tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-27199406505900586692009-02-20T16:24:43.486-08:00National Pensioners Convention - npcuk.orgThe National Pensioners Convention (NPC) is Britain's biggest pensioner organisation representing over 1000 local, regional and national pensioner groups with a total of 1.5m members.Seniors Networkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03851120902361584537noreply@blogger.comBlogger19125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2719940650590058669.post-52199555599612468502008-10-20T02:22:00.000-07:002008-10-20T02:41:28.729-07:00Protestors show anger at billions for bankers but peanuts for pensioners<strong>National lobby demands a decent state pension for all generations</strong><br /> <br />Britain’s pensioner and trade union movements are today (Wednesday 22 October 2008) joining together for the first time to call for a higher basic state pension for the over 60s of today and tomorrow.<br /><br />Over 1000 protestors of all ages are expected to lobby Parliament as part of a campaign organised by the National Pensioners Convention (NPC) and over 15 individual trade unions, to mark the centenary of the state pension (first introduced in 1908).<br /><br />For the first time in 100 years, working age and retired people will lobby their MPs together to stress that a decent state pension is an issue not just for today’s pensioners, but for future generations as well. This point has taken on extra significance given the recent financial crisis and the weakness of private pensions which have recently lost £250bn in value – adversely affecting up to 5m people who are about to retire.<br /><br />Key demands<br />The lobby will be calling for:<br /><br />The basic state pension to be raised above the poverty level (of £151 a week for a single pensioner)<br />The link with earnings or prices (whichever is higher) to be restored immediately<br />The state pension to be paid to all existing pensioners on a universal basis<br /><br />NPC general secretary Joe Harris said: “After 100 years of the state pension it’s a national disgrace that at least 2.5m older people are still living below the official poverty line, and millions more are struggling to meet the rising costs of living. Next year’s increase in the state pension will be a measly £4.55 a week, at a time when millions of older people will be faced with the unenviable dilemma of trying to heat their homes or eat properly.”<br /><br />“For decades, the policy of successive governments has been to rely on means-tested benefits for existing pensioners and good occupational pension schemes for future generations, as a way of avoiding paying a decent state pension. But this approach is unravelling – with means-testing remaining unpopular and ineffective at getting money to the poorest and many decent company pensions being replaced by insecure money-purchase schemes. Billions of pounds have been wiped off private pension funds in recent weeks – and up to 5m workers now face an insecure retirement.”<br /><br />“Pensioners – both now and in the future – need dignity and security in retirement that only a decent state pension can provide. The government should use the huge £46bn surplus in the National Insurance Fund and give everyone a pension that takes them out of poverty. It’s not acceptable that there’s billions for bankers, but peanuts for pensioners.”<br /><br />TUC General Secretary Brendan Barber said: “This year we have celebrated the centenary of the state pension. It remains a key achievement, but its value has melted away since the link with earnings was ended by the last Conservative Government.”<br /><br />“This is why unions are giving strong support to today's NPC lobby and rally, and joining the call to give today's pensioners a decent pension and restoring the link to earnings or prices.”<br /><br />Programme<br />The programme for the day will be:<br /><br />· DEMONSTRATION 11am Parliament Square (by Churchill statue). Up to 200 protestors with banners and placards, with some in Victorian costume.<br /><br />· RALLY 12-2pm, Great Hall, Methodist Central Hall, Westminster<br />Speakers include: Joe Harris NPC General Secretary, Kate Hoey MP, Mark Serwotka PCS General Secretary, Bob Crow RMT General Secretary, Kelvin Hopkins MP, Paul Kenny GMB General Secretary, Christine Blower General Secretary NUT, Michelle Stanistreet Deputy General Secretary NUJ, Bishop Howard Tripp (Titular Bishop of Newport), Derek Simpson Joint General Secretary UNITE, Dave Prentis UNISON General Secretary and Brendan Barber TUC General Secretary<br /><br />· LOBBY 1.30pm onwards Westminster Hall and Central Lobby, House of Commons<br /><br />Pension Facts and Figures<br />· Pensioner poverty has risen in the last year by 300,000, taking the total to 2.5m older people living on less than 60% of median population income before housing costs (the same figure as in 1997/8). For a single pensioner this equals £151 a week.<br />· Next April, the state pension will rise from £90.70 by just £4.55 a week for a single pensioner and from £145.05 by £7.25 a week for a pensioner couple.<br />· About two thirds of those pensioners living in poverty are women. The Government admits that women’s pensions are a ‘national disgrace’, with the overwhelming majority of existing women pensioners receiving less than a full basic state pension. Many were badly advised about the ‘small stamp’ or were unable to pay their national insurance contributions because of caring for their families, and being in low paid or part-time employment. Many married women will see their state pension rise next year by just £2.70 a week.<br />· Between 1997 and 2006, the number of people living in severe poverty – defined as living on less than 40% of median population income – increased by 600,000. The poorest quarter of pensioner households saw their incomes rise by less than 1% last year, well below inflation. The poorest single pensioners saw their real incomes drop by 4%.<br />· Around 61% of pensioner couples have an annual income of £15,000 or less, and 45% of all single pensioners have an annual income of £10,000 or less.<br />· In a recent EU survey, only pensioners in Latvia, Spain and Cyprus are more likely to fall into poverty than those in the UK. The Institute for Fiscal Studies concludes that the proportion of pensioners below the poverty threshold will remain at its current level for at least the next decade, despite government reforms.