Adult Social Care Statement The following Statement was made in the
House of Commons on Wednesday 1 December. “With permission, Mr
Speaker, I would like to update the House on our plans for adult
social care. Today we are publishing our ambitious 10-year vision
for adult social care—our White Paper: People at the Heart of Care.
It is a product of years of work, not only by every level of
government, but by many involved in the sector, including people
who...Request free trial
Adult Social
Care
Statement
The following Statement was made in the House of Commons on
Wednesday 1 December.
“With permission, Mr Speaker, I would like to update the House on
our plans for adult social care.
Today we are publishing our ambitious 10-year vision for adult
social care—our White Paper: People at the Heart of Care. It is a
product of years of work, not only by every level of government,
but by many involved in the sector, including people who give
care, people who draw on care, and their families. I wish once
again to underline my appreciation and admiration for everyone
who works to deliver this most vital of public services,
especially through this challenging pandemic.
Those working in social care—both paid and unpaid—deserve our
deepest respect, yet they also deserve a system that works for
them, and it is fair to say that that has not always been the
case. Time and again, we in this House have heard about the
challenges: the high turnover in the workforce; the lottery of
how people pay for care; unsustainable local markets; the varying
quality and safety of care; the low uptake of technology; those
carers who are not just unpaid, but under-appreciated; and the
complexity of the system for everyone involved. I am sure
honourable Members will have their own challenges to add to that
list. Make no mistake, these are complex issues—so complex, of
course, that successive Governments, over decades, have decided
to duck rather than deal with them. This Government, however, are
determined to get it right. After all, we cannot be serious about
levelling up unless we are also serious about social care.
In September we took a vital first step on the road to fixing
this generational problem when the Prime Minister, the Chancellor
and the Secretary of State announced our new health and care
levy. The focus on how we must pay for it is absolutely right,
but we were clear then, and we are clear now, that there is much
else we need to do. The White Paper contains more detail on what
we plan to do over the next three years to transform the sector
over the next decade. It is underpinned by three core principles:
first, that everybody has choice, control and support to live
independent lives; secondly, that everyone can access outstanding
personalised care and support; and thirdly, that adult social
care is fair and accessible for everyone who needs it.
The principles we hold are important, but we know we will
ultimately be judged on our actions. I will therefore set out
some of those actions before the House. First, giving everyone
the choice, control and support to live independent lives
requires both physical and digital infrastructure. We are
investing £300 million in housing. That investment will support
local authorities to increase the range of new supported housing
options, because it is vital that people live in homes that meet
their needs and give them the independence they require.
Moreover, we are setting up a new practical support service to
help people with minor repairs and changes, which will help them
to live independently for longer. That is in addition to
increasing the upper limit of the disabled facilities grant for
home adaptations, which includes things such as stairlifts, wet
rooms and home technology.
The digital infrastructure we put in place can be equally
transformational, because we know that digital tools and
technology can support independent living and improve the quality
of care. We are therefore putting in at least £150 million of
funding to drive the greater adoption of such technology, with
the ambition to achieve widespread digitisation across social
care. We are setting up a new national website, which will
explain all the upcoming changes, and we are piloting innovative
new ways to help people understand and access the care and
support they need.
Our second principle is to ensure outstanding personalised care
and support, and at the heart of that is looking after the people
who work in care. We are spending at least half a billion pounds
on the social care workforce over the next three years. Some of
those funds will help us to deliver new qualifications and better
career routes in care, which we know is crucial for holding on to
our caring and compassionate workforce. We are also directing
funds into stronger mental health and well-being support for care
staff, because colleagues cannot care for people unless we care
for colleagues. We are putting funds behind a change in the
services we provide to support unpaid carers, and we will find
and test what works best for those who are caring under
challenging circumstances. Regardless of whether that solution is
old or new, if it works, we want to do it. We are also
considering funding local areas to support their efforts to
innovate around the care they provide, so that they can provide
more options that suit people’s individual needs. Those new
models of care, including housing with care, have the potential
to play a pivotal role in delivering care that promotes
prevention, is more personalised, and enables people to live
independently.
