just a article ive picked up on now what annoys me is the fact that ive witnessed this for my self alcoholics and druggies claiming social fund these people should be stopped not the needy these alcoholics and druggies get £45 per day plus there other benefits why should we giving this to them there are people that really need this money but cant get it hers the article
Sunday 22 January 2012
'Abolishing social fund will hit women and children hardest'
Those relying on social fund grant say welfare changes will push most vulnerable sections of society into hardship and poverty
Guardian readers · guardian.co.uk
For many single mothers social fund is a vital service and taking it away will push them into further difficulties. Photograph: AlamyThis week, the House of Lords will again debate the
welfare reform bill. Among other changes, the bill proposes to abolish the discretionary social fund – which provides grants and zero-interest loans to help vulnerable people with essential outlays (such as beds, cots or cookers) or deal with sudden costs incurred in a crisis, such as family breakdown – and transfers some of the funding to local authorities, which will be entitled, but not obliged, to operate their own schemes.
Critics argue that cash-strapped local authorities will not choose to spend these reduced funds on replacement schemes – they have unprecedented pressures on their budgets and no town hall will want to make itself a particularly attractive target to the poor.
Labour peers are expected to call for the cash to be ringfenced so local authorities are required to spend it on a replacement scheme.
In May 2011, Steve Webb, a minister in the Department for Work and Pensions said: "The social fund is not being devolved to local councils. The welfare reform bill includes proposals to abolish the discretionary social fund. It will be replaced with a combination of locally designed and targeted assistance for the most vulnerable people in the community and a modernised and simplified national system of payments on account accessed through the benefit system."
A spokesperson said: "We're reforming the social fund because it is too complex and poorly targeted. Local authorities are best placed to deliver this support and will ensure that it goes to those most in need. People will now benefit from local knowledge and wider support services."
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