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Statutory Instruments

2016 No. 986

Social Security

The Income-related Benefits (Subsidy to Authorities) Amendment Order 2016

Made

10th October 2016

Laid before Parliament

13th October 2016

Coming into force

18th November 2016

The Secretary of State for Work and Pensions makes the following Order in exercise of the powers conferred by sections 140B(1), (3), (4) and (4A), 140F(2) and 189(4) to (7) of the Social Security Administration Act 1992( 1 ).

In accordance with section 189(8) of that Act( 2 ), the Secretary of State has obtained the consent of the Treasury.

In accordance with section 176(1) of that Act( 3 ), the Secretary of State has consulted with organisations appearing to the Secretary of State to be representative of the authorities concerned.

Citation, commencement and interpretation

(2) Article 2(2) and Schedule 1 have effect for the purpose of determining subsidy payable for the relevant year beginning with 1st April 2015.

(3) Articles 2(3) and 3, and Schedules 2, 3 and 4 have effect for the purpose of determining subsidy payable for the relevant year beginning with 1st April 2016.

(4) Article 4 has effect from 1st April 2016.

(5) In this Order—

the 1998 Order” means the Income-related Benefits (Subsidy to Authorities) Order 1998( 4 );

relevant year” means the period of a year beginning on 1st April in any calendar year in respect of which a claim for subsidy is made.

The amount of an authority’s subsidy

2. —(1) The 1998 Order is amended as follows.

(2) For Schedule 1 (sums to be used in the calculation of subsidy)( 5 ) substitute the Schedule 1 set out in Schedule 1 to this Order.

(3) For Schedule 1A (additional amount of subsidy: activities to reduce fraud and error)( 6 ) substitute the Schedule 1A set out in Schedule 2 to this Order.

Rent rebate deductions from an authority’s subsidy

3. —(1) Schedule 4A to the 1998 Order (rent rebate limitation deductions (Housing Revenue Account Dwellings))( 7 ) is amended as follows.

(2) In Part 2 (England), in paragraph 3 (amount of deduction), for sub-paragraph (3)( 8 ) substitute—

(3) The rebate proportion for 2016-17 is 0.752. .

(3) For Part 3 (weekly rent limits for purposes of Part 2: authorities in England)( 9 ), substitute the Part 3 set out in Schedule 3 to this Order.

(4) For Part 5 (amounts for purposes of Part 4, paragraph 4: authorities in Wales)( 10 ), substitute the Part 5 set out in Schedule 4 to this Order.

Amendments relating to the Housing (Wales) Act 2014

4. —(1) The 1998 Order is amended as follows.

(2) In article 17(1)(c) (subsidy in respect of non self-contained licensed accommodation etc. provided by an authority as temporary or short-term accommodation)( 11 )—

(a) in paragraph (i), after “Housing Act 1996” insert “, Part 2 of the Housing (Wales) Act 2014”;

(b) in paragraph (ii)—

(i) for “or (in Scotland)” substitute, “, Part 2 of the Housing (Wales) Act 2014 or”;

(ii) after “1987” insert “, as the case may be”.

(3) In article 17A(1)(c) (subsidy in respect of self-contained licensed accommodation etc. provided by an authority as temporary or short-term accommodation)( 12 )—

(a) in paragraph (i), after “Housing Act 1996” insert “, Part 2 of the Housing (Wales) Act 2014”;

(b) in paragraph (ii)—

(i) for “or (in Scotland)” substitute, “, Part 2 of the Housing (Wales) Act 2014 or”;

(ii) after “1987” insert “, as the case may be”.

(4) In article 17B(1)(c) (subsidy in respect of non self-contained licensed accommodation etc. made available by a registered housing association as temporary or short-term accommodation)( 13 )—

(a) in paragraph (i), after “Housing Act 1996” insert “, Part 2 of the Housing (Wales) Act 2014”;

(b) in paragraph (ii)—

(i) for “or (in Scotland)” substitute, “, Part 2 of the Housing (Wales) Act 2014 or”;

(ii) after “1987” insert “, as the case may be”.

(5) In article 17C(1)(c) (subsidy in respect of self-contained licensed accommodation etc. made available by a registered housing association authority as temporary or short-term accommodation)( 14 )—

(a) in paragraph (i), after “Housing Act 1996” insert “, Part 2 of the Housing (Wales) Act 2014”;

(b) in paragraph (ii)—

(i) for “or (in Scotland)” substitute, “, Part 2 of the Housing (Wales) Act 2014 or”;

(ii) after “1987” insert “, as the case may be”.

Signed by authority of the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions

Caroline Nokes

Parliamentary Under Secretary of State,

Department for Work and Pensions

10th October 2016

We consent.

