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Wirral taxi drivers in debt and homeless because of lack of support I don’t think we will ever recover from the pandemic.
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By Max Goldbart2021-03-17T09:53:00+00:00
Research reveals extent of impact on creative workers’ prospects
More than one-third (34%) of creative industry workers are not in employment 12 months after the pandemic erupted, according to a damning Bectu survey marking the one-year anniversary of lockdown.
According to the broadcasting union’s latest temperature-take of 4,000 people, 30% have been made redundant or laid off at least once since March 2020.
More than one-fifth (21%) remain excluded from both the furlough scheme and Self-Employment Income Support Scheme (SEISS).
Protecting these excluded freelancers has been one of Bectu’s major lobbying efforts of the past year and while chancellor Rishi Sunak’s latest budget handed a lifeline to 600,000 more, the union estimates another circa-2.4m are still without support.
| UPDATED: 15:33, Thu, Mar 18, 2021
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For several months, many self-employed people were hopeful the Self-Employment Income Support Scheme (SEISS) eligibility criteria would change for SEISS grant four. Directors of companies and the newly self-employed are among many self-employed people who have not been eligible for any of the previous SEISS grants to date. After several months of wondering whether more people could benefit from SEISS this year, Rishi Sunak finally announced a number of changes for SEISS grant four in his Budget announcement this month. Read on to find out m
Whipple J
Judicial review – Income support – Claimants alleging scheme, by which payments made to self-employed persons whose businesses adversely affected by Coronavirus emergency, unlawfully discriminating against self-employed women who had taken maternity leave or leave relating to pregnancy in three preceding tax years
In April 2020, HM Treasury (the defendant) introduced the self-employment income support scheme (the Scheme), by way of a direction under ss 71 and 76 of the Coronavirus Act 2020 (CA 2020). Under the Scheme, payments were made to persons who carried on a business that had been adversely affected by the Coronavirus emergency. With some exceptions, payments under the Scheme were to be based on average trading profits (ATP) of the individual’s business over the preceding three full tax years (i.e. 2016/17, 2017/18 and 2018/19).