We stand together as Advocacy, Information & Advice Charities calling on the Prime Minister and our government to protect the Human Rights Act

On May 18th 2022, we wrote to the Prime Minister to raise our concerns about the proposed scrapping of the Human Rights Act, and the proposed introduction of the  Bill of Rights.

Mind in Croydon has collaborated with over 60 Advocacy, Information and Advice Charities to bring attention to the important rights and protections the Human Rights Act offers our collective beneficiaries to live as equal people and to be treated with dignity.

Our letter to the Prime Minister can be read below in full. The letter was organised by the national advocacy Charity POhWER.

To have your Charity or Organisation added to this letter digitally, be added to the mailing list for future campaign activity or for other queries relating to this letter please contact POhWER Chief Executive at helen.moulinos@pohwer.net  or philippa@mindincroydon.org.uk at Mind in Croydon who can support you with your query.


The Rt Hon Boris Johnson MP
Prime Minister
10 Downing Street,
Westminster,
London
SW1A 2AA

May 18, 2022

Dear Prime Minister,

Human Rights Act & Proposed Bill of Rights

We the undersigned represent Charities and organisations who have supported millions of people to have their rights upheld and voices heard through advocacy, information, and advice since the Human Rights Act was introduced.

The UK has and continues to be a leader in the development and contributor of human rights law over the last hundred years. Since joining the European Convention on Human Rights (the Convention) we have been bound to comply with its provisions. The Human Rights Act brought rights home and created an important obligation for public authorities to comply with ECHR.

The Human Rights Act commits public authorities to comply with the European Convention of Human Rights in their policies, procedures and decision making. As advocates we see the positive impact Human Rights Act has had on the people we support through our charitable work.

Without the Human Rights Act, the modern advocacy profession might not exist with the same powerful impact or independent scrutiny. The Human Rights Act is at the epi-centre of a framework of rights and entitlements complemented by the Equality Act, Care Act, Deprivation of Liberty Safeguards, Liberty Protection Safeguards, Mental Health Act, Mental Capacity Act, related legislation in the devolved nations and Safeguarding.

Thanks to the Human Rights Act as advocates, we are able to independently challenge public authorities that support us in our everyday lives.

We help people to live as equal people through the cases we manage to have their human rights upheld in public services. 

Advocacy is one of the many ways in which people can be supported and empowered to uphold their rights and entitlements, be provided with choices and options, and safeguarded from harm and abuse. An advocate can help a person to:

  • speak up for themselves or give their views
  • understand the process they are going through, their rights and what choices are available to them
  • be part of an important decision which is being made about them
  • prepare for and take part in meetings and tribunals
  • raise queries or concerns
  • access information in the format which is most suitable
  • access services that can support them

Advocates can also provide information and signpost people to other helpful services. Our intervention often means people do not need to access justice through the courts or legal pathway as our intervention empowers people and protects their human rights.

The current laws protect everyone in the UK no matter who they are or what their own situation may be. The proposed reforms would significantly reduce the legal responsibilities the Government currently has towards us and diminish mechanisms for our collective Charity beneficiaries to hold public services accountable and to be treated as equal people.

The proposed Bill of Rights would offer opt-outs to public authorities to pick and choose whose rights they supported and if/when they supported those rights.  Many of the people we support are socially excluded, vulnerable and/or marginalised.

To focus this consultation on just a few minor legal technicalities and procedural nuances is diminishing the wider role the HRA 1998 plays to support people in everyday life and enable them to live as dignified people. Without HRA 1998, there would be no clear rulebook to govern expectations of conduct when dealing with public services such as Statutory Bodies, Local Authority, Prisons, NHS, DWP, Immigration, Housing and Coroner Service.

We believe the changes proposed are detrimental to our beneficiaries and would remove independent scrutiny of public services and the important role of advocacy. 

