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Cllr Tatler made no bones about it at Brent Scrutiny last night: Brent Council is facing a 'perfect storm' regarding its finances:
As already reported by Wembley Matters the combination of increased homelessness (150 families a week seeking help from Brent Council), inflation, rising interest rates, rising private sector rents and reduced private sector rental properties as a result of landlords exiting the market; combined has led to a £13m overspend by the Council.
The Resources and Public Realm Scrutiny Committee delved deeper into the repercussions and possible mitigations last night.
One focus was the 600 plus empty properties that could easily house the 500 families and single people (858 people in all) currently in expensive bed and breakfast accommodation. The challenge was how to contact the owners so that the Council could lease the property. Some councillors there were more than 600 empty properties and asked how the Council collected the figures. A councillor asked if this coudl be checked against the most recent census. In response Cllr Tatler said that the Council could reactivate the campaign to ask residents to report empty properties.
Contact Empty Property Team
Opening hours: Monday to Friday from 9am to 5pm
Email: empty.property@brent.gov.uk
The loss of subsidy cost is forecast to rise to £8.6m in 2023/24 (from £3.7m in 2022/23) as rents increase but the Local Housing Allowance remains unchanged at its current level. Benefits paid to those living in Temporary Accomodation is limited to 90% of the 2011 LHA rates which, particularly since the pandemic, is significantly less than rents being charged by most private sector landlords today. A percentage of the Housing Benefits subsidy received from DWP when compared to the total amount paid to residents is forecast to reduce by 14% when compared to the average over the last three years (67% versus a 81% average).
Councillors also asked about loss of Business Rates with commercial properties left empty. Could the Council charge double if left empty for more than 2 years as with empty homes? They were told that was not currently within the Council's powers. Cllr Tatler said that 90% of Brent businesses are SMEs (small and medium enterprises) who had been badly hit and thus no longer viable. Chair Cllr Conneely agreed with Cllr Malloy that she would rather be asking profit-making businesses to pay more than hard-pressed residents.
Cllr Malloy said that he knew of a commercial property in South Kilburn where the big property company owner had smashed all the toilets so they they could claim the property was unusable and therefore not pay business rates. This resulted in an interesting exchange with Brent Council leader Muhammed Butt:
1. Council to lobby government on business rates.2. Council to have a clearer plan on effective collection of business rates.3. Council to investigate use of census data to help identify empty properties.4. Council to work on ways of turning empty properties into usable properties.
From COMMON PLACE CONSULTATION
Barnet Council wants to transform West Hendon Playing Fields into an exciting new park and we want your views on how it should be improved. The new park proposals will include new play areas, recreational spaces, sports facilities, improved infrastructure, and expanded leisure amenities.
Your input is vital to creating a thriving destination that is inclusive and accessible. We are planning engagement opportunities where we would love to hear from you.
1- You can join us in person at our drop-in events to meet the project team, learn more about the project proposal and share your aspirations for the park:
Both venues have accessible wheelchair entry and toilets.
2- For those who are unable to attend in person, we are running two online webinars on 21st of November for you to learn more about the project proposal and ask any questions that you may have:
3- Take part in our survey by 17th of December. This will help us understand how you currently use the park, and your vision and aspirations of the West Hendon Playing Fields.
Our emerging project vision is to breathe new life into the site, turning West Hendon Playing Fields into a thriving destination that puts People, Place, and the Planet at the core of improvement efforts. The park will be inclusive to all ages and abilities, enhance local wildlife and biodiversity, and offer ample opportunities for physical activity and recreation.
We came up with this vision based on Barnet Council's aspirations for West Hendon Playing Fields, past engagement exercises, and what we know about the area. We need your input to make sure the final vision captures what the community wants. Complete our survey to share how you experience the park, your feedback on the vision and your ideas for improvement. We will use your feedback to design a park that you will enjoy.
