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Accommodation
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Past arrangements
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Interim measures
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Proposed future system
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MPs were able to claim up to £24,222 towards accommodation costs. Claims could include mortgage interest, rent or hotel costs.
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Claims can include mortgage interest, rent or hotel costs up to a maximum of £1,250 per month.
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Support will only be provided for rent or hotel costs. MPs will have accommodation directly provided by the new regulator through an agency. Bills will be paid directly by that agency.
Under transitional arrangements, MPs with existing mortgages will be able to claim for mortgage interest until the end of the next Parliament.
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MPs could claim not only for basic costs such as utilities, council tax, and building and contents insurance but also for services such as cleaning and gardening and for items such as white goods.
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MPs can only claim for costs such as utilities, council tax, service charges, and building and contents insurance.
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MPs will only be able to claim for basic costs such as utilities, council tax, and contents insurance.
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MPs could claim for the cost of maintaining their properties, including any repairs or redecoration. Claims could not in principle be made for anything improving the capital value of a property.
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MPs can no longer claim for the costs of furnishing, repairs, or maintenance.
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Interim arrangements to be made permanent.
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MPs could claim £25 a night for food without needing to provide receipts when staying away from their home.
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MPs can claim £25 a night for subsistence without needing to provide receipts when staying away from their home.
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Only MPs staying in hotels will be able to claim for the costs of meals up to £25 a night. Receipts will be required.
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MPs with constituencies in outer London can claim for the cost of a second home if they so wish.
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From April 2010 MPs with constituencies in outer London will no longer be able to claim for the cost of a second home.(Permanent change)
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No MP who represents a constituency falling within a reasonable commuting distance of Parliament will be eligible to claim for the cost of a second home.
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MPs did not have to pay capital gains tax on the sale of second homes.
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MPs should pay capital gains tax on the sale of second homes funded by the accommodation allowance.
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Any capital gain made during the transition period and attributable to support from public funds should be surrendered to Parliament.
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MPs who do not claim for the cost of accommodation instead receive a £7,500 London costs allowance
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No change.
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London costs allowance should be reduced to the level recommended by the SSRB (which would currently be £3,760). There should be a higher allowance for those with constituencies outside the Greater London area who do not receive taxpayer funded accommodation. Commuting MPs who work late can claim for cost of travel home or overnight hotel.
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In practice though not in principle MPs could allegedly change the designation of their main and second homes to maximise personal benefit.
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No further changes to be made to designation of second homes in 2009-10, with a transparent appeal procedure for exceptional cases.
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Designation of second homes to be determined in line with rigorously enforced objective rules policed by the new regulator.
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Ministers who have the use of grace and favour homes in London can claim the costs for a second home in London as well.
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Ministers living in grace and favour homes in London can no longer claim for the costs of a second home in London
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Interim measure to be made permanent.
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MPs who share accommodation can each claim the full allowance.
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MPs who share accommodation as partners are limited to claiming a maximum of one person’s accommodation allowance between them.
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MPs who share accommodation as partners should be entitled between them to claim up to a limit of one individual ceiling, plus one-third.
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