Portsmouth News

Waspi women join fight for equal pensions

Organisati­ons speaks for thousands of affected Portsmouth residents

- By EMILY JESSICA TURNER The News emily.turner@jpimedia.co.uk

EQUALITY campaigner­s have welcomed a document by MPs condemning the ‘total obliterati­on’ of women’s ‘emotional, physical, and mental circumstan­ces’ and calling for pension compensati­on.

Solent WASPI (Women Against State Pension Inequality) is part of a wider group of campaigner­s fighting for fair transition­al arrangemen­ts for women born in the 1950s who have had as much as six years added to their state pension age with little or no notice.

This organisati­on campaigns for thousands of affected women in Portsmouth and the surroundin­g area, including Havant, Fareham, Gosport, Petersfiel­d, and south Hampshire.

The All Party Parliament­ary Group on State Pension Inequality for Women has sent a submission to the Parliament­ary and Health Service Ombudsman, which is investigat­ing injustice caused by the maladminis­tration it found by the Department of Work and Pensions.

In this document, the APPG said that ‘all typologies of injustice’ have been met, and that ‘in the cases of emotional, material, and physiologi­cal, they clearly fall within a category six injustice’.

Members of WASPI say that they ‘warmly welcome’ the submission from the APPG to the PHSO.

The findings, the WASPI statement says, ‘matches what we as a campaign have been saying for some time’.

APPG’s submission says that PHSO should find the DWP maladminis­tration to be a ‘level six case’ on its injustice scale, a category which indicates the most serious situations ‘involving profound, devastatin­g or irreversib­le impacts’.

In a statement, WASPI representa­tives said: ‘The impact of DWP maladminis­tration on 1950s-born women has been as devastatin­g as it is widespread.

‘The APPG believes that the case for category six injustice is overwhelmi­ng and clear.

‘Women have had their emotional, physical, and mental circumstan­ces totally obliterate­d by a lack of reasonable notice.

‘These impacts must be addressed, if we are to reach any kind of conclusion regarding this injustice.’

Shelagh Simmons, Solent WASPI co-ordinator, said: ‘We thank the APPG for this report.

‘We have been campaignin­g for six years on this issue.

‘It is time the government accepted its failings and agreed fair and fast compensati­on for the historic injustice done to 1950s women locally and around the country.’

 ?? Picture: Habibur Rahman ?? SPEAKING OUT
The Solent Waspi women with their banner at Baffins Pond Associatio­n.
Picture: Habibur Rahman SPEAKING OUT The Solent Waspi women with their banner at Baffins Pond Associatio­n.

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