Older people deserve a specific set of rights to ensure they are treated with dignity and respect, according to the older people's commissioner for Wales.
Ruth Marks said she heard of many instances where people were discriminated against because of age.
Examples included travel insurance premiums rising for those over 70.
An ICM poll for the commissioner suggested almost eight out of 10 people strongly support the introduction of rights for older people.
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Ms Marks said she wanted the government to ensure that older people are better protected from age discrimination, with a formal set of rights being brought in to help individuals and organisations identify how it can be identified and tackled.
She said that the survey of 1,500 people of all ages, commissioned by the commissioner, shows there was "overwhelming support" for the idea.
"Age discrimination often goes unrecognised in our society because it has, in many instances, become normal to discriminate unfairly against older people," she added.
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“Start Quote
We're finding that there are specific areas, particularly in relation to financial services and in relation to health and social care where older people seem to be badly done by”
End Quote Ruth Marks Older people's commissioner for Wales
Alun Thomas, head of policy for the Older People's Commissioner, said around 2,000 people had contacted the commissioner's information line with concerns about discrimination.
"We're finding that there are specific areas, particularly in relation to financial services and in relation to health and social care where older people seem to be badly done by," he said.
"One example relates to the fact that insurance premiums suddenly take a certain hike once an individual reaches the age of 70.
"Another example would be where on health screening programmes, people are denied the right to health screening simply because of age and no other factor."
He said some rights were currently not being used effectively while others still had to be implemented.
He said he hoped the age equality aspects of the Equality Act 2010 would be brought in at the earliest opportunity.
The poll for the commissioner found 79% would strongly support the introduction of a set of rights. ICM interviewed a sample of 1,000 adults in Wales aged 65 and over by telephone from 18 - 25 March. A further 500 adults aged 18-64 were interviewed between 14 - 19 April 2010.
For more on this story: BBC News
Showing posts with label Equalities Minister. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Equalities Minister. Show all posts
Tuesday, 24 August 2010
Monday, 23 August 2010
Public will hold government to account under new equality rules

People will be able to see exactly what public sector organisations are doing to tackle inequality under new plans to put taxpayers in control of holding public bodies to account, announced today by Equalities Minister Lynne Featherstone.
Launching a consultation on the new public sector Equality Duty, the Minister promised to make efforts to reduce inequality more transparent by increasing the amount of information public sector organisations must publish. This will mean they can be held accountable not by civil servants in Whitehall but by the people who actually fund and use their services.
The new approach marks an end to top down targets and box ticking bureaucracy.
Equalities Minister Lynne Featherstone said:
“Equality is central to delivering the fair and more efficient public services that support a fairer society. However, in the past equality has too often become a byword for box-ticking and bureaucracy, with public bodies focussing on red tape rather than results.
“The new Equality Duty will change this – instead of the Government imposing top-down targets and bureaucratic processes on organisations, we will require them to publish data on their equality results in their services and their workforce, empowering the public by giving them the information they need to hold organisations to account.
“Citizens will be able to see for themselves how a public body is performing on equality, because what really matters is delivering improved, more equal services, not following complicated and expensive procedures.
“To really make this work we need to know what you think, so please visit the Government Equalities Office website and have your say on the proposals.”
The public sector Equality Duty will replace three separate duties that require government departments, local authorities and other public bodies to take into account gender, race and disability equality both as employers and when making policy decisions and delivering services. The duty simplifies this requirement and also extends it to fully cover age, religion and belief, sexual orientation and gender reassignment.
The consultation is the latest stage in the Government’s equalities programme, which so far has included enacting new rules to help tackle the gender pay gap and provide greater protection for the rights of disabled people, as well as work to improve equality for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people.
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