Daily Mirror (Northern Ireland)

BOROUGH SOME TEEN SPECIAL NO STORMONT NO BENEFITS

Housing Executive ‘black hole’ with 33,000 people to lose payments

- BY MICHAEL MCHUGH

Stormont

MORE than 30,000 people face losing benefits unless Stormont is reinstalle­d, it is claimed.

The Housing Executive insists it’s facing a “black hole” with those on the breadline most at risk.

AROUND 33,000 benefit claimants in Northern Ireland could lose out when special exemptions end, the Housing Executive has warned.

Measures designed to limit the impact of welfare changes are due to lapse in 2020 and no ministers are in place at Stormont to engineer their renewal.

Sandra Moore, chief executive of the Welcome Organisati­on which works with the homeless, said those who lived on the breadline would immediatel­y be placed at risk.

She warned: “The Housing Executive are facing a black hole.”

Research noted potential difficulti­es for tenants and landlords if mitigation ended as scheduled due to the reduction in housing benefit or Universal Credit for around 33,000 existing social sector claimants in Northern Ireland.

A study by the public housing body added: “If mitigation and welfare supplement­ary payments end as scheduled, tenants in Northern Ireland collective­ly stand to lose over £21million in benefits each year.”

It claimed discretion­ary payments could be used to help those struggling to make up housing costs shortfall. Civil servants have been given greater decision-making powers by the Secretary of State.

Key elements of welfare reform were introduced here in 2016, including the freezing of local housing allowance levels, applicatio­n of a benefit cap and changes to housing benefit.

A social sector size criteria, which critics term a bedroom tax, was then introduced in February 2017 and means reduced benefit if a house is considered under-occupied.

The Executive’s report said: “The waiting period for Universal Credit will likely result in increased rent arrears and referrals to food bank services are likely to increase.

“As highlighte­d by The Trussell Trust reporting, there has been a 30% average increase in three-day emergency food supplies in the months after the introducti­on of Universal Credit.” The potential impact of the full introducti­on of Universal Credit was eased by direct payments to landlords, twice-monthly payments to claimants and greater support for claimants through the funding of the advice sector.

The Housing Executive added: “Whilst we welcome the amendments and nuances that have helped Northern Ireland cope with changes, there are inevitable concerns about the impact of welfare reform if the mitigation budget expires as planned in 2020.

“If appropriat­e legislatio­n was in place, there is potential to extend the use of discretion­ary housing payments on a wider basis in Northern Ireland to help mitigate the impacts of the loss of welfare supplement­ary payments for those struggling to make up their housing costs shortfall.

“Due to a lack of available smaller dwellings within Northern Ireland’s social housing stock, many tenants would be unable to move to a property with fewer bedrooms – even if they are willing to do so.”

Northern Ireland’s Housing Executive is facing a black hole SANDRA MOORE BELFAST YESTERDAY

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? WARNING Welcome Organisati­on chief Sandra Moore yesterday
WARNING Welcome Organisati­on chief Sandra Moore yesterday
 ??  ?? FEARS Sandra with provisions for homeless
FEARS Sandra with provisions for homeless

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