"All of us in local government, across the political divide, want to see the Queen’s Speech finally set out the plans we have been waiting for and make good on the Prime Minister’s promise to ‘fix social care’, once and for all."
Failure to act on securing the future of adult social care as we emerge from the pandemic will be a ‘bitter blow’ to the millions of people who draw on and work in these vital services, a cross-party group of council leaders say today.
Ahead of the Queen’s Speech setting out the legislative agenda for the next year, the Local Government Association’s Chairman and political group leaders have signed a letter to the Chancellor calling for promised proposals on the future of care and support to finally be published so that people are best supported to live the lives they want to lead.
Meanwhile an exclusive new poll of MPs commissioned by the LGA shows an overwhelming majority (83 per cent) are in favour of additional funding for councils’ social care budgets, to tackle the funding gap.
The letter, copied to Health and Social Care Secretary Matt Hancock, Communities Secretary Robert Jenrick and Care Minister Helen Whately, also says the approach of one-off government grants and the social care council tax precept are only ‘sticking plaster solutions’ which prevent longer-term planning.
The signatories state that for the Government to finally make good on its promise to ‘fix social care’, we need three things:
- Investment - we need to move from a model of wellbeing based on care homes and hospitalisation, to a broader offer that enables people to live their own lives independently in their own homes and communities, in appropriate accommodation and with the right level of support. This preventative approach would be better for people and for the NHS by preventing or delaying the need for someone to go into hospital. As a significant employer, investment in social care is also an investment in local economies.
- No more sticking plasters - we must confine to history the approach of additional one-off grants and, in particular, the adult social care precept to fund social care. While helpful, they are only ever sticking plaster solutions which are unsustainable and depending on council tax is not the solution.
- Long-term funding – we need a solution for bringing more money into social care which matches the level of ambition we need to have for the future of care and support, beyond just protecting people from having to sell their home to pay for care, as important as that is. The case should be made for increases in national taxation and/or a social care premium based on universal risk-pooling.
Cllr James Jamieson, Chairman of the Local Government Association, said: “Social care has been on the frontline throughout the pandemic and councils have done all they can to protect and manage these vital services, while dealing with severe funding pressures for several years.
“In particular the last 12 months have proven their ability to respond to changing demands and needs under the most difficult of circumstances.
“The decisions on social care funding and reform in the coming weeks will potentially impact both the millions of people who draw on or work in care and support now, and the many millions more who will do so in the decades ahead. Our latest poll of MPs demonstrates the broad support across Parliament for additional funding for councils’ social care budgets.
“All of us in local government, across the political divide, want to see the Queen’s Speech finally set out the plans we have been waiting for and make good on the Prime Minister’s promise to ‘fix social care’, once and for all.
“This is about an investment in people, in all of us. A failure to act will be a bitter blow to everyone connected to social care.”
Notes to Editors
On behalf of the LGA, Savanta ComRes polled MPs (between 9 November 2020 - 13 January 2021) and Peers (between 2 November 2020 - 4 February 2021) to test their support for additional funding going to councils’ adult social care budgets to tackle the funding gap. The data has been weighted by party and region to be representative of the House of Commons and by party to be representative of the House of Lords