F1PART 5GRANTS FOR LIVING AND OTHER COSTS
CHAPTER 4GRANTS FOR DEPENDANTS
Interpretation of Chapter 446.
(1)
In regulations 41 to 45—
(a)
“adult dependant” means, in relation to an eligible student, an adult person dependent on the student other than his child, his partner (including a spouse or civil partner from whom the Department considers the student is separated) or his former partner;
(b)
“child” in relation to an eligible student includes any child of his partner who is dependent on him and any child for whom he has parental responsibility who is dependent on him;
(c)
“dependant” means, in relation to an eligible student, his partner, his dependent child or an adult dependant, who in each case is not an eligible student and does not hold a statutory award;
(d)
“dependent” means wholly or mainly financially dependent;
(e)
“lone parent” means an eligible student who does not have a partner and who has a dependent child or dependent children;
(f)
“net income” has the meaning given in paragraph (2);
(g)
subject to sub-paragraphs (h), (i) and (j), “partner” means any of the following—
(i)
the spouse of an eligible student;
(ii)
the civil partner of an eligible student;
(iii)
a person ordinarily living with an eligible student as if he were his spouse where an eligible student falls within paragraph 2(1)(a) of Schedule 4 and began the specified designated course on or after 1st September 2000;
(iv)
a person ordinarily living with an eligible student as if he were his civil partner where an eligible student falls within paragraph 2(1)(a) of Schedule 4 and began the specified designated course on or after 1st September 2005;
(h)
unless otherwise indicated, a person who would otherwise be a partner under sub-paragraph (g) is not to be treated as a partner if—
(i)
in the opinion of the Department, that person and the eligible student are separated; or
(ii)
the person is ordinarily living outside the United Kingdom and is not maintained by the eligible student;
(i)
for the purposes of the definition of “adult dependant”, a person is to be treated as a partner if he would be a partner under sub-paragraph (g) but for the fact that the eligible student with whom he is ordinarily living does not fall within paragraph 2(1)(a) of Schedule 4;
(j)
for the purposes of the definitions of “child” and “lone parent”, a person is to be treated as a partner if he would be a partner under sub-paragraph (g) but for the date on which the eligible student began the specified designated course or the fact that the eligible student with whom he is ordinarily living does not fall within paragraph 2(1)(a) of Schedule 4.
(2)
Subject to paragraph (3), a dependant’s net income is his income from all sources for the academic year in question reduced by the amount of income tax and social security contributions payable in respect of it but disregarding—
(a)
any pension, allowance or other benefit paid by reason of a disability or incapacity to which the dependant is subject;
(b)
(c)
(d)
any guardian’s allowance to which the dependant is entitled under section 77 of the Social Security Contributions and Benefits (Northern Ireland) Act 1992;
(e)
(f)
(g)
any child tax credit to which the dependant is entitled under Part I of the Tax Credits Act 2002.
(3)
Where an eligible student or his partner makes any recurrent payments which were previously made by the student in pursuance of an obligation incurred before the first academic year of the student’s course, the partner’s net income is the net income calculated in accordance with paragraph (2) reduced by—
(a)
an amount equal to the payments in question for the academic year, if in the opinion of the Department the obligation had been reasonably incurred; or
(b)
such lesser amount, if any, as the Department considers appropriate if, in its opinion, a lesser obligation could reasonably have been incurred.
(4)
For the purposes of paragraph (2), where the dependant is a dependent child and payments are made to the eligible student towards the child’s maintenance, those payments are to be treated as the child’s income.