Thursday, 5 December 2013

GOVT'S COLD HOMES SCANDAL


YESTERDAY, the Government rejected my amendments to the Energy Bill when I called for clear and unambiguous targets to eradicate fuel poverty.  

Today I witnessed the Chancellor compounding the living standards crisis and ignoring a golden opportunity to reverse decades of underinvestment in Britain’s ageing housing infrastructure.  He could have made up for the failings of the Energy Secretary by using today's occasion to reduce the rate of VAT on domestic renovation and repair and help to get Britain's million plus unemployed young people back to work.  

The inaction of the Energy Secretary and the Chancellor has left millions of households powerless in the face of rising fuel bills.  These millionaire ministers have failed to stand up for ordinary people and have capitulated to the Big 6 Energy Companies.  

They have proved themselves so out of touch with the lives of the British public that, rather than doing something about the rising numbers of people in fuel poverty struggling to pay their fuel bills, they've simply changed the definition of what constitutes fuel poverty!  

Even though there was a 29% increase in the number of excess winter deaths last winter, ministers smugly claim they've secured a good deal for people by knocking £50 off the increase in energy bills. But people's fuel bills are still going up by at least £70, placing even more people in the invidious position of choosing between putting food on the table or adequately heating their homes.

Brian Berry, Chief Executive of the Federation of Master Builders voiced his concern this afternoon when he said: “In his Autumn Statement George Osborne says he is backing British business and British families, and correctly named housing as the general public’s top infrastructure priority. 

"However, the Government continues to focus on big-ticket projects such as road and rail, which will be years in the planning and are unlikely even to begin within the term of this Parliament. 

"The Chancellor has missed an opportunity to reduce VAT on housing renovation and repair.  This would deliver an instant economic fillip to millions of households that are struggling with the ever-increasing cost of living and give Britain’s builders the boost they need to capitalise on the recovery."

Berry added: “Householders need more help to combat the rising cost of heating their homes, and lowering the rate of VAT charged on all housing renovation and repair would do this at a stroke.

He also echoed the point I made in the House of Commons on Wednesday about diverting the £4 billion raised annually in carbon taxes that could be earmarked for a mass programme of publicly funded energy efficiency improvements.

The sad irony of this latest Government debacle is that is that money is already in the system that could be used to fund these vital programme of works.  In addition to the £4 billion to which Berry refers, the Chief Medical Officer points out that for every pound spent tackling fuel poverty, NHS spending on treating cold related illnesses is reduced by 42 pence.  This would release around £1.3 billion to invest in insulating Britain's housing stock.  

So these bungling ministers continue to blunder while kids are left languishing on the dole and millions struggle to keep their homes warm.  This is a national scandal and demands urgent attention.  That's why I will continue to press the case for a national plan to end fuel poverty and ensure that no British citizen is forced to live in a cold home.

You can read the fuel poverty debate by clicking on this link: http://tinyurl.com/ppjbfqr

 

 

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