Thursday, November 7, 2013

Councils call for national old age social care loans scheme

Councils call for national old age social care loans scheme


A national deferred payment scheme to help people pay for their social care costs in old age should be created by ministers, English councils have urged.
Elderly man with carer
Council leaders want the government rather than local authorities to underwrite a scheme
The Local Government Association said the government could set up a company to lend money which would be paid back from a person's estate when they die.
Such a scheme is already run by several local authorities and the government is keen to create a nationwide system.
But the LGA says the government should underwrite it, rather than councils.
The government has said it would decide who would underwrite such a scheme in the new year.
'Peace of mind'
The LGA says the government should underwrite a national scheme because budget cuts mean councils do not have the money.
LGA chairman Sir Merrick Cockell said: "Deferred payment schemes can offer peace of mind to people worried about how they are going to pay for care in old age.
"This is an option which councils would like to be able to offer to as many people as possible but we have limited funds that restrict us from doing so.
"We suggest that government considers an option for a separate national organisation, similar to the Student Loans Company, to run the deferred payment scheme on behalf of councils.
"This needs to be part of a huge overhaul of the system that brings care up to a standard fit for the 21st Century and ensures that our increasingly ageing population can lead happy, healthy independent lives long into their old age."
Adequately funded
The proposal has been put forward by the LGA along with two other local government bodies, the Association of Directors of Adult Social Services (ADASS) and the Society of Local Authority Chief Executives (Solace).
Solace chair Joanna Killian said the government's changes to social care needed to be adequately funded.
ADASS president Sandie Keene added: "Funding is of paramount importance in ensuring that older people's wellbeing, safety and security lie at the heart of a modern, integrated and effective social care system.
"The proposals we have put forward alongside colleague associations will help towards that end."
BBC social affairs correspondent Michael Buchanan said that in the fiendishly complicated world of who pays for what in adult social care this proposal was at least easy to understand.
Ministers have also said they will be giving councils £335m to help implement social care changes which include the £72,000 cap on what individuals would be expected to pay from 2016.

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