The parent of a disabled child says she will “freeze” to keep her daughter alive this winter as she faces a £7,000 energy bill, with families resorting to desperate measures to survive the cost of living crisis.
Another father said he is skipping meals to ensure his autistic son has enough to eat – and has lost five inches off his waistline.
“Frightening” new data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) reveals that 55% of people living with disabilities are finding it difficult to afford energy bills and 36% struggling to cope with housing payments (rent or mortgage).
This compares to 45% of their non-disabled counterparts struggling with energy bills, and 30% having difficulty with housing costs.
Around one in 15 (7%) of disabled adults are behind on their energy bills, compared to one in 25 (4%) non-disabled people, according to the ONS.
Meanwhile, one in 25 (4%) disabled adults are behind on their rent or mortgage payments – twice as many as their non-disabled counterparts, with one in 50 (2%) behind on housing costs.
Families of those living with disabilities have become increasingly desperate amid the crisis.
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‘I will freeze to keep my daughter alive’
A mother said she will freeze this winter after her energy bill surged beyond £500 a month – the majority of which is used to power life-saving equipment for her disabled daughter.
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Carolynne Hunter, from Tillicoultry in Scotland, fears her annual bill hit will £7,000. She is being urged by her energy company to increase her direct debit to £700 a month, which she said she is refusing to do.
“I just can’t afford it,” she told Sky News.
“And I work full time, I am working 40 hours a week, so I have more money coming in than most.”
Her 12-year-old daughter, Freya, requires round-the-clock intensive care at home. She is oxygen-dependent and requires a track and hoist, a powerchair, an electric bed and an electric bath.
Image: Freya and Carolynne Hunter
Freya is unable to regulate her own body temperature, so requires constant heating in the winter.
This winter Ms Hunter will turn off the heating in every room except Freya’s – and said she and her other daughter will “freeze”.
But, Ms Hunter told Sky News, she has no choice if she wants to keep her daughter alive.
“I don’t matter, do I?” she said, adding: “People who have disabilities are just not going to be able to pay for these bills and they’re not going to survive.
“If you’re cold for a long period of time and you have an illness, you’re going to get hypothermia.
“And you can imagine the mental health of people – my mental health isn’t too great at the moment because I am sitting in a freezing cold living room every night.”
Skipping meals to feed his son
Paul Ridley, 57, has been skipping meals to ensure food stays on the table for his family, including his son Keith, 33, who has autism and is non-verbal.
The ensuing weight loss, increased by stress, has seen Mr Ridley drop from a waist size of 32ins to 28ins.
He said: “You’re always worried about the shopping – for example, a normal shop would get you about four or five bags.
“Now it’s around three.”
He added: “Carers are the unpaid army of this country. If we go down and cannot care, it’s going to cost the government more money.”
Mike O’Brien, who is a full-time carer for both his elderly and disabled parents, said his family’s grocery bill has gone up by £30 a week – despite continuing to order the same food.
He said one of the issues was trying to deal with rising prices on a fixed income. It comes amid calls for the government to increase benefits in line with inflation, with warnings “lives will be lost” if it doesn’t.
“When things are constantly going up and up, all of a sudden you realise [your benefits] are not going to last that long,” Mr O’Brien said.
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6:13
Explained: Why high energy bills hit everything
Energy bill surged by 50%
Dan McEvoy and his wife are full-time carers to their nine-year-old daughter, Elisa, who lives with cerebral palsy and is registered blind and deaf.
The 46-year-old dad of two said “everything is more expensive” when it comes to caring for someone with a disability – from spending more on fuel to get to hospital appointments, to needing to run the washing machine more often.
Image: Dan and Elisa McEvoy
Last year, Elisa spent eight months in hospital. Since coming home, the family’s energy bill has surged by 50%.
“Over half our energy usage comes from what we need to keep Elisa alive and comfortable,” Mr McEvoy told Sky News.
“The biggest frustration for us is every time we seem to be making any headway and promoting the idea that parents of disabled children are disproportionately impacted by this, there is a new prime minister.
“So it’s like starting again from scratch.”
Risk of death at home
James Taylor, from disability equality charity Scope, said today’s figures were “frightening” and the charity’s helpline had been “inundated with calls”.
“Scope has heard from so many disabled people who are having to choose between being warm and powering life-saving equipment,” he said.
Richard Kramer, Sense chief executive, added: “Many disabled people face higher energy bills due to needing to power essential equipment such as wheelchairs, hoists and feeding machines, or have to shoulder the costs of specialised therapies and diets.
“The latest ONS data is just further proof of how badly disabled people are struggling through this cost of living crisis.
Both charities are calling on the new prime minister, Rishi Sunak, to uprate benefits in line with inflation.
