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Welfare Reform

Welfare Reform. David Gray Welfare Rights Manager Peter McCann Head of Revenues and Benefits and Customer Services. Overview of presentation. 1) Welfare agenda Dave 2) Changes from April Peter 3) Longer term changes Dave. Royal Assent 8/3/12

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Welfare Reform

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  1. Welfare Reform David Gray Welfare Rights Manager Peter McCann Head of Revenues and Benefits and Customer Services

  2. Overview of presentation • 1) Welfare agenda Dave • 2) Changes from April Peter • 3) Longer term changes Dave

  3. Royal Assent 8/3/12 • Biggest Change to welfare system in 60 years • Stated intentions of Government • – Make work pay • - Protect the vulnerable • - Fair to tax payers • - Fair to benefit claimants Welfare Reform Act 2012

  4. Expenditure savings

  5. Universal Credit • Housing Benefit Reform • Abolition of Council Tax Benefit • Personal Independence Payments (PIP) • Employment Support Allowance • Enhanced benefit sanctions Measures

  6. Introduction 1. Bedroom Tax 2. Discretionary Support Scheme 3. Council Tax Reduction Scheme 4. Discretionary Housing Payments 5. Benefits Cap 6. Council Tax Empty Property Charge

  7. Bedroom Tax

  8. Bedroom Tax One bedroom calculated for each of the following: • A single claimant or every adult couple • Any single adult aged 16 or over • Any two children under age 10 • Any two children of the same sex aged up to 15 • Any other child (other than a foster child or child whose main residence is elsewhere) • A non-resident overnight carer

  9. Housing Benefit is reduced by making a reduction to eligible rent • 14% one room (2,000) • 25% two rooms (600) • 2,600 households affected • Total Housing Benefit reduction is £1.8m Housing Benefit – Bedroom Tax

  10. Housing Benefit – Bedroom Tax Exemptions: • Temporary accommodation • Supported accommodation • Claimant or partner qualifies for state pension credit Protections: • Recent bereavement – 12 months • New claim – 13 weeks

  11. What is Halton BC doing? • Supplied lists to RSLs of households affected • December 2012 - Council wrote to claimants informing of under occupancy • Number of bedrooms & household composition • Amount of Housing Benefit reduction • Claimants requested to inform HBC if household composition is incorrect • Over night care cases identified • Disabled adaptations identified

  12. Non Dependants • Where are they?

  13. Discretionary Support Scheme

  14. From April 2013 the Discretionary Social Fund will end • From April Halton Council has a new scheme which may or may not be able to help you • Not a like for like replacement

  15. As a result of the Welfare Reform Bill, the national Discretionary Social Fund, currently administered by DWP, will be disbanded from April 2013 • Crisis Loans for general living expenses and Community Care Grants will be replaced by new local assistance schemes to be administered by Local Authorities • Expected that the grant to LAs will be based on the equivalent social fund spend 2012-13 (£178m) But Halton £100k down on 2011/2012! • Will be non-ring fenced • No new statutory duties to provide local scheme Background

  16. Changes to the Social Fund Scheme from April 2013 • Regulated scheme • Sure Start Maternity Grants • Funeral Payments • Cold Weather Payments • Winter Fuel Payments • Discretionary scheme • Budgeting Loans • Crisis Loans • -Alignment Payment • -General living expenses • Community Care Grants Remains with DWP Locally designed & administered provision

  17. Awards 2011/12

  18. No cash • Freephone number • List of considerations reduced • Online applications for support in community

  19. Key Message • Discretionary Social Fund now no longer exists • Halton Council may be able to help you

  20. Council Tax Support Scheme(Abolition of Council Tax Benefit from April 2013)

  21. Current Position Expenditure:Housing Benefit £52mCouncil Tax Benefit £11mCaseload:Housing Benefit 13,014Council Tax Benefit 15,305

  22. Council Tax Benefit caseload & expenditure Current Council Tax Benefit Scheme

  23. Current Position • Demand led • Funding- Councils are reimbursed 100% of the full amount of Council Tax Benefit paid out correctly • From April 2013 Council Tax Benefit will be abolished and replaced by a locally designed scheme

  24. A Local Scheme - BUT….. • New local scheme should: • Protect pensioners ( 41% of Halton’s benefit caseload are pensioners) • Take into account vulnerable groups – responsibilities regarding child poverty, the disabled, homelessness and equalities • Incentivise people to work • But: • There will be a 10% reduction in funding (equates to £1.4m in Halton) • The pensioner protection increases the burden to around 18% for working age claimants • Any expenditure above the cash specific sum must be met pound for pound by LA • The more people protected the higher the burden

