PeoplePlus

PeoplePlus
Industry Training
Founded 1991 to 2015 Purchased by Staffline group PLC [1]& trading still
Headquarters Sheffield, United Kingdom
Key people
Emma Harrison, Chairman until 24 Feb 2012
Revenue £145m[2]
Number of employees
3,100+
Website www.peopleplus.co.uk/

PeoplePlus, a trading name for A4e, formerly known as Action for Employment, is a for-profit welfare-to-work company based in the United Kingdom. The company began in Sheffield in 1991[3][4] to provide redundant steelworkers with training so that they could find new jobs.[5] They now operate in five countries, but retain a significant presence in the UK where they work with organisations in the public sector such as the Department for Work and Pensions.

In the wake of various controversies and criminal investigations, MPs Fiona Mactaggart and former Secretary of State for Work and Pensions Margaret Hodge urged the UK government to suspend contracts with A4e.[6][7] In March 2012, following fraud allegations regarding an A4e contract, the Department for Work and Pensions began an independent audit of all its commercial relationships with A4e.[8] On 15 May 2012, Employment Minister Chris Grayling announced that the audits for the Work Programme, the New Enterprise Allowance programme and Mandatory Work Activity found no evidence of fraud in any of these contracts. However, while the team found no evidence of fraud, it identified weaknesses in A4e's internal controls on the Mandatory Work Activity contract in the South East and that this contract with A4e had been terminated, after deciding that continuing would pose 'too great a risk'.[9]

In March 2015 six former employees received jail sentences for forging files in a scam that was said to have cost taxpayers almost £300,000. Four received suspended sentences. In a telling aside, judge Angela Morris said it was not for her to decide whether more senior managers should also be held to account. [10]

History

A4E logo used until 2015

A4e was a company started by Emma Harrison's father. It was originally a Sheffield-based training company, putting unemployed steel workers through a getting-back-to-work course.[11] Emma Harrison joined the company after graduating in engineering.

After the Labour Party came to power in 1997, they introduced the back to work New Deal service for those on Jobseeker's Allowance, requiring claimants to attend vocational training or risk losing their benefit. In the mid 2000s the government withdrew funding from Jobcentre Plus' vocational training programmes and redirected the funds to "back to work" agencies, such as the Sheffield-based company A4e. A4e quickly became the largest provider of New Deal services in the UK, and had contracts for the New Deal worth £80 million.[12][13] When the New Deal was wound down in 2010, A4e was paid a share of £63 million in "termination fees".[14]

A4e was awarded a contract for the Pathways to Work scheme in 2008,[14] with a target to get 30 per cent of participants into employment. In February 2012 the Public Accounts Committee heard the success rate was 9 per cent.[15] Committee Chair Margaret Hodge questioned why A4e had been awarded new contracts to deliver the Work Programme despite this "abysmal" performance. Conservative Committee member Richard Bacon expressed similar concerns, asking why A4e's "dreadful performance in one of the immediate predecessor programmes" had not been taken into account during tendering.[16]

TV appearances

In August 2009, A4e was featured in two episodes of Benefit Busters. Chairman Emma Harrison also appeared on Secret Millionaire.[17]

Present operations

According to The Times, "A4e is a business consultancy that offers “to make millions from the unemployed by treating them as a commodity” to private and public companies."[18]

A4e are bidding for several large additional contracts from the UK government. Former Secretary of State for Work and Pensions David Blunkett, an advocate of increased participation by firms like A4e in the welfare system while in government, has faced criticism for accepting a trip to South Africa from A4e, in addition to earnings of between £25,000 and £30,000 as an adviser, three years after leaving office.[19]

In September 2011, A4e were awarded a £250,000 contract to advise the Prime Minister David Cameron's office on future privatisations. It will advise on how to design welfare contracts with private firms and getting value for money in contracting out.[20]

A4e has been hired by the Cabinet Office to advise on the rules governing four experimental schemes aimed at families with unemployed parents living in Conservative-led authorities.[20]

On 23 February 2012, Chairman Emma Harrison stepped down from her role as David Cameron's personal adviser on problem families in the wake of her firm being investigated over allegations of multiple fraud.[21] The following day, she stepped down as chairman of A4e amid growing pressure over the company's behaviour.[22]

On 9 March 2012, the Skills Funding Agency revealed A4e to be a preferred bidder for prison education contracts.[23] On 13 March the SFA confirmed it had awarded A4e two such contracts, worth up to £30million. Margaret Hodge commented: 'I find it astounding that, at a time when one Government department is investigating a company for systemic failures, another department is awarding the same company new contracts. You couldn't make it up.'[24]

On 11 September 2012, a Channel 4 investigation revealed that A4e had only found 4020 jobs that lasted over 3 months in the 10 months up to May 2012, for its 115,000 compulsory attendees at a cost to the taxpayer of £45 million. Margaret Hodge, chairman of the Public Accounts Committee said the performance was 'abysmal'.[25]

International

A4e have international operations in Australia, Paris, France, Germany, Ireland, Israel (operating as Amin), Italy, Poland, South Africa and India. In Australia they partner with SpotJobs, an online employment website, to deliver education and training to qualified users.

