Sunderland Echo

‘Autism passport’ will help

BID TO GET OVER DIFFICULTI­ES SOME FIND WHEN VISITING JOB CENTRES OR PROSPECTIV­E EMPLOYERS

- By David Allison david.allison@jpress.co.uk Twitter: @davidallis­on88

People with hidden disabiliti­es are set for a more enjoyable journey into employment – all thanks to the efforts of Wearsiders.

It comes after a focus group organised by the North East Autism Society and Sunderland-based Autism in Mind helped come up with the idea for an ‘autism passport’ to be taken on interviews and into Jobcentres.

To coincide with World Autism Awareness Week, the passport and online ‘employer’s toolkit’ is launched today.

The scheme, in partnershi­p with the Department of Work and Pensions and other leading disability organisati­ons, will mean potentiall­y difficult and anxious situations like job interviews could be thwarted.

It could make the journey to work for those with disabiliti­es and hidden impairment­s a much more enjoyable – and realistic – propositio­n.

Twenty-three-year-old Michael Crewe, from Sunderland, is currently enrolled in the North East Autism Society’s Employment Futures Unlock Your Potential programme, which supports adults with autism into work.

He said: “I think this is a brilliant idea and it would be immensely helpful for me.

“Just walking into the Jobcentre knowing I have something that’s official to present, so they know about me rather than me trying to explain it to them would be incredible. “It’s a great idea.” It is thought that 68% of adults with a known autism spectrum condition (ASC) in theNorthEa­stareunemp­loyed, regardless of qualificat­ions.

The Autism Alliance UK, RNIB, St Andrew’s Healthcare, Autism Plus, Dimensions, The Dyslexia Associatio­n, and the North East Autism Society has worked with the Department of Work and Pensions to launch the scheme.

Alongside the Passport will also be an online Autism and Neurodiver­sity Toolkit for staff and managers in workplaces and Jobcentres to provide the latest informatio­n, guidance and support for people with hidden impairment­s in, or looking for, work.

One of the key players in campaignin­g for the passport and toolkit to be created was John Phillipson, CEO of the North East Autism Society.

He said: “When we talked to adults with autism in particular it became clear that experience­s of visiting job centres and prospectiv­e employers weren’t always good.

“A lot of people found the whole experience difficult and explaining why they found it difficult even harder.

“I was thrilled when the North East Autism Society and Autism in Mind worked together to talk through this with some adults who would most benefit from support, and we came up with the idea for the passport and what should go in it.”

Carole Rutherford, director of Services from Autism in Mind, said: “I’m thrilled we’ve finally got here and

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 ??  ?? Michael Crewe on placement at the Empire Cinema in Sunderland.
Michael Crewe on placement at the Empire Cinema in Sunderland.
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