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Hampshire County Councils Revised Charging Proposals

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Title: Hampshire County Councils Revised Charging Proposals


1
Changes to Charging for Carein Hampshire 4th
March 2006
Southampton Centre for Independent Living
Hampshire Centre for Independent Living
2
Consultation on the charging policy for
non-residential services for adultsDave Ward
Hampshire County Council
3
The presentation covers
  • The current policy
  • The proposed changes
  • The reasons for them
  • The consultation

4
The current policy
  • Chargeable services
  • Services that give personal care and some other
    help at home, including sitting services
    hourly rate fixed annually
  • Meals are charged at a flat rate
  • Non-chargeable services
  • Care management and assessment
  • Help, advice and equipment from occupational
    therapists
  • Day centre/service attendance
  • Direct Payments
  • a flat-rate deduction in Option A and one based
    on a financial assessment in Option B

5
Principles
  • Service users
  • Pay for what they get
  • Pay what they can afford
  • Policy has to comply with the Governments
    mandatory guidance Fairer Charging Policies for
    Home Care and other non-residential Social
    Services, introduced in 2002

6
Financial assessment
  • To establish how much a service user can afford
    to pay, outgoings are subtracted from income to
    give a disposable income
  • Only the income and outgoings of the person
    receiving care are taken into account
  • Income includes Income Support, benefits,
    pensions and interest on savings and investments
    such as building society accounts (but not the
    principal)
  • Income doesnt include earnings from paid
    employment
  • Outgoings include an allowance for general living
    expenses (based on the Governments Income
    Support rules plus 25)

7
Financial assessment (cont)
  • Allowable outgoings also include housing costs
    (mortgage or rent), Council Tax and a range of
    disability-related expenses, including
  • Special clothing
  • Domestic help
  • Equipment maintenance
  • Gardening
  • Extra heating
  • Home maintenance
  • Personal care arranged privately

8
Financial assessment (cont)
  • Disposable income equals assessable income minus
    allowable outgoings and is the basis for any
    weekly charge
  • No disposable income
  • no charge
  • Some disposable income
  • weekly charge is the hourly rate x number of
    hours received in the week up to a maximum of ¾
    of disposable income

9
An example
  • Income of 150 a week minus outgoings of 130 a
    week gives a disposable income of 20 a week
  • 6 hours of care received each week at the current
    hourly rate of 11.36 an hour costs 68.16
  • Charge 15

10
Added value
  • Financial assessments carried out by Financial
    Assessments and Benefits Team
  • In addition to working out the weekly charge,
    they give advice on benefits and help in making
    claims
  • Around a third of all the visits they make are
    follow-up visits to progress claims

11
In total..
  • Around 50 of people receiving chargeable
    services contribute towards their cost
  • Charges raise about 4m each year
  • Total spend on domiciliary services in Hampshire
    is around 55m a year
  • Income from charges, therefore, pays for around
    7 of their cost

12
The proposed changes
  • The first four weeks of care would be free
  • Peoples savings, investments and capital (but
    not the value of their home if they own it) would
    be taken into account
  • An increase in the percentage of disposable
    income that can be used to pay for care from 75
    to 100
  • Charging for day centre/services attendance
  • An overall upper limit as a safeguard for people
    with a very high upper limit
  • Charges for Direct Payments Option A would be
    based on a financial assessment

13
The reasons
  • The Council needs to raise more money to put
    towards the cost of caring for increasing numbers
    of people
  • The number of people aged 85 in Hampshire is
    growing by 1,000 a year
  • Government funding is low (the second worst
    funded shire county in England 12 lower than
    the average) and the Council is prevented from
    raising the extra money needed through Council
    Tax (capping)
  • The gap between needs and resources is widening
    hence an expected Adult Services overspend of
    10-12m this year and major savings to find next

