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Scottish
Social Security Consortium
Minutes
of meeting 24 November 2003
Present:
Martin Barnes Child Poverty Action Group
Abigail Bremner Citizens Advice Scotland
Susan Drew Highland Advice and Information Network
Pat Gallagher Age Concern Scotland
Lindsay Isaacs Citizens Advice Scotland
Judith Paterson Child Poverty Action Group in Scotland
Susan Rew One Parent Families Scotland
Derek Sinclair Contact A Family
Angela Toal The Action Group
Jim Pearson Alzheimer's Scotland
Apologies:
Alice Jarvie Help The Aged
Stephanie Millar Update
Craig Mackenzie One Plus
Housing
Benefit Pathfinders
Alan Sinclair,
Benefits Manager at City of Edinburgh Council, spoke to the group
about the Housing Benefit pathfinder that would be taking place
in Edinburgh next year.
The launch date
for the pathfinder was 9th February 2004, and Edinburgh City had
decided to go for a 'big bang' approach. This meant that all private
sector HB claimants would be moved onto the new system on that date.
This would involve a reassessing all rents in line with the new
procedures.
The basics of
the pathfinder project was as follows:
- A Local
Housing Allowance (LHA), based on average rents in specific
areas, would be paid to tenants. Where the claimant rented a property
which was more expensive than this allowance, they would have
to pay the difference. Where the rent was less than the allowance,
the claimant could keep the difference (which would not be counted
as income for the purpose of calculating entitlement to other
benefits).
- A claimant's
entitlement to LHA would be based on household size (and the area
in which they were renting). There would be an entitlement to
one bedroom for any adult couple; any other adult aged 16 or over;
any two children under 10; any two children of the same sex aged
15 or under; or any other child. In addition, there would be entitlement
to further shared rooms on the following basis one to three
in a household would be entitled to one living room; households
of four to six would be entitled to two living rooms; and households
of seven or more would be entitled to three. All households were
entitled to a kitchen and bathroom.
- The LHA
would additionally be calculated on the basis of the averages
in a 'Broad Rental Market Area' there would be four such
areas in Edinburgh. Average rents would be calculated and published
on a monthly basis and claimants would be entitled to a LHA on
the basis of the published rates during the month in which they
claimed HB. Broad Rental Market Areas would be defined by postcode,
and Rent Officers would be responsible for calculating the monthly
LHA rate (in a manner closely based on the formula used to set
local reference rents).
- HB would
generally be paid directly to the tenant except where the
tenant is defined as vulnerable by the local authority. Guidance
about determining whether someone was vulnerable would be drawn
up by the DWP and was likely to include factors such as substance
abuse issues, mental health problems and serious illness. In addition,
rent would be paid to the landlord where there was a previous
history of not paying rent or rent arrears of eight weeks or more.
Edinburgh City may be paying rent to landlords for up to six months
after the introduction of the new scheme as each case would have
to be reconsidered on its merits. Where there was a surplus entitlement
(where rent less than the LHA), the difference was required to
be paid to tenants.
The following
groups would be exempt from the new system:
- Public sector
tenants (although the Government intended the scheme to eventually
cover this group too). Currently 90% of housing association claimants
have HB paid directly to their landlord, and HB accounts for 80%
of council rents (a block transfer between departments).
- 'Protected'
cases eg. supported housing provided by charities and voluntary
organisations.
- Pre-1989
tenancies
- 'Exceptional'
cases such as caravans and boats, and including bed and
breakfast accommodation.
- Cases where
a substantial part of the rent is for board and attendance
ie. residential care.
The Government's
aims in introducing this new scheme are as follows:
- Fairness
the new scheme would pay the same amount to tenants with
similar circumstances (as opposed to the current, rent-based scheme,
where tenants in similar circumstances could be paid very different
amounts on the basis of the properties they rented).
- Choice
tenants could 'choose' to pay more for a bigger, better property,
or could get additional income by renting a smaller, less attractive
property.
- Transparency
Published LHAs would mean tenants would know how much HB
they would be entitled to in advance. The current system of pre-tenancy
determinations was too slow and little used. This was intended
to act as a work incentive as well as people would know how much
they would get if they moved into work.
- Personal
responsibility by paying HB directly to the claimant, the
Government envisaged that people would take more responsibility
for budgeting (research showed that, currently, long-term HB recipients
did not know how much their rent was and might describe themselves
as not paying rent, rather than paying rent but in receipt of
HB).
- Simplicity
the new system would not require all claims to be referred
to rent officers, so would cut out a stage in the process.
