Scrutiny Involvement Network (S.Net), 7th July 2020

Here are the handouts and promises from our broad discussion on the possibilities for resident engagement post CV 19 for members of our network:

Kick off presentation to stimulate discussion (YD)

What can we do to improve the impact

 

Get together from Wythenshawe CHG to gather resident views under lockdown:

Life in Lockdown Promotion of

 

Guidance out this week on complaints handling and self assessment and sanctions from the Housing Ombudsman:

Complaint-Handling-Code

Guidance-on-complaint-handling-failure-orders

 

Cobalt regulatory Self Assessment with residents under lockdown

Appraisal form – Master

 

Capital programme/repairs video in lockdown – Six Town Housing:

Capital Programme – Customer Engagement

Consultation under lockdown Six Town Housing

First back to repairs survey

https://www.surveymonkey.co.uk/r/QDXV78F – texted to 8115 customers

Social distancing film

Social Distancing photo

English 2

Shared at all contact points (notice) with customers – Bury

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nyjjKm48O8g&feature=youtu.be

Translation Social Distancing boards:

Bengali

Arabic

Urdu

Polish

Gujarati

 

Bournville Village Trust Consultation – new development – YD

Consultation New Development

The notes from today have been sent out via Zoom recording to you all via drop box due to the large file size

If you need anything else, don’t hesitate to ask, thanks.

 

 

 

 

 

Homes at the Heart – new NHF campaign

NHF have launched a new campaign.

“Homes have never been more important to us than they have been during the coronavirus crisis.

For some people, home has been a sanctuary – a place to feel safe. However, for others, it has been a prison.

Everyone deserves a safe, secure, comfortable place to call home. Not just now, in the middle of this crisis, but always. The pandemic must act as a catalyst for change and investing in social housing makes this possible. It will also boost the economy, create jobs and improve people’s lives when our nation needs it most.

That’s why we’ve launched Homes at the Heart, a national campaign and coalition calling for a once-in-a-generation investment in social housing.

Today, we’ve sent a letter to the Chancellor in support of homes being at the heart of recovery, alongside our campaign partners: National Housing Federation, National Federation of ALMOs, Association of Retained Council Housing, and Crisis.

Over 50 supporters have already come on board.

For more – check out: https://www.housing.org.uk/our-work/coronavirus/homes-at-the-heart/

To follow, share or promote, use this hashtag: #HomesAtTheHeart campaign

Big Society – Third Sector latest – June 2020

  1. Covid-19: Fundraising key principles and public fundraising guidance
  2. Plans to ease guidance for over 2 million shielding
  3. Guidance on tourism and the visitor economy
  4. National Youth Activity guidance
  5. Heatwave Plan for England
  6. £105 million to keep rough sleepers safe
  7. National Emergencies Trust report on funding distribution to BAME communities
  8. NHS Volunteer Responders: self referral and becoming an approved referrer
  9. BOOST scale-up programme for social innovators
  10. Help us improve our charity safeguarding portal

 

1. Covid-19: Fundraising key principles and public fundraising guidance

Two new pieces of fundraising guidance by the Fundraising Regulator and Chartered Institute of Fundraising has been published today (25 June) for charities in England. The guidance sets out a responsible framework to help charitable organisations return to fundraising as restrictions are eased,  whilst still adhering to social distancing measures.

In particular the guidance provides advice on:

  • How to plan your future fundraising
  • How to interact safely with the public
  • How to safeguard the public, volunteers and staff
  • How to undertake a risk assessment

The Minister for Civil Society, Baroness Barran said: “I am pleased to support this guidance which outlines key principles for charities to follow while ensuring they adhere to social distancing measures and Government advice.”

The guidance will support charities to return to fundraising in a safe and sensitive way, however requirements may also differ across the UK.

For more information and to read the published guidance, click here.

2. Plans to ease guidance for over 2 million shielding

The government has updated the advisory guidance for people who are shielding, including a series of steps that will come into effect on 6 July and 1 August.

From 6 July:

  • You may, if you wish, meet in a group of up to 6 people outdoors, including people from different households, while maintaining strict social distancing
  • You no longer need to observe social distancing with other members of your household in line with the wider guidance for single adult households
  • You may also form a ‘support bubble’ with one other household.

