iff12 said:Having lived in many properties with a lot of RA tenants, I found a lot of them were borderline if not totally substandard, but then again some of the tenants were total scum. I live in a house bought by my best friend which was formerly rented to RA tenants, and you wouldn't beieve the damage they did. So its hard really to argue a case either way.
What I do think is unfair is that its almost impossible to get social housing, yet the only requirement to get RA is to be on social welfare and either over a certain age or already living in rented accomodation. I think its particularly pernicious that a time waster of a teenager who doesn't want to work can get RA to live in a flat in town so they can socialise whereas the genuine teenager who wants to work cannot afford to move out due to high rents and low wages. And I have seen too many of the above. The same criteria applied to social housing should be applied to RA - it sems many get it just because they want it!!
Another aspect of this is that a child, working and living at home usually hands up some kind of rent/housekeeping. If they become unemployed they are not entitled to rent allowance, so the parents have to make up the shortfall in the family income. However, if the child leaves home and goes on unemployment benefit, they are entitled to the RA. Seems crazy to me. Surely there should be something other than 'all or nothing' for those who live with parents while unemployed?
The question is why is the state willing to pay more to keep famililes apart.
In fact anomalies such as the one outlined by daltonr exist despite, rather than because of, constitutional protection for families; Indeed, the state continues to exercise anti-family policies in both areas of welfare and tax.Presumably part of the issue is the constitutional definition of family which the state is obliged to defend/support? Until that is widened certain anomalies will persist.
Charlie McCreevy made a change a few years back, so that those unemployed living at home (in the early 90s there were quite a few) could only move out and apply for rent allowance if they could get a letter from a doctor alleging abuse against their parents.
Hardly the most family friendly way of sparing a few quid!
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