For many months, I've been campaigning electronically against the Bedroom Tax on social media - questioning, challenging, informing.
I've made friends, acquaintances, colleagues and comrades.
We've shared stories, swapped ideas - many of their collective ideas informed my address to the 150 who attended the rally.So to them all thanks.
Standing on a bench, surrounded by Barclays and Vodafone, here's what I had to say:
(please check against delivery - always wanted to say that!)
In 15 days time, the Tory- led Coalition introduced the size criteria that will
see poor and vulnerable tenants in social housing facing a reduction in their
Housing Benefit each and every week.
The Tory Fail Government supported by their
Lib Dem allies in the Coalition seem to focus more on the fact that is not a
tax.
They seem keen on discussing whether it’s
called
the Size Criteria
the Under Occupancy Penalty,
or the Spare Bedroom Subsidy.
But to me and you it’s the BEDROOM TAX
It’s a phase the Tories don’t like – IDS
realy hates us calling it the Bedroom Tax.
Well Mr Duncan Smith I can think of a way to
stop us mentioning the Bedroom Tax
ABOLISH it
That’s the best course of action because it’s
so ill-conceived.
It’s a unfair and perverse tax which will
hit hundreds of thousand of vulnerable people living in social housing around
the country
It is a mass of contradictions and full of
unintended consequences.
And it penalises tenants for a weak housing
policy – of all recent Governments, including Labour – that has failed to build enough Social
Homes.
But it's no surprise that theses plans are such a mess.
That's because its being
organised by the Department of Work and Pensions
Yes the crack team that gave us a Work
Programme that is officially worse than doing nothing.
And their reward is that they been given
another brewery in which to organise a party.
When I started drafting this speech I had
lots of examples about how incompetent these regulations were.
But during the week, Inane Duncan Smith made
some changes – changes that are described as helping families with severely
disabled children, foster carers and forces familes
But that’s not the real picture
Its only SOME families with severely
disabled children...
only
those that under Bedroom Tax rules would have to share with siblings..
there
is no allowance for social need, such storing essential equipment to help them to
cope with their disability
It’s only SOME foster carers
Only
current foster carers or those approved in last 12
months will be protected from reduction in Housing benefit...
and
only for ONE extra bedroom, meaning fosters carers wanting to look after siblings and needing more than one
extra bedroom will still be liable for Bedroom Tax
And, we're not sure on this one, but it maybe SOME forces familes
there
is still a lack of clarity on how the Bedroom Tax applies to 'teenage adults' in terms of forces families...
Many
military personnel and forces families think exemption only applies when 'on
operations' - ie frontline duty... in Afghanistna, Mali, etc.
No
exemption if they in Catterick training to go 'on operations'
I
say again the Bedroom Tax needs to be abolished
And it
needs to be abolished wholesale, not piecemeal
Making
concession after concession, hoping like in a game of Kerplunk the whole thing
doesn’t collapse on you is NOT the answer
It
needs to be abolished now
The coalition are trying to use the tactic
of DIVIDE AND CONQUER – we must unite together to fight – not each other, but
this evil Bedroom Tax
We need to stand together and reveal the
truth.
That they are discriminating demonstrates
the unfairness of their policy.
But they have a solution to some of the
hardships that the inherent unfairness of the Bedroom Tax will bring.
Lib Dem and Tory MPs over the past few weeks have
continually stood up from the Government benches in the House of Commons and told us that there is a
Discretionary Housing Payment available to cover hardships
They seem to think that £25 million available will support all the 440,000 households
with a disabled family member.
The truth is the DHP fund will barely cover 1 in 10 of such
cases. So the DHP will probably be paid up to a maximum of 13 weeks
Just yesterday I read that a Tory MP in Central
Bedforshire couldn’t believe how the Discretionary Housing Payment wouldn’t
just make the problem of the Bedroom Tax completely disappear.
He
said he did not think the policy of ‘just giving a short-term’ DHP is
appropriate ‘because the situation could be exactly the same at the end of the
period’.
‘Surely
the people who have disabilities whose houses have been adapted specifically to
help them live in them should be in a separate category.'
And that's from someone who should know how all this should work - Andrew Selous MP is Parliamentary Private Secretary to Iain Duncan Smith at DWP
Put
like that, it is obvious that the bedroom tax is attacking the vulnerable, the
poor, the sick, the terminally ill and the disabled.
