Changemakers volunteer interview
Friday, February 5, 2010 at 12:00PM Devian Patel is 24, and has had a job since he was 13, when he embarked on his first paper round. He worked all through school, and university. In November 2010 he was made redundant by the computer company for whom he worked. In order to keep his skills up to date, he is working with Changemakers on our website. “I realized that rather than sitting around at home and thinking about myself, I needed to just look outside and see how I could help other people.
Ironically, the Young Person’s Guarantee, launched by the Department for Work and Pensions, which means that a young person who is unemployed for six months as a result of the recession will be guaranteed the offer of a job, training or work experience, only applies to 18-24 year olds, and Devian is 25 next month.
He is positive about the scheme, though, although wary of the caveat that it only applies to those who have been unemployed for six months. “It’s a shame it couldn’t be extended to older people”, he said. “It’s making a very big assumption about when the recession actually started.”
As someone with a very strong work ethic, Devian has been surprised at the dramatic effect being unemployed has had on him. “The maximum I have never had a job for is a month,” he says. “I have had to let it sink in.” He has also had a rude awakening about benefits. “I am only just figuring out now that that housing benefit is not a perfect solution. There is a lot of fighting to get what you are supposed to receive.”
Like a lot of young people, Devian had taken out a loan to get him started as he needed to furnish a new flat. “When I was made redundant I had the loan hanging over my head. Luckily I had done the payment protection scheme, but when you contact the loan company you have to ring an 0845 number, which is not cheap on a mobile.” He has found the Consumer Credit Counselling service helpful but said guidance for young people in his position is not easy to find.
“It seems like a lot of people have been set back by going to university,” Devian says. “I did four years and I have got a student loan of about £16,000. None of what I am doing is paying that off. The course which I have done has provided me with the right knowledge and the vocabulary, but when I am applying for jobs I am being turned down because I don’t have the experience. How can I get experience when no-one will give me the chance? It seems to me I would have been better if I had come out of sixth form and gone straight into a job. At least they would have sent me away for training which I wouldn’t have had to pay for. “
