Yorkshire Post

Anger at ‘chaos’ in compensati­on over Windrush

- VICTORIA FINAN ■ Email: victoria.finan@jpimedia.co.uk ■ Twitter: @victoriafi­nan

THE HOME Office’s handling of compensati­on for victims of the Windrush scandal has been attacked as “incompeten­t and chaotic” by campaigner­s for immigratio­n rights.

Figures from the National Audit Office show the compensati­on scheme, set up in 2019, has not met its aim of paying out claimants quickly enough.

The scheme was set up after it was revealed that people who arrived in the UK from the Caribbean between the 1940s and 1970s and their descendant­s were facing deportatio­n and detention despite living in Britain legally for decades due to “hostile environmen­t” policies introduced by then Home Secretary Theresa May.

Changes were made to the compensati­on scheme last year following criticism about the complexity of the applicatio­n process, the length of time it took for claimants to receive payment, and the size of payments awarded.

The scheme has paid £14.3m to 633 people thus far but of the money paid out, £11.6m (81 per cent) was paid to claimants after policy changes came into effect last December.

Just 10 per cent of the 1,033 claims received since March 2020 have reached the payment decision stages, and it has taken an average of 177 days for claims to reach this stage, according to the NAO.

Staff are spending an average of 154 hours to process a case through to payment approval, despite the Home Office estimating claims should take 30 hours to process.

The NAO also said that it had identified errors in how compensati­on had been allocated and that staffing needs were unclear.

Chai Patel, legal policy director at the Joint Council for the Welfare of Immigrants, said: “The Windrush compensati­on scheme should never have been left in the hands of an incompeten­t and chaotic Home Office. It is unfathomab­le that those responsibl­e for the scandal are able to decide if, and how, victims get redress. The Government’s handling of the scheme has perpetuate­d harm against those who’ve been so badly wronged, with claimants having to beg for justice and wait months for pay-outs.”

West Yorkshire MP Yvette Cooper MP, chair of the Home Affairs Select Committee, said: “Three years after the Windrush scandal it is completely unacceptab­le that the vast majority of those affected still haven’t received a penny in compensati­on.

“The Home Office promised to right the wrongs and to recognise the financial loss and deep distress that their decisions had caused. Yet the NAO report shows that 70 per cent of people who have applied haven’t even received an interim payment, and it appears many thousands more people have still been put off from applying in the first place.”

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