Have your say on the Finance Bill 2015

Have your say on the Finance Bill 2015

12:26 PM, 8th August 2015, About 9 years ago 1

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Do you have relevant expertise and experience or a special interest in the Finance Bill which is currently passing through Parliament? Have your say on the Finance Bill 2015

If so, you can submit your views in writing to the House of Commons Public Bill Committee which is going to consider this Bill.

Finance Bill 2015-16

Summary of the Finance Bill

A Bill to grant certain duties, to alter other duties, and to amend the law relating to the National Debt and the Public Revenue, and to make further provision in connection with finance.

Follow the progress of the Finance Bill

The Bill was presented to the House on 14 July 2015. On Tuesday 21 July, the Bill received its Second Reading in the House of Commons where MPs debated the main principles of the Bill.

The Bill has now been sent to the Public Bill Committee where detailed examination of the Bill will take place.

Guidance on submitting written evidence

Deadline for written evidence submissions

The Public Bill Committee is now able to receive written evidence. The sooner you send in your submission, the more time the Committee will have to take it into consideration. Consideration of the Bill in a Committee of the whole House is expected to take place on Tuesday 8 September 2015. Proceedings in the Public Bill Committee are scheduled in the programme motion to conclude by Tuesday 20 October 2015, but could finish earlier.

Please note: When the Public Bill Committee reports, it is no longer able to receive written evidence and it could report earlier than Tuesday 20 October 2015.

What should written evidence cover?

Your submission should address matters contained within the Bill and concentrate on issues where you have a special interest or expertise, and factual information of which you would like the Committee to be aware.

Your submission could most usefully:

  • suggest amendments to the Bill with explanation; and
  • (when available) support or oppose amendments tabled or proposed to the Bill by others with explanation

It is helpful if the submission includes a brief introduction about you or your organisation. The submission should not have been previously published or circulated elsewhere.

If you have any concerns about your submission, please contact the Scrutiny Unit (details below).

How should written evidence be submitted?

Your submission should be emailed to scrutiny@parliament.uk. Please note that submissions sent to the Government department in charge of the Bill will not be treated as evidence to the Public Bill Committee.

Submissions should be in the form of a Word document. A summary should be provided. Paragraphs should be numbered, but there should be no page numbering.

Essential statistics or further details can be added as annexes, which should also be numbered. To make publication easier, please avoid the use of coloured graphs, complex diagrams or pictures.

As a guideline, submissions should not exceed 3,000 words.

Please include in the covering email the name, address, telephone number and email address of the person responsible for the submission. The submission should be dated.

What will happen to my evidence?

The written evidence will be circulated to all Committee Members to inform their consideration of the Bill.

Most submissions will also be published on the internet as soon as possible after the Committee has started sitting.

The Scrutiny Unit can help with any queries about written evidence.

Scrutiny Unit contact details

Email: scrutiny@parliament.uk
Telephone: 020 7219 8387
Address: Ian Hook
Senior Executive Officer
Scrutiny Unit
House of Commons
London SW1A OAA

Related articles – LINK

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Comments

Dr Rosalind Beck

15:54 PM, 10th August 2015, About 9 years ago

I shall start preparing my submission. I'm thinking of including how the decision will bring my bankruptcy or sale of my houses closer with each interest rate rise.
They seem to want statistics and numbers, more than subjective opinions, although I'll have to get in something about it being unfair!
Mark, do you think this could be a plan for others? To do projections of bankruptcy and/or giving our tenants notice in order to prepare the houses for sale (meaning a lot of empty houses until they sell) and state how many people (not necessarily tenants, as there are often other family members not on the agreements) will be affected?
It might also be worth mentioning how the 'impact' on tenants was assumed to be 'nil.'

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