A
*discretionary* payment for something so fundamental & permanent as shelter
is just a recipe for housing stress & insecurity
One of my acquaintances from Twitter - @WeshWallace - wrote an open letter to the Prime Minister
In
it she said:
"David Cameron
"You say why should I have this lifestyle I cannot afford?
"Why should others pay for me to live like this?
"Since when has being made
blind a life style choice?
"Since when was being made
redundant an excuse for you to label me a skiver and a scrounger?
"Since when has claiming
benefits means your not entitled to be treated as a human being?
"Since when has it become acceptable to treat me like a piece of
rubbish?"
I want to speak up for those silent voices, the ones that the privileged members of the Cabinet never hear.
I want them to reflect on the words of Mahatma Ghandi
"A
nation's greatness is measured by how it treats its weakest members."
This is what the Government thinks ofthe poor in this country?
They are introducing
the Bedroom Tax on the same day as it’s giving millionaires a tax break – giving them a
saving of around £100,000.
So that's it
Millionaire's
tax break? Of course that's OK. Kerching?
On
the first of April – that really is a sick April Fool’s Day joke
Yesterday
was Red Nose Day – perhaps we should rebrand April the first RED FACE DAY.
I
want to see their embarassment. I want to see them squirm.
The Coalition claim that the bedroom tax is
needed to reduce the housing benefit bill.
But the scheme is now so chaotic it could
actually end up costing more than it saves in many parts of the country.
Just last week I spoke to one of my
residents.
She is worried about the bedroom tax –
worried sick
She has a 3 bedroom property but her 2 sons
are in care.
And the judgement under Bedroom tax is that 2 of those bedrooms are spare, surplus
to needs.
But if she doesn’t have those 2 rooms, her
sons can never return to live with her.
At the moment her rent for that 3 bedroom rent is £85 per
week, meaning she'd have to find £23 per week to cover the reduction of Housing Benefit that is the Bedroom Tax.
She’s looked at downsizing.
She’s been lucky and found
somewhere – a single bedroom apartment at £99.
How is that reducing the housing benefit
bill?
And that increase of £14 takes away her hope.
This Government is being cynical in
introducing this legislation –
they know the price of everything,
yet at the same time, they ignore the cost
I forsee increased demand on
The National Health Service
I forsee increased demand on
Sevices dealing with mental health and
social wellbeing
I forsee increased demand
Homelessness services
All directly attributable to the devastating
effects of the Bedroom Tax
If families are made homeless or pushed into
expensive private rented accommodation the tax payer could actually be left
with a higher bill – and still the problem of under occupancy will not be solved.
Ministers claim they are trying to solve
under-occupancy but David Cameron and Iain Duncan Smith have been forced to
admit that it is impossible for their plans to work because there aren’t enough
smaller homes for families to move into.
So all the Bedroom Tax will achieve is
making some of the poorest and most vulnerable people in society even poorer.
The best way to bring down the benefits bill
is to get people into jobs
I’m not sure if you know this fact, but the
majority of Housing Benefits claimants are in work and 93% of new claimants
need this benefit to subsidize low paying employers and part-time work.
That’s why Ed Miliband is looking at ways to
move forward with a Living Wage
That’s why Labour is looking at ways to
stimulate growth and employment
Labour supports sensible reform to the
Social Security system – but that’s not the same as these current WELFARE CUTS
The ones that are being pushed forward by this
Tory Government supported by its Lib Dem allies
From the Guardian to The Sun, everyone is
warning the government that this policy is a mess, but ministers are burying
their heads in the sand.
They have to concede that the Bedroom Tax is
crazy.
They have to concede that the Bedroom Tax is
now in total disarray.
This
isn’t about tough choices, it’s about the wrong choices.
Ministers must now admit they have got this
horribly wrong and think again – before it’s too late.
Already Labour front-benchers Liam Byrne and Jack Dromey have confirmed that they will abolished the Bedroom Tax if Labour
are returned to power.
I will want to hold them to that.
I am clear that the Bedroom Tax needs to be
abolished.
I want it abolished now.
And if not now, I will press the Labour
front bench team to abolish it as a matter of urgency if we are returned to
power in 2015.
Thank you for listening and thank you for your support
Well Said ! we need more like you in Government standing up for the people not standing ON the people - WelshWallace :-)
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