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Economic Development

Birmingham's bedroom tax fund nearly dry

Fears for poor as hardship pot for housing benefit changes in city set to run out

Jack Dromey

is on the verge of running out of money to help desperate families thrust into financial crisis by the controversial

The council has already given £3.8 million of its £4.1 million Discretionary Housing Fund to hard-up families and on the current trend will have spent the lot early in January.

The handouts are designed to help vulnerable people hit hardest by reductions in housing benefit because they have a spare room in their social rented properties, such as disabled people who require the room for carers or couples who cannot share due to severe illness or disability.

In Birmingham, 10,782 households have been hit by the bedroom tax since it was introduced in April 2013 and have to pay on average £16.42 per week to top up their housing benefit or move to a smaller property. This amounts to about £850 a year, with the worst affected losing £1,400.

So far this year about 6,600 grants have been paid from the discretionary fund, but with the money now running out Labour MP for Erdington Jack Dromey fears many will struggle to make ends meet before the fund is renewed in April.

Mr Dromey said: "Once in a generation, there is a tax so bad, so unfair that the next generation looks back and asks 'why did they do it? – such was the poll tax, now the bedroom tax.

"Over 10,000 households, with many disabled people, have been hit hard, 1,500 in Erdington alone, losing up to £1,400 per year.

"The Government claimed extreme hardship could be avoided by making discretionary hardship payments to the most vulnerable. But Birmingham runs out of money in January. Thousands face hardship at Christmas and a bleak New Year."