1 / 13

Changes to Adult Charging

Changes to Adult Charging. David Laws, Head of Finance, Adult Services, Lincolnshire County Council. 17 November 2010. What I want to do today. Talk to you about changes we are making to charges for Adult Social Care Tell you how we used what you said in the consultation

vienna
Download Presentation

Changes to Adult Charging

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Changes to Adult Charging • David Laws, Head of Finance, Adult Services, Lincolnshire County Council 17 November 2010

  2. What I want to do today • Talk to you about changes we are making to charges for Adult Social Care • Tell you how we used what you said in the consultation • Some of the words or ideas may be hard to understand – ask me to explain…

  3. Charging for Social Care • In England and Wales, social care is not free. Local councils ask people to pay some money towards the cost of their care if they can afford it. • Each council needs this money to help pay for the cost of services. • The politicians at each Council decide how much it is fair to ask people to pay. • Social care is free if you have little money to live on – for example some benefits.

  4. What happens here? • Lincolnshire only used to charge for some services, like part of supported living or home care for older people. • The Council fully subsidised other services such as transport and day services, which were free to use.

  5. Why is charging changing in Lincolnshire? • More people need support and care. The Council must raise more money to pay for care. • Government cutbacks mean the Council must find other fair ways to pay for care. • Personal Budgets mean the old way of charging for only some services no longer makes sense (perverse incentives). • The Council believes it is simpler and fairer to make a charge based on your ability to pay, not on what service you use. • It used to be mostly older people that paid a charge for services they received – now everyone will be assessed on their ability to pay in exactly the same way.

  6. We said – you did? • 49% of the people consulted disagreed with being charged for all services. Carers and younger people were most likely to disagree. 25% agreed. • Almost all consultees preferred being charged against part of their personal budget rather than all of it. • 20% agreed with being charged against all of a personal budget. • Most consultees thought a transitional period to adjust to new charges was important. 1,779 responses: 53% service users 32% carers. (27% under 65; 59% disability or long term health condition)

  7. What have the politicians decided? • All non-residential services will be charged for at their real cost • If you get a personal budget as a Direct Payment, then you will get charged on 90% of the real cost of the service (10% subsidy). • There will be a new maximum charge of £250 per week • There will be an independent appeals process – e.g. if you cannot afford to pay the assessed charge. • This will raise £1.47 million to pay for care services.

  8. How will this affect people with learning disabilities? • Some people who used to get free services may now have to pay a charge. • If you have over £23,250 you will have to pay either the full cost of the service or the maximum charge a week (very few people), whichever is lower.

  9. Don’t forget: • You get charged on your ability to pay • This means your income, any savings, any capital & expenses are taken into account. • Your disability related expenses are taken into account. • If your income is the same as Income Support plus 25% then you will not get charged. • If you are charged, your income will not get reduced to below Income Support plus 25%. • If your income goes up or down, you need to tell us.

  10. Frequently asked questions by Georgie Allen Q. What if I can’t afford it? - Contact us to discuss your problem. Everyone gets a benefit check so they can claim everything they are entitled to. - Don’t forget Disability Related Expenditure. - Independent appeal process Q. Will the service charge go up? - It will go up if you used to get a free service and have enough money to pay a charge. - It will go up for 58% of people already paying a charge. - It won’t go up for 42% of people who currently get a chargeable service. Q. Will it affect how many days I use a day service? - It shouldn’t. Talk to your practitioner if you are thinking of reducing your service so as to pay less.

  11. Frequently asked questions 2 by Georgie Allen How will I pay? - You can pay by Direct Debit or with an AllPay card at Post offices. Who will pay that hasn’t paid before? - People will be assessed for charging for the first time if they used to get free services such as transport or day services.

  12. What I would like the Board to do • Consider what information do people with learning disabilities and families need about Adult Charging? • What are the best ways to get it to them? • Frequently asked questions? Examples?

  13. How you can get in touch with me • Address: Orchard House, Lincoln LN1 1BA • Telephone: 01522 554091 • Email: david.laws@lincolnshire.gov.uk

More Related