Guidance has been tightened on the use of interpreters for benefits claimants, writes Gary Vaux
The Department for Work and Pensions has issued new guidance to its staff on interpreters. For some years, the DWP has been using untrained office staff in an unofficial capacity or even relying on family members, including children, to translate and interpret. Many claimants who are comfortable with English find it difficult to follow conversations with DWP staff – imagine how much more difficult it is for someone relying on a child of 11.
● An interview is needed.
● The customer does not speak English, or, in Wales, Welsh.
● The customer cannot, or does not wish to, provide their own interpreter.
The new guidance says that the arrangement for the interview must be made within one working day, although the interview itself may need to take place later than this. In Wales, by law, customers may choose to be interviewed in Welsh if they prefer.
Customers can still provide their own interpreter, including family members or friends, but under-16s can no longer be used.
Where interviews are conducted under caution, for fraud purposes, only professional interpreters may be used.
The new guidance is unequivocal on one key point: in no circumstances should customers be sent away to find their own interpreter. The DWP is still prepared to use its own multi-lingual staff to translate and interpret. Such staff will only get extra pay if they spend more than a quarter of their time engaged in interviewing.
Using DWP multi-lingual staff may be less than ideal, however, because the workers are not normally recruited for their translation skills. They also are not independent of the DWP. The guidance gives advice to staff using interpreters as well as staff acting in that capacity, and it warns them of the dangers of interpreters becoming engaged in dialogue with the DWP to the exclusion of the claimants.
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