David Cameron, a champion of disabled people? Try telling Paula Peters

A prime minister who talks about caring for his disabled son is about to unleash a new wave of benefit cuts on Britain’s most vulnerable people. People like Paula

George Osborne won’t have a clue who Paula Peters is, but he has shaped the past five years of her life. And when the chancellor delivers his emergency budget in parliament early next month, he should look up to the public gallery. He may well see Paula staring back at him.

As a disabled woman, she’s among those most hurt most by Osborne’s cuts. Now she wishes to hear for herself what the cabinet’s going to do to her next.

 

I want you to hear Paula’s story precisely because it is not the one David Cameron would have you believe. As the prime minister tells it, he’s a champion of the rights of disabled people. He has talked about how the strain of caring for his own severely disabled son, Ivan, almost led to his family “falling apart” I have no wish to doubt Cameron’s sincerity – but this month he will scrap the independent living fund, a small pot of cash that allows very disabled people to live in their own homes and communities. Without it, people with similar conditions to Ivan will become prisoners in their own homes, or shut away in a residential care facility.

During the election campaign, the Conservative leader promised that “the most disabled should always be protected”. Yet the Centre for Welfare Reform calculates that his austerity programme has so far hit Britons with disabilities nine times harder than the average. Those with severe disabilities were whacked 19 times harder. And now those same people are about to be devastated all over again.

I met Paula at the end of last week, a couple of days after Cameron refused to rule out further cuts to disability benefits. The 43-year-old has a range of health problems, physical and mental – among them rheumatoid arthritis, which accounted for her swollen hands and the chipped walking cane. Rapid-cycling bipolar disorder makes her prey to vertiginous mood swings. “Up, down, up, down: you want to get off the rollercoaster but you can’t. Your mind won’t quieten down.”

In 2010 Cameron and Osborne trained their sights on people like Paula, thanks to a chain of three choices. First, they chose to try to wipe out the deficit, rather than spur growth. Second, they chose to do this not by raising taxes, but almost solely by spending cuts. Finally, ministers decided they had to slash welfare, but couldn’t take money off pensioners – all that inevitably meant hacking back support for children, or people with disabilities.

What that’s brought for Paula is a profound anxiety about how much money she has to live on. In an attempt to bring down the bill for disability benefits, Iain Duncan Smith, the work and pensions secretary in charge of welfare, commissioned the private firm Atos to test every single claimant of employment and support allowance, the successor to incapacity benefit. Paula has been through two such tests in two years, each time seized with worry about what happens if she “fails”.

“It gets to the point where you’re frightened of the thud of the postman coming up your path,” she says. “You’re fearful of a brown envelope, in case it’s from the DWP [Department for Work and Pensions]. You’re fearful of a white envelope in case it’s from Atos.” The worry got so much that once she was admitted to the local psychiatric unit, where staff were warned not even to mention benefits in front of her.

Some have been less resilient. A friend of Paula, also suffering with bipolar, received a letter saying that she’d been paid too much in benefits. This was early in the austerity regime, when the lexicon of “skivers and strivers” was still new and shocking. The friend told others that she wasn’t able to cope with the stress. A few days later, she threw herself under a train, leaving behind three small children. “She’s not the only friend I’ve lost; this government’s got blood on its hands.”

So far Paula has kept her benefits. But she observes that they’ve barely risen in five years, while the price of food and energy has shot up. Sometimes she goes without eating. The Wednesday before we met passed without a single meal.

It’s not just benefit cuts that have hurt disabled people – it’s the drying up of public services and funds for care packages, or the difficulties in getting home adaptations and equipment. And, says Paula, it’s the suspicion from politicians and the public.

Official statistics show hate crimes against people with disabilities have been rising year on year since 2011. Some of this must be the responsibility of the government, and what Paula calls its “horrible rhetoric”. She was on the bus a couple of years ago, coming back from hospital when a man spotted her mobility aid and jeered: “I bet you’re one of those spongers.” Not a single passenger spoke up. “I couldn’t leave the house for a week after that.”

Of each £100 spent on benefits, only 70p is fraudulently claimed. Yet Tory MPs still talk of people claiming disability benefits as a lifestyle choice. Some lifestyle. “You try living with chronic pain and tiredness, with throwing up in the toilet, or bowel incontinence when it gets bad, with feeling like shit every day,” says Paula. And the same Tories who talk about getting disabled people working cut funding for the Access to Work programme that supports them at work.

read the rest of this article in the Guardian here: http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/jun/08/cameron-disabled-champion-paula-peters-cuts-most-vulnerable?CMP=share_btn_fb

What are YOU looking at?

What it’s like to be on the hard end of disability hate, day after day, week after week, year after year. True story.

