No One Left Behind Employability Strategic Plan 2024-2027

13 Sep 2024 11:50 AM

The No One Left Behind Employability Strategic Plan 2024-2027 outlines the key priorities for No One Left Behind over the next three years, and identifies the actions we will take to deliver on these priorities, reaffirming our commitment to continuous improvement.

Introduction

Our Vision

To deliver an employability system that tackles inequalities in Scotland’s labour market, creating a responsive and aligned approach that helps people of all ages who face the greatest barriers to progress towards, into and to sustain work.

Since devolution of employment support powers, we have been clear on our desire to shape an employability system for Scotland that delivers better outcomes for people who experience barriers to accessing the labour market.

We have been clear that the employability system must centre on the people that access it. This requires support to be tailored to an individual’s circumstances, and a recognition that progress towards employment may not be linear. We want employability services to be seen as an opportunity by those accessing them, which is why participation is entirely voluntary.

At the outset of devolution, we established the need for Scotland’s employability services to treat people with dignity and respect, to have fairness and equality at their heart, and to continuously improve – we remain committed to these values.

Why publish this plan?

Employability services are critical to creating a more inclusive labour market in Scotland, and are well placed to play a role in addressing a range of prevailing labour market challenges:

These challenges represent lost opportunities for people, for employers, and for Scotland as a whole. Although Scotland’s labour market has been more resilient than anticipated post-Covid-19, addressing these challenges is a central element of creating the Scotland we want to see.

Employability will not be able to do this on its own, and partnership working between organisations and services will be essential. That is why Scottish and Local Government embarked on a programme of transformational change through No One Left Behind – to design and implement a delivery model which has partnership at its heart and that actively drives alignment and integration of the services people may need to support their journey towards and into employment.

This plan is being published at a crucial time for Scotland’s devolved employability services as we move fully to a local delivery model. In supporting this move, we have engaged with partners and stakeholders through a series of national discussion events, and conducted evaluations of previous activity to generate learning. We have also considered broader policy ambitions, including those set out in the National Strategy for Economic TransformationFair Work Action Plan, Best Start, Bright Futures, the Verity House Agreement, and those in the COSLA Plan 2022-27, to shape the areas of priority for employability services over the lifetime of this plan.

Throughout this plan, we will:

The Journey so far

Employability services in Scotland have been on a journey since devolution of further powers under the Scotland Act 2016. Prior to this, evidence identified an employability landscape which was cluttered, complex for people to navigate, and which contained duplication of effort across a range of key actors.

In 2018, the Scottish Government published No One Left Behind: Next Steps for the Integration and Alignment of Employability Support in Scotland, which set out the evidence for change and the principles that must guide activity moving forward.

Action to deliver on the ambitions of No One Left Behind have been shaped by the Partnership Working Agreement for Employability, signed between Scottish Ministers and COSLA spokespersons in 2018.

We have come a significant distance since. Following the end of referrals to Fair Start Scotland in March 2024, Scottish Government funded employability provision is now commissioned through Local Employability Partnerships, under the No One Left Behind approach. This has seen the consolidation of a variety of national and local funding into a single, all-age offer of support, with delivery shifting from national to local models. Not only has this simplified the landscape for people, but it has created greater scope for partners to inform provision through Local Employability Partnerships (LEPs), supported decisions to be taken closer to participants, and enabled local labour market conditions to shape the focus of services more closely.

However, as we move forward, it is important to recognise the learning from Fair Start Scotland provision over its six years. Some key points noted in the range of evaluations include:

Employability in Scotland today

Participant Experience

Reach

Outcomes