COMMISSION ON THE POWERS AND ELECTORAL
ARRANGEMENTS OF THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY FOR WALES
MINUTES OF PROCEEDINGS
of the
EVIDENCE OF:
The Chartered Institute of Housing Cymru
held at
Caradog House, Cardiff
On
FRIDAY 25 JULY 2003
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In Attendance
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Lord Richard, Richard Commission
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Eira Davies, Richard Commission
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Tom Jones, Richard Commission
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Peter Price, Richard Commission
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Ted Rowlands, Richard Commission
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Vivienne Sugar, Richard Commission
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Paul Valerio, Richard Commission
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Sir Michael Wheeler-Booth KCB, Richard
Commission
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Keith Edwards, Chartered Institute
of Housing
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Louise Matts, Chartered Institute
of Housing
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Tamsin Stirling, Chartered Institute
of Housing
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Proceedings
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Lord Richard
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I wondered if you would be able to identify
yourselves and then perhaps open up.
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Keith Edwards
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My name is Keith Edwards.
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Louise Matts
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I am Louise Matts. I am the Policy Officer
for the Branch Committee.
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Tamsin Stirling
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I am Tamsin Stirling and Chair of the
Wales Branch of the Chartered Institution of Housing.
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Keith Edwards
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Thank you for the opportunity to speak
with you. We will keep comments brief. We want to raise
some issues in which we are particularly interested
and then perhaps follow them through in relation to
the Paper.
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I will explain the set-up in Wales. We
have an office in Wales and we also have , a lay committee
comprised of housing professionals including Louise
and Tamsin .
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We work very closely together, and we
are pleased to have the opportunity to come along today
to raise a couple of comments.
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We will not go into great detail but
we are the professional organisation for people that
are working in housing. We see ourselves in two distinct
roles. One is to promote housing policy to make sure
that politicians and others have effective ways of dealing
with that. Secondly at a more micro level, we work with
people on the ground, the organisations on the ground,
in terms of training and support, to develop housing
in the professional way and to achieve our policy aims
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CIH Cymru is part of the CIH nationally
and is not autonomous but we do have post-devolution
responsibility for housing matters that have been devolved
to the Assembly, and have a Wales Board that deals with
those issues. Just very briefly, before we move on I
think it is worth pointing out that housing in Wales
does have specific characteristics in relation to other
parts of the UK. I will not list what is in the paper
but I think it is imperative to make sure housing is
dealt with in ways that specifically address the Welsh
circumstances.
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I think it is also fair to say that,
post-devolution, we have made considerable progress
on housing issues, although not as much as we would
have liked. Nevertheless, it is fair to say the new
way of working to include people in the development
of policy has meant we have all had to roll our
sleeves up and work alongside government to develop
housing strategy. Certainly, my view and the view of
my organisation is it has been a very positive experience
in itself. I think there are also a number of particularly
important policy developments that would not have been
possible had we not had this opportunity for devolution
afforded to us. For example, the Homelessness Commission
in Wales developed the first homelessness strategy anywhere
in the UK.
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We have the BME housing strategy that
is, in many ways, as good as I have seen anywhere else
in the UK. We have our own Welsh Housing Quality Standard
that particularly applies to local authorities. We now
build all new housing association properties to LifeTime
Homes standards taking into account the needs of people
as they move through their life as their circumstances
and conditions change That is, again, something ahead
of the field as far as the rest of the UK is concerned.
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The final point before I move on is in
relation to stock transfer. Getting investment into
Local Authority housing, has been a very contentious
issue in Wales and has not been dealt with as in the
other parts of the UK. We have started looking at ways
including the Community Housing Mutuall where tenants
themselves become owners of the housing stock through
a co-operative, providing a way that suit Welsh circumstances
politically and other circumstances, to ensure that
we get the necessary investment in our housing stock.
All this has been underpinned by the fact that they
have a devolved administration. The Welsh housing community
has also played a role in developing all those initiatives
and ideas.
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Could I perhaps move on to the issues
raised in your Email. I believe you have had a list
of issues that would be particularly useful. I will
just deal with a couple of those very briefly because
I know you would like to tease out any points that you
think are worth pursuing.
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Firstly, in relation to the issue about
legislative powers, we would look to draw attention
to the Scottish experience. They have had that power
for some time now to introduce housing legislation which
they did in the first parliamentary term. Related to
this we have experienced difficulty in dealing with
a number of policies priorities identified early by
the Assembly, for example licensing Houses in Multiple
Occupation because of the need for primary legislation
and the lack of space in the UK Parliament legislative
programme.
