There has been a massive response to the Modernising Support Green Paper, Stephen Timms, the DWP minister for disability has revealed.  And whilst the government is still not offering any certainty that the proposal to replace PIP cash payments with vouchers will be dropped, they do seem to be distancing themselves from the Conservative’s proposals.

Timms was answering a question on behalf of the secretary of state for Work and Pensions from Labour MP Cat Smith:

“To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, when she plans to publish her Department's response to the consultation entitled Modernising support for independent living: the health and disability green paper, published in April 2024.”

Timms replied:

“The consultation on the Modernising Support Green Paper closed on Monday 22 July. Over 16,000 responses have been received and we will review these responses.

“The proposals in this Green Paper were developed by the previous government. We will be considering our own approach to social security in due course.”

The number of responses is more than ten times higher than were given to the DWP consultation on changes to the work capability assessment, which was launched in September 2023.  That consultation received 1,348 replies.

It is likely that the vast majority of responses will have been negative in relation to most of the proposals for changes to PIP.  It is encouraging to learn that so many people took the trouble to respond and it will have left the government in no doubt about the size of the fight they will have on their hands if they try to push through any of the more controversial ideas in the Green Paper  

The form of words used by Timms “We will be considering our own approach to social security in due course.” is identical to that used by Baroness Sherlock in the House of Lords last week.

Whilst it lacks any certainty, the phrase does suggest that Labour are planning to disown most of what the Conservatives have proposed.

Benefits and Work readers, who we know responded in large numbers to the Green Paper, can congratulate themselves on having spoken out so powerfully on behalf of the many PIP claimants who found the consultation too overwhelming to reply to.

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    · 3 months ago
    From The Observer

    It’s time to end blame culture over benefits bill, says Labour minister

    Exclusive: Work and pensions secretary Liz Kendall pledges to halt Tory ‘salami slicing’ of benefits, but Labour under fire for union pay deals

    Michael Savage Policy editor

    Sat 17 Aug 2024 19.00 BST

    Share

    Labour will end the blame culture aimed at people out of work and will not repeat the “salami slicing” of the benefits bill pursued by the Tories, the work and pensions secretary pledges today, as she warns that rising welfare spending is unsustainable.

    In her first newspaper interview since taking the role, Liz Kendall told the Observer that a drastic overhaul was required to fix a “broken” back-to-work system, warning that the number of people who are economically inactive was now bigger than the population of London.

    Describing her task as “one of the biggest challenges the country faces”, she said that she would be bringing in major reforms to a system that was failing too many of the near record 2.8 million people now out of work due to long-term sickness.

    She accused a series of Conservative politicians of using anti-welfare rhetoric against people in need of help. Amid concerns within Labour that welfare will be squeezed as part of chancellor Rachel Reeves’s first budget this autumn, Kendall said she would not make reform “merely about cuts and blame”.

    Citing large projected increases in welfare spending, she added: “I do not think it’s sustainable when you’re seeing those levels of increases, but we can do something about it.”

    She criticised the previous government’s approach, which she described as “salami slicing cuts [and] divisive rhetoric that blames people and doesn’t support them.

    “We’ve never seen more people written off. The last parliament was the worst for economic inactivity on record. It is for us to put this right. But we will need big reforms and big changes. I know people worry about this, but I want to say, we are on your side. We are not going to write you off and blame you. We take our responsibilities seriously. We’re going to bust a gut to give you the support you need to build a better life.”

    Reeves has already made it clear that she will make “tough decisions” on welfare spending in the forthcoming budget, describing spending as “out of control”. Over the next six years, spending on incapacity and disability benefits for working age people is projected to rise to £63bn – a real-terms increase of almost 48%. However, some MPs are wary of any squeeze that would only save money in the short term.

    Kendall repeatedly took aim at the rhetoric used by a series of Conservative figures. While former chancellor George Osborne talked about “shirkers”, Rishi Sunak denounced a “sicknote culture”. When he was work and pensions secretary, Mel Stride said some people did not work because they felt “down and bluesy”.



    Chancellor of the exchequer Rachel Reeves will be making ‘tough decisions’ on welfare spending. 

    “All of the talk about strivers versus scroungers or shirkers – I think the people who really shirk their responsibility were the people who last sat in this office because they wrote off millions of people who actually want to work,” Kendall said. “It matters deeply for individuals and their ability to have a decent life for themselves. It matters to our economy because it is the major thing holding back growth. But it also matters to the public finances as well.”