14
The reasons (cont)
  • Raising money (cont)
  • Increasing the percentage of the cost of services
    paid for by charges by 1 (from 7 to 8) would
    raise around 0.5m enough to pay for 6 hours of
    domiciliary care a week for 120 people for a year
  • To eliminate some unfairnesses
  • At present, people with a moderate income and no
    savings pay charges but people with a low income
    and substantial capital and/or savings do not
  • To bring Hampshire into line with other
    authorities
  • Most of whom take capital into account and a
    larger proportion of disposable income

15
The reasons (cont)
  • To ensure the Council is operating lawfully
  • The flat-rate deduction applied to Option A
    Direct Payments recipients does not comply with
    the Fairer Charging mandatory guidance which
  • Expects charges to be based on an assessment of
    ability to pay
  • Accepts flat-rate charges only in limited
    circumstances (such as meals, where charges
    substitute for ordinary living costs)
  • Expects people receiving direct payments to be
    treated as they would have been treated if they
    had been receiving the equivalent services

16
The reasons (cont)
  • To ensure the Council is operating lawfully
    (cont)
  • Or The Community Care, Services for Carers and
    Childrens Services (Direct Payments) (England)
    Regulations 2003 which expects the Council to
    have regard to the prescribed persons means

17
The consultation
  • All service users who might be affected by the
    proposed changes were written to at the beginning
    of January to seek their views. A questionnaire
    was provided and many have been completed and
    returned but many people have also written
    letters, sent emails or given their views over
    the telephone. All will be taken into account.
  • The consultation period runs until the end of
    March
  • Report to the Councils Executive Member for
    Adult Social Care at her Decision Day on 28 April
  • Second consultation with users of day care and
    equivalent services May to July

18
Refreshments
Southampton Centre for Independent Living
Hampshire Centre for Independent Living
19
Hampshire County Councils Revised Charging
Proposals
Philip MasonHCIL
Southampton Centre for Independent Living
Hampshire Centre for Independent Living
20
  • What is Proposed?

21
1. Capital 
  • Anyone with capital above 20,000 will pay full
    cost of care
  • Anyone with capital between 12,500 and 20,000
    will be assessed as earning 1 per week for every
    250 above 12,500. This implies an interest rate
    of 21, compared to actual interest rates of 4.
    Therefore the capital sum will be consumed
  • Anyone with less than 12,500 capital will not be
    subject to the 21 income assessment but will
    presumably continue to have actual interest taken
    into account

22
2. Disposable Income
  • All income above an allowance of Income Support
    or Pension Guarantee Credit 25 will be
    regarded as disposable and available to pay for
    care
  • Income Support with Enhanced Disability Premium
    25 114.81
  • Pension Guarantee Credit (age 60) 25
    136.81
  • The following cannot be regarded as disposable
    or available to pay for care
  • Earnings from employment
  • Disability Living Allowance Mobility Component

23
  • Some people may be able to add to their allowance
    by proving that they have extra Disability
    Related Expenses but these will have to be
    approved by a social worker and meticulously
    accounted for
  • The reduction of disabled and elderly peoples
    income to these levels will restrict those with
    medium to high care needs to poverty levels

24
  • Age Concern, who are opposed to means tested
    charging, say that if local authorities insist on
    charging for services, they should
  • reconsider the levels of the basic allowances
    and base them on a modest but adequate budget or
    similar standard to ensure that older and
    disabled people have enough left to live on
    after charges to remain socially included and to
    live healthily

25
3. Hourly charge
  • The County plan to increase their hourly charge
    from 11.36 to 13.32
  • For someone receiving the average of 20 hours a
    week, for Direct Payments Option A, this could
    mean a charge of up to 266.40 per week

26
4. Overall Upper Limit
  • Hampshire do not currently have an upper limit
    for weekly care charges
  • The highest current charge paid by a client for
    non-residential care is 383.64 per week
  • The new proposals suggest there will be an upper
    limit but do not say what it will be
  • It is likely to be between 200 300 per week