<br />· If the link between the state pension and earnings is restored in 2012, 3m existing pensioners will have already died. Even those who actually get a pension in 4 years’ time will only receive £1.40 a week more than they would have got anyway under the present system, because the level of the state pension will be so low.<br />· Had the link between the state pension and average earnings not been broken in 1980, a single pensioner would now be getting £154 a week rather than £90.70.<br />· By 2012/13, the National Insurance Fund will have an estimated balance in excess of £114bn - which the Government continues to use for other purposes.<br />· A recent survey by Scottish Widows found that 1 in 3 future pensioners will not have sufficient income to avoid poverty when they retire. Up to 9m workers currently have no other pension provision than that which will be provided by the state when they retire, whilst up to 5m soon-to-be pensioners have seen their pension pots dramatically reduced as a result of the current economic crisis.<br /><br />Notes for Editors<br />· Key spokespeople from the national and regional pensioner campaigns will be available for interview, as well as trade union officials<br />· All regions of the country will be represented<br />· There will be banners, placards and pensioners dressed in Victorian costume at the Parliament Square protest and an old Routemaster Campaign Bus touring the area<br /><br />For more information contact<br /><br />NPC – Neil Duncan-Jordan 07940-357-608<br />TUC – Rob Holdsworth 07717 531150<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/2719940650590058669-5219955559961246850?l=npcuk.blogspot.com'/></div>Neil Duncan-Jordan NPC National Officerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08648283478528028838noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2719940650590058669.post-18923113882462427852008-10-05T09:07:00.000-07:002008-10-05T09:10:50.350-07:00“Decent state pensions for all generations”BRIEFING PAPER<br />National Joint Lobby of Parliament<br />Wednesday 22 October 2008<br />"Decent state pensions for all generations"<br /><br /><br /><strong>Theme</strong><br />This event has been jointly organised with the TUC and the trade union movement in order to stress that the campaign for a decent state pension is an issue not just for today’s pensioners, but for future generations as well. We are therefore hoping that at least one pensioner and one worker from each constituency will see their MPs on the day.<br /><br /><strong>Key demands<br /></strong>The lobby ties in with the State Pension Centenary campaign and as such, echoes the immediate demands for:<br /><br /><ul><li>The basic state pension to be raised above the poverty level (which was £134 a week, but has since been revised to £151)</li><li>The link with earnings or prices (whichever is higher) to be restored </li><li>The state pension to be paid to all existing pensioners on a universal basis</li></ul><strong>Rally</strong><br />At 12 noon, there will be a rally in the Methodist Central Hall, Westminster addressed by MPs, trade unionists, pensioner leaders and others. Owing to the large number of people expected to attend, two rooms have been set aside – The Library and Lecture Hall – and we hope to run two simultaneous rallies to encourage maximum attendance. The rallies are expected to close at around 2pm.<br /><br /><strong>Lobby</strong><br />Anytime from 1pm onwards, lobbyists can make their way over to the House of Commons to see their MPs. Those wishing to take part in the lobby should now write to their MPs asking if they will make themselves available on the day to be lobbied. Owing to the limited space available in the House of Commons, MPs should arrange to meet lobbyists either in the Westminster Hall, Central Lobby or a private room/café.<br />Arrangements for getting into the House of Commons will be available shortly.<br /><br /><strong>Delegation to Number 10 Downing Street<br /></strong>We also hope to arrange for a joint NPC/TUC delegation to see the Prime Minister sometime during the day of the lobby to present our demands.<br /><br /><strong>Supporting action</strong><br />Those pensioner groups, trade union branches or other groups not able to come to London on the day of the lobby are encouraged to organise some event in their local area on the same day at 12 noon. This could be a march or rally, demonstration or some other activity. This action could help spread the message even further and encourage more people to get involved in the campaign.<br /><br /><strong>Campaign materials</strong><br />The NPC will be producing flyers, briefing notes and campaign stickers for those attending the lobby, long with newspapers and petitions for those holding events in their local areas. Please contact the NPC office to place an order.<br /><br /><strong>Further information</strong><br />For further information contact the NPC on 020-7553-6510 or email: <a href="mailto:info@@npcuk.org">info@@npcuk.org</a>.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/2719940650590058669-1892311388246242785?l=npcuk.blogspot.com'/></div>Seniors Networkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03851120902361584537noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2719940650590058669.post-3539778096088170822008-09-24T02:08:00.000-07:002008-09-24T02:09:36.375-07:00Prime Minister’s warm words not matched by actionBritain’s biggest pensioner organization, the National Pensioners Convention (NPC), has criticized the prime minister’s speech at the Labour party conference today, as being strong on rhetoric but weak on action.<br /><br />Commenting on the prime minister’s speech, Joe Harris, NPC general secretary said: “Mr Brown is right to call an ageing population a blessing rather than a burden, but his speech still lacked any date as to when he was going to restore the state pension link with earnings. Whilst he said no-one should live in fear of old age, he has refused to give an immediate increase in the winter fuel allowance and his commitment to better social care will be meaningless if it does not include an end to means-testing. He had lots of warm words but very little action.”<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/2719940650590058669-353977809608817082?l=npcuk.blogspot.com'/></div>Seniors Networkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03851120902361584537noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2719940650590058669.post-33285419732558195002008-09-16T04:19:00.000-07:002008-09-16T04:20:51.640-07:00Inflation rise will force more older people into povertyInflation rise will force more older people into poverty<br /> <br />Britain's biggest older people's organisation, the National Pensioners Convention (NPC), claims that millions of older people are now on the brink of poverty, following the latest figures released today showing a further increase in inflation.