In my last post  I spoke about how, thanks to my particularly fortunate circumstances, I  should not be too severely affected by the proposed cuts in the  Coalition's Comprehensive Spending Review.
I  wrote that in the same frame of mind as a parent might hug their warm,  safe, living children after hearing about a fatal school bus accident.  It's okay. I'm okay. The bad things happened to someone else. It's  terrible, but it was someone else.
That emotion dealt with, it's  time to acknowledge that I am not so unaffected as I would like to  believe. This is difficult for me to post as it involves hard truths not  just about my condition but also my business and my relationship, but Bendygirl's video has persuaded me that it needs to be said.
Hard  truth #1 is that I am dependent, physically and financially, on my  partner. I contribute to the household in the ways that I can, but  ultimately, he's providing for me.
I work, yes. I worked for a  company for just over two years and now I've been self-employed for  about eight months. I have a growing base of satisfied customers, I pay  National Insurance, I will be doing a tax return, and each month, the  business expenses are met with a bit left over. Go me!
Unfortunately,  much as I hate to admit it, hard truth #2 is that the bit left over  isn't a very big bit, and nor were my earnings while I was PAYE. It's  always been well under £8,000 per year. I simply can't work very many  hours and I'm not in a position to raise my rates.
So the long  and short of it is that if my relationship fails, meaning that I am no  longer housed and supported by someone else, I will have to wind up the  business and seek help from the state until such time as I am able to  find employment that pays enough for me to live on without demanding  more than I am physically able to give.
A lovely big squishy  truth now - my relationship is fine. That's why we're planning a  wedding. Excuse me while I cuddle that truth for a little while.
I  do feel, though, that part of what makes the relationship fine is that  we both know we could leave at any time. I'm not with him just because  he can pay the bills. We started our relationship in the knowledge that  we can both survive as single adults - we choose to be together, every  single day. It's not nice to think of exit strategies, but at least I  knew that if something unthinkable happened - for example, if he were to  hit me or to announce that he was leaving - I would be able to get a  taxi to a friend's house and then start phoning Social Services for  support. I would be able to claim money for food on an emergency basis, I  would have a few hundred quid in savings to see me through for the  first week or so, I would have help to apply for income replacement  benefits, and thanks to my DLA status I would have to be put in appropriate accommodation.
This is no longer the case.
The  Coalition are aiming to reduce the number of DLA claimants by 20%  (600,000 people). That's all very well, but the rate of fraud on that  particular benefit is just 0.5% (about 15,000 people), which means that  there are 585,000 people who are legitimately claiming, whose conditions  have not changed, and yet who are going to get kicked off a benefit  which is frankly a lifeline. Believe me when I say the bar is already  set quite high for who can and cannot get DLA - it's not awarded for  minor illnesses. Remember the official disability facts and figures?  There are 11 million disabled people in the UK and yet only 3 million  of them get DLA. Long-time readers will remember all the trouble I had  with my DLA appeal  a couple of years ago. Spending the best part of a year trying to fight  the system while also trying to cope without the money. It's not to be  had for the asking.
(It should also be reiterated that this shifting of the goalposts purely a cost-cutting exercise.  DLA has nothing to do with whether a person works or not. Many DLA  claimants are in work and paying tax. In many cases, it is their award  of DLA that allows them to buy the care and equipment that enables them to continue working.)
If  I were to lose my DLA, it's not just the money that would disappear.  All sorts of things go with it - daft stuff you wouldn't necessarily  think of, like help getting your water if there's an emergency and your  street is put on a standpipe, or eligibility for things like Disabled  Person's Railcards.
Let's be positive, though, and assume I keep  it. Next, I'd need income replacement benefit. This would be ESA, the  benefit that is being phased in to replace the old Incapacity Benefit.  ESA divides into two groups. One is for people who are never likely to  be able to work - mostly people with terminal illnesses with only a few  months left to live. This group get full and unconditional benefit for  as long as they are ill (in other words, until they die or a miracle  occurs). It's a small group - currently about 6% of claimants. The other  group is for those who, with support, would be capable of some  work, and their receipt of the benefit is dependent on them fulfilling  "work-related activities" such as voluntary placements or work  experience placements...
