Domain: dwp.gov.uk
Stories and comments across the archive that link to dwp.gov.uk.
Comments · 6
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Webpage creation dated 2006
The http://www.dwp.gov.uk/eservice/ website appears to be way old! The source code says it was built 13 March 2006.
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Re:Of course it's possible
The Disability Discrimination Act has been in effect here in the UK for years. Whenever I do work for a big company, there's usually an accessibility requirement in the brief somewhere. They started appearing not long after the DDA came into effect, and from talking to the clients, it's usually specifically due to this law.
Yep, it's worth pointing out that the DDA requires businesses to make "reasonable adjustments" to allow disabled people access to anything their able-bodied counterparts can access - websites included. So ramps for wheelchairs, WCAG compliant websites etc. but there is no universal service obligation - if it's going to cost too much relative to size of business, or if it's plain impractical you don't have to do it. Having said that, many businesses totally forget their website should be accessible.
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Bill Gates is still very evil. uknowit.
I was nearly killed by a routine MMR vaccination, and I know others who have been damaged. Later, the thimerosol gave me ADD and mild autism.
See here if you're a UK resident who's been injured by vaccines
In British Columbia, parents of autistic children have launched a lawsuit against healthcare authorities for endangering and permanently damaging children. Vaccination causes autism, ADD, and other mental disorders.
See here for interesting info if you're a vaccine victim from Canada
Personally, I'd like to maim the moron who decided that mercury derivatives make great additions to the crap they shoot into kids nowadays.
Info here
Interesting Viera Scheibner's research here
help for Isle of Man vaccine victims here
You probably have friends who have been damaged by vaccines. Think about it.
In conclusion, Bill Gates is still evil. Even Dr. Gardner agrees; ou have all been warned. Thank you. -
Re:So we have to choose?
One error - Please add the United Kingdom to "Socialist welfare state" category, as you can see here we get lifelong unrestricted unemployment benefit at a fixed rate of $73 per week
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Re:Unemployment!
I applied for JobSeeker's Allowance a few months ago and got turned down because I didn't pay enough National Insurance [~12% tax on your income] 4 years ago
You have to watch out for the two checkboxes right at the start of the claim form. If you only tick "Contributions-based Jobseekers Allowance", you can miss out that way (although it shouldn't, IIRC, be based on 4 year old contributions). You must tick "Income Based JSA" as well, and fill in the 15 or so extra pages of means testing questions. If you've got more than £3000 savings, you'll lose money; if you've got more than £8000, you're not entitled at all. You have to sign an agreement stating the kinds of work you'll be looking for and how many job applications per week (at least two, though a graduate would be expected to do more), and be able to prove when they ask that you have done what the agreement states (they write the agreement). After 6 months, you're off contributions-based allowances no matter what.
If you aren't entitled to JSA, you should be able to get Income Support at a lower rate. IIRC, JSA at the moment is just over £50/week, Income Support rather less; those figures are also reduced to the ~£43/week if you're under about 25, as you're apparently supposed to sponge off your parents, whether you have any or not. Those figures are for singletons; if you have a partner, you'll be jointly means tested, but if you're both on the dole, you won't get twice as much.
Even when you get those sorted out, you have to deal with Housing Benefit to cover the cost of a roof over your head; and that itself won't cover the full cost, so you'll need about a quarter of the JSA/IS to make up your rent. If you've got a mortgage, start collecting the cardboard boxes; you get sod-all help, so you'll be living in them soon.
Still, if you think it's bad now, you should have tried it around 1990. Graduates had to sign that they were willing to work anywhere in the country; if you lived in Cornwall and they came up with a job in Aberdeen, you were supposed to move to get the job, just because you had a degree. Then that mad witch Thatcher got booted out, and a very slight amount of sanity began to creep back into the country.
Check out the Department of Work and Pensions for more info. Also, see if your local council has a welfare rights department (tip: if they're Tory, they probably won't).
HTH
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Re:The Other Side of Government Data AccessThe UK equivalent of the Dept of the Interior is the Home Office. The Department for Work and Pensions is a merger of parts of what used to be the Department for Education and Employment and the Department for Social Security (formerly the Department for Health and Social Security). Is that clear?!
I've always found depts and ministries whose name includes "Interior" slightly sinister, probably for cold-war-hangover reasons.