HC Deb 21 November 1977 vol 939 cc461-2W
Mr. Sproat

asked the Secretary of State for Social Services (1) if he will make a statement on the conditions under which councillors can claim attendance money for council meetings while also drawing sickness benefit;

(2) how much councillors attending council meetings are allowed to claim for such attendance before it affects their sickness benefit claims.

Mr. Orme

Sickness benefit is payable only where the claimant is incapable of work because of specific disease or bodily or mental disablement. If a claimant does work on a particular day, he cannot be treated as incapable of work on that day, but if he does work under medical super vision as part of his treatment while he is a patient in or of a hospital, or work which he has good cause for doing—normally interpreted as being on the advice of his own doctor—he may earn up to £10 a week net.

The independent authorities who decide claims to sickness benefit may accept that attendance at a council meeting is permitted, provided that incapacity for work continues; the claimant's doctor gives prior approval; and that earnings are not more than £10 a week.

Mr. Sproat

asked the Secretary of State for Social Services how much councillors are allowed to claim for attending council meetings without their unemployment benefit being affected.

Mr. Orme

The allowance payable to councillors for attending council meetings is regarded as "earnings" by the independent adjudicating authorities who decide claims to benefit. Consequently, a councillor cannot receive unemployment benefit for any day in respect of which such an allowance is payable unless the allowance does not exceed 75p and certain other conditions are met.