[guide.chat] news thousands lose d l a

  • From: vanessa <qwerty1234567a@xxxxxxxxx>
  • To: "GUIDE CHAT" <guide.chat@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Sat, 28 Jan 2012 18:42:56 -0000

17 January 2012 Last updated at 21:48 Share this pageEmailPrint
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Lords back disability benefit shake-up

Crossbench peer, Baroness Tanni Grey-Thompson: "Disabled people fear being 
ghettoised"

Q&A: Welfare Bill flashpoints
Benefit changes set to be revised
Government suffers Lords defeats
The government has headed off a House of Lords defeat over plans to replace the 
Disability Living Allowance.

Ministers want to amend the system to make sure claimants undergo more testing, 
but opponents say this will mean 500,000 people will lose benefits.

A proposal to delay the scheme by carrying out an extended pilot project before 
it is implemented across the country was beaten by 16 votes.

The government suffered three Lords defeats on the issue last week.

Introduced in 1992 to help disabled people cope with the extra costs they face 
in their daily lives, Disability Living Allowance (DLA) is paid to two million 
people of working age.

'Scrutiny'
The replacement Personal Independence Payments (PIPs) would see claimants 
taking up-front disability tests and then undergoing regular assessments.

The government wants to pass its Welfare Reform Bill, which includes the 
proposal, by the end of the parliamentary session in May.

It says it has to reduce spending on benefits, helping to cut the deficit while 
also increasing incentives to work and targeting support for the vulnerable 
more effectively.

During the Lords debate, cross-bencher Baroness Grey-Thompson, an 11-time 
Paralympic gold medal-winner, proposed an amendment to the bill, delaying the 
introduction of PIPs until further testing was carried out.

She said: "There needs to be careful scrutiny of who will be affected by these 
changes. For me there's a real concern about whether it could lead to a 
deterioration of people's health."

But work and pensions minister Lord Freud said such a delay would cost £1.4bn.

He added that the government recognised the benefit of moving away from the 
"big bang approach" to implementation, which would see both new claims and 
assessments beginning in April next year.

The number of new claims for PIP would be limited to a "few thousand per month" 
for the first few months of implementation, allowing "us to fully trial all the 
processes in a truly live environment".

The government won the Lords vote by 229 to 213.

A Department for Work and Pensions spokeswoman said: "We welcome the outcome of 
tonight's vote.

"DLA is in need of urgent reform so that it can give people the support they 
need. Under PIP a greater proportion of people will be eligible for the higher 
rate of help than is the case under DLA.

"People understand that the welfare state needs to change and the introduction 
of PIP is an essential part of this process."

An earlier Lady Grey-Thompson amendment to the Welfare Reform Bill, in which 
she argued reports from doctors should be a mandatory part of the PIP 
assessment process, was withdrawn without a vote.


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