My article in this week’s Cornish Guardian focused on the “bedroom
tax” – following the recent Commons vote. It is as follows:
Thousands of people continue to campaign against the
“bedroom tax,” but the majority of MPs are not listening.
The Coalition has decided that working-age tenants in
council / housing association properties – who have a spare bedroom and claim
housing benefit – should have their benefits slashed.
The Conservative-led Government continues to claim that
their “under-occupancy penalty” will “encourage” families living in larger
properties to move elsewhere, allowing better use to be made of social housing
and to reduce the housing benefit bill.
But the “bedroom tax” is a nonsensical shambles. There are
simply not enough smaller social housing properties for families to downsize
into, while families forced out of social housing and into the private sector
will end up paying higher rents, which will actually increase the amount of
housing benefit being paid!
Last week, MPs debated the “bedroom tax” and many tenants
attended. One disabled lady sat in the public gallery and could not contain her
anger. It was widely reported that she ended up shouting at the MPs.
But it was hardly surprising. Wheelchair bound, she lives with
her husband and son in a three-bed home that had been specially adapted with a
wetroom and stairlift to help her cope with a degenerative back problem. She
uses her “spare room” to store her mobility equipment, though it is sometimes
used as a bedroom when one of her daughters visit. But, in spite of this, her
housing benefit has been reduced by £17 a week.
In the Commons debate, only two Coalition MPs voted to end
the “bedroom tax,” one of whom was St Ives MP Andrew George. He condemned the
so-called “spare room penalty” as “immoral,” and it is well worth reading what
he had to say in more detail
He said “it victimises the most marginalised in our
communities, undermines family life, penalises the hard-working low-paid for
being prepared to stomach low-paid work, masks the excessive cost and
disruption to those disabled who have to move from expensively adapted homes
and is, in my view, Dickensian in its social divisiveness.”
Well said. It is just extremely disappointing that all the
other MPs from Cornwall ignored
what he had to say and continued to demonstrate their support for the “bedroom
tax.” Shame on George Eustice, Stephen Gilbert, Sheryll Murray, Sarah Newton and
Dan Rogerson.
The motion calling for the abolition of the “bedroom tax” was
defeated by 252 to 226.
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