Help stop our government punishing families hardest hit by pandemic

by The Unity Project (TUP)

Help stop our government punishing families hardest hit by pandemic

by The Unity Project (TUP)
The Unity Project (TUP)
Case Owner
The no recourse to public funds (NRPF) policy is punitive and discriminatory, and should end. The Unity Project exists to support migrants who have NRPF through casework, community, and legal action.
Funded
on 21st January 2021
£19,488
pledged of £15,000 stretch target from 693 pledges
The Unity Project (TUP)
Case Owner
The no recourse to public funds (NRPF) policy is punitive and discriminatory, and should end. The Unity Project exists to support migrants who have NRPF through casework, community, and legal action.

Latest: April 28, 2022

Policy suspended!

Campaign success! The Home Office has suspended this policy pending review, and has promised to temporarily allow those on the 5-year route to apply for recourse to public funds.

We have advised dozen…

Read more

Our Prime Minister says his government will not allow any child to go hungry because of the pandemic - but as a small charity working with families in extreme poverty, we know that is not true. 

Since lockdown, we have seen how the Home Office is deliberately penalising migrant families who need state support to keep themselves and their children fed and housed during this national crisis. 

State benefits have been a lifeline for many families during the pandemic - but the parents we work with are being discouraged from seeking welfare support, and punished by the Home Office when they do. Migrant parents who access welfare benefits now will face double the Home Office fees in future (paying 10 years, rather than five); and have to wait an additional five years before they can become recognised as citizens of this country.

As a result, families who are already struggling will have to pay thousands of pounds in additional Home Office fees, and many more children will grow up in poverty. 

That's why The Unity Project is fundraising to bring an urgent legal challenge against the Home Office to stop this damaging and discriminatory policy. 

Our lawyers are Deighton Pierce Glynn, one of the leading human rights firms in the country, who have a strong record of holding the government to account so that people are treated fairly.

What is the case about?

‘No recourse to public funds' (NRPF)?

Since 2012, anyone granted 'limited leave to remain' by the Home Office has been blocked from accessing the welfare safety net, by having a 'no recourse to public funds' (NRPF) condition put on their immigration status. They can only claim essential support, like child or disability benefit, by showing serious financial hardship and making an application to the Home Office for their NRPF condition to be lifted.

Over 1.4 million people in the UK are subject to NRPF; most of them are black or from minority ethnic backgrounds; many have British-born children. Since the pandemic, the number of people applying to the Home Office to remove the NRPF condition because they can no longer support themselves has increased six-fold. 

What is the problem?

The NRPF policy is widely recognised as cruel and inhumane; politicians from all parties have called for it to be scrapped in the longer term, and immediately suspended during the pandemic. Schools and charities, including The Unity Project, see its devastating impact daily - where parents doing low wage jobs or whose work has dried up because of covid, cannot make ends meet, however hard they try. We know that children are going hungry and living in unsuitable, unsafe housing, as a result.

What is the government doing about this?

The government has ignored these calls. Instead, it is exacting a high price from some families who need support because of the pandemic: where applicants were previously on a five-year route to 'settlement' - being recognised as living permanently in the UK - the Home Office has doubled the amount of time they will have to wait, to 10 years, if they successfully apply to remove the NRPF condition having proven their poverty. 

Rachel is a mum of two young children, who struggled to find childcare because of the pandemic, so couldn't carry on working. She ended up owing rent, and her family was threatened with eviction. She turned to The Unity Project for help making a 'change of conditions' application to remove the NRPF condition, which was granted. However, it came with strings attached: she was switched from a five-year route to settlement, to the 10-year route. As a result, Rachel’s future in the country she and her British-born children call home is less secure - and she faces paying five more years of Home Office fees.

Applications for leave to remain have to be made every 30 months, so in the additional five years imposed on Rachel, she will have to apply twice, at a cost of at least £2,593 each time. Thousands of pounds of her earnings which could have supported her young family will go into Home Office coffers instead. For someone doing a minimum wage job, earning £8.72p/h, those sums are completely unaffordable.

There are many others like Rachel, which is why our legal challenge is so vital. 

Who is bringing the challenge?

Our lawyers, Deighton Pierce Glynn, have won a number of important High Court cases about the NRPF policy over the last decade. The Unity Project is a tiny charity with no full-time staff but a strong community of people who are affected by the policy, who have been working to end it since 2017. We worked together to win a court case against this policy last year, which led to important changes, but there is still more to do. 

Why do we need your support?

We believe the government’s policy is unlawful and that our legal challenge has a strong chance of success. However, we need to raise money to pay court fees and protect TUP from any adverse legal costs arising out of the judicial review process.

Where will my money go?

All funds raised will go towards paying court fees and protecting TUP from having to pay the Home Office's legal costs in the event that our challenge is unsuccessful. DPG and our barristers are working on this challenge free of charge.

Thank you for your vital support.

Get updates about this case

Subscribe to receive email updates from the case owner on the latest news about the case.

Recent contributions

Be a promoter

Your share on Facebook could raise £26 for the case

I'll share on Facebook
Update 3

The Unity Project (TUP)

April 28, 2022

Policy suspended!

Campaign success! The Home Office has suspended this policy pending review, and has promised to temporarily allow those on the 5-year route to apply for recourse to public funds.

We have advised dozens of families impacted by this pernicious policy since the start of the pandemic and with Deighton Pierce Glynn (DPG) have successfully pursued a number of individual cases over 2021. This was therefore welcome news. You can read more details here: https://dpglaw.co.uk/nrpf-policy/.

The future of the policy remains uncertain, and we continue to press the Home Office and support those families affected. 

Thank you again for your incredible support.

Update 2

The Unity Project (TUP)

Jan. 29, 2021

Application to High Court now issued!

The first stage of the case is underway!

Given the urgency, we have requested that our application be considered within 7 days, so we hope to be able to give you a further update very soon.

See DPG's website for more details: https://dpglaw.co.uk/challenge-to-government-punishing-families-hit-hardest-by-the-pandemic/

Update 1

The Unity Project (TUP)

Jan. 25, 2021

We did it! We can get this case off the ground!

Thanks to your incredible support, this case is now off the ground! We're busy getting ready to go to court and will keep you updated as things progress.

Get updates about this case

Subscribe to receive email updates from the case owner on the latest news about the case.

    There are no public comments on this case page.