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People on low incomes are about to be consulted about government policies, <b><i>writes Gary Vaux</i></b>.

Thursday 04 August 2005 00:00
So we all wore our white wristbands and nodded along to Pink Floyd - or nodded off. The irony of listening to multi-millionaire rock stars telling us how we could make poverty history was, I hope, not lost on the worldwide audience.

But how do we listen to the voices of people who are living in poverty in the UK? Self-organised groups exist for many "socially excluded" communities - the disability movement, for example, has moved in recent years to consisting of groups of disabled people, rather than having able-bodied people act for them. Yet people in poverty have no organised voice and are still largely represented by others such as welfare rights organisations or charities.

A new campaign hopes to change that. Next year, the government will compile its third National Action Plan on Social Inclusion. And for the first time it will include people experiencing poverty and social exclusion. The Get Heard project is a partnership between voluntary organisations and the Department for Work and Pensions. The project aims to enable people with experience of social exclusion to make known their views on government anti-poverty policies.

Is it really the case that "work is the best form of welfare"? Are the government's policies on help with child care costs and tax credits the best way of helping people into work? Will the changes that are planned for incapacity benefit lift people out of poverty?

The aim of the project is to bring together views on those types of questions, and comment on which policies aimed at combating poverty are working and which are not. The government has promised that these findings will be incorporated into the next national plan.

It has just launched a website with downloads to help people run workshops. It is based on the principle that people living in poverty have expert knowledge of the issues raised by living in poverty, and they have a right to enter into dialogue with their government.

The aim is for people living in poverty or experiencing social exclusion to hold Get Heard workshops to give their views on the government's policies. In the autumn of 2005, the project will hold regional events across the UK, to bring together the feedback from all the workshops, leading to a national event at the start of 2006. This will feed the information back to the Department for Work and Pensions.

People living in poverty may feel they have been let down or ignored before, or feel that in recent years they have been "consulted to death" without seeing much difference in the resulting policies. How do we know it will be different this time?

We don't. All we know is that the government has given a commitment to listen to the issues raised by people through the Get Heard workshops, and this is an opportunity that we can't afford to pass up. So if we are genuinely concerned about poverty in the UK and want our clients and service users to have some input into anti-poverty policies, we have to put our world-weary cynicism to one side. 

Gary Vaux is head of money advice, Hertfordshire Council. He is unable to answer queries by post or telephone. If you have a question to be answered please write to him c/o Community Care
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