Autism in the Workplace - the TUC Guide

In May last year the TUC launched its guide to employment of people on the autistic spectrum. It was written for them by Janine Booth who runs autism in the workplace training events for the Workers' Educational association.

This is a different route into the problem from the mainly NAS led approach, the trades union perspective. It is directed at trade union officers who come across autism issues in the workplace, and therefore might potentially have a strong influence on how peple at work treat autistic spectrum colleagues.

It starts off by establishing a Social Model of Disability perspective (my pet hate from an educational point of view - I don't think this works for autism). The social model looks at barriers in the work environment which clash with autistic impairment. All you have to do it seems is make some environmental and material adjustments and then people on the autistic spectrum will have the same chances as everyone else. Simples.....

It then explains the Triad of Impairment. There's a long section with lots of examples of thinking literally. On executive function - this is the set of abilities that enable people to translate motivation into action. START doing someting, CHANGE what you are doing, STOP doing something once started, and Managing Time. Then Motor Function, Sensory Sensitivity, Sensory Overload, two-line description each. This leads to distress, meltdowns sometimes, and stimming.

Then the usual platitudes debunking the mythology - behaviour is a product of distress, difference not disability, apparently 60-70 percent of people on the autistic spectrum have a learning disability, many people with autism do not want to be cured. - you know all this stuff.

The great mystery is the lack of references - what is all this based on? All they provide are 6 websites - the all party paliamentary group, autism europe, the autism hub, autistic uk, DANDA and NAS.  An autism timeline in an appendix reaches 2013 without mentioning the Autism Act or Leading Rewarding and Fulfilling Lives... The last UK contribution was the formation of the All Party Parliamentary Group in 2000.

In other words - lets not bother doing this properly - lets just package together a lot of opinionated rubbish and that's good enough for the TUC.

To the TUC: -  "Most Autistic people can work, including in normal (whatever that may mean) workplaces"

"People with autism have various means of communication - some are more verbal than others"

They list a lot of reasons why workplaces create difficulties for autistic workers: discrimination, bullying, lack of communication and support, preventing an autistic person carrying out duties or using equipment when there is no valid reason to do so. Also lower pay, imposition of new arrangements at work, working conditions in the past, autistic workers are more likely to have periods without work, decreased self confidence, work environments, bossy managers, disruption of routines, contracting out, and latterly "expecting people to abide by social rules without ever specifying what they are", "making judgements about a worker's social interaction" " issues with assessment and/or pronotional processes".

Now those last three I'd say were priority ones. Most of the preceding material is standard TUC issues, discussed at length. When we get down to these three, we are on unexplained one-liners. They are followed by more and repetitive one-liners. They are just adding on things they've read somewhere but dont understand. Right at the bottom of this long list comes "sensory issues, eg noise, light, smell".

There follows a section on workers with autistic dependents. It is again standard trade union stuff.

What they propose is, even without knowing staff might have autism, make the work-place more autism friendly. Provide a relaxation space, changes to working practices to be negoiated with the union, occupational health and managemnent training about autism, time off for trade union representatives to attend training, all instructions and policies to be written clearly, anti-harrassment, time off.

That's the solution apparently - social model, remove the "barriers" and it will all be hunky dorey. There's some standard stuff about politically correct language and hate crime. Then some stuff about the impact of auterity and autism in parliament, which ends with APPG in 2000. Nothing about the Autism Act. However the Autism Act is mentioned under a section on the law.

My problem with this document is there is no real undderstanding of autism. There's no sign of any effort to understand autism. Just the usual social model tripe - make a few wee anticipatory adjustments - nothing to autism really.

The whole document is a disgrace. I'm not anti-union. I was in a union most of my life and even for a while a rep. But this document is a sham. The TUC should be thoroyughly ashamed. They've not taken autism seriously, merely adapted autism to a general moan about workplace conditions for all employees, which is not fair.

Parents
  • It is not that the TUC is alone in not having the foggiest about what employing people on the autistic spectrum is about. This is the DWP's current state of play in the June 2014 update of "Employing Disabled People and people with health conditions":-

    "Autistic spectrum conditions (ASCs)

    In the UK, half a million adults are thought to have an ASC. They may have difficulties with:

    - communication

    - understanding the feelings of others

    - meeting new people

    People with an ASC may also have high levels of accuracy, attention to detail, and a good memory for figures.

    Adjustments for an employee with an ASD include:

    - maintaining a structured working environment and routine

    - avoiding language which is hypothetical or abstract

    - avoiding making statements which could be taken literally

    For more information and support visit the National Autistic Society"

    OK this might look vaguely familiar, but stop and think how it informs DWP staff of your needs.  If you are being reviewed for PIP or other benefits, what does this tell you they don't know about autism?

    Do you really just have a problem "meeting new people"? Do you actually have a communication disability - ability to hear and speak? Next time you go to a DWP interview, is it obvious you have a communication difficulty? Because that's explicity what they are looking for - and likely as not, failing to detect. Or are you just missing part of the conveyed meanings, and not conveying them correctly?

    Is routine and a structured working environment all you need?  What is your understanding of hypothetical and abstract? And how does anyone avoid making statements that could be taken literally?

    But much more importantly what difficultuies do you have that are not mentioned here? Because likely as not DWP have no idea about them.

    And who, I wonder, do we blame for this level of misunderstanding?  Where is DWP getting this stuff?

Reply
  • It is not that the TUC is alone in not having the foggiest about what employing people on the autistic spectrum is about. This is the DWP's current state of play in the June 2014 update of "Employing Disabled People and people with health conditions":-

    "Autistic spectrum conditions (ASCs)

    In the UK, half a million adults are thought to have an ASC. They may have difficulties with:

    - communication

    - understanding the feelings of others

    - meeting new people

    People with an ASC may also have high levels of accuracy, attention to detail, and a good memory for figures.

    Adjustments for an employee with an ASD include:

    - maintaining a structured working environment and routine

    - avoiding language which is hypothetical or abstract

    - avoiding making statements which could be taken literally

    For more information and support visit the National Autistic Society"

    OK this might look vaguely familiar, but stop and think how it informs DWP staff of your needs.  If you are being reviewed for PIP or other benefits, what does this tell you they don't know about autism?

    Do you really just have a problem "meeting new people"? Do you actually have a communication disability - ability to hear and speak? Next time you go to a DWP interview, is it obvious you have a communication difficulty? Because that's explicity what they are looking for - and likely as not, failing to detect. Or are you just missing part of the conveyed meanings, and not conveying them correctly?

    Is routine and a structured working environment all you need?  What is your understanding of hypothetical and abstract? And how does anyone avoid making statements that could be taken literally?

    But much more importantly what difficultuies do you have that are not mentioned here? Because likely as not DWP have no idea about them.

    And who, I wonder, do we blame for this level of misunderstanding?  Where is DWP getting this stuff?

Children
No Data