From April 2013 the so called ' bedroom tax ' comes into force. This is a hated piece of legislation as once again it attacks the poorest in society. I have just watched a program where people have bigger houses than they are allowed under the new welfare reforms, and yet the facts are in many areas there are no one or two bedroom properties for these people to move into.
A classic example just given was a woman who had lived in a three bed roomed property for 23 years, and recently her Husband died. She is now being forced to move from this property or pay the extra money she has for the unused spare room. Her family live local as do her friends, but there is not a single property available for her to move into within a 25 mile radius, as Housing associations got rid of one bedroom properties in many areas, as they were deemed to be uneconomical for purpose.
The Government Minister a Lord Best had no answer to the accusation put to him, that this is an unfair tax on the poor. He squirmed in his chair when asked if he had a spare room, only to say he actually had more than one spare a Lord I am sure he has a whole floor of spares rooms in his huge house.
He was stating that the Government can no longer afford the extra money to pay on Housing benefit for larger properties, where the spare rooms are not needed. I believe that by all means if that is to become law in April, then anyone after that date should be penalised, but thousands of people are going to be unfairly treated in my view, and have two options. Either pay the extra £14 a week on each spare room, or move. As I have already stated moving is not an option in many areas as there simply is not smaller accommodation available so what happens to these people?
Is the bedroom tax as unfair as the Poll Tax proved to be? Do people think that the bedroom tax is a fair and just system to use? Where do people go if there are no smaller places available? It seems to be to a very unfair way of in the wider scheme, to save a few bob. The Government give away billions every year in foreign aid, of which Cameron is rushing through new reforms of increasing the aid even further. Should we not look after a lot of these people who find themselves in a terrible situation through no fault of their own?
Of course your comments hold some water, but what about the people who are being told to move to smaller properties and there are simply none available and will still be forced to pay the extra money?
Surely that leaves me to believe that this has not been properly researched, as Lord Best when questioned on that very thing simply did not have an answer, and blubbered some useless reply that as usual did not actually answer the question put to him.
My old mum before she died lived in a 4 bedroom council house which we moved to when I was 7 years old. As we all moved out to start families of our own, she dug her heels in and insisted she needed the extra space for when the grandkids stayed. As she became more infirm, she moved into the room we called the parlour on the ground floor as she could no longer manage the stairs and the house was adapted for people with mobility issues at public expense.
Meanwhile, the 4 bedrooms upstairs and the bathroom were seldom used.
We tried our best to convince her to move to more suited accommodation and there was such accomodation available but she insisted that the house that had been her home (at that time for over 30 years) would reman so. She was a stubborn as hell!
I'm not sure what she would have made of the bedroom tax. There were many people local to her that would look in on her and make sure se was ok
My view on this stems from personal experience thus and it is centres on the availability within reasonable distance of the home to be vacated. If nothing is available and to save too much disruption and distress, the allowance should continue to be paid if no alternate is available.
But that view relates to the elderly. I can't comment on others who may be trapped by this in respect of which a move further afield would not be so damaging to their 'human rights'. But where to draw the line.
A muddled answer, I know, but it's the best I can come up with at the moment.
I have heard that this does not apply if you are a pensioner? Maybe someone knows the rules on that.
As if a family had lived in that house for many years and had their children there, and then the children moved away, it seems bloody unfair that that couple then retire and are asked to either contribute more for those extra rooms or to move from that property. It was said tonight by many people from different areas, that to downsize would mean they would have to find smaller properties, but they were simply not available.
I am yet to find out how much this new tax is likely to save the taxpayer over say a year. As I have already said, is it a huge amount in the wider scheme of Government wastage?
As the Chancellor of the Exchequer is living in subsidised accommodation with more bedrooms than he and his wife require over 10 Downing Street, will he have to pay the extra bedroom tax?
So if I understand this correctly, this "bedroom tax" is aimed solely at Housing Association/Council tenants claiming Housing benefit?
If so surely it is just bringing them into line "rulewise" with tenants living in private rented accommodation and claiming housing benefit.
Taken from my local councils website for private tenants:
"The amount of Housing Benefit you get will depend on where you live and who lives with you. Benefit is based on the number of bedrooms you need and not how much the rent is."
Its called The Local Housing Allowance instead of the bedroom tax but amounts to the same and has been around for years.
Like others I don't know all the rules under which this tax will be levied, if we are talking about taxing those that do NOT claim housing benefits but choose or under thier circumstances have spare bedrooms (like those whose children have left home) then it is wrong, if people pay thier council tax for thier home, pay the higher rent for bigger homes, buy more expensive bigger homes then surely that is thier perogative in a relatively free society.
If those renting larger properties and paying thier own way without Housing Benefit do decide to move into smaller properties there will be even less available for those that are on housing benefit to take on.
If people are claiming housing benefit for larger homes WHEN smaller homes are available why cannot Local Councils simply cut thier benefit to that which they would have to pay for the right sized property, ie if they need 2 bedrooms but have 3 pay them what they would recieve if they had a 2 bedroom property.