Our third principle is care that is fair and accessible for
everyone. We are introducing a cap on care costs so that no one
will have to pay more than £86,000 over their lifetime. That cap
will be there for everybody, regardless of any conditions they
have, how old they are or how much they earn. It is a universal
cap. Importantly, it will provide everyone with the peace of mind
of knowing that the days of unlimited and unpredictable costs are
coming to an end. The reforms will also make the existing means
test far more generous, compared with both the current system and
with previous abandoned proposals. Crucially, the £100,000 upper
capital limit will be available to those in home care, and we
expect many more people to be in home care. Let me be clear: no
one will be worse off compared with the current system, and many,
many people will be better off. All the ambitious plans that we
are setting out today must be underpinned by a sustainable care
market. The £3.6 billion we are giving to reform the social care
charging system will help all local authorities to pay a fairer
rate for care and put back into the system the fairness we all
want.
Before I conclude, Mr Speaker, allow me to put on record once
again my thanks to everybody who has played their part in
developing this important White Paper. The reform of social care
in this country has been ducked for far too long, but we will do
whatever it takes to take on this tough challenge, and we will
get it right. Today’s White Paper is an important step on our
journey to giving more people the dignified care that we want for
our loved ones, setting out important changes that will last for
generations and stand the test of time. As a Government we are
determined to get this right—I am determined to get this right—so
that we can build the healthier, fairer and more caring country
that we all deserve. I commend this Statement to the House.”
14:42:00
(Lab)
I thank the Government for the Statement, which has been a long
time coming.
First, we are told that we have a health and social care Bill to
deal with integration across the NHS and social care. Instead, we
get a giant Bill that is largely about NHS reorganisation to undo
the structures set up by this Government in 2012. We are also
told that there is a plan to fix social care, but we now have a
government levy that has working-class families paying for extra
funding that could in any event result in the NHS swallowing up
most of the money to deal with the ever-growing waiting lists for
vital treatment, with little left for social care. Finally, we
have the grand announcement of the care cap, for which there was
strong cross-party support when it was first proposed by Andrew
Dilnot in 2011 and legislated for in 2014. However, it is now due
to be delayed for yet another two years and introduced at half
the level recommended by Dilnot, with the terrible and deadly
sting in the tail of the last-minute amendment to the NHS Bill
that was forced through the Commons last week and means that
state-funded care costs will not be counted towards the care cap
at all.
I remind the House that we have waited for this social care White
Paper for four years, with unexplained delay after delay against
a backdrop of expectation that, when it finally came, the NHS and
care Bill would embrace NHS and social care integration. The
proposals for this and other measures in the White Paper should
have been an integral part of the Bill, which we will begin to
debate next week. Can the Minister tell the House how the
integrated care system under the Bill will be integrated for
social care? Will there be another piece of legislation? If so,
what will it seek to do?
Of course, Labour has called for and supports a number of the
measures in the White Paper, such as improving the housing
options available to older and disabled people and the potential
for technology to improve standards of care. However, there are
two central flaws in the Government’s latest approach. First,
Ministers have utterly failed to deal with the immediate
pressures facing social care as we head into one of the most
difficult winters on record. Secondly, they have failed to set
out the long-term vision and reforms that we need to deliver a
care system fit for the future.
Last week, we learned that a staggering 400,000 older and
disabled people are now on council waiting lists for care, with
40,000 of them waiting more than a year. There are more than
100,000 staff vacancies and turnover rates are soaring. Because
of these shortages, 1.5 million hours of home care could not be
delivered between August and October alone, and half of all
councils report care homes going bust or home providers handing
back contracts. Hundreds of thousands of older and disabled
people are being left without the vital support they need, piling
even more pressure on their families and the NHS at the worst
possible time.
Does the Minister recognise the figure, reported this week, that
42,000 care staff have left their jobs since April? How will this
White Paper ensure that care homes facing huge staff shortages
can stay open and recruit and retain staff? Absolutely nothing
new has been announced to deal with these crucial issues. Where
is the plan to end waiting lists for care? Unless people get
support when and where they need it, they will end up needing
more expensive residential or hospital care, which is worse for
them and for the taxpayer. We know that improving access is the
first step in delivering a much more fundamental shift in the
focus of support towards prevention and early intervention so
that people can continue to live independently in their own homes
for as long as possible. Without enough staff with the right
training working in the right teams, this will never be
achieved.
