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Implications of Welfare Reform

Implications of Welfare Reform. Wednesday 21 November 2012. Conference Chair Cllr Martin Hill, Lincolnshire County Council. Universal Credit and Other Welfare Reforms – a Local Authority Perspective. John Wright. 21 November 2012. www.local.gov.uk. Universal Credit.

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Implications of Welfare Reform

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  1. Implications of Welfare Reform Wednesday 21 November 2012

  2. Conference Chair Cllr Martin Hill, Lincolnshire County Council

  3. Universal Credit and Other Welfare Reforms – a Local Authority Perspective John Wright 21 November 2012 www.local.gov.uk

  4. Universal Credit • Aims to make benefits system simpler by merging out of work benefits and tax credits into one award, including Housing Benefit and make work pay. • Implementation Oct 2013 to 2017; pathfinder roll out in Greater Manchester region from Apr 2013 • Digital by default - 80% of transactions on line • Direct payment monthly in arrears to a household rather than an individual. • Jun 12 – Jun 13 direct payment demonstration projects involving six councils/HAs www.local.gov.uk

  5. Universal Credit • UC replaces the following benefits/tax credits: • Working Tax Credit, • Child Tax Credit, • Housing Benefit, • Income Support, • Income-based Jobseeker’s Allowance • Income-related Employment and Support Allowance. • Will support working age adults and children up to an upper age limit linked to the qualifying age for pension credit. www.local.gov.uk

  6. Pension Credit • UC not payable to people in receipt of pension credit, except where one of a couple under pension credit age, in which case treated as household eligible for UC. • Housing Benefit for these households replaced by Housing Credit • To be introduced to same timescale and payment terms as UC, though not starting until 2014 www.local.gov.uk

  7. Benefit Cap • Aims to restrict amount of benefit working age claimants can receive to average earned income of a working household after tax and national insurance. Applies to working age households • To be set at £500 per week for couples and lone parent households and £350 per week for single person households • Until UC to be delivered by councils through Housing Benefit www.local.gov.uk

  8. Bereavement Allowance Carer's Allowance Child Benefit Child Tax Credit Employment and Support Allowance (except where it is paid with the support component) Guardian’s Allowance Housing Benefit Incapacity Benefit Income Support Jobseeker's Allowance Maternity Allowance Severe Disablement Allowance Widowed Parent's Allowance Widowed Mothers Allowance Widows Pension Widows Pension Age-Related Benefit Cap When added together the benefit cap will limit the total income that can be received from the following benefits: www.local.gov.uk

  9. Benefit Cap • Does not include council tax benefit • Will not apply for those qualified for Working Tax Credit or in receipt of the following benefits: • Disability Living Allowance • Personal Independence Payment (from April 2013) • Attendance Allowance • Industrial Injuries Benefits • Employment and Support Allowance, if paid with the support component • War Widow's or War Widower's Pension • 9 month grace period for those in continuous employment for previous 12 months www.local.gov.uk

  10. Local Welfare Assistance • Replaces community care grants and crisis loans • Funded from un-ringfenced grant to be paid to upper tier and unitary authorities • Provides local support to vulnerable groups • Can be in cash or in kind • Indications that councils choosing mixture of the two, but with a greater emphasis on in kind rather than cash. www.local.gov.uk

  11. Housing related reforms • Oct 2011 - LHA reduced from 50th percentile to 30th percentile of market rates and frozen from Apr 2012 • From Apr 2013 to be adjusted by CPI • From Apr 2011 5 bed rate of LHA removed – max rate is for 4 bed property • From Jan 2012 single under-35s only eligible for shared rate of LHA • Apr 2013 – introduction of size criteria in social housing.

  12. Serious Fraud Investigation Service • DWP, HMRC and council fraud investigation services to become partnership to ensure single investigation in respect of Welfare Benefit and Tax Credit fraud • Council staff remain as council employees • Councils still responsible for non welfare related fraud www.local.gov.uk

  13. Comment • While we welcome: • Simplification of benefits and tax credit system with the introduction of UC • Recognition that councils are best placed to design systems to support the needs of their own communities. • Views differ on how people’s behaviour will change as a result of the reforms, but clear councils will be crucial in influencing the dynamic/behavioural changes the government is seeking, particularly in strategic housing role • But implementation raises a number of issues for councils www.local.gov.uk

  14. Impacts and Issues (potential & real) • General • Data exchange • IT readiness • New burdens • Demographic migration? • Loan sharks, Credit Unions and Stop Loan Sharks Team (https://www.gov.uk/report-loan-shark ) • Introduction of UC • Face to Face delivery • Managing run down of HB delivery • Future of staff (TUPE issues) • Monthly direct payments • Passported benefits www.local.gov.uk

