--------- Forwarded message ---------- Date: Wed, 15 Apr 1998 08:24:59 +0100 GMT From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: ESF: 1% for global grants for NGOs ESF: 1% for global grants for NGOs At the Social Council on 7th April, ministers heard David Blunkett and Padraig Flynn report on the joint Education/Social Council of London and explain what exactly the reform of the European Social Fund, proposed by the European Commission, involved. The ESF's main mission will now be to shore up the reform of labour market policies and practices by aligning them on a European strategy for employment and on annual guidelines on employment intended for Member States. Thus, as Commissioner Flynn explained, the ESF will be reformed from head to foot, or reinvented, so as to update it and to make of it a financial instrument shoring up national action plans for employment. Closely linked to the European strategy for employment, it will intervene in five areas: i) the setting up of active labour market policies to fight unemployment; ii) promoting social inclusion and equal opportunities for all; iii) developing a system of lifelong education and training to promote employability; iv) developing adaptability, innovation, entrepreneurship and job-creation; v) improving women's participation in the labour market. More specifically, the ESF will contribute to local development, including local initiatives for employment and territorial pacts for employment, and take account of the social and economic dimension of the information society. In order to guarantee the system maximum effectiveness, the Commission deems it necessary that the ESF should focus on a limited number of subjects within each of the aforementioned fields of intervention. However, at least 15% of all interventions have to be attributed to measures relating to equal opportunities and another 15% to the question of adaptability. Another radically new element concerns the introduction of the concept of "social risk capital" in the activities of the ESF, i.e., that at least 1% of the ESF funding in each programme shall be made available in the form of a global grant to intermediary bodies for the disbursement in the form of small grants to non-governmental organizations with local knowledge and expertise, avoiding the bureaucratic hurdles that often discourage local groups which are often beyond the reach of conventional mainstream programmes. Source: (c) Agence Europe, 09/04/98