The government delegate in Navarre, José Luis Arasti, has visited the information bus of the Minimum Vital Income that remains installed today and tomorrow in the Euskal Herria square of Berriozar and can be visited from 9 to 14 and from 15 to 18 hours.
It is an initiative of the Ministry of Inclusion, Social Security and Migration that aims to inform all those vulnerable people, potential beneficiaries of it but who are not receiving it, and help them in their case to make the application or to know the status of it. A new initiative to extend the scope of the IMV and ensure that all situations of poverty and exclusion are addressed.
Without the need for an appointment, people approaching the bus installed in Berriozar will be able to request information about the service, resolve doubts, make their request or see how their file is going.
The IMV bus thus begins a route that contemplates stops in about 30 locations during this first quarter. This ‘mobile office’, which is part of the ‘It’s the Minimum’ advertising campaign, served more than 1,700 people, 70% women, in its first phase between 18 October and 25 November 2022. Over a period of just over a month, it carried out its informative work in 14 sites in four autonomous communities.
Since its launch in June 2020, the IMV has reached more than half a million households, including 1.5 million people, almost half of whom are minors, and two out of three are women.
In the case of Navarre, at the end of December there were 18,809 beneficiaries of the Minimum Vital Income of which 8,244 were minors. There were 3,629 benefits with the Child Support Supplement, which is an aid of EUR 100 per household per month for children from 0 to 3 years old, EUR 70 per child from 3 to 6 years old, and EUR 50 per month for each child from 6 to 18 years old.