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Yet another cock up and another

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  • Yet another cock up and another

    Sheltered housing developments 'shelved due to benefit cuts'

    Hundreds of planned new sheltered accommodation units have been delayed or scrapped owing to proposed cuts to housing benefit, the BBC has learned.Several housing associations have said they are no longer financially viable.
    The flats, for the elderly or people with learning disabilities, are more expensive to build and run because they provide additional support.
    Ministers say they are reviewing the sheltered housing sector "to ensure it works in the best way possible".
    The National Housing Federation (NHF) has calculated that nearly 2,500 units have so far been scrapped or delayed as sheltered housing providers face losing an average of £68 a week per tenant.
    David Orr, chief executive of the NHF, told the BBC: "There is real impact now.
    "New homes for people with support needs - vulnerable people - that would be being built have been cancelled."
    BBC News has spoken to four housing associations who confirmed their plans had needed to change:
    • Southdown Housing in East Sussex scrapped plans for 18 units for people with learning disabilities
    • Knightstone Housing in Somerset has delayed a complex of 65 homes for the elderly and 13 properties for learning-disabled people
    • In Manchester, Contour Homes has had to put on hold a scheme to build 36 units for the elderly
    • In North Yorkshire, Harrogate Neighbours has delayed construction of 55 extra care flats

    The changes - announced in Chancellor George Osborne's Autumn Statement- will bring housing benefit rates for social housing in line with the sums paid to landlords in the private sector.
    Mr Osborne said the move would deliver savings of £225m by 2020-21.
    The cap includes sheltered housing, which is more expensive to provide due to the additional support on offer - anything from canteens to round-the-clock care staff.
    The benefit will not actually be cut until April 2018 but it will affect people signing new tenancies from this April.

    'We couldn't just absorb that'

    At one sheltered housing complex in Harrogate, the need for new development is clear - there is only one lift and the corridors are narrow.
    "We need to move," said resident Frank Forkes. "It's very cramped. If the lift breaks down, it's chaos because you've people upstairs in wheelchairs."
    The housing association has spent eight years developing plans for a new complex a couple of miles away.
    But following the government's announcement in November, the board of Harrogate Neighbours delayed the scheme. Under the new rules, they will lose £100,000 per annum on it.
    "As an organisation we have to be absolutely certain that we can afford to deliver all the services. And at the moment, it's not viable," chief executive Sue Cawthray said.
    The consequences of the benefit cuts are even worse for Contour Homes in Manchester.
    "We stand to lose - over the course of the 40-year life cycle of the development - if things stay as they are, £3.35m. As an organisation, we couldn't just absorb that," director of customer services Chris Langan said.

    Labour has described the housing benefit cut as a "catastrophe for those who can least afford it".
    But a spokesman for the Department for Work and Pensions said: "We've always been clear that we value the work the supported accommodation sector does to protect the most vulnerable members of society.
    "That's why we are carrying out a thorough review, working with the sector, to ensure that it works in the best way possible - which is what the NHF has asked for.
    "We are also providing councils with £870m of Discretionary Housing Payments which can be paid to people in supported accommodation."






    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-35583415
    Tags: None

  • #2
    Re: Yet another cock up

    Two of the main things the clone clowns harp on about, care for the elderly/disabled and housing.
    Well this well thought out plan once again to save a few bob is a fail.
    It means more elderly will have to depend on the LA for care in their own homes, this a service failing many and the first service to get the money saving chop. This also applies to people with learning difficulties, this something I know enough about.
    The elderly not only 'bed block' hospitals, a horrible title but we all know what it means, but many are in their own homes either owned or rented that are under occupied, houses that could go back in the housing market.
    No one should be forced to leave their home, but a WELL RUN sheltered home, can provide the care, attention and company that our elderly folks need and deserve.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Yet another cock up

      This Country fails the poor and weak in society every time .
      The benefits system is not really fit for purpose it should be a lifeline fir the sick and disabled who have the greatest need bearing in mind not every disabled person needs help.

      Those who are out of work need support not only with money and housing but with getting and keeping a job create jobs at the same time as increasing affordable and social housing .