27
5. Day Care
  • The County plan to include day care and
    equivalent services in the charging policy
  • Most people would not choose to go to day centres
    unless they have to
  •  
  • In many cases the time spent at a day centre is
    the only break available for long suffering
    caring families
  • Charging for this relief may hasten family
    breakdown with all the associated extra costs to
    Social Services

28
6. Direct Payments Option A
  • Hampshire County Council propose that Direct
    Payments Option A will be abolished and all
    clients transferred to Option B
  • In 1997 and 2002 it was established that Direct
    Payments Option A, with a flat rate charge of
    12, is acceptable within the Governments Fairer
    Charging Guidance because Option B exists for
    those who prefer to pay a means tested charge and
    receive a higher hourly payment rate

29
  • Direct Payments Option A is very different from
    receiving care provided by Social Services
  • Users take on all the responsibilities,
    including
  • staff recruitment and training
  • organising rotas, including holiday sickness
    cover
  • staff welfare and insurance
  • payment of wages, tax and National Insurance
  • record keeping
  • keeping up to date with employment legislation

30
  • Option A currently saves Hampshire County Council
    significant sums of money
  • Option A users receive a net payment of 8.17 per
    hour to organise their own care (9.28 gross
    minus a flat rate charge of 1.11)
  • Based on an average of 20 hours care per week,
    the average charge paid at this flat rate by
    Option A users is 22.20 (12) per week

31
  • Option B is funded at a level similar to directed
    services, costing Hampshire an average of 13.18
    per hour
  • As Option B currently appeals to those who have
    very low incomes, the percentage recovered by the
    County through charges can be assumed to be very
    low

32
  • If all Option A users were transferred to Option
    B their payment rate would have to increase to
    match
  • Based on available figures, Hampshires average
    collection rate through means tested charging is
    6.9
  • It could cost Hampshire County Council an extra
    3.5m per annum if they transfer all 786 Option A
    users to the more expensive Option B

33
  • Direct Payment users tend to have higher care
    needs than those on directed services, averaging
    20 hours per week as compared to 10 hours per
    week for directed services
  • Therefore Direct Payments users would be
    particularly adversely affected by increased
    charges
  • If Option A were to be abolished, there would be
    little incentive for new users to take on Direct
    Payments
  • The County would then need to provide more
    expensive directed services

34
  • The Government state in their new white paper
    Our health, our care, our say
  • we expect local authorities to set challenging
    targets for the take-up of direct payments
  • Meanwhile, Hampshire County Council are seeking
    to close down the most successful Direct Payments
    scheme in the UK

35
Is Means Tested Charging for Non-Residential
Care a Good Idea?
36
1. Charges are a tax on disability
  • Hampshire County Council collect Council Tax to
    pay for social services
  • They then charge disabled people again for
    essential services such as washing, getting out
    of bed, using the bathroom and eating

37
Charging enforces poverty andundermines
independence
  • Hampshire propose to levy the maximum charges
    permitted by Government guidance
  • This would ensure that clients who need a lot of
    care would be reduced to the lowest income
    permitted by the Government
  • This is not compatible with the stated purpose of
    social care to promote independence and social
    inclusion

38
Charges discourage disabledpeople from saving
for a pension
  • Although earnings from employment are not allowed
    to be taken into account for charging, Hampshire
    regard pensions or savings people may have put by
    when they were working as available to pay for
    care
  • The Government is keen to encourage people to
    save for retirement but Hampshire plan to
    penalise anyone who does so

39
Charging causes people to go without the help
they need
  • Many, faced with the indignity of a means test
    and enforced poverty, will try to get by without
    help
  •  
  • The loss of essential care undermines quality of
    life and health and may ultimately necessitate
    expensive remedial action by both Health and
    Social Services
  • Hampshire Social Services calculations imply
    that they hope to achieve a 30 saving from
    cancellation of services

