At First Base we are all well enough accustomed to spending time with people
whose lives are in a pretty bad place. Of course we are. After all,
it's what we do. When your life is tip top, you don't tend to need emergency food. Instead you go to a shop and buy what you need.
What takes your fancy. And this of course is the world most of us
live in breathe in. In the UK, we are the 59 million. We are the ones
with the wherewithal to fill up a Tesco basket and pay for it. The other
million? Well they come to likes of First Base for their daily bread
and each and every one of them brings along their very own a back story. Their reason. Their set of
circumstances.
Are
these sob stories or stories to make you sob? I guess that tends to
be down to which newspaper you choose to read with the morning
coffee. If you read the Daily Mail, you'll no doubt reckon these
pathetic excuses for humanity need a good old boot up their over
large backsides. A short sharp shock. A wake up call. Get a job. Get
a life. Get over it. Grow up. Man up.
Realistically, if you feel that
way about the undeserving poor I guess it is pretty unlikely you'll
be taking time out of your busy schedule to read this blog. Most of the people who land up on this page of mine tend to share the view that
the way so many people have been treated since the Great Crash pretty
well sucks.
Whatever.
Thankfully I'm not a guy who is chasing votes. What I write here can be taken of left, and if the Daily Mail brigade choose to leave it then it's no skin of my nose.
So we see tough cases.
And we see really tough cases. And then from time to time, we see
cases which completely kick us in the teeth.
Like
Donald.
Is
Donald really called Donald? Of course he isn't. So why Donald? No
prizes for guessing the answer!
So
what's the thing about Donald? What sets him apart? What compels me
to spend some time laying out his story for the online world to take a look at?
I
guess it is the fact that everything about the way Donald is being
treated is just so plain wrong. So unnecessary. So vicious.
I
first met Donald the other day. The bell over the door announced his arrival and when I reached counter in reception I saw regular looking
guy in his mid forties. He was dressed for a job interview. Smart
clothes, brushed hair and fearful eyes. When he said “Hello”, his
voice was small. Nervous. Worried about getting stuff wrong.
I gave
him my 'Don't worry mate, you're alright here' smile and in return he
smiled back. A small smile. But a smile.
He
handed over his piece of A4 paper which I duly scrutinised. It was
from Citizen's Advice and whoever had written it had taken the time
to make the story as full as possible. They were worried about this
one. Determined to see him right.
Name.
Address. Need for a 'Non Cooking' parcel. Background. Donald has been
sanctioned. He doesn't know why. Neither do we. They haven't told him
yet. All the paperwork says it that it will be 86 days before he sees
any money.
86
days.
As
in all the way through to the end of February. All the way through
the coldest months of what the experts are predicting will be the
coldest winter we have known in a while. All the way through
Christmas and New Year and the sales and the post festive period
gloom.
"You
don't know why they sanctioned you mate?”
A
frown. A shake of the head. A look of confusion. Regret. The small
voice again.
“No.
They said they would send me a letter.”
“It
says you need a non-cooking parcel. Have you no power?”
“No.”
We
talked but I did most of the talking. Donald was more focused on
being polite. I explained what the piece of paper he had brought to
us actually meant. I explained there was no need for him to keep
going into Citizen's Advice for a food parcel referral. Why? Because
the piece of paper he had handed me covered him for 86 days. OK? You
can come in twice a week for the next 86 days. OK?
But
it wasn't OK. It took me ten minutes to explain something which was
actually fairly simple. All the while Donald's face was creased in
concentration as he tried to absorb what I was telling him. And by
the time I went through it for the third time I knew Donald was a guy
with reasonably severe learning difficulties. And the penny dropped.
What
an easy mark he must have been for the person on the other side of
the desk. Now Donald we need you to spend a minimum of 35 hours a
week online and we need you to complete at least eight application
forms and even if the job is shelf stacking in Aidrie you still need
to complete the form because Aidrie is within 90 minutes commuting
time.....
They
might as well have talked to him in Mandarin. They had seen through
the smart attire and polite face and they had set the bar a mile higher than
Donald could even have dreamed of reaching. Donald had been correctly
identified as low hanging fruit and they had duly picked him. Picked him off.
