I would like to thank our Jobcentre teams in Truro and Penryn and their associated charities for the time and commitment they give to people, who are looking for work. I know that, in some cases, it can take months of careful one to one coaching to get someone to the point of an interview. When that person succeeds, it’s all worth it.
Recently the Government announced reforms to the benefit
system, which will see support targeted to those who need it most, while
ensuring people who abuse the system do not get away with it.
Last week, the first step to these reforms took place as The
Modernising Support Green Paper was published, which explores how our welfare
system could be redesigned to ensure people with disabilities and long-term
health conditions get the support they need to achieve the best outcomes, with
an approach that focuses support on those with the greatest needs and extra
costs.
The caseload and costs for the benefit are now spiralling.
There are now 2.6 million people of working age claiming PIP and DLA – with
33,000 new awards for PIP each month which is more than double the rate before
the pandemic. This is expected to cost the taxpayer £28 billion a year by
2028/29 – a 110% increase in spending since 2019.
The Green Paper sets out proposals across three key
priorities to fundamentally reform the system:
- Providing the right support to the people who need it most.
- Targeting our resources most effectively.
- Supporting disabled people and people with long-term health conditions to live independently and reach their full potential.
You can access the Green Paper and read the proposals in depth by searching for ‘Modernising support for independent living: the health and disability green paper’. I would be interested in hearing the views of the people of Truro and Falmouth on these proposals as they proceed.
The Green Paper is the latest of the government’s welfare reforms to ensure disabled people and people with long-term health conditions can live full and independent lives. It builds on last year’s Health and Disability White Paper and the £2.5 billion Back to Work Plan which will break down barriers to work for over one million people.
The Government is also delivering the largest expansion in
mental health services in a generation, with almost £5 billion of extra funding
over the past five years, and a near doubling of mental health training places
Finally I couldn’t pass this past week without
congratulating the re-elected Conservative Police and Crime Commissioner for
Devon and Cornwall Alison Hernandez for her superb election result last
Thursday. Alison and I have worked together on numerous issues around Truro and
Falmouth, including the reopening of police station front desks and in
particular accessing more funding to combat violence against women and girls in
Penryn and Falmouth, and I was delighted to see this result. I look forward to
working with Alison for the good of our communities in the future.
As always, I am fully focused on the job at hand and if
there is ever anything at all I
can do to help, then please do not hesitate to contact me.
Please get in touch with
me by email at Cherilyn.mackrory.mp@parliament.uk, or by
telephone on 01872
229698. My regular constituency advice surgeries are held
at my office, so please do get in touch should you wish to meet me about any
matters that I can be of assistance with.
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