He also said that his mother was generally reluctant to talk about her problems but had previously said that if she was in difficulty—health or finance-wise—she would “throw herself at the quarry.”
“My mother felt she couldn’t discuss her finances with anyone,” he said, according to the BBC.
Basic Pension Should Have Continued
Ben said that his mother had been fit and healthy, and that he was speaking to her three to four times a week, and last talked to her on Nov. 19, The Guardian reported.According to the Guardian, on Nov. 21, Ben was alerted by a friend who asked him where his mother was. He notified the police when he could not find her or her car upon arriving at her cottage in Church Terrace, Rhes-y-Cae.
The following morning, a search and rescue team found her body at bottom of a 40-foot face of the Rhes-y-Cae quarry.
He later found that his mother, a divorcee, had been receiving a state pension as well as pension credits.
In 2014, Joy had told the DWP that she had received an inheritance. In July 2017, her situation was reassessed and at this time, the DWP froze both her pension credits and her ordinary state pension. But they should have only frozen the pension credits. As such, she was left with no income whatsoever.
Ben said that his mother only had 5 pounds (about $6.50) to her name when she died and had apparently spent all of her savings of 5,000 pounds (about $6,508) after the DWP froze her entire pension.
Administrative Error
According to North Wales Live, according to a letter read at the inquest by DWP’s complaints resolution manager, Suzanne Mitchelson, Joy’s two pension payments should have been “de-combined.”
“I am sorry that due to an administrative error, this did not happen,” the letter from Michelson read.
Coroner John Gittins recorded a verdict of suicide, according to the news outlet.
After the hearing, Ben said that the DWP had been “guilty of a failure of duty of care,” North Wales Live reported.
He added that “it’s a disgrace how this can happen in modern society and what concerns me is that this could happen to someone else.”
According to the Guardian, a spokesman from the DWP said: “Our thoughts are with the family and friends of Mrs Worrall.
“We apologise unreservedly to Mrs Worrall’s family for the error that led to her pension payments being stopped and pledge to learn the lessons.”
“With the support of and at the request of the family I have asked [the DWP] to urgently review this verdict on Joy’s Death,” he said in a post on Twitter.