(I posted this to urcm but I'm reposting it here as it's more
on-topic. I have left the original comment I was replying to in, for
context.)
In article <
qvc749-...@willow.ductilebiscuit.net>,
kimble <
k...@ductilebiscuit.net> wrote:
...
>[2] Disability Living Allowance - a benefit paid to cover the cost of
>disability needs regardless of other income. The government and media
>have done a stunning job in recent years of branding benefits
>claiments of all types as scrounging fraudulent scum, to the point
>where visibly disabled people are now subject to benefits-related
>abuse in the street, and nobody seems to care that they're planning to
>cut payments to about 20% of legitimate claimants. :(
Gah. Don't get me started. I helped a friend with their DLA appeal
recently. The rules are incredibly pernickety and seem designed to
make it really hard for the claimant. Rather than "are you disabled
so that you need extra support to live a normal life" they ask much
more specific questions.
For example one of the few ways you can qualify is that you can't walk
normally. Well, that's how you or I would have framed it. But the
law is entirely in fiddling details. I spent hours reading
legislation and caselaw about whether certain things did or did not
count when considering, for example, whether someone was "able to cook
a main meal".
You count as able to cook, for example, if cooking a main meal is
something you could do but you would have to do it in 20 minute stages
with hour long breaks and it would take all day and be the only thing
you did that day. In that case you wouldn't be entitled to DLA.
The hearing itself was a huge deal for my friend, of course. The
tribunal expressed surprise that she was "able" to sit and talk to
them mostly coherently for an hour. I think they somewhat revised
that opinion when I asked my friend "what do you expect the effect to
be of you having come to this hearing this morning" and the answer
came "I will spend the rest of the day and much of tomorrow in bed
dosed up on opiates".
Quite a contrast with the rest of my dealings with the legal system,
as a sometime recreational litigant. At least in the civil courts,
truth and justice seem actually to be relevant.
The DWP DLA bureaucracy is actively hostile. At the appeal hearing
the tribunal members were, I think, well-meaning, but really very
ignorant and also hamstrung by the legislation.
--
Ian Jackson personal email: <
ijac...@chiark.greenend.org.uk>
These opinions are my own.
http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~ijackson/
PGP2 key 1024R/0x23f5addb, fingerprint 5906F687 BD03ACAD 0D8E602E FCF37657