Posts Tagged ‘disability living allowance’
Sunday, April 7th, 2013
As a gardener I am always looking for new ideas to add to my garden. Inspiration comes in all shapes and sizes. Like most of us who enjoy plants and trees – each new addition means a little less lawn to cut as we find a space for our latest acquisition.
Up here in Scotland we have some beautiful natural stone. Most of it huge and attached to a mountain but my garden has its own fair share.
Granite is plentiful in many areas. As such it is used a lot in buildings as it is one of the hardest stones known to man. And woman who digs it out of her garden!

A cairn is often used to mark the tops of mountains – people who reach the summit can add a stone. They are also used to mark paths keeping travellers safely away from the dangers of the edges. The lasting durability of the stone cairn is a symbol to those that follow behind.
So the idea of building a cairn in the garden was born.and it will represent those 62,709 people who signed Pat’s Petition before it closed.
I laid the first stone and it will be added to as and when weather, time and availability of gathered stones allow.

I don’t think I can count 62,709 but will use one stone per 100 signatures. The strength and hardness of these stones represent us all – disabled people, carers and their families.
PP closed 4 months ago but we are still inundated with requests from people wanting to add their support. To this end a space has been created here. New stones will continue to be added to the cairn as these numbers increase.
Like the cairn which won’t crumble into the soil – we stand united together and will grow and grow.
***************************
There are still some important petitions open on the government website.
WowPetition sign here – further details of the campaign group here
Stop the Abolition of Disability Living Allowance for Personal Independence Payments – sign here
.
Tags:benefits, disability living allowance, employment support allowance, esther mcvey, hardest hit, iain duncan smith, independent living, Pat's Petition, personal independence payment, welfare reform, work capability assessment
Posted in Pat's Debate, Pat's Petition | 1 Comment »
Monday, April 1st, 2013

The government is bringing in so many cuts that a Cumulative Impact Assessment is far too difficult
April Fool – it’s actually really very simple
At last more and more people are waking up to the realisation of the horrors lying in wait for disabled people, their carers and families. At last there are debates in Parliament with dozens of MPs relating true stories from their constituents. They all tell the same story. How disabled people, those with serious illness, and carers are being hit the hardest.
And this is just the end of the beginning.
Six more drastic cuts come on line today.
It is the perfect storm
That’s why I’m so proud of Pat’s Petition and what we achieved together.Pat’s Petition asked the government to “stop and look at the way all these changes would add up and impact on the lives of disabled people and their carers.” 62,709 people signed in the year that was open to us.
But the government refused. They say it is too difficult. You can read their response on Pat’s Petition here . They are conducting one enormous social experiment and leaving it for history to tell them what they did to us.
How can they get away with this?
Well – they can’t get away with it. We won’t let them. And neither will you.
The government are pretending that it is amazingly complicated when we are asking for something that is really simple. We are asking for an assessment of the impact on individual disabled people. There is no reason why they can’t run example cases through all the benefit changes one by one and show us, and the voters, exactly what they are doing to individual disabled people.
Scope/Demos have released research on these changes. And it isn’t as impossibly difficult as the government maintain.
We aren’t going anywhere until the government face up to their responsibilities and produce a projection of what their policies are, and will be doing, to disabled people and their carers.
Pat’s team is working with many other campaign groups and we are meeting with government statisticians to discuss how they can carry out a Cumulative Impact Assessment.
The WOW petition is still active and you can sign that here. Their number of supporters is growing daily. Please share this petition as wide as possible asking others to sign and share too. You will note they have had a preliminary response in which again the government states -
“Cumulative impact analysis is not being withheld – it is very difficult to do accurately and external organisations have not produced this either.”
This is NOT acceptable.
We still receive many emails and requests from people wanting to support this campaign. To this end a space has been created here to add your support, comments can be added too.
This Cumulative Impact Assessment
is going to happen
.
Tags:benefits, carerwatch, cumulative impact assessment, disability, disability living allowance, employment support allowance, hardest hit, iain duncan smith, independent living, Pat's Petition, personal independence payment, social care, universal credit, welfare reform, work capability assessment
Posted in Pat's Petition, welfare reform | 4 Comments »
Tuesday, February 5th, 2013
Received from Inclusion Scotland
Change in Assessment Criteria:
In December 2012 the UK Government announced an unexpected change in the PIP Assessment criteria. This change reduces the distance someone can walk (safely) before qualifying for the Enhanced Mobility element of PIP from 50 metres to 20 metres (the Enhanced Mobility element of PIP is equivalent to the Higher Rate Mobility Component of DLA).
The change has contributed to a substantial increase in the numbers expected not to qualify for the Enhanced Mobility element of PIP – up from 250,000 to 428,000 (a 70% increase).
Using the DWP’s own UK-wide projections of expected “winners” and “losers” arising from the replacement of DLA by PIP Inclusion Scotland have now calculated the equivalent figures for Scotland. These are set out below.
One piece of good news is that the majority of disabled people on life-time or long term awards of DLA will not now be re-assessed for PIP until after October 2015. However the following groups will be assessed before then -
* disabled people making new claims
* people currently in receipt of DLA whose awards end before Oct. 2015
* people whose condition/level of impairment changes before then to a level where it amounts to a change of circumstances requiring reassessment.
Mobility Component:
Using DWP projections, by 2018, Inclusion Scotland estimates that (more…)
Tags:benefits, carerwatch, cumulative impact assessment, disability living allowance, employment support allowance, hardest hit, inclusion scotland, mobility, personal independence payment, universal credit, welfare reform, work capability assessment
Posted in Pat's Debate, Pat's Petition | 2 Comments »
Tuesday, February 5th, 2013