<br /> <br />The official poverty figures show that 2.5m (23% of the pensioner population) are living on less than £151 a week. Up to 61% of all pensioner couples have an annual income of £15,000, whilst 45% of all single pensioners live on just £10,000 a year. <br /> <br />Between 1997 and 2006, the number of people living in severe poverty – defined as living on less than 40% of median population income – increased by 600,000. The poorest quarter of pensioner households saw their incomes rise by less than 1% last year, well below inflation. The poorest single pensioners saw their real incomes drop by 4%.<br /> <br />Joe Harris, NPC general secretary said: “Nearly three million pensioner households already spend over 10% of their income on energy and are living in fuel poverty. If you add onto household bills things like food and council tax, millions more older people could be using as much as 70% of their income just to keep their house warm and eat a decent meal[i]. That doesn’t leave very much at the end of the week to enjoy life.”<br /> <br />“The real reason pensioners are suffering is because they spend a higher proportion of their income on those items that are rising fastest – whilst the purchasing power of their state pension continues to decline. It’s a shocking indictment of the government’s pensions’ policy that the number of older people in poverty is higher now than five years ago and things look set to get worse. It’s time the government used the growing surplus in the national insurance fund to pay everyone a decent pension above the poverty line of £151 a week that rises every year in line with the greater of inflation or earnings. In light of the current increases in the costs of living – pensioners simply cannot afford to survive.”<br /><br /> For more information contact Neil Duncan-Jordan on 07940-357-608<br />[i]  For a single pensioner living on the pension credit guarantee of £124.05 a week, fuel, food and council tax bills can equal as much as 70% of their annual income <div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/2719940650590058669-3328541973255819500?l=npcuk.blogspot.com'/></div>Seniors Networkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03851120902361584537noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2719940650590058669.post-77851005027662318952008-09-10T07:53:00.000-07:002008-09-10T07:56:23.046-07:00Pensioners need immediate financial help with paying fuel bills –Pensioners need immediate financial help with paying fuel bills –<br />not energy efficiency schemes<br /><br />Britain's biggest older people's organisation, the National Pensioners Convention (NPC), has called on the government to ensure its package of measures aimed at helping families meet rising fuel bills (due to be announced tomorrow) includes an immediate increase in the winter fuel allowance to £500 for all pensioner households.<br /><br />Joe Harris, NPC general secretary said: "Many older people are already struggling to pay their energy bills and the recent increases are likely to drag well over a million more into financial hardship by the end of the year. Around 2.4m pensioner households are currently spending more than 10% of their income on fuel bills, and are living in fuel poverty. <br />What these people need now is more money – in the form of the winter fuel allowance so that they can avoid having to decide whether to heat or eat. <br /><br />Energy efficiency schemes won’t help them pay their bills this month and neither will they prevent over 20,000 pensioners dying from the cold this winter.”<br /><br />"Every time there is a 1% increase in energy bills, a further 40,000 older people fall into fuel poverty. It's time the government intervened to prevent the energy companies making profits at the expense of vulnerable pensioners, raised the winter fuel allowance to £500 and regulated social tariffs to give proper discounts to older customers."<br /><br /><br /><strong>FUEL POVERTY FACTS</strong><br /><ul><li>Nearly 90 per cent of all excess winter deaths are of people over the age of 65. </li><li>There were 22,300 excess winter deaths of older people last year, and 260,000 since 1997. </li><li>Almost one in three older people live in homes with inadequate heating or insulation making their homes more difficult to heat and/or keep warm. </li><li>More than 1 in 4 people living in fuel poverty are over 70 years old </li><li>Average annual energy bills now exceed £1,000. This will absorb 16 per cent of the income of a single pensioner dependent on the pension credit minimum guarantee and the current £250 Winter Fuel Payment. </li></ul><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/2719940650590058669-7785100502766231895?l=npcuk.blogspot.com'/></div>Seniors Networkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03851120902361584537noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2719940650590058669.post-59084431524304144722008-06-13T06:06:00.001-07:002008-06-13T06:08:26.920-07:00Pensioners forced to open bank accountsHundreds of thousands of pensioners are being told to open bank accounts if they want to continue getting their state pension.<br /><br />Currently around 400,000 over 60s still receive their weekly or monthly state pension payment through a giro cheque that can be cashed at their local post office. Up till now ministers have accepted that this arrangement could continue, but the NPC has learnt that letters are being sent to these pensioners telling them that the giro cheques are being withdrawn in 2010 and that they will have to have their pension paid directly into a bank account.<br /><br />The NPC, which opposed the scrapping of the original pension book back in 2003, believes that this latest move will not only further undermine the viability of hundreds of local post office branches resulting from a loss of income, but will also seriously restrict the ability of pensioners to manage their day-to-day financial affairs.<br /><br />Cheques are issued to the pensioner’s home address on a regular basis to match the current frequency of their benefit or pension payments, either weekly or monthly. If the individual cannot collect their pension in person, they can sign the back of the cheque to indicate that they have asked someone else to cash it on their behalf. The person cashing the cheque will also have to sign and provide suitable identification.