'Like
flies to wanton boys, they kill us for their sport.'
So sayeth Mr
Shakespeare. And you know what Will? They're still doing it. After
all these years. Every single lousy day.
It
doesn't have to be like this of course. A Job Centre is allowed to
see the likes of Donald for what they are. They are allowed to
identify their weaknesses and to work around them. I am stone cold
certain Donald would absolutely love a job. He would turn up on time
every day looking as smart as paint and he would be polite to absolutely
everyone he met. But it would have to be the right kind of job. A job
where the bar was low enough enough for him. And fair enough there aren't so many of those jobs to be
found. But there are a few. And the Job Centre could have done their
level best to help the lad out. They could have made sure he had enough to get by on whilst they helped him to look.
But
they didn't. Instead they chose to see him as easy meat. A soft
touch. A way to hit their 'three a week' target. Yeah, the one they
deny exists even though endless whistleblowers have leaked endless
documents proving its godforsaken reality.
When
the penny finally dropped, Donald's small smile grew a little. He
nodded with appreciation. He told me he was pleased he didn't need to
go into Citizen's Advice twice a week. The last time he had been in
he had waited for three hours even though he had arrived dead on nine
o'clock.
When
he had gone I asked Lesley and Iain if they had seen Donald before.
They had. Lots. This was his third sanction in the last two years.
And yes, they agreed that he was a bit slow. An easy mark. A soft
target. They told me how he is trying really hard to find a place to
volunteer because it means a chance to get warm. A chance to spend
some time in a heated room with the lights on. Because it is hard to
get through twenty four hours when there is no light and no heat.
Especially in December. And especially when you need to get through
the same cold, dark 24 hours 86 times.
Well
the world isn't great right now. Watching the news just makes you
want to find a cave to hide in. And of course most of what is going
down is completely overwhelming. It's all too big to get the head around.
But I figure here is a relatively small problem which can actually be
solved. At least I hope it can. For here we have one regular guy who
is being treated appallingly. Unacceptably. Donald doesn't deserve
this. He is a nice guy who just isn't wired right for the brutality
of 2016. He is the victim of the vicious hatred we see peddled every
day on the front pages of the tabloid press and the pathetic
politicians who pander to those same pages. He has become the perfect
victim and it is just plain wrong.
So
what can be done? What can you do?
You
can do this if you like. You can hover you mouse over the link below
and then you can click. The click will take you to a JustGiving page I have
just set up. Donald has 80 days of sanction to serve out. Donald has
found a way to get by on £2 a day's worth of electricity. So Donald needs £160
to get the lights and the heaters back on and to keep them on until
the end of February. And so we arrive at the doors of some basic
maths. If 80 readers of this blog chip in two quid each, then Donald
can sit in the light and cook his food and watch a bit of TV.
We are
all just little people. We can't fix the big problems of the world. We
can't make Aleppo whole again. We can't un-elect Trump. We can't
re-freeze the Arctic.
But
we can put Donald's lights back on until the end of February. We can
warm his bones. We can give him the wherewithal to heat a pan of
soup. We can make his life just that little bit more liveable.
So
I have set the bar at £160. It doesn't seem like much and I guess
it isn't much. Maybe this will work, maybe it won't. All you can do is
ask the question and hope for the best.
So just
in case you missed it the first time around, the link is here.
this Donald could be my son if me and his Dad were not here tomorrow. Bless you for writing this. We don't have much but will share and donate. Thank you for helping the Donalds of this world.
ReplyDeleteHappy to add my bit for all the Donalds. Thank you for being there for him and any others who,sadly, need to seek this help.
ReplyDeleteI know you've more than met your target Mark, but I'm sure there will be other Donalds to help, so I've added some.
ReplyDeleteI add the link to Munguin's Republic.
I'm not paid til Thurs Mark, but I've set a reminder on my phone and will share on FB, been there as you know, and it's completely out of order that not one DWP worker hasn't noticed he needs extra help never mind highlight it and solve his problem. #Disgraceful
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ReplyDeleteJust wanted to say thank you for the wonderful thing you have done for Donald. I hope he has a less stressful and more enjoyable time over christmas. Donated and am watching the appeal grow, makes me happy to know that there are caring people in the world.
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