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Waspi Women Ded Timeline for possible DWP compensation £ 2,950 each

Waspi Women Ded Timeline for possible DWP compensation £ 2,950 each

Waspi activists issued an update after DWP sent them a letter about their legal claim earlier this week.

Waspi activists issued an update after DWP sent them a letter about their legal claim earlier this week.
Waspi activists issued an update after DWP sent them a letter about their legal claim earlier this week.

Millions of Waspi women have received a calendar for the potential department for work and pensions ( DWP ) Value compensation of £ 2,950. Waspi The activists have issued an update after DWP sent them a letter about their legal claim earlier this week.

The president of the campaign, Angela Madden, warned that it could take 14 months in her case to make a final decision of a judge of the Superior Court. In a statement, Waspi Women said: “As we said in the update last night, on Monday night, our lawyers received a detailed letter from their counterparts in the legal department of the Government that advises the Secretary of State for Labor and Pensions and the DWP.

“We believe it would be useful for that letter to be published so that women born in the 1950s who were identified as victims of poor administration by the Ombudsman can see for themselves the government’s responses to the detailed arguments that our lawyers have made about why the Government is legally incorrect by saying that none of us has suffered any form of injustice as a result and should not receive any compensation for the consequences.”

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Waspi said: “We cannot say why the government is not willing to publish that letter; our lawyers asked those who represented the government to agree that that happened, but they are simply told ‘no’.

“We can say that there is nothing in that letter that makes us doubt that we would be doing the right thing to press with our challenge to the government’s decision.

“We cannot say if, after 10 years of DWP, delays, evasion and excuses, government lawyers have presented some new, sophisticated and powerful argument to demonstrate that every woman born in the 1950s was fully aware of the changes in our state pensions, despite the fact that the DWP delayed sending the letters that notify us of those changes that had decided that they had decided that they were necessary that they were decided that they were decided that they had decided that they had decided that they had decided to be

“We can say that the advice of our lawyers remains unchanged despite what is in the letter. According to the discussions we have had with our lawyers, we still believe that the reasons why the government has given to reject the findings of the people’s defender about injustice and compensation proposals are bad and that we still have a good law to show that they are little advanced. If we win that case, the government will be remembered and cannot be remembered and not remembered and cannot be remembered and not remembered and not remembered and not remembered and not remembered and not remembered and not remembered. You can have a bad case in the case.

“We cannot say why the Government is not willing to talk to women born in the 1950s about their experiences and what could be done to acceptably resolve long data dispute over the breach of not quickly notifying us about the changes in the age of our state pensions.

“We can say that despite the fact that we have made good faith, an open offer of alternative dispute resolution in the letter of our lawyers, and other offers made by other women born in the 1950s in the past, there is no agreement to try to find a path to follow through the discussion instead of judicial action. That is extremely disappointing given the continuous and published commitment of the government to seek legal disputes outside the court.

“And so we can also say this. We are not going to ‘overcome it’ and endure something that is fundamentally incorrect. On the other hand, our lawyers will issue our legal claim this week looking for a judicial review of the government’s decision.

“In that statement, we will ask the Superior Court to decide if the reasons he has given for his shameful decision really resists scrutiny. We will continue to seek a significant response from the government to our experienced experiences of injustice and the findings of the people’s defender that our experiences are real and have had a great adverse impact that changes life.

“And we mention that Waspi’s women do not give up? We don’t. With your support, we fight.”

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