Benefits are a lifeline for disabled people both in and out of work. If functioning correctly, our social security system can help disabled people live fulfilled independent lives, contribute to their communities, feel a sense of stability and afford the extra costs that disability brings. Sadly, however, scarcely a week goes by without a new report confirming just how badly our benefits system is broken.
One of these reports was released on Friday (January 31), when the Public Accounts Committee described the Department of Work and Pensions‘ treatment of disability benefits claimants as “unacceptably poor”.
The report found, among other things, that the DWP does not understand disabled people’s needs well enough, that disabled benefits claimants were underpaid by billions of pounds, and that people claiming disability benefits wait ten times as long to have their calls answered as people claiming other benefits.
- Disabled Brits suffering ‘unacceptably poor’ treatment at hands of the DWP, damning report finds
- DWP’s benefit fraud crackdown blasted as ‘one of the biggest assaults on welfare in a generation’
The findings are shocking, yet they didn’t surprise us at Sense. Disabled people have been raising the alarm for years on the problems with the benefits system, and particularly the process of claiming benefits.
Last year, we asked people living with complex disabilities what applying for benefits was like for them. Three in five people said they felt scared before their assessment, and half felt humiliated by the process. Half also said that applying for benefits made their health condition worse.
Friday’s report also quotes Sense’s research which found nearly half of disabled people were repeatedly contacted by the DWP in ways that were not accessible to them, despite the DWP knowing their needs. One woman we support who is blind was sent a printed decision letter about her benefits in the post, and so needed a relative to read her the decision. This robs disabled people of the right to privacy and to live as independently as possible.