Where is the long-term strategy to transform the pay, training
and terms and conditions of care workers, and to deliver at least
500,000 additional care workers by 2030, just to meet the growing
demand? Why do the Government persist in having separate
workforce strategies for the NHS and social care when the two are
inextricably linked? Where is the joined-up strategy for the
whole health and social care workforce?
The proposals in the White Paper for England’s 11 million family
carers, who provide the vast majority of care in this country,
are, quite frankly, pitiful. Unpaid carers have been pushed to
the limit by trying to look after the people they love. Almost
half said that they had not had a break for five years, even
before the pandemic struck, and 80% of them are now providing
more care than ever before. However, the funding announced
amounts to just £1.60 more for each unpaid carer per year. Does
the Minister not agree that families deserve so much better?
What was needed today was a long-term vision that finally puts
social care where it belongs: on an equal footing with the NHS at
the heart of a modernised welfare state. Can the Minister explain
how this White Paper does that and delivers the resources needed
to bring it about? At its best, social care is about far more
than just helping people to get up, wash, dress and get fed,
vital though this is. It is about ensuring that all older and
disabled people can live the life they choose in the place they
call home, with the people they love and doing the things that
matter to them most. This should have been the guiding mission of
the White Paper, with clear proposals to make users genuine
partners in their care by transforming the use of direct payments
and personal budgets, and ensuring that the views of users and
families drive change in every part of the system, from how
services are commissioned to how they are regulated and
delivered.
The Government’s proposals fall woefully short of the mark and
the reality of their so-called reforms is now clear: it is a tax
hike on working people that will not deal with the problems in
social care now. It will not even stop them having to sell their
homes to pay for care, as the Prime Minister has repeatedly
promised. The simple fact is that, under the Government’s
proposals, if you own a home worth £1 million more than 90% of
your assets will be protected, but if your home is worth £100,000
you could end up losing it all. Millions of working people are
paying more tax, not to improve their family’s care or stop their
own life savings being wiped out but to protect the homes of the
wealthiest. This is not fixing the crisis in social care, let
alone real social care reform. It is unfair and just wrong.
(LD) [V]
My Lords, I thank the Minister for the Statement. It is no
exaggeration to say that we on these Benches, along with many
other noble Lords, have been repeatedly pushing Ministers to
publish this White Paper for years. It is now two and a half
years since the Prime Minister announced from the steps of 10
Downing Street:
“My job is to protect you or your parents or grandparents from
the fear of having to sell your home to pay for the costs of
care. And so I am announcing now—on the steps of Downing
Street—that we will fix the crisis in social care once and for
all with a clear plan we have prepared to give every older person
the dignity and security they deserve … that is the work that
begins immediately behind that black door.”
We were pushing because it was evident even then that adult
social care was already in crisis. High levels of staffing
vacancies, and cuts to local government meant that fewer people
who had been entitled to state support would receive it, as the
criteria for eligibility were repeatedly tightened. Even then, it
was common knowledge that private patients were having to
subsidise those funded by the state, as the amount given to local
authorities did not match the actual costs of that care.
Even allowing for the inevitable delays caused by the pandemic,
this Government have insisted on continuing with their structural
reforms, rushing through the Health and Care Bill—which NHS
leaders are now asking to be delayed because of the continuation
of coronavirus and its pressure on all NHS services—as well as
the health and social care levy, rushed through your Lordships’
House in one day, six weeks ago, which now requires amendment in
the Health and Care Bill, which will mean that house owners
outside the greater south-east will end up paying a higher
percentage of their assets than those in the greater south-east.
So much for protecting them from the fear of having to sell your
home to pay for the costs of care—yet another broken promise from
this Prime Minister.
