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Opposition grows over plans to force councils to work with health bodies

Posted: 06 January 2005 | Subscribe Online


Local government leaders have warned ministers against compelling councils and health bodies to work together following reports that proposals for care trusts would be included in the adult social care green paper.

With the government reportedly considering imposing a duty on councils and the NHS to set up care trusts to commission adult services, the Local Government Association said compulsion was unnecessary.

David Rogers, chair of the LGA's community well-being board, said: "Local government and health already work together successfully to provide integrated care services outside a statutory model. It is not necessary for care trusts to be made statutory to integrate social care services."
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Association of Directors of Social Services president Tony Hunter also called for local flexibility. He said: "We are looking for a strong vision [in the green paper], clear outcomes and strong performance management frameworks, but with the mechanisms [to deliver these] left to localities."

Last month, a Department of Health source was reported as saying that the green paper would propose a statutory duty on councils and primary care trusts to co-operate in care trusts that would commission but not provide services.

The speculation took local government leaders by surprise.

One LGA source said: "It wasn't something that we thought was going to happen. We are trying to make enquiries about whether it
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will be part of the green paper."

Existing care trusts, which were introduced on a voluntary basis by the Health and Social Care Act 2001, can commission and provide services, although only eight have been set up so far.

Rogers said the LGA opposed dividing commissioning from provision, adding: "It could reduce the range of providers and damage the possibility of providing choice in social care."

It has emerged that the green paper has been further delayed. It had been expected this month, but will now be published in February because the government wants it to tie in with other initiatives. It had originally been set for launch last September.


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