Items
No. |
Item |
45. |
Welcome & Apologies
Minutes:
Councillor Calum Watt, Chair
of the Community Leadership Scrutiny Committee, opened the meeting
with a brief round of introductions and offered a warm welcome to
external guest speakers. Apologies for absence were received from
Councillor Liz Bushell and Councillor Matthew Fido. Councillor Gary
Hewson was in attendance as substitute.
|
46. |
Confirmation of Minutes - 27 June 2023 PDF 352 KB
Minutes:
RESOLVED that the minutes of
the meeting held on 27 June 2023 be confirmed and signed by the
Chair as an accurate record.
|
47. |
Declarations of Interest
Please note that, in accordance with the Members' Code of
Conduct, when declaring interests members must disclose the
existence and nature of the interest, and whether it is a
disclosable pecuniary interest (DPI) or personal and/or
pecuniary.
Minutes:
Councillor Chris Burke wished
it be noted that he was a member of the YMCA Board of Trustees and
there was a LEAP building within the ward he
represented.
Councillor Gary Hewson wished
it be noted that LEAP had recently opened a building within the
ward in which he represented.
|
48. |
Sheltering Our Citizens
|
49a |
Joanne Smith, Safeguarding Lead - City of Lincoln Council
Minutes:
Daren Turner, Strategic
Director of Housing and Investment offered his thanks to Joanne
Smith, Safeguarding Lead for her attendance to Committee at short
notice.
The Committee received a
presentation from Joanne Smith, Safeguarding Lead (City of Lincoln
Council). During consideration of the presentation, the following
points were noted: -
- The Local Authority Statutory
Duties were contained within relevant legislation, Housing Act 1996
– Part 6 and Part 7 (as amended by Homelessness Reduction Act
2017)
- Part 6 of the legislation
related to allocations and included the
requirement to hold a housing register and have a suitable policy
to set out allocation of accommodation
- Part 7 of legislation related
to the provision for advice to be accessed free of charge,
assistance to applicants to solve their housing situation and the
provision of temporary accommodation for those believed to be in
priority need
- Current numbers on the
housing register were separated into three bands as
follows:
-
- Band 1 –
322
- Band 2 –
477
- Band 3 –
1046
- In 2018/19, the authority
dealt with a total of 854 applications. Comparatively, in 2022/23,
the number of applications received was 1331.
- The total number within the
prevention band was 273 and were individuals that were threatened
with homelessness. The authority participated in negotiations in an
attempt to keep individuals living within the property or to
undertake a planned move elsewhere
- Individuals could be within
the prevention band for a total of 56 days. If an individual became
homeless sooner, they would be moved into relief duty
- Once the time limit of 56
days had been reached, a decision with regard to the potential for
priority need would be made. At this stage, consideration would be
given to whether an individual had made themselves intentionally
homeless and if they had a local connection to the
city.
-
- The local connection criteria
required six of the last twelve months or three of the last five
years spent within the city, family that lived within the city that
were in regular contact or if an individual worked within the
city.
- Any person with a main duty,
had to be rehoused. The only exceptions included an individual that
had declined an offer of suitable accommodation or had the
provision of temporary accommodation removed due to their
behaviour
- The numbers of homeless cases
had increased but the reasons for homelessness had remained the
same
- A total of 432 households had
been placed in temporary accommodation: 132 in licence properties
and 300 in Bed & Breakfast/Hotels
- There was a number of
B&B’s/hotels we used across the city but there
weren’t many and as such, many households ended up out of the
city
- Approximately 75% of the cost
of temporary accommodation was recovered through housing benefit
claims
- The City of Lincoln Council
resources included an allocations team, a homelessness team and a
rough sleeping team
The Chair thanked Joanne
Smith for the informative presentation and for her
attendance to Committee at short notice.