From 1 August:

  • That shielding will be paused,
  • The government advises those currently shielding to adopt strict social distancing rather than full shielding measures.

In effect this means, those shielding can go to work as long as the business is COVID-safe. Children who are clinically extremely vulnerable can also return to their education settings if they are eligible and in line with their peers. For more detailed information click here.

3. Guidance on tourism and the visitor economy

Government guidance on tourism and the visitor economy was published on 24 June: it aims to get the tourism sector backup and running so the public can safely take domestic holidays and visit attractions on days out
.

A new VisitEngland standard will ensure hotels, other accommodation providers and attractions are compliant with government regulations and guidance
. This will act as a marker to visitors that a venue is practising social distancing, maintaining cleaning routines and has undertaken a thorough risk assessment to protect customers when on site.

Measures such as timed tickets and cashless payments have been put into place ahead of the reopening of the sector so that staff and visitors alike can be kept safe.

Government guidance will help the tourism businesses reopen safely, reassure locals and allow businesses to open confidently. For more information and to read the guidance in full click here.

4. National Youth Activity guidance

The government has published guidance for National Youth Activity in England.The guidance is contextualised for youth sector organisations and intends to support organisations as they prepare for their reopening of services.

The youth sector includes statutory, voluntary, uniformed and private organisations as funders, commissioners and providers of activities and spaces for young people. The guidance takes into consideration the safety and support needed for young people, staff and volunteers and wider public health considerations for those engaging in youth sector activities.

To read the full guidance click here.

5. Heatwave Plan for England

With high temperatures this week, Public Health England has prepared advisory resources for those staying at home, including those who are shielding or self isolating. Due to the Covid-19 pandemic certain groups may be more exposed to high indoor temperatures, have reduced access to cooler spaces outside the home, and may be isolating away from people who might normally provide support.

Public Health England has developed specific resources for different audiences. There are actions set out in Page 24 of the Heatwave Plan for the community and voluntary sector that are useful to be aware of during the hot weather.

Further information and resources can be found here.

6. £105 million to keep rough sleepers safe

New funding from HM Treasury will help to support 15,000 vulnerable people accommodated during the pandemic. The £105 million aims to help rough sleepers secure their own tenancies as well as provide short-term housing while delivery of long-term homes continue at pace.

The government-led drive has brought together councils, charities, the private hospitality sector and community groups with the joint aim of protecting some of the most vulnerable people in society from COVID-19, and helping get them off the streets for good.

A further £16 million is also being provided for vulnerable people currently in emergency accommodation to access the specialist help they need for substance misuse issues, in order to rebuild their lives and move towards work and education.

For more information, click here.

7. National Emergencies Trust report on funding distribution to BAME communities

On 23 June, NET published a report on the first 12 weeks of its emergency coronavirus appeal, detailing funds raised and distributed so far.

The research found that the percentage of funds going to BAME communities in the UK overall was 17.4%. NET’s data on fund distribution covers 95% of UK Community Foundations members, and does not include further details on how much went to specific ethnic groups within BAME communities.

To read the full report, click here.

8. NHS Volunteer Responders: self referral and becoming an approved referrer

NHS Volunteer Responders service is still open for self referral. If somebody needs additional support with tasks such as shopping or picking up prescriptions, or would like a check in and chat call, or needs transportation to healthcare appointments, they can get in touch with the Royal Voluntary Service on 0808 196 3646 (8am to 8pm).

Further information about the self referral process and who is eligible for support is available here.

Charities that wish to directly support their clients who are vulnerable, can become approved referrers so that they can make referrals on behalf of their clients / members.  If you would like to become an approved referrer, please contact england.covid-communities@nhs.net and a member of the team will contact you to discuss this further.

9. BOOST scale-up programme for social innovators

The Inclusive Economy Partnership have just launched a new scale-up programme called BOOST, which supports social innovators with proven solutions to one of their three social challenges: Mental Health; Transition to Work; and Financial Inclusion and Capability. BOOST will be delivered by a unique partnership between the government, civil society and business.  The Inclusive Economy Partnership aims to unleash potential by using a new partnership model between business, civil society and government that enriches lives to build a more inclusive society.

