Henry Ward Beecher |
The
difference between perseverance and obstinacy is that one comes from
a strong will, and the other from a strong won't.
-Henry
Ward Beecher, American Clergyman
Occasionally
I discuss an ongoing problem on the #psychologysaturday posts. My
Working Tax Credits were stopped a good 18 months ago and since then
I've been trying to find out why this is and what I should do about
it. I've heard plenty of conflicting information, confused further by
my inability to remember it all. This is due to the memory
difficulties I have, which made me eligible for the benefits in the
first place.
Inhale.
I've
recently been working with a Welfare Rights officer called TJ, who
has helped me to gain information from HMRC about my case. She
requested a transcript of all the calls I made, and my mother made,
to the department. I received some CDs containing recordings of the
calls, and from this we've been able to hear what has been said in
the numerous conversations.
I
passed this over to TJ, who has listened to them. She has written a
1300-word complaint letter to HMRC. I'm not going to recite the whole
thing, but it lists out all of the numerous mistakes HMRC have made,
mainly being their complete inability to grasp that the short term
memory difficulties a) made me eligible for DLA and hence eligible
for WTC, and b) mean that I wouldn't have understood their procedures
for DLA moving to PIP and how this affects WTC. The letter also asks
for a back-dated reinstatement of WTC and compensation. It's a
brilliant letter from someone who knows how to illustrate a problem
and how to ask for what is needed- 2 things that, due to my
difficulties, are way over my head.
Fingers
crossed. It makes me think back to a few months ago when I met with a
Welfare Rights officer at a different office in Oldham, who sent me
out of the door empty handed suggesting I ask my employers for more
hours. It shows that, like in many government departments, it's the
luck of the draw as to whether you get someone who knows how to help
you and puts in the effort to make things happen, or whether you get
a jobsworth who puts in the minimum effort and sends you out with no
further progress. And, I might add, completely misinforms you and
advises you to look for more work.
But
it's progress. It's a lot better.
Oh,
also, I had mentioned that HMRC had sent my overpayment to a debt
recovery company. I'd asked them to put the case on hold while
Citizen's Advice looked into it, but more recently (after numerous
extensions to the deadline) I recently mentioned to them that the
overpayment was caused because of DLA and PIP, and being in receipt
of them due to memory difficulties, which is a vulnerability on my
part. Due to this, they weren't comfortable handling this case so
threw it back to HMRC again. I haven't heard back about this
overpayment from either the debt recovery company nor HMRC, so it's
possible that this has been cancelled.
Perseverance,
it seems, also pays off.
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