      All the time with have a country run by the same types of ex public school boys and others who have never worked in the real world and seen how the majority of the people live we will keep having the same problems as bed blocking and lack of housing .

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Yet another cock up

        Exactly I can not believe they have given most of their projects any fore thought whatsoever. They harp on about the countries future yet most of what they propose gets a Uturn or is totally unworkable in the real world.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Yet another cock up

          I have a saying( If the world is run by clever people I am glad I am an IDIOT)

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Yet another cock up

            Eton = question ( What purpose was Eton built for in the beginning??)

            - - - Updated - - -

            Eton College was founded by King Henry VI as a charity school to provide free education to seventy poor boys who would then go on to King's College, Cambridge, founded by the same King in 1441,



            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Yet another cock up

              Easy

              Give no other option than making the vunerable/ill person live with family.
              Bung a few bones (carers allowance etc) to family member.
              Job done!

              Ahhh...............see they've already sorted that!
              CAVEAT LECTOR

              This is only my opinion - "Opinions are made to be changed --or how is truth to be got at?" (Byron)

              You and I do not see things as they are. We see things as we are.
              Cohen, Herb


              There is danger when a man throws his tongue into high gear before he
              gets his brain a-going.
              Phelps, C. C.


              "They couldn't hit an elephant at this distance!"
              The last words of John Sedgwick

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Yet another cock up

                Till you draw yer pension, then Carers Allowance ends, unlike the caring role.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Yet another cock up




                  Fewer than half of nurseries will be able to offer extended free childcare planned by the government, the National Day Nurseries Association has warned.

                  The NDNA said underfunding of the scheme meant many nurseries in England would struggle to provide the extended free care for pre-schoolers.
                  Early years education for three- and four-year-olds is to be doubled from 15 to 30 hours for each week of term time.
                  The government says the extra free hours will help support families.
                  Pilots of the scheme are due to begin in the autumn and a full rollout will follow in 2017, under new legislation covered by the Childcare Bill.
                  Annual losses

                  But in its annual survey, the NDNA found only 45% of the 485 nurseries questioned said they were likely to extend the number of free hours on offer.
                  The NDNA - which represents more than 5,000 nurseries out of a total of about 18,000 in England - said nurseries were currently managing to offer 15 hours of free childcare a week by plugging the shortfall in government funding.
                  In practice, it said, this meant parents paid a higher rate for the hours their child spent in nursery above 15 hours.


                  The average nursery had to absorb a loss of about £34,000 a year due to the funding gap, with 89% of nurseries making a loss on free places, it claimed.
                  The majority of respondents (92%) to the poll were private nurseries, with 7% from the voluntary sector and the rest maintained nurseries.
                  NDNA chief executive Purnima Tanuku said the nursery sector was "fully behind" the principle of more support for parents.
                  "But serious funding shortfalls stand in the way of nurseries getting on board, despite their desire to help families with free childcare," she said.
                  "Private, voluntary and independent nurseries deliver most of the government's free places, currently 15 hours per week for all three- and four-year-olds and some two-year-olds.
                  "But the nursery sector is reluctant to commit to offering more free hours when they already make a significant annual loss - an average of £34,000 per nursery - on the funded places they currently provide."

                  But education and childcare minister Sam Gyimah said: "We are backing families and funding the sector, with £1bn extra funding every year by 2020, including £300m annually to increase the national average funding rate, to incentivise and attract providers to deliver the full 30-hour free offer to parents.
                  "This extra funding was based on an extensive consultation with the sector and our review into the cost of delivering childcare, the most comprehensive analysis of this market ever.
                  "The NDNA's survey shows many providers are likely to offer free childcare and thousands of providers and councils also expressed an interest in taking part in our early implementers programme, well in advance of the national rollout."
                  Elsewhere in the UK

                  In Wales, all three- and four-year-olds are entitled to a minimum of 10 hours of free foundation phase early education.
                  In Scotland, three- and four-year-olds are eligible for 600 hours of free childcare a year (the equivalent of around 16 hours a week during term time).
                  In Northern Ireland, under the pre-school education programme, there is an allocation of funded places for children in the year before they start school.



                  http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/education-35587685

                  Comment

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