I got an email today confirming that my question to full council about housing benefits WILL be answered at the next full council meeting.
So, if you're not doing anything on 11 June at 2pm pop down to the Council House and live tweet it...because I don't think I can make it myself and I'd like to know what they say! Oh, botheration...
Anyway, I am genuinely interested in the response and when the minutes come out I will do a post quoting it in full with any commentary that I deem necessary. Such commentary will include 'well said' etc if justified but will also include links to evidence-based rebuttals if that's what the answer requires. If it turns out to be mostly the latter the resultant blogpost will be sent round to all councillors.
In all seriousness, I am genuinely interested in the answers. The question was drafted from around three years of research and certainly was not intended to be a tripping up exercise; the points I raised really do need both answering and tackling. I really do hope that this raises awareness among councillors about the reality of benefits administration in Nottingham and that real improvement is triggered.
In a related issue, NCC is having to gear up to some big new responsibilities as a result of the government's 'welfare reform'. The Post has already written a very good article about one aspect of this, the replacement of the national Council Tax Benefit scheme with a local one, but another development sees the responsibility to administer the discretionary social fund (including crisis loans etc) transferring to councils like NCC.
Both developments are extremely worrying. As far as the Council Tax Benefit change is concerned, the big issue is that it masks a 10% cut in central funding for the scheme and councils look like they're being set up to be the fall-guys for that. Less attention has been focused on NCC taking over a local version of the social fund. I'm particularly worried because the last time NCC took charge of a discretionary benefit scheme it didn't go so well. And it still isn't. You've presumably guessed that I'm talking about our old mate the Discretionary Housing Payments scheme here?
At least NCC appears to have realised there is an issue as it has apparently set aside funding for a new policy officer to do the thinking on these two issues (not DHPs natch). So far Lisa Black and the policy officer responsible for failing to mention DHPs to One Nottingham have been in charge of NCC's welfare reform response. I'm sure it would be unfair to see this new resource as being evidence that they're not up to the job but hey...
However, it looks like the job will go internally and I'm not convinced the expertise is there. And before you ask, no of course I'm not suggesting I should be able to apply for it, I'm still not medically fit, I also have a major skills gap and there's no bloody way I'd go for any job which requires me to report to Lisa Black again cos she's not fit to lick my boots.
So. None of this is looking good. Even if we do get good answers to my big question, it's all changing soon with Universal Credit and these new local responsibilities. It really is not the time to be on benefits believe me.
If you have had a letter recently about the new government plans to abolish Housing and Council Tax benefits, then you will have had a letter from NCC claiming that theirs a 10% reduction.
ReplyDeleteIn plain simple terms, utter hog wash. The government report on welfare reforms states quite clearly that the onus will be on the local council to provide a scheme that provides this service and that the relief will be anything from 0% to 100%, not one word in that report about a 10% reduction.
So why does NCC have to lie? Theyre obviously looking to get some income out of already hard pressed claimants on DWP benefits and are looking to have an income albiet a small one yet the fact remains that what NCC claims and whats in the Report 12-24 available from here http://www.parliament.uk/briefing-papers/RP12-24.pdf will not say anything about any reduction. What it does say is that the scheme will be up to the council to provide this relief locally.
If you had the letter off NCC, you will also note that they have drop in clinics, not public meetings. This is obviously to deal with individuals on a one-to-one basis and sell that lie of a 10% reduction. The question is simple... WHO wrote the letter stating these facts?
The issue is what central govt will provide to pay for any new council tax benefit scheme. At present, local authorities effectively administer it on behalf of central govt and receive 100% subsidy.
ReplyDeleteUnder the new rules councils will have to decide on their own scheme but central govt subsidy will only be 90%. As the govt has said there can be no reduction in benefits for pensioners, this cut will be disproportionally applied to other groups eg unemployed unless councils make up the shortfall from other income. If councils do this it will obviously mean cuts to other areas in order to pay for it.
The document you link to has a number of references to the 10% cut eg the quote from Helen Jones on p18.