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Talking to the civil service, I know
that they have found this quite frustrating to deal
with relatively small tidying up things
because of the lack of Parliamentary time. This also
applies to quite major matters like establishing a Housing
Association Ombudsman service in Wales to address the
disparity between the rights of local authorities and
housing association tenants.
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In contrast inScotland they were able
to establish a Scottish Secure Tenancy through legislation
that placed housing association tenants on exactly the
same tenancy terms as local authority tenants.
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In England and Wales, the Law Commission
is carrying out a review of tenure law. I guess that
Wales is very much caught up in that and we do have
the opportunity to put forward its ideas. But the danger
is being drowned out by the much more of a weighty effect
that England can bring to bear in such discussions.
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The final point that I want to mention,
and Tamsin wants to make points about housing benefit
and stock transfer, relates not to legislative changes
but about the capacity of the civil service: this is
a particular concern of ours. If you look at the number
of civil servants delivering the national housing strategy
for Wales as opposed to those charged with delivering
housing policy in England within the Office of the Deputy
Prime Minister, there is a huge disparity but the civil
service in Wales is expected to deliver across the full
range of housing policy issues. The Assembly is able
to draw on support from weslh housing organisations
but it also relies on the centre and establishing good
relationships.
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We are picking up on a very mixed bag
of experience of dealings between the civil service
in Wales - from very good relationships, very responsive,
to where the draw-bridge has been almost been drawn-up.
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Tamsin Stirling
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I was just going to pick up on a couple
of points that you asked us to cover in relation to
housing benefit and stock transfers, and the finance
issues. I suppose the key issue here is where you draw
the line between what are devolved issues and what are
not.
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Housing policy which is devolved is very
much effected by fiscal policy which is not. For example
rent policy is devolved to the Assemblybut Housing Benefit
policy is dealt with by the Treasury. At the moment,
there is a whole programme of rent reform in England
to bring the rents of housing associations more closely
together. The way that housing policy is being tailored
is directly associated with converging rents in x years
time, and that is not really applicable in the same
way in Wales at all.. Rents between local authorities
and housing associations are much closer together and
we do not therefore have the same programme of rent
reform. Yet, housing benefit is run in the same way
as it is in England.
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Lord Richard
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Sorry, I do not follow that.
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Tamsin Stirling
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The housing benefit policies are being
tailored to a programme where local authorities and
housing associations rents are all being required to
converge. In a few years time they are going to have
some target rents that both local authorities and housing
authorities are aiming for and housing benefit will
not paid over that.
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Lord Richard
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What is wrong with that?
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Tamsin Stirling
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Simply that housing nuances in Wales
are not reflected in this process. I just think housing
policy is being delivered through fiscal means. The
specific characteristics of Welsh housing the
issue of low income and owner occupiers, more people
owning their home - it is would be appropriate to introduce
a housing credit system which support low income and
owner occupiers which would mean housing reform of the
benefit system.
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It is absolutely not on the cards in
England, and they will not be on the cards in Wales.
Therefore, there needs to be a solution for a Welsh
housing context.
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Lord Richard
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Any negotiation taken place that the
National Assembly would want to do?
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Tamsin Stirling
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It would be a reasonable response to
the housing context in Wales in which there are many
owner occupiers with low incomes
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Lord Richard
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Do you think this is something the Assembly
would like to do but cannot do?
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Tamsin Stirling
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It is not possible. It is not really
being considered.
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Tom Jones
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Accepting the principle of housing benefit
as opposed to universal benefit?
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Tamsin Stirling
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The issue of the owner occupiers is that
it is absolutely not applied to owner occupiers at the
moment, and will not be considered to be so. It is just
to support those that are on low incomes and rent. There
is an argument that people should be supported who are
on low incomes regardless of tenure so that benefits
could be pay the mortgage as well as the rent.
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Ted Rowlands
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Where would the money come from?
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Lord Richard
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How much would we need?
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Tamsin Stirling
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Studies have been done to actually work
out how much it would cost and the measure could be
funded through the release of capital receipts from
the right to buy sales of council houses which have
been released in England. However, in Wales, the money
has been released in other ways.
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There was an opportunity to fund something
like that, and that opportunity is now passed. I guess
there could be other opportunities that could be provided.