  25. The Scheme • Reduction in non pensioner benefit of a % amount to be deducted at the end of the calculation • The % amount to be determined by Members each year once the grant details have been received • For 2013/2014 it will be 21.55%

  26. The Scheme • The % reduction ensures that the cut is shared equally • Retaining present system ensures the in-built protection for various groups is maintained • Small sums will be billed ( poll tax) • Average between £2 & £4 per week • People billed for the first time

  27. General Issues • Increased cost of recovery • Small amounts soon become big • Difficulty in gauging future demand & subsequent financial impact • 3 schemes will be operating • Confusion • Have written to 9,000 households at the start of the year

  28. Key Message • Don’t ignore the Council Tax Bill • Get in touch with the Council

  29. Benefits Cap

  30. As part of the Welfare Reform Bill, a cap on the maximum amount working- age households can claim in benefits will be introduced from April 2013 (now summer 2013) • This is to prevent claimants receiving more income from benefits than the average wage paid to those who are working. • The cap is set at £26k per annum (£500 per week for households with children or £350 per week for single claimants without children). • Some benefits are excluded such as Working Tax Credits and Disability Living Allowance. • Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) have written to all households that they think may be affected. • DWP have identified 104 households in Halton that may be effected (have incomes of between £26k and £46k). • DWP have wrongly identified some clients as being effected. Benefit Cap

  31. Until the implementation of Universal Credit, the cap will be applied to Housing Benefit • Owner Occupiers will not be effected until transfer to Universal Credit • Claimants likely to see it as a reduction in Housing Benefit rather than a reduction in overall benefits • Have written to 100 people Benefit Cap

  32. Discretionary Housing Payments

  33. Discretionary Housing Payments • Amount increased from £87k to £282k • Bedroom Tax alone is £1.8m shortfall • Publicity states that this will be the safeguard!

  34. Council Tax

  35. Council Tax • Changes to charges for Empty Properties • Change to charges for Second Homes • Everyone currently receiving exemptions have been notified

  36. Final Message • Impact on individuals - Social Fund/Bedroom Tax/ CTRS – which do I pay? • Impact on Halton’s wider community- (less money in economy) • Collection issues for Council/RSLs • Confusion & uncertainties for everyone as Government amends legislation • ‘It won’t affect me’ syndrome - £100m reinforces this • Capacity issues of Council as its all in one area • Get in touch

  37. Income related JSA Income related ESA Income Support (inc SMI) Working Tax Credits Child Tax Credits Housing Benefit Universal Credit Current System Reformed System Disability Living Allowance Personal Independence Payment Pension Credit, Child Benefit, Carer’s Allowance (will remain) Council Tax Benefit ( to be replaced) Contributory JSA and ESA ( now has 52 week limit)

  38. Single means tested benefit • Payable in or out of work • Initially for new claimants- stock transfer to follow • Oct 2013 for new claims, April 2014 to start transfer ( by Oct 2017) • Transitional Protection • Pilots being undertaken • Digital agenda Universal Credit

  39. Universal Credit

  40. Universal Credit – Risks/Impacts • Universal Credit will be paid directly to the customer. • Customer will need a bank account. (preferably one that will accept Direct Debits for rent payments.) • Will be paid monthly in arrears and to one person if part of a couple. • As yet still no definition of ‘vulnerable’ for payment to go to landlord. Potential substantial risk for increase in rent arrears

  41. PIP • Replaces DLA for new claimants of working age from April 2013 • -10,600 benefit claimants in Halton on DLA • Points based • Many currently entitled to DLA would not get PIP • Intention is to save money • Disproportionate effect on Halton • North West pilot Personal Independence Payment (PIP).

  42. PIP

  43. Tax Credits • Eligibility criteria made harsher • Employment Support Allowance • Existing Incapacity claimants to be assessed against harder criteria for ESA. • Substantial proportion move onto Job Seekers Allowance • Child Benefit Reform • Restrictions for Higher Rate Taxpayers Wider Reforms

  44. A lot covered very briefly and very complex • Deserves more detail • Full detail of changes not yet available • Intentions – saving money • - less generous to benefit claimants • Help available through Welfare Rights Service (tel: 0151 511 8930) Summary of Welfare Reform

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