40
Charging increases the burdenon family and
friends
  • Much the greater part of care support for elderly
    and disabled people is supplied unpaid by family
    and friends
  • Reductions in support for families who are faced
    with heavy charges will place a much greater
    burden on these family carers

41
  • Many carers are not free to go out and work and
    will therefore suffer the effects of charging
    alongside the disabled family members they care
    for
  • High charges will drive some carers to give up
    the relief they need in order to avoid poverty
  • Others will stop providing care so they can go
    out to work to maintain a reasonable living
    standard
  • This will force Social Services to greatly
    increase their support to the disabled family
    member

42
Some may give up and move into residential care
  • Heavy charges will make it increasingly difficult
    for disabled and elderly people to cope in their
    own homes
  • As a result of lack of care support and general
    poverty, some will decide to give up and go into
    expensive residential care

43
Why are Hampshire suggesting these changes?
44
1. They claim it would be fairer
  • Hampshire claim that it is fairer if they apply
    the same high charges to all disabled and elderly
    people regardless of differences between the
    services provided
  • However, legal advice in 2002 pointed out
  • you cannot treat different people in the same
    way and still have a 'fair and equitable' policy.
  • To treat different people in the same way can be
    discriminatory under article 14 of the European
    Convention on Human Rights

45
  • Hampshire suggest that disabled and elderly
    people have a special responsibility over and
    above that of able-bodied citizens to provide
    funding for Adult Social Services
  • This means that service users should pay their
    taxes and community charges and then, so that the
    general population should not have to bear the
    burden, they should provide extra funding to meet
    the costs of care for other disabled people

46
  • Hampshire also claim that, to be fair, all users
    of services should be left as badly off
    financially as the poorest
  • However, Francesca Klug of the Centre for the
    Study of Human Rights, writes regarding European
    Human Rights legislation
  • the value human rights law puts on equality is
    not entirely neutral. Everyone being treated
    equally badly is not a human rights concept. It
    is not sufficient to ensure that no-one is being
    discriminated against if the consequence is that
    all groups are treated with an equal lack of
    respect or lack of opportunity to participate in
    social and civic life.

47
Hampshire County Council Want to Obtain More
Money
  • Ken Thornber, Leader of the County Council says
    Hampshire will need to find 11m over the next
    two years in order to balance its books
  • However, the suggested measures will not achieve
    the necessary funding increase

48
  • According to County figures the anticipated extra
    income obtained from treating all of a clients
    income above Income Support 25 as available to
    pay for care and increasing care charges to
    13.32 per hour is estimated at approximately
    500,000
  • No estimates are given for any of the other
    proposed changes to charging policy
  • Rather than saving money, the proposal to close
    down Direct Payments Option A is likely to incur
    a deficit in the region of 3.5m

49
  • In 2002, Social Services officers confirmed that
    the County Council would lose money if they
    applied means tested charging to Direct Payments
    Option A
  • The Audit Commission Report Charging with Care
    has shown that it is not a useful source of
    revenue for local authorities as an average of 25
    40 of revenue raised is swallowed up in
    administrative costs

50
How could Hampshire save money?
  • The best way Hampshire could save money would be
    to retain Direct Payments Option A and encourage
    many more people to use it
  • In addition, if means tested charging were not
    applied to Option A there would be no need to
    take on additional staff in the Financial
    Assessment team, as proposed in the Report to the
    Executive Member, Adult Services

51
  • Other ways of saving money could include
  • Better management of services provided directly
    by Social Services at a cost of 26.08 per hour
  • Monitoring of bills from care agencies, who
    currently charge for many hours of care which
    have not actually been supplied
  • Improvement in the Countys poor rate of moving
    people out of expensive hospital beds

52
  • Finally, Age Concern are representative of most
    organisations representing elderly and disabled
    people when they say
  • Charges for personal care and carers
  • services should be abolished

53
Resolution
Ian LoynesSCIL
Southampton Centre for Independent Living
Hampshire Centre for Independent Living
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