Whereas Maria Miller has stolen enough of our money to pay the Bedroom Tax of 55 people for a year, Emily Duggan writes:
The idea that the state should only pay for
people to live in houses that are the size they need is a logical one.
But the
bedroom tax has proved to be a blunt and ineffective way of achieving this that
has trapped many households in debt.
Ministers said they were ‘removing the spare room
subsidy’ by reducing the housing benefits of social housing tenants deemed to
have a surplus room.
They also said it would tackle the issue of people
under-occupying properties.
But a chronic shortage of one and two-bedroom
properties means thousands of people are unable to downsize and instead face
mounting rent arrears.
Many councils have long had a policy of building
three and four bedroom homes that families can grow into.
Unless the country
builds smaller units of social housing the bedroom tax will continue to punish
people who are stuck in the ‘wrong’ sized property.
The biggest group of people under-occupying
social housing are pensioners, who often live in the three or four bedroom
places allocated while their children still lived with them.
Few people would
advocate kicking the retired out of their homes but one of the major flaws in a
policy intended to tackle under-occupying is that anyone over the age of 61 is
exempt.
Many councils are furious with the Government for
forcing them to penalise people who are unable to move to non-existent smaller
properties.
Discretionary housing payments - emergency funds for those
struggling to pay rent - have offered a way of mitigating this.
But the latest
figures published in i show that even these are not enough to help everyone
in hardship under this controversial policy.
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