Sunday Mirror

End cruel rules that penalise parents of twins

Demand to change benefit laws that stop backdated payments after 3 months

- BY KATE SKELTON AND KELLY JENKINS scoops@sundaymirr­or.co.uk

PARENTS of twins are calling for a law change so universal credit can be backdated beyond three months.

More than 50% of twins and 90% of triplets are born prematurel­y – which can lead to problems after birth.

And parents claim the refusal to backdate Universal Credit fails to take into account the trauma of caring for babies fighting for life in neonatal care.

Ella-Mae Michalski spent six months in hospital before and after her complicate­d pregnancy and the premature birth of Bella and Ruby.

Yet when she tried to claim UC from the time of her twins’ birth she was turned down by the Department of Work and Pensions.

It said they could only backdate it three months as she had taken too long to report the birth and didn’t fulfil the “special circumstan­ces.”

She took the DWP to a tribunal which said she should receive all payments from the day the twins were born.

Ella-Mae, 34, said: “I feel so angry with the DWP – I told them how awful my experience with premature babies had been, how traumatise­d I was, and they did not care.

“I had to go to a tribunal when I should’ve been at home with my children who were on oxygen 24 hours a day. To be told that they wouldn’t backdate my claim because I didn’t fall into the special circumstan­ces category was atrocious.

“If having children fighting for their lives isn’t exceptiona­l circumstan­ces then what is?

“I felt like they were saying I was an irresponsi­ble mother, that I had been negligent by not reporting their birth earlier. I felt angry, sad, annoyed and hurt – that I’d been treated inhumanely.”

Ella-Mae, of Bromley, south London, was admitted to St Thomas’ Hospital 14 weeks into her pregnancy due to a weakened cervix.

She gave birth at 26 weeks and her twins spent 12 weeks in neonatal intensive care. Bella and Ruby would spend their first year on oxygen around the clock due to a lung disease.

Ella-Mae said: “I want the DWP to change their legislatio­n so having babies prematurel­y is automatica­lly accepted by the DWP as special circumstan­ces.

“When you are looking after children who are severely ill you are so vulnerable. I feel like the DWP penalises parents who are suffering.

“It was callous, uncaring and unethical when parents who have a child in intensive care deserve compassion. Parents in this situation should not be thinking about finances and submitting applicatio­ns when they are just desperatel­y trying to get through the day.”

She added: “Parents should not suffer economical­ly because of their children being in intensive care. There is no greater exception I can think of than your children in hospital treading the fine line between life and death.”

The girls came home from hospital in February 2019 – a couple of weeks before their due date – and a month later Ella reported their birth to the DWP and asked for girls to be added to the child element of her universal credit. Another mum told how she was so traumatise­d by her experience of giving birth to twins that she did not feel capable of submitting a child benefit claim until they were two.

Alice Wright, 33, of Norfolk, gave birth to George and Alexander after 28 weeks in April 2020, the start of lockdown.

She said: “It was incredibly frustratin­g, I didn’t know there was a time limit. My focus has been on keeping the boys alive, not paperwork.

“We need compassion and empathy. We are living month to month – it can be really hard to make ends meet. The child benefit would make a huge difference for us.”

Shauna Leven, of the Twins Trust charity, said: “The system is weighted against parents with twins, triplets or more. Many of our community have experience­d the strife of having babies in neonatal care and the web of bureaucrac­y that follows.”

Lucy Cadd, of law firm Leigh Day, said: “It is inconceiva­ble Ella-Mae could have been expected to organise her universal credit claim. We hope her case will encourage parents in similar situations to challenge a refusal to backdate.”

A government spokesman said backdating child benefit beyond three months would make it hard to verify and each case is considered on its own merit.

I felt angry, sad, hurt I had been treated so badly

ELLA-MAE MICHALSKI ON HER BENEFIT FIGHT

 ?? ?? LOVING Alice with her twin boys at just 10 days old
LOVING Alice with her twin boys at just 10 days old
 ?? ?? TENDER Ella-Mae with her girls at two months
TENDER Ella-Mae with her girls at two months

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