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Mid-life MOTs to examine health, skills and finances

An initiative offering over-50s mid-life MOTs is being lined up.

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The local enterprise partnerships in Coventry and Warwickshire, the Black Country and Greater Birmingham and Solihull submitted a joint bid to the Government’s Department for Work and Pensions to run the 10-week Mid-Life MOT programme.

The successful bid for funding means the three LEPs will work alongside the National Careers Service, Public Health England and the Money and Pensions Service to focus on health, skills and finances.

A series of webinars, particularly targeting SMEs, will be held over the next six weeks, starting every week from Monday, March 8 for individuals and Monday, March 15 for employers.

Information and help about the Mid-Life MOT programme will be featured on the three LEPs’ websites and social media as well as promoted by a range of organisations and groups throughout the region including Growth Hubs, Chambers of Commerce, the FSB, redundancy taskforces and the newly-formed GBSLEP Skills and Apprenticeship Hub.

Marion Plant, vice-chairman of the Coventry and Warwickshire Local Enterprise Partnership and chairman of its productivity and skills business group, said this was an opportunity to promote, support and re-evaluate skills, health and wellbeing to SMEs and their 50-plus employees.

She said: “Employment for the over-50s has been adversely impacted over the last 20 years and it has been brought into sharp focus by Covid-19 which has highlighted the need for people to re-consider their career in a new sector, upskill or re-skill.

Prospects

"The over-50s are at a higher risk of experiencing persistent long-term unemployment and worklessness compared to younger groups.

"This means that without early and targeted employment, careers and skills support they are unlikely to return to the labour market, and are at an increased risk of becoming long-term unemployed or economically inactive and fall into pensioner poverty.”

Professor Nazira Karodia, chairman of the Black Country LEP employment and skills advisory board and pro vice chancellor for regional engagement at the University of Wolverhampton, said: “The programme comes at exactly the right moment as we work collectively to support individuals, in this case the over-50s, to recover from the impact Covid-19 has had on employability and career prospects.”

“Through supporting the over-50s to re-evaluate their work, health and finances, explore re-skilling and flexible working, consider ways of maintaining and improving health and review pension prospects, the Mid-Life MOT programme will help create a resilient and skilled future-directed work-force which includes older people.

“The Black Country’s strategic aim is to grow its global supply chain with world class skills to maximize the benefits of the region’s location and resources.

"We need these skills to ensure our continued economic recovery and working with our LEP partners to support the over-50s to review their health, skills and finances, we continue to create the conditions for employability and up-skilling.”

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