UK Parliament / Open data

Welfare Reform Bill

Proceeding contribution from Lord McAvoy (Labour) in the House of Lords on Wednesday, 26 October 2011. It occurred during Debate on bills and Committee proceeding on Welfare Reform Bill.
My Lords, I would like to speak in support of the noble Earl’s amendment. There are cuts in the tax credit system, and I know from experience that many couples use that as part of their overall family income, to get high-class childcare. There are a whole stack of couples who are now in the process of cancelling that because they cannot afford to keep it going. There is going to be chaos in the childcare system because many parents, either single or together, will be in trouble, trying to get the same conditions that they have been used to in childcare over the past few years. Unless parents are given that assurance that their children are going to high-class, quality childcare that they can trust—the noble Earl mentioned some circumstances in which parents do not trust childcare—the whole field of childcare and its provision is going to be a real headache for society. This amendment would be a safeguard to ensure that parents are satisfied. Having had some experience of Ministers, I can almost hear the Minister’s reply, along the lines of, ““How can you guarantee the security of a system? People will fiddle, people will do all sorts of things, and we can’t trust them””. In some cases that is a reasonable judgment, but not in all cases, and certainly not in the majority of cases. People will feel that they have been done out of something here, and as usual it will be the women who give up the second job that assistance for childcare has helped them to go out and do. I have spoken to scores of women in my former constituency for whom that support for childcare was absolutely essential. This amendment will go a long way towards making sure that parents are not subjected to failure if they do not receive the quality, flexible and affordable childcare that they have been used to up until now. How would the Minister cater for those people who, with less money coming in, will perhaps have to downgrade their expectations if they want to continue with childcare, because they cannot afford as much? This has been a great liberation for parents, and it is something that the Government need to assure us of.
Type
Proceeding contribution
Reference
731 c321-2GC 
Session
2010-12
Chamber / Committee
House of Lords Grand Committee
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