What will be gained (apart from more tax revenue which will probably be spent assessing everyone) I do not know, I doubt many people will move to smaller properties and from what I can gather it is smaller properties that are in short supply on the Council/Housing Association waiting lists, so this may just make that situation even worse as some do move into those smaller properties that are available.
I sometimes feel these days that the only thing MP's and Lords do is sit down and work out how they can get more tax income into the coffers
The so called bedroom tax is NOT a direct taxation. It IS a reduction in benefits to certain persons as defined in my earlier post.
Bit controversial but why do we insist on long term benefits and house upgrades as out of work parents expand their family they cant already support. Give everyone 4 months benefits then they stop. Lots of jobs available but none they want to get up for .. then they can contribute like normal people and the UK saves a fortune while getting all the low level jobs filled .. I have never claimed benefits and would be embarrassed to have to. Few years of hard but needed reform would at least give us a future generation that knows work isnt watching jeremy kyle and claiming benefits for life.
You do follow your parents growing up.. two generations of illiterate dole dwellers at least now. We need to toughen up not worry if the recent reforms are punishment lol ... they need it to jolt them back into grafting normal buy your own house type of people.
Id be a great prime minister ... with Bob Diamond as Chancellor and Megan Fox as my PA
But being serious for once .. we are too soft on them and they need a kick up the arse .. not a house upgrade and more benefits .. we working people pay for them to move into houses hard working families cant afford ... cant be right surely
J
From what I understand of the system, one of our biggest problems/costs in the benefit system comes via the EU laws.
This says that an EU member working or residing in the UK is entitled to all benefits available to UK citizens and vice versa for UK citizens living or working abroad.
The problem for us is that UK citizens are entitled to a lot more benefits than many of our counterparts from othe EU states, ie 40,000 polish children living in Poland recieve child benefit from the UK because at least one parent is residing/working in the UK, now I don't know for fact but I doubt that 40,000 UK children living here are recieving any child benefit from Poland. Other benefits paid to immigrants and migrant workers fall under the same rule.
I do know that many benefits paid to UK State citizens are stopped if the benefits office know you are living abroad, one example of that is War Pensions which may be stopped if you decide to reside abroad.
It seems to be another of those EU rules that is of greater benefit to people choosing to come to the UK than it is for UK migrants going abroad.
At a time when the government is looking to reduce the amount paid in child benefit it might be a good idea for them to bring this up in EU meetings.
Many EU countries pay no or very little in benefits making Britain the popular place it is for immigrants and migrant workers.
People waiting for asylum with no valid reason are another drain on our funds, I firmly believe that it is our duty to provide asylum for those in fear of thier lives, torture or imprisonment without a fair trial in thier own country or the even the country they reside in, but feel that someone arriving from (let's say Nigeria) via France has no case for asylum since they have already found safe (but perhaps not desirable) refuge in France, they should not even be considered for asylum but be treated as an immigrant wishing to reside in the UK, and as an immigrant we should be asking ourselves "what can they bring to the benefit of the UK" ie qualified doctors, nurses, investment, an ability to finance themselves or tradespersons in short supply.
Many countries such as the USA, New Zealand and australia have strict immigration criteria, we could learn a lot from them.
There were many asylum applicants who came to the UK to compete in the Olympics, they are all still awaiting descisons including the man whose asylum claim is based on the fact that returning to his country would result in him having to do National Service.
There are many "scroungers" in the UK who are not immigrants or asylum seekers but there are also many long term unemployed who are genuinly seeking work but simply cannot find a job that pays enough (without being greedy).
Perhaps a policy of "child benefit only for the first two children could be debated".
Perhaps a system whereby people taking lower paid jobs have thier wages "topped up" with benefits so that they would get the same amount of money each week that they currently recieve in benefits encouraging people to find meaningfull jobs whilst lowering the amount they currently get in benefits without taking it all away (now we have a minimum wage Companies should not be able to take advantage of that too much).
And on the subject of minimum wage perhaps we could look at having varying minimums, ie those in certain professions should have higher minimum wages than say unskilled jobs, offering the minimum wage to a law graduate would seem a bit wrong.
I have long supported a new form of National Service whereby the long term unemployed be required to train for other jobs as part of a National Emergency organisation that could assist with dissaters, floods, extreme weather conditions, trained to operate de-commissioned fire engines to pump water out of flooded areas, trained as medics, or simply to erect tents for evacuees, cook food for evacuees etc. This would provide a much needed UK wide service, whilst giving people a chance to earn thier benefits whilst assisting the nation.
We have many disused army camps that could be used as bases for the National Emergency Force. We could train people and have them available when needed run in Military style without the need to train them in any form of combat duties.
When we need fire vehicles for disaster or floods we cannot simply lease them. They are already leased out on contracts to local fire authorities, that would already be using them to mitigate the effects of the disaster or flood.