Criticism from charities

In 2008, refugee and asylum charities criticised A4e for asking them to work as its unpaid partners.

Farrukh Husain, director of the Migrants Resource Centre, accused A4e of "gross exploitation of the voluntary sector". He further commented: "A4e must think the voluntary sector is naive to simply wish to sign up to a relationship that delivers little in return for voluntary organisations and fattens up the profits of A4e."

Maurice Wren, director of Asylum Aid, expressed concern that A4e's actions could reduce the quality of bids for future Home Office contracts to help and support refugees: "This could get some organisations thinking 'if we are to have any chance of getting a contract, we have to reduce our costs'. This means a poorer service for a very vulnerable client group."[26]

Loss of personal data

On 29 June 2010, A4e published a statement that an employee's laptop containing personal details of 24,269 people had been stolen. The employee's laptop was not encrypted, and was not recovered.[27]

In November 2010, A4e were fined £60,000 by the Information Commissioner's Office for the loss of the laptop. Commissioner Christopher Graham, said that it "...warranted nothing less than a monetary penalty as thousands of people's privacy was potentially compromised by the company's failure to take the simple step of encrypting the data".[28]

In November 2011, A4e were taken to task by a Social Security Tribunal for halting the benefit payments of claimants who wished to be accompanied by representatives of their choice at meetings run by A4e. The report also states that members of A4e lied to the DWP in order to cut the benefits to claimants.[29]

Fraud investigations

Hull

On 28 June 2009, The Observer disclosed information regarding a fraud investigation into A4e which was instigated after the Department for Work and Pensions uncovered discrepancies in its "confirmation of employment" forms - discrepancies which centred upon the falsification of employers' signatures by a number of recruiters. One recruiter also made a fraudulent deal with a local temp agency.[30]

A4e's official statement read: 'All the matters raised in the article are known to both A4e and the DWP and have been the subject of both an A4e investigation and a DWP led investigation. The A4e investigation revealed that whilst candidates had real job opportunities, these jobs did not meet the funding criteria being less than 13 weeks and 16 hours a week in duration. These investigations have resulted in the departure of both individuals from the company and the ceasing of all activity with the employment agency concerned.'[31]

Teesside

Another case of signature forgery emerged on 6 March 2012. This took place while A4e was working for Redcar and Cleveland Council to help disadvantaged young people into education, training or employment. A Council inquiry found that learners' signatures had been forged to exaggerate the number of vulnerable people the project had reached. A4e was forced to withdraw from this part of the project.[32]

Middlesbrough South and East Cleveland MP Tom Blenkinsop said: 'There needs to be a full investigation into this case. This is public money here, and this must be looked into to restore confidence into all regeneration projects carried out locally.'[33]

Fraud investigations and jail sentences

In January 2012, four former employees of A4e were arrested on suspicion of fraud dating back to 2010.[34] The alleged fraud was uncovered by an internal investigation by A4e. The two women, aged 28 and 49, and two men, aged 35 and 41 were bailed until mid-March.[34]

On 22 February The Guardian revealed that A4e had forced jobseekers to work unpaid in its own offices,[35] had been investigated nine times by the Department for Work and Pensions since 2005, and had been forced to repay public funds on five separate occasions after government investigations found 'irregularities'.[36]

Emma Harrison resigned as chairman of A4e on 24 February 2012, amid criticism of 'improper' conflicts of interest regarding government contracts and allegations of 'routine', 'utterly rife' fraud from whistleblowers.[37]

On 26 February 2012, Thames Valley Police’s Economic Crime Unit was revealed to be investigating the alleged theft by A4e staff of ‘tens of thousands of pounds' worth of vouchers meant to help the unemployed back to work.[38]

The Labour MP Fiona Mactaggart who sits on the Public Accounts Committee has stated 'My view is that this company has demonstrated that it is unfit to hold this kind of contract'.[6] in relation to the Work Programme.