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Vivienne Sugar
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If Tamsin has finished, I wanted to go
back to what was said by Keith. It is about the capacity
of the civil service in Wales to cope with the breadth
of the housing agenda, when you have dozens and dozens
of people in ODPM driving that agenda. It is just to
put to you the compensation, I suppose that is the inclusive
way that the Assembly works, which is to involve organisations
like yourself.
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The very earliest stages of thinking
were very different to the way it operates in England
where I understand they are worked up and polished before
they are shown to our side organisations, and that might
mean that you are providing a policy development capacity
for the Assembly for free.
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I just pose the question if you would
rather have it that way round, rather than the way it
operates in England.
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Keith Edwards
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Yes, the truthful answer is there is
no reason why we could not have both. We do not have
have the resources to allow us to completely replicate
the housing policy agenda in England so it is a combination
of what we do now and securing additional resources.
The early part of the first Assembly term was characterised
by wh\at has been called big tent consultations
with everybody was around the table. It could be cumbersome
and unfocussed, but everybody had their say.
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We have moved on. There is recognition
of the need to be smarter and to pull in the people
with expertise within organisations rather than badge
wearers. It is not either a more inclusive way of workin
or more resources. We need touse resources effectively
and develop partnership working.
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At the same time, it is necessary to
recognise the absolute limits on the resources available
to the Assembly to deliver plus the protocols that exist
between them and the Government's Department. Between
the ODPM and the Assembly there are some excellent relationships,with
a very supportive and responsive attitude to requests
for information.. With other sections there is not such
a good experience.
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Tamsin Stirling
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The capacity is not there also to influence
primarily legislation. There is an example at the moment.
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Lord Richard
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What is that?
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Tamsin Stirling
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The whole issue about paying Social Housing
Grant to not just registered social landlords but to
private sector developers that have been driven by the
housing crisis in the south east of England and in particular
the plan to deliver 200,000 homes in x number years.
However, we have not got the context here in Wales.
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Vivienne Sugar
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So should there be a context, a clause,
that says, "Does not apply in Wales"?
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Keith Edwards
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It may become relevant in the future
but its not relevant in the current policy context.
There is a lso a basic flaw in the consultation paper
where it refers to the Housing Corporation as being
responsible for the allocation of social housing grant
which is in England but its not in Wales.
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Tamsin Stirling
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Just to raise the issue of stock transfer
which is a contentious issue, I think one of the issues
here is that there is a commitment from the Treasury
to cover indebtedness after a transfer has taken place
with the local authorities. For instance, a local authority
whose housing stock is worth very little and still owes
quite lot of money on it, still has the debt to pay
. The Trasury has given a commitment to cover that cost
in both Wales and Scotland. This has been in place for
some time in Wales and Scotland but only recently in
England. So, support for housing in Wales and Scotland
went further for that policy in England. The general
feeling is that that decision was taken because the
stock transfer in Glasgow involved a lot of money to
make it stack up financially. If you cannot do something
for Scotland, you cannot do it for Wales. So that was
driven by something happening in Scotland.
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Lord Richard
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How long was the decision to cover that
in Wales?
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Keith Edwards
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The last two years.
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Lord Richard
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Yes.
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Tamsin Stirling
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There is an argument that would the Assembly
choose housing policy to pay for itself or not? It is
an argument that has been made by an academic or two,
but it is a valid argument. It could be seen as a degree
of intervention in a policy which could take it further.
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Lord Richard
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Please tell us more of the working relationships.
Good? Accessible? Easy?
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Tamsin Stirling
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Yes, easy.
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There is a whole range of people across
the housing division and a few within the Communities
First Team.
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Lord Richard
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The lawyers?
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Tamsin Stirling
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I have not personally dealt with the
lawyers. I think Keith certainly made the point about
initially lots and lots of consultation. I guess the
capacity issues goes for organisations outside the Assembly.
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Lord Richard
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Do you get your point of view across
to the Assembly? Do they take proper notice?
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Tamsin Stirling
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I am almost bound to say on some things,
yes, and some things, no The major disappointment for
me in the housing movement is the financial decisions
made. However, that is the joy of devolution; you influence
some decisions but you do not stop making the argument
for investment.
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Keith Edwards
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In terms of work-a-day relationships,
there is definitely a huge improvement for us compared
with working with the pre-devolution housing division,
for example. They are now very good, open and accessible
and you respect that.
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Assembly politicians that are there on
the ground, they are accessible in that respect.
