Wednesday, 24 April 2024

Newspaper column 24 April 2024 - Benefit changes

A big announcement from the Prime Minister last week was that the Government will be consulting on proposed reforms to the benefits system to ensure benefits are targeted at those who need it most whilst ensuring those who are able to work are supported to do so.

The Department for Work and Pensions provides a valuable service supporting people to find work and ensuring a safety net for some of the most vulnerable people in our society. In particular, the DWP offices in our constituency, St Austell and Newquay Jobcentres and St Austell Benefit Centre, do excellent work, with Newquay Jobcentre recognised as one of the best performing in the south west for the way in works with local businesses and community groups in innovative ways to help people find work.

The Prime Minister’s announcement from last week outlines a package of wide ranging reforms to put work at the heart of welfare and deliver on his “moral mission” to give everyone who is able to work, the best possible chance of staying in, or returning to work. The welfare package also includes further measures to crack down on fraud and removing benefits entirely from long term unemployed who don’t accept a job when one is available.

It comes as many more working age people are being awarded benefit for mental health conditions than when it was first introduced over a decade ago, as well as concerns that the assessment process is significantly easier to abuse by individuals who seek to exploit the system.

Total spending on benefits for people of working age with a disability or health condition increased by almost two-thirds to £69 billion since the pandemic, and we now spend more on these benefits than our core schools’ budget or on policing. Given the significant change in caseload and unsustainable increase in costs, it’s clear our current disability benefit system for adults of working age is not fit for purpose.

A consultation on Personal Independence Payment (PIP) will be published in the coming days which will explore changes to the eligibility criteria, assessment process and types of support that can be offered so the system is better targeted towards individual needs and more closely linked to a person’s condition rather than the current “one size fits all” approach.

Let me be clear, this is not about removing support for those who need it, but the current situation is unsustainable. Not only is it cost taxpayers a huge amount of money. Let’s remember the money has to come from somewhere and it is hard working taxpayers who are footing the bill. The current situation is also making it more difficult for local businesses to find the staff they need. This is holding back our economy locally and nationally.

I am pleased that the Prime Minister has listened to the calls for reform to the system. It is crucial that those with long term health conditions who most need assistance via the benefits system and services provided by the Department for Work and Pensions get appropriately targeted support to enable them to manage their conditions and the way in which it impact their lives. But at the same time, we also need to ensure those who abuse the system are not able to continue to do this..  I hope that the Prime Minister’s announcement will enable both of these things to happen, and I will continue to support our local DWP staff in the delivery of their vital work.

As ever, if I can be of assistance on any matter, my office is available for any constituents needing help, advice or guidance – tel: 01726 829379 or email: office@stevedouble.org.uk

Wednesday, 17 April 2024

Newspaper column 17 April 2024 - More support for our fishermen

Parliament has now returned from the Easter Recess. In the last week, among other things, I was pleased to meet with Cornwall Council in St Austell town centre about anti-social behaviour, meet with a local company near Newquay about renewable energies, get an update from the team delivering the A30 Link Road to St Austell, and spend time on the doors talking to people about the local and national issues that matter to them in communities across our constituency. Whilst in Roche I visited the Clays Health Centre and met with some of the doctors and staff there. It was good to get an update on their work and I have come away with a few issues to work on, on their behalf. On Thursday I spent time meeting with fishermen in Mevagissey following the Government’s decision to provide compensation to fishermen most affected by the by the zero total allowable catch decision on pollack, which was recommended by the International Council for the Exploration of the Seas last year.

I have worked hard, along with my Cornish MP colleagues, to get the Government to provide support for these fishermen, many of whom are based in Mevagissey or Newquay, since I first heard about the upcoming changes and met with the fishermen in November last year. The fishermen were very clear then that the thing they would most welcome would be a compensation scheme. This is because the changes were brought in at short notice, and fishermen did not have the time or resources to be able to adapt their way of working to go after different fish, and as such they were essentially left without a way to make a living  - so seeking compensation to address this was a sensible way forward.

Since I met with the fishermen I have worked with them and the organisations that support them to gather evidence to make the case for compensation. I met with the DEFRA Ministerial team on many occasions, asked questions in Parliament and held a debate on the subject in February.

There was resistance to a compensation scheme from civil servants, essentially because this is a unique situation and has never happened before. However the  Environment Secretary has listened and taken action, recognising the issues faced by the affected fishermen and has used the powers available to him to effectively override the civil servants.

I'd particularly like to thank the fishermen from these communities and everyone who contacted me for working constructively with me to help make the case for this support. This shows the Government is on the side of Cornish fishermen and I am pleased to have played a part in them reaching this decision.

The compensation scheme is very welcome, but it is only the first step, and what we must do next is look at restoring a sustainable pollack fishery, as I highlighted in my debate in February. The Government is working with the fishermen, who know most about their catch, to get the scientific evidence to do this, and I will be working with local fishermen and industry representatives to make this happen as soon as possible.

As ever, if I can be of assistance on any matter, my office is available for any constituents needing help, advice or guidance – tel: 01726 829379 or email: office@stevedouble.org.uk