A shocking government betrayal of the parents of children with special educational needs has set alarm bells ringing that Labour may be following a similar playbook with the Timms review.  We ask, is the Timms review a con and how should claimants respond to the recent call for evidence?

SEND review

Parents of children with special educational needs are currently taking part in a major review of provision for their children, which Labour has repeatedly claimed puts parents and young people “at the heart of the process”.

But one extraordinarily important change did not feature in the current SEND consultation, which finishes at the end of May.

This is the proposal to drastically reduce access to SEND tribunals, where parents can challenge the decisions of local authorities.

What makes this especially outrageous is that a staggering 98.9% of SEND tribunals – yes, you read that right -currently find in favour of the parent.

The parents of one affected child launched a legal challenge against the failure to include tribunal changes in the consultation.  They were informed last week by government lawyers that the secretary of state had chosen not to consult on this measure, as the decision had already been made.

This, it seems, is what Labour means by putting affected people at the heart of decision making.

An organisation called Measure What Matters has written a piece for Special Needs Jungle about the consultation, which we very strongly recommend claimants read.

One of the shocking claims is that Labour are paying £90 million to a PR firm to promote their SEND reforms.

But most important of all is the process that the organisation calls “manufactured consent”:

“It is what happens when those in power do not discover public support — they construct it.

  • They select who sits at the table.
  • They define the terms of engagement.
  • They write the script.
  • They filter the evidence.
  • They close the comments.
  • They manage the narratives.
  • They discipline dissent.
  • And then, they point to the resulting silence…and call it consensus.”

Does that sound familiar to readers who have been following Labour’s attempts to reform disability benefits?

We are not going to answer the question we asked in the headline, we’re going to leave it to readers to make up their own minds whether the Timms review is a con and perhaps share their conclusions in the comments below.

What should you do?

In fact we are not going to answer this question either, it will be up to readers to decide on the best course of action for them.  But in relation to the current consultation, which we have already written about, we do have some suggestions. 

Firstly it’s worth pointing out that the DWP are calling this consultation a “call for evidence”, which is important.  Governments don’t have to consult on most changes to the law, but if they do consult they have to make the process fair or it can be challenged in court, as happened last year when Labour failed to get the Conservatives’ flawed work capability assessment consultation upheld in court.

But, as far as we can tell, a call for evidence is not covered by the same requirements as a consultation, so may be much more difficult to challenge in court while still leaving the DWP free to argue that claimants had a say in the review.

So should you take part?

Our own opinion is absolutely yes, but we know that there will be others in favour of a boycott.  It will be up to individuals to decide what is right for them.

If you do decide to respond, bear in mind that the call for evidence covers a massive number of topics in four often complex questions, almost as if it was designed to discourage participation from the outset.

So, we suggest that you decide for yourself what issues are important to you in relation to PIP reform and write about those instead.

And be warned that there seems to be a limit of 4,000 characters for each of the main boxes, equivalent to about 600-700 words.  Anyone who wants to write more than that may be able to email the review at This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it..

Below are a few ideas concerning what you might want to write about, you may want to make your own suggestions in the comments below.

For the “Please provide your response here” box

  • Do you think that any of the PIP activities need changing or new ones adding or do you think they should stay as they are?
  • In particular, do you think it should be made harder for people with “less severe” mental health conditions or conditions such as autism or ADHD to claim PIP?
  • Do you think that work and PIP should be linked in any way at all and, if so, how?
  • Do you think that the Timms Review should be involved with the scrapping of the WCA or should that be the subject of a separate, detailed review of its own?

You may have other issues you want too include in this box. 

For example you may have experience of the appeals system you’d like to share.

Or experience of problems contacting PIP by telephone.

You may have theories about why there has been a rise in the number of people claiming PIP.

Or you may want to set out the part you think politicians and the DWP have played in demonising PIP claimants.

