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Archbishop calls for cut to universal credit delays | Archbishop calls for cut to universal credit delays |
(35 minutes later) | |
The six-week waiting time for universal credit must be cut as the idea that people have a nest egg to fall back on is "grotesquely ignorant", the Archbishop of York has said. | The six-week waiting time for universal credit must be cut as the idea that people have a nest egg to fall back on is "grotesquely ignorant", the Archbishop of York has said. |
Writing in The Sunday Times, Dr John Sentamu said ministers must take a "courageous" look at the benefit. | Writing in The Sunday Times, Dr John Sentamu said ministers must take a "courageous" look at the benefit. |
Addressing the delay must be a priority, he said. | Addressing the delay must be a priority, he said. |
The government said it was determined to ensure people would not face hardship. | The government said it was determined to ensure people would not face hardship. |
Changes recently announced to the system of advanced payments meant people could access these as soon as they got into the system, a spokesman said. | Changes recently announced to the system of advanced payments meant people could access these as soon as they got into the system, a spokesman said. |
Universal credit rolls six working-age benefits into a single payment. | Universal credit rolls six working-age benefits into a single payment. |
Since it began rolling out four years ago, almost a quarter of the 610,000 claimants receiving the benefit have had to wait for a month and a half for the first payment. | Since it began rolling out four years ago, almost a quarter of the 610,000 claimants receiving the benefit have had to wait for a month and a half for the first payment. |
Although Dr Sentamu praised the concept of a single welfare payment, he wrote that the current system "seems to assume that everyone has a nest egg that will tide them over as they wait a minimum of 42 days for payouts". | Although Dr Sentamu praised the concept of a single welfare payment, he wrote that the current system "seems to assume that everyone has a nest egg that will tide them over as they wait a minimum of 42 days for payouts". |
"That assumption is grotesquely ignorant, because millions of people, especially those in need of support, are already in debt and have nothing to fall back on," he said. | "That assumption is grotesquely ignorant, because millions of people, especially those in need of support, are already in debt and have nothing to fall back on," he said. |
'Widows and orphans' | 'Widows and orphans' |
Dr Sentamu added that the UK's poorest were at risk of falling into a downward spiral of debt, with some taking out expensive loans to bridge the 42-day benefit gap, so that the repayment of loans or of interest "becomes the first call on any payment they receive". | Dr Sentamu added that the UK's poorest were at risk of falling into a downward spiral of debt, with some taking out expensive loans to bridge the 42-day benefit gap, so that the repayment of loans or of interest "becomes the first call on any payment they receive". |
He wrote: "In the Bible, the hardest-pressed of all poor people were summarised as 'widows and orphans' for they were the group most at risk and with least support. | He wrote: "In the Bible, the hardest-pressed of all poor people were summarised as 'widows and orphans' for they were the group most at risk and with least support. |
"Our concern should be for their present-day successors whose essential outgoings are costing more and more and their incomes standing still or going down." | "Our concern should be for their present-day successors whose essential outgoings are costing more and more and their incomes standing still or going down." |
'Difficult to justify' | |
Last week, Prime Minister Theresa May agreed to scrap premium rate charges for phone calls to the universal credit helpline, which can be up to 55p a minute. | Last week, Prime Minister Theresa May agreed to scrap premium rate charges for phone calls to the universal credit helpline, which can be up to 55p a minute. |
However, she refused to pause the roll-out of the scheme despite a non-binding vote by the opposition backing the move. Tory MPs were ordered to abstain from voting. | |
Stephen McPartland, a Conservative MP who threatened to rebel, told BBC Radio 4's Week at Westminster that he thought a resolution to the issue was close. | |
He would like a reduction in the delay to four weeks and said: " "I think the Secretary of State [David Gauke] has found it very difficult to justify inside the parliamentary party why they need to defend a six-week wait." |