Hey Scotland, good on ya.
A great day for Scotland, I do not need to say more.
It's been a great week or so thus far though. A few days ago with STUC and Labour backing the SNP have begun asking the British government for a further
£15 million for our emergency budget to help mitigate the worst of the effects of the Bedroom Tax in Scotland.
For those that do not yet know the so-called Bedroom Tax is a cut in housing benefit of around £14-£16 pounds a week for those who own what is defined as a "spare room". Children under the age of 16 are expected to share bedrooms. Parents who are separated and keep a spare room for their children will also feel the cut.
The thinking behind this is that there are, according to modern Tory ideology, "benefits scroungers" who live in houses that are too big and hog benefits and all the rest of it. Therefore we should be taxing those scroungers to pay for the mistakes of our unspeakably wealthy banking elite. In truth only 0.7% of benefits are fraudulently claimed, twice as much remains unclaimed by people who, by rights, should claim. The Conservatives suggest getting a lodger to help pay the rent. That may work for stately homes but it does not work for council houses that you can barely swing a cat in.
The thing is though - in order to receive the housing benefit you have to earn less than £16,000 a year (around $26,000 a year). That means, by Scottish standards, you have to be "poor" in order to be taxed. I know that some Americans may sniff at that as being defined as poor but that's just our standards over here. Many of the people (I have heard "most", in Scotland at least) who claim housing benefit are disabled or suffer from mental health problems and thus have further problems that they must pay for (including debt), and when you have a large family as many of these people do then a cut in housing benefit can cause serious problems.
As tragic as it sounds a difference of £14 a week really does make the difference for a lot of people. A number of people affected by the tax who suffered from depression and other problems have actually committed suicide.
"I think it's absurd that we are having to try to jump through hoops trying to find money within a fixed budget to mitigate the impact of a policy that's opposed by a majority of Scottish parliament, opposed by a majority of the Scottish people, being imposed on us by a government we didn't vote for."
"It would make much more sense to have the powers of welfare in Scotland so that we don't have a bedroom tax in the first place. But we want to do the right thing."
Though the essence of this is all wrong - the ancient nation of Scotland asking the British government cap in hand for a bit of extra pocket money to spend mitigating the worst of the effects of British governmental mismanagement - I am glad to see Scotland united and working together to fight this issue.