The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

‘Pointless’ welfare tests for the disabled to stop

- By Andrew Picken apicken@sundaypost.com

TENS of thousands of chronicall­y ill and disabled people will no longer have to undergo gruelling tests to keep their welfare payments.

Work and Pensions Secretary, Damian Green, has revealed people with lifelong health conditions which have no prospect of improvemen­t will now automatica­lly receive Employment Support Allowance (ESA).

Under the current system people in this category are reassessed sometimes as often as ever y three months and the tests, contracted out to private firms, have come under fire for being too tough.

The illnesses which qualify for continuous ESA payments without reassessme­nt have still to be decided but it is likely to include severe Huntington’s, autism or a congenital heart condition.

Critics last night pointed out ministers remained committed to a cut in the amount of money that some new recipients would receive.

But Mr Green said: “I believe in a welfare state where you have to be hard-headed, but you shouldn’t be hard-hearted.

“We want the welfare state to work for everyone, and there are a group of people for whom constant reassessme­nt is pointless and increases their stress and anxiety levels.

“If someone has a disease which can only get worse then it doesn’t make sense to ask them to turn up for repeated appointmen­ts. “So we will stop it.” Mr Green said it would be a “retrograde” move to scrap the tests for all ESA claimants as for the “vast majority of people, work actually helps them”.

More than two million people receive ESA, which is worth up to £109 a week.

The move has been welcomed by charities supporting those with severe illness.

Michelle Mitchell, chief executive of the MS Society, said: “This is a victory for common sense. Frequent reassessme­nts for people with progressiv­e conditions like MS are too often a waste of time and money; they can leave people with uncertaint­y and fear of having their support taken away.”

Mark Atkinson, chief executive at disability charity Scope, said: “This will be a welcome change for some disabled people, and it’s good to see the Government recognisin­g the work capability assessment needs wider reform.”

But Neil Gray, SNP Fair Work and Em p l oy me n t spokesman at Westminste­r, said: “Changes to the reassessme­nt process for those who are chronicall­y ill is a welcome first step but this really is a missed opportunit­y by the Secretary of State to set out an ambitious plan to protect the sick and the disabled.”

A spokesman for the Public and Commercial Services union said: “We have campaigned on this for years, and pay particular tribute to Disabled People Against the Cuts who more than anyone have kept the blatant unfairness of the system in the spotlight.

“We welcome this partial retreat but this Tory Government is still committed to cutting social security, including for sick and disabled people, so there is still a long way to go.”

 ??  ?? ■ Work and Pensions Secretary Damian Green.
■ Work and Pensions Secretary Damian Green.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom