The Conservatives are targeting some claimant’s cash, medication and access to justice, in a tougher sanctions regime aimed at forcing more long-term unemployed people into work.  Mandatory work placements, fraud investigations as a form of coercion and a “digital tool” for tracking attendance at job interviews are also to be introduced.

Whilst most of the measures will affect a relatively small number of claimants at this stage, there is the possibility that they will become more widespread once the principle that they are acceptable has been established.

The measures form part a “Back to Work plan” to feature in the Autumn statement which Chancellor Jeremy Hunt and the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions Mel Stride say will “help people stay healthy, get off benefits and move into work.”

 Amongst the new features to be introduced are:

  • Closing the universal credit (UC) claims of people who have been on an open-ended sanction for more than six months.  The DWP point out that this will include removing access to free prescriptions and legal aid.  In theory, this should not affect disabled claimants, but in reality could potentially hit disabled claimants who are appealing a decision that they are fit for work.
  • Automatically investigating claimants for fraud and error after 8 weeks on an open ended sanction, even though there are no grounds for suspicion.
  • Tracking claimants attendance at job interviews and work fairs using a “digital tool”.
  • Imposing mandatory work placements after 12 months on Restart.

Stricter sanctions and loss of prescriptions

The DWP say they will introduce “Stricter sanctions for people who should be looking for work but aren’t”.

This will include closing the UC claims of people who have been on an open-ended sanction for more than six months.

An open-ended sanction is one which applies for as long as a claimant does not meet a specified commitment. 

So, for example, if a claimant failed to attend an interview with a work coach, they would be subject to an open-ended sanction until they did attend a rearranged interview. They would then have a fixed period sanction applied.

At the moment claimants subject to an open-ended sanction have a deduction applied to their standard allowance until they comply.  This can last indefinitely.

Under the new rules their claim would end after six months if they are not receiving additional child, housing or disability UC payments.  The DWP say this will also have the effect of “ending their access to additional benefits such as free prescriptions and legal aid.”

In theory, this measure will not apply to disabled claimants. 

However, because the mandatory reconsideration and appeal process generally take longer than six months, a claimant who has wrongly been found capable of work could find themselves on an open-ended sanction for failing to do something that, for example, a mental health condition prevents them doing. 

They may then find their UC claim and access to free prescriptions stopped before they have an opportunity to have the decision they are fit for work overturned.

Fraud investigations for disabled claimants

If a claimant is on an open-ended sanction for more than 8 weeks and they are in receipt of additional UC payments for childcare, housing or disability they will automatically be investigated for fraud and incorrect payments through the Targeted Case Review system.

This will be the case even though there are no grounds for suspecting any wrongful payment has been made.

Claimant tracking

The DWP say they are introducing a new digital tool that will allow work coaches to “track a claimant’s attendance at DWP organised job interviews or job fairs”. 

The DWP have given no indication of how this tool will work, but say that it will “ensure that claimants who do not attend mandatory appointments without a good reason, are sanctioned.”

Restart mandatory work placements

The Restart scheme, which currently provides coaching and training to claimants who have been on UC for nine months is to be toughened up.

In future, claimants can be placed on the Restart scheme after six months.

 In addition there will be a review after 12 months on Restart at which  “a work coach will decide what further work search conditions or employment pathways would best support a claimant into work.”

 The conditions can include a mandatory work-placement.

Claimants who refuse to accept the conditions laid down by the work coach will have their UC claim closed.

NHS Talking Therapies

An additional 384,000 people will be eligible for free courses of mental health treatment, such as CBT, for treatment of mild and moderate mental health conditions such as depression and anxiety disorders.”

 Individual Placement and Support

An additional 100,000 people with severe mental illness will be eligible for Individual Placement and Support (IPS).  The DWP say that IPS employment specialists help claimants to find and keep employment.

Universal Support in England and Wales

100,000 claimants per year, including disabled and vulnerable claimants, will receive up to 12 months “place and train” support from a dedicated keyworker who will help them find and keep a job.  Up to £4,000 will also be available to help each claimant manage health conditions or to help employers make necessary adjustments.

WorkWell

The DWP say WorkWell will help support people at risk of falling into long-term unemployment due to sickness or disability, through integrated work and health support.  The scheme will begin in 15 pilot areas.

Fit note reform

The government is to “explore reforms of the fit note process to provide individuals whose health affects their ability to work with easy and rapid access to specialised work and health support.”