<br /><br />For many older people, the cheque payment enables them to easily get a friend or neighbour to collect their pension on their behalf. It’s a flexible approach that helps those who may not always be able to get to the post office in person. Lots of older of older people don’t have, don’t want or cannot open a bank account – but they want to keep using their post office to collect their pension. It’s outrageous that the government is now making it difficult for pensioners to get at their own money. The decision to withdraw the cheque payment is yet another attack on both the pensioner and the post office.<br /><br />The NPC believes that the government is unable to legally stop paying pensions, simply because an individual does not have a bank account, and is considering a legal challenge to this latest move. In the meantime, they are advising those affected to ignore any letters advising them to give up their giro cheques in favour of opening a bank account.<br /><br />On 15 February 2006, James Plaskitt MP, Department for Work and Pensions minister told the House of Commons: “It is not the Department’s policy to stop an individual’s pension payments if he or she refuses to receive pension payments by the direct payment method. Customers who do not provide account details are paid by cheque.”<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/2719940650590058669-5908443152430414472?l=npcuk.blogspot.com'/></div>Neil Duncan-Jordan NPC National Officerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08648283478528028838noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2719940650590058669.post-88321448667101664522008-06-02T02:58:00.000-07:002008-12-12T22:56:56.920-08:00Grey power marks 100 years of state pension with demand to end poverty in old age<p align="left"><a href="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_IwWIGZI3oM0/SEPG3bTqTqI/AAAAAAAAAAU/xRDZHZoyNz4/s1600-h/banner500.jpg"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5207224249695751842" style="DISPLAY: block; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; WIDTH: 405px; CURSOR: hand; HEIGHT: 126px; TEXT-ALIGN: center" height="133" alt="" src="http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_IwWIGZI3oM0/SEPG3bTqTqI/AAAAAAAAAAU/xRDZHZoyNz4/s320/banner500.jpg" width="474" border="0" /></a></p><br /><strong>* Delegates believe grey vote may hold key to election victory<br />* Composer Michael Nyman lends support to campaign with new piece</strong><br /><br />Two thousand leading members of Britain’s growing grey power movement will mark 100 years of the state pension at the opening of their annual Pensioners’ Parliament on Tuesday June 3, by calling on the government to raise the state pension above the poverty line and restore its link with earnings before 2012.<br /><br /><strong>The demand comes at the start of the 3-day annual event in Blackpool,</strong> organised by the National Pensioners Convention (NPC). Delegates from across the UK will also argue that meeting the needs of Britain’s 11m older voters will be key to winning the next election.<br />A recent survey by the Hansard Society confirmed previous findings that the propensity to vote directly relates to age. 78% of 65-74-year-olds said they would definitely vote, compared to only 23% of those aged 18-24.<br /><br /><strong>Some of the major concerns which delegates will discuss include:</strong><br />· Raising the basic state pension above the poverty level of £134 a week and restoring the link with earnings now<br />· Requiring good quality, free long-term and social care to prevent people from having to sell their homes in order to pay for services<br />· Replacing the council tax with a fairer system based on the ability to pay<br />· Tackling the growing threat of fuel poverty amongst Britain’s elderly to prevent the deaths of over 20,000 pensioners every year from the cold<br /><br /><strong>Joe Harris NPC General Secretary said</strong>: “The current political climate shows that the general public are unimpressed with what the government has done over the last ten years in relation to pensions, council tax and care. After a century, the state pension remains just £90.70 a week and at least 2.2m pensioners are still living in poverty. The link between pensions and earnings has been delayed until 2012, by which time 3m of today’s older generation will be dead.”<br /><br />“<strong>Social care in Britain is in crisis.</strong> The government refuses to spend the money needed to provide free care in the home and continues to argue that patients must pay for help with washing, eating a meal or going to the toilet.”<br /><br />“<strong>Council tax has risen by more than 100%</strong> in the last decade, and fuel bills continue to escalate to such a point where millions of older people are now having to make the unenviable choice between eating or heating.”<br />”All political parties need to realise that<strong> pensioners may well hold they key to who wins the next general election</strong> – especially as they are more likely to turn out and vote than any other section of the electorate. The Pensioners' Parliament will warn the politicians that if they want the votes of Britain's 11m older people, they are going to have to do something positive.”<br /><br />The opening session of the Parliament will also feature theatrical readings in period costume and speeches from Frances O’Grady (TUC), Danny Alexander MP and Kate Hoey MP. Delegates will also hear a specially composed piece of music by Michael Nyman entitled “The Battle for the Old Age Pension”.<br /><br /><strong>Michael Nyman said</strong>: “The state pension is a fantastic piece of social policy, yet it is in urgent need of support. I’m backing the NPC’s campaign to raise the state pension above the poverty level to help pensioners with rising costs of living. That’s why it’s important that the battle for a decent old age pension continues.”<br /><br />Pensions Minister, Mike O’Brien will also attend the event for a reception on Wednesday evening.<br /><br />A more detailed programme is available at <a style="COLOR: blue; TEXT-DECORATION: underline; text-underline: single" href="http://www.npcuk.org/">http://www.npcuk.org/</a>.<br />· National and regional representatives from across the UK will be available for interview on request.<br /><strong>· The event starts at 1pm on the North Promenade, Blackpool with a marching band and over 1000 marchers with banners</strong>.