Penalties for unpaid carers in benefits scandal must be halted, says Ed Davey

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Penalties imposed on thousands of unpaid carers who fall foul of the discredited carer’s allowance benefit rules should be suspended until the government has fixed the system, the Liberal Democrat leader, Ed Davey, has said.A Guardian investigation last year revealed hundreds of thousands of unpaid carers were landed with huge debts – and in some cases prosecuted for fraud – after being inadvertently trapped by chronic failures in the benefit’s design and administration.Although the government promised a year ago to reform carer’s allowance, there is increasing impatience among campaigners over the lack of progress and concern hundreds of unpaid carers are being hit with fresh repayment demands each week.“It cannot be right that the government is still hounding carers for repayments, long after this scandal was exposed and even after we secured an independent review, but before anything has been done to put things right,” Davey said.An independent inquiry into carer’s allowance headed by the disability policy expert Liz Sayce was ordered by the government in December.

Sayce presented its findings to ministers three months ago but it is unclear when the government will publish her report or its formal response.“The government needs to pause repayments now, publish the review’s findings without further delay, and get on with fixing the system so it actually works for carers,” Davey said.A Liberal Democrat amendment to the government’s fraud and error bill to be debated in the Lords next week calls on the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) to stop pursuing carers’ repayments until the government’s plans to reform the benefit are implemented.Lord Palmer, the Liberal Democrat work and pensions spokesperson in the Lords who laid the amendment, said it was wrong unpaid carers were continuing to be unfairly punished by a system that was clearly not working.He called the carer’s allowance scandal “a national disgrace”.

At least 144,000 carers are now repaying more than £251m in carer’s allowance overpayments, typically between £2,000 and £5,000 but sometimes as high as £20,000.These draconian punishments are applied when carers working part-time breach earnings limits attached to the £82.30 a week benefit.This “cliff edge” penalty means carers pay back the entire benefit if they breach earnings limits by even tiny amounts.A carer who received 50p more than the £196 weekly threshold for 52 weeks would pay back not £26 but £4,258.

80.The impact has been exacerbated by the DWP’s routine failure over many years to investigate all the electronic notifications it receives alerting them to potential earnings breaches.This has resulted in carer’s allowance claimants unknowingly accumulating overpayments over several years.Campaigners have consistently called for carer’s allowance overpayments to be written off given the chronic failures of the previous government to fix problems they had been warned about many years ago internally through a DWP whistleblower and externally after issues were raised by MPs.Sign up to First EditionOur morning email breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what’s happening and why it mattersafter newsletter promotionEmily Holzhausen, director of of policy and public affairs at Carers UK, said: “It’s critical that we see the publication of the independent review very quickly with a clear timeline for action to ensure that this scandal is addressed head on.

With every day that goes by, unpaid carers are still being subjected to overpayments demands operating under what, everyone has acknowledged, is a broken system.”She added: “Given the devastating impact this can have on unpaid carers who unwittingly go over the earnings limit, it’s essential that we get this change as soon as possible to prevent more carers ending up in such a terrible situation.”A DWP spokesperson said: “We’re on the side of carers.That’s why we’ve commissioned an independent review of carer’s allowance overpayments and delivered the biggest ever cash increase in the benefit’s earnings threshold – helping 60,000 carers by 2029-30.“We will respond to the independent review in due course and in the meantime, we must balance our duty to the taxpayer while ensuring carer’s allowance is administered fairly, accurately, and best supports those who use it.

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‘£30 for a ready meal?!’ Do Charlie Bigham’s new dishes really beat going to a restaurant?

Like Tesla cars and the ending of the Sopranos, Charlie Bigham ready meals seem to be rather divisive. On the one hand, people clearly love them: about 31m dishes were sold in the past year alone. On the other hand, they generate a heap of mockery. The critique seems to be that only a gullible idiot would shell out up to a tenner on an oven-ready fish pie, chilli con carne or – as one commentator once memorably labelled it – a tray of “Tory slop”.Those critics will be sharpening their kitchen knives because Bigham, who is a kind of Tim “Wetherspoons” Martin for centrist dads, has just announced the launch of his Brasserie range: deluxe versions of his meals with prices that fetch up to … wait for it … £30! Thirty whole English pounds!With a menu consisting of venison bourguignon, coq au vin, confit duck (all at £16

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‘It’s about weaponising opinion’: the power of Topjaw’s online foodie show

When the presenter Jesse Burgess goes to a restaurant, the kitchen always sends him dishes he didn’t order. One of the ironies of fame is that the more you can afford, the less you have to pay for it. Except that Burgess isn’t a celebrity, he says. “I’m just a guy who really likes food.”Burgess is the 34-year-old host of Topjaw, a small but mighty internet platform featuring chefs and foodies, whose “Best of” series, for better or worse, has changed the way Londoners – and those beyond – eat out

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Benjamina Ebuehi’s recipe for peanut butter banana french toast | The sweet spot

I can’t be the only one who is a bit ambitious when buying bananas. Despite my best efforts to get through them, a couple of well-ripened, black-skinned bananas in the fruit bowl is an all too common sight. Banana bread feels the obvious choice, but sometimes you just don’t have the time or enough people to share it with. A quicker option that I like to make at weekends is french toast, though I tend to lean into the Hong Kong-style in which the slices of bread are stuffed with peanut butter and drizzled generously with condensed milk and butter. Delightful stuff

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Not all Argentinian red wine is malbec | Hannah Crosbie on drinks

You could make the argument that my journey into the wine industry began with Argentinian malbec. Even before I was pouring wines in restaurants, taking orders and learning the table numbers, it was the first wine with which I became truly familiar. It was the black bottle with the white label that lined our supermarket shelves, and what people on the telly with expensive haircuts and thick resin bangles poured into large glasses.The Guardian’s journalism is independent. We will earn a commission if you buy something through an affiliate link

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Rachel Roddy’s recipe for baked leek and egg gratin | A kitchen in Rome

While sorting out some books the other day, as well as gathering a pile to give away or sell, I spent a large part of two hours looking for books I know I once had, and trying to remember if I had loaned or lost them. And then, in the case of one particular book, ordering another copy. Ten out, one in: not terrible.The book I (re)ordered was Beaneaters and Bread Soup, by Lori de Mori and the photographer Jason Lowe. Gathered over decades of living just outside Florence, the book is a collection of wonderful, practical Tuscan recipes, and also tells a story of Tuscan food through portraits of photogenic local artisans: a chestnut grower, a bee keeper, a man who makes knives … I would mention more if I could find the book, which I suspect was borrowed and never returned – you know who you are! (Unless I have got this wrong and it is behind the bookcase

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How to turn scallop roe into a delectable butter – recipe | Waste not

Beyond Jersey’s epic beaches and rugged coastline, the island has an extraordinary food culture, rooted in both land and sea. From world-renowned jersey royal new potatoes to scallops sweeter and more tender than I’ve tasted anywhere, Jersey’s bounty is second to none. What excites me most, though, is how local farmers and producers are embracing regenerative agriculture, and in doing so reimagining the island’s food future with creativity and care. At the heart of that movement is Regen Gathering, a visionary festival that brings together farmers, chefs and food lovers to explore what Jersey’s foodtopia could look like.Last month, I was lucky enough to host a talk at the event, and cook a welcome dinner for all the speakers, alongside Regen’s inspiring founder, India Hamilton