 The concern is that the DWP may be working towards reducing the role of GPs in providing fit notes, replacing them instead with DWP staff.  This is hinted at in the Back to Work Plan, which says:

“Primary care (GP surgeries) will continue to play an important role in supporting working age people where their health presents a barrier to work. But there is often pressure on the time and expertise needed to hold the work and health conversation effectively and direct people to the right support, which is why we are exploring reforms.”

A blueprint for the future

If the DWP is successful in imposing these ‘reforms’ on a relatively small group of claimants without opposition, there is a real possibility they may then be introduced more widely.

It is hard to see how anyone could argue that effectively depriving claimants of access to prescribed medication, cutting off their access to legal aid or deliberately using fraud investigations as a method of coercion are legitimate functions of a social security system intended to act as a safety net.

But, it seems, that is exactly what is being introduce.

You can read more about the Back to Work Plan here.

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    lesley · 5 months ago
    Read this in the Guardian: Really does read like something out of a George Orwell novel.

    Then I read this on another site.
    This is the weight loss medication the govt is suggesting that they give to overweight benefit claimants.  The name itself is a dead giveaway surely? Does it mean "we who govern"? W.T.F.?
    'In March 2023, Novo Nordisk (the makers of Wegovy) was suspended from the ABPI for a period of two years, for engaging in misleading marketing practices that amounted to "bribing health professionals with inducement to prescribe". This is only the eighth time in the last 40 years that ABPI sanctioned a member organization. Due to this, the Royal College of General Practitioners and the Royal College of Physicians ended their corporate partnerships as it would be in breach of their ethical guidance. The Novo Nordisk General Manager of the UK, Pinder Sahota, chose to resign as President of the ABPI prior to the suspension.'
    I have also read that well over 10billion of benefits goes unclaimed each year.

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      Twisted Witch · 5 months ago
      @lesley Good lord, this is bloody rich. One of these 'weight loss' jabs was developed to help control Type 2 Diabetes, and it was discovered as one of the side effects that appetite was suppressed. Ever since that fact hit the news it has become next to impossible to source the medication for diabetes. And here we have some tin pot scheme to roll it out to benefit claimants when they can't suppy it to the people it was developed for!
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    George · 5 months ago
    No prescriptions or dentists equals eugenics in the uk
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    colcs · 5 months ago
    i cannot believe what the dwp are proposing to do yet again .Let me tell you the conservatives and the labour party are exactly the same and i fear for us all if labour get in on the next election.
    none of these politicians care about the disabled ,that's all they want to do is bring the benefits bill down and how they will do that is hit the most vulnerable down in society.
    I have heard on the radio this morning that hunt may not increase benefits in line with inflation next year but will give tax cuts and who will that benefit the most ,the most wealthy in society.
    I would urge anyone on legacy benefits of employment and support allowance (income related) to stay on this benefit until they have to go over to universal credit because when this government brought in universal credit they told people that they would not be any worse off and in fact they are .
    If you are on esa income related and in the support group and you claim pip as well ,currently esa pay you a disability premium and a severe disability payment all within your esa but once you go over to uc ,you loose these extra payments because uc does not pay it .
    Instead they pay you a transitional payment which is far less than you were previously on under esa and if benefits rise in line with inflation next April that transitional payment reduces so you will not be any better off.
    The system is appalling  .
    They wasted millions of money with covid but nothing is done about that .
    They should be targeting all the people that avoid paying tax instead of hitting the most vulnerable in society but they will not do that because most of the politicians are avoiding paying tax in offshore accounts. 


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      sue · 5 months ago
      @Fibrogal Hah! Some of us got changed over just before the delay was announced!
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      Asbo · 5 months ago
      @Kerry @Kerry this is already New Style ESA
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      Fibrogal · 5 months ago
      @Kerry I thought this wasn’t happening until 2028? 
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      Tuxcat · 5 months ago
      @John Exactly John, which is why I couldn’t move house to a different area.
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      Alison · 5 months ago
      @Kerry Yes , it will. But you must keep your eyes open . UC has a reputation of cockups . Infact the whole system does. I hope you are more fortunate than us. Over 3 months with nothing coz Esa still open but not paying and UC can't open coz Esa account still live. They don't talk to one another . It is a disgrace. 
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    jlee · 5 months ago
    Talking therapy is useless....
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      Ilo · 5 months ago
      @The Dog Mother You should insist on being seen by a psychiatrist who can diagnose. If you can afford it, pay privately to see one
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      The Dog Mother · 5 months ago
      @jlee Indeed.She said I had as far as she's allowed to , PTSD, but couldn't diagnosis, as it's beyond her remit. 
      Fabulous. So I'm undiagnosed so can't even use it as part of my miraide of health issues. 
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    shadowpony · 5 months ago
    "If a claimant is on an open-ended sanction for more than 8 weeks and they are in receipt of additional UC payments for childcare, housing or disability
    they will automatically be investigated for fraud and incorrect payments through the Targeted Case Review system.
    This will be the case even though there are no grounds for suspecting any wrongful payment has been made." so the government will suspect fraud even where there is none? surely this is against many laws? also, why is the sanction open ended? is it that the claiment commitment is so onourous  that the claiment cant comply?
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    CC · 5 months ago
    Before anyone thinks Labour is the answer, Liz Kendall has been quoted in the times as saying the Tories are not going far enough with these plans.