<br />· The opening session will start at 2pm in the Empress Ballroom, Winter Gardens, Blackpool.<br /><br /><strong>· Michael Nyman's new piece "The Battle for the Old Age Pension" will be performed live by the Wingates Band on June 3 at the Winter Gardens, Blackpool as part of the Pensioners’ Parliament. I</strong><br />t will also be performed at the "Nyman Live at Cadogan Hall" festival on June 6,7,8. For more information <a style="COLOR: blue; TEXT-DECORATION: underline; text-underline: single" href="http://www.cadoganhall.com/">http://www.cadoganhall.com/</a>.<br />· Contributions will also be made throughout the event by a number of guest speakers from the Royal College of Nursing, Commission for Social Care Inspection, Carers UK, Communication Workers Union, Local Government Association and the Equality and Human Rights Commission.<br />Pension facts &amp; figures - then &amp; now<br /><br /><strong><span style="font-size:180%;">1908<br /></span></strong>· Non-contributory pension<br />· Payable to men and women at 70<br />· 5 shillings a week: represented between 20-25% of average earnings<br />· Means-tested and based on character<br /><strong><span style="font-size:180%;">2008</span></strong><br />· Contributory pension<br />· Payable to men and women at 65 in 2024 and rising to 68 by 2044<br />· £90.70 a week: represents around 15% of average earnings<br />· Pension not means-tested, but means-testing still exists for those who need additional income<br />· One in five of today's 11m pensioners live below the official poverty line, the vast majority of them women. In 1891, 1.3m people were classed as paupers – of which 31% were over 60-years-old<br /><strong>· The National Insurance Fund currently has a surplus of £46bn, which is forecast to grow to £114bn by 2012. This money is primarily intended to pay for state pensions, but today’s pensioners are being denied a higher pension because the government is using the money to fund other expenditure</strong><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/2719940650590058669-8832144866710166452?l=npcuk.blogspot.com'/></div>Seniors Networkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03851120902361584537noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2719940650590058669.post-18838365073072361812008-05-12T07:01:00.000-07:002008-05-12T07:05:01.359-07:00Care Free Campaign<p>To coincide with the government's six month's consultation on the future of care and support services, the NPC has today launched the Care Free Campaign. It will:<br /><br />+ Reject the use of means-testing and call for care to be properly funded by central government to provide free services to all without the use of rationing criteria<br />+ Recognise that the use of personal budgets are not universally suitable or the best way of providing the right type of care for all users<br />+ Demand the postcode lottery in provision of care is ended and replaced with national standards of access and quality of services<br />+ Call for recognition and support, both in financial and practical terms, for the families and carers of users<br />+ Champion the need for properly trained, supervised and paid staff to assess, enable and care for users<br />+ Promote appropriate care to Britain's diverse pensioner population <br />The voices of pensioners and their carers must be heard loud and clear during this six month consultation period. It seems that everyone acknowledges the growing crisis in social care, but no-one seems prepared to do anything to tackle it. Local authorities have tightened access to services because they have been starved of funds from central government. As a result, hundreds of thousands of vulnerable pensioners have been denied the care they so desparately need. Even those who need help getting out of bed in the morning are being left to fend for themselves. In effect, they either have to rely on friends or family, pay privately or go without.<br /><br />Care in this country is still treated like a Cinderella service, which has been underfunded and overlooked for years. But those who need the care know that the postcode lottery on access to services, the differing charges around the country, the varying standards of care and the continued use of means-testing are simply intolerable. The government has introduced an artificial dividing line between personal and nursing care when all care should be provided free - and no-one should be expected to sell their home simply to pay for care that in hospital they would get free of charge.<br /><br /></p><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/2719940650590058669-1883836507307236181?l=npcuk.blogspot.com'/></div>Neil Duncan-Jordan NPC National Officerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08648283478528028838noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2719940650590058669.post-29130796118295537042008-04-24T05:02:00.000-07:002008-04-24T05:03:15.014-07:00Pensioners still face hardship over the 10p tax debacleUp to one million older women aged 60-64 will still suffer as a result of the abolition of the 10p tax rate.<br /><br />The National Pensioners Convention (NPC) believes that even the compensation package announced today by the Chancellor of Exchequer, will not be sufficient to reimburse all those women who have seen their tax bills rise since April 1.<br /><br />Many women pensioners are telling us how this tax change will have a serious impact on their standard of living. One example is a 63-year-old widow who has a NHS pension on top of her state pension bringing her total income to just £11,000. Her company pension will rise but the increase in tax from 10% to 20% will mean she is now worse off than before.<br /><br />Millions of pensioners above 65 will also be hit. Someone with a taxable income of just £6500 already pays over £1000 a year in tax - but will now be asked to find a further £130 because of the abolition of the 10p tax rate.<br /><br />These pensioners will receive no compensation whatsoever, whilst women aged 60-64 may not get enough through the blanket compensation package that's been proposed to cover their losses in full. This whole episode has severely damaged the government's standing with older people and the only way to regain it will be to urgently tackle the real problems they face by raising the basic state pension and restoring its link to earnings.