Stephen Timms
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Age | 69 |
Web site | www.stephentimms.org.uk |
Date of birth | July 29,1955 |
Zodiac sign | Leo |
Born | Oldham |
United Kingdom | |
Spouse | Leng Lim |
Office | Member of Parliament of the United Kingdom |
Party | Labour Party |
Job | Politician |
Education | Sixth Form College, Farnborough |
Emmanuel College, University of Cambridge | |
Books | Broadband Communications: Market Strategies |
Broadband Communications: The Commercial Impact | |
Child Poverty Bill | |
The Faith Collection | |
Networked Multimedia: The Business Opportunity | |
Commercial Expert Systems in Europe | |
ISDN: Customer Premises Equipment | |
Official site | parliament.uk |
Position | Member of Parliament of the United Kingdom |
Member of Parliament of the United Kingdom since 1997 | |
Previous position | Shadow Minister for Employment of Government of the United Kingdom (2010–2015) |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 419683 |
Stephen Timms Life story
Sir Stephen Creswell Timms is a British politician who served as Chief Secretary to the Treasury from 2006 to 2007. A member of the Labour Party, he has been Member of Parliament for East Ham, formerly Newham North East, since 1994.
Cost-of-living payments don't last - food bank
... Sir Stephen Timms, who chairs the committee, said the data showed that regular benefits were now too low...
Pause benefit deductions for debt repayment - MPs
... Labour s Sir Stephen Timms, who chairs the committee, said: " Inflation is at a 40-year high, with spiralling energy, food and fuel prices adding up to a cost-of-living crisis not seen for a generation and a bleak outlook for many families...
Pensions: Millions receive wrong amount 'for decades'
... " It is worrying that the DWP s IT systems have not kept pace with the demands on them, " said Labour MP Sir Stephen Timms, chairman of the Work and Pensions Select Committee...
Queen's Jubilee birthday honours: Damian Lewis, Stella McCartney and Clare Balding on list
... Labour MP Nia Griffith and Conservative MP Maria Miller are also made dames in the list, while Labour MP Stephen Timms is knighted...
Coronavirus: Tell us your stories of performance claims, say MPs
... the Committee Chairman to Stephen Timms said the number of new claims was unprecedented ...
Amber Rudd links universal credit to rise in food bank use
... Pushed again on the cause of the issue by Labour s Stephen Timms, Ms Rudd added: I have acknowledged that people having difficulty accessing the money on time as one of the causes of the growth in food banks, but we have tried to address that...
Cost-of-living payments don't last - food bank
By Thomas MorganBBC News
Cost-of-living payments only provide temporary respite from the use of food banks, it has been claimed.
The UK's largest food bank provider, the Trussell Trust, said there was only a short-term dip in demand for their services after payments are made.
With The Next instalment going into accounts soon, it estimated The Money lasted only one to three weeks.
The government said the payments were delivering " quick and much-needed help" to millions of low-income households.
How the payments workThe support scheme, launched Last Year , has seen a series of payments made to more vulnerable people facing the financial challenges of the soaring cost of living.
Low-income households, pensioners and Some People with disabilities have benefited.
The largest current payment totals £900 and comes in three almost equal instalments paid during The Course of a little over a year. That goes to people on low-incomes who receive means-tested benefits such as universal credit and pension credit.
The Next payment will be made. The third will be made in spring next year.
Some older people and those with disabilities can be eligible as well as receiving additional payments.
Ministers said this formed part of " record" financial support worth £3,300 for families during the cost of living crisis, including support with energy bills.
'I'm left with approximately £10 after outgoings'Charities and recipients have warned that the temporary nature of the payments are a problem.
Jenni Galliford from Hampshire has received universal credit since 2018 and is looking for work.
She Said the payments were helpful, but were just a " sticking plaster" and she would rather see a permanent rise in universal credit to meet rising costs.
" It went back to the same after the payments because the cost of living is still rising, " She Said . " You get into a situation where you're existing day to day rather than living.
" I think you just have to spend it on The Essentials and understand you are going to go back to where you were before.
" I'm left with approximately £10 after outgoings. "
She also said she was worried about The Situation after next spring.
" What happens when those payments stop? You've just left people who have been relying on those payments high and dry again. "
InvestigationsHelen Barnard, director of policy at the Trussell Trust, said the payments were not a suitable long-term solution to tackling poverty and hardship.
" Each Time a cost of living payment is made we have seen a corresponding reduction in the need for food banks, " She Said .
" However, this respite is short-lived, as very soon afterwards we see that need increasing again with The Number of emergency parcels distributed quickly rising again. "
Each payment provided a respite of one to three weeks, depending on individual circumstances, The Charity estimated.
Figures from YouGov for the Trussell Trust show that the majority of people who received payments in The Spring of this year said that the payment had made just a little or no difference to improving their current financial situation when surveyed in August.
In addition, 80% of people who received a payment in spring had said they had already spent the relief by The Time they were surveyed in August.
The Work and Pensions Committee of MPs is investigating whether the payments are supporting those most in need.
Sir Stephen Timms , who chairs The Committee , said the data showed that regular benefits were now too low.
" Many families cannot survive on universal credit and so have to use food banks, " He Said .
The government said it was undertaking a comprehensive evaluation of the effectiveness of the payments scheme.
Debt charity StepChange said, while the payments were providing a lifeline for low-income families, it was " no surprise" they were lasting only a short amount of time as they were being swallowed up to cope with debt problems.
The government said it had raised the amount paid in benefits, citing a 10. 1% increase in universal credit in April and increases in The National Living Wage.
Prime Minister Rishi Sunak recently said he recognised " things are tough right now" pointing out that halving inflation was a top priority.
How To check if you can claim a benefitRelated TopicsSource of news: bbc.com