§ Mr. BattleTo ask the Secretary of State for the Environment how many people have been exempted from paying community charge(a) by each category of exemption, (b) in Leeds, West, and (c) in England and Wales.
§ Mr. KeyThe categories for which information is available are given in the table. No information is available for Leeds, West. Figures for Wales are a matter for my right hon. Friend the Secretary of State for Wales.
231W
Estimated numbers exempt from community charges in England at 1 June 1990 Numbers Members of visiting forces, international headquarters and defence organisations and their dependants. Including diplomats 40,000 Severely mentally impaired 97,000
Numbers Aged 18 who attract child benefit because they are still at school, of aged 18 or 19 and on full-time courses of further, but not higher education 179,000 Full time students whose term time address is in Scotland or Northern Ireland 2,500 Members of religious communities 11,000 Patients whose main residence is in an NHS hospital 42,000 People whose sole or main residence is in a residential care home, a nursing home, a mental nursing home, a private hospital, or a hostel providing a substantial level of care, and who are also being treated or cared for in such an institution 321,000 Residential care workers employed at a very low salary 1,500 In detention 45,000 Total of categories listed 739,000
§ Mr. BlunkettTo ask the Secretary of State for the Environment if he will list for each local authority district area the latest figures on the number of premises liable for the standard community charge.
§ Mr. PortilloI am arranging for the available information to be placed in the Library of the House.
Properties subject to a standard charge with a multiplier of zero are not included.
§ Mr. BlunkettTo ask the Secretary of State for the Environment what monitoring is being undertaken by his Department on the operation of the rules relating to exemption from the poll tax for those suffering from severe mental impairment; and if he will make a statement.
§ Mr. PortilloMy Department is in constant touch with local authorities on all aspects of the community charge. We also maintain close contact with officials in the Department of Health on issues relating to the exemption for persons with a severe mental impairment. Supplementary advice on the exemption was sent on 2 July 1990 to community charge registration officers and general medical practitioners from both Departments.
§ Mr. BlunkettTo ask the Secretary of State for the Environment (1) if he will publish the latest figures on the number of people who have been exempted from the poll tax due to(a) severe mental impairment, (b) residence in a hospital or home, (c) aged under 20 years at school or in further education, (d) membership of visiting forces, (e) persons in detention, (f) membership of a religious order, (g) homelessness and (h) others;
(2) if he will publish his best estimates of the number of people classified as suffering from mental illness who have been granted poll tax exemption under the severe mental impairment provisions;
(3) if he will publish his best estimates of the number of people classified as suffering from severe dementia who have been granted poll tax exemption under the severe mental impairment provisions.
§ Mr. PortilloThe estimated numbers exempt from community charges in England at 1 June 1990 are as follows:
232W
Number Severely mentally impaired 97,000 Patients whose main residence is in an NHS hospital or people whose sole or main residence is in a residential care home, a nursing home, a mental nursing home, a private hospital, or a hostel providing a substantial level of care, and who are also being treated or cared for in such an institution 363,000 Aged 18 who attract child benefit because they are still at school, or aged 18 or 19 and on full-time courses of further, but not higher, education 179,000 In detention 45,000 Members of visiting forces, international headquarters and defence organisations and their dependants. Including diplomats 40,000 Members of religious communities 11,000 Persons without fixed abode or living in short stay hostels n.a. Residential care workers employed at a very low salary, and full time students whose term time address is in Scotland or Northern Ireland 4,000 Note: Separate information is not available on the number of exemptions of people classified as suffering from severe dementia or mental illness.
n.a. Not available.
§ Mr. BlunkettTo ask the Secretary of State for the Environment if he will(a) place copies in the Library of all material produced by his Department designed to promote awareness of the right to poll tax exemption for certain groups of people and (b) state the level of expenditure being incurred on such material; and if he will make a statement.
§ Mr. PortilloCopies of all departmental published material on exemptions from the personal community charge, including circular letters sent out to all community charges registration officers have been placed in the Library.
The cost of producing this material has been approximately £1.2 million so far.
§ Mr. Ieuan Wyn JonesTo ask the Secretary of State for the Environment if he will seek to introduce legislation to prevent district councils from recovering poll tax debts from individual housing benefit allocations.
§ Mrs. Gillian ShephardI have been asked to reply.
Legislation does not provide for local authorities to recover arrears of community charge from housing benefit.