This matter is part of a much wider, political issue that clearly needs addressing. When vampirequeen says the system is already a minefield, and now they are planning to meddle with one aspect of it, that's not going to fix anything. As usual misuse by the few impact on the many who use the benefits system properly, but clearly the attempts to repair the system arise at least in part from the realisation that the benefits cost is unsustainable (like the NHS in its current form). A lot of my experience at close quarters of people on benefits (and I accept this is not a 'good' example) were the people that attended the drug clinic where I worked 12 years ago. Some of the 'clients' (not all) would openly discuss the arrangement whereby whoever picked up their GIRO that week would subsidise the others until they got theirs etc, in other words, the benefits were pooled. Sadly, it was often to buy drugs used on top of their medication (methadone) - which we had to curb if it took place in and around the clinic, so that's how I know about that! The other unfortunate memory I have from the 3 years I worked there was (again some, not all, but word quickly spread) of the clients nagging (that's the only word for it) the foreign staff grade doctor who was grappling to try and understand the complicated benefit system that his patients were eligible for, to sign their Incapacity Benefit forms. There are 306,000 adult opiate or crack users in the treatment system in the UK, more than half of those are in prison.