People should be marching on Parliament with torches and pitchforks, and not just the ones directly harmed by this fiasco. True fiscal conservatives should be just as appalled at the level of waste resulting.
I seem to have mislaid my pitchfork.
People should be marching on Parliament with torches and pitchforks, and not just the ones directly harmed by this fiasco. True fiscal conservatives should be just as appalled at the level of waste resulting.
Here you go...I seem to have mislaid my pitchfork.![]()
This article published on November 9, 2017 might be of interest to those in the U.K. Here are a few excerpts:
"A Senior Judge Has Suggested Charging The Government For Every "No-Brainer" Benefits Case It Loses In Court
Britain’s most senior tribunal judge says most of the benefits cases that reach court are based on bad decisions where the Department for Work and Pensions has no case at all.
Sir Ernest Ryder, senior president of tribunals, also said the quality of evidence provided by the DWP is so poor it would be “wholly inadmissible” in any other court.
In an extraordinary outburst against what he said was the incompetence of the department, he said he and his fellow judges were so incensed by the volume of cases where there was “no justifiable defence to the appeal” that they were considering sending them back – or charging the DWP for the cases it loses.
The percentage of cases lost by the DWP on appeal has been growing rapidly. In 2007, 44% of cases heard in the Social Security and Child Support tribunal went against the DWP. Ryder said the figures have now risen to a “staggering” 61%.
He said this was because in most instances the DWP simply had no case at all.
Benefits assessments have been mired in controversy since being outsourced to private companies who are encouraged to cut claimants."
The article continues by discussing the lack of help for PIP appeals, now running at 100,000 per year, and that complaints against the PIP assessment process increased by almost 880 percent last year.
One former benefits advisor at a Citizen Advice office stated that: ". . . the decision-making was so bad; medical evidence from the practitioners actually treating the client was usually ignored or marginalised, in favour of ‘assessments’ by a disability assessor, who was usually a nurse with no specialist knowledge of the client’s condition, but who had undertaken a short course on assessing disabilities and had examined the client for 30 minutes."
Read the entire article here:
https://www.buzzfeed.com/emilydugan...based-on-bad?utm_term=.lqb8Yl9X32#.ifvOZ48Dk5
Note: I first attempted to post this under "Living with ME/CFS - Work, Finances and Disability Insurance", but have insufficient privileges to post there.
That is the logical conclusion, however the whole process was supposed to reduce costs and has ended up costing more than if they'd left it alone.I think charging the DWP for each no brainer case it loses is not such a good idea as it will cost money to the public purse.
I don't think it's an accident, and the judge probably doesn't either. The current system has been created specifically to deny benefits to people entitled to them, while denying that anyone is accountable for the improper denials.
Quite so. The standard slippery bar-stewards' strategy of creating intermediaries so the buck can always be passed down the line.The government is passing the assessments to someone else, so it's not their fault. The assessment companies can't help it if some of their employees are dishonest, so it's not their fault. The assessors aren't qualified and lack the resources to do proper assessments, so we can't really blame them either.
In principle I agree, but the problem in this case is that it would ultimately be the taxpayers' wallet.Sounds like a good idea, hit them where it hurts, the wallet!
In principle I agree, but the problem in this case is that it would ultimately be the taxpayers' wallet.
In principle I agree, but the problem in this case is that it would ultimately be the taxpayers' wallet.
But the government won't do that, since ATOS is doing the job which the government paid them to do. If they are not violating their contract with the government, then they probably can't be punished for what's happening.I think the organisation that needs to be hit in the pocket is the private company that has been given the contract to do the medicals.
Pulling out of a contract is almost always a violation of that contract, and likely to have some nasty expenses involved. And there will always be another profit-driven company ready to step in and squeeze the government for every penny that it's willing to pay.I suspect as a result the company would pull out of the contract, as they do when the profits drop away, leaving the government forced to directly employ and train the medical assessors, or redesign the whole system.
ATOS did pull out of ESA (because all the bad press was affecting their share price amongst other things).............then the DWP hired Maximus............but then they got ATOS back to do PIP assessments(?) they must have come up with some changes/financial incentives(?)I suspect as a result the company would pull out of the contract
If only we were privy to the departmental discussions and advice that Peter Lilley received prior to hiring John Locascio, and the advice which he subsequently gave.
I wonder if so much time has now passed that copies of things like that might start becoming more accessible under the FOIA? I can't believe that this has been going on for so long!