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Pensioners in the Highlands will pay the price as winter fuel payments are scrapped





Universal winter fuel payments are to be scrapped.
Universal winter fuel payments are to be scrapped.

Pensioners in the Highlands will pay the price as winter fuel payments are to be scrapped.

This is the view of Simon Francis, coordinator of the End Fuel Poverty Coalition.

The Scottish Government has taken the decision to follow the UK government in no longer providing winter fuel payments to all pensioners.

The UK benefit is due to be replaced by a Holyrood-run alternative - but ministers have confirmed it will be means tested, while the roll out has been delayed.

Social Justice Secretary Shirley-Anne Somerville said she had "no choice" after the chancellor announced cuts south of the border.

It came as Scotland’s finance secretary ordered ministers to “constrain all but essential" spending to help pay for public sector pay deals.

Highland residents are generally paying more for fuel than in other parts of the UK. A previous report showed that Caithness and Sutherland are paying 25 per cent more for their fuel bills than the rest of Scotland.

33 per cent of Highland residents were experiencing fuel poverty at the end of 2023.

Simon Francis, coordinator of the End Fuel Poverty Coalition, said: "This is a decision made in Westminster by the Chancellor, but it is pensioners in the Highlands and across the rest of the UK that will pay the price.

"We have publicly commended the new UK Government in taking some of the long-term measures to tackle high energy bills, such as the drive for more renewable energy. But these solutions will take time to bring down bills.

“In the meantime, households of all ages will need more support to stay warm this winter, not less.

“We urge the Chancellor to broaden the targeting of the Winter Fuel Payment which would enable a more generous scheme to be introduced by Scottish ministers. The UK Government also needs to act to introduce support to end energy debt and reform Britain's broken energy system.

"The Highlands has one of the highest rates of fuel poverty and unless we see urgent action to keep people warm this winter, one of the first actions of the new UK Government will be to condemn more vulnerable Scottish households to cold damp homes this winter."

Age Scotland has echoed the same call by urging the UK government to reconsider plans to scrap the winter fuel payment for pensioners who do not receive pension credit.

Age Scotland’s policy director, Adam Stachura, said: “At minimum, a quarter of a million pensioners in Scotland on the lowest incomes or living in fuel poverty will no longer receive this vital financial support over the winter months, while hundreds of thousands more on modest incomes are going to struggle with their energy bills even more than normal as a result.

“This brutal decision by the UK Government was made too fast, cuts too deep and its impact will be severe. It’s important that they rethink this move, as it has a huge impact on the devolution of social security and the needs of Scottish pensioners who live in some of the coldest homes in the UK.”


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