Nottingham Post

NCH STAFF ‘VERY NERVOUS’ ABOUT JOBS

- By JOSEPH LOCKER joseph.locker@reachplc.com @joelocker9­6

STAFF working for Nottingham City Homes are understood to be “very nervous” about losing their jobs as the city council seeks to bring the housing provider back under its full control.

The decision to cancel the company’s contract comes after a series of misspends were uncovered.

Towards the end of last year it was discovered that just under £15m had been wrongly and unlawfully transferre­d from Nottingham City Council’s Housing Revenue Account (HRA) to its general fund. The money was intended for council tenants and their homes, but it was instead used to support other services amid financial constraint­s.

Evidence of these misspends dates back to 2014/15, but payments beginning in the 1990s are also being investigat­ed.

The council commission­ed two independen­t reviews which have uncovered further misspends up to £40m, with money said to have been used on non-hra activities despite being ringfenced.

Of this total, £17.1m is understood to have been potentiall­y misspent by Nottingham City Homes (NCH), the council’s arms-length housing provider.

NCH denies the claims. As a result of the issues, the council served NCH a 12-month notice to terminate the contract and bring services in-house, as was done with Enviroener­gy.

But the news has caused concern for NCH’S 1,021 staff.

Councillor David Mellen, leader of the council, who represents the Dales ward, said: “It is very important that we reassure both the tenants and the staff members. I was with an officer of Nottingham City Homes in my previous meeting and he was saying some staff are very nervous about that and this is going to cause people to worry about their jobs.

“It might cause people to worry but we are trying to reassure them that what we want to do is a lift and shift. We haven’t got the skills within the council now that we had 20 years ago to run a housing function. We need those staff members to move across, so there won’t be people losing their jobs.”

The process of bringing NCH in-house has already begun.

Councillor Mellen says this will bring the council back in line with what is happening nationally as arms-length management organisati­ons (ALMOS) are brought back under the control of councils.

There were at one stage 75 ALMOS in Britain. Now there are only roughly 20 left. They were set up, like NCH, as a way of accessing additional resources.

Tenants must also be reassured, says the council leader.

Councillor Mellen added: “Equally we need to reassure tenants that this is not going to be something that will cause them to be anxious, because in reality the same people will be doing their repairs, the same patch managers will be there, the same independen­t supporters in sheltered accommodat­ion will still be there.”

As called for by Conservati­ve Clifton West councillor, Andrew Rule, all transactio­ns involving the HRA going forward must be signed off by the section 151 officer in the council. This is currently Clive Heaphy, also the director of finance, who first discovered the unlawful payments back in 2021.

 ?? JOSEPH RAYNOR ?? Homes in Nottingham
JOSEPH RAYNOR Homes in Nottingham

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