In setting the scene, we and others have pushed for the
publication of the White Paper prior to the Bill starting its
journey in the Lords, because we cannot understand how any
Government could restructure integrated care services between the
NHS and the care sector without knowing what plans they have for
the future of the adult social care sector. Yesterday’s paper was
deeply disappointing—but I think the Government know that, which
is why Ministers announced yet another White Paper next year on
integration. But hang on: was that not why this White Paper was
due to be published? If there is to be another White Paper, the
timing is important. Can the Minister say when this new White
Paper will be published? This one certainly is not the
answer.
Allocating some money to developing the workforce in five years’
time will not even start to address the current crisis in social
care: with well over 100,000 vacancies; with social care
providers still having to pay for expensive PPE that is provided
free to the NHS; and with providers handing back state-funded
payments to their local authorities because they cannot provide a
safe service for those patients. It does not address the current
practice, caused by lack of funding, of domiciliary care workers
not being paid as they travel between clients. It does nothing to
change the experience of unpaid carers. There are lots of great
ideas about following best practice and getting people to talk
together, but there is no real offer of funding for regular
respite care or other benefits and support.
Reading the full White Paper, the truth about the promises in the
Statement begin to be revealed. The Minister knows that, from
these Benches, we have repeatedly emphasised the importance of
housing in relation to care and support for adults of all ages.
It was, therefore, perhaps encouraging to read the recurring
phrase
“Making every decision about care a decision about housing”,
but closer examination of the funding for disabled facilities
grants increases shows that there will be £570 million a year in
2022–23, 2023-24 and 2024–25. The current budget for this year is
already £537 million. Although continued funding is welcome news,
this is only a £33 million—or 6%—increase, which, given rising
costs of labour and materials, will barely keep up with
inflation. It is not the transformative grant that the Statement
trumpets. On the funding for
“a new service to make minor repairs and changes in peoples’
homes, to help people remain independent and safe”,
for which most authorities are able to offer only £1,000 to
£2,000 per person before they have to look at their assets, no
cash amount is specified, but it is hoped that this will give a
boost to handyperson services that are so highly valued by older
people and provide such a great return on investment.
It is impossible to transform way our social care provision
works, keeping people in their homes, unless this White Paper
demonstrates the practical support that the Government can give
to make that happen. The real difficulty we face is that staff in
the sector, providers, the NHS and, above all, the users and
their families are severely let down by the White Paper. The word
“dignity” is used repeatedly in the Statement. The reality is the
opposite: no vision, no real reform and, worst of all, no attempt
to deal with the current crisis.
(Con)
My Lords, I thank the noble Baronesses for the points they raise.
But let us be clear that for many years—not just five, 10, 15 or
20 years; some noble Lords have said that we knew this issue was
coming after the war, in the 1950s—the demographics of the
country meant that we were going to have an ageing population,
and successive Governments of all colours have not grasped the
nettle. They have commissioned a report, it has gathered dust on
the shelf and another report has come along. Many noble Lords,
including my noble friend and others, have written papers
for various think tanks, but those also gathered dust and nothing
has been done. When I have spoken to friends of all political
colours, they have said that, frankly, it was too difficult and
there were other priorities. So the Government should be given
some credit for finally grasping the nettle.
We have set out a vision. Before you set out a strategy, you have
to set out a vision, and we have done so. This is a 10-year
vision, and we have committed to the first three years.
Throughout the White Paper, we have said that we will continue to
consult the sector—experts, carers, both paid and unpaid, local
authorities and nursing or care home providers—to make sure that
we get the right balance and understand the issues. As technology
develops—medical technology, information technology and other
technology that enables people to live in their own homes—we will
see how the vision might adapt, rather than laying out everything
from day one. We have laid out the vision and the spending for
the first three years, but we will continue to consult to ensure
that we are adapting to the changing technology and
circumstances.
Compared to the current system, more people will be supported
with their social care costs and have greater certainty over what
they pay and receive higher-quality care. We think the plans
announced represent the best value proposals. As many noble Lords
will appreciate, that means balancing many issues: how many
people are supported; how much they are supported; and the cost
to taxpayers of offering that support. We believe that the plan
sets out an appropriate level for the cap and balances that with
people’s personal responsibility for planning for their later
years. A number of experts have written recently asking why
financial advisers advise people to build up ever-larger sums of
money but they then leave it to their children at the end of
their lives, rather than depleting their assets as they get older
to look after themselves. We were clear that the £86,000 would be
the amount individuals will need to pay towards the cost of their
care, and the amendment to the Health and Social Care Bill
reflects the changes. We believe the new system is necessary,
fair and responsible.
