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    • Hi, I am a local authority tenant and was in a 3 bed house. At the end of last year, my last child moved out and so did my spouse as we are now going through a divorce which meant that I was in the house alone and decided that I needed to downsize not only for myself but to offer the property to a family that needed it. I registered on the local authority housing bidding site as i was asked to do and I was accepted and given a priority banding as I was downsizing and they were desperate for my house. I have been extremely lucky and after about 6 weeks was accepted for a new build from a housing association via the housing gateway. I viewed the property 2 weeks ago and had to sign the tenancy last week when they were doing bulk signups for the houses and that is the day I moved. In between viewing and sign up, I contacted my current local authority landlord and asked how I give notice as I had been accepted for a property I had bid on and was moving.  The lady told me how to do it online and then said that I needed to give a full weeks notice which wasnt a problem as I had enough time.  (I was also told a weeks notice was what i would need to give by another staff member about a month ago when I phoned up for another housing related question.  I dont have any of this in writing.) I have now moved, handed back the keys and I am now being told that I need to give 4 weeks notice which I cannot afford. I hav e spoken to the council again explaining that I was told a week and that to be honest, if I knew they were going to charge me 4 weeks I would not have been able to move and would have stayed in the other house.  I thought I was doing the right thing. They said that calls are recorded and they asked me when I called in and was told a week and they would listen to the telephone conversation and if it was correct what I was told, they would see what they could do to reduce the notice period. They have now emailed me back and said that they have listened to the conversation and the lady said 4 weeks notice and I am liable for 4 weeks rent.  Now I may well of misheard her when I thought she said a full weeks notice she may have said 4 weeks notice but I am sure she said a full weeks notice and i was told a week by another member of staff a few weeks ago. I have emailed her back and said that I may of misheard but I would like to listen to the phone recording myself.  As yet they havent responded. I think its unreasonable for them to make me give 4 weeks when I had to sign the new tenancy with little notice or loose the property.  And it was all done through their gateway, and they will have a tenant in there pretty much straight away getting rent from them. I am on a very low income, I am on my own, I have serious medical issues and I am really getting myself stressed out over this. Any advice would be so appreciated.  Can I insist they let me listed to the recording? RH  
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DWP and my compensation claim


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Hi i hope someone can help with this, :)

 

In Nov 2005 i had an accident at work which was there fault, this put me on statutory sick pay for 4 months i was also advised to make a claim which i did. the company made me redundant in dec 2006 then i went on job seekers allowance till dec 2007, I could no longer seek work due to a number of health problems so have been on incapacity bennefit since dec 2007.

Now my claim is coming to a close and they have offered me £2750 which i think is an insult, The medical expert who examined me said 4 months off work with 12 months to get back to normal.

The solicitors who are dealing with my case said £2750 is a good offer,

I was living on £90 a week for my family and had to buy food and pay full rent out of my wages so i had to borrow money from my family and friends till i got back to work.

 

I have claimed for £3800 in loss of earnings when i was off work which my solicitor now tells me the Department of Work and Pensions will want back,

so dont bother claiming them as DWP will claim them from my work.

It seems to me in the letter i have just received that they just want me to take the £2750 and forget about the rest,

 

The thing is there was a gap of a year since my accident and when i went on incapacity bennefit i also went back to work 4 months after my accident for 9 months before they finished me.

 

can the DWP take my loss of earning off me even though i went back to work and didnt claim incapacity till over a year later. My solicitor says because i have been on incapacity for a year they will want a years money out of my compensation. :confused:

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I can't see why to be honest :confused: Incapacity benefit is a non-means tested benefit, it is payable based upon your circumstances, not income. The claim for Jobseekers may have been based upon income and money available to you at the time of the claim.

 

I don't claim benefit, but for the sake of argument, lets say I did. If I was to have a lottery win three years from now, would the government demand back any benefit money I would have (hypothetically speaking) claimed? No.

 

Unless your compensation was available to you during the period you claimed benefit, I cannot see why they would want to claim it back from you. As far as I am aware (I MAY be wrong) the DWP can only recoup money if:

 

1. You were found to be commiting benefit fraud

2. You had a repayable Social Fund loan

3. You are later discovered to have had available funds during the period of your claim for Income based benefits

4. You were awarded a Funeral Payment from the Social Fund and it was later discovered that there were or now are monies available from the deceased's estate to meet the full or part cost of the funeral.