Whatever it is, you can include it here.  The main thing is to make a contribution about the things you think are most important, rather than trying to answer all the highly complex questions the review panel has asked.

For the “Is there anything else you would like to tell us” box

Do you think that this Call For Evidence is a fair, easy to follow and effective way to ask claimants about their opinions?

Do you think this call for evidence covers too many topics, bearing in mind the amount of time the Timms review has to issue its final report in the Autumn?

Do you think that any specific changes to PIP that the Timms Review eventually recommends should be the subject of a full, formal consultation before any action is taken?

What happens next

We know that the consultation ends on 28 May. That is the point at which panel members will see the responses.  Though, as the consultation terms make clear, they are actually planning to feed everything to AI and let that produce a summary for panel members. (Think Amazon’s “Customers say”).

We also know that by the end of May the review members will have a maximum of 30 working days left – at 5 paid days per month with the final report due in the Autumn – to consider all the submissions and come up with their proposals.

The review committee say they will be engaging with people in many other ways in the coming months. So, it may be that a proper consultation on specific proposals is still on the cards.

But it seems very unlikely.

The call for evidence submissions won’t be available until the end of May.  If the Timms panel spend just 10 working days considering them and coming up with their own proposals for changes to PIP, taking into account all the new evidence, that would take us to the end of July.

If they then launched a consultation on their own proposals, that would need to last a minimum of 12 weeks to avoid falling foul of the courts. 

Which would then give them a maximum of 5 working days to review all the feedback and adjust their proposals accordingly.

That hardly seems possible.

The truth is that the more the Timms review progresses, the harder it is to take it at face value.

Comments

Write comments...
or post as a guest
People in conversation:
Loading comment... The comment will be refreshed after 00:00.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 days ago
    Disability Rights UK - Experiences of PIP Survey
    This is open until 25/07/26 and will still feed in to the Timms Review.


    They have also published their response to the Timms Review:  

    I am planning to say that I agree with the following recommendations in Disability Rights UK Report etc. and cut and paste them when I submit my response later today. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 days ago
    As ever and just like every other such set up, Timms views the public as an uneducated useless mass, hiding in plain sight all its wrongdoings. 

    The deliberate destruction of lives choked in bureaucracy and threat of deprivation whilst deliberately ignoring the wilful ineptitude of unaccountable DWP employees and contractors wasting public monies and wielding threats with impunity is morally bankrupt.  

    It is the DWP which needs to be ripped apart in its entirety - not the sick, injured and dying.

    Even the smaller number of parasites feeding off benefits due to those same incompetent DWP and contractors can only do so because the people we pay to sort it out prefer to attack those too ill and exhausted to fight back.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 6 days ago
    I have only recently become aware of the Timms Review and the consultation exercise. I have Parkinson's and receive Attendance Allowance. Both of my daughters have teenage sons who have Autism and ADHD respectively, and neither of them was aware of Timms when I mentioned it to them. They both receive PIP.  I have been witness to their struggles with daily living since they were born, and can assure you that in both cases the conditions are real and impact significantly on their ability to socialize and do the things that most of us take for granted. Why has no general communication been sent from the DWP to the people in receipt of these benefits to make them aware of the consultation exercise?
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 1 months ago
    Not the Timms review but a report meant to help inform it. 

    The "independent" review into mental health conditions and ADHD and Autism interim report is out.

    https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/independent-review-into-mental-health-conditions-adhd-and-autism-interim-report

    Some snippets from the interim report. Note my choice of snips might not give a very fair impression of the report. It is over 80 pages long.

    "current patterns are shaped as much by the design of systems as by underlying need, including the incentives those systems create and the increasing tendency to medicalise forms of distress that may have broader social or developmental roots."

    "What is clear is that services are under significant and sustained pressure, and that the status quo is unlikely to be sustainable or fair in its present form."

    "A central question for the Review is whether rising presentations to services reflect a real increase in psychological distress within the population, or whether they arise primarily from changes in awareness, recognition, diagnosis and service use."

