* Mario Kreft MBE, the Chair of Care Forum Wales.
Denbighshire
County Council has been accused of paying unrealistically low care home fees.
An
investigation by social care champions Care Forum Wales (CFW) has
revealed the local authority is among the worst payers in Wales.
The
figures are contained in a table published by CFW of the postcode lottery of
fees paid across Wales.
They
say the rates set by the councils were “budget driven” and were not based on
the true cost of providing care.
Anglesey
is sixth from bottom of the table and Conwy is 10th from
bottom, with Denbighshire fourth from bottom and Wrexham second from bottom.
Right
at the foot of the table is Flintshire County Council who have been awarded a
giant wooden by CFW for being “the meanest” local authority in Wales.
A
care home owner in Flintshire, who declined to be named for fear of being
victimised and blacklisted by the council, was shocked to discover that the
funding for individual residents in Flintshire is up to £11,000 a year less per
person than in parts of Wales – for providing exactly the same level of
service.
The
revelation came after what social care champions Care Forum Wales (CFW)
describe as a “fee-fixing North Wales cartel” was blown apart by Gwynedd
Council whose Cabinet voted unanimously for increases of up to 25 per cent.
Their
decision followed similar hikes in Merthyr Tydfil where councillors were warned
that not paying fees that reflected the “true cost of care” would be unlawful.
According
to CFW, it’s left the remaining five local authorities in North Wales “with
nowhere to hide” and Flintshire County Council at the bottom of what’s come to
be known as the League of Shame, detailing the fees paid in different parts of
Wales.
As
a result, the local authority has been awarded a giant, five foot tall wooden
spoon.
The
unnamed Flintshire care home owner said: “I am left feeling physically sick
when I see the levels of funding for people in care in other parts of Wales.
“It
is our residents who are suffering from the penny-pinching attitude of
Flintshire Council but it costs the same to look after someone in Flintshire as
it does in Gwynedd or Merthyr but Flintshire Council pay a lot less.”
CFW
say the Flintshire care home is also at the wrong end of a growing North-South
divide.
They say the postcode lottery was brought into
sharp focus when Torfaen Council announced big increases in their rates – 17
per cent for residential care and 25 per cent for nursing care.
It means that a 50-bed care home in Torfaen will
receive £546,000 a year more for providing residential EMI care than a similar
sized home in Anglesey, Wrexham and Flintshire for exactly the same levels of
care.
In the case of Denbighshire it equates to an extra
£494,000 a year and £444,600 more than a home in Conwy.
The
anonymous Flintshire care provider added: “I love my job. I love the role of
supporting and caring for people who need that help and the days that I’m hands
on and providing that care are the best days of my week.
“Ten
years ago I enjoyed the management side of the job as well but not anymore, not
when we’re starved of the necessary funding which means I can’t afford to
decorate or even properly clean the place and I know that council-owned homes
are decorated every year.
Last
year’s bottom two were Swansea and Neath Port Talbot and both have boosted
their care fees by over 12 per cent while Blaenau Gwent (14.9 per cent)
and Caerphilly (13.40 per cent), found even more money.
It’s
a state of affairs that has Mario Kreft MBE, the Chair of Care Forum Wales
which represents around 500 of the country’s independent care providers,
fuming.
Mr
Kreft said: “We are calling on all fair minded people in local government – and
through the good offices of the Welsh Local Government Association – to ensure,
as put to the councillors in places like Merthyr, Torfaen and Gwynedd, they
need to urgently review their fees.
“A
number of other councils deserve credit for committing to conduct urgent
reviews of their rates and we trust that they will now also follow suit and do
the right thing.
“It
is vital that these authorities fulfill their statutory responsibilities and
ensure that they act lawfully and set their rates in such a way that they
reflect the true cost of providing care for the most vulnerable people in our
society.
“If,
however, they continue to act unlawfully, it will put more unacceptable
pressure on hard-pressed, hard-working families to make up the difference which
is unfair at the best of times but totally intolerable during the current cost
of living crisis.
“We
are in an absurd situation where you can go from North to South Wales and find
a person in Flintshire with exactly the same needs and receiving exactly the
same service but in Torfaen they receive £11,000 more per person a year for
providing it.
“Either
the likes of Torfaen are being totally profligate with Council Tax payers money
or Flintshire need to step up to the plate and meet their statutory, lawful
obligations by recognising the true cost of social care.
“It
is frankly unbelievable that in Wales we have 22 local authorities all setting
their own fees and we are seeing massive differences in those fees – it means
that in most parts of Wales the system is just unsustainable.
“We
rightly have national standards that we need to abide to and we need a national
framework for setting fees as recommended by the Welsh Government in their
White Paper, Rebalancing Care and Support.
“Gwynedd,
Torfaen and Merthyr councils deserve praise for doing the right thing in
setting fees at a level that is nearer to covering the true cost of care for
the sake of the vulnerable people who live in care homes and nursing homes.
“This
has certainly ratcheted up the pressure on the remaining North Wales
authorities whose position is now completely and demonstrably untenable and
unlawful unless they follow suit.
“At
the moment the only way providers in places like Flintshire and Wrexham,
Denbighshire, Anglesey and Conwy can manage is to go back to the hard-working
families of their residents who will suffer financially – it’s a stealth tax.
“How
can it be that for providing an identical service in Connah’s Quay you receive
£11,000 less per person than you receive in Caerphilly?
“It’s
a North-South divide and in the 20-odd years since devolution, the level of
fees paid by the North Wales local authorities have gone from top of the league
to relegation candidates.
“As
a consequence we are seeing care homes closing across Wales because they are
not financially viable which is something that is required by law.
Mary
Wimbury, the chief executive of Care Forum Wales, said: “We rightly have
national standards that are required in terms of the quality of the care
provided and the national regulations governing the social care sector.
“What
we need now is a complete overhaul of the system and the introduction of a
sensible and fair national framework for commissioning a national fee which
ensures realistic and sustainable rates that cover the true cost of care and
allow providers to properly reward their valued workforce.
“This is becoming increasingly urgent because the
demographics are going in one direction with the recently published census
results show that one in five people in Wales are now aged 65 or over.
“Our network of care homes and domiciliary care
providers provide essential support for the NHS.
“Without
that scaffolding, the burden on an already stretched NHS with hospitals
bursting at the seams will become even more intolerable and the whole system
could collapse like a house of cards.”