PIP assessment
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So got my letter through from dwp who have awarded me the standard rate for mobility. Basically £22 per week. Nothing for anything else even though I need help with everything! Rather disappointed but I guess better than nothing...
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Username_removed said:So challenge it.
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I don’t think I have the fight in me...just went through so many forms and interviews for esa. Still nothing found on last mri. 8 months of extreme pain with no diagnosis. Just fed up with it all.
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swifty said:I don’t think I have the fight in me...just went through so many forms and interviews for esa. Still nothing found on last mri. 8 months of extreme pain with no diagnosis. Just fed up with it all.
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Username_removed said:
But the reality is that there are very few organisations in some areas which has created a 'desert'.
Having been brought up for the first 40 years of my life in and around the towns of Lancashire (Blackburn, Rochdale, Oldham & Bury) I am acutely aware that there used to be Welfare Rights organisations in abundance.
Now living in the rural parts of Kent for the last 30 years where even if you would like to go out for a meal on a Saturday night, journeys of one hour are common.
Welfare Rights organisations do exist but they are so inundated with people wanting help that the queues mean waits of 1/2 months are common and that is just to be registered for help (as with the CAB) It can then be another 4/8 weeks before you get to see anybody. Time limits imposed by the DWP make it impossible to wait that length of time.
AgeUK had to close up due to loss of funding. It has since reopened but no longer has a quality welfare rights service - their local website says that they offer a service of helping to fill out forms only
Council run services were cut some years ago
As I have mentioned in the past, I have had the experience of having a Professor of Law from the local university represent me at a Tribunal for a Council Tax appeal. He was utterly amazing in the way that he briefed me before hand but also how he handled the legal aspects of the hearing. I have never seen so many books of law on one table spread between the Judge, Counsel for the local authority and my rep. I just sat back and let it all happen. I came out of there thousands of pounds better off and the local authority being told to revise their guidance.
Sadly they no longer deal with these mundane types of claims - their time is now taken up by the massive volumes of appeals etc for illegal immigrants held in our local detention centres. Not only do we have the quiet beaches where they land as was the case last year in Dymchurch, but also the Channel Tunnel and the docks at Dover.
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Got my brother in laws assessment report was comparing to his application for pip and drs letters I think he has got someone else’s report nothing coincides with application and drs letter he was going to give up as he can’t handle stress but I’ve found someone to represent him at his appeal just a waiting game now
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Username_removed said:.
Time limits are easily surmountable nowadays. Late MRs are relatively straightforward and you have to be really trying to not get a late appeal admitted. They’re just administrative deadlines.
Love the illegal immigrants bit. There’s actually no such thing in law.
They are not all administrative deadlines - there is the overriding 13 month deadline for instance.
For the ordinary guy in the street I would imagine that popping off a MR application 12 months after the decision letter date would not be acceptable to the DWP. If it is that easy and the DWP play ball up to the 13 month deadline why on earth do people continually press the point that they must get the MR application in within the 30 days?
Likewise appeals to the MOJ, so they tell us, must be in within 30 days of the MR decision. Why bother if you really have a 13 month window that you can use?
In the past and always due to illness/hospital admissions, and having gone beyond the 30 day limit to appeal (pre MR) I have put the files away and had to make a second application. Over the past 18 years I have never always agreed to the decisions made but because of my medical issues I have probably missed appeal time limits three times, one was when I was late in challenging the IIDB decision not to pay the 7 years of arrears. On that occasion I was in hospital with complete organ failure due to a severe acute Pancreatitis attack.
The advice that you have just given should it not be included in the DWP literature that you get with a decision? Should it not be more widely known? Or once again is it the case that you have to find a Welfare Rights organisation to enlighten you?
I really do wonder how many Joe's on the street know that you have no need to worry about any seemingly 'official' notification of the 30 day deadlines - you just need to get it in by the 13 month deadline.
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Username_removed said:It’s not optimism at all. Legally there’s no such thing as an MR. The phrase doesn’t exist in the legislation. There’s just “in time” applications (effectively the MR) or “any time: reviews. If you can show a ground - ignorance, mistake etc. - then you get a review. The only thing that’s changed is that in 2013 you became obligated to have the MR before the appeal. DWP then tried to kill appeals by arguing that a refusal to MR attracted no right of appeal. That was ended earlier this year by new caselaw which now means that DWP now find themselves with a whole pile of appeals on the back of MRs they previously refused. They’ve now slowly moved back to making MRs meaningful again in order to reduce the number of appeals and so pretty much MR will be given the go ahead.
