Debates between Baroness Thomas of Winchester and Lord Bishop of Bath and Wells during the 2010-2015 Parliament

Welfare Reform Bill

Debate between Baroness Thomas of Winchester and Lord Bishop of Bath and Wells
Tuesday 1st November 2011

(13 years ago)

Grand Committee
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Baroness Thomas of Winchester Portrait Baroness Thomas of Winchester
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Is there a disability employment adviser in every Jobcentre Plus office? What training do disability employment advisers have? If the Minister does not know the answer now, which I am sure he does not—it is rather a detailed question—could he possibly write to me? A lot of us are concerned that disability employment advisers may not be quite as boned up as we think they should be on all sorts of conditions. I say that having been at a Jobcentre Plus office where I had to tell a disability employment adviser that the person in front of him had rheumatoid arthritis, when they were not an English speaker and they were describing their symptoms, and he had never heard of the condition. That rather shocked me, so I would be grateful for that information.

Lord Bishop of Bath and Wells Portrait The Lord Bishop of Bath and Wells
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My Lords, I enter the debate with a little trepidation. Like other Members of this Committee, I am sure, a number of letters have been sent to me and various cases put. I have had a particularly heart-rending one, running to several pages as so often these letters do, from someone who has fairly severe mental disabilities, according to the letter, and who has responsibilities at the same time, it seems, for a disabled mother. My understanding of the principle of conditionality at the moment in relation to unemployment benefit is that she could be penalised under this process. I would like some assurance that where severe disability is in place, as it were, we will be sure to safeguard the well-being of such people and that they should not be penalised in these circumstances.