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Blackburn with Darwen drops council tax for terminally ill people

Blackburn with Darwen drops council tax for terminally ill people

BBC News2 days ago
Terminally ill people in a Lancashire borough who have less than a year to live will no longer have to pay council tax.Councillors across all parties in Blackburn with Darwen approved the decision, making it the second local authority in England to take the step after Manchester introduced the scheme in June. End-of-life care charities Marie Curie and Hospice UK said they wanted other councils and devolved governments to follow suit. Labour council leader Phil Riley described it as a "worthy idea" but said he had concerns about potentially "intrusive conversations".
"There are some practical issues but I am absolutely clear we can look at this," he said."It helps people at a very serious moment in their lives."My over-riding concern is that, if we are not careful, it gets some of the council officers into some fairly intrusive conversations which will be uncomfortable."He said the "very obvious one is that what do you do if someone believed they were going to die and then didn't and whether you go back".
Council tax worries
Speaking earlier this month, Marie Curie senior policy manager Jamie Thunder said a terminal diagnosis could mean an individual or their partner having to reduce their working hours, or stop altogether."Council tax is one of the larger bills that you might have to pay," he said."It's also one people are very worried about missing particularly because the enforcement of council tax can be quite sudden and ramp up quite quickly."So taking that bit of pressure off is a really valuable thing."The Local Government Association, which represents English councils, said some discretion and support for terminally ill people was already available but there was interest in the new steps being taken.
Listen to the best of BBC Radio Lancashire on BBC Sounds and follow BBC Lancashire on Facebook, X and Instagram and watch BBC North West Tonight on BBC iPlayer.
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