Reblogged 
from The SKWAWKBOX Blog:
 Please share widely.
Please share widely.
In just a few short weeks, the new Universal Credit benefit system starts to 
roll out, albeit more slowly than originally planned (but already in operation 
in pilot areas). This new benefits system rolls a wide variety of benefits into 
a single process, including unemployment benefit – and crucially, it extends 
‘conditionality’ even to people who are already working, so that penalties can 
be applied to people for not having enough hours, or if they are not considered 
to be trying hard enough to get more hours.
The government’s ‘policy aims’ for this new system state that:
Universal Credit is designed to ensure that for 
people who can, work is still the best route out of poverty and an escape from 
benefit dependence.  The aim of Universal Credit is to increase labour market 
participation, reduce worklessness and increase in-work 
progression.  The conditionality regime will recast the 
relationship between the citizen and the State from one centred 
on “entitlement” to one centred on a contractual concept that 
provides a range of support in return for claimant’s meeting an explicit set of 
responsibilities, with a sanctions regime to encourage 
compliance.
A series of Freedom of Information (FOI) responses from the DWP reveals that 
the new regulations turn the 
opinion of even junior Jobcentre 
Plus (JCP) advisers into law, place them in a position of despotic omnipotence 
over benefit claimants, and turn claimants – even working ones – into helpless 
chattels shorn of power, choice or recourse if unreasonable expectations are 
placed on them.
A ‘claimant commitment’ (CC) is a set of obligations placed on a benefit 
claimant in terms of actions that must be carried out in looking for work (or 
more work), the amount of time that must be spent and the results generated. 
These requirements, as the DWP statement above indicates, are not negligible. 
For example, as 
one 
of the responses states:
A claimant will be expected to devote the same number of hours to work search 
in accordance with this action plan as we would expect them to be available for 
work (up to a maximum of 35 hours a week).
This might seem reasonable enough. But as one ex-DWP manager asked her 
MP:
Is affordability of the work search/preparation 
taken into account by the Adviser?   The average cost of Job seeking prior to 
2012 was around £2-£6 per week assuming no job interviews secured, the Jobseeker 
visited the Jobcentre once a week to look for work, checked the local press, 
made 1 or 2 job applications and asked family/friends.  Claimants were not 
required to pay Council Tax .
£6 a week when you’re on as little as £56 a week in benefits is a huge amount 
of money. But now claimants can be expected to attend the JCP more than once a 
week – in fact, as often as the adviser decides is appropriate as part of the 
CC. Council tax support is far less available, and the price of essentials like 
food has risen steeply. The costs associated with the activities likely to be 
involved in a 35-hour work-seeking week are very likely to be (to use the 
government’s favourite word for NHS hospitals) unsustainable.
Claimants have a right to query the conditions of a CC – but if they refuse 
to sign it and ask for it to be reviewed, it will merely be looked at by another 
JCP adviser, not by a more specialised ‘Labour Market Decision Maker’ 
(LMDM).
As we’re already well aware, the DWP 
has 
no qualms about asking JCP advisers to carry out tasks for which they have 
no qualifications or experience. A decision by an adviser-level JCP employee is 
perfectly likely not to take into account the full range of circumstances faced 
by a claimant – and a review by another adviser, who will face his/her own 
pressure to conform and not to offend a colleague or possibly incur the wrath of 
a supervisor, in no way guarantees that bad decisions will be overturned.
Especially in a context in which – as we know in spite of government denials 
– all of the advisers in a JCP are likely to be under pressure to meet 
covert 
targets on the number of sanctions the JCP applies.
But surely, if a bad CC isn’t overturned by an adviser the claimant can ask 
for someone more senior to look at it? You’d think so – at least under any sane 
government. However, as the 2nd FOI response makes very clear:
There is no right of appeal if 
a claimant refuses to accept their Claimant Commitment and the requirements that 
have been set out in it.
Under this new system, a JCP adviser – who might be incompetent, 
inexperienced, bitter, have a personality clash with the claimant or just simply 
be having a bad day – is the final arbiter of whether a CC is reasonable and 
achievable, and even a patently bad decision cannot be appealed for a higher 
opinion.
And if a claimant refuses to sign?
If the claimant still refuses to accept their 
Claimant Commitment then he or she will no longer be entitled to claim 
Universal Credit.
Refuse to sign something that might be realistically unachievable – and 
receive nothing. Could a more coercive and arbitrary situation be imagined?
If a claimant signs and then fails or refuses to perform one of the CC 
conditions, the only small ray of hope is that an LMDM might see reason:
if a claimant fails to carry out any of the work 
related requirements set out in their Claimant Commitment this will be referred 
to a Decision Maker for consideration of whether a sanction should be applied. 
If a claimant has good reason for not carrying out a particular work related 
requirement then a sanction will not be applied.
But this is asking someone to accept a set of conditions knowing they can’t 
fulfil them – and then put themselves in the hands of a person whose 
qualifications, motivations, reasonableness and parameters are entirely unknown, 
in the hope that they’ll agree not to immediately cut off his/her benefits.
That reminds me of something. What was it? Oh, that’s right.
Russian roulette.
