Mercury (Hobart)

Help call as youth face job troubles

- DAVID KILLICK

Political Editor

THE state government should be doing more to help young people who have been disproport­ionately affected by the economic consequenc­es of the COVID-19 pandemic, Labor says.

Opposition education spokesman Josh Willie said Labor had policies ready for the government to adopt to assist – and the problem was stark.

“We have a youth unemployme­nt rate at 15.1 per cent. Since March, 6400 young people have lost their jobs.

“Last week, the Productivi­ty Commission released some research showing that young people through the global financial crisis, and after, were trapped in low-paying jobs, insecure employment and wage growth was particular­ly slow compared to other cohorts.

“We’re calling on the government to do more to support young people and adopt some of Labor’s policies in our COVID recovery package.

“Things like free TAFE for demand industries, expanding the regional employment hubs across the state to connect long-term unemployed with employers and jobs and also to mandate apprentice numbers on public works.”

But Education Minister Jeremy Rockliff said Labor was deliberate­ly ignoring the government’s efforts to assist young people.

“Our government is continuing to focus on skills and training opportunit­ies for young people and adult learners as we recover from COVID-19 and kickstart our economy,” he said.

“The highly successful TasTAFE SkillUp training initiative continues to offer no cost or low cost training to Tasmanians to help those reenter the workforce.

“And the commonweal­th government’s recently announced JobTrainer package will also support young Tasmanians with an additional $21m of federal and state government funding to be invested in thousands of additional low or no-cost training placements.

“What Labor are proposing is only half of what we will be investing in training places through JobTrainer and by excluding private RTOs they would effectivel­y be restrictin­g the number of qualificat­ions and placements that can be offered.”

david.killick@news.com.au

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