Mike J
Winger
I've applied for Universal Credit but as Mrs K is still working - you have to apply as a couple believe it or not - I'm not sure I'll get much or anything
Jobseekers?? I don’t know much about benefits I’m afraid.
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I've applied for Universal Credit but as Mrs K is still working - you have to apply as a couple believe it or not - I'm not sure I'll get much or anything
I've challenged it but they are not playing ball. This is part of an email back to me:
Whilst we accept there are numerous sources of advice on the subject of Furlough, many of these are conflicting with advice we have as an employer from respected HR advisers.
Therefore, as our initial response below advises, we do not believe the basis on which we contract and engage Casual workers allows us to apply for the Furlough scheme.
This is because a lot of the confusion that has arisen does not address the fact that you are a worker and not an employee as detailed in the Government Guidance event though our tactical work is paid on a PAYE basis
So what are you supposed to live on?
What’s the craic with after the furlough period? Can the firm just terminate employment or do they have to go through normal procedure?
At the minute as I'm entertaining a 2 years old working from home might not be that easy either, but I'll look into all options!
This seems to say differently. Would it be worthwhile getting Citizens Advice involved?
[Withdrawn] Check if you can claim for your employees' wages through the Coronavirus Job Retention Scheme
Find out if you’re eligible and how much you can claim to cover wages for employees on temporary leave ('furlough') due to coronavirus (COVID-19).www.gov.uk
It has been updated a load of times since first released so, they may be working with old info.
Firstly so sorry to hear your news. Secondly I would start with a planning session and I don’t want to go into too much detail as I don’t know enough about you and your circumstances. Start with the most important,urgent stuff you need to address - for example can you live short term on the resources you have - if this is the most important, urgent thing for you. You may wish to look for short term employment in a new field to get you through this difficult time - for example supermarkets are currently recruiting staff and have very fast turnaround times. A friend of mines son was told to attend a shop with his passport. He had a very short chat and was taken on with effect from the next day. So there are options for you even if not your preferred choice.Morning All,
I appreciate I'm not alone in this, but I've had a f***ing awful few weeks. Mrs K is also front line NHS so that's done our collective stress levels no good at all.
I received two pieces of mail the other day
One was my P45 - In a nutshell, I accepted a job at another hospice, I put in my resignation at my old job, the a global pandemic happened, and then the new hospice pulled the job.
As a result of all this I'm now unemployed, no furlough, no nowt.
The other was a letter from our GP telling me that as I'm immuno compromised and at risk of severe illness, I'm now on lockdown for at least 12 weeks.
I know I'm/we're not in the worst position, but you'll forgive me for being properly fucked off with my current situation.
However, this does present me with an opportunity - A potential change of career.
I have lots of transferable skills (so I'm told) but I'm not sure what else I could turn my hand to. Any (sensible - come on now) suggestions or ideas really would be welcome.
To say my mental health has taken something of a battering would be an understatement, so any help would be appreciated
They seem to like acting the prick. Hope it all works out for you.I've sent them that link but they still disagree that I'm entitled to help. I've pointed out the relevant parts and also explained I'm shielding under public health guidance, so even though some of them do have work available, I've been told not to work.
Sorry for hogging your thread @Keawyeds
I’d risk it and still go to work.Benefits. I'm trying to claim ESA but I haven't managed to get through on the phone to put a claim in yet.
Not sure if you missed the bit about her being a high risk immunosuppresed person. That’s a ridiculously risky thing for her to do.I’d risk it and still go to work.
Maybe with you having a 2 year old and a mrs that works for the NHS, now would be a good time to concentrate on the little one and spend some quality time.
Perhaps getting money for stuff is not priority at a time like this?
Well I was half expecting a letter cos of my asthma, but it didn’t come. I was already weighing up the pros and cons of ignoring it though. I’ve spent nearly 10 years sticking to a financial plan to get myself on the level again - would it be worth throwing all that away again against the risk of getting ill?Not sure if you missed the bit about her being a high risk immunosuppresed person. That’s a ridiculously risky thing for her to do.
@becs For you does this mean that you and no one who lives in your house goes out and that someone else has to drop your shopping off?? Also does this mean that you can`t have a walk around the block where you live??Sorry to hear that. I'm on 12 weeks immunocompromised lockdown with no wages or furlough too. It's really tough. Have a hug
What sort of skills have you got?
You’re not doing a very good job of selling yourself as a fundraiser
Maybe with you having a 2 year old and a mrs that works for the NHS, now would be a good time to concentrate on the little one and spend some quality time.
Perhaps getting money for stuff is not priority at a time like this?
@becs For you does this mean that you and no one who lives in your house goes out and that someone else has to drop your shopping off?? Also does this mean that you can`t have a walk around the block where you live??
unless it's something I could do from home and work around Mini-K
You'll get something. After 6 months it'll drop due to your wifes employment but initially you might be treated as an individual. You won't get housing benefits and all that, but you should get the basic living amount (this is based on my previous experience, payed tax for 16 years solid, no break in employment, house, kids, mortgage etc with partner working full time, albeit it was 5 or 6 years ago)I've applied for Universal Credit but as Mrs K is still working - you have to apply as a couple believe it or not - I'm not sure I'll get much or anything