Infected blood compensation update as DWP and inheritance impact clarified ahead of first payments
The Government has announced more than £13million in compensation spread across 10 people affected by the infected blood scandal, with 25 more victims invited to claim and further compensation rollouts expected to follow. In total, £11.8billion has been set aside for the victims as announced by Rachel Reeves.
While the identities of the 35 people potentially receiving their compensation this festive season, thousands more could be getting hefty lump sums in the new year, but it may not be as celebrated as some think. On behalf of some of the victims and activists the Social Security Advisory Committee voiced some pertinent concerns with the Minister for Social Security and Disability Stephen Timms.
This included issues such as whether the compensation goes to an estate with multiple beneficiaries or that is being contested and how it could impact recipients on means-tested benefits. The Minister's response was published alongside the compensation update, reassuring that benefit recipients should not be impacted.
Timms explained: “The current system for marking those customers who are also beneficiaries of these compensation payments is fit for purpose. Each means-tested benefit for which the capital disregard applies has its own means of noting which customers are beneficiaries of payments from an Infected Blood Compensation scheme.
“These disregards have been effectively applied for years; therefore, we see no evidence that the system is not fit for purpose.” Essentially assuring victims that their means-tested benefits should disregard any compensation they receive entirely.
On the more complicated issue of estates that are being disputed, the MP stated: “This means that whether or not a will is contested is not part