Christopher John Ball

boots_2015_MINI_3“Asylums with doors open wide,
Where people had paid to see inside,
For entertainment they watch his body twist,
Behind his eyes he says, ‘I still exist.’” – Atrocity Exhibition – Joy Division

It is sad to say that many of us who have a disability or impairment will be able to recall experiences of having been bullied, picked on, singled out and abused, both verbally and physically, as we go about our lives. Would it be fair to say that we often take this abuse as being a ‘normal’ part of our daily routine, experiences that we have perhaps come to expect and, in the eyes of many as I will explain, something we should ‘put up’ with?

The ‘incident’ that inspired this article occurred on Saturday 14th March 2015. My partner and I were waiting to catch a train to Euston from Watford High Street Overground Station…

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Attacks on disabled people still rife – one year on from Paralympics triumph…

The Paralympic Games FAILED to improve the lives of disabled people or change the attitudes of the wider public, If anything it has done exactly the opposite, the uneducated wider public think all disabled people can perform like the Supa Crips that took part in the games whereas we know the real truth.

The Disabled participants at the games were used by the politicians and the media to continue the abuse of disabled people on an everyday basis, nothings changed,  a few supa crips have achieved their personal goals forgetting their fellow disabled citizens in the process.

Being abused in the streets and shops is now an everyday thing for disabled people, disabled people are now the new Blacks, how long will it be before abuse of the disabled is taken as seriously as being Black???

Paul Smith – Founder – Atos Victims Group

 

Success of GB athletes fails to alter attitudes, as poll shows widespread verbal and physical abuse

The vast majority of disabled people in Britain feel there has been no improvement in attitudes towards them a year after the Paralympics and many feel stigmatised as “benefit scroungers” while suffering hostility and abuse, a leading charity has warned.

Campaigners said the sea change in perceptions of people with disabilities generated by the London 2012 Games has been eroded by misleading rhetoric from politicians and within the media about welfare payments and a crisis in living standards for the disabled caused by spending cuts.

Twelve months to the day after the opening ceremony for the Paralympics, the host city for the Games – which thrust athletes such as Jonnie Peacock and Ellie Simmonds into the same spotlight as Mo Farah and Jessica Ennis – has one of the highest rates of attacks on disabled people.

Abuse of wheelchair users on London trains

More than four in ten wheelchair users have been verbally or physically abused on trains, a survey has revealed.

Blind and visually impaired passengers have also been targeted, with 41 per cent admitting they had been subjected to abuse on their commute.

In total, more than a quarter of disabled rail travellers said they had suffered a hate crime or abuse, the poll for the Action for Rail campaign showed.

Campaigners fear proposed railway staff cuts will only heighten the abuse, with 14,000 guards potentially being lost in the next six years.

from The Metro http://metro.co.uk/2013/04/24/abuse-of-wheelchair-users-on-trains-revealed-3666031/ 24/4/2013

Abuse against disabled whilst shopping 21st April 2013

Elle J Morgan I had abuse last week, i went into my local shop premier stores and there was a neighbour in there, I said hi and stated how she was waiting for council and how they were late etc, after a brief chat to me off she went…the sales assistant said ‘ she has no business complaining seeing as she’s a sponger, doesn’t work and has a free house etc..now I know for a fact this neighbour worked up unti a year or two ago and was on a temp contract…so my head went cos I have a chronic spinal condition and fibro and have been in the WRAG for 4 years…So I said we’ll I’m on benefits, could happen to anyone, you never know what’s round the corner…Up she pipes how the state and her are paying for all my kids cos I have lots of them (I have 3) I said no I have a bad back ..yeah right she says, pull the other one .(I have OA in entire spine and have had 3 ops to correct disc and nerve issues, now told no treatment just pain relief, have neck compression..Also have OA in arms and foot, I am up to 70mcg buprenorphine among other meds,which isn’t just given for an ache !) …she starts going on about being sick of paying for people like us, so I said well did you pay for your kids births or schooling cos if not then u r too a claimant…and I went..I was so angry..still am, it was the first time I’d felt well enough to go to the shop in nearly a year…
(comment) I posted a similar story last week, a friend has muscular dystrophy , he has always worked and owns his own home. He parked in a disabled bay and was getting his walking frame out the boot when a man pushed him over shouting”get a f@# job there’s nothing wrong with you”.
(comment) there’s more and more of this happening – I’ve experienced a friend being spat at for being in a wheelchair.
(comment) Someone living near me is in his 40s and has had a stroke. He has had “you f***ing dole scrounger stop pretending & get a job!” shouted at him many times!
(comment)The other week I was told by a random complete stranger in the streetthat I was fit for nothing !I have cerebral palsy and use a wheelchair