Category Archives: Carers

Carer to be hit by introduction of ‘bedroom tax’

Carer to be hit by introduction of ‘bedroom tax’

By Nick Spoors
Published on Thursday 24 January 2013 07:50

A carer from Northamptonshire said he would be financially better off with his disabled wife in a nursing home when a new bedroom tax comes in.

Tony Sharman, 60, gave up work to look after his wife Anne, 56, full-time at their two-bedroom housing association flat in Towcester following her second brain haemorrhage.

Mr Sharman sleeps in the second bedroom because Anne’s special bed, designed to prevent pressure ulcers, is too small for them both. She also needs too much medical kit to fit in another bed.

Yet from April, the Government will dock the couple £60 a month in bedroom tax from their benefits because they say Mr Sharman’s room is a ‘spare room’, even though he has to sleep in it, and the flat is therefore ‘under-occupied’.

Part-time workers are often carers – don’t underestimate their value

By threatening those who work part-time with loss of benefits, this government fails to recognise their contribution to society

Various

‘People who choose shorter hours usually do so because they need time to care for … family members. This is time well spent – not just for them, but for all of us.’ Photograph: Burger/Phanie / Rex Features

There are three glaring inconsistencies in ministers’ plans to dragoon part-timers into longer hours of paid work. First, it threatens to take valuable hours out of the informal caring economy. This would heap more costs on to the welfare state, just when the government is trying to cut public spending. Second, it leaves less time for voluntary work and citizen action – crucial building blocks for the government’s much-vaunted “big society”. And third, every extra hour worked by a part-timer is an hour that can’t be worked by a jobseeker. This undermines the prospect of cutting unemployment: much needed if we’re to keep a lid on the benefits bill and help the economy struggle out of recession.

Of course there are part-timers who genuinely want more hours of paid work. But clearly this ploy is aimed at those who don’t – otherwise why threaten them with loss of benefit? People who choose short hours usually do so because they need time to care for children and other family members. This is time well spent – not just for them, but for all of us. The value of unpaid home-based work has been estimated at more than 20% of gross domestic product. And that’s when hours are valued as if paid the national minimum wage, which scarcely reflects the real value to society of caring work.

Charges to rise for around 2,000 people receiving social care in Liverpool

Hit the poor!

MORE than 2,000 people will be told to pay more for their social care under a shake-up at Liverpool council.

The council insists the move is designed to make charges for social care fairer and bring it in line with most other local authorities.

The changes will generate an additional £600,000 in income for the council.

The £222-per week cap on contributions will be removed, which will impact on the wealthiest.