What worries me are the young people who are not in work or education - and not on benefits either, the ones slipping through everything available to them.
Last year I needed someone off garden help so messaged a 'student' who used to post on Facebook intermittently looking for gardening work etc. he came and worked for me for a day and then asked if he could bring a couple of friends in. I said yes, I would pay them minimum wage. When they came, they looked uite young, but they worked well. The oyungest of them in particular was not only a hard worker, but he organised and managed the other two lads to do the work in the uickest and most efficient way. I was really impressed by him.
I chatted to them when I took out drinks and biscuits and so on but kept it fairly light . On the third day I did begin to enuire casually about when they left school and what training they were going into.
They were due to do another half days work the following day, but did not turn up. Obviously my uestions frightened them off.
Those three lads are off the records, not in school and education and not claiming benefits. Now and again I remember them, and it bothers me. The youngest lad, was clearly bright, a hard worker and natural manager. He assessed the job, worked out the best way to do it and then organised the older boys to do it. he could have a good future with those natural skills. But he has dropped out and will not be easily encouraged back in again.
I decuced from what they said that the younger one was still under 16 and that all three of them had just stopped going to school around the age of 14. They lived at hom and just worked 'on the black', doing odd jobs like mine, two were cousins and would go to work on building sites for odd days to provide themselves with enough cash for their needs.