1 / 9

Yvette Hartfree and Grahame Whitfield Centre for Research in Social Policy

How will tenants respond to the Local Housing Allowance reforms? Reflections on the existing evidence. Yvette Hartfree and Grahame Whitfield Centre for Research in Social Policy. What is LHA?. Most radical change to HB since its introduction Only applies to tenants in the PRS

taniel
Download Presentation

Yvette Hartfree and Grahame Whitfield Centre for Research in Social Policy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. How will tenants respond to the Local Housing Allowance reforms? Reflections on the existing evidence Yvette Hartfree and Grahame Whitfield Centre for Research in Social Policy

  2. What is LHA? • Most radical change to HB since its introduction • Only applies to tenants in the PRS • Replaced HB with flat-rate allowance based on location & household size • Payments made to tenants • Introduced in 9 pathfinder areas in 2003/04, national roll-out in April 2008

  3. LHA national roll-out model • Rates set at 50th percentile / median • 5 bed cap • Claimants able to keep an excess of £15/week

  4. Core Evaluation Findings • Low awareness and understanding of how LHA worked • Paying rent was a priority – claimants took this responsibility very seriously • LHA did not appear to increase housing choice • Claimants not motivated to move to cheaper accommodation to maximise an excess • Safeguard provisions for vulnerable claimants did not work well

  5. LHA reformed model • Rates set at 30th percentile • New upper limits for each property size • 4 bed cap • Excess removed • Shared room rate extended to under 35’s • Increases to non-dependent deductions • Increase to DHP fund • New allowance for a non-resident carer

  6. Implementing the Changes • Raising understanding and awareness of the changes • Transitional protection arrangements for existing claimants • LA role to help claimants negotiate with landlords - incentive of transferring payments to landlords • Allocation of Discretionary Housing Payment funds

  7. What we think might happen – low concern • Additional room allowance for a non-resident carer • Removal of excess • 4 bed cap • Increases to non-dependent deductions

  8. What we think might happen – high concern • Rents set at 30th percentile / rent caps: • Minimal impact where rents are already below LHA rates • Negotiations with landlord • Moving • Staying put – ability to manage a shortfall • Extension of shared room rate to u35’s • Support for vulnerable claimants

  9. Centre for Research in Social PolicySchofield BuildingLoughborough UniversityLoughboroughLeicestershireLE11 3TUTelephone: +44 (0)1509 223372crsp@lboro.ac.ukwww.crsp.ac.uk

More Related