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Edward Davey Pledges
Committment to Holocaust Memorial Day
06.02.06
Edward Davey welcomed the Government’s commitment
to reduce the number of people on incapacity benefit as new welfare
reform proposals were announced today.
He also revealed that in Kingston and Surbiton there are:
• 2,800 people in receipt of incapacity benefit
• This represents an increase of 4% since Labour came
to power
• All but 14% have been claiming for at least 2 years
• 1,300 of these claimants have mental or behavioural
disorders, and account for 46% of all cases
• There has been an increase of 15% in the number of
people with mental or behavioural disorders on IB since Labour came to
power
Ed Davey said:
“Within a year of coming to power, Labour published a Welfare Reform
Green Paper, talked about tackling the rising number of people on
incapacity benefit and helping the million claimants who said they
wanted to work.
“Eight years on we are in exactly the same position.
“Despite these eight years of failure, the Government are right to go
back and look again at tackling a system which is a scandalous waste of
human potential and which has condemned a million people who want to
work to a lifetime on benefits.
“The strategy set out by the Government today is welcome, but it will
not be easy to deliver.
“I will be looking at the proposals in detail in order to make sure
that the 2,800 incapacity benefit claimants in Kingston and Surbiton
are given good quality support, individually tailored to meet their
needs. I will also be looking to make sure that are
sufficient safeguards to prevent vulnerable people from being
sanctioned because the system is not sophisticated enough to deal with
complex conditions.
“There must also be more support to help people retain their jobs when
they become ill; more support for employers to take on disabled staff;
greater use of voluntary sector expertise; and enough flexibility
within the proposed new benefits so that those with fluctuating
conditions are not penalised.
“Finally, the increasing incidence of mental health problems requires
special attention. The grim statistics show that if you are on
the benefit for more than two years, you are more likely to die or
retire than return to work. In Kingston and Surbiton it seems
that not only is there an increasing proportion with mental health
problems on benefit but 62% of them have been on the benefit for over 2
years.”
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