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Mr. Jackson

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  1. Hi unclebulgaria67, Thanks for your response. I am allowed to do part-time study with a LCWRA status as you highlight. You have further stated the £12000 MA loan from Student Finance is not going to affect the UC. Around 80% of the loan will go towards tuition fees anyway. But I can appreciate the DWP may interpret the remaining 20% as being used for maintenance purposes. This is the part I can understand why I might have to tell the DWP that I'm starting this course. Although most of the remaining 20% will simply go towards my course costs. I'm struggling to see how this is any business of the DWP actually. The fact I am receiving this student loan should not obviate the requirement for the state to pay benefits, should it? After all the loan is just that, it's money I have to pay back. Just as if I had taken out a £500 loan from a bank or other financial institute to help pay bills or other costs as my benefits don't cover all the basics, surely I wouldn't be expected to write an entry on my journal informing DWP that I have taken out a £500 loan, right? Mr. Jackson
  2. Hi unclebulgaria67, Thanks again for your reply, I appreciate the information. The link you provided is for undergraduate students from what I can tell. I will be doing an MA part-time and so the Masters loan from Student Finance is to be used by the student how they see fit. In my case as I said £10,200 will go to tuition fees, which I will be able to prove with payments receipts and bank statements if necessary. The grey area in all of this is the remaining £1800. But you have said that part also won't affect UC. Therefore, if I am allowed to study part-time on UC without it affecting my LCWRA status, or triggering a new health assessment and the MA loan is not treated as income, do I have to inform UC at all then? I obviously don't want to invite problems that are avoidable, if possible. Thanks, Mr. Jackson
  3. Hello unclebulgaria67, Thank you very much for this helpful response. Do you think though that DWP would bring a health assessment forward so I have it sooner because I am able to attend university one day a week? In relation to the finance side of things I will be receiving just under £12,000 as an MA loan from Student Finance. However, £10,200 of it will go to the University in tuition fees. So yes I will have just under £1800 to pay for expenses, including using public transport to and from the University which is 10 miles from where I live. Does that £1800 qualify as income and needs to be declared to DWP? Even though it's a loan? Thanks, Mr. Jackson
  4. Hi Guys, I'm new here. I have been in receipt of Universal Credit with limited capability for work and work related activities for a few years now, after winning my DWP health tribunal. I do not receive PIP payments. I am still receiving treatment but I am making progress. I now feel that I am in a position to refocus on work and career ambitions. I would like to study a part-time MA at university. This would involve taught study at the university one day a week for my course requirements. I have been informed that you can still receive UC if you are studying part-time in higher education. However, does anyone know if this still applies if you are in receipt of the health component of Universal Credit? Or would the DWP simply say that if you are able to study part-time and attend university one day a week you are able to be classed as available for work? If anyone has information that can help me with this I would be so grateful, thanks. Mr. Jackson
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