Campaign highlights from 2014

If this campaign was not running, then AtW would surely be in a worse mess for Deaf people right now and probably be on the way out in the name of cuts. Keep it up Stop Changes! Let’s not see everything we fought for over 30 years destroyed. Reblogged from the excellent campaign site: https://stopchanges2atw.com/2014/12/27/campaign-highlights-from-2014/

The #stopchanges2atw group have been extremely busy over the past year. A lot has happened and there is a lot of work which we are enormously proud of. We thought we’d share a few of the key moments of the campaign and also what’s happened with AtW to remind you how far we’ve come.

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Tom Watson, described by Limping Chicken as a “Labour Big Beast”, shows support for our campaign. We were very grateful for Tom’s support which got attention for our campaign and also, more importantly, raised awareness about the issue and what was happening within AtW.

JENNY SEALEY JOINS US
We we’re delighted that Jenny Sealey joined the campaign and became our spokesperson. Jenny is hugely respected, and has experienced cuts not only to her own support, but has seen other people’s budgets cut too. Having witnessed the impact these changes were having across the community, Jenny was therefore the perfect person to represent the campaign.

TERESA PEARCE MP SUPPORTS US
We were extremely pleased to have the support of Teresa Pearce, a member of the Work & Pension Select Committee. Teresa has worked tirelessly on the issue of Access to Work and we can’t thank her enough for everything she has done.

PETITION REACHES 5,000!
A milestone which we were very pleased to reach. We are continuing with the petition and are about to reach the 7,000 mark!

CAMPAIGN VIDEOS
We released a series of campaign videos to raise awareness for our campaign. There were nine videos, showing how different people were being affected.

WORK & PENSION SELECT COMMITTEE ANNOUNCE INQUIRY
On 12th May the WPSC announced they would be launching an inquiry into AtW. We began supporting as many people as possible to make submissions and along with others, raised the issue of access to the committee clerk, enabling submissions in BSL. This was the first time that an inquiry had been made BSL accessible in this way which in itself was a significant moment.

30 HOUR RULE SUSPENDED
On 14th May the then Minister for Disabled People, Mike Penning, announced the suspension of the 30 hour rule and a review into AtW. This review was to last three months, however, it is still ongoing and we are not expecting to see anything until the new year.

PHSO COMPLAINTS
Alongside our work, DeafAtW have been guiding people through the Obudsman process. We see this as an alternative route to challenge what is happening with AtW. This is an important piece of work which we have been supporting wherever possible.

LEIGH DAY – FIGHTING FUND
We have been working with Leigh Day, the human rights law firm, over Access to Work for some time & have now had two successful outcomes. The first case we tried to take was settled, and the individual named had their AtW support fully reinstated. In the second case, we asked that the AtW guidance be published as we believed to not have this in the public domain was unlawful. This has now been acted on. We are very grateful to Leigh Day for all their work and support. In Particular we would like to thank Ugo Hayter and Richard Stein. We now have a fighting fund of £3,000 and are in a strong position to be able to make legal challenges where deemed necessary. We are continuing to communicate with Leigh Day and will look at any next steps needed in the new year.

WPSC INQUIRY
The inquiry receives a record number of submissions (over 300) and holds a series of four evidence sessions. The report is published before Christmas and is welcomed by the campaign, including all the issues we have raised.

THANK YOU’S:

Our supporters:

Teresa Pearce MP, Disabled People Against Cuts (DPAC), Inclusion London, DeafAtW, Graeae Theatre Company, NUBSLI.

We would like to take this opportunity to thank the following people/organisations:

The Limping Chicken.
Ian W Gouldstone.

Work and Pensions Select Committee Report Findings Summary

If you haven’t caught up yet with the release of the Work and Pensions Select Committee report and its recommendations, published on 19th December, here is a round up.
With over 350 submissions of evidence to the committee, some in BSL, it was shown just how many people had experienced problems with Access to Work, either as users of the scheme or as professionals supplying a service.
Even the oral evidence sessions caused a furore with no access for Deaf people and some evidence sessions not being televised. Or they were but there was no interpreter present.
The report set out several recommendations which organisations can now use to further lobby ministers to implement.
The report highlighted how damaging actions taken by this government have been and how little consultation they did prior to detrimental changes which could have so easily been avoided:
– imposition of the 30 hour rule for support workers on BSL interpreters leaving Deaf people struggling to employ interpreters who did not want to be employed
– applying guidance as a rule and changing the guidance so frequently that users were left with no knowledge of what it was
– targeting high cost users and cutting support without warning
– imposing review periods of three months leaving people unsure about whether to book support or not
– changing the address to a mail handling centre without notifying anyone so invoices were late by more than two months causing providers to borrow money to pay their mortgages and nursery bills
– there are many more examples…
The Committee is to be applauded on its clarity. NUBSLI has found it hard to gather information when so little is made available by the DWP. In meetings where interpreter organisations are present, internal figures are quoted which when asked for in freedom of information (FOI) requests seem to disappear. In a culture of secrecy and obfuscation it has taken months of work on FOIs by NUBSLI members to get to the bottom of how the AtW budget is worked out and what it is set at along with a general lack of available statistical information. The Office for NationalStatistics has not called the DWP the worst department for nothing. This work is still ongoing as answers to FOIs by the DWP tend to reveal little.
Under this government you can also trace the changing statements made online. In 2012, the government accepted the recommendations made by the Sayce report. After that you can then see via published statements and answers to questions in Hansard that previously protected budgets become protected over longer spending review periods, millions go missing and the same recommendations from Sayce are still being made about how government should view AtW.
Budgets which are protected, then changed to have protected averages over three years amount to a lot less when spend in the first year means budgets in the following years are protected at a far lower amount. Especially when announcements are made in the second year when spend has already occurred. To anyone looking at the figures there was nothing protected. After averages are worked out the AtW budget was actually cut by millions in the very year the government accepted recommendations, made announcements and was effectively cut again the year after.
Another shock this year was the missing millions thankfully picked up again by the Committee. £80 million in fact. This could have nearly doubled the AtW budget, in the way that was talked about as not being possible in the last evidence session by the Minister of State for Disabled People, Mark Harper MP. The previously promised increase in AtW spend has not materialised. What is more shocking is that the only people campaigning about this are Stop Changes and the organisations involved in supporting the campaign such as DPAC and NUBSLI.
There was another £15 million promised that later, in announcements, become spread over three years which does not appear to be included in the spend.
For organisations and parts of the media to talk about interpreter salaries without challenging the government about cuts, or worse being in agreement with making cuts, has done a disservice to the Deaf community and has been nothing but damaging. At best this is ignorance, at worse working to a government agenda that align’s with ones own rather than the wider community.
There are recommendations by Sayce that are elaborated on in the Committee’s report such as the way AtW is viewed by the government and how budgets are calculated and spent.
In summary:
– AtW produces a return on investment by way of lower benefit claims and should be treated as such within overall DWP budgets (look up the DEL-AME switch)
– AtW produces a return on investment by way of increased tax payers in work so HM Treasury could give money back to DWP to reflect this
Let’s hope we do not have a repeat of 2012 where recommendations are ‘accepted’, statements made but yet the reality gets worse.
Let’s hope we see a materialisation of the £95 million and budgets are actually doubled as promised.
Let’s hope, really hope, that everyone agrees that talk of cuts are nonsensical, government is challenged on this, that they see AtW as an investment and we should all work together to make the recommendations in the report a reality.
More information:
Work and Select Committee press release and report
Stop Changes response to Committee’s report
NUBSLI response to the Committee’s report
DPAC blog