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Housing benefits DEBATE
| Profile | Posted by | Options | Post Date |
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TeresaW | Report | 4 Jul 2011 12:48 |
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Sounds familiar Ann, and I bet that's exactly what will happen. |
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Rambling | Report | 4 Jul 2011 12:55 |
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Just looking at rentals, near where i used to live so commuter belt for London, terraced house £800 per mnth then you add the £1500 pa rail season ticket.Moving people out of London will only add huge pressure to the cash strapped councils, not to mention the potential backlash from residents who find council tax goes up as the services are even more stretched. |
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AnninGlos | Report | 4 Jul 2011 13:10 |
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I'm not sure but if families are made homeless don't they have to be housed in the area where they already are living? |
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JoyBoroAngel | Report | 4 Jul 2011 13:23 |
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its good to hear other peoples opinions |
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Uggers | Report | 4 Jul 2011 13:36 |
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Joy, that wouldn't work because rent is ridiculously high in the commuter belt. I live an hour or so by train out of London and it's property values are at the highest level here. |
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Kay???? | Report | 4 Jul 2011 13:47 |
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JoyBoroAngel | Report | 4 Jul 2011 13:54 |
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David how would you sort the problem |
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Rambling | Report | 4 Jul 2011 14:00 |
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I don't think it is the crunch yet Kay.... it's just the beginning of it, I fear lt will be Darwinism in action, the survival of the fittest and to hell with the needy and those less able. ( I do gloom and doom well ;-)) |
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Kay???? | Report | 4 Jul 2011 14:10 |
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Merlin | Report | 4 Jul 2011 14:12 |
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Was,nt there at one time something called "London Weighting" on wages for people who worked in London,to compensate for the higher prices there? or has this been stopped.Also there used to be some one from the Council who would come and tell you the amount you could charge for rental of a property if let out to people who claimed benifit/rent allowance.I think the main problem is the High rental Charges made knowing that the Councils would pay it no matter what, Re Prefabs.They were,nt too bad,some are still around and they,re much better than being homeless.**M** :-S |
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AnninGlos | Report | 4 Jul 2011 14:17 |
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It is a difficult one isn't it. We are all talking about those who are made redundant etc. Not so long ago there was a discussion about those who refused to work and drew benefits for everything. I think this is one of the things that has generated the capping. But if there is no work?????? Or is there? |
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Vera2010 | Report | 4 Jul 2011 14:34 |
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Hayley |
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Rambling | Report | 4 Jul 2011 14:42 |
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'plenty' of jobs locally....assuming you can afford to take one working for 1-15 hrs per week... i like this one especially lol |
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TeresaW | Report | 4 Jul 2011 15:11 |
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Back to commuting into the city instead of living there. My son lives in Chelmsford, he has a job which, when he first started was in nearby Danbury. He still has this job at the moment, but they have closed their Danbury office and transferred operations to their London office. My son hasn't had a pay rise to compensate for the £4000 a year rail season ticket...(yes thats right, £4000!) so he is between a rock and a hard place at the moment. |
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SheilaSomerset | Report | 4 Jul 2011 16:06 |
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There is a huge diversity in rental charges around the country - if I was renting here, I'd expect to pay around £700 a month for an ordinary 3-bed, but go 12 miles down the road to Bath, and you can more than double that for a similar property. I think that the cap is too low, and that 'expensive' cases should be looked at on an individual basis. Why should a hard-working (but low-earning, or recently made redundant) family who have roots, children at local schools, maybe family nearby etc. have to move away? |
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AnninGlos | Report | 4 Jul 2011 16:08 |
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I agree the cap is too low Sheila. Has it been finalised or are they just talking about it? |
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Sharron | Report | 4 Jul 2011 16:20 |
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I live in a council house.These were built as the homes fit for heroes that were promised after the Great War. A smallish house, 12ft like the labourer's cottage, with a reasonable sized garden. This was for the working man to grow food to feed his family and to have a place in which his children could safely play. |
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ChAoTicintheNewYear | Report | 4 Jul 2011 17:37 |
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There used to be rent controls on private housing, until Thatcher decided otherwise. |
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+++DetEcTive+++ | Report | 4 Jul 2011 17:59 |
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I'd suspect that the £500 pw limit was a wet finger in the area job. After all, £2000 pm does seem an awful lot, and if people couldn't afford that amount on their own, then perhaps the thought was they should be looking for somewhere cheaper? |
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ChAoTicintheNewYear | Report | 4 Jul 2011 18:07 |
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Wrt private rents many councils (maybe all, I'm not sure) will only pay for what they deem that you need. For example a couple with one child will only have the rent equivalent to what would be charged for a two bedroomed house in that area paid. |
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