outdoor relief उदाहरण वाक्य
उदाहरण वाक्य
- Less eligibility was in some cases impossible without starving paupers and the high cost of building workhouses incurred by rate payers meant that outdoor relief continued to be a popular alternative.
- The 1601 Act sought to deal with'settled'poor who had found themselves temporarily out of work it was assumed they would accept indoor relief or outdoor relief.
- In contrast to the regulations in England and Wales the establishment of poorhouses was optional, and outdoor relief could still be provided, which remained the preferred choice of most parishes.
- The economic crisis after 1929 led to a political crisis in mid-1931 and MacDonald failed to secure agreement in cabinet for his proposed cuts in'outdoor relief'for the unemployed.
- Although the Poor Law Amendment Act did not ban all forms of outdoor relief, it stated that no able-bodied person was to receive money or other help from the Poor Law authorities except in a workhouse.
- Although supportive of the government's introduction of old-age pensions in 1908, Burns was opposed to the provision of government aid to the unemployed, arguing that no outdoor relief should be given to the poor.
- The introduction of pensions for those aged over 70 in 1908 did not result in a reduction in the number of elderly housed in workhouses, but it did reduce the number of those on outdoor relief by 25 per cent.
- Due to rising unemployment, in this second premiership, Rockingham's administration saw the passage of civil parishes, later officially called " unions under Gilbert's Act ", to provide outdoor relief and set up workhouses.
- Relief for those too ill or old to work, the so-called'impotent poor', was in the form of a payment or items of food ('the parish loaf') or clothing also known as outdoor relief.
- In 1846, of 1.33 million paupers only 199, 000 were maintained in workhouses, of whom 82, 000 were considered to be able-bodied, leaving an estimated 375, 000 of the able-bodied on outdoor relief.