A single mother with eight children who receives £2,000 a month in state
handouts has complained she is struggling to make ends meet.
Marie Buchan, 31, whose children range in age from 12 to two months, lives
in a three-bedroom housing association house in Selly Oak, Birmingham, but says
it's not big enough and has applied for a bigger one.
And she says her benefits payments, which were reduced from £582 a week to
£500 a week in September after the government introduced a cap on handouts, are
not enough for her family to survive on.
Now Miss Buchan, who is £2,000 in arrears with her rent, says she fears she
may be evicted after falling behind with her rent.
She said: 'The benefit cap has hit me hard - money is very tight. I am
£82-a-week worse off and, when you have eight children, every penny counts.
'I don’t waste my money - everything goes on my children. It is tough
bringing up eight children on your own, a constant battle.
'I feel the threat of eviction all the time. I have already been to court
once due to rent arrears and I fear I may be dragged there again.
'I am scrimping and saving to try to get the arrears down but it is very
difficult.'
Miss Buchan's financial problems are compounded by the fact that she owes
£600 in bus lane fines after receiving ten tickets for straying in bus lanes in
Birmingham city centre in three days.
Miss Buchan, pictured with her eight children aged two months to 12 years, has run up bus fines of £600
She says she was caught in bus lanes while looking for a parking space when
taking her baby, Olivia, to hopsital for treatment for bronchiolitis.
Miss Buchan, a tenant of Bourneville Village Trust in the south-west of
Birmingham, used to receive £385 a week in child tax credit, £100 child benefit
and £97 income support.
But the benefits cap, introduced earlier this year by the Department for
Work and Pensions (DWP) to reduce the burden on the state, limited her handouts
to £500 a week.
Miss Buchan, whose relationship with her former partner and father of all
her children ended this year, has children Tia, 12, Leah, 11, Latoya, eight,
Joshua, seven, Alisha, five, Mikayla, three, Amelia, two, and two-month-old
Olivia.
She sleeps with three of her children in one bedroom of her £200,000 semi,
while another four share a second room and Joshua has the third to himself.
She was on the waiting list for a four-bedroom home but has been removed
from the list after falling behind with her rent.
A DWP spokesman said: 'The benefit cap sets a fair limit to what people can
expect to get from the welfare system.
'Claimants cannot receive more than £500 a week, the average household
earnings.
'We have been working with claimants for 18 months to help them prepare for
the cap.
'Already 18,000 people potentially affected have been helped into work, as
those receiving working tax credits are exempt.'
Bournville Village Trust spokesman said: 'It is normal policy for social
housing landlords not to transfer households to larger properties when there
are rent arrears, especially of this level.'
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