  15. Impacts and Issues (potential & real) • Introduction of Benefit Cap • Provision of information • Sufficiency of DHPs • Rent arrears/increased cost of collection? • Increases in B&B and Temp Accommodation? • Overcrowding? • Increase in rough sleepers? • Reputational impact? • Local Welfare Assistance • New role for councils • Various options being considered • SFIS • Future investigation of tenancy and council tax fraud www.local.gov.uk

  16. Questions? www.local.gov.uk

  17. The Implications of Welfare Reform-Local Council Tax Support-the story so far Andrew Burton IRRV - Head of Revenues, Benefits & Customer Services Bassetlaw DC November 2012

  18. What the briefing will cover • What is happening to (scrapping of) Council Tax Benefit and -what have we done/still to do at Bassetlaw DC ? • x Bedroom Tax • X Universal Credit • X Social Fund • Practical analysis…20 mins

  19. CTB, what is happening – key messages 1) From 1st April 2013, there is no more Council Tax Benefit. Councils instead must put in place a locally determined scheme that awards discounts to residents by reference to financial need. 2) The local scheme will be funded by the Government at a level of 90 per of existing “demand led“ CTB. ……… (continued)

  20. CTB, what is happening – key messages • 3) Pensioners cannot be worse off than they are now under CTB. They are protected and the Govt said this is the only intervention in schemes. • 4) The new local scheme must somehow encourage the journey from welfare to work, the idea being that if councils did more about job creation and unemployment, the 10% saving in CTB would heal itself. • 5) Under the equality duty , must not, disadvantage vulnerable groups. So, some working age groups should not face reductions such as the severely disabled.

  21. Some Bassetlaw DC stats • CTB caseload 2012 -10,500 claimants • CTB spend £9.130m 2012/13 • 10 per cent is >£910,000-£1m with new cases • Pensioner caseload - 5089 • Working age earning- 1881 • Working age IS/JSA 3565 • Existing spend on pensioners £4.3m • Existing spend on working age £4.8m • Expected spend for working age under new scheme £3.9m

  22. What are we doing in Notts ? MPA and districts in Notts worked together on standard menu of options and framework But, there is no countywide scheme as Billing Authority must reflect different challenges. Not all Notts agree to types of change e.g. a weekly liability restriction , Ashfield ,Broxtowe and Gedling said no …. Council Leaders -involved, informed re menu options and timetable , Difficult choices for members

  23. The million pound drop • LGA Chairman Sir Merrick Cockell said “Councils are being put in a very difficult position. Under the proposed scheme most councils will have to ask people on lower incomes, including the working poor, to pay more council tax than they currently do

  24. Bridging the £1m Drop -Attempt 1 • Use the Council Tax Benefit scheme as basis- but restrict support for Council Tax for working age people yet protect the vulnerable (severe disability and war pensions) • – Everyone pays something including JSA /IS by presenting (in Bassetlaw) 80% of liability for rebating • – Indicative modelling: • Potentially nets £0.7m (cap support at 80%) - £1.003m. (cap support at 75%)

  25. Example………. • Band A ,Harworth charge now £1115.50 • Gets Income support /JSA so rebate pa £1115.50 ie £ 21.39 pw • If only 80 % rebate-able so £21.39 x80% so gets £17.11pw which is £892.26 pa in new support • £1115.50 minus £892.26 = £223.24 or <£19 pm - specifically £4.28 pw to pay . • This element would account for 7/10 of shortfall ( c 700k )

  26. The million pound drop -other adjustments to CTB scheme- common in Notts • Capital limit from £16,000- nets <£0.030m • Scrap Second Adult Rebate for working age (£0.012m) • No backdating awards (£0.020m) • Increase non dep deduction (£0.050m) • Stop ignoring Child benefit (£0.220m) • Stop ignoring income disregards (£0.090m) • Consider vulnerable class • Consider hardship fund • Consulted ………….

  27. BDC Consultation messages residents with the least money will receive the most help Support will be distributed as widely as possible among people eligible to claim the discount The scheme will support people moving into, and on, low paid work. The scheme will ensure that everyone apart from the most vulnerable will pay something towards Council Tax

  28. Consultation formats Leaflets /booklets- 22,000 mailshot On line survey www.bassetlaw.gov.uk Bassetlaw CAB/A1Houisng / other RSL/2 shires CU/Vol sector, Fin Incl group Parishes/local councils Road shows TRA 8+ weeks 29/8 to 28/10/2012

  29. Wait a minute Mr Pickles made an announcement first reported in the Times 13/10/12

  30. £100m deal (or no deal?) Share of £100m is £217, 275 Conditions apply, mainly IS related cases Transition, no Income Support /JSA case to be worse off by more than 8.5% Substantially underfunds the gap Other changes in attempt 1, can’t apply Grant can’t be claimed until after scheme deadline 31st Jan 2013 May need to re do our scheme and consult again Initial angry reaction…………

  31. A 4 letter word beginning with F FURY Meddling Descending into chaos. Bad thing made worse During 3rd reading, amendment to review in 3 years and include Council Tax Support in UC Threw out changes to home alone discounts Doomed to failure , takes money off poor, lasted 3 years, late central interfering ,labelled poll tax ii Bad week, that was the last week in October

