The Labour Party has warned that households in rural areas like Northumberland are worst affected by rapidly rising energy bills as Labour accuses the government of allowing taxpayers to bear the brunt of spiralling costs leading to additional expenditure over its Tyne and Wear neighbours of almost £2000 per year”.
Commenting on the analysis, Councillor Liz Simpson who represents Newbiggin by the Sea where more than 40% of children are living in deprivation said: “Living standards are currently falling at the fastest rate since the 1950s. The energy price cap, council tax and National Insurance contributions all rose at the start of April. An estimated 1.3 million people, including 500,000 children, are expected to be pushed into poverty over the next few months and what's this Government doing? other than clarting on with Brexit in Northern Ireland and building scaffolding to support a failing Prime Minister”.
Analysis by the Labour Party highlighted that 28% of rural properties were classed as low efficiency in 2019, compared to just 9% of those in suburban areas and 12% in urban areas, and that the average rural efficiency rating was 59 (on a scale from zero to 100) but 66 and 65 in suburban and urban areas respectively.
The Conservative cuts to energy efficiency programmes over the past 12 years have seen home insulation rates plummet while household energy and motorists costs soar”.
Cavity wall insulation rates fell 97% in 2013 after the coalition government introduced its ‘green deal’ that saw previous energy efficiency programmes, which made the installation free or heavily subsidised, replaced with a loan scheme.
Last Year Keir Starmer promised to bring the Labour Party closer to rural areas like Northumberland and farming communities emphasising that “farming matters to Labour”, in the first speech by a Labour leader to the National Farmers’ Union conference since 2008.
Councillor Simpson also told us: “Labour launched its rural England policy review in April last year, outlining a plan to become ‘the party of the great British countryside’ as data revealed that Conservatives cuts in rural areas would cost rural communities £255m a year leaving a wasteland of second home villages as a blight on our landscapes’.
“Labour’s rural England policy review will ensure that our next manifesto provides as much hope and opportunity to rural communities as it does to those living in towns and cities,”
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