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NO SYMPATHY
A family of 11 are to be booted out of their home for not paying the rent, even though they rake in £33,000 a year in benefits. Ray and Tracey Ramond owe £400 to their housing association landlords but they claim they cannot afford the rent even though they claim benefits of £640 a week.

Their monthly rent is £500. Of that, £450 is paid directly to their landlords in housing benefit. The £50 deficit caused the debt, says Tracey. They ran up arrears of £1,354 on their previous home, a council house and because of that they are barred from the waiting list.

Tracey moaned, “I don’t know what we’re going to do. We’ve got nowhere to go and nobody’s helping us. The state allowance is not much when you have this many to feed and buy school uniforms for."

She added, "We do our best, like they get good trainers and that, but it’s not easy. I must spend about £250 a week on food shopping, but I do try to give them cooked meals with vegetables. It can be hard having so many of them because it’s always noisy. But I have my ciggies and two very good friends who help out.”

Ray claims he cannot work because of depression. The couple are squashed into a three-bed property with their kids (check out the names!) Cherlynne, Stacey, Chantelle, Nicky, Susan, Courtney, Leigh, Tia and Chardonnay. The Ramonds get £375 in Child Tax credits and the rest comes from housing benefits and family allowances. (Source:
The Sun)
       


BENEFIT SCROUNGERS

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Tracey Crompton has never had a job, and her husband Harry has been out of work for 15 years. Yet the couple live for free in a seven bedroom house with their ten children and receive £32,656 in benefits a year. They even have their own vineyard in their 270ft long garden. Mrs Crompton moaned, "I'm not satisfied with the benefits we get, I want more. I haven't been able to work because I've had to bring up the kids and Harry's got health problems. If the kids need something I go and get it. I rarely go without things either. If I need something, like a new pair of shoes, then I'll get it." Fortunately their benefits do stretch to a £250 weekly shop which usually includes 50 packs of crisps and ten litres of fizzy drinks.

Crompton family

The couple and their ten children live in Hull in two semis knocked into one. As both are unemployed, their weekly £120 rent is paid by housing benefit and they receive another £628 a week in income support, disability and carer's allowance and other payments. Mr Crompton says he is unable to work due to angina and irritable bowel syndrome. Mrs Crompton said, "We don't have money worries. We don't go without things. I don't see why others should have money worries." The walls of her home are dirty and peeling and the floor is covered in videos and magazines. She added, "I don't have much time for cleaning since I started a college course in catering. I'm really nervous about what will happen at the end of my course. I've never worked and so it would be scary to think I would have to get a job. It would have to be very well-paid to pay more than the benefits." (Source:Daily Mail, Oct/08)


Meet the McGawleys, a shocking vision of family life in 21st century Britain. They treat the welfare state as their personal cashpoint, the more babies they produce and the less work they do, the more money rolls into their free council house. If anybody in the household actually had a job they'd have to earn £30,000 before tax to equal the staggering total they get in handouts. Incredibly, their monthly kitty has just been swollen by £143 in child benefit because sisters Lizzy and Charlene, both pregnant before 16, gave birth, making their mum Julie a granny at just 34.

The girls and their newborn tots now share their three-bedroom home in Blackpool with Mum, her three other children, their stepdad Jerry Campbell and EIGHT dogs. The sisters' boyfriends, who fathered the babies, stay over occasionally. They are rarely in work. Sadly, the McGawley girls are just part of a startling set of statistics that reveal how in Britain today one in 14 babies is born to a teen mum, with 100,000 schoolgirls falling pregnant each year. And it is the taxpayers who are footing the bill.

As well as Lizzy and Charlene's child benefit, mum Julie gets £263 a month for her brood. She gave up work six years ago suffering depression so, with boyfriend Jerry as her carer, the family now receives £378 a month income support, £146 disability premium and £721 tax credits. That's on top of £228 housing benefit to cover rent. Most parents long to deliver a better life for their children. But things don't look set to change. At 15, gymslip mum Lizzy doesn't even feel part of any problem. As she lights a cigarette she revels in underage motherhood, bragging it gives her something better to do than watch Coronation Street.

And she says feeding and changing 14-week-old Bailey is much more fun than school. "I was bored when I didn't have the baby," she said. "I'd sit in and watch TV. Now I've got something to do with my time." Chain-smoking Lizzy first got pregnant at 13 with boyfriend Donn Goulden, who was 15, but miscarried after a fight. "Both pregnancies were accidents," she said. "But I don't regret it. I'd love more kids. Me and Donn want to have a football squad."

Lizzy, fingers covered in gold sovereign rings, wants to move in with Donn, who's also dripping with bling. "I should be able to get a council house next year," she said. For now Lizzy shares a tiny room with her baby. By day she fights for a seat on the stained sofa or battered armchair to nurse him. Lizzy still spends most of her time staring at the TV. But she insists she's delighted to be a mum, even if neighbours call her "slag". "I don't care," she said. "They're just jealous."

Big sister Charlene, now 16, was certainly jealous, then she discovered Lizzy was pregnant before her. The girls, who rarely see their own dad although he's in a relationship with the mum of Lizzy's boyfriend Donn, both featured in ITV1 documentary Britain's Youngest Mums And Dads. Desperate to get out of school, Charlene was trying for a baby from 14. She didn't tell boyfriend David Morgan, six years her senior, that she wasn't on the Pill.

"I really wanted a baby more then anything else," she admitted. "I thought it would be fun." Now, just three weeks after giving birth to son Bradley, she confessed: "I don't want another one, it hurt too much. "But it is fun being a mum. And I really liked being pregnant. I loved all the attention." Like Lizzy, Charlene shares a tiny room with her baby and yearns to move out. The babies' arrival means the three other McGawley sisters, Victoria, 14, Heather, 11, and Julie Ann, six, share the biggest bedroom. Meanwhile Mum and Jerry bed down on the lounge floor, its threadbare carpet matted with dog hair.

Julie told us, "We manage fine on the money we get but we need a bigger house. We were offered a four-bedroom place but you weren't allowed pets. I couldn't let go of the dogs, they're my babies." When we visited the family the pets were locked in the kitchen, fouling the floor. On being let out they ran through the McDonald's burger bags littering the lounge to crawl all over the sofa, licking the newborn babies who were being nursed. Upstairs was a similar scene with bare boards on the landing and a toilet with no seat in the grimy bathroom.

"I'm desperate to move out," complained Julie, puffing on a cigarette then passing it to young Victoria. "But the council have totally ignored our pleas." She said she had warned her girls about getting pregnant when they were 12. "Charlene went on the Pill but came off because it gave her mood swings," she added. "And because of that Lizzy wouldn't take it. I wouldn't change things for the world, though. I'm really proud of my family and don't care what people think. It's nothing to do with them. They're probably envious." Or maybe they're just furious at having to pay for it all.

What they receive each month:

CHILD BENEFIT (for Lizzy and Charlene) £71.50 each
CHILDREN'S TAX CREDITS £721.93
INCOME SUPPORT £378.80
HOUSING BENEFIT £228.76
DISABILITY PREMIUM £146.68
ANNUAL TOTAL £21,700

(Source: News of the World)

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