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Daily Record
Daily Record
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Steven Rae

Dying mum with six months to live 'can't make memories' due to huge energy costs

A dying mum says she and her family are being "robbed" of the chance to make proper memories because she can’t afford to tick off her bucket list due to huge energy bills.

Tammy Prescott, 43, was forced to stop working after she was diagnosed with stomach cancer in September 2021, when she was given just six months to live.

Now, after 11 gruelling rounds of chemotherapy, instead of making memories with her husband, Lintyn, 55 and children, Sadie 12 and Poppy, 10, they are struggling to make ends meet, forcing them to be housebound, reports the Mirror.

Lintyn now works up to 60 hours a week as a chef to help pay their bills and has no free time or money to complete the bucket list of transforming the garden, having a holiday, booking a family Christmas experience, and enjoying days out at the seaside.

Tammy, who has been forced to give up her job as a children’s nursery manager because she is so ill, said: “It kills him that he can’t spend more time with me. My husband works every hour god sends him, bless him.

“I have to try and not think about it otherwise I’d spend every day crying. This is the time you’re supposed to be making special memories, doing things, ticking off things on your bucket list.

“But we can’t afford to do that, we just stay at home now. I have to keep the heating on because I get so cold and it goes into my bones.”

Labour is pledging to freeze the energy price cap at its current £1,971 until the end of March next year. Next year bills could top £5,000 leaving families living in fear and Keir Starmer describing it as a "national emergency”.

Tammy, agrees and said: “It’s madness, they keep adding and adding and adding. The energy prices are ridiculous. It’s just gone up to £200 a month for electric and gas and that’s just the summer months.

Tammy said she would love nothing more than to go on days out with her two girls as “it’s scary for them and they know it’s coming”.

“Every cough and sniffle they are on it,” she explained. “It would be wonderful to go on the go-karts with them, or to the seaside and jump in a car and go somewhere but you can’t because of the petrol cost.”

Tammy, from Halifax, West Yorkshire, gets PIP and a support allowance, but it doesn’t cover what she used to earn when working, which was around £1,300.

Tammy with her young daughters. She says husband Lintyn works 60 hours a week but the family struggle to make ends meet due to rising energy costs. (Mirror)

Her husband brings home a basic wage of £1,200 a month and Tammy now gets about £1,000 benefits but she says: “All this goes on bills. There’s no wriggle room.

”Every month they have to find at least £200 for energy, around £500 for food, £600 for rent, phone bills of £65, water and council tax around £200, petrol at least £200 a month, and £120 for school meals for the children.

Even Tammy’s simple dreams are unmanageable for the family as every spare penny is eaten up with trips to the hospital, school uniforms, and extra expenses connected with her condition.

As a result of chemotherapy Tammy’s feet feel numb and she can only wear certain shoes and walk for a limited amount of time.

Tammy would love to transform their “shrubland” garden with some paving slabs so she can sit outside watching the kids play in a paddling pool or a Christmas experience for the family who are “mad” about the festive season.

“These bills are robbing them of being able to have happy times and creating happy memories and relaxing times with their mum,” Tammy said.

“It’s affecting even the basic things like having better cuts of meat. They want you to eat healthy but you can’t because we’re having to buy more affordable things. It can be a nightmare trying to work out where you can take money from to pay the bills.”

The desperate mum is calling on the Government to allow those with a terminal illness to access their state pension earlier - a campaign being put forward by cancer charity Marie Curie.

Tammy with Lintyn. She has gone through 11 gruelling rounds of chemotherapy. (Mirror)

“I’ve been working since I was 14, always paying into the system,” she said. "I am never going to reach the age where I am going to be able to access it. It’s not about me, it’s about my family and how they will be able to support themselves going forward.

“I know towards the end of my illness, my husband is going to have to massively reduce his hours or stop working and be a single parent altogether.”

Marie Curie’s ‘Dying in Poverty campaign’ is calling on the UK Government to grant working-age people early access to their State Pension if they have a terminal illness.

The charity is also calling for greater support with energy costs to be made available to all terminally ill people, regardless of their age, and for more support with the costs of childcare for terminally ill parents with young children.

So far they have 80,000 signatures for their petition demanding action, which will be handed into the new PM in their first week.

Mark Jackson, Marie Curie Policy Manager, said: “The current working age benefits system is failing terminally ill people like Tammy.

“There are considerable added costs that come from living with a terminal illness. In some cases, up to £16,000 a year, and that’s based on research from 2019, pre pandemic and pre cost-of-living crisis."

He is urging the public to sign their petition calling on the UK Government to grant working age people early access to their State Pension if they have a terminal illness, “because nobody should die in poverty.”

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