They came in yesterday. A young couple. Twentyish I suppose.
He was studiously polite. She hung back a little, doting on a smiling infant
son who was obviously their pride and joy. He explained that he had been in for
a food parcel before. A while ago. His head dropped a tad as he fronted up the
fact that it had been his probation officer who had sent him in. No doubt that
had been his wild time. Some idiocy fuelled by valium, Buckfast and complete
and utter boredom. Then his head came back up. Things are different now.
Changed. He explained that all that stuff was done and dusted whilst sneaking a
glance at his smiling offspring. He told a familiar tale of umpteen job applications
and no replies. Couldn’t care less shrugs from the staff of JobCentre Plus. So
what do you expect? You’re young, you’ve no experience, you’ve got a criminal
record. How dare you harbour hope? Just learn to live on fifty quid a week and
count yourself lucky. That all too familiar take of the doomed youth of the
disintegrating West.
But my man had decided he wasn’t going to take it lying
down. If nobody would give him the chance of a job he would create a job on his
own. So he knocked the door of every takeaway in the town and punted his
services as a menu delivery guy. And he got two of them to say yes. I have no
idea what he charged but who cares really. He knocked doors and got two orders
in the book. I couldn’t help but cast the mind back to the gnarled face of
Norman Tebbit all those years ago extolling the virtue of recession doomed
youth getting on their bikes and finding a job. Norman , you really would have loved this lad.
He was your kind of people.
And there’s more. He was going to get paid cash once he had
letterboxed the menus. And he knew that that he would be breaking the rules if
he continued to sign on. And he had decided that his days of rule breaking were
all done. So he had marched into the JobCentre Plus and signed himself off. He
walked away from his £50 a week to follow his new course. Obviously he asked if
there was any financial help on the table but of course there wasn’t. Had he
been a bit older, over 25 I think, them an appreciative state would have
replaced his dole money with some new enterprise money for six months. But
apparently anyone who is young does not deserve any help in setting up on their
own. Odd really when we are so keen of offer unsecured loans running to tens of
thousands at subsidised rates to any brainy kid wanting to study ancient Greece
for three years at university.
So my man basically had a problem. A cash flow problem. The
menus had been delivered but payment wasn’t due for a week and he had walked
away from his dole. Which left him with a partner and a baby to feed and no
money whatsoever to make that happen. He told me it had been a long day. They
had toured every agency in town looking for help and they had found none. And
finally he had remembered the place his probation officer had once sent in for
a food parcel. And here he was. Here they all were. Nervous, ultra polite, a
little bemused. They couldn’t quite understand why everyone had lost all
interest in them now that they were trying to do the right thing. We were able
to give them bags of food enough to get through the week and I did my best to
be encouraging. Stick at it. Acorns and oak trees and all that. But why oh why
are we so hell bent of crushing every ounce of spirit out of this horribly
unlucky generation. Even you might agree with that Mr Tebbit.
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