New fund to help councils fight fraud
3 Jul 2014 11:39 AM
Eric Pickles announces support for councils
ready to take on fraudsters.
Local Government Secretary Eric Pickles yesterday (2
July 2014) announced a new multi-million pound fund to help councils claw back
the taxpayers’ money lost every year to fraud.
Mr
Pickles is also urging Town Halls to “turn idle assets into money”
to protect front line services. The government is allowing councils to use
money raised from the sale of assets, such as empty buildings and redundant
brownfield land, to help pay for the costs of improving local services and to
keep Council Tax down.
In
a speech to council finance chiefs, the Local Government Secretary challenged
councils to use innovative financial management to address fraud, surplus
assets and Council Tax collection. Taking such an approach would help local
authorities make the sensible savings needed over the next few years to help
reduce the deficit inherited from the last administration.
The
Secretary of State pointed out that even though Council Tax collection rates
remain high, the billions that go uncollected each year, much like the money
lost to fraud, places an unfair extra burden on honest, hard-working
taxpayers.
Councils are invited to bid for a share of the £16 million
fund, which opened yesterday, but to be eligible they must demonstrate how
their proposals will recoup money owed or tighten safety nets to prevent
criminals ripping them off. Official figures show councils are losing £2
billion a year to fraud and error.
The
fund will give councils 2 years of support to step-up how they tackle
unnecessary losses from non-benefit related fraud, such as Council Tax fraud,
blue badge fraud or theft of grants.
Speaking at the Chartered Institute of Public Finance
and Accountancy’s annual conference yesterday, Eric Pickles
said:
Fraud costs hardworking taxpayers £2 billion per
year. We are supporting councils to go further in catching fraud felons, and
today I am proud to commit £16 million over 2 years to ridding this
scourge. This challenge fund will be allocated to the most innovative local
authorities who plan to generate the most-effective savings.
Councils should also be channelling their energies into
getting idle assets off of their books. With £220 billion worth of
assets, and £2.5 billion of that earmarked as surplus, it is time to
start asking: ‘what good is that empty, mothballed office block to the
taxpayer?’
Communities Minister Baroness Stowell, who is leading
the department’s push against local government fraud,
said:
We
cannot afford to waste public sector money by not preventing fraud. In
assembling bids, I am keen for councils to generate new and energetic
approaches, work together and consider shared services and other ways to
maximise savings, whether their focus is on procurement, Council Tax or social
housing fraud.
The
move is a further call to arms for councils to do more on fraud, which follows
the £19 million I
announced in April to help councils catch tenancy cheats and free up
precious housing for those who need it.
Rob
Whiteman, Chief Executive officer at the Chartered Institute of Public Finance
and Accountancy, said:
This funding is hugely welcome, it will put resources
into protecting taxpayer’s money at the front line and every pound saved
increases the amount that can be spent serving communities across the
country.
Public services across the UK are striving to meet
rising demand while dealing with on-going financial pressures. The Chartered
Institute of Public Finance and Accountancy’s new Counter Fraud
Centre will work with them to ensure that they have the tools they
need to continue to protect the public purse while continuing to deliver front
line services.
Further Information
The Counter Fraud
Fund applies to councils in England only. Successful bids must
demonstrate an innovative approach to tackling fraud, encompassing detection,
prevention and deterrence from genuine additional activities to achieve
financial savings through counter fraud activities. All bids will be judged
against the potential financial savings and benefits on offer, as well as
additional criteria such as partnership working, sustainability, feasibility
and innovation. Deadline for bids is 5 September 2014 and successful bids will
be announced shortly after.
The
purpose of the Counter Fraud Fund is to support local authorities during the
implementation of the Single Fraud Investigation Service and increase the
capacity and capability of local government to tackle losses from non-benefit
fraud. The fund will help individual local authorities establish an
investigative capacity over the 2 years. Overall this government is investing
£35 million to improve councils’ ability to identify and tackle
fraud.
Earlier this year, ministers asked the Chartered
Institute of Public Finance and Accountancy to set up a national Counter Fraud Centre,
which will take over existing public sector counter-fraud functions from the
Audit Commission.
The
Department for Work and Pensions will continue to tackle housing benefit fraud
as part of a single approach announced in the Autumn
Statement.
The Council Asset
Programme has made up to £40,000 available to individual local
authorities to kick-start savings and build more homes and jobs through better
use of assets. This extra support now means councils can to go further and
faster modernising services through new finance flexibilities on the use of
£200 million capital receipts from the sale of property assets in 2015 to
2016 and 2016 to 2017.
In
addition the transparency
code will require councils to publish a list of all owned assets so
the taxpaying public can see what they have on the books.
In
April, the department announced
£410 million in funding to help councils transform the way they
run local services to put the user first. A major package of incentives was
unveiled to reward authorities that cut duplication and build services around
the needs of local people. This included the £320 million Transformation Challenge
Award, which is available to areas with ambitious plans for improving
services including integrating health and social care; getting the unemployed
back to work; or early intervention to get children ready for
school.
The
National Fraud Authority has estimated that councils could save £2.2
billion a year by cracking down on fraud and improving their prevention,
detection and recovery of council fraud. Source: National Fraud
Authority’s2012 Annual Fraud
Indicator.
The
total cumulative amount of uncollected Council Tax still stood at almost
£2.4 billion in 2012 to 2013. Source: DCLG statistical
release.
The
value of assets designated as surplus by councils stands at £2.5 billion,
out of a total of £220 billion assets. Source: DCLG statistical
release.
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