BOOST formally began in February 2020, with the programme being delivered in partnership with the Young Foundation, a leading independent think tank specialising in social innovation to tackle structural inequality.

The Inclusive Economy Partnership believes that partnerships are the catalyst to unleash potential and create the fairer and inclusive society. To read more about the new scale up programme click here.

10. Help us improve our safeguarding portal

In January 2020, DCMS published an online tool to help charities in England to handle the reporting of safeguarding allegations about the behaviour or actions of a person in their charity.

In order to continually improve this service, we are seeking volunteer user testers to enable us to identify improvements. The user testing sessions will take between 45 minutes and an hour and will be carried out by Nudge Digital, contracted by DCMS. All sessions will be conducted remotely.

The above is the content of the monthly letter from the Governments Office of culture and responsibility
If you are interested in participating to help the government improve this service, please contact Patrick McKenna (patrick.mckenna@culture.gov.uk).

Scrutiny Network with MHCLG 13th May 2020

We had a 2 hour meeting to share what activity had been going on within the housing sector – with MHCLG.

Here are my notes of the changes made to support involvement

SNet CLG Meeting 13May2020

 

We agreed out next meeting would be on 8th July, for 2 hours:

No agenda -just discussion and ideas sharing – dedicated to involvement post CV19

Land Registry suggests you can put your pen down

From 4th May 2020 anduntil further notice, the Land Registry has announced temporary changes that will make it easier to deal with execution of transfers, leases and other deeds relating to a disposition of an interest in land.

Here is some useful advice from our friends at ACS:

READ OUR BRIEFING IN FULL >

May 2020 – update and advice from RSH on CV19

Here is the latest report from RSH on their CV19 sector survey,

https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/coronavirus-operational-response-survey-reports

The results show that housing associations and local authorities are working hard to maintain essential operations in the face of the impact of the virus and finding solutions to their most pressing challenges. These include redeploying staff, identifying new contractors and suppliers, and contacting more tenants by phone and by text, particularly tenants who are vulnerable.

Social housing landlords’ report that they been able to access PPE, but supply and continuity is highly uncertain and they have concerns about the supply chain for other materials. Emergency repairs are being maintained, but backlogs of routine repairs and less critical safety checks are building up. Landlords also face challenges in carrying out safety checks where tenants need to shield themselves from the virus or are more generally afraid of providing access.

Providers responsible for care and support settings are reporting that they can maintain safe staffing levels and essential services. However, they highlight concerns about their ability to maintain safe staffing levels where there are outbreaks of coronavirus in the care setting itself, particularly where staff need to self isolate or due to illness, including anxiety and stress.

Statistical production

The current disruption to the UK as a result of the coronavirus outbreak could affect our ability to publish our statistics to the same timescales and to the same level of coverage as in previous years. See our Statistical Data Return Collections page for further information.

Update 1 May 2020: Letter to small registered providers

We have written to all small providers (with fewer than 1000 units) about changes to our regulatory approach during the Coronavirus crisis and how to contact us. The letter to small providers follows our letter of 26 March 2020 to all registered providers.

Update 17 April 2020: Coronavirus Operational Response Survey and further guidance

Coronavirus Operational Response Survey

We have issued the first of our short monthly surveys via our online data collection portal NROSH+ to all private registered providers of social housing with more than 1,000 properties, all stock-holding local authorities, and to some smaller private registered providers with over 500 properties and/or a high proportion of care and support activity.

The responses, alongside other information, will help us to identify where there may be challenges that the sector or individual providers need support to meet and what potential assistance might be necessary.

We are encouraging providers to respond to the survey by the submission deadline of 24 April. However, where providers believe tenant safety is threatened or viability is under strain, they should inform their key contact at the regulator or our Referrals and Regulatory Enquiries team, via enquiries@rsh.gov.uk or 0300 124 5225, immediately.

Meeting local housing needs

We, along with many others, recognise the significant contribution that the sector is making, collectively and individually, to support the communities they work in during such unprecedented circumstances. Providers, as with many others, including local authorities, are facing a wide range of pressures and competing priorities.

We know that working closely with local authorities to support them in their role, is high on your list of priorities, not least in the efforts being made in relation to homelessness, rough sleeping and meeting other housing needs. We encourage all providers, where they are able to do so, to continue to support their local authority partners in such difficult times, in line with 2.1.1 of the Tenancy Standard.

