Community Care Community Care Social Work News & Social Care Jobs
Menu
  • Jobs/Careers
    • Jobs
    • Employer Profiles
    • Workforce Insights
    • Podcasts
    • Careers Zone
    ▼
  • Learning
    • Community Care Inform Adults
    • Community Care Inform Children
    ▼
  • Events
    • Masterclasses
    • Webinars
    • Community Care Live
    ▼
  • E-newsletters
  • News
    • Adults
    • Children
    • Social work leaders
    • Workforce
    • Choose Social Work
    • Write for Community Care
    ▼
  • Network
    • The Social Work Community
    ▼
  • Search
  • ID
    Community Care
    • Menu
    • Jobs/Careers
      • Jobs
      • Employer Profiles
      • Workforce Insights
      • Podcasts
      • Careers Zone
    • Learning
      • Community Care Inform Adults
      • Community Care Inform Children
    • Events
      • Masterclasses
      • Webinars
      • Community Care Live
    • E-newsletters
    • News
      • Adults
      • Children
      • Social work leaders
      • Workforce
      • Choose Social Work
      • Write for Community Care
    • Network
      • The Social Work Community
    • Search
      • Register
      • Login
      Jobs Live Inform

      Government shelves Care Act funding reforms until 2020

      Introduction of cap on care costs is postponed amid concerns over cost of implementation

      By Andy McNicoll on July 17, 2015 in Adults, Care Act 2014
      Photo: Gary Brigden

      The government is delaying its flagship policy to cap social care costs under the Care Act until April 2020, breaking a key pre-election manifesto pledge.

      The cap on the amount self-funders will have to contribute to their care costs was due to be introduced from April 2016. Costs were to be limited to £72,000 for over 65s and younger adults with disabilities.

      Two other key reforms have also been postponed until April 2020:

      • A duty on councils to meet the eligible needs of self-funders in care homes at their request and;
      • A more generous means test for residential care that the government estimated would have benefited an extra 23,000 people in 2016-17 alone.

      The proposed appeals system for care and support will also be delayed so it can be considered as part of the forthcoming spending review.

      In a letter to the Local Government Association, care minister Alistair Burt said a time of consolidation in public spending was not right to introduce “expensive new commitments”. The government predicted the reforms would cost £6bn over the next five years.

      Earlier this month, the LGA called for the reforms to be delayed and the cash to implement them “instead put into the social care system itself”.

      The government has made no indication of whether the £6bn saved by delaying the reforms will be injected into the social care system.

      Councils received £146m at the start of this year to carry out early assessments of self-funders on the basis that the care cap would be introduced from next April. The Department of Health said no decision had been made on what would happen to that money.

      Harold Bodmer, vice president of the Association of Directors of Adult Social Services, said that the government was right to delay the reforms given the “intolerable strain” on social care budgets.

      “Frankly, if directors were asked to choose between implementing the funding reforms right now or having the money directly to fund these growing demands they would almost without exception prioritise a fair and sustainable funding settlement to meet the true cost of providing safe, good quality care,” he said.

      “The important issue now must be to ensure that current services can benefit from the extra funding this decision makes available. This ought to be the beginning of a thoroughgoing, transparent process, through the coming spending review, of putting fair, equitable and fully-funded social care services back on track after what have been five devastating years.”

      Martin Green, chief executive of Care England, echoed Bodmer’s call for the government to address social care funding in the forthcoming spending review.

      “[We] must now, once and for all, use this time to develop a long-term and sustainable funding solution for social care. If the government refuses to address the issue of funding, we will have a care system in crisis and the NHS unable to cope with the pressure,” he said.

      More from Community Care

      Related articles:

      A career in social work: ‘It’s the best thing I ever did’
      Government launches review of special guardianship orders
      Comments are closed.

      Job of the week

      Bournemouth Christchurch and Poole Council logo

      Children’s Social Workers – Level 2/3 – Children & Families First

      Employer Profiles

      • Bournemouth beach Bournemouth, Christchurch and Poole
      • Hampshire County Council
      • A picture of an Oxford college quad Oxfordshire County Council
      • Two colleagues talking South Gloucestershire Council
      • Wokingham town centre image Wokingham Borough Council

      Workforce Insights

      • Would you move from the city to work in a more rural setting?
      • Webinar: building a practice framework with the influence of practitioner voice
      • Photo: Microgen/ Adobe ‘They don’t have to retell their story’: building long-lasting relationships with children and young people
      • Podcast: returning to social work after becoming a first-time parent
      • How managers are inspiring social workers to progress in their careers
      • Hand putting wooden cube block on blue background with word CAREER and copy space for your text. Business career planning growth to success concept Workforce Insights – showcasing a selection of the sector’s top recruiters

      Featured jobs

      Sign up for our social work emails

      More from Community Care

      • Network

        The networking platform for social workers


        Connect with peers
      • Jobs

        The latest job opportunities within the social work sector

        Search for jobs
      • Events

        The largest free to attend event for the social work sector

        Register now
      • Learn

        The online learning and practice resource for social workers

        Find out more

      Connect with us

      • facebookFacebook
      • XX
      • LinkedInLinkedIn
      • InstagramInstagram

      Topics

      • Adults
      • Children
      • Workforce
      • Social work leadership

      More information

      • About us
      • Contact us
      • Write for Community Care
      • Accessibility
      • Advertise with us
      • Privacy
      • Terms & conditions
      • Cookies
      Mark Allen Group
      © MA Education 2025. St Jude's Church, Dulwich Road, Herne Hill, London SE24 0PB, a company registered in England and Wales no. 04002826. MA Education is part of the Mark Allen Group. All Rights Reserved