Dan White, from Disability Rights UK, said: “We are reaching a point in the cost of living crisis where without urgent intervention from the government, disabled people will be at risk of serious deterioration in their health, and at worst death in their homes”
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Nearly 500 people have been arrested over protests supporting the proscribed group Palestine Action, as demonstrators defied calls to reconsider in the wake of the Manchester synagogue terror attack.
Two days after the attack in Crumpsall, crowds of people gathered in central London on Saturday to call on the government to reverse the ban on the proscribed group.
Organisers of the protest, Defend Our Juries, said 1,000 people attended the event to “oppose genocide and the Palestine Action ban”.
The Metropolitan Police said 492 people had been arrested, with the youngest being 18 and the eldest 89. The force said 297 remain in custody and the rest have been bailed.
Before the demonstration even began, six people were arrested for unfurling banners which read “I oppose genocide” and “I support Palestine Action” on Westminster Bridge.
The bulk of the arrests were made in Trafalgar Square, where protesters held placards showing their support for Palestine Action, which was added to the UK’s list of proscribed terrorist groups in July.
The Met said a different group of protesters also gathered in Whitehall before trying to make their way to Trafalgar Square.
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Met Police call on pro-Palestine protesters
Many of those arrested throughout the day were older individuals. Pictures showed people with walking sticks or in wheelchairs being supported by police, while others were physically carried to a processing pen after failing to cooperate with officers.
One protester, 62-year-old Mike Higgins, who is blind and uses a wheelchair, told the PA news agency: “We are going to win this battle, by the way, there’s no doubt about that. The problem for me is that I want to win it now to try and bring an end to the suffering in Palestine.”
Image: Police remove a protester taking part in a demonstration in support of Palestine Action in Trafalgar Square. Pic: PA
Image: Pic: PA
The Metropolitan Police had urged the Defend Our Juries group to postpone the event in light of the synagogue attack.
Chief of the Metropolitan Police, Sir Mark Rowley, said he was worried resources would be stretched and the ability of the force to protect communities would be compromised as a result of the protest.
Image: Protesters unfurl a banner on Westminster Bridge. Pic: PA
Image: Pic: PA
In a statement on X on Saturday morning, Sir Keir Starmer also said anyone thinking of protesting should “recognise and respect the grief of British Jews”, while Jewish figures called the action “phenomenally tone deaf”.
In a letter to Ade Adelekan, the deputy assistant commissioner of the Metropolitan Police, Defend Our Juries said the protest would continue as planned as “the protection of our democracy and the prevention of countless deaths are critical issues”.
The controversial decision drew criticism from policing minister Sarah Jones, who said many of those attending the event “want to be arrested, that is their aim”.
She said: “We believe in people’s rights to protest. This protest here in London is a different order of event because people are supporting a proscribed organisation and the police have to step in, in that case.”
Image: Pic: PA
A similar event held by the group, Greater Manchester Friends of Palestine, took place earlier on Saturday in Manchester. Instead of marching in support of Palestine Action, the event was to “honour the names of Palestinian children brutally killed by Israel in Gaza”.
A crowd of around 100 pro-Palestinian supporters gathered outside the city’s Cathedral to listen to speakers before moving en masse to St Peter’s Square.
Image: A similar event was held in Greater Manchester. Pic: Reuters
Image: A counter-protester in Manchester. Pic: Reuters
People were heard chanting “Free Palestine!” while a small group of counter-protesters marched in front shouting “release the hostages”.
Greater Manchester Police (GMP) did not say if any arrests were made.
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Synagogue attack: Burnham and Badenoch in Manchester
Away from the protests, GMP said four of the six people arrested in connection to the synagogue terror attack will remain in custody for up to another five days.
The force said the custody extension applies to two men, aged 30 and 32, and two women, aged 61 and 46.
An 18-year-old woman and a 43-year-old man have been released and will face no further action.
GMP said all six people had been arrested on suspicion of commission, preparation and instigation of acts of terrorism.
Police have been granted extra time to question four people who were arrested in connection with the terrorist attack on a synagogue in Manchester.
Three men remain in hospital after the car and knife attack at the Heaton Park Hebrew Congregation Synagogue on Thursday.
Jihad al Shamie, 35, who was on bail for an alleged rape, was shot by police as he launched the attack on Yom Kippur, the holiest day in the Jewish calendar.
Adrian Daulby, 53, is believed to have been shot dead by police while trying to stop al Shamie from entering the synagogue.
He died alongside Melvin Cravitz, 66, a worshipper who helped prevent the attacker from entering the place of worship.
Image: Pic: PA
Counter Terrorism Policing North West (CTPNW) is leading the police operation and has been granted warrants allowing them to detain four people who were arrested on suspicion of preparing terrorist acts for a further five days.
The warrants relate to two men, aged 30 and 32, and two women, aged 46 and 61.
Greater Manchester Police (GMP) said the investigation was “continuing at pace” with “significant resources” mobilised in order to “establish the full picture into what has happened”.
The force said three men remain in hospital with serious injuries, including a security guard with car-impact injuries and a Community Security Trust (CST) worker with stab wounds.