Gas safety advice for landlords

Gas servicing

The Health and Safety Executive has provided updated guidance on its expectations in relation to gas servicing. Our expectation is that registered providers follow that guidance. To clarify some of the queries we have received in respect of regulatory expectations on gas safety:

  • Decisions to suspend gas servicing would not, in our view, be compliant with the HSE guidance.
  • We are gathering information via the Coronavirus Operational Response Survey about the impact on providers’ operations of the coronavirus.
  • Where any provider (regardless of size) is being overwhelmed by the impact of coronavirus on their operations, they should contact us as a matter of urgency.
  • Otherwise, assuming you are doing all the above, for the time being, we do not need providers to notify us as and when gas safety certificates are going out of date.

Updated guidance on lifts and personal protective equipment

Regulatory judgements

Please note: All of our currently published viability judgements are based on data which do not take account of any financial impact of the outbreak.

Update 8 April 2020: Further measures to reduce the regulatory burden

Following our letter of 26 March 2020 to all registered providers and our release of survey questions yesterday, we confirm further measures to reduce the regulatory burden on registered providers during the coronavirus pandemic.

Postponing the deadline for the Financial Viability Assessment electronic accounts submission

We recognise that registered providers may face challenges in submitting their accounts to RSH within the 6 months after year-end deadline that is set in statute. Whilst we ask providers to take steps to submit their returns to us as soon as reasonably practicable, we will not take any action where returns due up until 30 September 2020 are delayed by up to 3 months i.e. to 31 December 2020. In line with this, we are postponing the deadline for Financial Viability Assessment electronic accounts submission deadline to 31 December 2020.

Expectations about value for money reporting

We will take a proportionate approach to value for money regulation to reduce the regulatory burden. We recognise that reporting on VFM in line with the regulatory standards could prove challenging in the current circumstances as organisations are having to make rapid decisions about how to reprioritise the use of their resources.

  • Providers should calculate their VFM metrics from their accounts and report these as usual.
  • We do not expect providers to spend time reflecting the impact of the current circumstances in their VFM commentary. If providers are unable to provide the level of reporting that they would otherwise have done, the regulator will take a proportionate response.

Regulatory judgements published during our pause of In-Depth Assessments

We have paused our programme of IDAs for the time being. We will continue to publish some remaining Regulatory judgements until the end of June 2020. These will be either based on:

  • work that we had started before this pause, which is being completed with the consent of the provider concerned; or
  • from on-going reactive engagement.

We will publish these Regulatory judgements as they are completed, rather than in our usual monthly publication batches.

We may publish other Regulatory judgements before we resume our programme of IDAs, for example following mergers or based on material reactive work unrelated to coronavirus.

We are also pausing our work to upgrade current G2 and G3 judgements, to allow us and providers to focus on responding to the challenges caused by the coronavirus pandemic. We know that the providers concerned are working through actions to address issues identified in G2 and G3 judgements and this decision does not mean that the RSH has concerns about delivery of those improvements. We remain in touch with non-compliant providers to monitor their on-going progress.

Gas safety advice for landlords

The Health and safety executive has provided further advice and guidance about carrying out gas safety checks.

Update 7 April 2020: Survey on operational risks

We set out in our recent letter to registered providers that we would survey providers to understand how they are coping with the impact of coronavirus on specific operational risks.

The objective of the survey is to ensure that we have up-to-date information from providers on issues that the sector has told us are particular operational risks. We will use the survey results, alongside other information, to identify where risks are emerging, what potential mitigations might be necessary, and where there may be challenges that the sector or individual providers need regulatory support to meet. It is not about looking for non-compliance.

The survey will be hosted on our data collection portal NROSH+, for all private registered providers with more than 1,000 homes, all local authority registered providers and some registered providers with fewer than 1,000 homes who we will be contacting shortly, to complete. It will ask providers to answer a single multiple-choice question on each of 5 key areas:

  • Emergency repairs
  • Statutory gas safety checks
  • Statutory fire safety checks
  • Asbestos, electrical, legionella and lift checks
  • Care and support staffing levels.

For each area it will also ask them to identify any key constraints, risks and mitigating actions and the scale of any backlog.

