Budget
2000: Winning the war against child poverty?
Press reports
had suggested that the Chancellor would be stepping up the 'war
on child poverty' in last month's Budget ('Budget to focus on child
poverty' The Guardian 17 February). Expectations were
therefore high, but did the Chancellor deliver?
In the event, the press headlines focused on the boost in spending
for health and education. Although the Chancellor re-stated the
commitment to end child poverty in his Budget speech, he did not
mention it as a key aim in his televised address later that evening.
Commentators would be forgiven for thinking that the priorities
had shifted.
Budgets are, of course, carefully staged political events designed
to make good newspaper headlines. Journalists rush to meet copy
deadlines, which is why the detail (unless deliberately 'spun' by
the Treasury) can be overlooked. The small print is found in the
full Budget Report (still referred to as the 'red book', although
under New Labour it has acquired a glossy white cover). The Treasury
claims that the measures in the Budget will lift another 400,000
children out of poverty by the end of this Parliament (a total of
1.2 million children, up from the previous estimate of 800,000).
But how will this be achieved?
The 'red book' reveals that the measures announced in the Budget
will mean up to an additional £670 million a year in financial support
for children, rising to nearly £1.5 billion a year in 2001/02. By
the end of this Parliament, Treasury figures show that financial
support for families with children will amount to an additional
£7 billion a year.
CPAG was disappointed that the Chancellor did not announce a significant
increase in child benefit, although from April 2001 child benefit
will rise in real terms by 50p for the eldest child and 35p for
other children. The children's tax credit (which replaces the married
couple's and additional personal allowance from April 2001) will
also be increased in real terms by 50p a week. The most significant
measure is an increase in means-tested benefits for children by
£4.35 a week for each child from October 2000 (from June 2000 for
working families' and disabled person's tax credits).
The social fund maternity grant (renamed the Sure Start maternity
grant) will be increased by £100 from this autumn to £300. Many
commentators were confused about other changes relating to maternity
and the birth of a child, not least because of press reports that
the Chancellor would announce a new 'baby premium' for parents receiving
benefit. No new premium was announced, but from May 2001 parents
receiving working families' and disabled person's tax credits will
be able to make a new claim as soon as a child is born. Because
under current rules tax credits are assessed at six-monthly intervals,
there can be a delay of up to six months before an additional credit
for the child can be paid. The change in rules also means that tax
credits can be adjusted sooner to take account of any loss of earnings
due to the birth of the baby.
The measures in the Budget are welcome, although there is a marked
shift towards more targeting of support through means-tested benefits.
For the longer term, the Government plans to simplify support for
children through an integrated child credit, due no sooner than
2003 (the Treasury has indicated that this may be administered by
the Inland Revenue). Although this did not make the headlines, it
could have ripple effects throughout the whole of the means-tested
benefit system. Watch this space. A more detailed analysis of the
Budget and the impact on families with children will appear in the
June edition of Poverty journal.
Free
School Meals campaign update
Visiting Fifth
Avenue Primary School in Hull proved to be an eventful day for CPAG
Campaigns Officer, Susan Brighouse. Trying to give an interview
to the BBC Radio Humberside presenter while eating a school meal
with the children and shouting to make herself heard above the children's
chatter proved impossible. So she had to retreat to the relative
peace of the catering manager's office.
Susan started her day by receiving a box full of pledges collected
by Hull City Council's Welfare Rights and Social Services Department.
Hull Welfare Rights Officer, Rose Lister, arranged the visit to
the school to join the children for a school meal, and meet with
the head teacher and staff. Over half of the school's children are
entitled to free school meals and most of them choose the nutritious
school meal as opposed to packed lunches. Bradford CPAG continues
to draw together information about the take-up in Bradford schools.
Some schools will be now be drawing up new plans for school meals
provision, and it is important that policies to ensure the take-up
of free school meals are part of the process.
Fife CPAG members met with backbench Members of the Scottish Parliament
(MSP) to brief them on the CPAG Free School Meals campaign. The
branch has collected over 1,700 signatures in Dunfermline, Kirkcaldy
and Glenrothes. They are urging people who support the aims of the
campaign to write to Sam Galbraith, Minister for Education in the
Scottish Parliament, to highlight the fact that providing nutritious
school meals free to those who cannot afford to pay is a key route
to tackling poverty and social exclusion.
