Reclaiming Welfare
Corporate Watch | 24.04.2010 21:04 | Public sector cuts | Social Struggles | Workers' Movements
An increasing number of grassroots campaigns and groups around the country have been set up to support unemployed workers and benefit claimants, fight privatisation and resist corporate profiteering from the welfare system. Below is an incomplete overview of some of these groups and what they do.
Related: Corporate Watch on the 'unemployment business' | Mule: Forced labour for Jobseekers | Mule: Welfare Reform: who will it affect? | Plotting and scheming for Welfare not Workfare | Cambridge Unemployed Workers Union founded | UWU Picket of A4E | Sheffield Claimants and Unemployed Workers launch meeting | Unemployed Workers and Claimants Union in Oxford | Unemployed Workers Unions spring up from Salford initiative | Week of Action on ‘Welfare Abolition Bill’, March 7 – 15th | Precarity: New forms of exploitation, new forms of resistance at Beyond ESF
London Coalition against Poverty and Hackney Unemployed Workers
The London Coalition against Poverty (LCAP) was formed in 2007, inspired by Ontario Coalition against Poverty (OCAP), primarily to act as a base for collective action around housing. LCAP has also been doing work around jobcentres since 2008, when some of the people involved with LCAP were asked, wrongly, to give confidential medical information to the jobcentre; when they refused to hand it over, their benefits were cut. Another claimant had their benefits cut because the wrong postcode was written on their claim form. In response, 25 people occupied the jobcentre in Dalston with a list of demands. The claimants’ benefits were soon reinstated and compensation was offered. People also began leafletting jobcentres in Hackney, London, encouraging collective action.
Since then, Hackney Unemployed Workers, a separate group working closely with LCAP, has been formed to ‘keep an eye’ on the jobcentre in Hackney. New coalitions against poverty have also been formed in Tower Hamlets and South-East London.
Edinburgh Coalition against Poverty and Edinburgh Claimants Union
Edinburgh Claimants was formed in 1992, when the local council cut off funding to Edinburgh Unemployed Worker’s Centre and claimants occupied the building in response. In 1996-7, there were occupations of jobcentres in an attempt to resist the introduction of Job Seeker’s Allowance (JSA), which imposed stricter conditions for people claiming unemployment benefit. There have been meetings of Edinburgh Claimants Union at the Autonomous Centre of Edinburgh since 1997.
In 2008, the Edinburgh Coalition Against Poverty was formed, inspired by LCAP. One of the first ECAP initiatives was to organise a phone tree to enable swift collective action against jobcentres people’s benefits were cut, bailiff companies engaged in repossessions, bad landlords or to support people who were being harassed by the sheriff’s office. One action has been to go en masse to local councillors’ surgeries to demand that they deal with their constituents’ problems, for example being harassed over old poll tax debt. A later action targetted the Edinburgh offices of Action 4 Employment (A4e), which contracted by Jobcentre Plus to provide unemployment services ECAP’s work is regularly spotlighted in a new local free sheet, the Edinburgh Muckraker.
Cambridge Unemployed Workers Union
This new group, based in Cambridge, recently organised a demonstration outside A4e offices in Cambridge. The aim of the group is to “represent and defend the rights of those who are unemployed [and] fight the Welfare Reform Act.” For more information on Cambridge Unemployed Workers Union, see The Cambridge Action Network.
Brighton Benefits Campaign
Resistance to privatisation of welfare and support for claimants in Brighton has been provided for years by the Brighton and Hove Unemployed Workers Centre (BHUWC). Regular welfare advice sessions are run at the BHUWC, the Brighton Unemployed Centre - Families Project and the Cowley Club. Between 1995 and1997, there was a vibrant campaign in Brighton against the introduction of JSA; alliances were formed with Jobcentre Plus staff and jobcentres were occupied. People who had been active in the JSA campaign then became involved in various campaigns against welfare privatisation and, eventually, formed a new group called Abolish Working Links (AWOL), which produced a local newsletter about Working Links, a private company paid by the government to get claimants off benefits. The newsletter, bearing the slogan “Working Links, We think it stinks!”, was handed out at various Brighton jobcentres.
