Wednesday, 1 March 2017

The future of care services: 'at breaking point'

There are huge question marks over the future of care:
Futures Forum: The future of Sidmouth's hospital and care services >>> "looking at the statistics for over-85-year-olds, Sidmouth needs to retain its hospital beds"

It all has to be paid for:
Futures Forum: Councils are planning tax rises to cover the mushrooming cost of social care > finances 'on a cliff edge' as referendums to raise taxes are planned

But that probably isn't going to happen:
Futures Forum: The future of our care services: local council funding is broken

Especially as the District Council is reluctant to put up taxes and has its priorities elsewhere:
Futures Forum: Knowle relocation project: and constant financial vigilance: "April 2018 > Relocation to Honiton complete."

The Local Government Association has been very clear about the situation:
LGA Analysis: Council tax rises will not fix local government funding crisis


This is the comment from the Rural Services Network:


Monday, 20 February 2017 12:01

Services face cuts despite council tax rise

Written by  Ruralcity Media
Services face cuts despite council tax rise
VITAL local services face further cuts – despite forthcoming rises in council tax.
Council tax rises in 2017/18 will not bring in enough money to prevent further deep cuts to local services, said the Local Government Association.
LGA chairman Lord Porter said: "Services supporting the most vulnerable people in our communities are at breaking point. Many councils are increasingly unable to turn down the chance to raise desperately-needed money for social care and other local services next year.
"But extra council tax income will not bring in anywhere near enough money to alleviate the growing pressure on social care both now and in the future."
Then Rural Services Network has warned that a new system should be introduced to ensure adequate rural social care fundingThe network argues that it is more expensive to deliver services to rural communities, where one in three rural residents will be older than 65 by 2039.
Network chief executive Graham Biggs said core adult social care resources for the next financial year amounted to £22 per head in rural areas compared to £21 per head.
All councils can raise council tax by up to 1.99% in 2017/18 to fund local services without the need for a local referendum. Most district councils can increase by £5 per year at Band D level. England's 151 social care authorities can increase council tax by up to a further 3% in 2017/18 (up to 4.99% in total).
Income from this extra precept must be spent on social care.
Analysis by the LGA suggests147 of England's 151 social care authorities are considering or have approved introducing the social care precept in 2017/18. This would raise £543 million to pay for social care services.
But the LGA says this extra income will be swallowed up by the cost to councils of paying for the government's National Living Wage, which could total up to £600m next year.
If all district councils use their full council tax flexibilities in 2017/18 they would raise an additional £60 million to fund local services. But with local government facing an overall funding gap of £5.8bn by 2020, the LGA says council tax rises will not prevent the need for continued cutbacks to local services
Councils will also have to continue to divert more money from other local services, including filling potholes, maintaining parks and green spaces and running children's centres, it says.
Lord Porter said: "Social care faces a funding gap of at least £2.6 billion by 2020. It cannot be left to council taxpayers alone to try and fix this crisis.

Services face cuts despite council tax rise - RSOnline

Meanwhile, we wait in vain:
“Elderly waiting up to a year for home care” | East Devon Watch 
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