We admit that the Care Act 2014 was landmark legislation informed
by a range of partners, and we want to build on those strong
foundations, rather than reinvent the wheel. Many of the
provisions in that Bill act as a platform for better, even more
joined-up health and social care in future. We are the first
Government to announce that we are going to integrate health and
social care, and that we will have a system of healthcare all the
way through—not social care as a bolt-on afterwards—from your
birth all the way through your life.
The Health and Social Care Bill contains several provisions built
on the Care Act 2014. We have looked at assurance, with a new
duty on the Care Quality Commission, and we have looked at data,
to make sure we have the appropriate data on adult social care.
People should pass from hospital to social care with no delay and
as seamlessly as possible. We have looked at provider payments
and the better care fund. The Bill also proposes to put
integrated care systems on a statutory footing, which will make
sure that, in each area, working with local authorities, account
is taken of the needs of social care, joined up with the other
parts of the healthcare system.
On 3 November, we published the adult social care winter plan,
because we recognise that this is a long-term plan, but we have
constantly been listening to stakeholders and have drawn up
recommendations with a number of people, including Sir David
Pearson, who reviewed last year’s adult social care plan,
advisers from SAGE and UKHSA. So we have listened carefully to
make sure that we meet some of the short-term issues that we are
facing. We have looked at how we can increase spending, where
relevant, to make sure that we tackle some of those issues.
Across the House, noble Lords will want to pay tribute to social
care workers, both paid and unpaid. We have a track record of
responding to workforce pressures—for example, the £162.5 million
workforce recruitment and retention fund and the £388 infection
control and testing fund. We will continue to keep this situation
under control. We are also increasing the rate of the national
living wage, which means that many of the lowest-paid care
workers will benefit from pay rises. We are also investing at
least £0.5 billion in the way we support the development and
well-being of our social care workforce—an investment in
knowledge, skills, health and well-being, and how we drive the
retention of existing staff and boost recruitment. This will set
the conditions for professionalisation over a longer period,
giving carers recognition. When we look at the social care
workforce and how much they are valued, one of the great issues
has to be recognition of their skills and giving them a
professional development pathway.
In the longer term, as set out in the White Paper, we remain
interested in working with commissioners and providers to make
that sure care workers have the best terms and conditions
possible, including being paid for all the hours possible. This
is already set out in our existing market-shaping and
commissioning guidance. We will also explore how we can champion
best practice and support local authorities, including through
the new CQC assurance framework. We acknowledge the prevalence of
zero-hours contracts in the social care sector and we are
interested in working with commissioners, providers and care
workers to understand how those contracts impact this sector.
Chapter 6 of the White Paper sets out three key aims for the
workforce strategy over the next three years, backed up by £500
million of investment. We want to create a workforce that is
well-trained and well-developed, healthy and supported,
sustainable and recognised. We want to make sure that social care
is seen as a rewarding career—that it is not only heart- warming
but has professional recognition. I should stop there and take
some more questions at this point.
15:02:00
(LD) [V]
My Lords, could the Minister say exactly what the Government are
doing right now to recruit more carers, in view of the huge
shortfall in the workforce? Are they largely leaving it to
hard-pressed local authorities?
(Con)
The Government are in conversation with local authorities at the
moment to look at the short-term issues. That is why we have
announced increases in funding, particularly as part of the
winter plan. The White Paper we are talking about today looks at
the longer term, but we have also recognised the short-term
issues, which is why we have announced these increases in
spending.
(Lab)
My Lords, we have been waiting for four years—sometimes I think I
have been waiting 40 years—for a White Paper that contained a
vision for social care that would, once and for all, rescue it
from its Cinderella role in public services. I did not get that,
but I am a glass-half-full person and am relieved by how many
times unpaid carers are mentioned and how many warm words there
are about identifying, recognising and involving carers. I thank
the Government for that.
