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Working together to mitigate the impacts of Housing Benefit reform

Working together to mitigate the impacts of Housing Benefit reform. Phil Turner Specialist Advisor. Background. “...spending on housing benefit has risen from £14 billion ten years ago to £21 billion today. That is close to a 50% increase over and above inflation.

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Working together to mitigate the impacts of Housing Benefit reform

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  1. Working together to mitigate the impacts of Housing Benefit reform Phil Turner Specialist Advisor

  2. Background “...spending on housing benefit has risen from £14 billion ten years ago to £21 billion today. That is close to a 50% increase over and above inflation. Costs are completely out of control. We now spend more on housing benefit than we do on the police and on universities combined... ....it is clear that the system of housing benefit is in dire need for reform. We will do that by: • Resetting and restricting Local Housing Allowances; • Up-rating deductions; • Reducing certain awards • Re-adjusting Support for Mortgage Interest payments • Limiting social tenants’ entitlement to appropriately sized homes; • And, lastly, we will for the first time introduce maximum limits on housing benefit – from £280 a week for a one bedroom property to £400 a week for a four bedroom or larger” George Osborne, 22 June 2010

  3. 937,000 claimants affected by LHA changes

  4. Average losses per loser per week (£s)

  5. LHA Caseload Impact – East Sussex

  6. LHA Impacts by Area

  7. 30th Percentile Comparison

  8. Mitigating Impacts of Housing Benefit Reform on Our Communities The government has announced increases in the national Discretionary Housing Payments budget by; • £10 million in 2011/12 • £40 million in 2012/13 • £40 million in 2013/14 Begin planning for the potential impacts of Housing Benefit reform - what can local authorities do and what could the impacts look like at a local level? DWP Impact Assessment - http://www.dwp.gov.uk/local-authority-staff/housing-benefit/claims-processing/local-housing-allowance/impact-of-changes.shtml

  9. Practical Ways Forward • Provide training for members and front line staff (including partner agencies) regarding the package of measures and the local response • Develop a partnership approach between Housing Options Services and Housing Benefit Departments • Engage with private rented sector landlords • Talk to Housing Management and Partner RSLs • Talk to Money Advice/Debt Counselling Services • Talk to Job Centre Plus • Talk to tenants • Work in partnership! • Share good practice...

  10. Partnering the PRS as LHA changes • Communication! • LHA safeguarding (direct payments) – new guidance on LHA from DWP emphasising expanded discretion to pay landlords directly where the local authority considers it will assist the household to access alternative accommodation or sustain an existing tenancy • Set up early warning systems to gain time to work with households at risk – how can local landlords work with the local authority to assist them in sustaining tenancies? • There are significant benefits for PRS landlords who work in partnership with the local housing authority • How will the local authority work with the PRS in future? • Do local landlords have any suggestions of things that the Council could do to alleviate concerns they may have over LHA changes?

  11. Options for Landlords • Undertake a considered impact assessment • Work with your tenant to discuss affordability • Work in partnership with the Council – there are additional benefits that can be provided around tenancy sustainment and where appropriate - direct payments / use of DHP

  12. Some other suggestions • LAs should consider how they might revise their approach to assessing households for PRS access schemes such as Rent Deposit and Bond Guarantee Schemes where it is likely that the impact of proposed changes could make accommodation provided through the scheme unaffordable in future • Review how marketing and work undertaken in response to recession impacts may be adjusted to assist in disseminating information and advice regarding Housing Benefit changes – link this work to some of the wider impacts of the government’s austerity package such as increasing household costs • Ensure marketing is disseminated internally for colleagues with narrow financial margins in light of increasing households costs, reductions in in-work benefits and the 2 year public sector pay freeze

  13. Consider the wider package of measures... • It is not only people in receipt of housing benefit that are affected by the coalition’s austerity measures • Increase in VAT? • Pay & recruitment freezes? • Redundancies? • Interest rates? • SMI changes and time limits?

  14. Phil Turner 07796308167specialistadvisor@hart.gov.uk

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