MIKE
HEDGES AM WELCOMES THE FIRST MINISTER’S COMMITMENT TO DEALING WITH CHILD
POVERTY.
Speaking from his Senedd Office, Swansea East
AM Mike Hedges said…. ‘Child poverty is a blight on our society and it is a
situation we all ought to be committed to eradicating. I am pleased with the
First Minister’s response; we ought not to need a discretionary assistance
fund, but the sad reality is that it has acted as a last resort for a number of
people, including many single parent families. It often provides funds for some
of the bare essentials for life such as a cooker or a settee. The Welsh
Government can take pride that it stands by people in their hour of greatest
need and ensures that they can have essential items for their life. I am glad
that the First Minister confirmed an ongoing commitment to this fund.’
Mike Hedges AM
OAQ55025
2. What action is the Welsh Government taking to support children
in poverty in Wales? OAQ55025
First Minister of Wales
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I thank Mike Hedges for that question. The major levers for
addressing child poverty remain firmly with the UK Government. The Welsh
Government is focused on using devolved powers to leave more money in the
pockets of families with children, particularly those children living in poverty.11
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Can I thank the First Minister for that response? I very much
welcome that the Welsh Government has committed to additional funding for the
discretionary assistance fund, which has helped individuals and their families
during times of crisis and, quite frankly, destitution. To ensure the fund's
long-term future, additional funding will be required. Will the First Minister
outline his proposals for the fund in future years?12
First Minister of Wales
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I thank Mike Hedges for that supplementary question. He is
absolutely right to point to the success of the decision made here in the
National Assembly to have a national scheme. When the social fund was abandoned
by the UK Government, here in Wales we decided that we would have a fund that
would be run on a Wales-wide basis with no local lottery in it. In England, we
know that many local authorities took the money that they were given when the
social fund was broken up and provide no service for poor people with it at
all.13
Here, we have helped 280,000 applications to the fund since its
inception. The budget has increased year on year in this Assembly term. It was
£7 million in the first year of this Assembly term; it's £11.2 million in this
year. It went up £2 million in this financial year; it will go up by another £1
million in the next financial year. The number of applications has gone up
remarkably quickly in an age of austerity: 65,000 applications in the first
year of this Assembly term; 160,000 in this financial year, to the end of
December; so it's going to be more than 100,000 additional applicants to the fund.14
And not only have we sustained it, Llywydd, by more money to keep
the fund available to people, but we've extended its scope as well. We've made
sure that it can respond to the needs of refugees and asylum seekers here in
Wales. We've made sure it's available to people who are discharged from prison
with absolutely no possessions at all. I wish there wasn't a need for a
discretionary assistance fund. I wish that the social security system provided
people with enough to be able to meet their needs without this final safety net
of the welfare state. But while it is needed, here in Wales we go on investing
in it and making sure that those whose needs are the very toughest in our
society have somewhere in Wales that they can go.
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