× Search rightsnet
Search options

Where

Benefit

Jurisdiction

Jurisdiction

From

to

Forum Home  →  Discussion  →  The Social  →  Thread

Fit for Work on BBC Sounds

Jo_Smith
forum member

Citizens Advice Hillingdon

Send message

Total Posts: 334

Joined: 3 October 2018

Hi guys, is this a new program or a repeat? It’s fascinating- nothing new for us, the welfs, but well covered, I think. I really like it.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/brand/m001mck1

Andyp5 Citizens Advice Bridport & District
forum member

Citizens Advice Bridport & District

Send message

Total Posts: 1017

Joined: 9 January 2017

Jo_Smith - 09 June 2023 04:50 PM

Hi guys, is this a new program or a repeat? It’s fascinating- nothing new for us, the welfs, but well covered, I think. I really like it.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sounds/brand/m001mck1

According to our colleagues Alan B and Margaret its a new series Jo.

shawn mach
Administrator

rightsnet.org.uk

Send message

Total Posts: 3782

Joined: 14 April 2010

Thanks for the heads up ... here’s the write up:

For 30 years, governments have tried to get disabled people into work by toughening up benefit rules.  Part of the motivation has been to cut the welfare bill, but it’s also been framed as an attempt to stop disabled people “languishing” on benefits.

But the policy has had tragic consequences, particularly for people with mental illness, who have felt coerced and pressured, as the department for work and pensions has deemed them fit for work. Many - maybe hundreds - have taken their own lives.

According to a former chief economist at the DWP, “it’s one of the biggest social policy failures of the last 20 or 30 years. We caused an enormous amount of human suffering. We achieved very little, we didn’t save any money and it probably cost more than it would have if we hadn’t done anything.”

In this series, Jolyon Jenkins investigates how the policy came about, starting under the government of John Major, which turned for advice to an American private insurance company that became notorious for unlawfully denying the legitimate claims of policyholders in the US.

Stainsby
forum member

Welfare rights adviser - Plumstead Community Law Centre

Send message

Total Posts: 618

Joined: 17 June 2010

Its very well researched

There is a recurring theme in those cases where the claimant committed suicide following a failed WCA and that iss housing benefit was aparently terminated.

If that’s the case then LA’s are as culpable as the DWP given that termination of a passporting benefit is of itself not syufficient to provide the basis for a superseding decision terminating HB.