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Manchester Evening News
Manchester Evening News
National
John Siddle & Helena Vesty

Mum quits NHS for pension to pay soaring bills - before dying of Covid, leaving orphaned kids penniless

The son of a tragic hospital cleaner today tells how she cashed in her NHS pension to pay a rocketing electricity bill - just two months before she died of Covid-19 last week. But now her heartbreaking decision has left her girls without a mother – and penniless too.

Judith Thorpe, 49, took her pension in desperation to protect her two teenage daughters from worrying about family finances during the cost-of-living crisis – and to make sure they had new school shoes and jumpers. But the family will miss out on a potential £30,000 of death in membership benefits – all because of a fuel bill that more than doubled from £45 to £110.

Now orphaned Hannah, 16, and Scarlett, 13 – whose dad John Lydon died of cancer in 2015 – are being cared for by their 24-year-old half- brother Lewis and his partner. Lewis says he had no idea his mother had cancelled her pension in May to get just £210 paid back after fees from £362 contributions she had put in from her £10-an-hour £14,500/year salary since November.

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The family have now been told that they won’t be getting the death in membership benefit – around double her salary – because she had left the scheme. Judith, of Longbenton, Newcastle upon Tyne, fell ill with Covid last Saturday, but had a seizure and was rushed to hospital.

She was put into intensive care but diagnosed as brain dead. Her family took the decision to withdraw life support on Wednesday. Doctors believe she had a rare form of the virus which entered the spinal cord and then her brain – with fewer than 20 people across the world affected the same way.

Cleaner Judith cashed her NHS pension (Mirror)

Grieving Lewis, a customer service adviser, has blasted the government for failing to shield families like theirs from surging bills. It comes as half of the UK’s households are expected to be plunged into fuel poverty by the New Year - with the poorest three times worst hit.

And despite projected rises in the energy price cap to £5,000 a year in 2023, the Government is yet to step forward with meaningful help. Lewis told the Mirror : “I’m disgusted at them.

“They let energy giants reap record-breaking profits while millions of families choose between heating or eating. Mam told me she was worried she wouldn’t be able to afford new school shoes and jumpers. Every spare penny was going towards her bills.

"She said, ‘I just can’t make it work. I can’t even afford to use the dryer’. She wouldn’t watch telly because of the electric. She’d read a book instead.”

Judith’s supplier was Eon, which this week revealed a quarterly net profit of £1.2 billion. “Mam never wanted the girls to know about her finances and didn’t want them to worry about asking for a treat," continued Lewis.

"I offered her help but she was always too proud to take what money I could spare. She never bought anything for herself. She wore the same coat for four years - and worked tirelessly for her kids.

“She always said she didn’t want us to stop our lives for her. ” Lewis’s fiancee Abbie, 24, added: “She had a pension up until May just after the energy price cap went up. I remember talking to her about how much gas and electricity had gone up by and she was really worried.

Judith Thorpe didn’t tell Scarlett, Hannah and Lewis what she’d done (Mirror)

A GoFundMe fundraising appeal to help support Judith’s surviving children has been launched contributed. Proceeds will help with funeral expenses and fund support for Lewis, Hannah and Scarlett. Lewis, who lives round the corner from the family home, is due to star to university next month to study paramedical science.

He said: “Mam was our biggest supporter. She told us that she wanted to be our cheerleader, waving us on. But she was always there to lend a hand to anyone in need in the community. She was much loved by so many people and we are all devastated by her passing.”

Gary Smith, GMB General Secretary, said: “This tragedy is a real world consequence of Britain’s broken energy market. With energy prices about to explode further, this Conservative government needs to wake up to the mess that it’s created.”

Shadow Health Secretary Wes Streeting said: “This is a heartbreaking tragedy for Judith’s family. It is even more distressing to know that her family has been left without the financial support they would have been entitled to had Judith not spent her final months struggling with the bills and cashing in her pension. Labour will scrap vat on energy bills to ease pressure on households.”

A DHSC spokesperson confirmed: “The death in service lump sum is calculated as twice pensionable pay. However it is a benefit only available whilst the person is paying into the scheme.”

Readers wishing to donate to the family can do so here.

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