    Plans to curb welfare spending come with the Tories criticising the government for reaching a series of pay deals designed to end strikes. A backdated pay offer for train drivers was announced last week: it followed the chancellor’s £9bn package to increase public sector pay and a major increase offered to junior doctors.

    Stride said his party would “take no lectures from the government, who have failed at the first hurdle to signal that they will get a grip on welfare spending”.

    “Labour have made their priorities clear – taxpayer-funded above-inflation pay rises demanded by their union paymasters and scrapping welfare reform that could save the taxpayer £12bn – all while axing winter fuel payments for pensioners. Without taking much-needed action to make the welfare bill sustainable, Labour will once again ramp up taxes.”


    In a frank assessment of the challenge she faces, Kendall said she was “under no illusions” about the size of her task. She said the current system “is broken. It’s not working. But I know that our work coaches are full of passion and ideas about doing things differently.”

    Kendall suggested there would be serious reforms to jobcentres, freeing them up from monitoring benefits and linking them with the NHS to help those struggling to work for health reasons. “We have got to put jobcentres back to where they were initially meant to be, which is a public employment service,” she said. “That isn’t how they are. Their overwhelming focus is on monitoring, assessing and policing benefits. We’ve got 16,000 work coaches and we want them to do what they say on the tin.”

    She also committed to a review of universal credit, new plans to tackle economic inactivity led by local areas and mayors and a “youth guarantee” ensuring every 18-21-year-old could get training, an apprenticeship or support to find work. More details of her plans will be unveiled in a white paper in the autumn.

    Kendall would not be drawn on whether she was pushing for the Treasury to end the two-child limit on benefits that most experts believe is a driving force behind child poverty. However, the Leicester West MP said that the government’s child poverty taskforce had met for the first time last week and that the issue was a priority.

    “I have got one in three kids in Leicester growing up poor,” she said. “On one of my last visits to one of my primary schools, they’d had to go out to find a young boy who had not been at school. When they found him at home, all he had was a bowl of salad cream for breakfast. I know in my bones how appalling the situation is.

    “I will only make a commitment when I know that we can deliver on it. The last Labour government did incredible things to tackle poverty, but it was so easily overturned by the Tories. We are determined that our strategy will not only take immediate action, but this time it will last.”



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    · 3 months ago
    Biggest issue now is Labour making pip means tested - that wasn’t a question asked in the consultation so we haven’t had a chance to explain how bad an idea that would be (compared to the equally terrible voucher idea)

    Or Labour making it next to impossible for those with invisible or neurodivergent to claim pip or disability elements of pip