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Important
points
- The
single room rent entitlement would remain
- Claimants
would still be able to apply for a discretionary housing
payment where their entitlement to HB did not cover their
rent
- The
Government's intention was that no one would lose out at
the introduction of the LHA. Where an existing claimant
had an entitlement higher than the relevant LHA rate, they
would not be moved onto the new system until the LHA had
reached the level of their existing entitlement.
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Grainia Long
from Shelter Scotland outlined some of the concerns Shelter had
with the new proposals. She noted that 43% of Shelter clients reported
problems with their Housing Benefit claims and stated that Shelter
generally welcomed the pathfinder reforms, especially the fact that
it would be more transparent and simpler to administer and understand.
However, the organisation had the following concerns:
- Requiring
that payment of HB was made directly to tenants was taking away
choice rather than increasing it.
- Access to
a bank account was a particular problem in Scotland, with 30%
of those on the lowest incomes not currently having one. [Alan
Sinclair noted that the local authority had had discussions with
banks regarding basic bank accounts, which would be the Government's
preferred option for tenants as rent could be paid by standing
order. HB could be paid into a Post Office card account.The
council was very keen to prevent the use of cheque cashing services
which charged high fees.]
- Debt issues
might create further problems for claimants especially
were HB payments were eaten up by overdrafts or obligations to
other creditors.
- Where HB
was paid to the earner rather than the carer, it could not be
assumed that it would be used for the benefit of the whole household.
- Problems
with rent restrictions caused by local reference rents and the
single room rent would remain, as would administrative problems
caused by the introduction of the Verification Framework.
- Furthermore,
HB would still be paid four weeks in arrears and would still be
means-tested, leading to an inevitable poverty trap,
Further issues
discussed by the group included:
- Existing
problems with the private rented sector. Grainia Long noted that
there were already well-known problems with the way the private
rented sector worked, which were not being addressed in these
proposals. The proposals assumed that the private rented sector
worked well, with a selection of affordable property available,
and that it was a discrete sector. The reality was that the private
sector did not operate well and, further, tenants may move in
and out of private/public accommodation during the course of their
claim.
- There were
concerns that the proposals would further discourage private sector
landlords from renting to benefits claimants. Alan Sinclair noted
that some English pathfinder local authorities were reporting
that landlords were issuing notices terminating tenancies in advance
of the introduction of the new scheme. This had not been the case
in Edinburgh yet, and the council was working closely with landlords
to inform them of the plans.
- Housing
Benefit was a reserved issue and was being treated as operating
entirely separately from issues such as housing policy and homelessness,
both of which were devolved and were being tackled under a separate
policy agenda.
- Other changes
were taking place in relation to HB which would simplify the claims
process. Benefit periods had already been abolished for pensioners
and would be abolished for working age claimants in April 2004.
This meant that moving into work would be treated as a change
in circumstances rather than requiring a new claim. Fraud efforts
would also be redirected to claimants judged as being of highest
risk.
- In relation
to vulnerable tenants, there would be a very complicated interaction
between different organisations, which may lead to confusion.
The new arrangements for supporting people could mean that a tenant's
housing provider and support provider could be different organisations
with different definitions of vulnerable. Add to this the local
authority's definition, which could be different again. Further,
there was evidence that housing officers did not see vulnerability
in the same terms as eg. advice providers and social workers might.
- Edinburgh
City already had problems with backlogs of HB claims due to computer
problems earlier in the year. However, as the new system was simpler
to administer, Alan Sinclair did not see its introduction as adding
to the problem. He noted that IT providers had received significant
money from the Government to adapt their systems to the new procedures.
Several different IT systems were being tested across the nine
pathfinders.
Minutes
of the previous meeting
Martin Barnes
noted discussions at the last meeting about Fuel Direct and a campaign
to simplify application and promote it as an alternative to pre-payment
meters. This was something that CPAG may be interested in taking
up too.
Abi - I did
refer a case to Mike, but I don't know at this point whether there's
any chance of him taking it forward. Could we leave it out of the
minutes for now?
Information
exchange
Derek Sinclair
noted that the Inland Revenue had published guidance in relation
to recovering overpayments of tax credits. The group commented on
the shoddiness of the consultation process, including the fact the
draft guidance had been removed from the IR's website. Judith noted
that some changes had been made to the final policy, including more
information about in-year recovery. The guidance in relation to
top-up payments (where recovering in-year overpayments was causing
hardship) was unclear. It appeared from the way the guidance was
worded that these payments would form part of the amount that could
be recovered at the end of the year. There was also no publicity
about the availability of these payments and it was unclear how
the amount of the payment was calculated.
The group noted
in general that the Inland Revenue seemed geared up to dealing with
overpayment problems at the end of the year, rather than when they
happened. Indeed, it appeared that the IR did not consider the issue
of 'official error' unless their miscalculation created a problem
which could not be reconciled at the end of the year. The group
further raised concerns about 'official error' and the chaos created
during the introduction of tax credits, which meant many claimants
genuinely did not understand what they should be receiving.
