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29 March 2013 Last updated at 13:38
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A national scheme to aid vulnerable people in financial trouble is ending just as demand for such help is expected to surge, campaigners warn.
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Community care grants and crisis loans paid through job centres, as part of the social fund, will end on Monday. Instead, councils in England and the Scottish and Welsh governments are being given funding to provide alternatives.
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Critics warn demand will rise as the government's welfare changes kick in. And, they fear, the changes means help for tens of thousands of people will be a "postcode lottery", meaning the level of aid they get will be dependent on where they live.
Repaid through benefits Previously, those in need could turn to the fund, which offered loans averaging about £50 to overcome shortterm financial crises usually caused by delayed payments or unforeseen circumstances.
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Loans were repaid through benefits. Separate community care grants were available to vulnerable people, including domestic violence victims or those leaving care, to help them buy goods needed to return to independent living.
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But the changes mean that those in need now face widely varying offers of support from local authorities, depending on where they live.
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Many councils are planning to offer offer food stamps or redeemable vouchers for furniture.
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Some will exclude newcomers to the area, while others will outsource the service or consider linking payments to "good behaviour".
There's something that makes me instinctively very The government says devolving the £178.2 million funding to local control wary about the will make sure it gets to those who are most in need. move towards food stamps and vouchers.” But it has not set any rules on how councils spend the money, and
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funding is not guaranteed at all beyond April 2015.
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Funding for this year will be roughly equal to the current annual cost of the loans and grants in each local area.
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Critics say demand is due to surge as the government's welfare changes kick in.
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Thousands of households with spare rooms will see their housing benefit payments cut, and millions of working age claimants will be forced to pay a contribution towards their council tax for the first time. Damon Gibbons, director of the Centre for Responsible Credit, said: "There is no doubt that there will be increased need, whether or not it is
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