bfccrazy wrote:Some very fair points made. The feeling of the means tested benefit system being a good thing are not in question. I think the striking thing for those people genuinely affected and in need of help is that the people deciding on the outcomes are generally going against what medical professionals are saying.
If you went to a Dr and got told that you're incapable of working..... Then got told by somebody who was not medically qualified that because you could tie your shoelaces that you could work. It'd leave a sour taste.
Naturally and here there isn't enough cooperation between the medical profession and the welfare system.
There is a massive difference between being "signed off" by a GP and being passed "fit for work" by a clinician working for the welfare system. Let's take Steven Defour as an example - and NHS GP would happily sign him off with a pulled muscle because he is unable to do his job as a footballer. The GP has done their job and Defour obviously cannot complete his job with a pulled muscle.
But would you allow somebody to phone in sick for an office job with a pulled muscle? No. You would (hopefully) be extremely accommodating and look into their workload ensuring that they didn't have to do much walking but they would reasonably be expected to fulfill their duties.
That, albeit extreme example, demonstrates the difference between being signed of "sick" by a GP and completing a work assessment which is designed to see if you are capable of doing *some* work.
The old system relied purely on GP's sicknotes. I saw people signed off for years and receive years and years of benefits paid for by tax-payers for relatively minor ailments when they could have been working.
bfccrazy wrote:The benefits system in this country across the board is amazing - but just because some people will get caught in "friendly fire" does not make it right. With the amount of people across the country who passed comments on the Daniel Blake film likening it to situations which they were familiar with, I'd say that there are enough people out there who have had a negative experience of the system to warrant some sort of added criteria or a reform of the appeals process.
I genuinely do not believe there are any "real Daniel Blakes" because the film does not bare proper resemblance to proper benefit procedures.
What would happen in reality is that Daniel Blake would appeal the decision and, if he had no savings or separate income, he would still be entitled to JSA (instead of ESA) and the terms of his attendance to the Job Centre would be agreed with a benefits officer.
A benefits officer is essentially the same job as I used to to. It appears (anyone correct me if I'm wrong) that they can set discretionary conditions (ie. how often you have to sign on etc etc) so somebody doing the job well here, confronted with a case like the fictional "Daniel Blake" could set the lowest possible attendance conditions based on the knowledge that he may well win an appeal.
So Daniel Blake WOULD have an income. He'd have JSA, Housing benefit, Council tax benefit, free prescriptions and whatever else the local authority provided (in Nottingham they used to add in free public transport but I think now you only get a discount on travel). They would also have the discretionary possibility of referring him to a food bank if necessary.
Essentially, the whole plotline of the film ends after the opening section because that is where the film skews away from the reality of the benefits process and instead starts just making things up.
And -AND- you have to accept that "Daniel Blake" has "passed" a medical only days after a heart attack. Although it's shocking, I can find only one example reported by the press of a similar instance. ONE example. Of course, it's one too many, but to put it into perspective it is one in two million. That's 1 in 2,000,000.
Furthermore, reports of the ONE chap to whom this happened do not mention what happened after he was declared "fit for work". I would presume he followed the appeals process and won his case, as I outlined would happen above.
But that wouldn't make for much of a film.