Finding my employment circumstances changed due to the Birmingham Post's synergy-related headcount adjustment, today's first entry in the diary was a 10.40am meeting at Handsworth Jobcentreplus.All dolled up in my best satin and tat, looking every inch like Zorro, I took a deep breath and headed off to Soho Road to present myself to a Ms Badhan who, I was told, would help set me back on the road to gainful employment and prevent me from hanging around on street corners cadging money off passers-by.
It's been a long time since I last signed on; probably 20 years or so since I was laid-off at the Stage and Television Today when my cravat didn't pass muster.
I still remember the Peckham dole office. A big purpose-built sausage factory with burly bouncers on the door.
The staff dealt with your claim from behind a steel mesh screen, treating dole monkeys with indifference at best, scorn at the worst.
Unlike some in my family, I'm not work-shy. I actually enjoy the daily grind, providing the job is challenging, the conditions are good and there's a Kit Kat or two in the sweetie vending machine.
In periods of unemployment in my youth, I always played the game and tried to get a job.
There were openings for journalists then and it was a noble profession. I would even widen my search and declare myself willing to work in the BBC Radiophonic Workshop at a push.
My ambition always impressed the uncivil servant behind the mesh barricade and I always got my dosh.
I did find the actual act of signing-on a rather soul-busting affair, queuing up with all sorts of no-marks and ne'er-do-wells for a few quid to see me through the next fortnight.
It was with these preconceptions that I turned up to my appointment.
Well, things have certainly changed in 20 years.
I suppose the clue's in the name Jobcentreplus. Truly, this was no fortress of no hope for society's dregs.
The outside of the building is a drab slab, that's true – the only reminder of its earlier status.
Inside it was like Willy Wonka's Chocolate Factory only more garish.
Gone were the walls decorated with slips advertising minimum wage jobs. Indeed, there was no sign of any jobs at all. They are now kept on a computer and job-seekers access them from terminals on the jobshop floor where they can also play Call Of Duty, download U2 albums and look at boobies.
The bouncers have been replaced with helpers dressed as angels who greet you with a cheery "Yowsah!" before telling you they're here to make your wildest dreams come true.
Some were on roller skates, dishing out Sherbert Dabs.
It's all open-plan now and each job seeker has his or her own personal employment mentor who will give you a little cuddle if you're feeling blue before having a cosy chat about what you've done to find work this week.
The person whose job it was to send you to another office, five miles across town, only to be told you were in the right place to start with, is now some sort of dandy Master of Ceremonies, a cross between an Asda Greeter and Eddie Izzard. Their sole purpose in life is to spread a little happiness.
My interview was with someone called Phil who had been assigned my case on account of our astrological compatibility. He was OK. A bit too brown rice and sandals for my liking but I've been promised he'll have had a shave and be wearing Adidas next time I go and see him.
We went over my claim and he photocopied a few documents.
"Shall I photocopy my arse for you too? Some people are cheered up by that," he said.
"Thanks but no," I told him.
"You're the boss," he said and winked.
I was then passed over to my personal mentor who had obviously been told about my penchant for ladies with freckles as her face had already been seen-to by the make-up department.
We talked about how I would find a job and I explained that most journalists find that word of mouth is the best recruitment policy. It's who you know that matters.
I also said that maybe my days of being an inky hack are probably over as all newspapers are laying off people in a quite spectacular fashion.
We agreed that I would ask the mayor about any vacancies for a town cryer, spend a few hours on the internet blogging and stuff and generally pester any mates for work.
I don't even have to go back once a fortnight to sign on as I'm applying for Income Support on account of being a lonely parent.
The money will be paid into my bank account regularly and, though it will barely pay for my biscuit bill, it's nice to have it.
I'll also get help with council tax, school dinners, child care and milk tokens. How cool is that?
Although this is only a temporary glitch in my ambitions for global media domination, I'm going to learn from the situation and positively embrace it. It will do me good to mix with people less fortunate than myself.
Tomorrow I'm going to find a job.

2 comments:
lurve the idea of sherbet dabs being handed out. I assume these are doled (no pun intended - arf) out by leggy lovelies, wearing Hooties-style uniforms.
GReat post - you'll soon be employed (but then, you'll get no milk tokens. Life can be such a beeyatch sometimes)
...im glad to see that you received such fair treatment..and i truly hope you receive all the monetary needs you require for survival for you and your kids...maybe it is the way that the dss..or dhss...has changed over the years..i thankfully..have very little dealings with them at present...only for child benefit...however picture my experience..at 17...pushed into a yops course..full time work for 23.50 per week...after thatchers 'on yer bike' programme....try to move away to find work...does not arrive...my wife having to work full time to cover rent..we end up with minus 10 pounds per week to live on...move home again..get a job..my employer for reasons best left unsaid..decides not to pay my ni contributions...when applying for sickness benefit three years later due to a disabling illness...find i have not paid enough ni contributions to be entitled to anything...i do not work now...i am a househusband and an artist...dss shelve records due to lack of funding to get the money from my old employer..find state pension is not going to come because of this...erm...loophole in the law....
i guess i feel a knot in my stomach when there are people who abuse the benefits system....my neighbour has all her rights in order..even to the extent of making her landlord pay for her own private gardener...accompanied by comments as 'you cant do that i know my rights'...and general abuse of 'morality' laws..that never seem to be questioned by any authority..except to use the word asbo...and never implement it...and let us not forget the chap on sickness benefit since his early twenties..gets his own flat using benefit..and then spends the rest he recieves on bottles of vodka...now..one more drink and he's dead....the story of the unemployed bloke..who has a job..gets a good flat..gives up his job...and cons the landlord into saying that human rights says he does not have to pay anymore than the dss maximum...even though the flat is worth twice as much in monthly rent..(this particular guy got sky tv pumped into his flat for free too...) glad to be out of the system...but at the same time..never been in a position to abuse it,and actually never would..or,said enviously...could!!
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