Adjusting your work-related requirements
The DWP has a lot of discretion about work-related requirements. No matter the outcome of a WCA, your requirements should be adjusted if you are unable to comply with them for mental health reasons. There is nothing to stop you from asking your work coach to review and update your work-related requirements at any time.1s14(2) WRA 2012 See Chapter 13 about the kind of supporting evidence that you could use when making a request. What advisers say: what work-related requirements to expect
‘There are huge discrepancies in how claimants are treated depending on who their work coach is and which other job centre staff (see here) they encounter. This can make it very difficult to advise claimants on what to expect.’ Limitations on work search and work availability
In the all-work related requirements group, you are generally expected to search for work for at least 35 hours a week and to look for work that you can do for at least 35 hours a week. However, if you have a ‘physical or mental impairment’ (and in certain other circumstances) these hours can be reduced.2Regs 88 and 97 UC Regs Most, if not all, mental health problems should be accepted as ‘mental impairments’. Additionally, if your condition substantially reduces your ability to do work of a particular type or in particular locations, you do not have to be available for or look for that kind of work.3s17(4) and (5) WRA 2012; reg 97(4)-(6) UC Regs While you are providing fit notes
If you provide fit notes (eg, because you are waiting for a WCA or because you have a short-term period of sickness), no work search or work availability requirements can usually be imposed on you for the first 14 days. This can apply up to twice in a 12-month period.4Reg 99(1), (4), (4ZA) and 4(ZB) UC Regs These rules are not normally helpful for long-term mental health problems. Note the other rules in this section about adjusting your work-related requirements.
Complex needs
The DWP has policies about how it must support people claiming UC whom it considers to have ‘complex needs’. This includes giving extra thought to work-related requirements. There is more information on p000. Easements and reasonable adjustments
If you cannot comply with certain work-related requirements because of your mental health, you can ask your work coach to change, reduce or stop them. These adjustments by a work coach are sometimes called ‘discretionary easements’. The DWP states that these can be applied for a short, medium or long period of time and that they should take account of ‘all of [your] individual circumstances.’5ADM J3160 and J3250-J3270 Easements may include, for example, switching off your work-related requirements during a mental health crisis or pausing your work search requirement for a period while you are unable to comply with it because of your symptoms. Under the Equality Act 2010,6ss20, 21 and 29 EA 2010. See also s19 the DWP also has a duty to make ‘reasonable adjustments’ to the way it imposes work-related requirements to avoid disadvantage to people with disabilities. A failure to make these adjustments is discrimination. (See here about the meaning of ‘disability’.) A reasonable adjustment might include changing the type, venue, frequency, length or timing of work-related activity. Job centre interviews: some types of reasonable adjustment7DWP, Universal Credit Guidance, ‘Reasonable adjustments’, v5.0, House of Commons library deposited papers, available at Changing the location of an interview
Audio recording of an interview
Home visits (in exceptional circumstances)
Private interview rooms or providing a quiet space at the job centre
Changing the time or date of an interview
Involving representatives and other third parties
If a request for an easement or reasonable adjustment is refused, you cannot challenge this through mandatory reconsideration or appeal, but may request a further review of your work-related requirements,8s14(2) WRA 2012; DWP, Universal Credit Guidance, ‘Claimant commitment’, v5.0, House of Commons library deposited papers, available at complain (see here) or consider judicial review (here). For example, if you are being required to attend the job centre every week and this is inappropriate because of your mental health condition, your adviser may be able to challenge this using the template judicial review pre-action letter available at . Contact an independent advice service if you need support with this step - see advicelocal.uk. Examples
Lakyle, who experiences anxiety, is assessed as having LCW. He has work-focused interview and work preparation requirements. Lakyle can ask to have his work-focused interviews by telephone, explaining that visits to the job centre cause him acute anxiety. He can also ask not to be put forward for face-to-face training in large groups if he would find this unmanageable.
Bronwyn has a long-term mental health condition. On moving from ESA to UC, she has a new WCA and is found ‘fit for work’ While appealing the decision, Bronwyn is placed in the all work-related requirements group. She explains her mental health problem to her work coach who agrees to limit her required hours of work-search and work availability. The work coach also agrees that Bronwyn’s work preparation requirement can be satisfied through an online course rather than, for example, work experience, because this is something that Bronwyn agrees she can reasonably manage. The work coach does not agree to reduce the frequency of Bronwyn’s weekly job centre appointments, despite Bronwyn explaining that she thinks this would be a reasonable adjustment. Although Bronwyn cannot appeal this decision, she may be able to get it changed by asking for a further review of her work-related requirements, making a complaint and/or pursuing judicial review.