The ideology of cuts affecting the most vulnerable people in our society is totally out of character for a nation that traditionally prides itself on bringing support to those in crisis. Over the years, the UK has led the way in terms of people and organisations who have gone way beyond the call of duty in terms of supporting others and treating them with the dignity and respect they deserve. This is a country that after years of struggle, made health, education and general wellbeing a basic human right.
This coalition government has taken the decision to fly in the face of these hard fought traditions and has instead, become hell bent on passing the responsibility and burden of the national debt onto those who can least afford it. As a result of this policy, we now see people struggling to make ends meet, forced into the ever-willing arms of payday loan companies who, on the face of it appear to be offering help and financial security. The reality is that they push people into further poverty and desperation.
The introduction of the benefit freeze and the accompanying diatribes spewed by government ministers was designed to (more…)
Tags:benefits, blindness, carers, cumulative impact assessment, disability, disability living allowance, employment support allowance, personal independence payment, universal credit, welfare reform
Posted in Pat's Debate, Pat's Petition | 2 Comments »
Tuesday, February 5th, 2013

To all at Pat’s Petition
Several years ago, our groups took our concerns over welfare reform to our Local Implementation Team meeting. Our main worry was that the move to support in primary care implied that we would no longer receive support for claims for disability benefits through letters from psychiatrists and care coordinators. At the time, this felt disastrous, and we anticipated a local solution. We were told to take up our worries directly with the DWP.
Since then, we have become increasingly alarmed by the redesign of the NHS, welfare reform, slashes to local authority budgets, loss of legal aid, and other changes, all at the same time as unprecedented economic austerity which has had an impact on local voluntary sector services. This is all too much at the same time, and is surely a disaster waiting to happen.
We have (more…)
Tags:benefits, carers, disability, disability living allowance, employment support allowance, universal credit, welfare reform
Posted in Pat's Debate, Pat's Petition | No Comments »
Tuesday, February 5th, 2013

