"uri","answering body","answer > is ministerial correction","answer > date of answer","answer > answer text","answer > answering member constituency","answer > answering member printed","answer > question first answered","answer > uri","answer > answering member > label","answering dept id","answering dept short name","answering dept sort name","date","hansard heading","house id","legislature > pref label","question text","registered interest","tabling member > label","tabling member constituency","tabling member printed","uin" "http://data.parliament.uk/resources/1052333","Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government","false","2019-02-06","
At Autumn Budget 2019, the Chancellor made available £410 million in 2019/20 for social care services in local authorities – both adult and children’s social care. We proposed in the provisional local government finance settlement to distribute these resources based on the existing Adult Social Care relative needs formula, as the best available method. Consultation responses overwhelmingly supported this approach which was confirmed in the final settlement. Local authorities have welcomed the additional funding and the discretion to spend in a way which best fits their community’s needs.
","Richmond (Yorks)","Rishi Sunak","2019-02-06T16:56:38.887Z","http://data.parliament.uk/resources/1052333/answer","Biography information for Rishi Sunak","7","Housing, Communities and Local Government","Housing, Communities and Local Government","2019-01-31","Social Services: Children","1","House of Commons","To ask the Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government, if his Department will make an assessment of the potential effects on children of not using the children’s services relative needs formula to distribute the social care support grant announced in Budget 2018.","false","Biography information for Bob Blackman","Harrow East","Bob Blackman","215161" "http://data.parliament.uk/resources/1052334","Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government","false","2019-02-07","
The final local government finance settlement confirmed a real-terms increase in available funding for local authorities to help deliver local services, support vulnerable residents and build vibrant communities.
This includes an additional £650 million for social care, allocated using the well-established Adult Social Care relative needs formula, which takes into account the relative needs of local authorities, including in urban areas.
The additional resources provided through the settlement also included the distribution of £180 million of surplus in the business rates retention levy account, which was allocated on the basis of each authority’s 2013-14 Settlement Funding Assessment. The Settlement Funding Assessment is a measure of the relative needs of local authorities, including in urban areas.
Funding baselines for every authority are determined by an assessment of the relative needs of areas, including measures of deprivation.
","Richmond (Yorks)","Rishi Sunak","2019-02-07T17:14:15.9Z","http://data.parliament.uk/resources/1052334/answer","Biography information for Rishi Sunak","7","Housing, Communities and Local Government","Housing, Communities and Local Government","2019-01-31","Local Government Finance","1","House of Commons","To ask the Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government, what assessment his Department made of the needs of urban areas when allocating £1 billion of additional funding in the provisional local government finance settlement.","false","Biography information for Bob Blackman","Harrow East","Bob Blackman","215162"