CPAG was seeking
a meeting with the Paymaster General to address concerns about tax
credit implementation. Martin Barnes noted that the Inland Revenue
was the subject of a broader Treasury review which might see it
restructured. There may also be problems with the continuation of
IT support services, which would have a likely knock-on effect to
end-of-year reassessments.
Susan Drew noted
that the Water Customer Consultation Panel (the consumer body for
the restructured water industry in Scotland) had been examining
the issue of water charges. It had recommended to the Scottish Parliament
that the existing water relief scheme for low income families was
extended in the short term and that, in the longer term, steps had
to be taken to address affordability at a UK-wide level. A report
had been commissioned to look at affordability of water and sewerage
charges which had come up with a 'water poverty' definition akin
to fuel poverty. More information was available at www.watercustomer.org.uk.
Jim Pearson
noted an issue regarding unequal treatment of capital under Pension
Credit. People who received the Guarantee Credit component were
passported to full Housing and Council Tax Benefit. However, those
who only got the Savings Credit component were subject to normal
capital cut-off rules, meaning that if they had more than £16,000
capital, they were liable for full rent. In reality, a minor difference
in income of less than a pound could mean that one person got full
HB while another was liable for full rent. This was obviously unequal
treatment. The matter had also been raised by Perth CAB who
received a response from the minister responsible saying that the
Government did not intend to change the current rules because no
one was worse off as a result (ie. people will over £16,000
capital would not have been able to claim HB under previous rules
either).
There was also
an issue round Severe Disablement Allowance and Pension Credit.
A number of pensioners may currently be claiming SDA rather than
Retirement Pension because it would have made them better off previously.
However, SDA does not count as income for the purposes of claiming
the Savings Credit element. Therefore these people may now be better
off claiming Retirement Pension as any drop in income may be made
up by guarantee credit and entitlement will count towards Savings
Credit. CAS was currently waiting for a response from the Pension
Service on this issue.
Martin Barnes
highlighted that the DWP were due to release a report into child
poverty. This may set precedents in the way they deal with pensioner
poverty and poverty among disabled people. CPAG had been campaigning
for an increase in the support given to children of low income families
of £5 per week. This would enable the Government to meet its
poverty targets. However, they did not expect such an increase to
feature in the Chancellor's pre-budget speech. CPAG did expect to
see confirmation of plans to establish Child Trust Funds and extend
educational allowances to encourage young people to stay on in education.
It was also
noted that Danny Philips had now got a job at the Scottish Executive
therefore CPAG in Scotland was looking for a new manager.
Susan Drew noted
that Rights Advice Scotland was a new organisation representing
welfare rights workers in local authorities. She had attended their
launch event and they seemed eager to work in partnership with others
in the sector. It was not clear if membership would be limited to
those working for local government.
ACTION:
It was agreed that Abi Bremner would write to Rights Advice
Scotland with an open invitation to attend a Scottish Social Security
Consortium meeting to speak to members.
Judith Paterson
reported that CPAG in Scotland were in the process of organising
their second benefits and poverty conference. The provisional date
was Friday 18th June. Ideas for seminar topics included:
- Developments
in 'Activities for managing life' new processes for determining
entitlement to DLA
- Tax credits
with the focus on the annual review process, or the migration
of Income Support claimants
- Housing
Benefit how to administer HB claims after benefit periods
were removed, as there would still be reviews and different fraud
procedures
ACTION:
It was agreed to get a representative from the Inland Revenue
Adjudicator's Office to speak at the next meeting about dealing
with tax credit complaints. Abi Bremner and/or Judith Paterson would
also do a review of tax credit overpayments.
Date
of next meetings
Meeting dates
for 2004 were agreed as follows:
Tuesday 17th
February in CPAG offices in Glasgow
NOTE DATE CHANGE ABOVE
Thursday 6th May at CAS offices in Edinburgh
Tuesday 28th September at CPAG offices in Glasgow
Monday 22nd November at CAS offices in Edinburgh
All meetings
would run from 1pm to approximately 3pm.
Back
to the Scottish Social Security Consortium
main page
For
more information contact:
Judith
Paterson
Child Poverty Action Group in Scotland,
Unit 9, Ladywell
94 Duke Street,
Glasgow G4 0UW
0141 552 3303
email jpaterson@cpagscotland.org.uk
Abigail Bremner
Citizens Advice Scotland
Spectrum House
2 Powderhall Road
Edinburgh EH7 4GB
0131 550 1000
email
bremnera@cas.org.uk
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