17.06.22
With petrol prices set to hit
£2 a litre, food inflation predicted to reach a 20-year high of 11% this summer
and gas and electricity bills rocketing, the UK is facing a cost of living crisis.
But Cardiff Council is overseeing the distribution of almost £2.2m worth of grants to ease the burden on those households in the city who are most in need.
The Council has been allocated the money as part of the Welsh Government’s £177m Cost of Living Support Scheme. Much of this is going towards a £150 payment to eligible households but £25m has also been set aside for a Discretionary Scheme. This allows local authorities to support households they consider in need of extra help with their living costs, and Cardiff Council’s share amounts to £2.193m.
A report on the Cost of Living Support Scheme will be considered by the Council’s Cabinet meeting on June 23 when members will be recommended to help the most vulnerable households in the city through this Discretionary Scheme.
Cllr Chris Weaver, the Cabinet member for finance, modernisation and performance, said: “It’s clear that everyone’s bills are rising at an unprecedented rate at the moment and we are looking to help anyone who feels unable to cope, whether you are on benefits or experiencing in-work poverty – please come and talk to us.
“We are all too aware of the cash crisis people are facing just from the huge increase in demand we are seeing on council services, with more and more people coming forward looking for help.
“Through the support schemes, we have paid 86% of eligible households in Cardiff – around 76,000 – the £150 payment. That amounts to everyone who had applied as of last Monday and everyone who didn’t need to apply because we already held their bank account details. But clearly there are other households which have yet to apply, despite receiving letters from us.
“We’ll be writing to them again and emphasising that we are turning around requests for payments within a week. The money is here for them, they just need to apply for it.”
Details on whether you
qualify for the £150 are available here (Cost of living support payment(cardiff.gov.uk)) alongside information on how to apply.
At the moment, the £150 payment is being made to all households living in properties in council tax bands A-D, and those in band E who get a disability band reduction and any property receiving council tax reduction irrespective of their band. In Cardiff, these payments will total more than £13.3m.
The Discretionary Scheme allows councils to make payments to households who are not covered by the main scheme and to make additional payments or cover the cost of essential services, like energy bills or rent. It will be paid by two methods – one means-tested and other not means-tested.
Eligible groups not requiring
means testing could include:
The council is also planning
to make means-tested payments to help people receiving benefits via these
schemes and services:
If agreed by Cabinet, and to encourage take up of the Discretionary Scheme, the Council is planning a publicity campaign which will see information available at its Hubs, through its Adviceline (029 2087 1071) and the Money Advice Team, on social media and its website. Letters will also be sent to households receiving benefits.
“Using the Discretionary
Scheme and targeting the payments in these ways should ensure those most in need
receive the most help,” said Cllr Weaver. “We will also be investigating ways
in which any money unspent in the main fund can be diverted into the
discretionary scheme.”