Bedroom tax "unworkable" say Housing Associations

Two thirds of households affected by the bedroom tax cannot find the money to pay their rents, with 15% already having received an eviction risk letter, according to new research amongst Housing Associations.

The survey of 183 housing associations commissioned by the National Housing Federation (NHF) found that 66% of their residents hit by the bedroom tax are in rent arrears, with more than a third (38%) reported to be in debt because they were unable to pay the bedroom tax.

The NHF said that this was equivalent to 72,000 housing association tenants in England alone who were in rent arrears because of the policy. More than one in seven households (15%) hit by the bedroom tax had received an eviction risk letter by October 2013.

The research also found that housing associations have invested millions of pounds to mitigate the impacts of the bedroom tax. Each housing association with affected tenants spent an average of £73,250 on additional resources before April 2013 to help their residents prepare and cope, including welfare and financial advice services. It is estimated that associations are spending even more this year, an extra £109,000 each on average, by March 2014, with larger associations spending up to £2.18m.

Around 413,000 people in England are affected by the social sector size criteria or 'bedroom tax'. Of these, an estimated two-thirds of them are disabled according to Government figures.

Demand for Discretionary Housing Payments, a limited emergency fund provided by the Government for the most vulnerable households impacted by the bedroom tax, has tripled this year according to Federation research from December.

National Housing Federation chief executive David Orr said: “You can argue over what to call the policy, but there is no disputing the impact that the bedroom tax is having across the country. It is heaping misery and hardship on already struggling families, pushing them into arrears. Now many are at risk of being evicted because they simply can’t find the extra money to pay their rent.

“These people have done nothing wrong. The Government has suddenly changed the rules and given them a false choice: move to a smaller home or pay. Yet we know there aren’t enough smaller homes in England for these families to move into.

“Housing associations are doing all they can to avoid evicting residents, but as not-for-profit organisations they can’t simply write-off unpaid rent. From day one we have said the bedroom tax is unfair, unworkable and just bad policy. It’s putting severe pressure on thousands of the nation’s poorest people and must be repealed.”


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Welfare Reforms £25.00 This course provides a guide to legal practitioners on the operation and implications of two of the government's key welfare reforms - the benefit cap and 'bedroom tax' - in the context of the new regulations, policy changes and subsequent recent case law