    Labour already proven that they don’t understand pip
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 months ago
    When will we get any more news 
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      · 3 months ago
      @Brian Marriott Obviously when labour find more black holes.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 months ago
      @Brian Marriott @Brian Marriott I don't think we will have definitive information until the Budget on 30 October. Until then, we only have rumours, some of which may be government leaks. We just don't know, it's a cruelly anxious time. Take care, Mari.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 months ago
    I sent my 8 page paper to Caxton House and Mel Stride, It wont make much difference.
    PIP payments are used by all who receive them to pay their way in life.
    We all need cash to pay our way in life, no matter what your circumstances are.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 months ago
      @Anon Anon
      Yes Kendall is Minister for work and pensions and she seems to be just as discrinatory as Stride against the disabled community and disability benefits.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 months ago
      @Kevin Jackson Mel Stride was an advocate of stopping pip and he said people who felt "down and bluesy" should be forced to take jobs.
      You won't get any support from him.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 months ago
      @Kevin Jackson Mel Stride is no longer the minister for work and pensions, Liz Kendall is.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 months ago
    I am one of those participants who would  have completed the lengthy survey, downloaded as a copy!
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 months ago
    Pip should be money only as we need the money to pay for taxi and for repairs voucher will not pay for taxi voucher is useless 
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      · 2 months ago
      @Matt @matt totally agree with you. I too and sick of always living in fear and proving myself over and over again. 
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      · 2 months ago
      @Brian Marriott I believe they will start a revolt if they go ahead with it as it's totally useless and we have told the gov with overwhelming response that it will not work and no one wants it as it is a dangerous and reckless thing Todo I my self have no use for vouchers I do in fact have use for cash like paying my bills !! Im sick of fearing for the right to live they want the disabled gone simple fact 
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      · 3 months ago
      @Brian Marriott You keep making the same comment over and over again. I understand the anxiety about any possible changes but the Government aren't going to read these comments.
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    · 3 months ago
    I used to work until my doctors said there was no way with my chronic fibromyalgia epilepsy and arthritis plus suffer from high anxiety, depression and ptsd my money gets used on my daily living expenses also a Motability scooter which is my lifeline i have to watch what i eat and i have multiple chemical sensitivities so i have to be careful with everything i eat or consume, my wet room is upstairs and i need to see about a stair lift , carer and a household help but you cant pay for people to come in with vouchers plus the extra heating in the winter the air in the summer, extra bill money food taxis when you need to get to an appointment in a hurry
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    · 3 months ago
    Does anyone have any new information on this as I'm really scared and worried I'm going lose my pip cast payments for vouchers I rely on pip for my carer and a cleaner and other living costs this being stripped away I will fall down hard, I'm having sleepless nights over this I have dyspraxia, Asperger's, epilepsy and anxiety and trying not to make myself sick over this. Any reassurance or information is much appreciated. 🙏
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      · 3 months ago
      @CaroA I hope fingers crossed they scrap this ridiculous not thought through plan as usual attack the most vulnerable of society and quietest voices no matter Labour or conservative all the SAME. If you know  any more information I'd greatly appreciate it if you happen to hear anything new to come of this as I'm absolutely petrified. 🤦‍♂️🙏
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 months ago
      @Jack Thanks for this Jack I hope you can find some peace during your day.  So many of us are really worried about this but hopefully 🤞 it won't be as bad as we think.  
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    · 3 months ago
    They won't be changing to vouchers. Think of the additional administration costs for the govt and for retailers! This is a non-starter. Anyway, we already use a voucher of sorts, one issued by the govt redeemable with the govt against taxes which is what gives them their value. Money. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 2 months ago
      @A Actually your wrong do you know how much and how long if would take and cost to set up this system ? I’m  a software developer believe me this is a massive and expensive task no one individual could oversee this or indeed operate it 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 2 months ago
      @A While in your head it seems that simple, really world it's not even like that.

      You do understand barcodes store very basic infomation they can't store complex amounts of date. 

      This system would cost more then it would save the government alone in development of software and then getting company's on board with the idea. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 months ago
      @billkruse No significant administration cost would involve if they decided to, as it can take only one staff member to issue vouchers to millions of people within less than a minute on a computer, in the form of barcodes, to be sent out via emails or text messages, to scanned at retailers and voila done.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 months ago
      @billkruse Hi Bill, nice to see you on here and I do enjoy your work on that mensa website. About money and the invasion by Holland in the late 1600's. And on R. Murphys blog.
      As you say £££ is already a voucher !
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    · 3 months ago
    I had Encephalitis when I was 23 months old leaving me with several problems although I look OK and sound OK.  People think I am about 16 years when I am actually 45. I use my PIP to pay for my carer who has been organised for me through the local council.  Are the DWP going to drag me in to get me to work (I can't of course). Please don't judge people, there are some who really need help and have done for years.
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    · 3 months ago
    I have severe neck, shoulder and spine problems. Without pip I would be totally housebound as there is no way I could afford to get around. My mental health isn't good as the pain I'm in is traumatic.  So I would end up staying in all the time as I need to pay to get around. I am really anxious about these changes. Worse than when I had to do the work capability assessment. They always treat disabled people like we are a burden. It's like do u think I would be like this if I had a choice. And they talk about cutting back on money, have u seen how much these politicians spend on themselves and charge to the government,  remember that one guy who charged the government 40 pounds for a breakfast, and he bought expensive boxer shorts on tue governments money. Its such hypocrisy 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 months ago
    I have been claiming benefits since the age I was able to, I have very severe mental health due to past trauma and I also have learning disabilities, those who claim for no reasons should be the ones that pay not the ones that genuinely need the support. I tried working a few times before I actually claimed but I mentally couldn’t cope having intense anxiety attacks. If I was strong enough to I would do it but I’ve tried many times
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    · 3 months ago
    I think you are spot on Pete.

    I am 58 years old, I have always worked.  I have been diagnosed with a ver6 rare condition that causes my nerves and small to medium blood vessels to narrow.  As a consequence I have rehabilitating numb feet/hands causing mobility issues.  The condition has also caused me to suffer with asthma and with nerve damage I have a dropped foot.   Walking is very slow and difficult.  I am under two Cnsultants, I am on various medications and have a biologic injection every 8 weeks and Infusions every 6 months.  There is no cure for my illness.  As a result I cannot work.  PIP is a life line.  

