Daily Mirror

My wages no longer cover all that I have to pay out..

Council worker Mags’ shock after bills and prices soar

- BY BEN GLAZE Deputy Political Editor in Merthyr Tydfil @benglaze

THOUSANDS are expected to march in London today to demand Government action on standstill wages and the soaring cost of living.

The TUC We Demand Better rally comes as its analysis reveals working people lost nearly £20,000 in real earnings between 2008 and 2021 as a result of pay not keeping pace with inflation.

And the union body says the pay slump shows little sign of slowing, with real wages now worth £66 a month less than in 2008 and set to fall this year by more than £500.

The TUC says years of pay stagnation have left millions without a “safety net” and at the mercy of soaring bills and prices. In the run-up to the rally we spoke to people in the South Wales town of Merthyr Tydfil to find out how they are being affected.

One of those shocked by the price rises is Mags Davies.

Direct debits for utility costs would leave her online account every month, but in April her gas and electricit­y bill bounced. At first she blamed the bank but after checking she found her monthly bill had risen from £89 to £208. “My wages no longer covered everything I’d normally have to pay out,” she admitted. “I was upset, I just didn’t realise things had gone up so much. “There was total panic. I had to sit down and work out my bills and how I was going to reduce them.”

Mags needs her Peugeot to visit her sister Linda, 68, who has learning difficulti­es. Mags, who qualifies for a free bus pass, visits her twice daily, and would rely on the car in an emergency.

She has changed how she does her weekly shop. “I now do my main shop in Aldi,” said Mags, who works for Merthyr Council. “But I go one

week and it’s one price and then you go the next week and it’s 50p or 60p more. I go to Asda once a month to get the things I can’t get in Aldi.”

Unison member Mags, 62, takes a packed lunch to work to save money. Previously she would refill a 500ml bottle of Fanta from a two-litre flagon. “Now I buy Aldi’s own orangeade and refill from that,” she said.

Mags, who has two rescue dogs, has also noticed price spikes in pet food. “A year ago dog food was costing me £11 a week, now it’s £16.”

Mags is desperatel­y worried for the autumn when the energy price cap is due to climb from £1,971 per year to an estimated £2,800. “How are people managing who aren’t working? By Christmas we are going to have major problems,” she said.

Hundreds of trade unionists marked the anniversar­y of the 1831 Merthyr Rising last weekend, in which the Red Flag was raised for the first time as a symbol of working class rebellion. And campaigner­s in Merthyr Tydfil looked forward to today’s rally.

Labour’s local Senedd Member Dawn Bowden says demonstrat­ors will “demand better because working people deserve it”. She added: “They are as entitled to a decent standard of living and way of life as any of the privileged Old Etonian elite.”

National Union of Students Cymru chief Becky Ricketts told how students were using foodbanks. “It is desperate for our young people,” she said.

And locals on the streets of the town told how the crisis is affecting them.

Landscape gardener Dan Inglefield, 30, said: “It’s pretty tough. I must have spent £800 on oil that’s going to last me six, seven months maximum.

“I drive a pick-up truck. It costs me half the money I make just to get to the client and back.”

Kirsty Powles, 34, a mum of two who works for a health board, said: “In the supermarke­t normally I’d spend £100, now it’s costing £150. I used to spend £30 a week on petrol, now it’s £45. And it’s going to get worse.”

Daniel Davidson, 30, who lives in B&B accommodat­ion and has ADHD, said: “I’ve started to live on eggs, cheap tuna and 29p noodles.”

ben.glaze@mirror.co.uk

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