welcome the the world of dolites
u know those scum who bleed the country dry,
quite frankly he s not meant to survive,the powers that be dont care and couldnt imagine what life is like on benifits.
serious advice
bulk buy at lidl,go to tesco,wherever at 3;30 on sunday and buy the reduced veg /fruit,diet matters,managed to feed 2 kids on healthy homecooked food this way when kev lost his job
Last year i had to have an operation on my leg (not going into details)and was off work for 6 weeks. The forms I had to fill in were unbelievable, the outcome being I could only claim incapacity benefit to the grand total of £118:06. This was to cover the WHOLE of the 6 weeks. If I hadn't needed the money I would have told them where to shove it.
It gets right up my nose the fact that these "scummers" have never worked, dont intend to work and know how to screw the system for every last penny.
erm....I understand that jobseekers allowance is an extra, not including the dole, but on top of it. Never having drawn any benefits then I cannot talk from experience so can stand to be corrected.
This is happening everywhere.
25 years of loyal service to get that paltry ammount is a disgrace.
I presume though he would have got some kind of redundancy payment?
It's a shit time out there for lots of people who have worked hard all their lives, and then get treated like crap.....disgraceful.
Unfortunately it is not on top of anything, but a person "can claim 2 elements", one is based on contributions and the other is an income based and is means tested.
erm excuse my ignorance but doesn't the above statement mean that jobseekers is paid on top of income support? Then housing support and council tax support and free school meals etc. I have heard of cash sums being paid for furniture,new appliances etc.
Having said that I do sympathise with anyone losing thier job but some do seem to live better by not working.
The year before I retired, the guy next door to me, who as far as I am aware never worked was actually getting £3 per month less than me and I had to work away from home living in digs, while he never had to get out of bed. I saw his benefit slip when he asked me to sign a form to say he wasn't working. How sick did I feel knowing I was working for £3 per month. I had to pay tax N.I. and pension which reduced my income, he didn't. No doubt we both get the same pension when we retired.
You think being made redundant is bad?
At my company they have a thing called 2p (or some such stupid name).
They sack you, force you to take the same job but at an agency and you lose ALL YOUR YEARS OF SERVICE.
They don't call it sacking - but that's what it is.
They say your terms and conditions are transferred - but they aren't - you lose all your years of service.
And the agency has ZERO reposnibility to continue your employment. You can be out of work completely in a couple of months.
If a company wants to make 100+ people redundant they have to go through a whole consultation process. Minwe also tries to place you elsewhere in the company.
But this 2p'ing is criminal and sidesteps the whole protection you get from a redundancy process.
I seem to remember my old company "outsourced" several jobs where the same people they had as employees previously were now on "contract" through an agency. They were promised that nothing would change, but one year down the line they were all worse off. Working longer shifts for less money and less people I believe. This was possible because of our "opt out" from the EU working directive. It also meant the company didn't have to pay redundancy.
I was promoted for times in six months, on each occasion given a nice pay rise. The final promotion put me on alternating (days and nights) shifts, with the responsibility of training new staff to do all the different jobs that I had learned over the years. I trained up six members of staff, three for days and three for nights. Then I was made redundant. They no longer needed a training supervisor, so I was not replaced. They did absolutely everything by the book, I did check.
So I am unemployed, which now the wife has left me with the kids is probably just as well. Also I used my redundancy money to pay for a home learning course that will firstly see me A+ certified as a computer maintenance technician and then go on to do another course on networking.
I will be self employed before this time next year, and hopefully will never have to trust another company to employ me full time ever again.
Wow I am surprised, a thread where peeps are complaining benefit isnt enough? Most of the people I talk to in day to day life complain people get too much! The basic £64 is not a lot but its normally a door to a lot of other benefits you can claim as well. A lot of people with that £64 can end up with it almost in their pocket as a disposable income as they live almost rent and bill free. Ive known plenty of folks locally whos benefit money in their pocket to spend on what they like is more than what I get left with after I pay my bills.
Perhaps some people need to learn how to play the system a bit?
Little or no other benefits available to a single bloke ....
Then Steve..... how on earth do they expect someone to live on that kind of money fgs? :shock:
I would spend over half of that ammount on food.
Keep ya chin up m8.
The joy of benefits, I'n not working at the moment and with 2 children I get a week, after bills are paid and arrears on mortgage are paid (I had to wait 39 weeks to get my mortgage paid) and life insurances cos they cover the mortgage I'm left with £75 a week to buy food, buy clothes, save for birthdays/christmas. You some how just manage.
I was made redundant four times in four years so I can talk from personal experience.
To make sure we as a family could survive the loss of our families sole income, I'd made sure that the mortgage and car loan were protected with redundancy cover. Without these I'm not sure we would have survivied financially.
Once I'd signed on to jobseekers allowance, our council tax became free, so did medicinal presciptions, the kids were also entitled to free school dinners meaning our food bill was dramatically reduced.
All in all, there was very little difference between my take home pay after a 50 hour week, and the total amounts being received from the various sources once I was registered as unemployed.
Sure if I were a single guy with no kids, then the minimal figures quoted would be extremely difficult to survive with.
But as others have said, nobody will gift you the benefits you are entitled for, you have to claim them.
Maybe this might help some.