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Re: Bedroom Tax At Last, Our Council Speaks Out.
Are the banks going to start charging for a person to hold an account? If they are, that bit of news slipped by me.
I know that banks do have accounts which you pay for(ours is something like 12.50 per month)...and the bank 'gives' you(that's laughable) a series of perks. Each time I go to the bank I am cajoled, to try and get me to convert my basic current account to one of these.......I won't do it. They have my money...from which they make money by lending it to other people at a rate of interest that savers can barely dream about.....I get so little on my savings account, that if I were to be told I was paying to hold my money in the bank, I would be tempted to draw it all out and bury it in the backyard. I recently went into the bank to withdraw some money(and it wasn't a vast sum I was taking out)....they wanted proof of identity.........I have banked with the same bank for 49 years.......they wanted photo ID....I didn't have any photo ID other than my bus pass. So my husband had to take the money out because he has a driving licenece with his mugshot on it. I was asked what I wanted the money for........I was as mad as hell about it....what business is it of the bank, to know just what I am doing with my money? Blooming cheek(I really wanted to put something else, but stopped myself) The recent business in Cyprus has left me feeling even more disillusioned with the security of money in banks. |
Re: Bedroom Tax At Last, Our Council Speaks Out.
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Re: Bedroom Tax At Last, Our Council Speaks Out.
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Re: Bedroom Tax At Last, Our Council Speaks Out.
And just who would you put in the place of the tories then.......there doesn't seem to be a lot of fiscal innovation in that mauve lot.........I think they call themselves New Labout, but believe me, they are just tories in a shabby coat.
Politicians of all colours....all parties...... have no interest in improving the lot of the common man....they just want to do what is best for themselves and tell us to sit down shut up, be quiet and pay our dues.......they do not inhabit the same world that we walk in, they are not subject to the same privations that we endure....so they know absolutely nothing about what we think or feel.........thet have their bills paid their homes supplied and paid for by us, and when their time in the POW is over they have nice lucrative careers because of the contact they made in the POW. |
Re: Bedroom Tax At Last, Our Council Speaks Out.
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Why should banks give you a free service? |
Re: Bedroom Tax At Last, Our Council Speaks Out.
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While they might not actually charge you for your account, the banks make money from the accounts that they manage....which includes your money and my money. I think that most banks realise that if they do start charging for accounts there will be folk who will move their money to where no charge is made for basic bank accounts. I do not want the fancy perks.......the money off when you shop at Argos, or the roadside assistance, insurance on my techno stuff(it is all covered by my house insurance anyway)....all I want is to have my money in a safe place, be able to pay my bills and put a little bit by for a rainy day......now, if they don't want to handle my money...then, I will move it to somewhere that does. |
Re: Bedroom Tax At Last, Our Council Speaks Out.
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Even if an EU migrant is eligible for housing, if they are applying for assistance under Part 7 of the 1996 Housing Act (the homelessness provisions) they must also be unintentionally homeless and fall into a priority need category, as defined by section 189 of the 1996 Act, before they can qualify for assistance.17 Section 185(4) of the 1996 Act had required authorities to disregard ineligible family members when reaching a decision over whether an applicant has a priority need for accommodation. Thus if a dependent child was ineligible, even though his/her parents were eligible, the family was treated as not being in priority need and no statutory duty to house the family arose (but see below). Subsequently the Labour Government tabled amendments to the 2008 Housing and Regeneration Act during its passage through parliament to remedy this declaration of incompatibility across the UK. With effect from 2 March 2009 section 314 and Schedule 15 of the 2008 Act amended the 1996 Housing Act and the 1999 Immigration and Asylum Act so that the requirement to disregard ineligible household members when considering whether an eligible applicant is homeless or has a priority need for accommodation, no longer applies. Describing the effect of the amendments, the then Minister, Iain Wright said: …in summary the issue at stake is what help British citizens whose household includes members with different immigration status should get if they become homeless. The amendments will ensure that in future, households in those circumstances will be provided with suitable accommodation, while continuing to ensure that people from abroad with no claim to UK public resources cannot confer entitlement to long-term social housing. Thus the entitlement of homeless households in this position is to an offer of suitable private rented accommodation and not to a social housing tenancy. |
Re: Bedroom Tax At Last, Our Council Speaks Out.
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Re: Bedroom Tax At Last, Our Council Speaks Out.
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