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Gurcharan Singh,Prospective Parliamentary Candidate for Ealing Southall, this week issued a stark warning that Gordon Brown’s changes to housing benefit rules are harming the most vulnerable tenants and reducing the availability of affordable accommodation.

Follow up:

Last year, Labour Ministers introduced a new ‘Local Housing Allowance’, with housing benefit being direct to the tenant rather than to the landlord. But vulnerable tenants often struggle to manage their finances and spend their rent money on other things. Homeless charity, Crisis, has warned that this can result in rent arrears and eventually homelessness.

Landlords who were previously happy to take on tenants on housing benefit have suffered from non-payment of rent. Many landlords now routinely refuse to let to Local Housing Allowance claimants. According to the National Landlords Assocation, half of all landlords are reluctant to lend to tenants on Local Housing Allowance.

22,711 people in Ealing Southall are on local housing waiting lists, and a sizeable proportion of them are on housing benefit. Housing waiting lists have risen by 112% under this Labour Government – reflecting the shortage of affordable accommodation.

Conservatives have pledged to change Labour’s failed policy. Tenants will be able to choose whether to have their housing allowance paid direct to their landlord. This will increase the availability of quality low-cost housing.

Cllr. Gurcharan Singh said:

Labour’s new housing benefit rules are failing the most vulnerable in our society. Landlords are put off from renting to those on benefit, slashing the availability of decent places to live. Some tenants struggle to manage their finances, using up their benefit money by rent pay day. They get into arrears and trouble as a result."

Tenants should have greater choice, and be free to specify that their housing benefit should go direct to the landlord. This will help those most in need.

Source: DCLG, Live Tables, Table 600

1 comment

# George on 28/10/09 at 19:02
I stand to be corrected, but the most vulnerable as you call them, CAN ask for the rent to be paid direct. A landlord can also ask for this. Vulnerable has wider meanings, and does not mean that a person has to demonstrate a disability. This option I understand from the internet, is in the rules. This is a rule only for private housing, and whether it means that more quality housing will be available is highly debateable unless the Council keeps an eye on that. As you are a non Whig, you will know that what you advocate will put up the cost of administering the scheme.

You say housing waiting lists have gone up. I thought they had gone down in the borough of Ealing. What are the figures over the last 48 months?

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