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Taking the DWP to a small claims court
Sammysan
Posts: 1 Newbie
I won my PIP appeal on the 14th of October, however they have still not started payments. I rang them yesterday and they confirmed that they were not appealing nor have they asked for a SOR but couldn't tell me when I'm going to get my money. Do you think issuing a letter before action might prompt them to make payment?
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Comments
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I won my PIP appeal on the 14th of October, however they have still not started payments. I rang them yesterday and they confirmed that they were not appealing nor have they asked for a SOR but couldn't tell me when I'm going to get my money. Do you think issuing a letter before action might prompt them to make payment?
No.
But well done on winning your appeal.Alice Holt Forest situated some 4 miles south of Farnham forms the most northerly gateway to the South Downs National Park.0 -
As Alice states, it will be No.
If you want to take legal action against anyone, you have to consider what steps are in between raising the issue and going to court. There are usually 3 steps- Internal complaint, Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) and then court. Courts dislike people rushing there without allowing the other party to be given the chance to sort it.
The process for the DWP are set out here
https://www.gov.uk/government/organisations/department-for-work-pensions/about/complaints-procedure
The ADR is either an Independent Case Examiner or the Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman. Try the complaints procedure first and then escalate if you don't get any sense out of them.Unlike some here, I am not omniscient. If I am wrong correct me. I won't take offence.
The law is like an ocean - have a swim but don't drown.0 -
It is not uncommon for it to take 6 weeks or so for the DWP to reinstate benefits following an appeal decision. Give it a few more days and ring them again.Information I post is for England unless otherwise stated. Some rules may be different in other parts of UK.0
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