Lincoln council overspent on discretionary housing payments budget

File photo dated 12/09/2018 of model houses on a pile of coins and bank notes. An extra 356,000 mortgage borrowers could face payment difficulties by the end of June 2024, in addition to those who are already behind, according to the City regulator. Issue date: Friday March 10, 2023.File photo dated 12/09/2018 of model houses on a pile of coins and bank notes. An extra 356,000 mortgage borrowers could face payment difficulties by the end of June 2024, in addition to those who are already behind, according to the City regulator. Issue date: Friday March 10, 2023.
File photo dated 12/09/2018 of model houses on a pile of coins and bank notes. An extra 356,000 mortgage borrowers could face payment difficulties by the end of June 2024, in addition to those who are already behind, according to the City regulator. Issue date: Friday March 10, 2023.
Lincoln council exceeded its allowance from the Government for supporting people with housing costs in the year to March, new figures show.

Lincoln council exceeded its allowance from the Government for supporting people with housing costs in the year to March, new figures show.

Discretionary housing payments are paid by local authorities to cover shortfalls in residents' housing benefit or Universal Credit.

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The Government gives a pot of money to each council to make these payments, but councils can top it up with their own funds.

The Government has frozen housing benefit for the last three years, and Shelter said benefits must be uprated to track the dramatic increase in rent over the last few years.

The housing charity added discretionary payments are only a temporary solution, and urged the Government to provide longer-term solutions, including building more affordable housing.

Department for Work and Pensions figures show Lincoln council spent £140,608 on discretionary housing payments in 2022-23.

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However, it was allocated a budget of £132,330, meaning it spent an extra 6% on top of its allocation.

In 2021-22, the council spent an extra 5% on top of its initial budget.

Across England and Wales, local authorities spent an added 15% of their combined allocation, with 42% of councils overspending their budget by more than 5%.

Just 11% of authorities spent less than 95% of their budget.

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Polly Neate, chief executive of Shelter, said the freezing of housing benefit means "desperate families are struggling to balance the books in the overpriced and insecure private rented sector".

Ms Neate said discretionary housing payments are needed to bridge the gap between housing benefit and rent, but added they are "only a sticking-plaster solution".

"If the Government really wants to tackle the housing emergency, the Chancellor must urgently unfreeze housing benefit to help families pay their rent," she added.

"But the only long-term solution to the housing emergency is for the Government to invest in a new generation of genuinely affordable social homes, with rents tied to local incomes."

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A government spokesperson said nearly £1.6 billion in funding has been given to local authorities since 2011, "providing a safety net for people struggling with rent or housing costs".

They added: "We are set to spend over £30 billion on housing support this year, on top of the significant cost of living help worth around £3,300 per household.

"It is for councils to decide how to allocate funding and manage their budgets, and they can top up government funding up to two and a half times using their own funds."