What is the so-called 'bedroom tax'?
How many people will this affect?
Who will be affected?
Source: The National Housing Federation
Why do the government want to cut housing benefit?
We believe this tax is wrong. We believe thousands of people with a disability will face additional costs and may even lose their home because of this tax (the DWP estimates that 420,000 of the 660,000 to be initially affected by the tax are disabled). We are campaigning against this and we want your help.
Please tell us if this will affect you and what it will mean to you. People stories are one of the strongest ways we can show the unjust impact of this tax.
In addition please ask your MP to add their signature to an early day motion called under occupancy penalty and the vulnerable. You can view the motion on the parliament website by clicking here.
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Grainia Long, chief executive of the Chartered Institute of Housing, put it:
Other people are also unfairly affected ... people who need a bigger home because of a disability should also be exempt. We know that the open market doesn't cater particularly well for these people, and they should not be penalised for living in social housing when in many cases there is nowhere else for them to go.
National Housing Federation chief executive, David Orr, this week said:
The bedroom tax is still an unfair and perverse tax which will hit hundreds of thousands of vulnerable people living in social housing. They are being punished for a weak housing policy that for years has failed to build enough affordable homes.
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