Oral Answers to Questions Debate

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Department: Department for Work and Pensions

Oral Answers to Questions

Madeleine Moon Excerpts
Monday 25th June 2012

(12 years, 4 months ago)

Commons Chamber
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Pamela Nash Portrait Pamela Nash (Airdrie and Shotts) (Lab)
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10. How many people are waiting for appeal tribunals on the outcome of work capability assessments.

Madeleine Moon Portrait Mrs Madeleine Moon (Bridgend) (Lab)
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14. How many people are waiting for appeal tribunals on the outcome of work capability assessments.

Lord Grayling Portrait The Minister of State, Department for Work and Pensions (Chris Grayling)
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At 31 December 2011, the latest date for which data have been published, 63,500 appeals were outstanding in which the work capability assessment was a factor, down from 84,100 in October 2010. There are always a number of live appeals at the various stages of processing before being listed for a tribunal hearing.

Lord Grayling Portrait Chris Grayling
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I think that the hon. Lady has misunderstood the situation. There will always be people who are waiting for appeals. If they put in an appeal submission today, they will not have a tribunal hearing this afternoon. There is always a gap to allow everyone involved to prepare for the hearing itself. We are doing everything we can to reduce the backlog of appeals, as we inherited a massive backlog two years ago from the previous Government. The figures I have just set out show that we have succeeded in reducing that. We have reduced it as far as possible, but there will always be people in the pipeline waiting for appeals, because they simply do not happen on the same day as the application goes in.

Madeleine Moon Portrait Mrs Moon
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My constituent, Mrs W, was placed in a work capability assessment group on 7 April. She appealed and waited until September when she was successful, like 40% of those who appeal. Shortly afterwards, she was recalled for a further assessment. Will the Minister consider giving work capability assessments tribunals the ability not just to assess the rightness of decisions at the time they are made but to decide when the assessments need to be made, cutting the number of people in the revolving door, waiting for appeals?

Lord Grayling Portrait Chris Grayling
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The hon. Lady will know that when the present system was set up by the previous Government, they built in a system of prognosis times, which set a rough estimate of the next time an assessment should be held. As I said, I have now taken steps to lengthen that period when somebody has been through an appeal, but she should be under no illusion: the system she talks about is the one set up by her own party.