Update at the end of this post
Readers of this site will know that last week, Stockport council’s cabinet agreed that full council would vote next meeting on a motion which called on the government to halt the Universal Credit rollout.
Such a motion would hardly strike terror into Tory hearts, but it was marginally better than eff-all, so I wrote it down in my notebook seeing as I had a spare half-page and was at the meeting.
It’s all turned to turds, anyway.
On Wednesday, I attended the Stockport United Against Austerity protest against the launch of Universal Credit at Stockport jobcentre (the UC rollout started in Stockport on Wednesday).
A Labour councillor name of Laura Booth was there. She told me that councillors were still fighting about the wording of the Universal Credit motion they’d vote on.
Some wanted to vote to Stop and Scrap Universal Credit. Others still wanted to go with Pause and Fix – as though anyone on the planet thinks that’s even possible. Pause where? And Fix what?
Universal Credit is a disaster from beginning to end. Fiddling around with little bits will achieve nothing. You know the one about trying to polish a turd? That.
Anyway.
Don’t you just want to destroy the world.
Update:
God help us all.
This is the motion (page 8) on Universal Credit going to the full Stockport council meeting on 29 November. The motion calls for the council’s chief executive to write to Amber Rudd to request a pause to the Universal Credit rollout. Bet that’ll worry her.
This is hopeless. Tells you where Labour is on Universal Credit, though.
From the council’s 29 November agenda:
Motion (iv) Universal Credit
This Council notes:
– cross-party backing for the principles behind Universal Credit (UC), including the
amalgamation of benefits, access via one application portal and ensuring work always pays;
– the work of this Council and the Citizen’s Advice Bureau to help and support people in
relation to navigating the changing benefits system and mitigating the risks of change; and
– that despite this, the Government’s approach to UC rollout has raised significant concern in relation to monthly payments in arrears, overuse of sanctions, the pacing of transition and rollout; opacity in relation to the benefits entitlement, and cuts to the benefits system which are not reflective of need.
This Council further notes concerning reports that for many people, this has led to:
– exacerbated poverty and hardship, in particular for those living with disabilities;
– increased poverty for low income working families;
– people having to choose between food and rent;
– indebtedness due to delayed payments;
– increased rent arrears for tenants in social and private housing relating to the removal of the former direct payments system;
– making it harder for victims of domestic abuse to escape relationships;
– disadvantages for non-IT literate people; and
– instances where these factors have led to loss of employment.
This Council believes that
– measures contained in the recent Budget to provide resources to help improve the taper and help with return to work are to be welcomed, but as the Children’s Society has noted, they do not and cannot fully address the aforementioned concerns;
– as such, this Budget represented a missed opportunity to bring in both these measures immediately and pause Universal Credit rollout completely, allowing for the full review needed to fully address these problems.
This Council therefore resolves to:
– continue to work with partner organisations to mitigate as far as possible the risks and
challenges associated with this month’s UC rollout;
– request that the Chief Executive write to the Secretary of State for Work & Pensions urging a pause to further rollout of the ‘Full Service’ system;
– in that letter, emphasise the need to address all of the above points, with particular emphasis on ending the current system of monthly payments in arrears; and
– request that the Chief Executive write to the Chancellor of the Exchequer requesting that funding be urgently found to address the needs of UC recipients and plug the wait times gap.