We have published the survey questions on NROSH+ in advance to help providers prepare.

We will make the survey and supporting guidance available to providers to complete on NROSH+ from Friday 17 April. Providers should submit survey responses through NROSH+ covering the period up to and including 17 April, by Friday 24 April. We intend to repeat the survey monthly for as long as it remains necessary. The guidance will set out the planned timetable for future surveys and we will keep the required frequency under review.

Where providers are currently struggling to meet the challenges presented by coronavirus and there is a resulting threat to tenant safety or the provider’s financial viability, they should contact us as soon as possible. Do not wait for the survey return to contact us.

Update 30 March 2020: MHCLG guidance

Further to our letter to registered providers last week, the Ministry of Housing, Communities & Local Government has issued guidance for landlords and tenants including:

Update 26 March 2020: Letter to providers on changes to regulatory approach

The Coronavirus outbreak is causing very significant operational pressures for social housing providers. We are responding to this unprecedented situation by making changes to our regulatory approach, We are also setting out expectations for providers about contacting us if they are struggling to meet the challenges presented by Coronavirus and there is a resulting threat to tenant safety or the provider’s financial viability. This is intended both to support providers in focussing on front-line operations and to identify where there may be challenges that the sector or individual providers need regulatory support to meet.

Across the sector, the shared priority is maintaining tenant safety. This includes addressing emergency and urgent repairs and statutory compliance with health and safety requirements.

Providers should also:

  • manage risks to staff safety and follow wider guidance on limiting the spread of coronavirus
  • tell us promptly about material issues that relate to non-compliance or potential non-compliance with the regulatory standards focussing on health and safety, significant service delivery risks to vulnerable tenants, and financial viability.

In particular, they should tell us if they:

  • either as a result of access issues, or a shortage of staff, are unable to deliver a minimum service to tenants; experience a shortage of staff which means that safe levels of staffing cannot be maintained in care, supported or vulnerable people’s accommodation; or
  • identify danger to tenants that cannot be rectified within reasonable timescales.

Providers must also continue to tell us about any viability issues they face.

To reduce the regulatory burden and refocus our regulation on the key risks at this time, we will:

  • be proportionate and take full account of the circumstances when responding to compliance issues
  • collect some information from providers about risks affecting tenant safety.
  • extend our pause of In-Depth Assessments for the time being
  • postpone submission deadlines for the Statistical Data Return, Local Authority Data Return and Financial Forecast Return
  • continue to collect the Quarterly Survey to allow us to monitor sales, liquidity and cashflow pressures
  • ask some providers who face higher risks to their finances to share their own cashflow monitoring information
  • increase our engagement with providers and other stakeholders.

Full details are in our letter to providers.

19 March 2020: Updated contact information

See the Contact us section on our homepage for our interim correspondence arrangements. You can continue to contact us by calling: 0300 124 5225 or emailing enquiries@rsh.gov.uk.

Statement update 17 March 2020: Pausing of In Depth Assessments

Following the Government extending the measures to limit the spread of Coronavirus (COVID-19) we have updated our approach to proactive regulatory engagement with registered providers.

We have paused our programme of In Depth Assessments of registered providers. This means that for the time being we are not starting any new IDAs. For those IDAs that are underway we are in contact with providers to either complete the IDA online or to defer. We will keep the position under review.

Registered providers are reminded that they are expected to communicate in a timely manner with the regulator on material issues that relate to non-compliance or potential non-compliance with the regulatory standards. As ever, our regulatory approach remains proportionate and we will take account of the circumstances, including those arising from the impact of coronavirus, in considering our response to non-compliance or potential non-compliance with the standards.

Statement issued 6 March 2020

We expect all registered providers to prepare for the potential impact of Coronavirus (COVID-19) on residents, staff, contractors and suppliers. In doing so, ensure that you are following the latest advice and guidance from the Government and Public Health England available at gov.uk/coronavirus.

The Regulator of Social Housing is operating as normal, including all of our planned and reactive regulatory engagement, and will continue to do so unless Government guidance changes and means that we need to modify our business operations.

Registered providers are reminded that they are expected to communicate in a timely manner with the regulator on material issues that relate to non-compliance or potential non-compliance with the regulatory standards. As ever, our regulatory approach remains proportionate and we will take account of the circumstances, including those arising from the impact of coronavirus, in considering our response to non-compliance or potential non-compliance with the standards.

