Cheaper to have a MR & appeal than for the DWP & assessors to spend the time doing a proper job
Options
gruber
Posts: 29 Listener
Hey everyone I am new on here. This seems a good source of information after looking around other sites. I don't have any immediate questions as such as my next assessment for PIP in next year.
But I have been reading B&W and there is a piece on there that shows that the DWP and assessors don't care about doing a good job. For them it is cheaper to fail people as the costs of the appeals and MRs are less than the time it would take the case managers and assessors to do a proper job like review all of the evidence before making a decision.
Is this true? I think the best course of action then is to get to the appeal people asap Don't bother spending time worry about the claim form or the assessment
But I have been reading B&W and there is a piece on there that shows that the DWP and assessors don't care about doing a good job. For them it is cheaper to fail people as the costs of the appeals and MRs are less than the time it would take the case managers and assessors to do a proper job like review all of the evidence before making a decision.
Is this true? I think the best course of action then is to get to the appeal people asap Don't bother spending time worry about the claim form or the assessment
Comments
-
gruber said:Hey everyone I am new on here. This seems a good source of information after looking around other sites. I don't have any immediate questions as such as my next assessment for PIP in next year.
But I have been reading B&W and there is a piece on there that shows that the DWP and assessors don't care about doing a good job. For them it is cheaper to fail people as the costs of the appeals and MRs are less than the time it would take the case managers and assessors to do a proper job like review all of the evidence before making a decision.
Is this true? I think the best course of action then is to get to the appeal people asap Don't bother spending time worry about the claim form or the assessment
Be all you can be, make every day count. Namaste -
O my god my form was done by CAB and correctly filled in along with relevant evidence but if there not going to read your evidence how is that right and even when you do the MR and point that out 9 times out of 10 still go with the assessment how is that right.
-
I'm not sure that mine was, so I've asked Welfare Rights for a copy of it so I can have a look as the assessor says in his report several times "didn't state it on the questionnaire". I have a different officer now so he's going to try and help me with it all when the decision comes through.
Oh and there was evidence with it, more than there was the first time around lol. -
So it is all down to the assessor that looks at the claim and whether the claim is so convincing that they would have a hard job going against it. Those then get the award they should have.
The rest that are refused which appears to be about 45% of the claims made are then in this limbo land.
-
All I know is that with my first benefit claim there was little info on the form, one or two letters for evidence and I was awarded PIP enhanced based more or less on my mental health, this was in 2014, fast forward to 2019, I had an assessment last month and the assessor has decided that I no longer have mental health problems, dropped the rate to standard for both and made it about my physical health plus there's a lot of discrepancies in the report, how an assessor thinks he could possibly know better than the claimant, their son, the gp they had been seeing for over 10 years and a psychiatrist is beyond me and all because he did his MSE and stated that he declared I wasn't a certain way for 50% of the time.. LOL, you can really tell that in 60 - 65 minutes right? I have to wait for the decision letter before Welfare Rights can help with the MR (if I do need to do one) and the complaint which I am going to do regardless of me getting anywhere with it or not.
-
From what I have read it is cheaper for the DWP to let this happen than it is to have the decision makers spend more time with the case trying to make the correct decision first time. If that is actually true, then there is no incentive for the assessor to put themselves out and do a proper job.
-
1) Person is awarded PIP first time.Persons involved-1 Case Manager1 Assessor2) Person not awarded PIP and proceeds to tribunalPersons involved-1 Case Manager for the original decision1 Case Manager for the mandatory reconsideratin stage1 Case Manager pre-appeal1 Case Manager post-appeal1 Assessor3 panel members at the tribunal (including GP and judge and related fees/salary)1 DWP representative at tribunalLegal bod within DWP to decide whether to request statements of reason etcHow is it cheaper to let it go to appeal?
Brightness
Categories
- All Categories
- 13K Start here and say hello!
- 6.6K Coffee lounge
- 69 Games lounge
- 385 Cost of living
- 4.3K Disability rights and campaigning
- 1.9K Research and opportunities
- 199 Community updates
- 9.2K Talk about your situation
- 2.1K Children, parents, and families
- 1.6K Work and employment
- 768 Education
- 1.7K Housing and independent living
- 1.4K Aids, adaptations, and equipment
- 586 Dating, sex, and relationships
- 363 Exercise and accessible facilities
- 737 Transport and travel
- 31.6K Talk about money
- 4.4K Benefits and financial support
- 5.2K Employment and Support Allowance (ESA)
- 17.1K PIP, DLA, and AA
- 4.9K Universal Credit (UC)
- 6.2K Talk about your impairment
- 1.8K Cerebral palsy
- 868 Chronic pain and pain management
- 180 Physical and neurological impairments
- 1.1K Autism and neurodiversity
- 1.2K Mental health and wellbeing
- 317 Sensory impairments
- 818 Rare, invisible, and undiagnosed conditions
Do you need advice on your energy costs?
Scope’s Disability Energy Support service is open to any disabled household in England or Wales in which one or more disabled people live. You can get free advice from an expert adviser on managing energy debt, switching tariffs, contacting your supplier and more. Find out more information by visiting our
Disability Energy Support webpage.