We are calling on a wider study and equality impact assessment to understand the realities on the wider UK population,  requesting for a meeting to share case studies and evidence on how HRA benefits the people we support every day through public authority independent scrutiny and mitigates often wider escalations in the legal process. Scrapping HRA would be detrimental to our beneficiaries, public authorities and wreak havoc with framework of other intersecting rights laws and codes of practices.

Our society remains unfair and unequal – the millions of people who sought support through our Charities should serve as significant reminder that the Human Rights Act 1998 and other protection laws are not currently being necessarily always upheld by local and central government bodies. Independent scrutiny, challenge, and freedom for people to empower themselves is a fundamental part of our society and democracy.

Yours sincerely,

Helen Moulinos, Chief Executive, POhWER

Jo Moore, CEO, Accommodation Concern

Peter Walsh, Chief Executive, Action against Medical Accidents (AvMA)

Mr Abe Ncube, Advocacy 1st, Community Connex

Jamie Renton, Chief Executive, Action Disability Kensington & Chelsea

Leanne Hignett, Service Delivery Director, Advocacy Focus

Elssa Keegan, CEO, Advocacy Matters

Judith Davey, Chief Executive Officer, The Advocacy Project

Sabrina Solomon, Head of Service Delivery, The Advocacy Project

Ian Maxey, Deputy Head of Service Delivery, The Advocacy Project

Natasha Fox, CEO, Advocacy West Wales-Eiriolaeth Gorllewin Cymru

Philip Bramson, Chief Executive, Advonet

Ewan Roberts, Centre Manager, Asylum Link Merseyside

Sr Ruth Miller, Volunteer, Asylum Link Merseyside

Theresa Mawson, Volunteer, Asylum Link Merseyside

Kevin Keech, Volunteer, Asylum Link Merseyside

Bridie Sharkey, Trustee, Asylum Link Merseyside

Kacey Jones, Volunteer, Asylum Link Merseyside

Peter Simm, Volunteer, Asylum Link Merseyside

Ged Edwards, Volunteer, Asylum Link Merseyside

Gareth Hankinson, Staff, Asylum Link Merseyside

Steve Hawkins, Trustee, Asylum Link Merseyside

Mike Storry, Volunteer, Asylum Link Merseyside

Dr Paula Grey, Trustee, Asylum Link Merseyside

Shahzad Wilson Mukerjee, Volunteer, Asylum Link Merseyside

Hilary Hopkin, Volunteer, Asylum Link Merseyside

Jannatul Chowdhury, Staff, Asylum Link Merseyside

Chris Vick, Service Director, Advocacy Services for North East Wales (ASNEW)

Emily Barratt, Deputy Director, Brighton and Hove Speak Out

Chris Mounsher, Advocate, Brighton and Hove Speak Out

Emma Lopez, Engagement officer, Brighton and Hove Speak Out

Jeanette Goodman, Advocacy Team Leader, Brighton and Hove Speak Out

Sarah Coombes, Volunteer Coordinator, Brighton and Hove Speak Out

Sanchita Hosali, CEO, British Institute of Human Rights

Philip Kerr, Carers Federation

Angus Claydon, Director of Operations, The Care Forum

Kevin Peltonen-Messenger, CEO, The Care Forum

Michèle Stokes, Chief Executive Officer, Carers in Hertfordshire

Roma Mills, Policy and Engagement Manager, Carers in Hertfordshire

Colin Ling CEO, Chinese Wellbeing

Di Burbidge Service Development Manager, Chinese Wellbeing

Jack Davey, Advice Service Lead, CHAS Bristol

Alice Tibbert, Director, CHAS Bristol

Suzi Henderson, CEO, Cloverleaf Advocacy

Cherry Pedler, Manager, Community Support Network South London (CSN)

Garrick Prayogg,  Project Manager, Cultural Diversity Network

Maria Dolly Galvis Zapata, Chief Executive Officer, The Elfrida Society

Ali F. Jabeen, Operations Manager, Specialist Advocacy Services for Parents with Learning Disabilities and/or Difficulties, The Elfrida Society

