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5 May 2020 – Coronavirus meeting

APPG ON UNIVERSAL CREDIT

Evidence session on the impact of COVID-19 on Universal Credit

Report from informal meeting on 5th May 2020

OVERVIEW

The APPG on Universal Credit (UC) is a cross-party group, which was established in order for Members of Parliament and Peers of all parties to be able to come together to discuss their experiences of UC and those of their constituents, to receive advice and support from various agencies, to share best practice at supporting claimants and monitor this critical policy as it is rolled out.

The APPG accepts the core aims of UC in simplifying the benefits system and making it easier for people to move into work. The reality of UC, however, does not live up to these good intentions. We are seriously concerned that the design of UC does not sufficiently take into consideration the specific needs of the poorest working age people in the UK, that it fails to provide many of households with sufficient income to get by and that in its current form, UC does not work in their best interest. When this is coupled with the cuts to UC, for example, from the work allowances, taper rate and disability premiums, evidence indicates that some groups of claimants, including disabled people and single parents, are worse off than under the legacy system.

On 5 May 2020, the APPG held a virtual evidence on the impact of the outbreak of COVID-19 on Universal Credit hearing evidence from: Citizens Advice, NACCOM network, The Children’s Society, Child Poverty Action Group, and UC:Us.

Of the 120 attendees, the following parliamentarians were present: Debbie Abrahams MP (Chair of the APPG on Universal Credit), Bim Afolami MP, Fleur Anderson MP, Paula Barker MP, Hilary Benn MP, Baron Boateng, Ruth Cadbury MP, Stephen Farry MP, Yvonne Fovargue MP, Drew Hendry MP, Rachel Hopkins MP, Baroness Ruth Lister of Burtersett, Baroness Meacher, Stephen Timms MP, Baron Young of Norwood Green.

SPEAKERS

  1. CITIZENS ADVICE

About Citizens Advice

Citizens Advice aims to provide advice to people in need and improve the policies and practices that affect people’s lives. Citizens Advice provides free, independent, confidential and impartial advice to everyone, on their rights and responsibilities.

The impact COVID-19 on Citizens Advice services

Key findings

Recommendations

  1. Suspend NRPF rules to ensure everyone who needs it can access benefits.
  2. Suspend the benefits cap to ensure people can access adequate levels of financial support during this period and beyond.
  3. Turn advance payments into non repayable grants to ensure people get the support they need to get through the five week wait. 
  4. Mirror investment in UC and Working Tax Credits in other legacy benefits.  

Further details can be found in Citizens Advice’s new briefing.

About NACCOM network

NACCOM is the No-Accommodation Network. They have 112 members across the UK who work to prevent homelessness and destitution amongst people who are asylum seekers, refugees and others without recourse to public funds. 63 of their member organisations provide accommodation through hosting, housing projects and night shelters to people who would otherwise be street homeless.

Key findings

COVID-19 has exacerbated existing challenges that people who are new refugees faced pre-pandemic.

Positive policy changes in response to COVID-19

During the outbreak, people who have been granted refugee status will not be evicted from Home Office accommodation for at least three months and will be able to start a claim for UC whilst accommodated. This means that when the time comes for people to move, they are already set up with benefit payments. This change will need to be adapted post outbreak, but NACCOM are calling for it to remain as it shows that there is an alternative to the destitution gap.

Recommendations

  1. Advance payment loans should be available as a grant. This would reduce the 35-day wait and would mean that new refugees and others are not penalised through repayments.
  2. There should be the option for the first payment of UC to be made directly to the persons ‘ASPEN’ card- the card that Home Office support is paid to when someone is waiting for a decision on their asylum application. This is an essential change during lockdown as people are struggling to open banks due to closures, an inability to travel on public transport and for those shielding. 
  3. The ‘move-on’ period for people who are new refugees should be extended until the first payment of UC is made and the person has a positive housing option confirmed. 
  4. NRPF conditions should be lifted, enabling everyone should be able to access public funds and services. This would protect individuals during the pandemic as well as wider public health. 

About The Children’s Society

The Children’s Society supports change to young people’s lives at an individual level through its direct programmes of work. It also aims to affect systemic change by influencing legislation and government practice, and to affect a positive shift in public attitudes towards children and young people.

Key findings

Accessibility

Transitioning onto Universal Credit

Legacy Benefits

Recommendations

  1. Automatic back dating of UC payments to when a claimant first requested their claim.
  2. Increasing the capacity for DWP staff to help and support claimants with complex needs.
  3. UC should count the date a claimant leaves their job, rather than when they receive their final pay so it does not reduce their entitlement, or leaving them with nothing.
  4. Advance payments should be non-repayable grants, especially for ‘vulnerable’ groups. These could be based on the DWP’s own criteria of ‘vulnerability’.

About Child Poverty Action Group

Child Poverty Action Group (CPAG) works on behalf of the one in four children in the UK growing up in poverty.  CPAG develop and campaign for policy solutions to end child poverty. They also provide information, training and advice to the people who work with hard-up families, to make sure they get the financial support they need and carry out high profile legal work to establish and confirm families’ rights.

Key findings

The pandemic confirms what we have always known about social security but is frequently forgotten – benefit claimants are not a static group of people – life is unpredictable and any one of us may need to claim benefits at any time.

Additional costs

Benefit cap

Two-child limit

Recommendations

  1. The benefit cap needs to be addressed – families are not receiving the recent uplifts in benefits because of the cap.
  2. There needs to be help for children. CPAG are The Children’s Society are calling for a £10 increase in Child Benefit.
  3. The two-child limit must be lifted.

CPAG are publishing weekly briefings on families’ income during the pandemic.

About UC:Us

UC:Us is a group of Universal Credit recipients based in Northern Ireland, representing a wide range of family circumstances and claimant groups. Led by Ruth Patrick (University of York) and Mark Simpson (Ulster University) the claimants have been part of a participatory study of the experiences of early UC claimants in Northern Ireland, where the benefit was first introduced in late 2017.

Key findings

Ruth Patrick introduced UC:Us, outlining the history of the group as part of a participatory study of the experiences of UC claimants in Northern Ireland.

The APPG heard from two claimants based in Northern Ireland about their experience of living on UC during the outbreak:

Mark Simpson outlined the main issues with UC encountered in the study:

Recommendations

  1. Remove the five-week wait.

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