Actually that's not quite true. There's a  third group for ESA. The third group is those very definitely disabled  people whose conditions don't quite fit the boxes. Those with  fluctuating conditions. Those who would be considered capable of  "mobilising" fifty metres if they had an appropriate wheelchair, even if  they do not in fact have such a wheelchair, nor any way of obtaining  one. These people are put onto normal Jobseekers' Allowance with all the  hoops and hurdles thereof, and drop out of all disability monitoring at  the DWP. No specialist support. No reasonable adjustments. Just  sanctions if you do not sign on or if you do not apply for enough jobs.
Assume,  then, that I would get either work-related activity ESA, or that I  would be discarded onto JSA. Finally, I have to find somewhere to live,  and this is where it gets really tricky.
First of all, as a  person under 35 I would only be eligible for a room in a shared house.  Sharing a house is a tricky prospect for a disabled person. You need the  people you live with to be able to understand about your disability.  You need them to understand, even when drunk, that your mobility aids  and assistive items aren't their toys and that you really do need  a proper sleep schedule. You need to be able to get help to fulfil your  share of the chores, and Social Services do not provide help with  housework for people who live with "able-bodied adults". I wouldn't last  five minutes.
Of course, you also might need certain adaptations  to the property. That's expensive and I doubt councils will fund much  of it. So maybe that would mean not having to enter a house-share  because it's not physically appropriate. Which means we're  looking at temporary accommodation in (a) a hospital or (b) a hotel with  an accessible room. It could happen, but it'd be expensive. Perhaps a  better solution would be care homes? I don't require nursing care, but  it would be a room, and it would be accessible, and the other people  would understand my situation.
Heh. Well, yes. That's a solution.  It's already a solution for many people. Live in a care home. They  remove all your income replacement benefit, and they remove all of your  DLA care component, and then they give you £20 a week of "pocket money"  to cover anything that's not basic food and bills. Shampoo, conditioner,  deodorant, makeup? Pocket money. Clothes and shoes? Pocket money. A  laptop computer to enable you to communicate with the world? Pocket  money. These things could be considered luxuries, but would YOU employ  someone without them?
DLA mobility component is different. People  can use that however they see fit. Some people hand it all over and get  a leased Motability adapted vehicle. Some people use it to hire or  purchase a mobility scooter. Some people use it to cover the difference  between what the NHS will pay for a wheelchair, and the price of a  wheelchair they can actually use. Some people pool it with others  in their care homes to fund an accessible minibus. Some people keep it  and use it for taxi fares so that they can do things like, ooh, go into  town and sign on or do Work Related Activity as part of their ESA/JSA  requirements.
The Coalition intend to axe DLA mobility component  for people in care homes. Adapted cars, taxi fares, and in many cases,  wheelchairs, GONE. When challenged, the government said that local  authorities should be providing transport and daytime activities for  disabled people in care homes. These would be the same local authorities  who have been told to reduce their spending by 25%...
So if the  Coalition's plans are successful, then for the next seven years at least  (until I am 35), my choices are to stay with Steve, or to attempt to  bounce on a welfare safety net that will be so small as to be  negligible. Can I still honestly say that we live together out of  choice, when my best case breakup scenario will be either virtual  imprisonment in a care home, or living out of a suitcase in a cheap  hotel? Ironically, the additional pressure this puts on my relationship  only increases the chance of it turning sour. And since neither of those  situations are going to enable me to pick up the threads of my life and  move towards getting back into employment, it makes me even more likely  to remain benefit-dependent for longer.
I say again, for myself  as much as for the people reading this, that my relationship with Steve  is stable and loving and going nowhere. In that respect I am more lucky  than many disabled people who find themselves increasingly dependent on  their partners. But one thing you learn with adulthood-acquired  disability is that life can change in an instant - I'm scared that the  safety net which caught me once, and which I may rely on to catch me  again, is being removed.
Originally posted here.
 
Non-partisan UK-based Disability campaign. Advocacy for people with invisible illness and/or physical & mental health conditions. Also Carers, their Families and Friends. Our individual voices are too quiet to be heard, but collectively we can shout loud enough to drown out this tide of abuse against us. Disability Hate Crime, lack of full legal protection, people in care homes costing too much to be let out and not one political party willing to fight for us.
Sunday, 24 October 2010
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