About CAB
The Citizens Advice Bureau
Service offers free, independent and confidential advice.
It celebrated its
Diamond Jubilee in 1999; from its origins in 1939 as an emergency service
during World War II, it has evolved into a professional national agency
which challenges.
Five and a half
million people seek help from Citizens Advice Bureaux every year.
The CAB helps solve
problems which are central to people's lives, including debt and consumer
issues, benefits, housing, legal matters, employment, and immigration.
Advisers can help
fill out forms, write letters, negotiate with creditors and represent
clients at court or tribunal.
As well as giving
advice, the CAB Service uses its bank of client evidence to find out
where local and national services and policies should change. It has
built a strong reputation for independent analysis.
There are 700 CABs
in England, Wales and Northern Ireland. Each CAB is an independent charity,
relying on funding from the local authority and from local business,
charitable trusts and individual donations.
There are now more
than 30,000 people working in the Service. Ninety per cent are volunteers.
They include CAB advisers, administrators and management committee members.
You can find out
more about volunteering with the Tamworth bureau by clicking
here or on the National
Association of Citizens Advice Bureaux (NACAB) website. Each bureau
belongs to NACAB, which sets standards for advice, training, equal opportunities
and accessibility.
NACAB also co-ordinates
national social policy, media, publicity and parliamentary work.

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