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Social Welfare Eligibility

Dáil Éireann Debate, Thursday - 14 July 2022

Thursday, 14 July 2022

Questions (127)

Aindrias Moynihan

Question:

127. Deputy Aindrias Moynihan asked the Minister for Social Protection if she will consider allowing persons on illness benefit to qualify under means testing for the fuel allowance given the current cost-of-living crisis; and if she will make a statement on the matter. [34752/22]

View answer

Written answers

The Fuel Allowance is a payment of €33 per week for 28 weeks (a total of €924 each year) from late September to April, at an estimated cost of €366 million in 2022.  The purpose of this payment is to assist qualifying households with their energy costs.

Qualifying payments for Fuel Allowance are those payments that are considered long term payments and an applicant must also satisfy a means test.  People on long term payments are unlikely to have additional resources of their own and are more vulnerable to poverty, including energy poverty.  It is for this reason that the Department allocates additional payments, supports and resources to help this cohort of claimants.

In the vast majority of cases, Illness Benefit is a short-term payment for those who are certified by their GP as needing to take time out from their employment due to illness and, accordingly, is not a qualifying payment for Fuel Allowance.

People who are permanently incapable of work may be eligible for Invalidity Pension, subject to satisfying the relevant social insurance and medical criteria.  Those who are substantially restricted in undertaking suitable employment arising from a medical condition may be eligible for the means-tested Disability Allowance, subject to meeting the relevant medical criteria.  Recipients of both of these payments, subject to satisfying all qualifying conditions, may be eligible for Fuel Allowance.

Any decision to allow those in receipt of a short-term payment such as Illness Benefit to receive the Fuel Allowance payment would represent a fundamental change to the nature of the scheme.  As such, it would have to be considered in an overall policy and budgetary context.

Under the Supplementary Welfare Allowance scheme, Additional Needs Payments may be made to help meet an essential, once-off cost which customers are unable to meet out of their own resources, and this may include exceptional heating costs.  Decisions on such payments are made on a case-by-case basis.

I hope this clarifies the matter for the Deputy.

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