DLA Replaced With PIP For New Applicants In Most Of Britain From Today
A new system of benefit payments affecting disabled people has started rolling out across Britain.
Personal Independence Payments (PIPs) are replacing Disability Living Allowance (DLA) as part of the government’s welfare reforms.
The government claims PIPs will target resources more effectively towards those who need it most.
But a charity warns that almost a fifth of claimants – 600,000 people – could eventually lose their benefits.
Since April, thousands of new claimants in the north of England have already applied for PIPs. Now, new claimants of working age in the rest of Britain will also have to apply for a PIP, rather than DLA.
Northern Ireland will join the system later.
From October, PIPs will be extended further, when the government will start to re-assess existing claimants, but only those who circumstances have changed.
The vast majority of the 3.2 million people who currently claim DLA will not be re-assessed until 2015 or later.
Many disabled people fear having to be put through the new in-person tests to test their eligibility.
Phil Sumner, a former postman who has multiple sclerosis, told the BBC that the prospect of an interview is “quite intimidating”.
“It’s like being judged again. Filling out forms is bad enough. Face-to-face, I don’t like anyway,” he said.
Savings
Figures from the Department of Work and Pensions (DWP) suggest that 450,000 will no longer be able to claim the benefit by 2018.
But the disability charity Scope said that – including those who would have claimed in the meantime – 607,000 people will miss out in total.
The government claims the new system will better target those who need help.
Under DLA, most people filled in their own application forms, and did not have to re-apply, even if their health improved.
“Seventy-one percent would have indefinite awards, without regular checks,” the disabilities minister, Esther McVeigh, told the BBC.
“So this is about targeting billions of pounds a year at the people who need it most.”
Analysis
Before PIP launched, the government promised disabled people a simpler application process. The 55-page DLA form was not only long, but also complicated.
To start a claim, applicants must ring DWP. This causes problems for those unable to use the phone.
“I’ve had deaf people contact me on Twitter asking what on earth they are supposed to do,” disability rights campaigner Kaliya Franklin says. “There’s a textphone number but most deaf people don’t have the technology. They send text messages instead these days but there’s no option for that.”
You can appoint someone to make the detailed 15 minute-long phone call on your behalf.
But Ms Franklin is concerned for those with mild to moderate learning difficulties, who live independent lives but would struggle to understand the three-step PIP claims process. The difficulty, she says, is that “most of these people fly under the radar”.
However Scope believes the main motive is to spend less.
“Disabled people believe this reform is an excuse to save money,” said Richard Hawkes, Scope’s chief executive.
“It doesn’t help that the minister is able to predict exactly how many disabled people will receive support before they have even been tested,” he said.
Expenditure on DLA has gone up by 32% in the last 10 years.
But the government insists the introduction of PIPs is not about saving money.
Expenditure is still expected to rise from £12.6bn in 2009/10, to £13.8bn in 2015/16.
However, with 450,000 fewer people expected to receive the benefit by 2018, the cost to the taxpayer will be much smaller than it otherwise would have been.
Interviews
Under the new assessment system, 75% of applicants will be required to attend face-to-face interviews.
Those interviews will look at people’s ability to wash, dress, cook and make journeys. But they will also assess reading and verbal communication skills. The government says they will therefore test mental, as well as physical health.
But Scope says the planned test is “deeply flawed.”
Scope claims it will be a “tickbox-style medical assessment”, which will not achieve the desired objective. It is worried that there could be a repeat of problems that occurred with the fitness-to-work test, known as the Work Capability Assessment.
Thousands have appealed successfully against their adjudications in such cases.
But Capita, one of the firms carrying out the assessments, has tried to ease fears about the tests. “It is more of an interview than a medical assessment,” said Stephen Duckworth, the head of Capita’s PIP programme.
“Applicants could be asked to bend over and touch their toes, but it will not be more complicated than that,” he told the BBC.
An independent review will examine the new PIP payments in 2014, before most people are reassessed for the benefit.





i wonder how many sick and disabled will die on this changeover of benefits plus all of carers who look after their spouses on middle rate care will lose their benefits don’t forget
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only the housebound i believe will be entitled to the high rate of care and mobility. Everyone who is receiving it now and can leave the house will be downgraded to low care for both and those on low care and mobility now being kicked off the benefit altogether
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Reblogged this on HUMAN RIGHTS & POLITICAL JOURNAL.
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