The last few years have seen a lull in campaigning on these issues but, in 2009, another group was set up, Brighton Benefits Campaign, to resist against the Welfare Reform Act. The group, still in its infancy, plans to target companies like Working Links and A4e. Other targets include Atos Healthcare, whose computer system, Logic Integrated Medical Assessment (LiMA) system, is used to assess Employment Support Allowance (ESA) claimants. The company further claims that its software may replace doctors assessments. One claimant, who is missing an arm, was given a LiMA computerised assessment which read “mild amputation.” Another read “can take adequate care of his goldfish...” Profiteers also include charities like the British Legion, which works with the DWP to ‘support’ those on sickness benefits to ‘return to work’. Finally, Maximus, the company administering the DWP’s ‘Flexible New Deal’ in Brighton, will be high up on the list of targets.
No to Welfare Abolition
A national coalition of groups, No to Welfare Abolition, is being launched as a base for resistance to the new attack on claimants posed by the Welfare Reform Act. A national gathering was held in 2009 and another is planned this April. For more information, you can join the coalition’s mailing list.
Corporate Watch
Homepage:
http://www.corporatewatch.org
Additions
Tyneside Claimants Union
25.04.2010 10:09
Star & Shadow Cinema Newcastle
We are a group of people who meet together to act collectively to solve problems with the benefits system. Anyone is welcome to join us, particularly people claiming benefits of any sort (e.g. JSA, ESA, DLA, Incapacity Benefit, Housing Benefit, Income Support, Carers Allowance, Tax Credits, Pension Credits, etc.), and unemployed workers, unwaged people, etc.
Wage Slave
Comments
Hide the following 6 comments
How I learned to stop worrying and love the benefits cheats:
25.04.2010 06:32
Alister Darling and those two brain caterpillars that control you. You are not going to enjoy this…
I fully support workers who cheat the benefits system! There! I said it! I’m not suggesting for one moment that I personally cheat the system. I’m paid by BACS, directly to my credit union account. The government, sadly, knows exactly how much I earn and in their infinite wisdom, believe that I £4k a year in wages is enough to live off without support other than £60 of my rent paying. More’s the pity.
Those that have found a way to fiddle the system. Good on you!
We in the UK have some real drains on our system. They don’t live in council houses on estates, or come from abroad (who are actually denied all state welfare, despite BNP propaganda saying otherwise). They live off us whether we like it or not and they’re taking hundreds of billions a year.
Drains like Fred Goodwin, ex-CEO of Royal Bank of Scotland and one of the biggest causes of the recession, that’s put millions of people worldwide on the dole. He’s only in his 40′s, but he’s retired with a £600k a year pension. We’re paying for that when against our will, the government bailed out RBS. Lord Ashcroft receives protection from the police and has the British Army fighting to keep him and his buddies in power, at the expense of the taxpayer, while he is not one himself. We’ve had MP’s who already “earn” over £60k a year, claiming for moat cleaning, duck houses and using their second homes as a property development company.
On a more everyday scale though, we are robbed every day by our employers. We provide the labour that customers want and pay for, while our bosses, take our money for it to pay themselves better than what we get. At the end of the day, a business can always run without a boss, or managers, but it cannot run without workers, which are the most vital part, yet paid the least.
These are our work-shy “sponges” on the system. Hopefully you agree with me that it is wrong that they take this money from us. However, it is perfectly legal. No doubt because these same people are the ones who dictate what the law is in the first place, either directly, or through funding the parties in power with the condition that the party pleases these rich funders.
Now, I know that the Daily Mail might tell us that people who smuggle away £65 a week extra in dole are somehow the scum of the earth, but lets actually think about this like adults for a moment. Job Seeker’s Allowance for a single person under 25 is £45 a week, over 25 it’s £65 a week. Housing benefit is capped at around £40 a week for under 25′s and £60 a week for over 25′s. These are what single people get, couples get even less.
