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Daily living activity 3 - are March 2017 amendments unlawful?

Daphne
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The Secretary of State has withdrawn her appeals against cases which awarded more than one point for monitoring health and administering medication casting doubt on the legality of the changes that were made to Daily Living Activity 3 in March 2017 (which were made alongside the mobility changes were were declared unlawful)

Garden Court North Chambers says -

As a result of withdrawing her appeals, the SSWP has accepted that, as with the case of her error relating to the mobility element of PIP, she will now need to review past claims relating to this descriptor, to identify other claimants who may have been underpaid. The government has not yet given any details of when or how that process will be carried out, or how many claimants it expects to be affected.

Further, the SSWP’s abandonment of her appeal may cast doubt on the legality of the changes she made to the Regulations in March 2017 regarding Activity 3. When making those changes, she did not consult before doing so. Following the SSWP’s concession in these test cases, it now appears that the SSWP was, through the March 2017 amendments, making a significant change in the law. In RF v Secretary of State for Work And Pensions [2017] EWHC 3375 (Admin) (21st December 2017), the High Court quashed the SSWP’s other attempt to amend the Regulations, partly because the SSWP had failed to consult before making those changes.

Thanks to Tom Royston for alerting us to this.

Sally63
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more detail on the Garden Court site:

The First-tier Tribunal (FTT) had decided that two claimants with chronic conditions were entitled to a Personal Independence Payment (PIP). The SSWP appealed to the Upper Tribunal (UT). But shortly before a test case hearing arranged before a three-judge panel of the UT for 21st May 2018, the SSWP withdrew her appeals (Secretary of State for Work and Pensions v AN & JM CPIP/1882/2015 and CPIP/1159/2016). Her related appeal to the Court of Appeal (Secretary of State for Work and Pensions v Birch C3/2017/0894) will now also be withdrawn. Both claimants will receive the disability benefit to which the FTT had decided they were entitled.

The appeals concerned the meaning of Daily Living Activity 3, ‘Managing therapy or monitoring a health condition’, before amendments were made to it in March 2017. The government had been arguing that ‘therapy’ excluded treatment which consisted of the monitoring of health and administration of medication. For example, one of the claimants in these cases was a person with type 1 diabetes and unusual sleep patterns, who needed someone to watch over him at night, sometimes administering insulin or glucose while he slept, to avoid diabetic coma and death. The FTT had decided he qualified for PIP. The government had argued in the appeal that he should be awarded only 1 of the minimum 8 points necessary to qualify for PIP.

[ Edited: 1 Jun 2018 at 10:41 am by Sally63 ]
Stuart
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Esther McVey answering urgent question today on paying arrears to affected claimants for period prior to change to activity 3 in March 2017.

https://goo.gl/SEvUH4

shawn mach
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stuart - 04 June 2018 03:46 PM

Esther McVey answering urgent question today on paying arrears to affected claimants for period prior to change to activity 3 in March 2017.

https://goo.gl/SEvUH4

And now in Hansard:

I carefully considered these historical cases and decided no longer to continue with the appeals in order to provide certainty to the claimants. Since withdrawing the appeals, I have provided instructions to operational colleagues to put these claims in payment urgently. These claimants will receive any backdated moneys owed, and should receive their first payment within the coming days.

These cases were decided prior to the March 2017 amending regulations—the Social Security (Personal Independence Payment) (Amendment) Regulations 2017—in which the Government clarified our policy for managing therapy under PIP daily living activity 3. These regulations are not affected by our decision to withdraw these appeals.

More: https://hansard.parliament.uk/commons/2018-06-04/debates/CCD1E23E-45EB-422C-A52C-A3CC06730FFD/PersonalIndependencePayments

[ Edited: 4 Jun 2018 at 07:51 pm by shawn mach ]