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Lords pass welfare bill

teek | 01.03.2012 08:35 | Occupy Everywhere

BBC:

Welfare Reform Bill passes final House of Lords hurdle

The government's controversial Welfare Reform Bill has passed its final hurdle in the House of Lords. The bill introduces an annual cap on benefits and overhauls many payments within the welfare system. David Cameron has said it marks an historic step in the biggest welfare revolution in more than 60 years. But a report from a parliamentary committee has warned that changes to the benefits of disabled people may risk their right to independent living.

Work and Pensions Secretary Iain Duncan Smith said he was delighted that the bill had passed the Lords. "Many people said it would not get through, but it has and on time," he said. "This bill reforms every part of our welfare system and I look forward to implementing the changes our country badly needs. The Universal Credit will mean that work will pay for the first time, helping to lift people out of worklessness and the endless cycle of benefits. Whilst those people who need our help and support will know they will get it without question."

Meanwhile, MPs have said that the rights of disabled people to lead an independent life must be written into UK law. The Commons Human Rights Committee said the "cumulative impact" to the benefits system could force some people out of their homes. The UK ratified the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities in 2009, but the coalition must "fulfil its obligations", the committee said.

The cross-party committee's report criticised changes to benefits, including restrictions in local authority eligibility criteria for social care support and the replacement of the Disability Living Allowance with Personal Independence Payment. It also said the closure of the Independent Living Fund and changes to housing benefit "risk interacting in a particularly harmful way for disabled people".

The report stated: "The right to independent living does not exist as a freestanding right in UK law. Although it is protected and promoted to some extent by a matrix of rights, the committee believes that this is not enough. It argues that the government and other interested parties should immediately assess the need for, and feasibility of, legislation to establish independent living as a freestanding right."

The report also insisted that the UN convention is "hard law, not soft law" and the government should "fulfil its obligations under the convention on that basis, and counter any public perception that it is soft law". The committee's chairman, Labour MP Hywel Francis, said: "The right to independent living in UK law may need to be strengthened further, and we call on the government and other interested organisations to consider the need for a freestanding right to independent living in UK law."

The government says it will spend an extra £7.2bn on social care over the course of this Parliament. A Department for Work and Pensions spokeswoman said ministers would look at the findings and respond "in due course". She added: "The government says it will spend an extra £7.2bn on social care over the course of this Parliament."

The spokeswoman also welcomed the committee's "acknowledgement that this government is committed to removing barriers and creating opportunities for disabled people, and that the UK is a world-leader on disability rights and in relation to independent living in particular".

teek

Comments

Hide the following 4 comments

Completely fair game eh

01.03.2012 10:08

My mother is in her late fifties, not in very good health and she has just received notice she will not be allowed her state pension at the age of 60, as she had been promised in written declaration that this would be so. Instead, she needs to work until she is 66, for a lower pension!

She has been a tax payer all her working life. And according to the government this is what she deserves.

justice or what

just wait..


"justice or what"

01.03.2012 11:40

Depends on your definition of 'justice'. The reality is the country can pay the pensions it can afford. There is a reason that everyone does not retire at 50 years old for example.

Realist


Alternative viewpoint

01.03.2012 12:24

"My mother is in her late fifties, not in very good health and she has just received notice she will not be allowed her state pension at the age of 60, as she had been promised in written declaration that this would be so. Instead, she needs to work until she is 66, for a lower pension! "


I wonder if your mother views herself as lucky to live in one of the few countries in the world where universal healthcare, free at the point of delivery ensure her poor health is treated combined with the peace of mind that she will receive a pension and not have to work until she drops.

Not likely to ever retire


a real change to decent non poverty policies is required

01.03.2012 14:47

Typical last two comments from the likely already well-heeled.

The access to NHS care is likely to be over once this bunch of money mad capitalists in Government get their way on it (current bill must be dropped entirely, ort even in an emasculated form, would for the basis for full privatisation (USA style most likely) during another Tory b*****d government.

As for welfare., having already lost two frinds to suicide and aggratvated health conditions, this passing of the Bill marks another nail in the coffin of decency, dignity and real protection for the sick and disabled in the UK. The Tories have always hated the idea of parting with a single penny to help others other than the few who gave to charity and a few philanthropists (mid-late 19thC mainly)

It was Joseph Rowntree who said around 1909 though that charity and Philanthropy were all very well but not the answer to poverty. It took until 1945 Labour Gov ( with two world wars, high unemployment -esp after WW1,the 1929 financial crash, Depression etc, during that period, to change things. Beveridge though was proposing and changing things during a time when mostly full employment (male) was still possible: women 'chained to the kitchen sink' still sadly, albeit due to post-war Keysianism etc and the Bretton Woods agreement et al. Also a time when little modern tech was available to reduce both job levels and incomes as is happening now.
REight wingers broke all this from 1970 Tricky Dicky Nixon broke Bretton Woods, at the behest of big business, followed in the mid-1980's by demented from birth in my view, Thatcher and Regaan. Major in the Uk allowed banks to 'creat online money' and allowed building socs to 'bribe' people to go for bank status (early 1990's)

We need not so much a sea change as and oceanic change in attitudes to money, incomes and work( incl voluntary as long as it doesn't take a single paid job for those health enough to do them- this being paid at a rate equivalant to the 'Living Wage' to ensure no-one really drops into poverty- the 'Citizen's Income' idea perhaps; and especially for those over 50 or 55 with long term health problems. Such as in maybe the first comment posters mother's situ...)

The New Economics Foundation's report 21 Hours (working week) and another sponsored by them regarding getting rid of 'online money creation'; which greatly helped lead to current financial debacles should be starting points. Closing ALL tax havens and the Robin Hood Tax aswell. No more Quantative Easing only to prop up banks and Government, but to Gov to spend ring fenced on green and infrastructure manufacturing projects incl housing albeit sensitively done as a priority.

If the top 20 people who 'own' £120billoin between them (albeit it varuous ways), were made to reliquish £110 bn to allow cancelling of ALL cuts and (£81bn and tax rises £29bn) the'd still have half a billion left each for their baubles!

OK not so easy to do as to say, but surely better than basically causing poverty, misery, and death as the Tories especially ID-S et al (and their Wisconsin USA style reforms) are deliberatly doing. Wisconsin now has 40% plus of it's people in poverty and queing for soup kitchens. If I.D-S etc like that so much, let them up sticks immediately on a one way ticket to live there- though let's keep their ill-gotten gains (Cameron's £30mill legacy, Osbourne's £3 mill one) to help give to decent people including the sick, disabled and those in work by paying a Living Wage to all...

Cue whining , winging , spin, denials, crocodile tears, blather etc from the Tories who crawl and slither on to this site.....

pirate


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