Now, that gives you a grand total of £85 a week income for an under 25 to pay your rent, bills, eat, and try get a little entertainment in there to stop you going nuts. The grand total of £125 a week for over 25′s isn’t much better.
Consider for a moment whether you could live on that kind of an income. Forget about your Internet, credit card bills, running your car and phone and entertainment for a moment. Can you even pay your rent/mortgage, gas and electric and feed yourself on that? The answer is no.
Yet currently, nearly two million people on benefits in the UK are told to do just that. This doesn’t even include people, such as cleaners, like myself who’s wages are below this income! There is no question here that we are talking about peoples’ health and welfare here and in a world where the rich irresponsibly put a price tag on water, food, shelter and warmth, to deny those things means death.
So, I do not consider it wrong if somebody tops up their benefits with a bit of cash in hand work, or tops up their undeclared wages with a bit of benefits. This however is not only illegal, but also criminal. Break these rules and not only will the money be forcibly removed from you by sequestion and bailiffs, but you can also get jail time. I’m sure this comes as no surprise though that this double standard exists, as we as the poorest workers do not fund parties with large donations. Even if we wanted to fund the parties, we couldn’t match the donations of the rich, seeing as though “the richest 1pc in the UK hold some 70pc of the country’s wealth” . We simply can’t ever match that kind of political bribe and as a result it is the poor, not the rich, who are declared the outlaws for a far lesser crime.
The intention of making benefits so unpleasant is to encourage us to accept substandard working conditions and pay and even to scab, join the army, or police, or do other such things that in the end only harm our other workers more. If benefits were fit for purpose, to support those who have been forbidden to work by the rich, then maybe there’d be a slight case for having a pop at “benefit thieves”, but at the end of the day, there’s not and there’s far bigger fish to fry before you do that anyway.
The lesson here is to understand that what is right and lawful and what’s wrong and illegal are not allways one and the same. Justice and the law are not the same thing
Barnsley Bill
Don't forget Sunderland from the list
28.04.2010 22:12
http://sunderlandwelfareaction.wordpress.com/2009/12/20/defending-the-welfare-state-and-public-services/
Mayday
More groups, articles, links here
28.04.2010 23:41
More groups, articles linked here:
http://www.afed.org.uk/nottingham/claimants
Come to the next No to Welfare Abolition meeting on Sept 11th!
And days of action preceding this.
Nottingham bod
Homepage: http://www.afed.org.uk/nottingham/claimants
Some articles
29.04.2010 00:13
End of the Social Wage? Radical responses to the Welfare Reform Bill
http://www.afed.org.uk/component/content/article/145.html
Published in Black Flag last October.
Also ...
Instant Muscle Gets Wasted (2008):
http://nottinghamshire.indymedia.org.uk/2008/03/393121.html
http://www.afed.org.uk/nottingham/nottingham_sparrow_3.html
New Deal for the Dead - resurrected (from a long gone website):
http://www.afed.org.uk/nottingham/claimants/new_deal.html
Anarchist Federation
Homepage: http://www.afed.org.uk
The attack on voluntary workers,disabled & welfare is a attack on all of us,
01.05.2010 10:00
Protest on the streets&
vote tactically to get a hung parliament, maybe liberal for cooperation& green where possible, conservative would be a disaster, "lumpen proles",voluntary workers & disabled have already got it hard enough thanks!.
On councils maybe labour, usually the councillors arent new labour.
Companies like Boots who are know owned by a vright wing almost fascist italian billionaire advertise in E.european countries for cheaper workers undermining everyone. Boots also are a conservative company who want to privatise large parts of the NHS!!!!!
Claimants unionist
National Social Network
03.07.2010 15:03
Go To; http://unemploymentmovement.com
Pipa
Homepage: http://unemploymentmovement.com