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/2719940650590058669-2913079611829553704?l=npcuk.blogspot.com'/></div>Neil Duncan-Jordan NPC National Officerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08648283478528028838noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2719940650590058669.post-11741280162650589272008-04-14T08:58:00.000-07:002008-04-14T09:00:47.752-07:00New research reveals shocking reality of pensioner povertyThe National Pensioners Convention (NPC), Britain's biggest pensioner organisation, has claimed the latest pension research from the UK Statistics Authority reveals the shocking reality of pensioner hardship in 21st century Britain.<br /><br />Joe Harris, NPC general secretary said: "For years, successive governments told us that it was okay to keep the state pension low because private company pension schemes would ensure that everyone had a comfortable income in retirement. But these figures prove that was a myth. A 100 years after the first ever state pension and 62% of pensioner couples and at least 50% of single pensioners are living well below the official poverty line. It is a national scandal, yet the government's only solution is to offer people means-tested benefits and delay restoring the link with earnings until 2012. The country can afford to give all older people a decent pension of at least £135 a week that goes up each year in line with wages. After 100 years, it's time we ended pensioner poverty for good."<br /> <br />PENSION FACTS<br /><ul><li>The state pension link with average earnings was broken in 1980. Had the link remained, today's state pension for an individual would now be worth £145.15 a week rather than £90.70. </li><li>By the time the link is restored by the government in 2012, 3m of today's pensioners will have already died. </li><li>The national insruance fund currently has a surplus balance of £46bn. </li><li>Around 1.8m pensioners do not claim the means-tested Pension Credit, despite being eligible. </li><li>1 in 5 pensioners live below the official poverty line, the vast majority of them women.<br /><br />For more information contact Neil Duncan-Jordan on 07940-357-608<br /><br />Visit <a href="http://www.pension/">www.pension</a> 100.co.uk for information about the NPC's pension campaign</li></ul><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/2719940650590058669-1174128016265058927?l=npcuk.blogspot.com'/></div>Seniors Networkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03851120902361584537noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2719940650590058669.post-80961625387128491722008-04-07T07:02:00.000-07:002008-04-07T07:03:28.878-07:00Protest over 25p "insult"Britain's biggest pensioner organisation is today calling on all older people aged 80 and over to send the 25p weekly age addition they receive, back to the Chancellor, in protest at the government's continued failure to substantially raise the basic state pension.<br /><br />The National Pensioners Convention's (NPC) call comes on the day the state pension is increased by just £3.40 a week extra. But the additional 25p payment - first introduced in 1971 - is now seen by many older people as insulting and derisory.<br /><br />Thirty seven years ago, the extra weekly payment for those aged 80 and over was set at 25p in line with the value of a bag of coal. At the time, it was considered a valuable addition to the weekly state pension of £5. Today, if it had risen relative to the state pension - it would be worth around £4.50 a week.<br /><br />But over the years, its continued neglect has made it a symbol of discontent amongst Britain's elderly. Even pensions minister Mike O'Brien acknowledged in a parliamentary debate last year that the 25p payment was "an insult", after his mother had complained about it.<br /><br />There are around 2.6m people aged 80 and over, and every week they receive this pathetic payment which rubs their noses in the fact that their state pension of £90.70 a week, is so pitifully low. Today, the age addition can't even buy a 27p second class stamp. I think sending 25p back to the Chancellor will show how angry pensioners really are.<br /><br />This year represents the centenary of the state pension - yet 1 in 5 older people, particularly those older pensioners, are living below the official poverty line. The government has said it will restore the pension link to earnings in 2012, but by that time 3m of today's pensioners will have already died. We need a decent state pension now, set at around £135 a week, which allows all older people to live in dignity in retirement.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/2719940650590058669-8096162538712849172?l=npcuk.blogspot.com'/></div>Neil Duncan-Jordan NPC National Officerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08648283478528028838noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2719940650590058669.post-73896686168485690512008-04-02T04:00:00.000-07:002008-04-02T04:02:17.336-07:00Local councils delay issue of new bus passesHundreds of thousands of pensioners in England have yet to receive their new bus pass, despite the introduction on April 1 of the new free national bus travel scheme. The delay has led to accusations of confusion and incompetence amongst a number of local authorities, but the NPC is calling on all bus operators to honour the old passes until the new ones come into force, to ensure that all pensioners - wherever they live - are entitled to the new concession.<br /><br />But whilst the new scheme is a welcome step towards the NPC’s demand of free nationwide travel on all forms of public transport, it does not yet include metros/trains and trams, travel before 9.30am or community transport schemes such as dial-a-ride. Most notably, the scheme also does not extend to other parts of the UK. Many local authorities have complained that a lack of funding for the new concession from central government will force them to cut other services or raise council tax. But much of the problem lies with the bus companies overcharging them for pensioner travel.<br /><br />The government must ensure that the scheme is properly funded and regulated so that the real benefits of free travel can be enjoyed by all pensioners right across the country, and the delay in issuing bus passes in some areas gives even more strength to the argument that we should have a national scheme administered centrally.