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Funding shortfall 'threatens services'

Posted: 27 March 2003 | Subscribe Online


The government should provide an extra £29m to close Supporting People's funding gap and review its operational problems because they "threaten to destabilise services for vulnerable people".

Supporting People, the new single-stream funding regime for housing with support, comes into effect on 1 April. Jim Coulter, chief executive of the National Housing Federation, said the housing association trade body had asked the government to urgently fill the £29m gap between the funding needs identified in December 2002 and the £1.4bn allocated to councils for the programme last month (news, page 11, 27 February).
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Coulter said local authorities were trying to make reductions on their Supporting People budgets by imposing draconian contracts and agreements on housing associations providing supporting housing. He also called for secure funding arrangements for years two and three, including the flexibility to carry over any surplus or deficit.

Meanwhile, a report by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation into the expected impact of Supporting People on services for people with complex needs has found that health, housing, social services and probation service commissioners lack an agreed definition of marginal groups.
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The report says there are known "shortfalls and gaps" in services for marginal groups and that an analysis of need will be essential. "Local politicians will need convincing of the necessity for action and partner authorities will be expected to commit resources to enable support services to extend their reach," it says.

Supporting People: Real Change? Planning Housing and Support for Marginal Groups from 01904 430033.


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