Declan's first interview with Reed in Partnership
We hate coincidences! Within two weeks of Declan's dispatch last August of his application to the Investigatory Powers Tribunal (IPT) concerning the interception of our communications and directed surveillance, our live-in landlady, human rights activist Belinda McKenzie, served us with backdated notice to vacate our flat by the end of January and Haringey Council left us with our first £77 shortfall in rent to pay, among other things. This time, the day after Declan sent his application to the European Court of Human Rights (following the IPT's dismissal of his complaint), our jobcentre, Highgate Jobcentre Plus, issued letters notifying us that we were being placed with Reed in Partnership, a private-sector provider of the Department for Work and Pensions' Work Programme.
This is a letter that Declan wrote to the chief operating officer for DWP prior to his first meeting with Reed in Partnership this afternoon:
This afternoon Declan's adviser kept mentioning the "mandatory activities" Declan could expect from him in the weeks to come, without being specific about what he had in mind. All Declan could do is keep reminding the adviser and the manager who sat in on the interview that his first tier complaint would not be directed at Reed in Partnership but at Highgate Jobcentre Plus for sending us to an unsuitable provider, if and when a case can be made.
Suffice to say that we both remain deeply concerned that Highgate Jobcentre Plus has selected Reed in Partnership to use us as cheap labour for dead-end jobs. Declan will be raising this concern with a High Court judge next month in the matter of Heavey v Highgate Jobcentre Plus referred to in paragraph 17 of his application to the European Court of Human Rights. My interview with Reed in Partnership is on Friday.