Archive for the ‘care crisis’ Category

Berkshire DPAC supporting statement for Cumulative Impact Assessment

Monday, February 4th, 2013

Received from Berkshire DPAC

 

These are just some of the things that have impacted on disabled people – at a time of mass unemployment and recession.

The debate in the House earlier this month highlighted the appalling impact of the Work Capability Assessment ALONE on disabled people. People with the most serious and complex impairments can no longer apply for help from the Independent Living Fund, as this has been closed to new applicants. It will be closed completely in 2015, throwing its users on the mercies of local authorities who will apparently not have ring fenced money in their rapidly decreasing budgets to support this. As from April this year the government starts to remove Disability Living Allowance from anybody who is able to mobilise (I use this word advisedly since it includes people who can wheel their own wheelchairs) more than 20 m. They have reduced this distance from 100 m in one fell swoop and failed to put this figure in their consultation paper.

Despite the increasing numbers of administrative errors and technical problems within the DWP, which have caused deaths in some instances – one was quoted in the debate last week – and massive distress in many, many others, the government is also withdrawing legal aid for appeals by benefit claimants as of the 1st of April.

Then there’s the bedroom tax, penalising families of sick and disabled people who need extra bedrooms to cater for things like storage space for equipment, or where it is impossible for anybody else to sleep in the same room as the claimant. Meanwhile social care is denied to the vast majority of people of any age who need it, because local authorities are not receiving enough money to meet the real need.

And now they’re introducing new and frankly insane guidance to the WCA, as if it wasn’t bad enough already. Assessors will no longer be able to consider issues like the depression that often accompanies chronic pain for example, or the physical impact of medication for mental health problems. Why? Because the new guidance insists that people must only be assessed on either physical impairments or mental impairments. Furthermore assessors, who we know rarely have the qualifications or expertise to do so, will be allowed to IMAGINE that a bit of equipment or a type of therapy might help you – and deny you your benefits until you’ve tried them out. Please bear in mind this could take months, in the case of therapies and could cause actual harm in the case of equipment.

All of these lead to stress, anxiety, physical and mental ill health, especially because of cuts to benefits and available cash. They also leads to isolation, depression and in some cases suicide. Some people are told they are fit for work by ATOS but when they go the Job Centre, they tell them they can’t satisfy the requirements for Job Seekers Allowance and therefore will get nothing.

As we have seen, the Work Programme is utterly failing disabled people (Panorama 28/1/2013).

Which other group in society has been hit by as many cuts as these? How can the Government possibly justify its refusal to do a cumulative Impact Assessment? It is no surprise that the references to Nazi Germany’s treatment of disabled people are becoming more frequent.

Merry

 

I dont want to go in a care home – Nadia

Monday, February 4th, 2013

 

Received from Nadia Clarke

scissors

I worry about the future as I have been told that my funding may not be enough for me to have the right amount of support to enable me to live my life. This will leave a huge impact on my life as I live independently with full time support from my PAs.

It is important to me that I have full time support for in the future, as both of my parents work full time and I am hoping to attend university this year or leave home to live independently.  I don’t want my parents to PA for me as no other 20 year old has their parents looking after them why  should this be different for me??? I want my parents to be parents to me and not my PA’S, I do not want to feel belittled and to be made to feel like a child.

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Supporting statement from CarersTrust

Saturday, February 2nd, 2013

 

Moira Fraser, Director of Policy at Carers Trust:

“Carers Trust is gravely concerned about the impact welfare benefit cuts will have on carers and their families. Despite assurances, disabled people and carers have not been protected from the Government cuts and instead are taking more than a fair share. Carers are seeing their cost of living rise alongside, for some carers, a cap on benefits and cuts to family income arising from changes to Disability Living Allowance. Together, these changes will have a disastrous impact on carers across the UK. 

The Government needs to publish a full analysis the impact and legacy of these cuts will have on carers and disabled people.”

Supporting statement from Carers UK

Wednesday, January 30th, 2013

carers_uk

 

Heléna Herklots, Chief Executive

of Carers UK:

 

“Carers fear finding themselves In the centre of a perfect storm, as, on top of cuts to already overstretched social care services, they may face a combination of cuts to disability benefits, changes to Council Tax Benefit and Housing Benefit and the introduction of the household benefit cap.

We are shocked and disappointed at the lack of adequate analysis of the impact all these changes will have on carers. There is the real risk that the combined impact will have devastating personal consequences for carers and their families but will also bring greater costs to society and the economy in the longer term. Government should urgently publish full analysis of the impact of their changes to benefits on carers and disabled people, taking account of simultaneous cuts to vital social care support.”

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Carers UK is gathering evidence about the financial costs of caring. They need carers’ stories on the extra living costs they face and the impact on their ability to earn

Full details -  https://www.surveymonkey.com/s/carerpanel

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Is UK Government in breach of its duty to respect human rights?

