Self-isolation support payment launches in Cambridgeshire and Peterborough
Fenland residents can now apply for the new Test and Trace self-isolation support payment of £500 if they lose income as a result of not being able to work.
The government recently announced the new payment aimed at helping make up for any lost income people face due to having to stay at home and self-isolate and tasked local authorities to have this by today October 12, with payments backdated to September 28.
You will be eligible for the self-isolation support payment if you meet all the following criteria:
You have been asked to self-isolate by NHS Test and Trace because you have tested positive for coronavirus or have been in close contact with someone who has tested positive
You are employed or self-employed
You cannot work from home and will lose income as a result
You are claiming at least one of the following benefits: Universal Credit, Working Tax Credits, income-related Employment and Support Allowance, income-based Jobseeker’s Allowance, Income Support, Pension Credit or Housing Benefit
NHS Test and Trace ID number, bank statement, and proof of employment or self-assessment returns will need to be provided. Payment is sent within 3 working days.
Claims are to be made via local authorities visit: Fenland: www.fenland.gov.uk/testandtracepayment
Dr Liz Robin, Director of Public Health for Cambridgeshire and Peterborough said: “We need to continue to do all we can to control the spread of the virus. Self-isolation is one of the most powerful tools for controlling the transmission of Covid-19, and this new Test and Trace Support payment will ensure individuals on a low income will be able to claim a £500 lump sum payment if they cannot work from home and are required to self-isolate.
“We know that some people don’t feel they are financially able to self-isolate or may not be eligible. Cambridgeshire local authorities can help with support as well as help with individual needs to self-isolate, so please do not struggle and telephone your local council whose numbers are on the webpages listed to seek support.”
You will not be eligible if you have not received a notification from NHS Test and Trace telling you to self-isolate, continue to receive your full wages or are furloughed, can work from home during a period of self-isolation, your period of self-isolation started before the scheme launched on September 28, or you are quarantining after travelling abroad (unless you test positive).
This financial support comes as the government places a legal requirement on people to self-isolate when instructed to by NHS Test and Trace and introduces tougher fines for breaking the rules. You could be fined if you do not stay at home and self-isolate following a positive test result for COVID-19, or if you are contacted by NHS Test and Trace and instructed to self-isolate because you are a contact of someone who has had a positive test result. If you test positive for COVID-19, it will also be an offence to knowingly provide false information about your close contacts to NHS Test and Trace. Failure to comply with these requirements may result in a fine.