A disabled university graduate is choosing between eating or heating as she expects her bills to soar.

Kyra Edwards, who suffers from severe OCD, anxiety, and depression, said ‘there is nothing left to cut back on’ as she faces one of the worst economic crisis since the 1970s.

The 28-year-old, from Hamilton, has always strandled the poverty line despite spending ten years in education and securing a BA Honours degree in journalism.

Glasgow Times:

Now she has shared her experience with the Glasgow Times as part of our Beat The Squeeze campaign which is highlighting the pressing issues affecting people's living standards.

It comes as household bills are set to skyrocket after a UK Government decision to increase the energy fuel cap by a whopping 54%.

The move has left people like Kyra anxious about how they will support themselves and scrambling to find hundreds of pounds extra a month just to keep afloat.

Kyra said: “I was already skipping meals before they cut the universal credit uplift last year, now I barely eat.

“As of April all of my bills will be going up, I can't afford that. There's nothing left to cut back on.

“The cost of living is currently unbearable.

“I've always been under or on the poverty line despite spending a decade in education, getting a degree and working two jobs to alleviate this. This turned out to be at the cost of my mental health.

“For now I can't even focus on getting better because the things I need to survive that should be available are slowly being taken away from me.

“This is constant - how are we supposed to deal with price hikes when we are already at a disadvantage.”

Glasgow Times:

Kyra is unable to work due to her mental health and relies on benefits for income support, which are currently barely covering her bills.

She receives £952.23 a month from Universal Credit and £240 Personal Independence Payment to cover rent, food, travel, bills, and her debt repayment scheme.

Now as her bills are set to rocket she is bracing for the worst as her weekly shop takes a hit.

Kyra said: “The position I am being put in is that those with the least are being asked to carry the cost for those who have the most.

“The only reason I am not at food banks right now is because I get an extra £240 a month from PIP because of my disability.

“This has become a lifeline but the process for receiving that extra help took around six or seven months, it was exhausting.

“I don't own a car, I could never afford one and I have debt so it ruled out financial options.

“I rely on public transport, mainly trains but the prices have gone up.

“Inflation has caused food prices to skyrocket over the past few years.

“I have to use free products, otherwise I get ill - these are hit the most.

“[When it comes to money] it’s past worry, I've been having to make these choices for years already, this [energy crisis] just solidifies what people were already dealing with.”

Glasgow Times:

The Glasgow Times has launched our "Beat The Squeeze" campaign this week to help our readers through the next few months.

Organisations such as Citizen's Advice Scotland say people are "holding on by their fingertips" following a surge in requests for advice.

 

 

Derek Mitchell, chief executive of Citizen's Advice Scotland, said: “We are facing a nightmare scenario in the spring as the rising cost of living and increases in energy bills collide with flat or falling incomes.

“Around half a million people are already cutting back on food shopping to deal with unaffordable bills, and looking at the demand for advice the Citizens Advice network saw during the pandemic, we see a link between the need to use a food bank and the need for advice around utilities.

"People are holding on by their fingertips.

"They can’t afford a big rise in bills with no support. Some sort of emergency action from the government is essential."