On Friday, the police watchdog, which is investigating the incident, said it was examining the use of lethal force by GMP firearms officers, including “whether police may have caused or contributed to the death” of Mr Daulby.
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Arrests at pro-Palestine protest
Nearly 500 arrested as pro-Palestine protest goes ahead despite pleas
It comes as 492 people were arrested over protests supporting the proscribed group Palestine Action in Trafalgar Square on Saturday.
The demonstration went ahead despite Sir Keir Starmer, other politicians and police bosses calling on organisers to reconsider.
The Board of Deputies of British Jews called for those who attended the demonstration arrested under the Terrorism Act to also be investigated for stirring up racial hatred.
The board is set to hold an event in the same location on Sunday afternoon to reflect on the two-year anniversary of the 7 October Hamas attack.
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1:42
Met Police call on pro-Palestine protesters
On Friday, the head of counter-terrorism policing, Laurence Taylor, said a “suspicious device” attached to al Shamie’s torso was fake and police believed he “may have been influenced by extreme Islamist ideology”.
He added: “Based on some fast-time assessments conducted on our systems, this individual does not appear to be known to counter-terrorism policing, however, he does have a non-CT (counter-terror) related criminal history.
“This includes a recent arrest for rape, which resulted in him being bailed.”
A close adviser to Prince William has told Sky News William “does care deeply about tradition” but his Earthshot Prize shows he’s not afraid to modernise to make sure his work “makes sense” for the generation he will serve.
Marking a month to go until the fifth Earthshot Prize awards takes place in Rio de Janeiro in Brazil, Jason Knauf, the new chief executive, says it shows “the sort of leader that Prince William wants to be, both now and in the future” but also the huge impact his influence can have on issues like the climate crisis.
Mr Knauf has become a close confidante of the Prince, having worked with him for ten years, and being there right at the beginning of the Earthshot journey, “when this thing was percolating, and he really pushed us to make it something special”.
But after discussions this week about the “change” William wants to make when he’s monarch, Mr Knauf told us the Prince doesn’t want to just shake things up for the sake of it.
“He does care deeply about tradition, about his family’s legacy of service, and I think Earthshot is a really good example of how you’re going to see that maintained in the future, but done in a way that makes sense for the time”, he said, adding: “That’s what his grandmother did.
“That’s what his father’s been doing. Updating the tradition for the generation that they serve”.
Image: Prince William joined actor Cate Blanchett during a visit to Earthshot Prize finalist Colorifix. Pic: Andrew Parsons / Kensington Palace
Explaining how in the early days they looked closely at other examples of past royal prizes or initiatives, such as the Duke of Edinburgh Award, for inspiration, Mr Knauf said: “You know, we didn’t just create this thing in a vacuum. It was about what kind of difference could his leadership make?
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“And one of the things about the royal family for generations, has been recognising the work of others.
“You know, whether that’s through the honours system, recognising people in arts and community service or whatever it might be, all this is doing is taking something that’s really traditional and putting a modern twist on it”.
Image: Pic: AP
Last week, a TV programme was released in which Prince William admitted, during an interview with Hollywood star Eugene Levy, that “change is on my agenda” when he becomes King.
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Prince William hinted at ‘change’ in an interview with Canadian TV presenter Euguene Levy
This weekend, the finalists for the fifth Earthshot awards are announced, with four weeks to go until the ceremony takes place in Rio.
The prize recognises innovators coming up with solutions to the world’s most pressing environmental problems.
Among this year’s finalists in the running for the five £1m prizes are Matter, a British company whose simple washing machine filters remove the greatest cause of microplastics in our ocean; the world’s first fully ‘upcycled skyscraper’ in Australia, a Chinese company working on mobile phone waste, and the country of Barbados for its environmental focus.
For the first time, the awards will take place in the same country, in the same week as the UN climate change conference COP30.
Image: Prince William is the founder and president of The Earthshot Prize. Pic AP
Addressing whether the positive message of Earthshot will be overshadowed by the inevitable split opinions on tackling the climate crisis that will come out of the conference in Belem, Mr Knauf said: “The news around political disagreement and all of that stuff will be out there, but that’s one of the reasons we created the prize, directly to challenge that pessimism and negativity, to say we need to get on with this work.
“Showing world leaders that big things are happening in their regions and in their countries and in their backyards should remind them that, actually, this isn’t something that’s theoretical.
“The actual solutions that we need really, really do exist”.
Prince William will travel to Brazil on 3 November for engagements in Rio, highlighting environmental issues, as well as attending the awards on 5 November at the iconic Museum of Tomorrow.
In a video posted on his social media, the Prince explains how he continues to do this for his children, saying: “The Earthshot Prize was founded because this decade matters.
“2030 is a threshold by which future generations will judge us; it is the point at which our actions, or lack of them, will have shaped forever the trajectory of our planet.”