Wednesday, January 30th, 2013

Centre for welfare reform

The Centre for Welfare Reform  has already demonstrated that the fiscal impact of UK government policy targets cuts and income reductions on people in poverty and disabled people is extraordinarily severe. The overlapping impact of social care cuts and benefit cuts for people with the most severe disabilities means that the average burden from the cuts, per capita, is 19 times greater for people with the severest disabilities. This is a shocking state of affairs and an unprecedented attack on a minority group. It is obvious nonsense to suggest that no reasonable Cumulative Impact Assessment of the cuts could have been made. It is clear that the failure to make such an assessment puts the UK Government in breach of its duty to respect human rights.

Simon Duffy

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Baroness Hollins backs Report

Baroness Hollins back the latest report from The Centre for Welfare Reform:

A FAIR SOCIETY? – HOW THE CUTS TARGET DISABLED PEOPLE

Baroness Hollins says:

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How the cuts target disabled people by Simon Duffy

Thursday, January 17th, 2013

A Fair Society – How the cuts affect disabled people by Simon Duffy

Full details can be found hereThe Centre for Welfare Reform

Centre for welfare reform

The government seems to have made no effort to understand the cumulative impact

of its cuts on minority groups, especially those with the greatest needs. It has rejected

calls for a ‘Cumulative Impact Assessment’ of the cuts despite the obvious fact that

those with the most severe disabilities now face the combined impact of:

Social care cuts

Benefit cuts

Housing cuts

Regressive tax increases

For this reason The Centre for Welfare Reform, on behalf of the Campaign for a Fair

Society, has done its own analysis -

Using the government’s own figures, it is clear that by 2015, in England alone, local

government and housing will be cut by

£16.2 billion. This is a cut in real terms of 41.9%.

Social care for children and adults makes up

60% of all spending over which local

authorities have any control. Data collected over the past two years indicates that social

care has already been cut by nearly

£4 billion, and will be cut by £8 billion by 2015, a cut

of about 33%.

Benefits for disabled people and the poorest will also have been cut by

£18 billion, a cut

of about 20%.

When we look at the combined impact of all the cuts we find:

People in poverty (

21% of the population) bear 39% of all cuts.

Disabled people (

8% of the population) bear 29% of all cuts.

People with severest disabilities (

 

2% of the whole population) bear 15% of all cuts.

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The onslaught continues – sign Pat’s Petition

Monday, October 8th, 2012

Sign Pat’s petition here.  

Conservative conference is underway and by the hour we are hearing statements and interviews from government ministers regarding welfare reform and cuts. See links below

 It is even more vital now that we have all these issues debated in parliament.

Will Pat’s Petition achieve 100,000 by Nov 1st? We believe it will if we all push it forward as wide as possible.

The petition has reached over 50,000 signatures – quite incredible for this small group of unfunded friends with no large organisations behind them. But we need to reach 100,000 by the deadline at the end of the month.

As Pat says -  “That can sound quite daunting, but other petitions have done it. Anne Williams last year got 40,000 signatures on the very last day for her petition about her son Kevin who died at Hillsborough. Richard Branson had his support within a week. And the cuddly badgers achieved their target in weeks. If only people would support disabled people in the same way.”

 

link to Youtube video, click here -       Pat’s Petition

 

The group are asking people to be quick about taking actions:

Sign the petition at   http://epetitions.direct.gov.uk/petitions/20968

Check junk boxes for activation emails.

Share the petition link by e-newsletters, facebook, twitter – get to places where people are already online

Add to blogs, write letters to media and your MP

If you are attending A Future that Works Oct 20th march ensure the petition details are shared with fellow marchers

Grassroots groups have been extremely supportive and we ask you to give this a final push.

Campaign teams from charities to come on board and raise awareness to your memberships. Time is running out so you need do this quickly.

 

WE ARE ALL IN THIS TOGETHER

 

Links

1. David Cameron on Andrew Marr show

Q: Nick Clegg said there would be more austerity after 2015. Was he right?

Yes, says Cameron. The cuts will have to be decided before the election. The government will have to look at things like welfare

2. Iain Duncan Smith Guardian 19.26 pm

“This quote is from 19:26 Sunday -

“A delegate asks Duncan Smith if he could cut more from the welfare budget, saying that would be very popular with the public.

IDS says he’s cut more than any other secretary of state – £18bn – but these are “difficult” times.

Once he has reformed welfare, everyone will be able to recognise that those who are on benefits are genuine claimants, he says, and not scroungers.”

3. George Osborne plans to cut another £10bn from welfare budget

FOR FURTHER DETAILS OR IF YOU HAVE ANY IDEAS ON HOW TO HELP PLEASE CONTACT PAT – patspetition@gmail.com

 

 

 

Pat’s Petition – Urgent Call for Action

Sunday, September 2nd, 2012

Friends,

We have now reached the last two months for the epetition ( sign here ) and now, more than ever, we need your support.

Charities like Disability Rights UK, Carers Trust and Carers UK have added our flyer to their newsletters, and grassroots organisations including Disabled People Against Cuts, Spartacus, Act Now for Autism and many more  have promoted it.

