There will be an additional premium for people with severe, lifelong conditions that mean they will never work.
Lucas Vogan is a local resident in the Birches in County Armagh."There was a greater volume of traffic with the Balmoral Show already... so the diversion has caused much disruption," Mr Vogan told BBC News NI.
"The rural roads which people were diverted onto aren't built for that volume of traffic, there has been total gridlock - delays of up to two hours and local residents couldn't get in and out if their houses."People just had to phone work and say they couldn't come - neighbours of ours missed their hospital appointments."Campaigners have said "doing nothing" is not an option in securing their local river's future.
Representatives from conservation, farming and other industries have for the first time come together to improve the health of Suffolk's River Deben.The East Suffolk Catchment Partnership (ESCP) group has produced the "Recovering the Deben - From Source to Sea" plan which aims to improve water quality.
Dr Helen Dangerfield, a director at Essex & Suffolk Rivers Trust who is co-ordinating the action, said just 11% of the river was meeting ecological standards.
"The threat to the estuary is very real - only about 11% of the river that feeds into the estuary is at good ecological status which means it is polluted; it is suffering from historical modification and things that humans have done to the river," Dr Dangerfield explained.International users can access all BBC News election content on
Laura Kuenssberg and Clive Myriealong with BBC political editor Chris Mason and other experts.
The programme will be on BBC One in England, BBC Two in Wales and Northern Ireland, and the BBC News channel for audiences in Scotland and overseas.Dedicated election results programmes on BBC One in Scotland, Northern Ireland and Wales will be presented by Martin Geissler, Mark Carruthers, and Nick Servini respectively, with Anne McAlpine hosting a Gaelic-language election round-up on BBC Alba.