But family carers are at breaking point now. As my noble friend
said, most have not had a single break since the start of the
pandemic. They need immediate help, so will the Minister tell the
House how the proposals in the White Paper will help stressed
carers now? My second question is about integration between
health and social care services, which is the only hope for real
reform. It is frequently referred to in the White Paper, but
there is no vision for how it will be delivered. We understand
that another White Paper about integration is being prepared; I
wonder why that is necessary when it could have been tackled in
this one. Could the Minister update the House on progress and
assure me that carers will be consulted as that paper on
integration is written?
(Con)
First, I pay tribute to the work that the noble Baroness has done
for carers over many years. She has personally raised with me
issues with carers, both paid and unpaid, as well. The White
Paper clearly raises issues of professionalising, training and
recognising carers to help make this a rewarding career for many.
At the same time, it looks at unpaid carers and understands that,
for a number of reasons, they are not all similar. Sometimes they
are school-age children. We have looked at young carers and at
elderly carers—for example my mother, who, in her 70s, looks
after an 80 year-old sister who suffers from dementia. They have
different needs.
We are first trying to look at how we can help make their task
easier, for example through technology freeing up time. We are
also looking at respite and how we can make sure they have
breaks. We hope that those conversations will be had at the local
level, between ICSs and health professionals having meetings
directly with the individuals concerned to make sure that unpaid
carers have the appropriate support.
(Non-Afl)
My Lords, I feel torn on this. On the one hand, it is irritating
that the White Paper has come out but everybody wants to bash it,
when I am relieved that somebody has suggested something. On the
other hand, it is not satisfactory. To ask some immediate
questions, the crisis of care staff has already been referred to,
but I am concerned that the White Paper is being used to avoid
talking about the real crisis now. There are genuine problems in
care homes in the aftermath of Covid. It is not just about staff,
but the fact that relatives are still being denied face-to-face
visits. There is still a climate of risk aversion and fear from
some managements, with lots of people with dementia being locked
in their rooms. All sorts of terrible things are happening and
people do not know what to do. I do not want this White Paper to
be used to bat things away.
That was the first thing. Secondly, in the longer term, can the
White Paper create that vision and be used as a platform? To be
honest, I think it is visionless and technocratic. We need to get
talking and involve the nation in developing the vision we need.
Everybody has an investment in improving this.
(Con)
The noble Baroness, Lady Fox, makes a valid point: we have to
look at not only the long-term vision but the short-term issues
raised. This is why, on 3 November, we announced the adult social
care winter plan for 2021-22. This was developed in conjunction
with the NHS and social care stakeholders. We drew on the
recommendations of the review of last year’s adult social care
winter plan and listened to a number of different stakeholders in
setting out the short-term issues.
As the noble Baroness acknowledges, we are the first Government
to set out a long-term vision, not just from one electoral cycle
to another but for 10 years. We have set out a vision with three
years of commitment to specific spending, some of which is a
discovery process, because we still have to know what will and
will not work, and how to use and integrate technology. By doing
that, we have laid down the gauntlet to whatever Government come
after us, of whatever political colour, for them to continue to
fulfil this vision. It is a vision against which this and future
Governments will be measured.
Other politicians from other parties have known about this for
many years. The noble Baroness, Lady Pitkeathley, mentioned
waiting for 40 years and others have known about our post-war
demographic challenge. We have finally grasped the nettle. We are
not going to get everything right, which is why we have not laid
out a detailed, prescriptive plan for 10 years. We have laid out
a vision of integration, making sure that we use the best
technology to support people in their own homes, as much as
possible. At the same time, we have committed for the next three
years. After that, the challenge is for us to work with all
stakeholders to deliver that vision.
(CB)
My Lords, I am particularly delighted to see this White Paper and
congratulate the Government on publishing it in this timeframe.
However, we need to look closely at workforce needs, at the same
time as we look at workforce needs for the Health and Care Bill,
because there is a real mismatch between the vision we now have
and the staffing for that vision. I welcome this opportunity to
hear how the Government think we can tackle that and give young
unemployed people good opportunities to come into a proper caring
profession.
