Tags (All lower case. Use " " for multiple word tags):
Don't think you've really spent much time reading up on the bedroom tax. These are not 'under occupied' housing. They are just spare bedrooms. Council flats are generally built with three bedrooms so when one is emptly there is no available two bedroom flat to move to so people either have to do without or move, which often means moving out of the neighbourhood. Many people in Tottenham have had to move and then have all the hassle of finding a new place and then getting their kids to school in Haringey every day. It hasn't saved a penny and is a vindictive and nasty piece of class hatred. It is also a by product of the 'right to buy' which has seen one third of Haringey council housing sold off and not replaced. Many of these end up in the portfolios of private landlords who then get fat on housing benefit, which of course WE have to pay for.
I never had you figured for a right-winger FPR. You are arguing that the bedroom tax is in principle a good thing. Phillip has pointed out that in application it is a very bad thing.
You missed Tom Watson and Catherine West was council leader of the year in 2013 in Islington. She's a fabulous candidate, she has to be to go up against Lynne Featherstone.
Unfortunately the local Labour party used the bedroom tax argument in 2014 and it's just not as effective the second time around.
I think you make good points FPR. Due to Mrs Thatcher's Right-to-Buy, our social housing stock is much depleted, with Conservatives bent on reducing it even further. Their ill-considered Right-to-Buy would apply to Housing Associations, who are trying to do the right thing. This, despite the need: largely unmet and sometimes greater without, than within.
Those who might toss around "bedroom tax" too easily forget that a few of those currently not housed, are in greater need than some of those currently accommodated. Labour used to champion the least advantaged in society, but no more.
Outside of London, where there aren't one bedroom flats, this isn't working. It's just cruel. In principle making the most of your housing stock is right, in practice it's not.
Two wrongs don't make a right!
In principle making the most of your housing stock is right, in practice it's not.
John, you may need to 'unpack' this for me please and possibly others. I think you'd accept that the quantity of social housing stock is limited (always); how can it ever be right not to make the most of it?
i.e. manage it efficiently so as to do the greatest good for the greatest number?
You asked: "Since when was letting people stay in under occupied social housing a good idea ...?"
To repeat an old allegory I'm fond of, let's imagine we're the "blind men around the elephant."
Put aside a little time, and try a search engine. Put your search into a question form which which seeks to explore different sides of this argument. (E.g "bedroom tax good or bad?")
I found a number of blogs which defended the Bedroom Tax but admitted its flaws. For example, saying it was a good idea which was poorly executed; or as good in theory but wrong in fact. Although as you seem to start from the position that the Bedroom Tax is inherently a good thing, try these for balance.
© 2024 Created by Hugh. Powered by
© Copyright Harringay Online Created by Hugh