Leicestershire CPAG is sending out a survey to a selection of local
schools asking them about their policy on the take-up of free school
meals. It has received backing for the issue of take-up from most
local MPs.
Peterborough CPAG has been given some money from the town Mayor's
charity fund for its project to produce an undated version of its
local poverty study, published in 1997.
Nationally CPAG has been meeting with officials from the Department
of Education and Employment to seek funding to commission some research
into the reasons for the lack of take-up of free school meals by
children who are entitled to them.
If there is not a CPAG branch in your area, and you are a CPAG member
willing to contact your local schools to find out what policies they
have for encouraging take-up of free school meals and for healthy
eating initiatives, please contact CPAG Campaigns Officer, Susan Brighouse.
Warm
homes and kind hearts! - update on progress of the Warm Homes Bill
to end fuel poverty by 2015
'We are witnessing
a rare occasion when we are almost indulging in an all-party love-in!'
commented Conservative MP, Sydney Chapman, during the successful
second reading of the Warm Homes Bill on Friday 10 March 2000 in
the House of Commons.
The attendance of MPs well exceeded the necessary minimum of a hundred
to guarantee the Bill would pass this stage. Hundreds of constituents
and community groups, including CPAG members and branch representatives,
wrote to and phoned their MPs asking them to vote. And they did
with a resounding result of 143 for, 0 against. The debate on the
day included many positive statements from representatives of all
three main political parties. Government Minister, Chris Mullin
MP, said '...the aim of the Bill is both worthwhile and necessary...
it would... (ensure) that the most vulnerable households need no
longer risk ill health due to a cold home'. The Warm Homes Bill
will now undergo further stages in the Commons and the Lords. As
Liberal Democrat MP, Tom Brake, noted '...together we can embark
on a historic cross party campaign to put an end to the outrage
of fuel poverty'.
The organisations represented on the national steering group of
the Warm Homes Bill Campaign are the Association for the Conservation
of Energy, Child Poverty Action Group, Friends of the Earth, Help
the Aged, Local Government Association, National Housing Federation,
National Right to Fuel Campaign, NEA, UNISON and the NHS Confederation.
If you would like a copy of the Campaign Broadsheet, and are an
individual CPAG member who is interested in lobbying your MP on
future action on the Warm Homes Bill, please contact Susan
Brighouse, Campaigns Officer.
Paying
for Care Handbook
1st edition
Geoff Tait, Pauline Thompson (of Age Concern), David Simmons and
Helen Winfield
CPAG's new Paying for Care Handbook is the first comprehensive,
fully referenced guide to social security and social services law
and practice for adults needing care at home, in supported accommodation,
or in residential and nursing care homes.
Send £11.95 (plus £2.95 p&p) to CPAG, 94 White Lion Street, London
NI 9PF.
News
in brief
Royal connections?
If one day Prince Charles Phillip Arthur George does ascend
to the throne, he will be the first British king to share his initials
with CPAG. So notes a lighthearted piece in The Guardian.
Poverty in
London
The London Research Centre's new report, Getting the Benefit,
is a study of social security receipt in London, providing an analysis
of previously unavailable data from the late 1990s. The report highlights
that over one in three children in London were living in households
in receipt of social security benefits - 35 per cent of all children
in London, compared with 31 per cent of all children for England.
For copies contact Phil Garrood on 020 7787 5618
Human Rights
Act
The Human Rights Act comes into force on 2 October 2000. It is already
in effect in Scotland and Wales, but only in respect of the devolved
powers of the Scottish Parliament and Welsh Assembly. As social
security is not an aspect of government that has been devolved,
for social security purposes the Human Rights Act will only apply
from 2 October 2000.
London Marathon
Thank you to all the people who have sent in sponsor forms for Debbie
Taylor who will be running in this year's London Marathon on behalf
of CPAG. More details about her success in the next edition of campaign
.
Finally...
The new all-in-one CPAG Welfare Benefits Handbook replaces
the previous two-volume edition. Its 1376 pages include everything
you need to know about welfare benefits advice.
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