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Grant Payments

Dáil Éireann Debate, Thursday - 8 July 2021

Thursday, 8 July 2021

Ceisteanna (275)

Danny Healy-Rae

Ceist:

275. Deputy Danny Healy-Rae asked the Minister for Further and Higher Education, Research, Innovation and Science if the penalisation of students who received the pandemic unemployment payment when applying for the SUSI grant (details supplied) will be examined and addressed. [37068/21]

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Freagraí scríofa

The Student Support Scheme is a critical financial support for students participating in higher education. As of earlier this week, SUSI had received almost 74,000 applications from students. To date, almost 53,500 applications have been assessed with over 47,000 assessed as eligible for support for the next academic year.

As in any statutory scheme, a core principle is that there is consistency of approach and an equitable treatment for applicants as part of the means assessment process.

This applies to people who are dependent on different types of social protection payment.

The Pandemic Unemployment Payment has been treated as reckonable income since it was introduced in March 2020 . Income from the Covid-19 payment therefore has the same standing and is treated in a similar fashion to other Department of Social Protection payments such as Jobseeker's Benefit or Jobseeker's Allowance.

This means that a student or a family on the Pandemic Unemployment Payment should be treated in the same way as a student or a family who are dependent on Jobseeker's Benefit or Allowance. The holiday earnings disregard does not apply to these social protection payments, and it would not be fair or equitable to apply a different approach to the PUP.

However, a very important feature of the scheme that I would point to is the change of circumstances provision.

If an applicant or a family member has experienced a change in circumstances during 2021, then they can apply to SUSI for their application to be assessed or reassessed under a change in circumstances.

Such a change in circumstances would clearly include no longer being in receipt of a pandemic unemployment payment. Students will no longer receive the PUP from early September, in line with normal circumstances where students do not qualify for unemployment payments while at college.

The change of circumstances provision is a well-established procedure and it can also operate at scale. For example, over 10,000 applicants declared a change of circumstance in the 2020/21 academic year and some 40% of these applications related to COVID-19.

I am confident that the application of this provision will continue to allow the scheme to be flexible and responsive to people's circumstances.

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