Just nine of the 36  sheltered Remploy factories that were set to be shut in the first wave  of a government closure programme could be kept open under new  ownership, a minister has announced.
  
  Maria Miller, the Conservative minister for disabled people, told MPs  this week that the government had received 65 “proposals” to take  Remploy factories out of its control. 
  
  Detailed bids for the nine factories will now be considered, with the final outcomes likely within a couple of months.
  
  Miller said the government had offered a wage subsidy of £6,400 for  each disabled member of staff that was kept on, with expert support of  up to £10,000 for each employee-led bid. 
  
  Miller said the government had also provided £8 million to guarantee  “tailored support” for up to 18 months for every disabled person  affected, was working with the Employers Forum on Disability to secure  job opportunities, and had added £15 million to the Access to Work  budget as a result of the closures.
  
  She said that the closures would allow the government to support thousands more disabled people into mainstream work.
  
  Miller also promised that there would be a “comprehensive system” to  keep track of how many former Remploy workers found new jobs.
  
  But Anne McGuire, Labour’s shadow minister for disabled people, said:  “Even if she is minded to make this decision, doing so in the current  economic climate makes it look as if she is abandoning her duty of care  to disabled employees who have given many years of service to a company  that the government own – a company that this country owns.”
  
  The Labour MP Ann Clwyd added: “When Margaret Thatcher was schools  secretary she was known as ‘Margaret Thatcher, milk snatcher’. You,  minister, are now known as ‘Maria Miller, Remploy killer’. Are you  proud of that?”
  
  But the disabled Conservative MP Paul Maynard said that young disabled  people had “higher aspirations than to spend 40 years of their working  lives in segregated employment, shut off from society, being sheltered  – what a ghastly, offensive phrase that is”. 
  
  He added: “Segregated employment has no role in today’s society. What we want is equality of employment rights.”
  
  Labour MP Sheila Gilmore, a member of the Commons work and pensions  committee, accused Miller of “effectively setting off one group of  disabled people against another”, and added: “Surely it is not  necessary to have some people lose the jobs that have given them so much  in their lives in order to help other disabled people.”
  
  Remploy unions announced last week that disabled workers had voted in  favour of industrial action over the planned closures, with the 2,800  remaining disabled workers set to stage two 24-hour strikes later this  month, on 19 and 26 July.
  
  News provided by John Pring at www.disabilitynewsservice.com
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Government holds out hope for just nine Remploy factories
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