|
49b |
External Attendees
Minutes:
The Committee received a
collaborative presentation from guest speakers, Caroline Killeavy,
(Chief Executive Officer, YMCA), Heidi Walton, (Chief Executive,
LEAP Housing), Claire McGonigle, (Deputy Chief Executive,
Framework, Lincolnshire) and Sandra Blow, (Operations Manager,
Framework, Lincolnshire). During consideration of the presentation,
the following points were noted:
- Supported accommodation
included hostels, night shelters, dispersed housing, family homes,
self-contained accommodation and flats
- Core funding for supported
housing came from housing benefit claims
- Other sources of funding came
from public contracts, grant funding, fundraising and charitable
donations and self-generated income streams and public
support
- Supported accommodation
support was offered to all individuals that were homeless or at
risk of becoming homeless, some of which included victims of
domestic abuse, victims of crimes, care leavers and single and
young parents
- LEAP Housing were a
non-commissioned service further to the termination of contract
with Lincolnshire County Council in 2020
- The organisation no longer
supported only young people and instead, offered to support to
individuals of any age which included pregnant teenagers and
families
- LEAP Housing offered
supported accommodation through a number of resources which
included:
-
- Adam Health House
- Barlow House
- Dispersed Housing
- Homer House
- The ambition was to move
individuals on and to prevent a dependency on the
service
- Once placed in safe
accommodation, individuals struggled to move on as they did not
meet Band 1 or 2 criteria unless a service user was a care leaver
or suffered serious mental health illness
- Framework, Lincolnshire had
been present in Lincoln since 2011
- The organisation offered the provision of 15 emergency
self-contained flats and 44 single/shared occupancy house as
part of the Lincolnshire Housing Related Support Partnership
(LHRSP), commissioned by Lincoln County Council (LCC) Public
Health. These were adult services and as such, there was a
requirement for individuals to be aged 18+ to use the service.
Additionally, individuals were required to be triaged in by the
Local Authority, direct referrals were not accepted
- Additional recourses
included:
-
- The Corner
House (Complex
Needs and Somewhere Safe to Stay)
- 15 self-contained flats for single adults. Commissioned by
the Department for Levelling Up, Housing and Communities (DLUHC)
through the City of Lincoln Council (CoLC)
- Referrals for the service
needed to be triaged in by the Rough Sleeping Team, not
CoLC
- MOSS
- A non-commissioned service,
used to move individuals on or out of LHRSP accommodation. MOSS was
used for those that were able to move with a lower level of support
and service users were permitted to stay for up to 2 years.
Priority for the service would be given to rough
sleepers
- RSAP
- 6 self-contained flats, commissioned by Rough Sleeping
Initiative through CoLC
- Somewhere Safe to Stay Hub
- 9 rooms within a shared house, commissioned by DLUHC
through CoLC
- Provision reduced in June 2023 and merged with the Complex
Needs Service
|
50. |
Work Programme 2023/24 PDF 106 KB
Additional documents:
Minutes:
Consideration was given to the
Committee’s Work Programme. Further to scoping discussions,
the Democratic Services Officer confirmed that the focus of the
Committee’s work for the remainder of the calendar year would
include an update on the Poverty Truth Commission and Youth
Engagement.
It was agreed that the Poverty
Truth Commission update would be brought before the Committee in
November 2023. The Democratic Services Officer advised that
confirmation of attendance had been received from Charlotte Brooks,
Director for Local Change - LocalMotion.
It was agreed that an update
on Youth Engagement would be brought before the Committee in
November 2023. The Democratic Services Officer advised that
confirmation of attendance had been requested from Toby Ealden,
Artistic Director & CEO - Zest Theatre and Sukhy Johal MBE,
Director of the Centre for Culture and Creativity - University of
Lincoln.
It was agreed that
Lincolnshire Partnership Foundation Trust (LPFT) be invited back
before the Committee for an update on the temporary Closure of
Lincolnshire's Male Psychiatric Intensive Care Unit (PICU) - The
Hartsholme Centre. The Democratic Services Officer confirmed that
the item would be brought before the Committee during the first
meeting of the new calendar year, 2024.
It was agreed, at the
Chair’s request, that Development Plus and a representative
from Lincolnshire County Council be invited to attend Committee in
relation to Sheltering Our Citizens. The Democratic Services
Officer confirmed that the item would be brought before the
Committee during the first meeting of the new calendar year,
2024.
It was suggested and agreed
that the Armed Forces Covenant be brought before the
Committee in March 2024. The Chair tasked the Democratic Services
Officer with requesting attendance from representatives of The
Royal British Legion, The Royal Air Forces Association, the Army
and the Navy.
Date of Next
Meeting: Tuesday 14 November 2023.
|