The Southland Times

Work and Income clients ‘scared stiff’

- SHELLEY ROBINSON

New Zealand’s social welfare system ‘‘dehumanise­s’’ people in need, with beneficiar­ies described as ‘‘scared stiff’’ of Work and Income case managers, new research says.

A Canterbury Community Law (CCL) investigat­ion, which looked at access to justice for beneficiar­ies, said beneficiar­ies felt they were treated as ‘‘non-humans’’ by Work and Income – not even allowed access to toilets during lengthy waits at offices.

Fear was at a level where people were forgoing entitlemen­ts from Work and Income, instead going to non-government organisati­on’s food banks, or the Mayor’s Welfare Fund, because of previous negative experience­s, the report said.

‘‘Beneficiar­ies are uniformly scared stiff of the department [Work and Income]. The department’s got the axe above their head . . . they’ve got huge power over these people, power of the most basic rights, food, clothing and shelter,’’ a lawyer said in the report.

Lead researcher, CCL lawyer Kim Morton said past negative experience­s stopped beneficiar­ies challengin­g the Ministry of Social Developmen­t if their benefit entitlemen­ts were turned down.

‘‘This means it is really essential beneficiar­ies have acess to legal help,’’ Morton said.

‘‘It helps to even out an uneven playing field.’’

Case managers, members of review committees, beneficiar­ies, advocates and lawyers were interviewe­d for the research.

Morton said people interviewe­d for the research said Work and Income offices gave little privacy.

‘‘Instead they have to discuss often traumatic events in front of a long line of others, then to a different case manager each time, in an open plan office ,’’ she said.

A beneficiar­y in the report said: ‘‘[T]hat whole process where you are not seen as a person . . . we’re treated as non-human.’’

Social Developmen­t Minister Anne Tolley said if the need for the toilet was ‘‘urgent’’, and if a security guard or staff member were available to ‘‘accompany’’ the beneficiar­y to facilities, then they could use staff toilets. Otherwise, they could go find public toilets, she said.

Beneficiar­y

Labour deputy leader Annette King said using a toilet in a government­al department office was a ‘‘basic right’’.

‘‘Being able to tell your story in private, away from the ears of strangers, is essential,’’ she said.

The report said case managers were ‘‘overstretc­hed’’.

Tolley said there was ‘‘no evidence’’ of this happening.

In 2014, the Auditor-General reviewed welfare services and found most people said their claims were ‘‘resolved fairly’’.

She said the Government had reduced the number of people on benefits, with an 8.6 per cent decline in Canterbury of solo parent benefits. Morton said: ‘‘When there is a strong government goal to reduce numbers of beneficiar­ies, it is even more important that procedures are robust and there are fair processes for reviewing decisions.’’

Morton said the research showed benefits were inadequate, leaving beneficiar­ies in a ‘‘state of poverty’’. A solo parent receives $300.98 after tax, on a benefit, with $120 accommodat­ion supplement.

Ministry of Business Innovation and Employment data said median rents in Christchur­ch were $418, with lower-quartile rents at $285.

Lawyer and co-author of a Child Poverty Action Group paper on welfare, Catriona MacLennan, said benefits needed to be raised to a ‘‘liveable standard’’ to counter the effects of child poverty.

‘‘It is a very intimidati­ng process, it is exhausting dealing with the ministry – these are people already living in stressful circumstan­ces,’’ she said.

Beneficiar­ies are sent to a budget adviser to access entitlemen­ts but advisers told researcher­s they cannot advise when the benefit amount is inadequate.

King said being on a benefit was often ‘‘when people are at their lowest and most vulnerable’’.

‘‘Taking away their privacy and dignity is an indictment on the Government which should be there to help people get a hand up when it’s needed most,’’ she said.

 ??  ?? Anne Tolley
Anne Tolley

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