Latest news in Yorkshire: September 01, 2017 01:38:39 PM
Extra financial support is being offered to vulnerable young people in Rotherham after plans to exempt care leavers from paying Council Tax were revealed.
Rotherham Council is proposing that all care leavers under the age of 21, or up to 25 if they are still in full time education, should be free from having to pay any Council Tax.
The plans are to be decided by the Council’s Cabinet next month.
Leader of Rotherham Council, Councillor Chris Read, said: “When any young person sets up home on their own for the first time, paying bills can come as a bit of a shock.
“But for care leavers this can be even more difficult to manage, so through acting as corporate parents and taking care of our own, we can help in those first few years of independent living.
“We are one of the first councils in our part of the world to be adopting this sort of policy, which reflects our changing priorities to ensure that we give more Rotherham young people the best possible start in life.”
The move is being considered following a report by The Children’s Society, a national charity which supports vulnerable children, including in Yorkshire. The report suggested that care leavers are a particularly vulnerable group when it comes to accruing Council Tax debt. The charity found that it can be challenging for care leavers when moving into independent accommodation and beginning to manage their own budget fully for the first time and that falling behind with their Council Tax payments is a particular problem.
The Children’s Society has been calling on local authorities across the country to exempt care leavers up to the age of 25 from council tax and 29 have already agreed the recommendations. Rotherham would be an early adopter of the scheme, if the proposals are passed.
If agreed around 45 current care leavers living within and outside the borough will benefit from the exemption. The cost to cover this would be £13,000 with similar costs year on year, depending on the numbers of care leavers per year.
Peter Grigg, Director of External Affairs at The Children’s Society added:“Care leavers have often experienced a really difficult upbringing and they may have experienced abuse, neglect or family breakdown which can have a big impact upon their life chances.
“Without the family support most young people get as they become adults, care leavers often struggle to juggle their household bills and make ends meet.
“Many find themselves in debt, or having to go without food or other basic necessities.
“To expect some of the country’s most vulnerable people to start paying council tax just days after leaving care is setting them up to fail.
“This would be a welcome step in the right direction by Rotherham.”
The Council’s Cabinet will review the plan at its meeting on September 11.
- New Deputy Lieutenants appointed
- Work begins on Gulliver’s theme park
- Hyperloop One to build super-fast underwater transport system
- Rotherham care homes could close
- SYP to launch Safe Pass initiative
- Convicted sex attacker back in court for possession of indecent images
- Doncaster man jailed for possession of Class A drugs
- Hillsborough jurors must ‘ignore’ claim gate was forced
- A VOLUNTEER SHOT
- Stopped. Searched. Shamed.
- E-fit released in connection to Doncaster assault
- Driver dies in M1 collision
- Man jailed for taxi driver robbery
- NHS Trust looks to Doncaster school for future staff
- Day of action disrupting criminal activity and protecting vulnerable people
- Sheffield charity taxi with a pub in the front seat
- African mosaic
- Rotherham peer charged with rape and indecent assault
- Roads Policing Group launch Operation Illuminate
- Picture released by family
- Drugs, cash and vehicles seized in Rotherham
- Poundworld announce closures
- South Yorkshire Police calls for retired officers and staff to return to work amid pandemic
- Couple killed by Stocksbridge bypass collision
- Rotherham care figures soared this year with consequences
- Nigel Sanderson, missing from Sheffield?
- Information for fans ahead of SUFC v Nottingham Forest
- Rogue landlords pay the penalty
- New Barnsley Market Food Hall looking for fresh food traders
- Teen jailed for death of Samuel Baker, Sheffield
- Work begins on Gulliver’s theme park
- Reported sexual assault and theft
- Barnsley Safeguarding Children Board has changed its name
- Officers appeal for witnesses to Wath-upon-Dearne assault
- Teenager dies after falling ill on car journey to Rotherham
- Spooky Yorkshire Wildlife Park Weekend
- Council rolls out more safety measures for schools
- Motorcyclist left with life-threatening injuries following collision
- Creepy crawlies take centre stage at Yorkshire Wildlife Park
- tmptitle