DutchNews, December 7, 2015
Junior social
affairs minister Jetta Klijnsma is in talks with four Dutch cities about
experiments they want to run to relax the rules governing welfare benefits.
Utrecht, Groningen, Wageningen and Tilburg want to overhaul the current welfare
rules so that claimants would not have to continually apply for jobs and go on
‘reintegration’ courses, the Volkskrant says on Monday.
The councils think a
more friendly approach will work better and cost less than the current
regulations. The four cities will meet Klijnsma again next week with more
concrete plans. All experiments with alternative ways of dealing with welfare benefits
(bijstand) have to be approved by her.
The Volkskrant says a number of other
cities, including Eindhoven, Nijmegen and Amsterdam, are also working on new
ways of dealing with welfare claimants.
‘Many people on benefits become
paralysed by all the rules and checks,’ Eindhoven councillor Saskia Lammers
told the paper. In particular, the government’s tone in dealing with claimants
and its lack of trust in them have an impact, she said. ‘We have to stimulate
rather than sanction,’ she said.
Soft
In June, Utrecht city council said it
planned to begin experimenting with a ‘basic income’ to replace the current
complicated system of taxes, social security benefits and top-up benefits, if
the government gave approval.
Other cities, including Groningen, Maastricht,
Gouda, Enschede, Nijmegen and Wageningen, are said to be looking along the same
lines.
VVD councillors in many councils oppose the ‘softer’ approach, the
Volkskrant says. ‘You get the most out of people by challenging them, not
allowing them to sit around doing nothing,’ said Amsterdam VVD councillor
Marianne Poot.
Rules
At the moment, someone claiming bijstand is required to
apply for a number of jobs a month, take part in reintegration sessions, follow
courses and do voluntary work. Council have to check they are meeting the
conditions and to reduce benefits if they are not. Claimants who find a
part-time job are allowed to keep up to €196 a month on top of their benefits.
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