    I believe there are people out there abusing the system.  The Goverment have a right to target those individuals.  I know of cases of individuals who have NEVER worked and claim every benefit they can.  But genuine claimants should not b made to feel like they are scrounges.  I have paid my taxes and NI contributions all my life
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 months ago
      @Thomas Those people who have never worked are like myself but have good reasons why we can't work just as you have good reasons why you don't work.
      Every individual is different and have had a different life, don't judge them through no fault of their own. 
      You were fortunate to work in the past but many were not. 
      Think about what you are saying here please.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 months ago
      @Thomas @Thomas Of course there are “cases of individuals who have NEVER worked and claim every benefit they can.” Some PIP claimants are born with major, lifelong disabilities and are among the most vulnerable members of society. PIP is not a reward for NI contributions or income tax paid. 
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    · 3 months ago
    I think it's likely something will come out of this consultation but it'll probably be that PIP will become harder to claim. I'll be honest, I think this is fair as people are claiming it without a formal diagnosis, normally anxiety and depression.

    Maybe there could be some lower rate whilst people wait to see consultants etc. For the record I have both a serious physical condition and various mental health conditions I've been diagnosed with by consultants over the years. But the thing is, when I first began to suffer mental health problems years ago (suspected schizophrenia) I didn't claim DLA because it wasn't affecting me in that way. Maybe I did need it, I dunno but did end up claiming DLA ten years later. It just feels like some people are claiming PIP just because they can rather than whether they actually need it and this is perhaps partly what is driving the surge in claims.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 months ago
      @Hannah B Why do you say that? 
      You need to state your reasons why.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 months ago
      @Pete I think they are going to make pip available to people with physical disabilities only. 
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      · 3 months ago
      @Pete
      Thank you Pete. Kind of you to acknowledge.
       I also have had a retinal thrombosis in left eye.  So only have peripheral vision and no central vision in that left eye.  Other eye okay.
      Am now reluctant to disclose on any forms now (other than for DWP) that I have a mental health condiition.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 months ago
      @lesley I feel for you as I also have an eye condition which causes tearing of the epithelial layer on my eyes. Was in a load of pain though when I turned up at A&E and they could see the cysts under magnification. I can't imagine what they've had said if the cysts weren't there. Incidentally the condition is idiopathic, there's no explanation as to what is causing it. I think it could be my liver but sadly the more likely I suggest that, the less seriously I'll prob be taken.
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      · 3 months ago
      @Pete
      I agree Pete.
      Once I had a piece of grit or something in my eye.  I went to A&E for help because it was so painful.
      I disclosed on a form that I had a mental health illness.
      The doctor who examined me could not find anything,(the piece of grit or whatever it was in my eye had probably cleared by itself). The A&E doctor then said "People with mental health problems always think things are a lot worse than they really are"
      I put in a complaint about that doctor and reported him to the Patient Advocacy Liaison Service.
      I turned out about a month later when I was examined by an opthalmologist at my local opticians that I had "dry eye syndrome" which can be extremely painful.
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    · 3 months ago
    I highly doubt vouchers will happen - it’s just too much of a bureaucratic nightmare and will end up costing money. It will engender a black market and there will be marches full of the wheelchair-bound and the elderly. Not a good look, even if this govt is heartless and no better than the last. There’s a good case for offering therapy and easier access to such for those who want it. Everything else is too blatantly cruel and/or infeasible. I will never vote Labour again. 
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      · 1 months ago
      @Dods I will never vote again they are all the same now 
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      · 2 months ago
      @Dods @Dods the green paper (PIP Bill) was introduced by the Tories what labour do with it is another story if they chose to follow the bill to the letter as laid out by the Tories then I won't vote for labour again either but I would never vote for the Tories either not unless I somehow mange too some how inherit over £5 million or a large company such as Tesco, or Amazon, that are worth  billions of ££££ 
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      · 2 months ago
      @Dods The fact there trying to end us says it all it's disgusting and they know for a fact that no one wants this at all but there hellbent on starving and un-aliveing  the disabled it seems 
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      · 3 months ago
      @Dods Not all therapy is created equal. "Standard" talking therapy, which the government are quoting, are for what is considered "safer" and less complex condititons. More specialised treatments are next to impossible to access without going private. Without the means to pay for this treatment would leave many of us in extremely dangerous positions.
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    · 3 months ago
    I still think there was never an intention to use vouchers, I think the real plan was making it much harder to qualify for PIP, the proposal e.g. requires a clinical diagnosis, as well as various adjustments to the descriptors.