5. You have arrears of child support to pay.

 

Were you claiming Contribution based jobseekers allowance or income based jobseekers allowance? With jobseekers, the sum you can claim can be affected if you have savings over £6000. If you have savings over £16000, you don't qualify at all. Neither of these sums are anywhere near what you say the compensation is. You do have to tell them about a change in circumstances but this is for the duration of the claim, not after.

 

Your best bet would be to ask them yourself, otherwise you could have that money sitting around doing nothing. I really don't think they can recoup it.

  • Haha 1

My advice is based on my opinion, my experience and my education. I do not profess to be an expert in any given field. If requested, I will provide a link where possible to relevant legislation or guidance, so that advice provided can be confirmed and I do encourage others to follow those links for their own peace of mind. Sometimes my advice is not what people necesserily want to hear, but I will advise on facts as I know them - although it may not be what a person wants to hear it helps to know where you stand. Advice on the internet should never be a substitute for advice from your own legal professional with full knowledge of your individual case.

 

 

Please do not seek, offer or produce advice on a consumer issue via private message; it is against

forum rules to advise via private message, therefore pm's requesting private advice will not receive a response.

(exceptions for prior authorisation)

 

 

 

 

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I would imagine they can relclaim any amounts that are paid to cover loss of earnings, as they were paying you means tested benefits for this period, but they can only claim back what they paid you, not the total amount you receive.

 

For example claim benefits 10 weeks @£100 = £1000

Loss of earnings payments for same 10 weeks = £1500

Due to DWP £1000. £500 for you. This puts you back in the position you would have been had you been working and not claiming.

Consumer Health Forums - where you can discuss any health or relationship matters.

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I can't see why to be honest :confused: Incapacity benefit is a non-means tested benefit, it is payable based upon your circumstances, not income. The claim for Jobseekers may have been based upon income and money available to you at the time of the claim.

 

I don't claim benefit, but for the sake of argument, lets say I did. If I was to have a lottery win three years from now, would the government demand back any benefit money I would have (hypothetically speaking) claimed? No.

 

Unless your compensation was available to you during the period you claimed benefit, I cannot see why they would want to claim it back from you. As far as I am aware (I MAY be wrong) the DWP can only recoup money if:

 

1. You were found to be commiting benefit fraud

2. You had a repayable Social Fund loan

3. You are later discovered to have had available funds during the period of your claim for Income based benefits

4. You were awarded a Funeral Payment from the Social Fund and it was later discovered that there were or now are monies available from the deceased's estate to meet the full or part cost of the funeral.

5. You have arrears of child support to pay.

 

Were you claiming Contribution based jobseekers allowance or income based jobseekers allowance? With jobseekers, the sum you can claim can be affected if you have savings over £6000. If you have savings over £16000, you don't qualify at all. Neither of these sums are anywhere near what you say the compensation is. You do have to tell them about a change in circumstances but this is for the duration of the claim, not after.

 

Your best bet would be to ask them yourself, otherwise you could have that money sitting around doing nothing. I really don't think they can recoup it.

 

 

Thanks for the reply, :)

 

I gave the DWP a ring and they said they will not take any money out of my compensation, and they are sending a letter out to me to confirm this with my solicitor.

I told my solicitor about talking with the DWP and he was not impressed:eek:

i wonder if they were trying to have me over a barrel:roll:

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No problem. Incapacity is not a means tested (income related) benefit, so I didn't think they could possibly ask for the money back.

My advice is based on my opinion, my experience and my education. I do not profess to be an expert in any given field. If requested, I will provide a link where possible to relevant legislation or guidance, so that advice provided can be confirmed and I do encourage others to follow those links for their own peace of mind. Sometimes my advice is not what people necesserily want to hear, but I will advise on facts as I know them - although it may not be what a person wants to hear it helps to know where you stand. Advice on the internet should never be a substitute for advice from your own legal professional with full knowledge of your individual case.

 

 

Please do not seek, offer or produce advice on a consumer issue via private message; it is against

forum rules to advise via private message, therefore pm's requesting private advice will not receive a response.

(exceptions for prior authorisation)

 

 

 

 

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  • 4 years later...

Help I need some urgent advice, briefly I had a misdiagnosed appendicitis in January 2007 I have been with a firm of solicitors since 2008 which have been handling my claim on a no win no fee basis, the outcome is today that the NHS have awarded me £50,000 which is below the quantum value given of £800,000 this is due to my medical expert changing his opinion that he had held for 5 years....any way now the solicitor has sent us a cheque for £10,199 they have not broken anything down and said it is £50,000 - £30,000 for the DWP as I was claiming Incapacity Benefit, and £10,000 for an Interim payment I received for treatment, can they do this please advise...

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