This will act as some motivating force! It will not.
The anti-homeless campainer is involved in a campaign to provide secure of tenure for residents. Her refusal, quite rightly, was based on the fact that accommodation offered by HAP is not secure, and can be withdrawn by a landlord, after 12 months putting the individual back to square one.
You may have noticed that she had a school going daughter. So not only is secure accommodation an issue, but school placement is another.
How many times should a person have to move home? How many schools should a child attend?
Again in the other part of your post, you are agreeing with almost everyone.
However, this is your solution:
Can you not see the gaping flaw in your logic - you want to reward those who sit around doing nothing with a house, welfare and a 52" TV, you are saying that this will keep them out of crime.
Nobody is jealous of them, we don't want their lifestyles - why should we pay for it?
In other words, its cheaper to provide a house, welfare, 52" TV, than it is to employ extra gardai, courts and prison services.
The way some people go on here, its as if they are jealous of their lifestyles.
We don't want to live in a community where we must pay people not to be criminals, where community projects go undone because taxes have to be diverted to this lark. It cuts the heart out of the community.
And I would say it is a since of indignation that some people expect the community to finance their lifestyle without making an contribution to society.
You have low expectations if somehow a 52" TV is considered a 'reward'. But I have offered my solution, or rather preferred option to welfare cuts, but I dont see alternatives being proposed other than cutting welfare.
I have argued why I think that is a bad idea, perhaps others will show how it would be a good idea?
You have low expectations if somehow a 52" TV is considered a 'reward'. But I have offered my solution, or rather preferred option to welfare cuts, but I dont see alternatives being proposed other than cutting welfare.
I have argued why I think that is a bad idea, perhaps others will show how it would be a good idea?
So what do you propose?
Can you tell where 'here' is?
Sorry, let me please clarify what I said because you seem to have a habit of responding to things that I didn't say.
You stated:
"In other words, its cheaper to provide a house, welfare, 52" TV, than it is to employ extra gardai, courts and prison services."
to which I responded:
"You want to reward those who sit around doing nothing with a house, welfare and a 52" TV, you are saying that this will keep them out of crime
If you think that my "expectations" are low, when I view a house, welfare and a 52 " TV as "rewards", then by the same token I would have to say that your "expectations" and your sense of entitlement is off the chart.
I think we've gone around this enough times. Have a nice afternoon.
Check my profile - Switzerland.
Well I can tell you what we do here:
Once off unemployment benefits, which is usually 400 working days, you have zero entitlements. Once you have consumed all your resources, including flogging the 52" TV on eBay you can apply to the community welfare officer who will decide what you need to have in order to live in that community as there are no automatic entitlements. If you are a young person who can't move back to live with parents, then you will be allocated a place in a dorm or if it is family a set of rooms to replace your rented accommodation. If say your daughter's class is going on a school field trip then the community will pay for this, you'll get food vouchers, cloths vouchers etc... but very little cash. In return you will be expected to work for the community and to pay them back once you have recovered your situation. A member of the community, usually a neighbour will be appointed to supervise you during the period. Their job is to make representations to the community on your behalf when you need something - like for instance your car needs to be repaired, that is assuming the community has agreed that you need a car in the first place.
Going on social support is something very few people do over here and when they do the are highly motivated to get off it ASAP. Very often the solution is to move to somewhere else and find a job. In the case of unskilled workers that often turns out to be a farm labour or maintenance work in the mountains.
Which is the type of system that we want here. Prior to the welfare cuts to under 26 years olds, I could never quite grasp the logic of handing an 18 year old €188 per week. Absolutely crazy and the best thing that could be done was cutting that.
Although I still think that €100 euro per week is way too much to give to someone who has never worked, who still lives at home and when you think that his parent received €140 a month, one would imagine that one way to tackle this would be to extend what is "child" benefit to a "lazy teenager" benefit, payable to the parent for a defined period, stopping if the teen hasn't either found a job or gone to college, and replacing it with a training or college payment if they have.
Incentive for the teen to earn or learn and an incentive for the parent to guide the teen to take up something, rather then sitting at home and doing nothing.
Except child benefit stops at the age of 18, so the parent isnt in receipt of the €140 anymore. Perhaps it is this misunderstanding of how the welfare system works that has people believing in the headline tripe.
Also, my understanding is that participation rates of school leavers to third level education or equivalent are quite high in this country. Which backs up my view that most people are prepared and willing to do something for themselves.
You really should try to read what I wrote, clearly you misunderstood, I said that when you consider that the parent received €140 per month up to the time the "child" reached 18, and on doing so the "adult" who is still living at home used to be entitled to (means tested of course) €188 a week, now reduced to €100 - the point still stands.
The parent's income has reduced by €140 and the "lazy teen" is being handed €100 a week - for nothing.
http://www.irishtimes.com/news/education/some-99-of-dublin-6-students-go-on-to-third-level-1.1901885
"Provisional figures from the [broken link removed] (HEA) show that only 15 per cent of young people from Dublin 17 – covering [broken link removed] and[broken link removed] – go on to third level.
And only 16 per cent of those in Dublin 10 – encompassing [broken link removed] and[broken link removed] – do likewise.
This compares to 99 per cent of school leavers in Dublin 6, an area that includes Ranelagh and Rathmines, and 84 per cent in Dublin 4."
Also, my understanding is that participation rates of school leavers to third level education or equivalent are quite high in this country. Which backs up my view that most people are prepared and willing to do something for themselves. Which undermines the deliberately misinformed and disingenuous title of this topic.
*sigh*.
That is the point.
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