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Learning difficulties services suffer most as cuts cause decommissioning

Posted: 05 May 2005 | Subscribe Online


More than two-fifths of all services decommissioned since the launch of Supporting People were for people with learning difficulties, figures from the Office of the Deputy Prime Minister have revealed.

Of the 978 services decommissioned by councils since 2003, 414 were targeted at people with learning difficulties, a higher figure than for any other group.

Alison Giraud-Saunders, co-director of the Foundation for People with Learning Disabilities, said closing down poor quality services was a good thing.
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But she said some services were being closed down because of a "turf war" between Supporting People teams and social services, with people with learning difficulties caught in the middle.

She said: "I know there are examples where what's been behind services being decommissioned is the Supporting People team have gone in and said this shouldn't be paid for out of our budget. What should happen is that services don't get decommissioned for an individual without alternative proper support in place."

ODPM figures released in March showed that the number of people using Supporting People had dropped 10 per cent. Funding for the programme was cut 7 per cent over three years starting last month.

Peter Kinsella, managing director of learning difficulties consultancy Paradigm, said learning difficulties projects were an easy target if councils adopted a "crude estimate" of the maximum they were prepared to pay.

He said learning difficulties services cost more than other services, because of the intense support that was required, and that decommissioning would leave many services untenable.
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"The big problem is if Supporting People funding is withdrawn providers will look towards social services to replace it. If someone needs support it has to come from somewhere.

"Supporting People reached out to people who weren't the priority of social services but who needed important levels of support to give them the independence they needed," he added.

Mental health programmes were the next most likely to be cut, with 136 being decommissioned, followed by 103 services for older people being axed.

An ODPM spokesperson said decommissioning did not mean vulnerable people would lose out.

Authorities could decommission services if they did not provide a high standard of care or provide value for money but they had to make sure vulnerable people were given alternative provision that better met their support needs, she added.


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