On 9 March 2012, the Department of Work and Pensions announced it had 'been made aware of an allegation of attempted fraud in relation to a Mandatory Work Activity contract with A4e'. It stated that it had begun an investigation into this allegation, and also, as a result of the allegation, an 'independent audit of all our commercial relationships with A4e'.[8]

On 22 March 2012, the BBC's Newsnight current affairs programme revealed that they had received a leaked document suggesting 'systemic fraud' at the company.[39] The following day, Labour MP Margaret Hodge, who chairs the Commons Public Accounts Committee, called on the government to suspend its contracts with the jobs training agency.[40]

On 3 April 2012, Exaro news revealed that A4e was being lined up for another major government contract despite being at the centre of a fraud investigation. Ministers made the company the preferred bidder to take over the sensitive Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) helpline to advise people of their rights in discrimination cases.[41]

On 20 April 2012, Police officers raided A4e's office in Slough after allegations were referred to them by the Department for Work and Pensions. A 33-year-old man was arrested and later bailed.[42]

On 22 May 2012, Exaro news published leaked internal audit report which exposed 'potential fraud' at A4e.[43] The report compiled by the audit and risk department examined a sample of 224 of the company’s job placements and found that "potential fraudulent/irregular activity is not confined to one particular geographical area of the division, and shows a potential systematic failure to mitigate the risk towards this behaviour at both an office and regional level". Auditors also discovered A4e sent an unemployed job-seeker to work in lap-dance club.[44]

In March 2015 six former employees were jailed for forging files in a scam that was said to have cost taxpayers almost £300,000. Another four ex-members of staff received suspended prison sentences for what Judge Angela Morris said were ‘deceitful and unscrupulous’ practices. They had falsified employer details, time sheets and jobseeker signatures to inflate the numbers they said they had helped into work.[10]

Liam Byrne statement

Liam Byrne, Shadow Work and Pensions Secretary, responded to the DWP announcement of 9 March as follows: 'The time has come for full disclosure. With more questions over A4e and David Cameron’s former family tsar Emma Harrison coming by the day, ministers must now come clean and tell the public exactly what they know and when they were informed about all allegations of fraud at A4e.'

'The Government needs to make clear what new safeguards are being put in place to prevent this spreading any further, and with huge questions hanging over the entire Work Programme – and billions of pounds of public money at stake – ministers must publish all provider performance data immediately.'[45]

Payments to Emma Harrison

Prime Minister David Cameron has been criticised after it was revealed that Harrison was paid an £8.6 million shares dividend in 2011, in addition to her £365,000 annual salary, with the majority of this funded by the taxpayer.[46] Margaret Hodge described the dividend as "ripping off the State" and urged ministers to suspend all work with A4e.[7]

The company's chief executive Andrew Dutton stated that Harrison's dividend payment reflected her personal risk as a shareholder.[47] MP Stephen Barclay said the payment's size was of concern with regard to the DWP receiving value for money. He questioned the justification of paying management fees not linked to performance, adding that "It’s not A4e's fault if they get paid for poor delivery."[47] Barclay further established that A4e takes a 12.5 percent management fee on the half of its work that it passes on to local charities.[48]

On 25 February 2012, it emerged that in addition to her £365,000 annual salary and £8.6m shares dividend, A4e also paid Harrison and her partner around £1.7m over two years for leasing properties, including their 20-bedroom stately home, to her own firm.[49]

Private Eye has revealed that an additional £4m was shared between the other directors of A4e; in the case of Roy Newey, Hugh Sykes and Steve Boyfield, through Personal Service Companies, thereby avoiding the payment of National Insurance.[48]

Criticism from Fiona MacTaggart

On 2 March 2012, Fiona MacTaggart, Labour MP for Slough, revealed she had reported A4e to the national auditor on three occasions over the preceding two years, following complaints from her constituents. She stated that A4e "often provides poor service to unemployed people", "offered courses which had little worth and no recognition" and "are pursuing a policy which reduces the total number of jobs available".[50]

Allegations from former employees

On 8 March 2012, the Daily Mail reported allegations from Amy Rae, former team manager at A4e's Edinburgh office. She stated that A4e did not provide the training they were paid £950 to provide for each young person referred to their Community Task Force programmes by the JobCentre, instead sending them home. Rae blamed this on the failure of A4e management to authorise funding for the training, despite repeated requests. When inspectors from the Department of Work & Pensions arrived to inspect the training which was not taking place, Rae states she was instructed to deceive them by borrowing people from another A4e course in the same building and instructing them to lie, if questioned by the inspectors, about which course they were on: 'I had to stage-manage a completely bogus training session, complete with a fake chart. It was awful. It was all lies, a facade. We just pretended.' Rae is also reported to state that this was not an isolated occurrence.

