The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Rudd urged to build on Universal Credit reform

Minister claims planned changes will help 15,000 families a year

- BY DAVID WILCOCK

Amber Rudd has been urged to take further steps to help people on Universal Credit after unveiling reforms of a system she said was not as “effective” or “compassion­ate” as she wanted.

Charities, church and union leaders spoke out after the work and pensions secretary said a plan to move three million people on to the single benefit payment would be delayed until 2020.

Ms Rudd also said a controvers­ial plan to apply a two-child benefit cap retrospect­ively to new Universal Credit (UC) claimants would be axed in a move that will help around 15,000 families.

She said it was not “reasonable” to impose the two-child cap – intended to force claimants to make decisions on whether they can afford a third child in the same way as those in work – on families which already have more than two offspring.

Ms Rudd also signalled an end is in sight for the longstandi­ng benefit freeze introduced by former chancellor George Osborne in 2016, saying “it should come to an end” in 2020.

However, she admitted she had yet to discuss extra funding with Chancellor Philip Hammond.

Other changes will make the system more “individual”, tailoring it to claimants’ needs by making payments more regular or paying rent money direct to landlords.

Shelter chief executive Polly Neate said the benefit freeze had been causing “real hardship”, including affecting people’s ability to pay their rent.

She said: “We hope the government is now waking up to the challenges faced by tens of thousands of households around the country who cannot wait until 2020 for the freeze to be lifted.

“They need action now to avoid homelessne­ss.”

Save The Children’s Steven McIntosh said the announceme­nts were “a step in the right direction”, but added: “Families are forced to pay sky-high childcare fees before waiting weeks to be paid back.

“This risks plunging families into debt or keeping parents out of work, underminin­g the whole system.”

The two-child cap limits support for families through tax credits, housing benefit and UC to the first two offspring.

Subsequent children, except in special cases, are not entitled to the “child element”, which is £2,780 a year.

Ms Rudd used her first major welfare speech to try to allay fears about the roll-out of UC.

The minister told an audience at a Jobcentre in Kennington, south London, that it was “not right” that the two-child limit was being made retrospect­ive from February.

She added: “All children born before that date will continue to be supported by Universal Credit. And that will help approximat­ely 15,000 families a year.”

But Unison general secretary Dave Prentis branded the remaining cap “morally wrong”, adding: “This is a highly flawed system that needs to be thoroughly rethought.”

 ??  ?? TURNAROUND: Amber Rudd said at London’s Kennington Jobcentre that it was “not right” that the two-child limit was being made retrospect­ive from February
TURNAROUND: Amber Rudd said at London’s Kennington Jobcentre that it was “not right” that the two-child limit was being made retrospect­ive from February
 ??  ?? Philip Hammond
Philip Hammond

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