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/2719940650590058669-7389668616848569051?l=npcuk.blogspot.com'/></div>Neil Duncan-Jordan NPC National Officerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08648283478528028838noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2719940650590058669.post-79225014806433018442008-03-12T07:50:00.000-07:002008-03-12T07:51:15.215-07:00Budget offers little to help pensioners with rising costs of livingMillions of pensioners will struggle to find anything in the Budget that will really help them meet the rising costs of living or make the difficult choice of whether to eat or heat. After 5 years of refusing to increase the winter fuel allowance, the government has finally been forced by growing pressure to give a small increase - but it is unlikely to be enough to stop the rising scale of fuel poverty amongst older people or end the scandalous number of winter deaths amongst the over 60s.<br /><br />Around 2.2m pensioner households already spend more than 10% of their income on fuel bills - and an extra £50 just won't keep up with the huge increases that have recently been announced by the energy companies. The Chancellor's decision not to give an across the board rise of £100 to all pensioners is also likely to back fire. No-one can seriously believe that a 79-year-old's fuel bill is any less than that of an 80-year-old, and it's about time all pensioner households were getting a £400 winter fuel allowance.<br /><br />What is more significant about the Budget, is what the Chancellor didn't say. Pensioners are furious with the government's refusal to improve the state pension. Britain continues to have the least adequate state pension in Europe and the promise to restore the link with earnings is still at least 4 years away, by which time 3m of today's pensioners will have died. Failing to mention this or the need to address the rising council tax faced by millions of older households will once again leave Britain's pensioners feeling like they're the forgotten generation. Come the general election, the grey vote may well look elsewhere.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/2719940650590058669-7922501480643301844?l=npcuk.blogspot.com'/></div>Neil Duncan-Jordan NPC National Officerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08648283478528028838noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2719940650590058669.post-57764398012952181832008-03-10T04:22:00.000-07:002008-03-10T04:23:28.481-07:00Pensioners want a Budget for eating and heatingThe Chancellor will have to announce a substantial improvement in pensions and the winter fuel allowance if he wants to win back the support of older voters.<br /><br />This April, the basic state pension will rise by just £3.40 (3.9%) to £90.70 a week. Already it is amongst the lowest in Europe and the Government's reliance on means-tested benefits has done little to help the 1 in 5 older people who still live below the official poverty line. Three million of today's older people will be dead before the Chancellor restores the link between pensions and earnings in 2012, yet it would cost just £600m to bring it in now.<br /><br />In the last decade, 260,000 more older people have died during the winter months than at any other times of the year. Yet despite this and the huge rises in energy bills, the winter fuel allowance has been frozen since 2003. For every 1% increase in charges a further 40,000 join the ranks of 1m pensioner households already suffering from fuel poverty. It's a national scandal that older people are still literally dying of cold.<br /><br />If the Chancellor wants to restore the faith of pensioners in his government, he must raise the state pension by around £45, restore the link to earnings now, and double the winter fuel allowance. If not, the gap between pensioners and the rest of society will continue to grow and come the general election, the grey vote may well look elsewhere.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/2719940650590058669-5776439801295218183?l=npcuk.blogspot.com'/></div>Neil Duncan-Jordan NPC National Officerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08648283478528028838noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2719940650590058669.post-13964538794088470162008-02-27T23:51:00.000-08:002008-02-27T23:52:29.270-08:00Council tax rises bring more misery to pensionersThe news that average council tax bills are to rise by 4% will bring more misery to millions of pensioners who are already struggling to meet rising food and energy bills. The average Band D council tax of £1374 now represents around a third of a pensioners' spending. Council tax of £26.42 a week is around 30% of the £87.30 weekly basic state pension and this year's £52 rise in council tax will also swallow up a third of the £3.40 a week extra pension due in April.<br /><br />The government has no solution to the unfairness of council tax, apart from asking pensioners to claim discredited means-tested benefits. This is not the answer, and we urgently need complete reform of the system that takes account of the ability to pay.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/2719940650590058669-1396453879408847016?l=npcuk.blogspot.com'/></div>Neil Duncan-Jordan NPC National Officerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08648283478528028838noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2719940650590058669.post-38184997677037296472008-02-26T05:18:00.000-08:002008-02-26T05:20:36.219-08:00New bus travel scheme must be properly fundedThe evidence showing the benefits of offering free bus travel to those aged 60 and over is widely acknowledged and includes greater independence and less social exclusion, growth for local economies, improved services for fare paying travellers and reductions in demand for health and social services.<br /><br />Nevertheless, older people do not wish to gain at the expense of other younger members of society, and any shortfall in funding for the scheme from central or local government must not be used to paint pensioners as the problem.<br /><br />Many local councils are rightly concerned about the somewhat doubftul methods of calculation and assumptions on cost put forward by the bus companies. Many charge for a full journey from one end of a route to another, when the passenger might only be travelling a few stops.<br /><br />As a result of such sharp practices, costs of the new scheme have been over estimated and local authorities have started talking about having to make cuts in other services.<br /><br />Fundamentally, a national scheme should be properly funded by central government, the grants for concessionary travel should be ring-fenced to ensure the councils spend it properly and the Department for Transport should have tighter controls on the charges made by bus operators.