Dear  colleagues
The House of Commons Select Committee on Work and Pensions  has just launched an inquiry into benefit sanctions.  We are planning on  putting in a submission, which has to be sent in by 12 December.  As is  Church Action on Poverty's style, I'm keen that we base our submission on  people's actual experiences of sanctions.  
It would be great if you could pass on this request to  anyone who might be willing to provide a story/case study of their experience of  being sanctioned. What would be good in particular is stories of  either:
·          Where people feel that they were unfairly  sanctioned, or in other ways unfairly treated by the Jobcentre in relation to  their sanction.
·          The knock on impact of being sanctioned, on them,  their health, housing, wider family etc.
I'd prefer it if people were able to write case studies in  first person (ie in their own words), and to include their own name and address  (or at least the area they live in)  but if this is not appropriate, then  anonymous case studies would be ok.
To include them in the submission, I'd need to have them by  Monday 1 December at the latest (though the sooner the better).  The full terms of reference for the Select   Committee Inquiry are at the end of this email, if you wanted to submit any  evidence directly yourself.
Thanks
Niall 
Niall  Cooper
Director 
Church Action  on Poverty
Dale House, 35 Dale Street,  Manchester, M1 2HF
0161 236 9321  
niallc@church-poverty.org.uk  
www.church-poverty.org.uk
Church  Action on Poverty is a company limited by guarantee, registered in England &  Wales with No. 3780243. Charity No. 1079986.
Work  and Pensions Committee
Select Committee Press  Notice
AN14 201415
6 November  2014
For immediate  release
NEW  INQUIRY
Benefit sanctions policy beyond  the Oakley Review
The Work and Pensions  Committee has decided to conduct an inquiry into benefit sanctions policy. This inquiry will consider aspects of sanctions policy  which were outside the remit of the Oakley  Review.
Terms of  reference for the  inquiry
Submissions of no  more than 3,000 words are invited from interested organisations and  individuals. 
The Committee is  particularly interested in:                            
·         Employment and Support Allowance (ESA)  sanctions, including: whether the  current ESA sanctions regime is appropriate and proportionate for jobseekers  with ill health and disabilities; and the reasons for recent sharp increases in  the number of ESA sanctions;
·         Whether particular groups of ESA and JSA  claimants (by impairment type; age; gender etc.) are proportionately more likely  to be sanctioned than others; 
·         To follow up the Committee's  recommendation for a full independent review, to investigate the purpose,  effects and efficacy of benefit sanctions, and to consider the issues such a  review would need to take into account,  including:
o     What are the current sanctions regimes  trying to achieve and what evidence is there that they work?  
o     To what extent are sanctions justified  solely as a means of ensuring that unemployed benefit claimants fulfil the   conditions of benefit entitlement? 
o     What evidence is there that benefit   sanctions also encourage claimants to engage more actively in job-seeking and  ultimately move into employment? How could this be measured?  
o     What are the wider implications of  sanctions in terms of their impacts on claimants?
·         What are the alternatives to the current  sanctions regimes? For example:   
o     How might the current system of  financial sanctions be altered to make it more appropriate or effective?  
o     Is there a case for non-financial  sanctions? 
o     What form could non-financial sanctions  take? 
o     Are there examples of good practice from  other countries?
Submissions do  not need to address all  of these points.
The deadline for submitting evidence is Friday 12  December.
How to submit your  evidence
·          To  encourage paperless working and maximise efficiency, select committees are now  using a web portal for online submission of written evidence. The  web portal is available on our website. 
·          The  personal information you supply will be processed in accordance with the  provisions of the Data Protection Act 1998 for the purposes of attributing the  evidence you submit and contacting you as necessary in connection with its   processing. 
·          Each  submission should:
o    be no more than 3,000 words in length 
o    be in Word format with as little use of colour or logos as  possible
o    have numbered paragraphs 
·          If you need to send a  paper copy please send it to: The Clerk, Work and Pensions Committee, House of  Commons, 1st Floor, 14 Tothill Street, London SW1H  9NB
·          Material already  published elsewhere should not form the basis of a submission, but may be  referred to, in which case a web link to the published work should be  included.
·          Once submitted, evidence is the property of the Committee. It is the Committee's decision whether or not to accept a  submission as formal written evidence.
·          The Committee normally, though not always, chooses to make public the  written evidence it receives, by publishing it on the internet (where it will be  searchable), or by making it available through the Parliamentary Archives. If  there is any information you believe to be sensitive you should highlight it and  explain what harm you believe would result from its disclosure. The Committee  will take this into account in deciding whether to publish or further disclose  the evidence. 
·          Select Committees are unable to investigate individual  cases.
·          Further  guidance on submitting evidence to Select Committees is available  on the parliamentary website.
Notes for Editors
·          In its January 2014  Report, Jobcentre  Plus in the reformed welfare system, the Work and Pensions Committee  recommended that the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) take steps to  measure the extent of financial hardship caused by benefit sanctions. It also  recommended a full independent review of the current sanctioning system (in  addition to the Oakley review which was then being undertaken), as it is being  operated across the Jobcentre Plus network (see chapter 4). The Government's  response to the Committee's Report was published in April  2014.
·          The Oakley  Review was an independent  review of Jobseekers Allowance (JSA)  sanctions in relation to mandatory employment schemes, i.e. principally those affecting JSA claimants participating in the Work Programme, DWP's  mainstream contracted employment programme. This review was a requirement of the Jobseekers (Back  to Work Schemes) Act 2013 and was therefore  limited in scope. It was conducted by Matthew Oakley for DWP and published in July 2014.
·          As well focusing on  sanctions applied in relation to mandatory employment schemes such as the Work  Programme, the Oakley Review was limited to issues around the clarity of  communications with claimants and how well claimants understand the sanctioning  process, including their options regarding decision reviews, appeals and the  availability of hardship payments. The Government published its response  to the Oakley Review in July 2014, and has begun to implement some of its  recommendations, in particular those around the clarity of DWP's communications  with claimants.
--ENDS--
Committee  membership:   
Dame Anne Begg MP  (Chair) (Lab, Aberdeen South), Debbie Abrahams MP (Lab, Oldham East and  Saddleworth), Graham Evans MP (Con, Weaver Vale), Sheila Gilmore MP (Lab,  Edinburgh East), Glenda Jackson MP (Lab, Hampstead and Highgate), Kwasi Kwarteng  MP (Con, Spelthorne), Paul Maynard MP (Con, Blackpool North and Cleveleys),  Nigel Mills MP (Con, Amber Valley), Anne Marie Morris MP (Con, Newton Abbot),  Teresa Pearce MP (Lab, Erith and Thamesmead), Mr Michael Thornton MP (Lib Dem,  Eastleigh.
Specific Committee  Information: clarkeja@parliament.uk  0207 219  4835 or workpencom@parliament.uk  020 7219 2839
Media Information: calderg@parliament.uk 020 7219  7556
Twitter: @CommonsWorkPen
Committee Website: www.parliament.uk/workpencom
Watch committees and parliamentary debates  online: www.parliamentlive.tv  
Publications/Reports/Reference Material: 
Copies of all select  committee reports are available from the Houses of Parliament Shop (12 Bridge  St, Westminster, 020 7219 3890) or the Stationery Office (0845 7023474).   Committee reports, press releases, evidence transcripts, Bills; research papers,  a directory of MPs, plus Hansard (from 8am daily) and much more, can be found on  www.parliament.uk
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