Originally posted by waghorn41
Originally posted by slah
Well I have to say I think that this all kinda seems fair....
1: Why should you be on state help if you have the means of supporting yourself?
2: Why should you receive wellfare for being unemployed if you´re not available for work?
3: Why should the state accept that when you have money you spend it on things you didnt even have when you were employed?
I make a living sitting in a complaint board where we deal with these very cases (and may be biased because of that), and I have to say that if you have enough money to live for 6 months, while buying a new car (new in the meaning that you didn´t have one before), and not being able to work because you´re ecucating yourself I would be seriously pissed off if you were able to receive that kind of financial help from the state.
I´m not denying there is a bit of red tape, but that can´t be avoided in any system. It´s needed to ensure that every case gets treated the same way, so that noone gets special treatment, and so that noone gets a bad treatment - everybody gets the same.
1. I had to sign on for future purposes, believe me I didn\'t want to. Not after handouts.
2. They said effectively that if I signed on I had to be available EVERY day, notwithstanding that in the process of applying for jobs, waiting for interviews I would have days when I was \'free\' and could have done the courses. They were not interested in helping me find a job after all.
3. I needed a car to be able to get to interviews and possibly commute to work as public transport was/is so dire. Consider trying to get to an interview or a job maybe 50 miles away - could you walk/cycle it every day and be fit to do a days work?
You\'d be pissed off? How do you think I felt at the state telling me I had to sign on but couldn\'t then use my resources to get back into work? That\'s not red tape it\'s a red noose.
1 - I´m not sure I understand what you mean about signing on for future purposes - I think I´m loosing something in translation could you expand your point for us who are a bit thick
2: Of course you have to be available EVERY single day - think of it´s like a job. You are effectively being paid by the state as being available for work should a job turn up.
I can´t speak for the law in England, but in Denmark the law says that if you have 100.00 kr, and you would be entitled to 10.000 kr a month, then you won´t be eligible for support until you have spent the 100.00 kr. Also because you would be entitled to 10.000 kr. a month you can´t just blow your money in a month, but have to wait 10 months because if you were supported by the state you would have to live on 10.000 kr. a month. HOWEVER ( - in Denmark at least ) the state doesn´t care what you do in those 10 months because the state doesn´t pay you. You are not at that time \"employed\" as jobseeking in that period. IF in fact you have to be available every day AND NOT get any support then we can agree that´s unfair - and illogical.
3: use public transportation to go to jobinterviews and get a car once you get a job and need daily transportation. Your ability to use your own car to go to the odd jobinterview and the potential need - when you GET a job - to get to and from work is a luxury which the state ( and the taxpayers) shouldn´t have to pay for. You choose to get a car - you pay for it.