Many people on zero hours, minimum wage contracts face huge problems claiming either tax credits or housing benefits without which they are unable to house and feed themselves and their families despite being as hard working as anyone in full time stable positions.
As to benefit reforms - think about all those who are dying destitute...see this article for just a few examples, the actual numbers are horrific. It does not take much for carefully constructed life to fall apart, illness, divorce, redundancy and now a very, very fragile safety net.
[[ http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/new-atos-shame-sick-and-disabled-benefits-applicants-forced-to-go-weeks-without-money-as-a-result-of-new-rules-for-appeals-9107586.html]]
Quote "*People with serious disabilities and health conditions are being left for weeks with no financial support by Government changes to benefit assessments.*
Under new rules introduced by the Department for Work and Pensions in October, anyone wanting to appeal a decision that they are fit to work first has to have all their paperwork looked at again, while receiving no sickness benefits. The Citizens Advice Bureau believes this will result in thousands of people being wrongly forced to survive on no income at all.
The Government said that this "mandatory reconsideration" would cut down on bureaucracy and take just two weeks, but some disabled and sick people are being wrongly assessed and left with no support for months on end.
Kate Green MP, the shadow minister for equalities, said that "the government are putting vulnerable people in an impossible position".
"They urgently need to get a grip to ensure the system is fair and effective,” she added.
The Work Capability Assessment, which until recently was exclusively carried out by Atos healthcare, is so notoriously slapdash that in 2012 more than 42 per cent of appeals against decisions were upheld. Their poor performance is understood to have prompted the assessments contract being put out to tender.
Blunders include ruling that a 39-year-old woman from Livingstone with a brain tumour was fit to work just weeks before she died and a double heart and lung transplant patient from Essex dying nine days after being declared well enough for employment.
Previously if a controversial assessment wrongly concluded someone was well enough to work, people could appeal immediately, and received benefits while they did this. Now a formal appeal can only be launched after this reconsideration process is completed."