    "Historical analyses show that behaviours in children once regarded as" within the range of normal variation, or even as something to be welcomed in some contexts, are now more often interpreted as requiring intervention or treatment."

    " There is also concern that certain platforms, including TikTok, convey a high proportion of factually inaccurate messages around for example ADHD"

    "There is also a need to consider the medicalisation of distress within current systems of response. While clinical frameworks are essential for identifying and treating many conditions, there is a risk that a wide range of difficulties - particularly those arising from social, educational or environmental pressures - may increasingly be interpreted primarily through a medical lens.This can lead to pathways in which diagnosis becomes the main route to support, even where alternative responses may be more appropriate. It can also lead to inappropriate treatment – loneliness for example is unlikely to respond to antidepressants. A more effective approach may therefore require ensuring that people are directed to the form of support that best matches their needs, which in some cases will be clinical, but in others may be educational, social or community-based."

    "In many cases, earlier practical, educational or community-based support may offer more effective and less disruptive responses than prolonged waits for specialist assessment alone. The aim is therefore not to narrow access, but to broaden the ways in which help can be offered, so that individuals and families are able to receive support earlier and in forms that are better matched to their circumstances. In practice this may mean expanding earlier forms of support whileensuring that specialist services remain available for those whose needs require them."

    "The aim is not only to improve outcomes for individuals and families but also to ensure that public resources are used more effectively"
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 months ago
    There is a long article on the BBC news regarding the almost complete transfer of people to Universal Credit. It describes Duncan-Smith's visit to Easter house in Glasgow in 2002, and from that the challenges for the future of working age welfare. It does not bode well for the disabled. Articles like the one above never mention the cost of the state pension which will have to be reformed due to numbers and a declining birth rate. Not sure how employers are going to feel with more staff over 65 years of age. I suspect life expectancy to start to decline in the next decade.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 months ago
    I will tell you all what this is.
    I have recently had call to contact Sir Stephen Timms on a matter of disability related business as I am disabled myself.
    He will not even bother to reply to me.  He contacted me when I contacted him at the House of Commons and he asked me to resend the email to him at his DWP email address.  I subsequently did and I have received no reply whatsoever.  That was three months ago.
    If he will not respond to an ordinary disabled person at all, I consider that this review is just going to be the usual lip service and nothing else.  
    He obviously considers us to be beneath him.  
    I have no faith in him at all.

  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 months ago
    That responses are anonymous means bots can swamp the responses and claim to be from disabled people, carers, workers, experts, whatever they want. And the DWP AI analysis and summary will report what the bots have flooded the responses with. So I fear this call for evidence will just amplify right wing bots. 
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 months ago
    These call for evidence questions should never have been released to the public. They may be questions to which the review panel requires answers, but different, more specific consultation questions should have been compiled so as to help reach those answers.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 months ago
    Maybe we could devise answers to the survey which would register in the way we want with AI? 

    @Aw could be on to something with mentioning key words.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 months ago
    I don'f see why there is a separate 'easy read' questionnaire. There should be one version, which is easy to read.

    Also, whilst linking pip to work is problematic and inappropriate in any case, it is entirely irrelevant to pension age claimants, whose interests are unaddressed.



  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 months ago
    "The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) has admitted that it won’t even read the responses to the Timms PIP review"!!

    This so-called consultation seems to be nothing but lip service.

    Stephen Timms has nothing to with the Stephen that's described in the Bible as a man of God.