We are committed to broad-reaching engagement with a diverse range of communities. We will be engaging with a wide range of groups, including:
We will also be consulting with the following organisations to ensure that our proposals meet statutory requirements. They include:
We are committed to engaging with residents and stakeholders in a way that is:
We believe that these principles will help us to build strong relationships with you and your community, ensuring all voices are heard as we develop the proposals for West Hendon Playing Fields.
We will listen to and record every comment you make. Our communication channels will be open, consistent, and transparent. We offer both offline and online communication channels to ensure accessibility for everyone. At the end of each key stage, we will tell you how we incorporated your input into the design of the Playing Fields. Where feedback has not been incorporated, we will clearly explain why.
LINK TO KNOWLEDGE MAP to comment on different aspects of the park.
There was a Master Plan for the area back in a 2018 consultation that includes various proposals LINK
I was told to expect a statement from Thames Water about the situation at Wembley Triangle yesterday but none was forthcoming by midday today so I tweeted them at midday. The incident began on Thursday. LINK
Their answer is above.
UPDATE - Neil Levy of Thames Water has sent the following message:
We managed to work all night yesterday to repair the sewer and we have demobilised from the site now.
We found that the sewer was severely blocked with rubble, bricks and fat, which we believe may have caused a break in the pipe.
We have restored the sewer service and there has been no further flooding or pollution impact to the environment.
We apologise for any inconvenience this has caused but traffic should be back to normal by the end of today.
Lyon Park Primary strike action has been suspended because the cCuncil stepped in and agreed to fund all the voluntary redundancies applied for and has agreed to facilitate talks, starting tomorrow, to resolve all the other issues.
The NEU will go ahead with the dates of strike action next week if these talks do not resolve the outstanding matters.
Cllr Neil Nerva, Brent Cabinet Member for Public Health and Adult Social Care
Brent Council opened consultation on changes in Adult Social Care charges on Thursday that propose a reduction in the minimum income guarantee support and increased charges for service users. This will reduce Brent Council spending on Adult Social Care overall. Adult Social Care is the biggest area of Council spending.
Attempting to put a positive gloss on the proposals, Councillor Neil Nerva, Cabinet Member for Public Health & Adult Social Care, said:
These proposals for the charging policy are essential to ensure that we can continue to deliver a high-quality Adult Social Care service for years to come. If adopted Brent’s Adult Social Care charging policy would still be one of the most generous in London but it would be more consistent and sustainable for future years.
The Council said:
The proposed changes to the charging policy are essential to ensure the council can continue to provide the Adult Social Care services thousands of residents rely on in a sustainable way for years to come.
The proposals include:
In only the second proposal are residents given the opportunity to reject it outright. Public consultation meetings will be arranged to discuss the proposals.
More information is available on the Consultation website LINK . This includes a Powerpoint presentation from which I have extracted some case studies below:
The Council seek to reassure service users:
Share your thoughts on the consultation by Sunday 17 December. The council will then review all feedback and present the final proposals to Brent’s Cabinet in January. The earliest that any changes will take effect is April 2024.
Brent Council was recently warned by its finance officers about the financial pressures on the Council and the need to make further ‘savings’ that will impact on services. The warning comes in the wake of a substantial increase in the Council’s housing costs as a result of the soaring numbers of homeless people, higher rents in the private sector when placing such families in temporary accommodation, and the shortage of private rented accommodation. There are also pressures on the Adult Social Care budget (higher charges are in the pipeline) and some local authority schools are running deficit budgets.
Faced with that situation the leader of Brent Council, Muhammed Butt, has signed a letter along with 118 other council leaders to the Chancellor calling on him to address the homelessness and temporary accommodation crisis that threatens local government’s financial sustainability and the services upon which England’s most vulnerable people rely.
The letter is signed by councils from across the country led by Conservatives, Labour, Liberal Democrats, the Green Party and Independents. It follows an emergency summit held last week (Tuesday, 31 October), co-hosted by Eastbourne Borough Council and the District Councils’ Network.
According to the Department of Levelling Up, Housing and Communities, the cost of temporary accommodation to councils reached £1.7bn last year and it is increasing rapidly.
