Essay sample library > The Bedroom Tax: Is It Fair?

The Bedroom Tax: Is It Fair?

2023-03-29 03:43:19

(Telecom, 2013) So what is the solution? I think that the solution is in local governments and central government. Housing policies must be changed urgently in order to provide additional small houses to allow families to move from larger homes. Without this, families will continue fighting high rents and the country will have to keep paying HB's high cost in the private sector. In addition, the Board of Directors should allocate tenants to accommodation sizes of appropriate size when borrowing the property, and to agree to move if the situation changes.

Last year I talked to a family who was trying to get over the crackdown on bedroom taxes at their small parliament building. Kay Harris (above picture) lives with her husband Terrance and his son Gareth at a three bedroom house in Betws in South Wales. When the coalition government introduced so-called "inadequate occupancy rates," Kay was forced to pay her housing association 127 pounds per month. This is a small box room that is used this week with her grandchildren every weekend. As she said to me then, the cost embarrassed her, she could not afford to barely buy groceries. In the old mining area where she lives, many of her friends and neighbors encountered the same problem. She has been against the bedroom tax since 2013 and is doing her best to help people appeal.

After the introduction of the bedroom tax (informal occupancy rate) in the 2012 Welfare Reform Law, physically handicapped activists played an important role in developing bedroom tax protests. It is estimated that various welfare changes will have a disproportionate impact on people with disabilities and endanger the rights of persons with disabilities independent living. In 1948, the watershed of motion proved the existence of physical and procedural barriers. This evidence is the norm for providing facilities accessible to people with disabilities. This specification specifies the minimum requirements for accessible physical access and program access. Examples of obstacles include provision of access only to the building, lack of maintenance of sidewalks, places unrelated to public transportation, lack of visual and auditory communication, ultimately becoming independent, participate in the disabled And may separate from opportunities.

There is a reason for fair tax fair tax deduction. It is an official proposal, not a general term. This differs greatly from the progressive income tax system and single tax. It is not taxation on income. Fair tax will replace all existing income taxes with a single consumption tax - payroll tax. The proposed tax will be 30% tax on purchase of new products and services, except for the necessity arising from "pre-sales". "Prepay" is similar to refunds and becomes available at the beginning of each month, so tax-exemptions are basically applied to certain purchases.