(Con)
I thank the noble Baroness for the conversations that we have had
about this, and a number of other issues, as I got to grips with
my brief. She makes a very important point. We have to make sure
that social care is seen as an attractive career path and not
just something unskilled; we know that there are skills involved,
such as empathy. There will also be an increased need for digital
skills, and people management skills will be handy in other
areas. For far too long, social care has been seen as the poor
relation of other parts of the health system. By bringing health
and social care together, we are sending a signal that our vision
is to put them on an equal footing. We are also explaining how we
intend to spend over the next three years. We challenge
everyone—stakeholders, local authorities, everyone—to come
forward and help us develop that vision for the long term, and to
hold future Governments to account against that vision.
(LD)
I wish the Minister good luck with his nettle grasping—I think he
is going to need it. He will know that the right housing is key
to enabling people to remain safely and happily in their home,
yet only £300 million, a very small amount, is being promised in
the White Paper to integrate housing into health and care
strategies. Take, as an example, the so-called extra care units,
where people can live in a flat with appropriate on-site support;
that will mean only about 3,000 such units across England. Can
the Minister say over what period that money is being offered? Is
it three years or a different period? How many units of supported
housing can be provided for that amount of money?
(Con)
I thank the noble Baroness for raising this issue. We want to
ensure that people can live in their own home for longer. We have
committed a sum of money and been quite clear that practical
changes can be made, such as installing stairlifts, level-access
showers, wet rooms, sensors, et cetera. New technology is
constantly being developed to meet people’s needs in their own
home. To this end, we have committed a further £573 million per
year to the disabled facilities grant, from 2022-23 to 2024-25.
We are also talking to local authorities and others, looking at
whether we need to increase the subsidy amount per adaptation and
reconsider funding allocation to better align with local needs,
as well as funding a new service to enable minor repairs and
changes to people’s homes. We need to know what needs to be done,
and local authorities and others can come back to us on the
adaptations that they need and the best way to achieve them. We
must look at best practice to make sure that, as technology
develops, people can stay in their own home for longer.
(Lab)
My Lords, I declare an interest; my daughter-in-law is a
full-time unpaid carer. First, the report says that unpaid
carers’ money will go up to £69.70 a week. That is fine if you
also have a job, but quite a few unpaid carers have given up
their jobs to be unpaid carers, so that is all that they have
got, other than the benefit that the person they are caring for
may get. That is a pretty tough situation. Secondly, unpaid
carers get very few breaks—some get no breaks at all. We must
devise a way of looking after the 10 million or 11 million people
who keep everything going. Although there are aspirations in this
document, I would like to see them translated into something
absolutely practical, so that I can go to an unpaid carer and
say, “You’re full time, and something will happen to help you and
take off the pressure.” It is a lonely business working full
time, on virtually no money, looking after somebody. If the paid
carers who come in the mornings or evenings do not turn up, it is
the unpaid carers who keep things going. I hope that the Minister
will pay attention to that. There is a whole agenda there which
many of us will be pushing very hard on.
(Con)
I know that the noble Lord has been a champion in this area. We
have been quite clear that, as we go forward, a number of issues
have to be understood. For example, you cannot say that all
unpaid carers are the same. They all have different needs: some
can work and some cannot work; some can spend a couple of hours
working and share their care duties with others; there are sole
carers; some are elderly and some are younger. We want all the
different partners to come together to discuss individual
needs—including respite for carers, to rest and recharge—and to
look at their financial situations. We have laid out that those
who are not working may be eligible for other benefits on top of
the care allowance that they get. We are exploring this. It is a
process of discovery and we want to ensure that it works. We have
therefore set out the vision and the three-year commitment.
(LD)
My Lords, I would like to pursue the points that were raised a
minute ago by the noble Baronesses, Lady Fox and Lady Watkins.
Despite the welcome long-term aspirations in the White Paper, the
reality is that the chronic workforce shortages in social care
are getting worse, with uncompetitive pay being the main culprit.
