I’m going to submit my claim for UC next week, I don’t want to wait any longer
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I'm exhausted so I'll wish you a good night's sleep and we'll chat another day😴
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You have a good sleep as well. 👍💤🛌😴🥱
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What do other members think 🤔💭 of those with incurable conditions (like mine, autism) being reassessed on Personal Independence Payment every few years? It would be good to get some thoughts. 🤨🧐
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I am deserving of every penny of the current £737.20 award I get. It’s the maximum amount possible (enhanced rate daily living component, enhanced rate mobility component).
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I’ve been getting the maximum payment for a few years now, a big improvement on the amount I was getting from DLA/Disability Living Allowance.
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I just don’t think those with disabilities/conditions that won’t ever improve should experience reassessments every couple of years. It’s stress they don’t need.
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You shouldn’t need to keep telling Personal Independence Payment, “oh I’m still autistic. I haven’t got better whatsoever. My needs are still very much the same”. PIP have all the information ℹ️ they need to know about me. Why should I be made to keep repeating myself to them?!
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My current PIP award was extended to March 2028 last year in March. The next review for me is still a long time off (March 2027) but the thought that I’ll have to tell PIP in just over 2 years’ time that I’m still the same autistic person, it’s so exasperating. Can’t help but feel frustrated.
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I didn’t have to do this on Disability Living Allowance. I had an ‘indefinite award’ and that was the thing I liked about DLA, despite not getting the maximum payment.
It makes very little sense to retest and retest claimants with incurable conditions/disabilities. It’s so unfair, it should change.1 -
The DWP, the assessors, they live in ‘cloud cuckoo land’ to think that there’s even a remote possibility that our incurable condition/disability will improve from one reassessment to the next. 😡🤬
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I love your posts @ChrisSCOPEhtfc94 🙂
Especially all the emojis😻
I am not autistic but I get how your writing has to be perfect as I do have a thing about apostrophes in the wrong place:
I do have 5 kids with autism. I think my husband also might be autistic and, I guess to have all of our children affected, I might be carrying a recessive gene - and then there is my apostrophe thing (!)
With regard to being reassessed for PIP, I just have my 26yr old lad on PIP (well, he has just transferred this month to Scotland's ADP)
He was on a 5 year award and I think, in his case, as he is still learning new skills it was reasonable.
He has grown in confidence over the past 5 years. He still does the exact same activities and will still only board the exact same bus but he now has a little bit of paid employment!
He has been volunteering in a cafe that provides work for disabled people for 8 years now and he has got pretty good at it. I had a 'phone call out of the blue to say they wanted to pay him for 6 hours' worth of work weekly.
He has even learned how to use the coffee machine!
He couldn't do that 5 years ago. Who knows, one day he might have the speed and skills to work at Costa!
When his medical report came back to say why he had been placed in LCWRA, it was awful for me as a Mum to see him practically written off at the age of 21.
But, in fact, aside from his paid work he also has an additional 3 days each week of voluntary work so he definitely can do more than they thought.
And, although he will always be autistic with learning difficulties, he can learn new things so it's perfectly possible an award decision made when he was 21yrs old is going to change as he goes forward.
I suppose it depends on individual circumstances. I do think a 10 year review might be more realistic for autistic adults though. But it is amazing what progress can be made with the right support👍
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I am a big fan of emojis @anisty 🤣, I use them a lot 🤣.
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I’m looking forward to being financially better off from next month @anisty. I’ll be largely left alone like I was on Employment & Support Allowance. I’d expect that for someone who’s in the LCRWA group and doesn’t have to look or prepare for work.
The only thing that I expect to happen in the future, whenever that may be, is one of those reviews to check you are below 👇🔻⬇️ £6,000 in capital/savings.
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People do get daunted by those reviews @anisty but I’ll just go with the flow and just provide what they ask for, a few months’ worth of bank statements. I’ve never had anywhere £6,000 in the bank. As long as I stay below that figure, I would be fine anyway 👍🤣. Only when you have capital/savings above £6,000 does your UC award start being affected with deductions.
I’d prefer to not have one of those reviews for some time but like I said, I’ll just go with the flow. 👍
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Ps my lad is double enhanced award too but I think he will be able to come off enhanced mobility soon as he has learned more routes in our small town. So he can get round some familiar routes himself and has actually managed to keep calm when the bus broke down.
Though my daughter saw him in a blind panic recently when the bus took an unexpected route and she had to keep him right. And he can be a bit erratic crossing roads with no designated crossing point.
His ADP is due for re assessment in August this year so I will mention it to them then that he has become more able in a familiar place. He definitely won't need that enhanced payment for life.
So - improvements are possible and, with a condition like autism, the spectrum is so very wide.
My other kids (all adult) don't have the cognitive disability so they should be able to support themselves and never need the support of benefits🤞🤞
This is why PIP is not awarded on diagnosis but on how your disability affects you🙂
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Appreciate the opinions @anisty 👍😀😊 but I personally believe people like me shouldn’t have to keep telling PIP the same info ℹ️ they’ve already got. I think the system needs to be changed in that regard.
Thank goodness 😌😅 that my next review is still over 2 years away, March 2027. 📅🗓️📆
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Lol yeah well that's another story on my son's UC - stopped for now due to too much capital. Though they failed to deduct COL so i have an MR in.
His spends are too low for his award as he still lives at home. Most of what he does is free as it is centred round his support group. His bus is free too.
If he ever can leave home, he will need more money but he has been turned down for supported housing due to not having night needs.
That's another area where he might improve. They are offering a support package in a normal council tenancy. Hopeless just now but he might get there one day . . .
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As you’ve probably seen @anisty, I won’t be getting my overall UC entitlement (Standard Allowance for a single person over 25, LCRWA element) in just the single monthly payment. I’ll be instead getting the two payment dates a month. I can’t budget @anisty, hence the need for more frequent payments.
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If I could budget I’d have accepted the monthly payments but I am not good 👎👎 at budgeting @anisty.
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It’s better for me 👍✅ to have two separate payments of over £400 than getting a lump sum of over £800 at once and then waiting a month for the next lump sum. @anisty
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