The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Claim welfare system works – as 5,000 Scots get emergency grants

Benefit claimants forced to seek handouts to cope with delays in receiving payments

- KIERAN ANDREWS kiandrews@thecourier.co.uk

The UK welfare secretary has insisted the Universal Credit system gets Scots back to work as it emerged more than 5,000 people needed emergency grants last year because of benefit delays.

Conservati­ve minister Esther McVey visited Forster Group in Brechin with Angus MP Kirstene Hair yesterday to learn about the company’s training programme for young people and its new Constructi­on Learning Centre.

Figures released by the Scottish Government showed 7,385 households received crisis cash in Tayside and Fife over the past five years.

Nationally, that figure was more than 48,000 with one in 10 citing delayed benefits payments as the reason for requiring the handout.

Ms McVey argued the UK Government’s controvers­ial system works by personalis­ing training to help people back into work.

She said: “I gave a very recent speech about what is the vision of the welfare state and that personalis­ed support as we live in a technologi­cal world and age.

“How do we empower the individual through whether it’s training, getting a job? How do we do that in a modern society? That IT, that training, that budgeting is key but it is all about personalis­ation.

“It is about allowing the individual to fulfil their potential in whatever sphere that is. Today we are specifical­ly looking at constructi­on, we are looking at roofing, we are looking at solar power, but that is what we’ve got to do across the board.

“That is what it is all about. Support for the individual to fulfil their potential.”

Scotland’s employment rate stands at 75.5%, an increase of 1.4 percentage points on last year.

Yet a total of 296,520 households across the country have been helped by the Scottish Welfare Fund since it was establishe­d by ministers in April 2013.

In just the first three months of 2018, Scots received £1,451,162 so they could buy food, with a further £519,418 going towards helping people heat their homes.

SNP social security secretary ShirleyAnn­e Sommervill­e said she was pleased Scottish ministers had been able to provide a “vital lifeline” to households in need. She also said she was “angry” that UK Government welfare cuts were pushing more people into poverty.

Ms Sommervill­e said: “Any of us can face an unexpected expense. But that is harder to absorb if you are already struggling to survive. At those times it is only right that government offers support rather than a cold shoulder.”

Powers over a number of benefits, including carers’ allowances, disability assistance and maternity grants, are being transferre­d to Holyrood although there have been concerns the timescale might slip because of problems setting up an IT system.

That is what it is all about. Support for the individual to fulfil their potential. ESTHER MCVEY WELFARE SECRETARY

 ?? Picture: Paul Reid. ?? From left: company owner and chairman John Forster, DWP Secretary Esther McVey, Jack Davey, Kirstene Hair MP, Jack Napier and Maureen Douglas, HR director at Forster Group in Brechin.
Picture: Paul Reid. From left: company owner and chairman John Forster, DWP Secretary Esther McVey, Jack Davey, Kirstene Hair MP, Jack Napier and Maureen Douglas, HR director at Forster Group in Brechin.

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