The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Welfare fund underutili­sed – group

- CRAIG PATON

A fund from the Scottish Government set up to address acute poverty has been underutili­sed during the pandemic, poverty advisers have claimed.

The Scottish Welfare Fund (SWF) offers grants to people in need and is administer­ed through local authoritie­s.

Community care grants are issued to people to allow them to continue to live in their community, while crisis grants are often smaller and used to cover immediate emergency costs.

In a new report from the Poverty and Inequality Commission (Pic), the group says that just 15% of the total budget of the fund – £8.6 million – was used between April and June.

Proportion­ally, the fund should have paid out 25% of its funding – the equivalent of £14.4m – during the same period.

“The money allocated to the Scottish Welfare Fund is not being used to maximum benefit. REPORT

The spending of the fund during lockdown was also £1.1m lower than the same period in 2019.

The report accepted that some of the fund may have been held back by local authoritie­s to cope with any second wave of coronaviru­s or to combat the economic fallout of the pandemic, but added: “Neverthele­ss, in the three months at the epicentre of the biggest public health crisis in over a century, it does not seem right that the money allocated to the Scottish Welfare Fund is not being used to maximum benefit.”

The Scottish Government boosted money for the fund in response to the pandemic, with an extra £45m made available in March, more than doubling its previous £35.5m budget.

Pic chairman Bill Scott said the effect of the pandemic on those with low incomes was “drastic”, adding: “We know that local authority staff have been committed and worked diligently through a challengin­g time to meet the needs of vulnerable people.

“Yet, the SWF remains underutili­sed, to the detriment of those who need access to its funding the most.”

Local authority body Cosla said it was “disappoint­ed” the Pic did not approach them during its analysis “to better understand the experience and challenges of delivering the fund during the pandemic”.

Councillor Kelly Parry, the community wellbeing spokesman at Cosla, said: “However, we welcome the observatio­ns and any opportunit­y to work with the commission and the Scottish Government to strengthen local approaches while retaining local discretion to meet unique local needs.”

The report also suggested improvemen­ts should be made to the monitoring of the SWF.

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