You may already have done this in previous months. But can I ask you to repeat it?

Send it to your contacts, media organisations, charities, trade unions and local community organisations, anyone who can send it on further. Don’t worry about duplicating the message – they need to know we all want this to succeed.

With the Paralympics and the week of ATOS protests, as well as the recent TV programmes about the Work Capability Assessment, we can see that people are becoming more aware of the perfect storm that lies ahead. But we do not have much time to get this petition to 100,000.  Virgin Trains achieved their target within one week. The changes impacting on disabled people will affect far more people.

Now is the time to act.

I have copied the text of our flyer below – please use it and edit it to suit your situation. We recommend making sure you include the epetition link to make it easy for people to sign.

If you need more information, or want a formatted version of the flyer, please do just get in touch.

Thank you, Pat x

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Pat’s Petition

URGENT CALL FOR ACTION

SIGN THE PETITION AND PASS IT ON http://epetitions.direct.gov.uk/petitions/20968

Stop and review the cuts to benefits and services, which are falling disproportionately on disabled people, their carers and families

The petition is just one of many actions being taken by disabled people and their supporters. The idea is to get a debate in parliament. To force those dismantling our public services, rights and entitlements, to account for themselves. There is no illusion that the petition will stop anything by itself. But every small action joins with other actions, so that together they can make a difference.

A small group of volunteers has got this to over 44,000 signatures. Now we need to get it to 100,000 by November 1st.

Together WE can do this.

So please sign, and as important, send on to friends and colleagues. Add to e-newsletters, blogs, and social media platforms – spread the word.

Further information here – Pat’s Petition 

 Contact Pat – patspetition@gmail.com

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       Download a copy here   -    Call to Action sept 2nd

 

 

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The Best Birthday Present you can give me – YOUR SUPPORT

Friday, August 17th, 2012
       
  SIGN HERE –    PATS PETITION
 
There are a couple of very important dates rushing towards me. Oh yes I will be having a birthday – a big one. It has the numbers 0 and 6 in it and I leave you to put them in the right order. Of course, like so many others of my vintage, I have to wait a few more years util I actually ‘retire’ . That will be my new job description – ‘retired’. Forms where I used to leave blank because there wasn’t a category ‘disabled’ or ‘carer’ will now be completed in the usual way. ‘Retired’.’ On the same day will be my little granddaughter’s 1st birthday.
 

Hardest Hit event London

 
As if these 2 occasions weren’t enough yet another birthday awaits me. It will soon be one year since I, and 6 other ladies, joined together to discuss welfare reform and the idea of a petition was raised. Some of us had attended Hardest Hit events but we knew so many others had been unable to attend. This petition was for them and everyone else.
 
12 months ago my first blog telling you all how (more…)

The storm continues to rage around us

Monday, July 30th, 2012

These are challenging times for everyone, but especially for disabled people and carers. Cuts to benefits and services are coming our way from all directions creating the perfect storm.

Yet when we ask the DWP to carry out a Cumulative Impact Assessment of all these changes taken together Ms Miller refuses on the grounds it is too difficult and prefers to sit back and wait for the car crash. This just isn’t good enough. All new medicines, bridges, and vehicles have to be road-tested.

So how can they go ahead and conduct a live experiment on disabled people and carers without any estimates of what they are doing?

We all need to fight this together. Pat’s Petition needs your signatures. The petition could trigger government debate if we can achieve 100,000 signatures. If we all work together on this, 100,000 signatures for Pat’s Petition should be easily achievable. Because of the 40,000 signatures we have already the government is asking us to plan for a debate but we don’t have much time left to get the remaining signatures.

Dear Mrs Pat Onions

Looks like your e-petition “Stop and review the cuts to benefits and services which are falling disproportionately on disabled people, their carers and families” is gaining momentum.

If you do get to 100,000 signatures you will need an MP to support a debate.  You can find your local MP at http://findmymp.parliament.uk/. You can find more information about how the House of Commons deals with e-petitions on the Backbench Business Committee website at http://www.parliament.uk/bbcom.  If you need any more information, you can contact us at petitions@commonsleader.x.gsi.gov.uk. Thanks, HM Government e-petitions http://epetitions.direct.gov.uk/

Please help us now.

It’s desperately important that we show the government the strength we have if we work together. Pat’s Petition has brought together a group of independent disability organisations, academics and charities to carry out our own Cumulative Impact Assessment for disability – CIA-D. While we continue to press the government to carry out their own assessment of the changes, we are starting to gather evidence ourselves. It is still at an early stage but we hope to collect information for campaigners and journalists to show the cumulative impact of all these changes.

In the meantime please go out and get the signatures for Pat’s Petition.

All for one and one for all.

Together we can do this.

sign here  http://epetitions.direct.gov.uk/petitions/20968

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Please remember to watch 2 programmes this Monday evening. Panorama and Dispatches are both covering sickness and disability procedures.

Details can be found here