Deborah Kober Specialist Advocates for Adults and Parents with Learning Disabilities and/or Learning Difficulties, The Elfrida Society

Janay Crooks, Specialist Advocates for Adults and Parents with Learning Disabilities and/or Learning Difficulties, The Elfrida Society

Nikki Chivers, Group Facilitator for Adults with Learning Disabilities, The Elfrida Society

Diana Evans, Blackpool Advocacy Hub Manager, Empowerment

Lynne Stafford, Chief Executive, Gaddum

Ben Whalley, Head of Operations, Gaddum

Benn Keaveney, CEO, Hammersmith, Fulham, Ealing & Hounslow Mind

Arti Modhwadia, Director of Adult and Transition Services and Safeguarding Adult’s Lead, Hammersmith, Fulham, Ealing & Hounslow Mind

Caroline Ridley CEO, Impact Initiatives

Louise Peim Operations and Contracts Manager, Impact Initiatives

Sam Grant, Head of Policy and Campaigns, Liberty

Katy Porter, CEO, Manor Gardens Welfare Trust

Saiqa Sahotra Community Advocate, Mary Seacole House

Alex Coombes Specialist Advocate, Mary Seacole House

Ben Allen Community Advocate, Mary Seacole House

Miatta Mac-Boimah Outreach Worker, Mary Seacole House

Simon Torkington Advocacy and Training Manager, Mary Seacole House

Dr Melvin Bradley, CEO, MhIST

Gillian Unsworth, CEO, Mind in Brighton and Hove

Sharn Tomlinson, Chief Executive Officer, Mind in Mid Herts

Michelle Kabia, CEO, Mind in Tower Hamlets and Newham

Fiona Scaife, Operational Director for Advocacy Services, Mind in Tower Hamlets and Newham

Shelu Miah, Operations Director, Mind in Tower Hamlets and Newham

Rita Hirani, CEO MindOut.

Mandy Bigden-Slack, Advocacy Service Manager, MindOut

Teresa Jennings, Chief Executive, n-compass

Gail Petty, Advocacy Programme Lead, National Development Team for Inclusion

Rita Waters, Group Chief Executive, NYAS (National Youth Advocacy Service)

Kate Harvey CEO, Onside Advocacy

Suzanne Watterson Advocacy Services Manager, Onside Advocacy

Janine Daniels- Stretch Advocacy Services Manager, Onside Advocacy

Tony Kildare, Board Chair of Trustees, POhWER

Elyzabeth Hawkes, Deputy Chief Executive, POhWER

Fiona McArthur-Worbey, Director of Fundraising & Engagement, POhWER

Sandra Black, Associate Director, POhWER

Caroline Caesar‑Caston, ​Associate Director, POhWER

Martin Humes, Associate Director, POhWER

Jayne Degiorgio​, Head of Service London and South East, POhWER

Rose Humphries, Head of Service Central, Northeast & Scotland, POhWER

Anna Hansell, Head of Service South West and Wales, POhWER

Olivia Guerini, Suicide Support Therapist, Rethink Mental Illness

Gary Underhill, Spearman

Arran Evans, Director, Sussex Interpreting Services

Vikki Holloway, Chief Executive, SWAN, Southwest Advocacy Network

Emma Edwards, Director of Operations & Quality, Together

Tracy Moss, Operations and Development Manager, Together

Penelope Gibbs, Director, Transform Justice

Leslie Billy, Chief Executive, Viewpoint

Sharon Cullerton, Director, Vital Projects

Sara Firth, Chairperson, Vital Projects

Jonathan Senker, Chief Executive, VoiceAbility

Patricia Curran, Advocacy Service Manager, York Advocacy Hub

Philippa Thompson, CEO, Mind in Croydon

Posted on: 13th June 2022

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