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PRESS RELEASE
July 2011
Lord Low of Dalston CBE will chair an independent review into how the personal mobility needs of people living in state-funded residential care are met.
Leading disability charities, Leonard Cheshire Disability and Mencap, asked Lord Low to conduct the 12 week review, which aims to gather evidence from individuals living in state-funded residential care and their families, care providers and local authorities.
Its brief will include how disabled people’s needs are met, how they are funded and what responsibilities care home providers and local authorities have in relation to the mobility needs of residents.
The findings from the review will be published in the autumn enabling peers to consider the evidence and the review’s recommendations as they debate the Welfare Reform Bill.
The Bill as it stands would give Government the power to stop paying the mobility component of the Personal Independence Payment, which is set to replace Disability Living Allowance, to thousands of people living in residential care. It has already passed through the House of Commons and is set to move to the House of Lords in September.
The planned measure has prompted strong opposition from many disabled people, their families and disability charities, since it was announced in the Comprehensive Spending Review in October 2010. There is a widespread fear that removal of the benefit could leave 80,000 disabled people without the funds to meet extra transport costs such as maintaining an electric wheelchair or paying for accessible transport, leaving them trapped at home.
The review will provide the opportunity for an independent, public and comprehensive examination of how disabled people’s needs are currently met, how mobility support is currently funded, the requirements of providers and any concerns from parties involved in residential care.
Lord Low, chair of the review into personal mobility in state-funded residential care, said: “I have been asked and agreed to lead this important piece of work. The proposed removal of mobility payments from people living in residential care potentially has a significant impact on the lives of disabled people and it is therefore vital that there is a public and comprehensive look at this issue.
“I hope that the Minister for Disabled People, Maria Miller, will engage with the review, and I urge disabled people, providers and local authorities to take this opportunity to contribute publicly.”
Pauline Bardon, the mother of a disabled teenager who hopes to go to residential college, has accepted a position on the review’s steering group. She said:
“The removal of this lifeline payment will have a devastating impact on my 18-year-old daughter Gabriella, who has Rett Syndrome, a neurological and developmental condition. Next year Gabriella is hoping to go to a residential college, but if she loses her mobility allowance she won’t be able to get there or back again and in the college holidays will be housebound. This could take away her opportunity to continue her education and learn valuable life skills.”
To find out more about the review and to submit evidence, visit: http://lowreview.org.uk
The call for evidence is open until midnight on Monday 10 October 2011.
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Media enquiries
Contact Andrea Ttofa in the Leonard Cheshire Press Office on 020 3242 0290 Email: andrea.ttofa@LCDisability.org Out of Hours: 07903 949 388.
Notes to the editor
About the review
The review will run from Monday 18 July – Monday 10 October 2011
In the final Work and Pensions Questions before summer recess, Margaret Curran MP, shadow minister for disabled people, asked the minister for disabled people whether she would engage in the Low Review.
A transcript will be available on 19 July 2011:
http://www.parliament.uk/business/publications/hansard/commons/by-date/
The review is being chaired by Lord Low of Dalston CBE
The review’s steering group includes:
Leonard Cheshire Disability is acting as the secretariat for this review.
Leonard Cheshire Disability supports thousands of disabled people in the UK and works in more than 50 countries. We campaign for change and provide innovative services that give disabled people the opportunity to live life their way. Visit www.LCDisability.org
Mencap works to support people with a learning disability and their families and carers by fighting to change laws and improve services and access to education, employment and leisure facilities. Mencap supports thousands of people with a learning disability to live their lives the way they want.
People with a learning disability and their carers can find out more about our services by calling Mencap Direct on 0300 333 111 or by visiting www.mencap.org.uk