A fledgling scheme to provide emergency help to the
poorest in the country is in chaos, with £67m left unspent and record numbers
of families being turned away. Figures indicate that by the end of January councils
in England were sitting on £67m of the £136m that had been allocated to local
welfare schemes. Half of local authorities had spent less than 40% of their
funds. Analysis shows that under the new local welfare assistance schemes, four
in 10 applications for emergency funds are turned down, despite evidence that
many applicants have been made penniless by benefits sanctions and delays in
processing benefit claims. The schemes were designed to help low-income
families in crisis, such as those in danger of becoming homeless or subjected
to domestic violence. Charities and MPs have warned that those denied help are
turning to food banks and loan sharks. Read more on the Guardian website.
The Guardian view on unhealthy Britain: from housing to junk food, there
are solutions | Editorial
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People are living with sickness or disability younger than a decade ago.
That should shock the country and prompt action
The two-year decline in healthy ...
4 hours ago

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