A former employee from the Bradford office of A4e reports that A4e staff were sent to the stationery store Staples to buy their own rubber stamps with which to falsify Employment Verification Template forms, so A4e could defraud the Department of Work and Pensions.

A former employee from the Manchester office of A4e reports that pressure to meet quotas made fraud commonplace: 'Forging signatures used to go on all the time. You had no choice because it was made very clear to you that you would lose your job unless you reached your targets. If you couldn’t get enough so-called "job outcomes", you would just have to forge one, so you would find a genuine employer’s signature on another form and hold it up to the window under a blank one. It appeared everyone did it and nobody ever questioned it.'

A former employee from the Newcastle office of A4e reports that staff there were asked to sit basic numeracy and literacy tests alongside the unemployed to 'help bump up the numbers': 'It was in a really hot room and they crowded us all in. I could hardly breathe.' She likens the Newcastle office to a 'workhouse', and describes conditions there as 'utterly inhumane'. She states that people referred to A4e were required to ask permission to use the toilet: 'The problem was, if you let them use the toilet, they would never come back and that would mean A4e would lose a "client" and lose money. So they had security guards — ex-military, ex-police, ex-prison guards — patrolling the corridors.'[51]

References

  1. http://www.staffline.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/Crewe_RNS.pdf
  2. "A4e Facts and Figures | MyA4e". A4e.co.uk. Retrieved 2011-03-02.
  3. "Emma Harrison, A4e". Everywoman.com. Archived from the original on 24 September 2010.
  4. "Emma Harrison at". Womenspeakers.co.uk. Retrieved 2011-03-02.
  5. "The A4e story | MyA4e". A4e.co.uk. Retrieved 2011-03-02.
  6. 1 2 Greenhill, Sam; Martin, Daniel (27 February 2012). "Suspend work tsar MPs demand action fraud probe job placement scheme". London: Daily Mail. Retrieved 2012-02-27.
  7. 1 2 "A4e is another example of Fat Cats getting richer at the poor's expense". Daily Mirror. 26 February 2012. Retrieved 2012-02-26.
  8. 1 2 "DWP Statement on A4e fraud allegation", DWP, 9 March 2012. Retrieved on 10 March 2012.
  9. https://www.gov.uk/government/news/employment-minister-makes-statement-on-a4e
  10. 1 2 http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3020303/Government-work-contractors-forged-signatures-taxpayers-300-000-jailed-total-15-years.html
  11. Emma HarrisonStephanie Barnard (2 October 2008). "South Yorkshire - SY People - Emma Harrison". BBC. Retrieved 2011-03-02.
  12. Stephenson, Wesley (4 April 2009). "UK | Jobless training courses 'demoralising'". BBC News. Retrieved 2011-03-02.
  13. Toby Helm and Rajeev Syal (8 February 2009). "Key Labour employment plan close to collapse | Money | The Observer". London: Guardian. Retrieved 2011-03-02.
  14. 1 2 Clarke, Natalie; Hale, Beth (18 February 2012). "What a way to live off the state". London: Daily Mail. Retrieved 2012-02-29.
  15. Groves, Jason; Eccles, Louise (10 February 2012). "Fury as Cameron's families tsar gets £8.6m in ONE YEAR (and the bulk of it comes from taxpayer)". London: Daily Mail. Retrieved 2012-02-29.
  16. Gentleman, Amelia (9 February 2012). "A4e got welfare-to-work contract despite 'abysmal' record, MPs say". London: The Guardian. Retrieved 2012-02-26.
  17. "The Secret Millionaire - 4oD". Channel 4. Retrieved 2011-03-02.
  18. (subscription required)
  19. Toby Helm and Rajeev Syal (1 February 2009). "Storm over David Blunkett's role with private jobs firm | Politics | The Observer". London: Guardian. Retrieved 2011-03-02.
  20. Wintour, Patrick; Syal, Rajeev (23 February 2012). "A4e head Emma Harrison steps down from family champion role". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 24 February 2012.
  21. "Emma Harrison quits as chairman of A4e welfare-to-work firm". BBC. 24 February 2012. Retrieved 2012-02-25.
  22. Reinis, Nick;Summers, Nick "A4e included in preferred prison education bidder list", FE Week, 9 March 2012. Retrieved on 10 March 2012.