    I think there is a cross party agreement that has been in place for a while, and the only difference will be a difference in approach from both parties for the same end goal.
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      sue · 5 months ago
      @CC that was not a direct quote - that was the tory-led Times fudging it I  believe. No one has found A direct quote
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      tintack · 5 months ago
      @Jules While Labour's policy announcements thus far don't go anywhere near as far as I'd like, they have been somewhat better than what we're hearing from the Tories. Not going ahead with the WCA descriptor changes is certainly a decent start. We'll have to see if they stick to their commitments assuming they win next year, but I haven't seen anything to suggest they'd be harsher than the Tories. In fact, I'm not sure what "harsher than the Tories" could even look like at this point.
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      Sandra Bowes-Rennox · 5 months ago
      @CC At least there Shadow Chancellor has a background in economics unlike that rank amateur Hunt.
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      Jules · 5 months ago
      @tintack Labour will be harsher than the Tories, vote for another / any other party 
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      tintack · 5 months ago
      @tintack That should read "though they may make more than minor changes". Damn the lack of an edit function.
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    Woo · 5 months ago
    Vote Labour!
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    lesley · 5 months ago
    I would not be surprised if us over 75 year olds will be forced out to do some voluntary work to earn out DLA and pension credit.
    Already had two acquaintances suggesting that i go out and do some because I claim benefits.
    Can hardly look after myself, let alone go out to do voluntary work.
    Waiting for a bone fusion of my ankle, operation cancelled 3 times.  Can hardly put my weight on my left leg, in constant pain, using two crutches to get around and that's indoors!! When I finally do have the operation will be in a cast and have to use a wheelchair for a few months and then into a boot.  I do not have any carers and have to manage completely on my own. Takes me ages to complete any tasks I need to do during the day.
    What a good idea going out to do some voluntary work!!
    Also just had a diagnosis of skin cancer.  So my anxiety levels are sky high.
    Meanwhile multimillions sitting around a table deciding the fate of sick and disabled.
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      A · 5 months ago
      @lesley Hi Lesley 
      Am not surprised.  I have worked all my life looked after  my mom and son.  Mom passed away age 89yrs.  Am 58 yrs due a back operation worked part time   25 hours  past  12yrs with other health  issues I only had working tax blue badge  my hour went down  to 20 due depression and mucsckelton  pain  after moms death still working .
      New  working tax stopped. Am in debt with council  tax and bills  hard to buy prescriptions  dental as no working tax.

      My point is we are in work want to work not claiming  housing or council  tax.

      We should not need lcwra. Its the employers who need to have sanctions.

      They don't  help with  people  with disabilities. Employers are looking  for people  with a sickness record to get  rid off  them.

      Why dose  Hunt  mp  don't  look at them and  not with people  on PIP  etc.

      Now  I should do less hours  16  to get uc as will get nhs prescription and discount on council tax 

      Which muppet show are we on?????
      How dose that work 
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      lesley · 5 months ago
      @The Dog mother To the Dog mother, thanks.
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      The Dog mother · 5 months ago
      @lesley Aye its easy looking in from their side. Tell them you want a life free from their utter nonsense. 
      You deserve it. If you felt you could do volunteering I'm sure you would have long ago. 
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    al · 5 months ago
    this is only the work of the pure sadistic multi millionaire PM.
    suicides will go through roof by him picking on the ill.
    to come up with you wont be able to get a sick note from gp, means that no med3 then you cant start a claim.
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    John · 5 months ago
    I'm on IB ESA and PIP. But for various reasons I'd actually like to be on universal credit but want to delay doingso until June next year.