<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/2719940650590058669-3818499767703729647?l=npcuk.blogspot.com'/></div>Neil Duncan-Jordan NPC National Officerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/08648283478528028838noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2719940650590058669.post-90194819939817806362008-02-24T08:23:00.000-08:002008-02-24T08:24:26.329-08:00OUTRAGE AS THE COST OF CARE FOR THE ELDERLY IS EXPECTED TO DOUBLETHE cost of long-term care for the elderly is set to double during the next 20 years, research reveals.<br />The average bill for a four-year stay in a care home will soar from £112,312 to £223,476, warns Saga, which provides services for the over-50s.The alarming figure is based on fees rising by 3.5 per cent a year on top of 2.5 per cent inflation and underlines the importance of planning for the cost of care in old age, says Saga.The Daily Express crusade Respect For The Elderly has highlighted anger over how elderly people who have worked and saved all their lives are stripped of their homes to pay bills of several hundred pounds a week. Families who expected to inherit houses or flats instead find that funds have been drained to pay for care.Gordon Lishman, director general of Age Concern, said: “We estimate that one in four people aged 85 and over will need care but who will pay for this care in the future is unclear. “This summer, the Government will launch its Green Paper on the future of funding for care. Reform is urgently needed to make sure that everyone can get the care they need, that care is of better quality and that care is paid for in a fairer way.” Campaigners say that around 17 per cent of people aged 85 and over are in long-term care, and with life expectancy rising, increasing numbers of people are likely to need it in future. A man who is aged 60 now is expected to live for another 26 years on average, while a woman is likely to live for another 29 years.<br />Dot Gibson, vice-president of the National Pensioners Convention, said: “Every year 70,000 people have to sell their homes to pay for services that should be free – such as help to use the lavatory or getting dressed.“It would cost around £1billion – a fraction of what is earmarked for new Trident missiles – to give older people the dignity of having the care they need at the end of their lives without having to pay.”<div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/2719940650590058669-9019481993981780636?l=npcuk.blogspot.com'/></div>Seniors Networkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03851120902361584537noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2719940650590058669.post-43767941126128782362008-02-24T07:45:00.001-08:002008-02-24T07:45:53.657-08:00Record-breaking surplus in National Insurance Fund should raise state pensionRecord-breaking surplus in National Insurance Fund should raise state pension<br /><br />Britain's biggest pensioner organisation - the National Pensioners Convention (NPC) - has today called on the government to use the growing surplus in the National Insurance (NI) Fund to increase the state pension above the official poverty level.<br /><br />The call follows the publication of the latest economic forecasts from the Government Actuary's Department, which show that the surplus in the NI Fund has been rising by over two and a quarter times that of expenditure, and has now reached a record-breaking £38bn. In just five years, the surplus is forecast to top £114bn - the equivalent of 136% of expenditure and substantially more than the 16.8% surplus balance recommended for fiscal management.<br /><br />Joe Harris, NPC general secretary said: "These latest figures show that every month, employers and employees are paying 12.8% and 11% of salaries respectively in national insurance contributions - but that money is not being used to pay higher pensions. Instead, the government is using that money for purposes for which it was not intended. Today's pensioners are effectively subsidising the economy by having their state pensions kept well below the official poverty level."<br /><br />"After 100 years of the state pension, pensioners deserve more than the pitiful £87.30 a week they currently receive, and the massive surplus in the national insurance fund should be used to give everyone a pension above the official poverty level of £134 a week. These latest figures prove that the money is there to end the need for means-testing, restore the link between pensions and earnings now and give real financial security to all 11m pensioners."<br /><br /><a href="http://www.npcuk.org/">www.npcuk.org</a><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/2719940650590058669-4376794112612878236?l=npcuk.blogspot.com'/></div>Seniors Networkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03851120902361584537noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2719940650590058669.post-31145725943232923862008-02-24T07:38:00.000-08:002008-02-24T07:40:55.151-08:00Pensioners call on government to intervene over rising energy profitsPensioners call on government to intervene over rising energy profits<br /><br />Britain’s biggest pensioner organisation – the National Pensioners Convention (NPC) - has criticised today’s announcement by British Gas of increased profits, and called on the government to intervene to prevent energy companies gaining at the expense of vulnerable customers.<br /><br />Frank Cooper, NPC president said: “At a time when over 20,000 pensioners died last winter due to the cold weather, it is obscene for any energy company to be parading huge profits. Older people are constantly worried about whether or not they can afford to heat their homes, and for British Gas to announce both huge price increases and huge profits, only adds to this anxiety. It’s time the government intervened to prevent energy companies getting rich at the expense of vulnerable customers. The winter fuel allowance has been frozen since 2003 and now needs to be doubled to at least £400 per household, social tariffs should be standardised across the energy industry and prices should be regulated to prevent such blatant profiteering.”<br /><br /><br /><a href="http://www.npcuk.org/">http://www.npcuk.org/</a><br /><a href="http://www.seniorsnetwork.co.uk/">www.seniorsnetwork.co.uk</a><div class="blogger-post-footer"><img width='1' height='1' src='https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/tracker/2719940650590058669-3114572594323292386?l=npcuk.blogspot.com'/></div>Seniors Networkhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/03851120902361584537noreply@blogger.com0