Pensioners out of pocket for cold weather payments

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Friday, November 06, 2009
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This is Staffordshire

THOUSANDS of pensioners will get a fairer deal on cold weather payments this winter, but not if they live

in Stoke-on-Trent and Newcastle.

Until now, cold weather

payments have only been issued to pensioners in North Staffordshire when the

climate drops below zero at a weather station in Shropshire.

For years, MPs,

including Stone MP Bill Cash, pictured, 

have argued the Staffordshire winter can be harsher than Shropshire’s,

so pensioners haven’t received enough cash for extra heating bills.

From this winter, the

Government has agreed to use data from a weather station near Leek before

deciding whether cold weather payments are needed.

Moorlands MP Charlotte

Atkins said: “It is right that the Government have recognised what I have been

saying to them. – that we need to have a local weather station that reflects

what the real weather is.

“A weather station in

Shropshire does not reflect the local weather.

“If you look at the

micro-climate in the Moorlands, Biddulph can be totally different from Leek,  I know because I live in Leek and my

constituency office is in Biddulph.”

“I am glad we will now

have data on a proper climate for the Moorlands.”

Cold weather payments of

£25 are automatically paid to people in receipt of certain benefits, mainly pensioners

and severely disabled people, when an area’s average temperature falls or is

predicted to fall to 0°C   or below for

seven consecutive days.

Last year 130,400 cold

weather payments were made to pensioners in Staffordshire, using after two cold

snaps shown in data provided from the weather station at Shawbury.

Met Office statistics

show  the weather in Staffordshire is

consistently colder than in Shropshire.

Now, anyone living in

Leek, Cheadle, or anywhere else with a postcode of ST9, ST10, or ST13 will

benefit from the new data.

However, according to

the Department of Work and Pensions, everyone living in postcode areas ST1 to

ST8, which includes Stoke-on-Trent and Newcastle,  or ST11 and ST12, will remain covered by the

weather station at Shawbury, near Shrewsbury.

That outpost is about 38

miles away from Leek and 30 miles from the centre of Stoke-on-Trent. Leek is

less than 10 miles away from the centre of Stoke-on-Trent.

Last month, average

temperatures recorded at Leek were 10.1°C, while in Shawbury, it was 11.2°C.

In December last year,

mean temperatures in Shropshire were 3.5°C, while the Staffordshire weather was

again colder, at 2.2°C.

And consistently,

throughout the winter months, the weather was colder at Leek than at Shawbury.

Last November saw

maximum temperatures of 7.6°C  in Leek,

while the coldest was 3.4°C. In December temperatures fell to as low as 0°C,

January hit 0.4°C and February, 0.5°C.

By contrast, November in

Shropshire saw a far milder maximum temperature of 9.5°C   and a minimum temperature of 4°C. December

fell to  a lowest temperature of 0.4°C.

The coldest day in January was actually colder than in Leek at 0.6°C, but in

February the Shropshire climate didn’t fall below 1.5°C.

The weather station in

Leek, at Thorncliffe, is 298 metres above sea level while the Shawbury site is

72 metres above sea level. The height above the Earth’s surface relates to air

pressure – one of the most important factors in determining weather. that

determines what the weather is like.

MP Helen Goodman, the

Government’s Junior Work and Pensions Minister, said: “For winter 2009-10 nine

new weather stations will be included as part of the scheme.

“The changes are

expected to either have a neutral effect or indeed provide a more accurate

assessment for those eligible.”

A spokesman for the

Department of Work and Pensions, said: “Following representations from several

MPs, including Bill Cash, the weather station at Leek will now be used to

indicate when cold weather payments should be made.”

Andy Day, of the North

Staffordshire Pensioners’ Convention, said: “Anything that gives a more

accurate reading is better.“In general terms, Cold weather payments are a good

thing, but people should have the income from their basic state pension to be

able to exist perfectly well without them. We would welcome a much more

beneficial pension.”

Andrew Montgomery, who

lives in Ashbourne Road in Leek, welcomed the changes. The 79-year-old said:

“If the readings are going to be taken locally it’s going to be better for pensioners

in the Moorlands, because the data will be more accurate.”

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  • Profile image for This is Staffordshire

    by David, S-O-T

    Friday, November 06 2009, 6:53PM

    “How sick and twisted that we means test out old and disabled with what is nothing more thatn a body core temperature forecast chart. Many would be better paid working as lab-rats.”

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