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Tamsin Stirling
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Where it pans out to is the timescales.
That is not a criticism of any individual as you can
only do what you can do. Sometimes things drift and
there is a little domino effect that, when things drift,
there is a sequence of events that are carried out,
and things go from one financial year to the next.
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We are all impatient to see housing get
a better deal for people that live in poorer quality
housing.
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Vivienne Sugar
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Housing was previously devolved in the
sense that the Secretary of State had a large number
of (inaudible). Those people have been absolved, and
you brought that under direct control. Any less or more
people than were there? Why is there a delay in the
problem, Tamsin?
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Keith Edwards
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The old Welsh Office housing division
was sometimes ahead of the games as well, although It
is also happening in the other parts of the UK now,
pulling the two strands of social housing together;
local authorities and housing associations under the
control of aunified department.
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We have been involved, and Tamsin has
been involved personally in the review of regulation
for registered social landlords in Wales. I think we
have seen perhaps less resources going into regulation
in the last few years. I would be very surprised if
the complement of civil servants is significantly different
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Tamsin Stirling
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Yes. I think there are additional tasks
including responding to and servicing the members and
committees et cetera. I have not sat anybody down and
said, "What proportion of your time does this take?"
However, there are a collection of tasks which have
to be carried out now that were not carried out prior
to devolution.
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Ted Rowlands
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Taken off the peg from Whitehall.
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I am just going to ask as one thing astonished
me: an Act on homelessness, the England and Wales Act,
only in the 18 months or 2 years is virtually identical.
There are no special Welsh clauses as such because everyone
was satisfied homelessness was integrated by that Act.
Did it or did it not have any devolution?
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Tamsin Stirling
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The Assembly actually passed it in March
2001. Keith mentioned it a couple of times, Wales being
ahead of the game, through secondary legislation to
change the details of how things are dealt with local
authorities and to broaden the safety net of people
that are affected by other legislation
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Ted Rowlands
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In effect it did.
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Tamsin Stirling
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Yes, it was devolved under the previous
legislation.
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Ted Rowlands
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Therefore, we could use that to achieve
what the Assembly defined was needed, and the Act was
therefore not that relevant.
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Tamsin Stirling
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Yes that extended the safety net, and
then the Homelessness Act had a lot more of a broad-brush
approach on what was a strategic and preventative approach.
My reading accorded with what the Assembly's Homelessness
Commission had concluded. I don't think there is a conflict
there. The timescale was such that they used secondary
powers in advance of primary legisation.
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Keith Edwards
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The issue of the anti-social behaviour
and Housing Benefit proposals as well.
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Tamsin Stirling
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Yes, the issue of housing policy being
delivered by fiscal measures. There is something in
the White Paper at the moment about anti-social behaviour
and withdrawing housing benefit from anti-social tenants.
That is causing lots of anxieties, as you can imagine,
all round.
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I was going to use the Scottish example,
how it would undermine the homelessness strategy to
prevent homelessness and deal with more preventive and
ameliorative ways rather than saying it will result
in something like losing your home.
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In Scotland, there is a 10-year programme
looking at homelessness, to totally broaden the safety
net of the legislation where there is not anything.
The whole issue of the potentially homeless would then
be removed.
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In the Scottish case, if the housing
benefit measures go through someone who had their housing
benefit removed for being anti-social, they could apply
and would not be homeless and then the local authority
could pick up the tab. In effect you could review and
remove housing benefit for someone that is anti- social,
but does it undermine the national framework which is
about social inclusion and homelessness et cetera so
it has the capacity to run in a totally different direction?
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Sir Michael Wheeler-Booth
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Can I ask just one quick question? There
are a lot of comparisons with the English and Scottish
but there has been no mention of Northern Ireland. Are
you aware of what is happening there? Are there any
lessons you have learned from that?
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Keith Edwards
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We have an office in Edinburgh and Belfast
so we link with them. From talking to colleagues in
Northern Ireland, the main issue, surprise surprise,
is the political impasse and the difficulties arising
out of that.
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The devolution settlement was obviously
different. The CIH in Northern Ireland has difficulties
in engaging the appropriate ministers in Northern Ireland,
and they have been without a minister for a considerable
period of time. We are in close contact but there are
no cross issues for us other than one or two issues,
for example Lifetime Homes where we have worked very
closely with colleagues in Northern Ireland.
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Lord Richard
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Yes. Can I thank you for very much for
coming. You have opened up an interesting subject. Yes,
thank you.
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