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should a lone parent working fulltime as a teacher get some of her childcare paid??

10 replies

J2O · 10/07/2008 10:31

bfs mum has a 18 old dd in full time nursery, paying @£600 a month in childcare, she works full time as a primary school teacher and is a lone parent, surely she should be getting a percentage of the childcare costs paid?

OP posts:
GoatisLOLing · 10/07/2008 10:37

she should be getting taxcredits but i doubt v. much it that is enough.

J2O · 10/07/2008 10:53

dont tax credits pay 80% or something? or could she be earning too much?

OP posts:
Flibbertyjibbet · 10/07/2008 11:05

I was told over £30k per year income you don't qualify for tax credits towards childcare costs.

But then I was told that by the tax credits people so it may be wrong

Romy7 · 10/07/2008 11:07

we don't get anything for childcare with tax credits - there is an earnings limit but don't know what it is...
she should be using childcare vouchers though - that would be a start.

J2O · 10/07/2008 11:44

childcare vochers as in the ones where you don't get taxed for them?

OP posts:
J2O · 10/07/2008 11:45

vouchers also, i think she earns less thn 30K

OP posts:
Romy7 · 10/07/2008 11:59

yes - as a local authority employee they should have a scheme i think...

J2O · 10/07/2008 12:41

thats what i thought, thanks i will tell him to tell her

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aiden · 10/07/2008 22:57

she should definitely call the tax credit people because the eligibilty for the childcare element is higher for lone parents. i doubt very much that she won't get anything.

J2O · 10/07/2008 23:16

thanks for that aiden, i will do

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