Giving time and volunteering can sometimes affect your
entitlement to Jobseeker's Allowance (JSA). However, if
you follow a few basic rules and good practice you should be
able to carry on with your volunteering and still receive your
benefit.
The voluntary organisation
You can do unpaid volunteering for any type of organisation
except for a member of your family. If you do any unpaid
work for a relative this is not counted as volunteering.
If you volunteer for a charity or non-profit-making
organisation and you get paid money to cover your volunteering
expenses such as the cost of travel or a snack or protective
clothing such as wellingtons, this will not usually affect your
benefit payments. However, if you get paid a volunteering
allowance or get paid just for turning up, then your benefit is
likely to be reduced by the amount you are paid.
Entitlement to Jobseekers Allowance may be affected when
someone wishes to undertake unpaid work for a non charitable
organisation. If a volunteer is doing what someone would
normally be paid for, this may be classed as unpaid work, not
volunteering, and could affect their benefit. There are a
number of reasons for this; firstly the Department for Work and
Pensions (DWP) has a duty to those people receiving benefit to
ensure they are not being treated as cheap, or free labour by
employers. Secondly, DWP has a duty to taxpayers to
ensure that it is not paying benefits to those who should be
receiving payment for work they are undertaking.
Available for work
To be available for work, a volunteer must be willing and
able to attend a job interview at 48 hours notice and be
available to start a job at a weeks notice. This means
that you can volunteer and still be available for work
providing you can rearrange, or drop your volunteering.
Volunteers who are unwilling to rearrange or give up their
volunteering if DWP ask them to may lose their right to JSA
because they are no longer available for work.
Actively seeking work
You are only entitled to JSA for each week during which you
have taken reasonable steps to find a job. 'Steps'
include applying for a job, answering job advertisements and
registering with an agency. What is reasonable will
depend on your skills, abilities, training and previous
employment. The onus is on you to show what steps you
have taken in any week, and that the steps taken are reasonable
in your case.
JSA claimants are only entitled to JSA for each week during
which they have taken reasonable steps to find a job.
Volunteering is not generally considered to be a 'step' unless
your adviser has told you to volunteer. However, in
considering whether the steps you have taken are reasonable,
Jobcentre Plus must consider all the circumstances of your
individual case, including time spent in voluntary work and the
extent to which it may improve your prospects of finding
employment.
Hours
There is no limit to the amount of voluntary work you can do
in a week provided you remain available for, and actively seek,
work. You need to make sure you still have enough time to
look for work too.
What you should do
You must inform the Jobcentre that you are undertaking
voluntary work and they will be able to advise you according to
your personal circumstances and the nature of the voluntary
work. You should provide a contact phone number so you
can be easily contacted if a job opportunity arises.
You should tell the people for whom you are volunteering
that you may be asked to attend an interview at 48 hours notice
or start a job at one weeks notice. A letter from the
volunteer organiser to the Jobcentre may be useful. This
could include:
- The type of payments you receive.
- That you have discussed methods of seeking work with the
volunteer organiser, that you may be contacted on a stated
telephone number and that the organisation will do its best
to pass messages on to you.
- That the organisation understands and accepts that you
have to give up volunteering at a maximum of one weeks
notice.
- That volunteering will help you develop skills, get a
reference for job applications etc.
- If you are doing the same type of duties as someone who
is paid for their time, an explanation of why you are not
being paid.