The signatories included 108 district councils – two-thirds of the total. In many parts of the country, district councils are the tier of principal government closest to communities and they oversee services including housing, leisure centres and waste collection. The rising cost of temporary accommodation hits district councils particularly hard due to a large proportion of their budgets being devoted to housing.
The Councils are calling for a
meeting with the Chancellor ahead of his Autumn Statement to consider their demands:
This is the letter:
Dear Jeremy,
The unprecedented pressure on temporary accommodation services
An unprecedented number of people are turning to councils as the last option for support when they face homelessness. As councils, we are proud of the help we give to people when they need it, but our situation is becoming untenable. We have had no option but to rapidly escalate our use of temporary accommodation, which is threatening to overwhelm our budgets.
The level of concern was demonstrated when 158 councils attended an emergency summit on 31st October, organised by the District Councils’ Network (DCN) and Eastbourne Borough Council. The scale of the problem was also shown by a recent DCN survey in which 96% of our member councils reported an increase in use of temporary accommodation – four-fifths of them describing this as ‘significant’.
The ensuing increase in costs is a critical risk to the financial sustainability of many local authorities and we urge you to act swiftly to ensure we can continue our vital work. The pressure is particularly acute for district councils because housing costs constitute a far bigger proportion of our overall expenditure.
Without urgent intervention, the existence of our safety net is under threat. The danger is that we have no option but to start withdrawing services which currently help so many families to avoid hitting crisis point. There will also be a knock-on impact on other cherished council services, which councils could also have to scale back, and on other parts of the public sector – such as the NHS – which will be left to pick up the pieces.
Councils and our partner organisations in health, policing and education, as well as the voluntary sector, have had considerable success in recent years in moving the whole local system towards preventing homelessness, rather than just dealing with the consequences.
However, the supply of permanent, affordable housing has fallen in many places while the impact of the rising cost of living is making housing too costly for many people. This impacts on the health and wellbeing of households affected. Some areas also experience added pressure due to the placement of asylum seekers in local hotels and other temporary accommodation.
We do believe there is a way forward, as DCN set out to you in our Autumn Statement submission on 13 October. We are urgently calling on the Government to:
· Raise Local Housing Allowance rates to a level that will cover at least 30% of local market rent and commit to annual uprating.
· Provide £100m additional funding for Discretionary Housing Payments in 2023-24 and an additional £200m in 2024-25.
· Provide a £150m top-up to the Homelessness Prevention Grant for 2024-25.
· Review the cap for housing benefit subsidy rate for local authority homelessness placements.
· Develop policy to stimulate retention and supply in the privately rented sector.
· Give councils the long-term funding, flexibility and certainty needed to increase the supply of social housing.
Considering the urgency and scale of these matters, we would welcome a meeting with you ahead of the Autumn Statement.
We firmly believe that action on these issues will ensure that all councils can continue to provide an effective homelessness safety net. We also believe that these measures will be cost effective by ensuring homelessness is prevented, reducing public expenditure in future.
The human cost of homelessness is immense. With your help we can prevent it worsening.
In total, 119 council leaders from across England have signed this letter.
WEMBLEY TRIANGLE TONIGHT
A resident reported: No engineer in sight but no leak either. From Wembley Hill Road the road is closed to the left if you wished to go down Harrow Road. From Harrow Road coming into Wembley there is no right turn into Wembley Hill Road.
Thames Water has reported to Brent Council that a 'big crack' opened up overnight on the road at Wembley Triangle. Sewage escaped from the main sewer about 3 metres below ground and cascaded into roadside gullies.
Thames have classified this as pollution as it leads into the Wembley Brook (of recent fame). At the time of informing Brent Council. Thames said there had been no real impact on the brook at present but further work would be done today to investigate further and survey the pipe. This will establish the reapirs need to return the sewer to normal service and prevent any further flooding or pollution.
Wembley Matters has asked the Thames Water officer responsible for an update on the situation after today's investigation.