 

On line engagement

Vanilla Forums have created an all-you-need-to-know guide to community engagement. 

Their newest eBook, Driving Adoption and Increasing Engagement in Your Online Community Forum, is designed to give organizations the knowledge they need to boost their engagement levels. 

Meanwhile a bit of advice on Video Linking safely from our friends at ACS Solicitors:

READ OUR BRIEFING IN FULL >

Returning to work after CV19

Planning and risk management will be crucial to support residents and staff, including community and voluntary organisations thinking of opening their doors once again;

This is a useful guidance on what to consider from ACS solicitors:

READ OUR BRIEFING IN FULL >

 

The Home Builders Federation have developed a Charter with the Govt for their return to work:

HBF_A3_charter_FINAL

 

Here is the latest advice and fact sheets from the Chartered Institute of Housing:

https://cihnews.org/p/YRX-FXV/our-approach-to-covid-19

The Race Equality Foundation have sited the disproportionate impact of Cv19 on the BME community:

Coronavirus information and resources

 

Temporary suspension of duties under the Care Act

The Coronavirus Act 2020 (Coronavirus Act) sets out the temporary emergency measures that enable public bodies such as local authorities, NHS and the police to respond to the coronavirus pandemic. The measures are wide-ranging and impact on both existing legislation and regulations. This high-level summary from ACS looks at what the emergency changes mean to adult social care in England, what the temporary suspension of duties are under the Care Act 2014, and regulations and the implications for those individuals who are reliant on care and support provisions from their local authority:

READ OUR BRIEFING IN FULL >

 

You might also like this legal case study from ACS on depriving residents of their liberty:

READ OUR BRIEFING IN FULL >

 

Data protection under CV19:

We’ve seen claims that data protection laws can be put aside during the coronavirus crisis, and conversely, that complying with data protection rules would tie the hands of those trying to help out or adapt their work during this time.

Read this advice from ACS:

READ OUR BRIEFING IN FULL >

 

The NHF issued the following advice in their CV19 newsletter on 1st May 2020:

Testing for key workers
Emerging from the crisis – our initial thinking
Political updates
Building safety pledge
HCLG committee inquiry
New coronavirus housing and employment taskforce

Lease based providers

Lease-based providers which RSH r has found non-compliant are on the increases.

Keep an eye on this page for updates:

https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/regulatory-judgements-and-regulatory-notices

The regulatory judgements are a crucial read for lease based housing providers in their risk management:

Regulatory gradings (for providers with more than 1,000 homes):

Prospect Housing (G3/V3 in May 2020)

New Roots (G3/V3 in February 2020)

Westmoreland (G4/V3 in September 2019)

Inclusion (G3/V3 in February 2019)

Sustain (UK) (G3/V2 in January 2019)

Trinity (G3/V3 in November 2018)

Regulatory notices (for providers with fewer than 1,000 homes):

Larch (November 2019)

Expectations (UK) (September 2019)

Bespoke Supportive Tenancies (May 2019)

Encircle (April 2019)

First Priority (February 2018)

Section 106 advice – affordable homes under threat as contractors return to work

The latest advice suggests planning authorities consider allowing small and medium-sized (SME) developers to defer Section 106 and Community Infrastructure Levy (CIL) obligations in a bid to support housebuilding during the coronavirus crisis:

https://www.gov.uk/guidance/coronavirus-covid-19-community-infrastructure-levy-guidance

 

Section 106 and CIL are conditions built into planning permissions to ensure that a portion of profits made through development are channelled into providing affordable housing, infrastructure or other public benefits.

They are often resisted by housebuilders who see the social housing as something which reduces the costs of adjoining homes for sale on mixed development sites.

Section 106 delivered 49% of all new affordable housing in England in 2018/19 – so it is a crucial part of the housing crisys

Here are some useful links on returning under safe build conditions for contractors:

https://www.gov.uk/guidance/working-safely-during-coronavirus-covid-19#tradespeople-and-working-in-peoples-homes

and the April 2020 site operatiing manual – keep an eye out for updates after April 2020:

Site-Operating-Procedures-Version-3