    Am I likely to be affected like this by being a new claimant? Would it be better to claim it now? I will likely get transitional protection as I have higher rate care.
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      Fibrogal · 5 months ago
      @John you won't get transitional protection if you move before the DWP tell you you have to. Transitional protection only kicks in if DWP invite you to apply for UC. Be very careful you could end up losing out big time also once you have moved to UC (especially if you move before DWP tell you to) you cannot go back onto whatever income you are on - if you realise you are worse off once you have moved it's too late all previous premiums/SDP will be lost. Better to wait it out then you will get your transitional protection and take premiums/SDP with you. 
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      KABTT · 5 months ago
      @John Don't jump too early, I've been forced off ESA due to a "change" - my partner being of pension age. Without warning they've stopped all income and sent a PIP review at the same time!! The stress has been off the scale as this was entirely unexpected, had a call from a "compliance" officer on partner's birthday advising me all benefits would stop and to claim UC immediately. So I enquired further and was a bit misled into making an online claim a few hours later.  UC has some nasty sanctions attached, a JC worker will be deciding what you can and cannot do over the advice of a NHS doctor.  So stay where you are as long as you can - I'm still writing/reading up. 
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      The Dog mother · 5 months ago
      @John Me too..but no
       Don't jump onto uc. This may not even go through. Wouldn't be surprised if that's part of the plan to get us to panic and go onto uc.
      I've heard that those applying for pip has gone ballistic since word of this got out. Because she they so afraid when the two assessments combine they may not get pip and therefore lose out on the uc health element. 
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      James h · 5 months ago
      @John @john me to I’m still on esa wrag group since July 2019 and I’m hanging on till the death until 2028 best just to wait until your migration notice and save yourself some stress I’m dreading the universal credit horror show myself
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    Am · 5 months ago
    I am utterly fuming that this government, who lied to us about being better off outside the EU and who squandered billions and billions to private companies needlessly during covid, now seek to cling onto power by proposing such draconian democidal policies that they absolutely know are going to kill thousands upon thousands of vulnerable citizens. They are liars & thieves and now they want to add murder to the list. I am so so angry.
  • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
    The Dog mother · 5 months ago
    Wait! Did I just hear Hunt on the news say the Conservatives are compassionate. 😳
    He couldn't spell the word.
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    Elizabeth · 5 months ago
    So half a step away from claiming illness is a lifestyle choice, like homelessness. Because spending years in hospital, having no certainty over income and constantly having to fight for the basics is a real barrel of laughs.
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    The Dog mother · 5 months ago
    And the good times keep on rolling.
    I'm sick to my stomach of this idiotic government picking on the weakest.This has been a worry for months. If it's passed and I hope and pray not there is clearly some kind of mental block with these people. Soon there will be no benefits system. For the love of all that's mighty they need to getva grip. Stop blaming us for being unwell.
    • Thank you for your comment. Comments are moderated before being published.
      Sarah · 5 months ago
      @Mark Well said
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      Jules · 5 months ago
      @Mark Well said 
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      Mark · 5 months ago
      @The Dog mother They hate us and they just want us to either die or fill one of these crummy job vacancies.
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      Mark · 5 months ago
      @The Dog mother It's truly sickening.  They always go after the sick and disabled, instead of closing tax loopholes and targeting billionaires.  Amazon's tax bill alone could pay for a large chunk of the benefits system or the NHS. 

      But if they closed the loopholes, our corrupt MPs would also lose out on millions, so there's no chance of them doing that.  Way easier to attack the poor, again. 
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    Bob · 5 months ago
    Sick of them demonising the poor and the sick all the time 
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    frances · 5 months ago
    My daughter was on DLA, transferred to PIP, then when her son was 5, came the push to return to work, even though she was already on PIP. She had to start providing sick notes! This has now got to point of renewal for PIP, which she is quite worried about, she still has post operation problems after a msjor operation putting a mesh girder to support her bowel &,womb following huge hernia, ceasar section deliver etc. this was on birth of her youngest, she has arthritis same as me, has been hospitalised with pneumonia and now has what they call popcorn lung, she is type 2 diabetic, suffers depression for years, oh she has high blood pressure, and is dyslexic, which she has had anxiety about from age 11, she attended a high support special school. and yet they question her ability to work!  It beggars belief.
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    James h · 5 months ago
    Makes me feel like some kind of a criminal reading all that just for having autism no big fan of Labour but let’s hope they put a stop to all that propaganda rubbish when they get in along with all that new pip system coming in 2029 what a nightmare!!
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      Ben · 5 months ago
      @James h I'm autistic, with ADHD, personality disorder, MADD, and possible dyspraxia too. I've been in the same kind of cycle for 20 years or so now. Get a job, lose the job, claim benefits, then after a while I'm told I'm well enough to work again, and rinse and repeat. I'm very anxious about the future implications for myself and others like me.
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