skip to main |
skip to sidebar
Labour peers have come under fire for refusing to back an
amendment which would have spared thousands of benefit claimants from welfare
cuts. The Local Government Finance Bill, currently going through parliament,
will see council tax benefit scrapped and replaced with grants which only cover
90 per cent of the cost. Councils will
be able to choose how to make up the 10 per cent cut but cannot reduce benefit
for pensioners. This means in some areas councils will have to cut benefit for
working age council tax claimants by as much as 20 per cent. Crossbench peer Lord Richard Best has tabled
an amendment to the bill which would allow councils to cut the single person’s
discount, currently set at 25 per cent. This, argued Lord Best, would enable
the Treasury to receive its £500 million savings without hitting the poorest
people. Lord Best said a cut in the
discount from 25 to 20 per cent would equate to an 85 pence per week reduction
in discount for single people living in the lowest council tax band and £2 per
week in the highest band. Read more on Inside Housing.
No comments:
Post a Comment