Daily Mirror

Court ruling means cash for disabled

- BY DAN BLOOM Political Reporter

THOUSANDS of disabled people will get an extra £70 to £90 a week in benefits after a legal victory.

The ruling from the Upper Tribunal rewrites rules for granting Personal Independen­ce Payments.

These said people can do tasks unsupervis­ed if it’s “unlikely” they’ll come to harm. But epilepsy sufferers said this often left them without PIPs. They should now be covered.

Disabiliti­es Minister Penny Mordaunt said: “These updates will help ensure people with the highest costs are receiving the most support.”

But Labour’s Debbie Abrahams said: “This is a drop in the ocean of the funding that should rightfully go to recipients.”

“IT’S time to change politics,” says the Mayor of Salford, at a packed meeting of the Truth Poverty Commission in his home city. “Either politics is done to us, or we shape it.”

Since being elected a year ago, Mayor Paul Dennett has been radically reshaping the way things are done in Salford.

Last month he gave care workers a 10.7% pay rise. His town hall has given the go- ahead for seven new library sites at a time when many councils are closing them.

As other parts of the UK face maternity unit closures, the council has stepped in to ‘Keep Babies Born in Salford’ by opening a new midwife-led unit where 300 babies may now be delivered each year.

Salford has also invested £2million into a developmen­t company – in order to kickstart building of social housing that won’t fall under the government’s new Right To Buy policy. The company is called Derive – named after a joke involving Italian social revolution­aries.

All of which looks like a blueprint for a Labour government, or what unashamedl­y interventi­onist Dennett calls “sensible socialism”.

The 36-year-old mayor is passionate about using his £200million budget to end poverty, partly because he has never forgotten what it feels like to come up the hard way, through a childhood he describes as at times “horrific” and something “I wouldn’t wish on anyone”.

Scarred by domestic abuse and his younger brother’s fight against leukemia, he failed his GCSEs and A-levels and by 18 was working in a “sweat shop” call centre. “I had an interestin­g journey,” he says wryly, at his offices in Swinton. “I grew up in a family where there was traumatic violence and abuse. My dad became an alcoholic and I struggled at school in my early teens.” A power station fitter by trade, Pa Paul’s dad went on to manage m The Engine pub in Liverpool’s Prescot area area, where his alcoholism began. Paul’s mum, a cle cleaner, ran the pub as her marriage disintegra­ted. d Later L in life, Paul won a place to study Internatio­nal Business at the University of Ulster, where he achieved a first- class honours degree. He went on to Manchester Business school sch before doing a PhD at Manchester Met, working as a civil servant and then for a utilities company.

Now living in Salford – where he became a tenants’ leader and then a local councillor – as council leader he sees the Truth Poverty Commission as part of a new way of doing politics, with people’s consent.

Based on a model that has been used in Glasgow and Leeds, the Commission­ers include people with experience of poverty.

“Consultati­on usually means organisati­ons telling you about their plans,” says community worker Jayne Gosnall, 54, who is recovering from alcohol addiction.

“This is about really listening to people with experience.”

The Commission is independen­t but supported by Salford City Council, the Mayor and the Bishop of Salford, and facilitate­d by Church Action on Poverty and Community Pride. It has led to the council bringing in a raft of measures that will transform lives – from waiving birth certificat­e fees for homeless people to changing the way the council chases debt.

Debbie Brown, transforma­tion director at Salford City Council, says: “We come into these meetings and we hug each other – that’s not what normally happens in council meetings,” she says. “But the other thing that stopped me in my tracks was the City Council being identified as a cause of poverty.

“We heard stories about what it was like for people hiding from council tax collection agents, people being afraid, and that’s not a city I recognise.

“We’re changing a lot already. We’re going back to the personal, identifyin­g people who are struggling to pay and looking again at what we can do.

“We won’t be using bailiffs for those in receipt of council tax reduction and young care leavers are exempt.”

Laura Kendall, 33, a mum of two and a youth worker, suffered undiagnose­d mental health problems as a teenager and was placed in care. “Sharing my story for this project was difficult but very powerful for me,” she says. “I want people to know their voices will be heard, that a child growing up in the care system can have a better chance.

“I’d spent my whole life trying to get people to listen to me and got used to being rejected. This area has been written off so many times but it’s full of people with something to add.”

Salford’s mayor is determined to listen. “This is about working-class communitie­s coming together and a spirit of solidarity,” Dennett says. “It’s the spirit of Salford in action.”

‘We heard stories about what it was like to hide from council tax agents’

 ??  ?? SUPPORT Penny Mordaunt
SUPPORT Penny Mordaunt
 ??  ?? ACTION Salford Mayor Paul Dennett. Right, Laura Kendall
ACTION Salford Mayor Paul Dennett. Right, Laura Kendall
 ??  ?? DIFFERENCE Debbie Brown
DIFFERENCE Debbie Brown

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