  32. Consultation responses Approx 390 On the 80 per cent- survey is split , disagree said do it lower than 80 per cent 250 to 90 re Hardship Count income? – do it excl war widows Other tweaks - do it said 260/75 Agree vulnerable do it said 260/50 96 per cent from Bassetlaw 61 per cent not on CTB and mostly under 60

  33. Comments • “I recognise that BDC are required to bring in changes to the system but I hope you are continuing to protest strongly against the rationale behind it ie that poor and vulnerable people should be hit disproportionately hard by the need to make savings” • “MY CONCERN IS THAT YOU WILL NOT BE ABLE TO MAKE THE SAVINGS AND YOU WILL INCREASE COUNCIL TAX BILLS. MIDDLE CLASS WORKERS WILL SUFFER AS USUAL!”

  34. Be positive , it’s November Royal Assent to LGFA 2012 Council may decide to revise draft scheme and take the Transitional Grant and accept its conditions Fund the gap from tax base growth c 500k New discount powers We are unlikely to re consult year 1 Will be consulting for year 2 scheme

  35. Key matters Collection – est 50 per cent won't pay Collection costs >£50k more . Need DIRECT Debit Vulnerable and unknown information Discount changes- consider the impact Major publicity on scheme decision Jan/ Feb Revs staff at full output anyway- year end Customer impact rent increase and council tax. A huge telephone demand expected

  36. Next few weeks - Hold our nerve • Tax base, MPA and local councils • Empty property council tax • Decide on accepting share of £100m • BDC Weekly scheme and collection approach • CTS scheme by 31/1/13 (20/12/12) • Others • Major member decisions • Unprecedented activity and customer and staff impact to plan for

  37. Delegates attend one workshop, delegates to choose between; Workshop 1 – West Lindsey District Councils Universal Credit pilot Workshop 2 – Rushcliffe Borough Council and Melton Borough Councils Joint Universal Credit pilot Workshops

  38. Universal Credit Pilot West Lindsey District Council Alan Robinson Nicoya Palastanga

  39. What is Universal Credit? Universal Credit will simplify the benefits system by bringing together a range of working-age benefits into a single streamlined payment. It aims to: simplify the system, making it easier for people to understand, and easier and cheaper for staff to administer improve work incentives smooth the transitions into and out of work reduce in-work poverty cut back on fraud and error. The first applications to Universal Credit will be made in October 2013. We expect all working age claimants to have moved onto Universal Credit by October 2017.

  40. Income related JSA • Income related ESA • Income Support (including SMI) • Working Tax Credits • Child Tax Credits • Housing Benefit • UniversalCredit • Disability LivingAllowance • Personal Independence Payment • … to include support for housing and children • Pension Credit • Child Benefit, Carer’s Allowance (will remain) • Council Tax Benefit (Localised Council Tax Schemes) • Contributory JSA and ESA (conditionality rules changing)

  41. Local Authority-led Pilots 2013 focus pilots - Twelve pilots will run from autumn 2012 to September 2013 to explore how local expertise can support residents to claim Universal Credit.2013 focus pilots will look at:- encouraging claimants to access online support independently; - improving financial independence and managing money;- delivering efficiencies and reducing fraud & error; and- reducing homelessness.Post 2015 focus pilots – on the longer term role for local authorities in supporting Universal Credit claimants. North Lanarkshire West Dunbarton Edinburgh Dumfries & Galloway Key: LA-led pilots Pathfinder preparation projects Direct Payment Demonstration Projects Wakefield Oldham West Lindsey Wigan Shropshire Rushcliffe Birmingham Melton Oxford Torfaen Southwark Caerphilly Newport Bath & NES Lewisham North Dorset

  42. Migration - key dates Pathfinderbegins APRIL 2013 National introduction of Universal Credit – groups of new unemployed able to claim, gradual phasing out of claims for existing benefits OCTOBER2013 Expansion - new claims from people in work and moving current claimants to Universal Credit in phased approach SPRING 2014 Universal Credit roll-out complete 2017

  43. WLDC Pilot October 2012 to September 2013 Face to Face Delivery Local delivery Holistic approach Digital engagement/journey Reduce fraud and error

  44. Online Claims Digital by default Housing Benefit/Job Seekers Allowance Access to IT Public Access in council offices Working with partner organisations Public Access across the district

  45. Support for Customers Financial Literacy - budgeting skills - suitable bank accounts Introduction to IT Literacy and Numeracy

  46. What will be different? Co-location of services WLDC, JCP, LCC, VCS Additional support from CAB, Credit Union, training providers, NCS

  47. The Role of Local Authorities Localism Community Champions Reducing Fraud Partnership Working Experience – housing, skills agenda, council tax support

  48. Now over to you for any questions

  49. Welfare Reform - The Impact on Housing

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