    But everyone only seems to be only talking about the vouchers, which if I am right means the distraction is working,
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 months ago
      @cc I agree with CC. The vouchers idea is so outrageously silly and it simply masks the real intention to introduce something less diabolical, which people will grudgingly accept because it isn't as bad as they thought it would be. 

      Just my opinion, but I believe means-testing PIP would be too controversial and the idea would be met with strong opposition. 

      By far the most likely change, and I offer no opinion on this, could be stricter assessment criteria, with a view to reducing the number claiming for mental health issues particularly, but including anyone else claiming as well. This has been hinted at several times recently, although the precise nature of any stricter criteria is obviously a matter of conjecture. We will have to sit tight until they start leaking details ahead of the actual announcements.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 months ago
    I filled in the response form. I stated what if treatment I needed, such as my osteopath didn’t take the vouchers.
    Plus what if this was a tag to check where you were spending money?
    You may think buying a coffee out for your friend is a inconsiderate use of money. Not if you have been in bed all week with a flare up and seen no one. Mental health benefits are much needed.
    Plus sometimes you just need to pay the bills.
    I did indicate a certain number of staff would need to be employed for this and to deal with queries.
    We are sick, not on a thoughtless spending spree. We appreciate the money we get, and we would not choose this. A full time job would be easier, than a condition 24/7.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 months ago
    I rely on my pip for my taxi from hospitals and home and also to help with every day living 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 3 months ago
    I rely on PIP to live and pay my bills, I have many unseen illnesses and I am have been medically retired due to them.
    If PIP is taken away and replaced by voucher I won’t be able to pay my rent or bills. I did fill the response form in even tho a lot of the questions didn’t make sense to me I just answered them however I wanted. 
    Being medically retired I am now unable to work which sucks. 
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    · 3 months ago
    Equal shares of misery for all would not benefit anyone and would eventually lead to the complete end of PIP and DLA etc. as, eventually, all disabled benefits would be merged with universal credit if disabled benefits were means tested.

    Those who seek financial improvement for disabled people on low income should press for the existing means tested benefits to be improved for all on low income as everyone on low income, irrespective of disability should receive a fair income.

    Only silly people would consider that the means testing of existing disability benefits such as PIP or DLA was a good idea as it would not benefit anyone.

    Those who already qualify for existing means tested benefits would not gain a penny by those who have worked and carefully saved lossing out because some people have a Green Eyed Prospective. - Our loss would not be their gain.

    Bringing those, without savings/or on low incomes up, (via improved UC), would be fair but under the present economic circumstances that will not happen soon.

    PIP and DLA is only available to disabled people because disabled people have additional costs, additional needs and restrictions caused by their disabilities and these needs and cost and needs are the same irrespective of income. - It is and it should remain purely based on disability and should be paid in the same amounts in the same way to all who are disabled. 

    Let us not place unnecessary divisions between us were none should exist. 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 months ago
      @Edwards I agree with you.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 months ago
      @boris1 It simply wouldn't work,how long are your savings going to last you? 16k if you've been disqualified from claiming anything won't last 2 minutes, many have worked hard for their savings or their partner has,why should someone who hasn't squandered their money be penalised?and its a massive disincentive to even try work, why would you when the end result would be a total loss of your pip?? if they do thus they are absolutely nuts In thinking people will want to work because they won't 
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      · 3 months ago
      @Perceptive What about people claiming through contributions,my esa has always been contributions based because my oh worked,he doesn't work now he had to give it up to care for me and is now claiming carers allowance, he took a pension lump sum to enable us to do this,I don't claim income based benefits as the pension lump sum disqualifies us,also not everyone wants to swap their cont based esa for uc and then losing their disability payments,having  to be assessed again and get put in the wrong group with work searches attached which I can't do ,I wish,as we all do that we were not disabled and Free to work and earn our own money without all these threats hanging over us,life would certainly be a whole lot better if we were lucky enough to be fit and healthy 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 3 months ago
      @Perceptive @perceptive I agree.  Those who say it should be made means tested are causing division within the disabled community and  pitting us against one another. We should be standing in solidarity, after all we all have the extra costs that disability incurs and frankly its selfish and thoughtless of those who appear to lack compassion

      I guess as long as it doesn't effect them thats all that seems to matter.
      I find it astonishing.

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