South Leicestershire Lib Dems call for Winter Fuel Payments to be backdated for local pensioners.

South Leicestershire’s Liberal Democrats have called on the Government to backdate the Winter Fuel Payment for local pensioners who lost out last winter.

Under the Government’s plans, all pensioners earning £35,000 a year or less will now have their Winter Fuel Payments reinstated this winter. However, those who are now eligible but lost out last winter won’t be reimbursed under the Government’s plans.

Paul Hartshorn has now called on the Government to backdate the support for pensioners in South Leicestershire who were stripped of the winter fuel payment last winter and are now entitled to support this time.

The local Liberal Democrat Paul Hartshorn said “it is the least pensioners deserve” after countless people were forced to choose between heating and eating after “the Government’s disastrous decision”.

Liberal Democrat Spokesperson for South Leicestershire, Paul Hartshorn   said:

“I am glad that the Government has finally listened to the Liberal Democrats and other tireless campaigners in realising what a disastrous policy this was for elderly people in South Leicestershire. 

 

 “I heard countless stories from people here in South Leicestershire who were struggling to make ends meet after this support was stripped away. If the Government has truly ‘listened’ they should be backdating these payments to all those who lost support last winter but will receive it this time around.

“It is the least pensioners deserve after what they had to suffer through this winter. The Liberal Democrats will be pushing the Government every step of the way in Parliament, to force their hand and get these payments backdated.”

ENDS

Childcare desert: Leicestershire sees 407 childcare places lost since 2019

13 May 2024
Four toddlers playing with plastic bricks.

There has been a 407 fall in the number of childcare places in Leicestershire since 2019, House of Commons Library research commissioned by the Liberal Democrats has revealed.

It comes as applications open today (13th May) for parents to register for 15 hours of free childcare from September for children from 9 months old. The Liberal Democrats said the fall in providers was putting the deliverability of the government’s plans into doubt and leaving parents in “without options.” The party is calling on the Government to review the rates paid to providers for free hours to ensure they cover the actual costs of delivering high-quality childcare. 

In 407 childcare places have been lost since 2019, falling from 18,821 to 18414. It equates to a 2.16% fall in the number of places. If applicable: The number of childcare providers in Leicestershire has also seen a decline, with their now being 180 fewer than in 2019, a 20.74% fall.

Nationally, the number of childcare providers, including nurseries and childminders, has dropped by a fifth since 2019, from 61,162 to 48,143. Every area in the country but one has seen a fall in the number of childcare providers since 2019, leaving parents with less choice as to where they can get childcare.

Last month the National Audit Office criticised the Government’s roll out saying that dates for the scheme were decided without the DfE or the Treasury understanding whether the sector would be able to provide the number of places needed. It recommended the DfE continuously review the expansion in case it needs to relook at the timeline due to concerns about place numbers and staffing.

Liberal Democrat parliamentary candidate for South Leicestershire, Paul Hartshorn, said:

“Childcare in South Leicestershire has been driven to the brink by years of neglect from this Conservative Government. Local parents have been left completely without options.

“Free hours are no good if parents can’t find a nursery or childminder for their child – and thanks to this Conservative government’s underfunding, many parents in South Leicestershire now face a near impossible task of finding childcare.  

“The government urgently needs to review the rates it pays providers to ensure they cover the actual costs of delivering high-quality childcare and early years education.”

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