The official 2024 budget discussion.

13468923

Comments

  • Nightcity
    Nightcity Community member Posts: 2,426 Championing

    I Agree thoroughly with your interpretation here.

  • Nightcity
    Nightcity Community member Posts: 2,426 Championing

    looks like they expect it to take longer indeed, but going by every other rollout I'd be surprised if it wasn't paused at least once and if it was completed by 2027, their bull in a china shop approach always has and will create major backlogs and delays, they don't learn!

  • julievictoria
    julievictoria Community member Posts: 7 Contributor

    Does anyone know where we can read about how they plan to move us into work? I would like to read more about it.

  • Nightcity
    Nightcity Community member Posts: 2,426 Championing

    not yet we need to wait for this supposed white paper for that info.

  • Nightcity
    Nightcity Community member Posts: 2,426 Championing

    let's just be grateful he can't do anything else from his position.

  • Andi66
    Andi66 Community member Posts: 422 Empowering

    That's true, just hope kendall dosent take it on what he said

  • Nightcity
    Nightcity Community member Posts: 2,426 Championing

    she's just one person, I'm sure she'll be reigned in if she gets too excited in her role.

  • mangomungo
    mangomungo Community member Posts: 66 Empowering

    Hell get his karma in this life or the next. I’ll be glad to see the back of him. Bizarre thing is his siblings are a clinical psychologist and his sister does work for the UN, you’d think he’d have found some empathy somewhere.

  • Meg24
    Meg24 Community member Posts: 363 Trailblazing
    edited October 31
  • MW123
    MW123 Scope Member Posts: 816 Championing

    I’m curious about the idea that 'the battle has begun.' It seems challenging to engage in a battle without clear information on what we’re facing. Nobody actually knows what the proposals will be; they could even work in our favour. I believe it’s wise to hold off on reactions and speculation until we have more clarity.

  • WhatThe
    WhatThe Community member, Scope Member Posts: 2,375 Championing
    edited October 31

    These plans have been in place since 2016, following the failed 2011-2014 national reassessment programme.

    We do know that plans for a single "health assessment" and payment of a single "health element" will be introduced from April 2025 alongside the current UC migration programme which involves reassessing existing claimants.

  • judie
    judie Community member Posts: 122 Empowering

    GB News and Mike Parry are hating the whole budget so imo it can't be all bad ✊️🙂

  • WhatThe
    WhatThe Community member, Scope Member Posts: 2,375 Championing

    reform the WCA and make fewer people eligible for LCWRA.

    The disgrace is that we're still being sheltered from the facts. Keeping this buried for the last decade hasn't helped anyone and as far as I can see, we're already too late.

  • whistles
    whistles Community member Posts: 1,795 Championing

    I actually can't see how that's going to work. Those who are assessing are not going to have the qualifications or knowledge to decide what someone can or can't do, for every single condition (s) a person could have. Even a g.p won't know that, that's why you have specialized fields.

    My understanding and I accept this is just my opinion so correct me someone if this wrong. You have those who are longterm sick and cannot work, that's what the esa support group is for, then you have those who are significantly disabled which is what DLA was for. It was for those with severe, significant impairments eventing day to day life beyond the ability to work.

    I do wonder if since covid we've simply had a huge increase of claimants that weren't seen face to face. I guess it does make sense to send people for a WCA like they are doing for PIP. However removing the mobility part as society has people working from home isn't the answer. You need to attend the interview and interact with people, have a computer.

  • WhatThe
    WhatThe Community member, Scope Member Posts: 2,375 Championing
    edited October 31

    whistles, you are correct that the health assessors are not medically qualified, nor are the decision-makers.

    You have those who are longterm sick and cannot work, that's what the esa support group is for,

    The Work-Related Activity Group (WRAG) was also for those who are long-term sick with limited capacity for work. Thousands were incorrectly and unlawfully found 'fit-for-work' or placed in the WRAG during the first national reassessment programme of 2011-2014.

    That's where we've all gone wrong, misunderstanding these two groups and their qualifying criteria. Not by accident I should add!

  • JF7891
    JF7891 Scope Member Posts: 64 Contributor

    My theory is, the crux of the entire matter lies in the introduction of Integrated Care Services to monitor our health more closely and report to government under the disguise of closing the gaps health services received vs other individuals, and yes this will include some voluntary organisations such as telephone befriender service as well as the local council collecting yellow bags of bio-waste, as well as any 'social' workers, GPs, and other local staff, collecting data. The top-tier (yeah there is literal tiers) of the decision makers will be the government first, then the NHS, then everyone else, in that order.

    I get checking for fraud, however, neither the Labour nor Tories are out for claiming back moneys, their number one priority was always cuts, cuts, cuts.

    What it will come down to, is like it stated in the paper on the 2023-2024 study about benefits, WCA and all elements is this: Pensioners (or people who have supposedly had a long "working record") will get an extra money top-up, saved by cuts to people who came after them, the further and further disabled by a world left behind by said pensioners.

    They are basically drawing a line in the sand to the onslaught of bigger numbers of all older disabled people coming after the baby-boomers onwards to limit the damage done to public finances and the NHS by an ever increasing aging population year after year ever since 1945.

    So they have to decide what's the lesser of the evils, go after the rogue employers and thieving wealthy or have more justification for benefit cuts, and their statistical analysists probably gave the prediction that overpopulation outpaces wealth usurpation. I only agree with them on the fact that usurpation can be remedied at any time and quickly (especially as a means to an end) by legislation and executive powers, however overpopulation is unstoppable, so are diseases and disabilities, hence they demand more investigative powers to clarify the long-asked question by the experts: what is the definition of essential needs in benefits and to what extend can we establish a statutory right to the benefits of essentials in the charters of the DWP? In order to stop the constant battle in society of pro or contra benefits during this disabled population onslaught and to establish rules for cuts, this is what they came up with.

  • Meg24
    Meg24 Community member Posts: 363 Trailblazing

    This is the old system and it might have continued to work if out of work sickness benefit levels had kept up with the cost of living. As it stands, basic UC is not enough to survive on short term, people who can't find work quickly go into debt, get behind with their rent and it's creating a cycle of people having to take part time insecure work just to keep their heads above water. In 2017, the Tory government slashed the LCW benefit so that anyone short term (2 years or less) sick from work would only recieve this inadequate basic rate. So hundreds and thousands of people were faced with months or years of increasing debt with no way to increase their income.

    I think it's this that has led to the increase in LCWRA awards, because only then can people have sufficient income to actually feed themselves and pay their rent. LCW rates have made people much sicker, hence then eligible for LCWRA under substantial risk rules, because being so poor & under constant threat of being sanctioned makes you ill.

    If you have any chance of managing a disability of any kind, LCWRA on it's own is not enough, hence people have been forced to make PIP claims when in previous times it might not have occurred to people. For example when I was last in work unbeknownst to me I could have been claiming DLA but I didn't know it. It was only when I became to ill to work that I researched what extra help I could get.

    If we had adequate short term sickness benefits which properly supported people until they were ready to return to work, the PIP bill wouldn't be as high imo.