All 1 Debates between Pat Glass and Emma Lewell-Buck

Under-Occupancy Penalty

Debate between Pat Glass and Emma Lewell-Buck
Tuesday 5th November 2013

(10 years, 5 months ago)

Westminster Hall
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Emma Lewell-Buck Portrait Mrs Lewell-Buck
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I will address that issue in my next point. My local citizens advice bureau is receiving more than 33 inquiries every week related to the bedroom tax.

One case study identified a young lady who had never been in rent arrears. As a result of the bedroom tax, she has only 84p per day to live on—to buy food, clothes and toiletries. That is an absolute scandal. Her story resonates with what food banks and homelessness charities in my constituency have told me. They feel that the increase in demand for their services is directly linked to the bedroom tax.

At the same time as the crisis was looming, the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions was quoted in our local newspaper, the Shields Gazette, saying:

“When 13,101 households are stuck on a waiting list for social housing in south Tyneside, there’s a big problem that needs addressing… it can’t be right that many households across the north-east are living in an overcrowded home. There’s nothing fair about making families wait and wait for a house that is big enough, while other households on benefits are allowed to live in homes that are too big for their needs, at no extra cost.”

The Secretary of State helpfully advised that my constituents may

“decide to take up work, or work a few more hours to cover the difference”

or

“move to more appropriately-sized accommodation or take in a lodger.”

I would like to take this opportunity to invite him to South Shields to deliver that advice personally to my constituents.

Pat Glass Portrait Pat Glass (North West Durham) (Lab)
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A number of pensioners have told me in my surgery that they are living in three or four-bedroom houses and are subject to the bedroom tax, but cannot downsize. The shift that we want to see is three and four-bedroom houses becoming available, but in my constituency they are now hard to let.

Emma Lewell-Buck Portrait Mrs Lewell-Buck
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My hon. Friend is correct. Elderly people in my constituency have come to my surgery to say, in their words, that they are rattling around in three-bedroom homes. They would like to move, but they cannot.