As the ex-JCP manager points out, the system is fraught with unknowns and 
uncertainties. There is nothing in the documentation to indicate:
- what it means for a JCP adviser to ‘look again’ at a decision
- what the criteria for assessing a decision are, or how the 2nd adviser will 
obtain information about the claimant’s circumstances
- whether there are any firm timescales within which the claimant commitment 
review must be completed
- whether the claimant will be interviewed by the 2nd adviser or the decision 
will be made entirely based on the paperwork
- whether any additional financial support is available to help claimants meet 
increased work-search requirements
and I’m sure you can think of other pitfalls and problems.
We’re left with a situation in which it’s perfectly likely that someone will 
be expected to sign an unrealistic CC – and summarily deprived of all financial 
support if they refuse. Once coerced into signing this unrealistic commitment, 
they then face a financial ‘Russian roulette’ where the whim of an unknown 
person of unknown competence will decide whether a failure to comply was 
‘reasonable’.
All with no guarantee, or even likelihood, that the decision will be 
impartial.
The OECD – hardly a hotbed of socialism or a great friend to the common man 
or woman – considers impartiality to be very important. In a document titled ‘
Administrative 
Procedures in EU Member States‘, it discussion the need for 
impartiality:
5. 
Impartiality
29. The principle 
of impartiality is structurally weakened in administrative procedures 
because the Administration is party and 
judge in the procedure. Therefore it is 
necessary to establish legal measures to establish the 
equilibrium between the parties or at least to reduce the likelihood of 
unfairness. A Minimum of impartiality should be guaranteed. 
Therefore the withdrawal from the procedure of those Officials who have a 
personal interest (typical conflict of interest situation) in the outcome of the 
procedure 8 should be mandatory. Otherwise the 
administration would incur into abuse of power. Another requirement 
for impartiality is that any party in the procedure should be entitled to 
recluse any intervening official suspect of having an interest in the outcome of 
the procedure or having qualified friendship or enmity or kinship 
relationships with any of the 
parties.”
It’s absolutely obvious 
that advisers working together in a JCP office will often form friendships and a 
sense of loyalty to one another. It’s only human to find it difficult to judge 
impartially in those circumstances, and there will be a clear pressure to ‘back 
up’ one’s colleague, and a fear of upsetting a fellow adviser by overturning a 
decision.
It will therefore be extremely difficult to find an impartial adviser to 
judge a request for review – and even an impartial one will be judging based on 
personal experience and emotion rather than on professional qualifications and 
clear criteria.
In case anyone thinks ‘bloody EU and their bureaucracy’, or wants to write 
off as a ‘leftie’ opinion that this situation is wrong. The Ombudsman’s office 
sets out ‘
Principles 
of Administration‘ that make the potential problems very clear:
The Principles of Good 
Administration
Getting it 
Right
Public servants do 
not get it right every time, so there must be a form of redress that is 
impartial and fair for claimants.
Being customer focused
Public Bodies do not always treat people with 
sensitivity, bearing in mind their individual needs, and respond flexibly to the 
circumstances of the case in every instance; doctors for example, can 
get this wrong at times.
Acting 
fairly and proportionately
Public bodies do not always deal with people fairly or 
with respect.
There is no doubt at all that the new UC system completely fails to make 
available an impartial and fair ‘form of redress’ as outlined by the 
Ombudsman.
Let’s look at a real-life scenario. The DWP operates a 
Universal Jobmatch 
(UJM) system that jobseekers are expected to use to look for jobs – but the 
UJM system has been shown to be seriously flawed and even a 
vehicle for 
various scams. It also 
contains 
serious security issues that risk revealing jobseekers’ private information 
to people who shouldn’t have it.
Jobseekers are frequently pressured to use the system and told that they 
might be sanctioned if they don’t – but our ex-JCP manager advises me that there 
is 
no legal obligation whatever for jobseekers to use it. They 
can use any available method of jobseeking, online or offline.
Under the UC system, the 
illegality of a sanction applied 
for failing to use UJM 
will become irrelevant. A JCP adviser 
has 
no legal right to apply a sanction for not using UJM – but 
if they do, and a colleague 
from the same JCP and therefore likely to be 
similarly ill-informed agrees, then the sanctioned person has 
no right of appeal.
Yet again the government, via its ludicrously corrupt and vicious Department 
of Work and Pensions’ is showing a staggering degree of contempt for those in 
society who need help and support, and a complete disregard for the life and 
wellbeing of 
human beings in our society who find themselves in 
need of that support.
Support which, as the government baldly states, is no longer the 
‘entitlement’ it should be in a civilised society, but is instead something for 
which people are forced to sign unfeasible contracts that merely set them up to 
have that support snatched away arbitrarily – on the ‘godlike’ whim of JCP 
advisers of unknown competence and who might well be under pressure to hit 
sanction targets.
And all, if we’re to believe this lying-if-their-lips-are-moving government, 
because it’s the best ‘route out of poverty’.
Yeah. Like the best cure for a headache is decapitation.
Many, many people in this country will not survive a 2nd term of this 
government, or any part of it. And the way the rules are constructed shows that 
the Tories are ‘perfectly relaxed’ about that.
They want to take us back to the 1920s of soup kitchens, means-testing and 
stigmatised poverty.
We can’t let them. Please spread the word or this is where we’ll end up 
again:
