Yorkshire Post

‘Priority’ payments for victims to meet rent shortfalls

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GRENFELL TOWER victims could be hit by the so-called “bedroom tax” if they are rehoused in bigger homes but should be treated by councils as a “priority” for payments to offset its effect, the Government has said.

Residents of the west London tower block who are given bigger homes could be subject to the removal of the spare room subsidy, branded a bedroom tax by critics, the Department of Work and Pensions (DWP) said in an urgent bulletin.

Although the bedroom tax does not apply to people in temporary accommodat­ion, it may to victims housed in permanent accommodat­ion.

“We would advise that in these circumstan­ces any requests for a DHP (discretion­ary housing payment) to meet rent shortfalls should be treated as a priority,” the DWP said.

It is understood that the Government has identified DHPs as the quickest way to help those affected, but there is no guarantee that those moved into bigger housing will receive them for the duration of their tenancy.

Victims may also be forced to apply to their local authority for a payment, but councils are being encouraged to take into account whether they are placing victims in bigger homes and should be able to allocate them DHPs in those circumstan­ces.

Giles Peaker, a solicitor specialisi­ng in housing law, told

which first uncovered the DWP bulletin, that the Government will eventually have to find a longer-term solution.

“In the first place people should not be being put into properties where they would be subject to the bedroom tax,” he said.

“Any re-housing ought to be suitable, which would include affordabil­ity and the number of rooms. They would have a clear case for DHPs... but it’s not a permanent solution.”

The DWP has placed three specialist welfare advisers to help victims.

 ??  ?? Hundreds of tributes have been left at Notting Hill Methodist Church in west London to the victims of the Grenfell Tower disaster.
Hundreds of tributes have been left at Notting Hill Methodist Church in west London to the victims of the Grenfell Tower disaster.

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