  23. Groves, Jason "Despite a string of fraud probes A4e gets two new state contracts worth up to £30m", Daily Mail, 13 March 2012. Retrieved on 14 March 2012.
  24. Peev, Gerri (28 June 2012). "Scandal hit A4e spent £45million securing just 4,000 jobseekers a long-term roles". Daily Mail. London.
  25. Ricketts, Andy. "Charities complain of exploitation", Third Sector, 13 February 2008. Retrieved on 10 March 2012.
  26. "Data Theft". MyA4e. 29 June 2010. Retrieved 2011-03-02.
  27. "First Data Protection Act fines issued by commissioner". BBC News. 24 November 2010.
  28. "Victory for Edinburgh unemployed over A4e". Edinburgh coalition against poverty. 4 November 2011. Retrieved 24 February 2012.
  29. Syal, Rajeev and Helm, Toby. "Fraud inquiry into government jobs scheme", The Observer, London, 28 June 2009. Retrieved on 10 March 2012.
  30. "Observer and Channel 4". A4e. 28 June 2009. Archived from the original on 7 January 2010. Retrieved 22 February 2012.
  31. Syal, Rajeev. "A4e employee forged signatures to boost job placement numbers", The Guardian, London, 6 March 2012. Retrieved on 10 March 2012.
  32. Arnold, Stuart. "Middlesbrough MP calls for probe into A4e deal", Darlington and Stockton Times, 8 March 2012. Retrieved on 10 March 2012.
  33. 1 2 "'Fraud' arrests at government contractor A4e". BBC News Online. 21 February 2012. Retrieved 2012-02-19.
  34. Wintour, Patrick; Malik, Shiv (22 February 2012). "A4e compelled jobseekers to work unpaid in its own offices". London: The Guardian. Retrieved 2012-02-29.
  35. Syal, Rajeev; Gentleman, Amelia (22 February 2012). "A4e forced to repay public money five times after DWP found 'irregularities'". London: The Guardian. Retrieved 2012-02-29.
  36. Greenhill, Sam; Martin, Daniel (25 February 2012). "Now she's the out of work Tsar! Day after quitting her government role, PM's jobs adviser forced to resign from firm she founded amid escalating claims of fraud". London: Daily Mail. Retrieved 2012-02-25.
  37. "Now work tsar's staff probed over vouchers meant to buy interview suits for jobless". London: Daily Mail. 26 February 2012. Retrieved 2012-02-26.
  38. Leaked document suggests 'systemic fraud' BBC News 22 March 2012
  39. Margaret Hodge calls for A4e suspension BBC News 23 March 2012
  40. Home Office lines up A4e for major new contract, ExaroNews 3 April 2012
  41. Sixth person arrested in A4E back-to-work fraud inquiry Daily Mail 21 April 2012
  42. "'Potential fraud' Exposed at A4e". ExaroNews. 22 May 2012.
  43. "A4e sent unemployed job-seeker to work in lap-dance club". ExaroNews. 22 May 2012.
  44. "The time has come for full disclosure over A4e - Byrne", Labour Party, London, 9 March 2012. Retrieved on 10 March 2012.
  45. Four former staff of Cameron's 'back to work' tsar arrested in major escalation of fraud inquiry Telegraph.co.uk
  46. 1 2 Groves, Jason; Eccles, Louise (10 February 2012). "Cameron's 'families tsar' paid herself £8.6m from firm that survives on state contracts despite 'abysmal' record". This is Money. Retrieved 22 February 2012. Tory MP Steve Barclay said the size of the payment raised serious questions about whether the public was getting value for money from the Work Programme. He questioned whether the Department for Work and Pensions should continue paying management fees that are not linked to performance. ‘It’s not A4e’s fault if they get paid for poor delivery. What matters is whether we are getting value for money. That is why we need change,’ he added. Mr Dutton defended the vast payout to Mrs Harrison, saying: "The dividends we pay to shareholders reflect the personal risk that they have. [...]"
  47. 1 2 "THE CURSE OF GNOME". Private Eye. Pressdram Ltd (1308). 24 February 2012. Retrieved 2012-02-29.
  48. Boffey, Daniel; Helm, Toby (25 February 2012). "Welfare boss Emma Harrison made a pile renting out her stately home to A4E". London: Guardian. Retrieved 2012-02-25.
  49. MacTaggart, Fiona "A4e’s fall from grace has been in the pipeline for two years", Left Foot Forward, 2 March 2012. Retrieved on 3 March 2012.
  50. Greenhill, Sam. "The A4E files: Whistleblowers reveal damning new claims about Back to Work Tsar's job training firm", Daily Mail, London, 8 March 2012. Retrieved on 10 March 2012.

External links

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