Yes the 13th month time limit is absolute but that’s not hard to get round of you asl for an any time revision (as above); get refused but thus get a new decision against which to appeal.
Between 1 month and 13 there’s no issue. You used to have to show sodcoal reasims for late appeal. You no longer have to. You just have to show that your appeal has merit (that it’s not hopeless) and that it would be in the interests of justice for it to be admitted. DWP get asked if they would object to it being admitted. I’ve not heard of them doing so in years now unless the appeal truly is hopeless.
As I say the issue is not advice deserts. It’s poor information and people being easily discouraged.
Are you saying that a decision made in 2011 that was a revision to a 2004 decision can still be 'made to reopen' if I asked for an any time review - ie to test the validity of the 2011 decision that because no appeal was lodged at the time the 2004 decision was made they cannot make the backpayment for the 7 years?
If so why did the DWP tell me in 2012 (within the 13 month period) that I could not appeal as it was not an official error that caused the 2004 poor decision - it was my fault because I didn't submit the evidence at the right time errr I was in hospital for months.
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Hi everyone, please can people be considerate of others opinions. I know you all want to support each other which is great. If we could be mindful in the future I am sure all members would appreciate that, thanks.Scope
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Get help to fight it it’s worth it.
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Hi I remember years ago I had to go for medical or assessment whatever it was in the 90s it was Christmas Eve and the doctor said you have enough with your mental health problems we won’t go into the physical ones wished me a merry Christmas and kept my DLA it wouldn’t happen now
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I have requested a copy of the report the nurse sent. I only got 8 points as I am unable to walk any distance. May need to contact citizens advice or a place called advice shop for help should I decide to appear.
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Username_removed said:I’m not saying anything other than what I originally said, which is that I think that when someone gets a decision they’re not happy with and don’t feel like they have the fight then when someone like myself suggests that there are people out there who will do the fighting for you then it’s singularly unhelpful to keep coming on threads with negativity.
Unfortunately that level of support no longer exists in many place in the UK - the South East in particular is one of those areas.
Let me put it this way if there was such a service that would take up the fight for me then I would have not needed to close my PIP claim down.
The service you suggest exists does not do so everywhere.
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If you take the South East as an area there are three Scope centres. One in South East Essex, another in South East London and the third in Sussex at Hove near Brighton.
If you look at the map of Kent and unless you live in Dartford, Bromley maybe or near to Rye then the rest of the area is vast and has no cover.
It may be just a quirk and I certainly agree that the rest of the UK is probably better served.
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Lots of charitable and local organisations are springing up in response to demand for help with DWP. Some housing associations am due council now have their own welfare rights or money advice teams. Some volunteer centres offer cab advice. Start with your local Jobcentreplus, council or library and the two should be able to sign post you. The new theres they sites online that can provide advice. There is hope. There is help and there’s can be success.
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debbiedo49 said:Lots of charitable and local organisations are springing up in response to demand for help with DWP. Some housing associations am due council now have their own welfare rights or money advice teams. Some volunteer centres offer cab advice. Start with your local Jobcentreplus, council or library and the two should be able to sign post you. The new theres they sites online that can provide advice. There is hope. There is help and there’s can be success..
Our Council, and I should know, have closed down all of the council run advice centres due to reducing costs. We, as a council, refused to provide anymore funding to AgeUK (which caused it to close it's doors although it reopened on a skeleton basis) and reduced the amount given to the CAB for the same reason.
However I have not thought of the Jobcentre or the library (we are also in the process of closing that down early next year). The public loos and gardens are still safe for now!
I have to go to the library next week so will ask and as the JC+ is close by, I will ask there as well.
Can but try I suppose even if it is to be told that there is nothing available.
Advice web sites are good for what they are but it is better to talk a problem through face to face.
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Username_removed said:There’s no such thing as an advice web site. Web sites can give information. People give advice. They are profoundly different.
Even if you just look at say the CAB website it offers advice.
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