Early Wednesday afternoon Feb 6th, will see 5 of us meeting with Liam Byrne in London. 4 of us from PP with the 5th member from VIA Scotland – she will ensure Pat arrives safely and in a timely manner.
We are backed by others who can’t make the journey, and our memories of our friend who died just as we reached the petition end.
It is incredible to think that although PP has worked together for 18 months, and in a larger on line group before that, most of us have never been able to meet each other. We will spend a few hours together then leave for our respective homes spread many hundreds of miles apart.
We will have with us printed statements of your support, your real life stories, over 62,700 signatures and many questions to be answered. We have prepared as much as we can for what will undoubtedly be an interesting meeting with Liam.
Can we ask you to pledge your tweets tomorrow to this meeting. Hashtag #TeamPP , especially from 2pm onwards when the meeting starts.
This is to represent not just those attending this meeting,
but each and every supporter/signature/group/charity.
This list below is not complete, please accept apologies if we have not as yet added your name or that of groups/organisations you belong to. It will be updated over next few days.
Tags:benefits, carerwatch, cumulative impact assessment, disability, disability living allowance, employment support allowance, hardest hit, iain duncan smith, independent living, Pat's Petition, personal independence payment, TeamPP, universal credit, welfare reform
Posted in Pat's Debate, Pat's Petition | 5 Comments »
Tuesday, February 5th, 2013
A personal statement by Brian Barefield.
1. About me:
I am a 63-year-old male and I live alone in a one-bedroom flat which I have occupied since 2001.
I have two recognised forms of disability: the first is “cyclical depression”, a form of bipolar depression. I have lived with this condition since I was a teenager and apart from a three-month stay in a residential community in 1987 I have not missed work because of it.
The second and most disabling condition led to my enforced retirement from work in 2004. “Degenerative Disc Disease” is a condition similar to osteoporosis. It is gradually destroying discs in the lumbar region of my spine causing the spine to “crumble”. Arthritis occupies the spaces left by destroyed discs and puts pressure on various nerves and, to some extent, on the spinal-cord. In addition to affecting my mobility this second condition means I live with continuous chronic back pain and Sciatica, and, because the degenerative nature of the condition means I wake with a different “disability” each morning, I experience occasional bouts of encopresis and/or enuresis.
Because of my inability to adjust to the requirements of formal education – caused by what I now realise were early symptoms of my developing mental illness – I left school in 1965 when I was 15 years old and embarked on a journey which led to me achieving my true academic potential when I was 40 years old.
In a nutshell, during my teens and early twenties I made (more…)
Tags:cumulative impact assessment, disability, disability living allowance, Pat's Petition, personal independence payment, universal credit, welfare reform
Posted in Pat's Petition | 5 Comments »
Monday, February 4th, 2013
Received from Carole Rutherford on behalf of Act Now for Autism

The Welfare Reform Bill is impacting in a negative way within the autism community both financially and emotionally.
We fully support the team at Pat’s Petition. There has never been a greater need to pause before continuing with measures that are having a catastrophic impact within our community.
Adults and families living with autism are finding it harder to cope with the changes every day. We were told that the reforms would ensure that those with the greatest needs would be taken care of, this is not what is happening. We are hearing from adults with autism on a daily basis who are terrified about the prospect of a face to face assessment without anyone to enable them to communicate effectively.
Adults with autism do not have the ‘historic’ evidence or otherwise that we are hearing will be necessary. The bedroom tax is set to have a massive impact on families who cannot safely allow a child with autism to share a bedroom with their siblings. Families are going to be penalised for having a child with a disability.
It was once said that the moral test of Government is how that Government treats those who are in the dawn of life, the children; those who are in the twilight of life, the elderly; and those who are in the shadows of life, the sick, the needy and the disabled. Our current Government is morally bankrupt.
We need to be assured that Labour will not show the same lack or care and understanding towards the sick, needy and disabled
Tags:act now for autism, autism, benefits, carerwatch, disability, disability living allowance, employment support allowance, hardest hit, personal independence payment, social care, welfare reform, work capability assessment
Posted in autism, Pat's Debate, Pat's Petition | 4 Comments »
Monday, February 4th, 2013
Received from We are Spartacus

Disabled and sick people are being hit by a huge range of cuts and changes to benefits – be they general or disability-specific, means-tested or universal – as well as tightening eligibility criteria and increased charges for social care support. Whilst the poorest are undoubtedly suffering the most, almost every disabled or sick person in the UK, and their family, is affected by the cuts and changes.
The Coalition Government is moving all the goalposts; secure support we’ve come to rely on, that we were told would be there as long as we need it, has been thrown into doubt. And not content with these cuts and policy changes, the Government stands by whilst the media portrays us as malingerers and scroungers, misinforming the British public and ensuring support for its abandonment of disabled and sick people.
If the Labour Party truly believes disabled and sick people should be supported to live independent lives, it needs to nail its colours to the mast and shout it from the rooftops. We don’t have anyone else to fight for us against this Government’s policies; please don’t let us down.
Jane Young
Tags:benefits, cumulative impact assessment, disability, disability living allowance, employment support allowance, hardest hit, mobility, Pat's Petition, personal independence payment, universal credit, we are spartacus, welfare reform
Posted in Pat's Debate, Pat's Petition, welfare reform | 3 Comments »
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
Tags:cumulative impact assessment, disability living allowance, dpac, independent living, personal independence payment, universal credit, welfare reform
Posted in care crisis, Pat's Debate, Pat's Petition, welfare reform | 2 Comments »