If Covid surges this winter because of the new variant, these
workforce problems will be magnified, with potentially disastrous
consequences. There are similar concerns with unpaid carers, as
the noble Lord, , has just said. With no new
resources from the new levy coming on stream until October 2023,
and all the fragilities that I have just described, what are the
Government going to do to address the pay and retention issues
now, over this winter?
(Con)
The Government have been listening to the workforce and
understand its pressures. We recognise that this is the vision,
and that we need to look also at the short-term issues. We
announced £162.5 million for the workforce recruitment retention
fund, and the new Made with Care scheme to recruit social workers
and to send a message that social work can be a rewarding career.
We are talking to different bodies, including the Department for
Education, about how we increase professionalisation. We have
also increased the national living wage, meaning that many of the
lowest-paid workers will be paid more. We are investing at least
half a billion pounds in supporting the development and
well-being of the social care workforce, including an investment
in knowledge, skills, and well-being. We will work with partners
to set the conditions for the professionalisation over a longer
period. We cannot do this immediately; we want to consult the
education sector and care and social care experts, to give
recognition. That will be a precursor to making progress on
pay.
(Con)
Does my noble friend agree that the primary obligation of a
Government is to provide decent care for those who cannot finance
their own care, and that the lowest priority is to provide
taxpayers’ funds to enable those who own valuable assets to pass
them on to their offspring? If it is possible to enable people to
insure against the risk of having to use the value of their home
to pay for their own social care, possibly through a state-aided
scheme, would that not be desirable? Is he not astonished that
the Labour Party, normally the champion of public sector
provision and the enemy of channelling public money to the rich,
should advocate channelling money to the rich and not a
state-funded insurance scheme?
(Con)
I thank my noble friend for his question and pay tribute to him
as one of the authors of a paper on funding social care, which
had a number of interesting ideas. I am also very grateful to
noble Lords across the House who have approached me with
different ideas, including from the Labour Benches, these Benches
and the Cross Benches. The Government have looked at a number of
plans and have decided on this, but we are in conversation with
the private insurance industry, including the ABI and others, to
discuss what financial products it can offer in response to the
changes. Some people are quite happy to take out insurance
policies, but it depends on individual wealth levels and
circumstances, and a number of different matters. We hope that
there will be a development of the private market, and we are in
conversations with the insurance industry. It has told this and
successive Governments that, at the moment, there is no private
sector solution for social care insurance. I regret that and wish
that there was. My noble friend’s idea of the state underwriting
it is interesting, but many reports have been written. I know
that the noble Baroness, Lady Walmsley, will writhe in pain at
this, but we have drafted that letter. Whatever we do, we will be
criticised for it, but we will do this. We have set the vision
for the first three years and have set the challenge for all of
us to come together to provide the best possible social care for
the future.
(Non-Afl)
My Lords, I want to reinforce something that the noble Lord,
, said: the distinction between
unpaid and paid care workers is very unfair because people who
have to care do not have a choice whether to do so—they just do
not get paid. The noble Lord mentioned his mother looking after
her sister—there is no choice in that matter. Something ought to
be done to redefine the category of unpaid social worker, perhaps
by making such people part of universal credit so that they will
get a statutory payment as of right—because they are relieving
the state of some expenditure on care and, of course, performing
a very useful social function.
(Con)
The noble Lord makes the very important point that unpaid carers
save the state billions of pounds a year with all the work that
they do and the love and attention that they give. Sometimes,
they do have a choice, but they choose to be carers because they
are worried about putting their relative into a home and are not
quite sure about that—I understand that. But the fact is that, if
they are unpaid, we are looking at how we can support them
better. Unpaid carers are very different, and you cannot lump
them all into one group: they have different needs and are at
different stages of their lives. I emphasise the importance of
making sure that we understand how we can personalise that
journey for everyone—the cared- for person and the carer. But, if
you have given up work, a range of other benefits may be
available, and we want to make sure that unpaid carers are
equally valued and not penalised for looking after a loved
one.
(Con)
My Lords, following on from my noble friend Lord Lilley’s remark,
what percentage of people in need of care will be covered by the
£86,000 cap?
(Con)
I am afraid that I do not have the details of that, but I will
write to my noble friend.
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