The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Roll-out of universal credit expected to impact rent arrears

Finance chief says welfare reform already resulting in bad debts written off

- Claire warrender cwarrender@thecourier.co.uk

The roll-out of universal credit will have a “major impact” on the level of rent arrears in Fife, a council finance chief has warned.

Les Robertson, Fife Council’s head of revenue and commercial services, said the impact of welfare reform was already being seen in the amount of bad debts being written off by the local authority.

“This can only get worse in the forthcomin­g years with universal credit being rolled out in Fife from December 2017, and a number of other welfare cuts having already hit, and will continue in the coming years,” he said.

Of the 700 council tenants already in receipt of universal credit, 568 have seen their rent arrears increase to a total of more than £300,000.

Mr Robertson said: “This does not bode well for the future as, in the coming years, we have nearly 14,000 workingage tenants who currently rely on housing benefit to meet their rental liability.

“These tenants will at some point transfer on to universal credit.

“This, in all probabilit­y, will have a huge impact on rent collection.”

He said if the impact on the first 700 tenants moving to universal credit was replicated across the 14,000 workingage tenants, rent arrears would increase by nearly £6 million.

More than 200 staff from the council’s housing and finance services are working on a project with the sole aim of improving rent collection rates.

“The widely important goal is to increase net rent collection to over 100 per cent of the charge levied,” said Mr Robertson.

“This will be a major challenge with the negative impacts of universal credit and other welfare cuts such as the benefit cap already being felt.”

Among the reasons for the increase in arrears are that tenants claiming universal credit have to wait at least six weeks for their first payment, meaning they do not have funds to pay rent.

Fife Council wrote off £1.04m in rent arrears in 2016/17, an increase of £342,000 on the previous year.

Mr Robertson said this was the equivalent of less than 2% of the total rent due.

“There can be no disputing the cuts in housing benefit and universal credit introducti­on is increasing the overall write-off position,” he added.

There can be no disputing the cuts in housing benefit and universal credit introducti­on is increasing the overall write-off position. LES ROBERTSON

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