  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 months ago
    Yes a big con and we should not stand for it me and my wife r disabled and we have to fight for pip every time even with long term health problems and we will never get better and that keep attacking disabled people should be on the news and newspapers 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 2 months ago
      @Wayne Wayne we could have too see work coaches eventually the way it's looking.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 months ago
    I'd like to tell them how I feel about PIP but I have a learning disability so I don't understand the questions. There was an easy read one so I looked at that but do they ask the same questions in the easy read but ask them in a simple way or are they different questions in the easy read? I tried looking at the other one first but I couldn't understand any of the questions so that's why I looked at the easy read one instead 
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 2 months ago
      @J I just ignored the questions and wrote what I felt
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 months ago
    I agree with some of things that Aw has mentioned.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 months ago
    Everyone should mention the words "destitute" and "suic1de" several times. If the AI doesn't pick that up we will know even that is a manipulated sham. For myself, I've spent too many of the last 17 years worrying about losing everything, it's badly affected my MH and made me feel like they don't want to listen to the truth anyway. I gave up trying to save myself with them a long time ago. I get up every morning and try to make the best of my day, until they decide I can't. That's all I've got now, I'm exhausted.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 months ago
    If only this stupid government put the same energy into economic growth as they do welfare we might be better off. Every day we read of businesses going into administration involving thousands of job losses adding in turn to the ever expanding welfare bill. And of course the TIMMS review is a con just like any other. “We want to encourage people into work. What work! “
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      · 2 months ago
      @David I think their is alot of care work and support work available but it's not for everyone.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 months ago
    I wonder if this is more to get evidence on what to take off the form of PIP and how to get less people on it instead of what they're saying. Looking at how to find even more loops to avoid supporting people financially while Timm and his colleagues continue to claim unnecessary expenses and MP's salaries that are not means tested or we continue to pay for the champagne budget for the house of Lords or Cameron's £2 million private jet for "work travel". Sortitions end of. Reform of work conditions. Reform of health services. End of paying people to sit pretty. And yes we all contribute towards these expenses as everyone who lives in the UK and visits pay VAT including people on benefits. Don't believe that false division between tax payers and people on benefits. The only ones who don't pay taxes as they should are MP's and politicians like Farage and Badenoch even Starmer who go on about tax payers and benefits claimants. This review is incredibly sexist now people are panicking that women with autism and adhd are being correctly diagnosed finally after many decades of evidence pointing at that fact because women are meant to support people and not to ask for help. It's outrageous.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    · 2 months ago
    I think the backdown on changes to the benefit system under Liz Kendal, is a temporary victory, the current minister will be back to revisit changes to save money for other Government spending, especially the defence budget. 
    I raised this with my MP, and pointed out, at the time proposed, changes were made to help people into work, that people who were retired and on state pension would be affected and lose benefits as well, without the option or opportunity to return to the workforce. 
    In my opinion, all the changes to benefits, since the banking crisis of 2008, are to plug the gap in Government, finances, universal credit is a good example. I was on long term incapacity benefit, and due to migration, on to universal credit, I lost out  on around 55K to 60K from May 2019 till reaching my retirement pension earlier this year. And the recent back down is only temporary, and no doubt Pat McFadden, will come forward with new plans to modernise the welfare system, which will reduce payments to claimants. Also the freezing of tax allowances, will bring more people paying tax on their pensions, I will come into this category, from April.
    I remember when my late mother, received a tax demand in 2016, based her on second state pension,  which was based on my later fathers work history, what it basically meant was that, after 10 years my later fathers was paying tax, for all he was dead? 
    And with the current uncertainty due to the Middle East crisis I think more is to come to changes to benefits, when most political parties are singing from the same hymn, sheet, I am a member of the Labour Party, and disgusted at the current Government’s inability to tell the truth about the threat to the welfare state and reform the taxation system so the wealthy pay their fair share of taxes. 

Free, Fortnightly PIP, ESA & UC Updates!

News, Coupons, Campaigns, Feedback.

Over 140,000 claimant and professional subscribers.

 
iContact
We use cookies

We use cookies on our website. Some of them are essential for the operation of the site, while others help us to improve this site and the user experience (tracking cookies). You can decide for yourself whether you want to allow cookies or not. Please note that if you reject them, you may not be able to use all the functionalities of the site.