David Evennett

Guy Opperman

Two of the Lords Commissioners of Her Majesty’s Treasury

10th October 2016

Article 2(2)

SCHEDULE 1 Schedule to be substituted for Schedule 1 to the 1998 Order

Article 12(1)(b)

SCHEDULE 1 Sums to be used in the calculation of subsidy

RELEVANT YEAR 2015-2016

Local authority Administration subsidy (£)
England
Adur 280,003
Allerdale 440,716
Amber Valley 535,340
Arun 724,476
Ashfield 674,613
Ashford 545,396
Aylesbury Vale 613,196
Babergh 322,649
Barking and Dagenham 1,506,125
Barnet 2,418,387
Barnsley 1,408,476
Barrow in Furness 360,111
Basildon 1,078,409
Basingstoke and Deane 710,506
Bassetlaw 563,576
Bath and North East Somerset 769,034
Bedford 838,965
Bexley 1,058,826
Birmingham 7,392,503
Blaby 266,431
Blackburn with Darwen 858,859
Blackpool 1,408,191
Bolsover 418,611
Bolton 1,684,004
Boston 385,053
Bournemouth 1,256,143
Bracknell Forest 453,505
Bradford 3,208,653
Braintree 679,728
Breckland 597,097
Brent 2,809,151
Brentwood 256,434
Brighton and Hove 1,809,919
Bristol 2,878,572
Broadland 359,622
Bromley 1,464,979
Bromsgrove 269,804
Broxbourne 489,492
Broxtowe 435,338
Burnley 676,544
Bury 909,675
Calderdale 1,259,702
Cambridge 555,377
Camden 2,336,563
Cannock Chase 513,417
Canterbury 642,731
Carlisle 456,409
Castle Point 372,000
Central Bedfordshire 935,192
Charnwood 557,221
Chelmsford 623,301
Cheltenham 517,630
Cherwell 522,368
Cheshire East 1,441,218
Cheshire West and Chester 1,527,298
Chesterfield 660,548
Chichester 491,834
Chiltern 263,639
Chorley 434,080
Christchurch 204,184
City of London 114,000
Colchester 815,600
Copeland 340,179
Corby 437,376
Cornwall 2, 672,483
Cotswold 288,852
Coventry 1,895,430
Craven 185,225
Crawley 722,672
Croydon 2,647,451
Dacorum 680,305
Darlington 629,590
Dartford 428,262
Daventry 251,414
Derby 1,473,576
Derbyshire Dales 234,009
Doncaster 1,893,838
Dover 630,933
Dudley 1,568,960
Durham 3,462,583
Ealing 2,541,077
East Cambridgeshire 318,214
East Devon 498,549
East Dorset 275,771
East Hampshire 400,965
East Hertfordshire 491,657
East Lindsey 727,761
East Northamptonshire 297,184
East Riding of Yorkshire 1,405,701
East Staffordshire 493,261
Eastbourne 630,990
Eastleigh 405,112
Eden 179,445
Elmbridge 446,279
Enfield 2,521,581
Epping Forest 498,283
Epsom and Ewell 245,972
Erewash 505,296
Exeter 642,917
Fareham 297,894
Fenland 521,718
Forest Heath 279,351
Forest of Dean 381,908
Fylde 326,402
Gateshead 1,412,026
Gedling 486,176
Gloucester 726,321
Gosport 509,726
Gravesham 540,696
Great Yarmouth 744,187
Greenwich 2,481,711
Guildford 494,308
Hackney 3,330,468
Halton 933,097
Hambleton 305,283
Hammersmith and Fulham 1,664,377
Harborough 207,174
Haringey 2,762,678
Harlow 679,661
Harrogate 472,361
Harrow 1,371,534
Hart 194,884
Hartlepool 846,252
Hastings 714,532
Havant 524,766
Havering 1,134,406
Herefordshire 736,435
Hertsmere 531,321
High Peak 420,017
Hillingdon 1,604,114
Hinckley and Bosworth 343,649
Horsham 414,247
Hounslow 1,601,337
Huntingdonshire 669,981
Hyndburn 553,378
Ipswich 878,877
Isle of Wight 844,402
Isles of Scilly 2,522
Islington 2,650,412
Kensington and Chelsea 1,415,458
Kettering 406,506
King’s Lynn and West Norfolk 697,340
Kingston upon Hull 2,343,946
Kingston upon Thames 635,331
Kirklees 2,234,054
Knowsley 1,295,608
Lambeth 3,302,601
Lancaster 675,124
Leeds 4,533,552
Leicester 2,335,869
Lewes 392,854
Lewisham 3,421,141
Lichfield 317,141
Lincoln 607,502
Liverpool 4,651,182
Luton 1,243,161
Maidstone 655,887
Maldon 226,503
Malvern Hills 273,449
Manchester 4,862,750
Mansfield 630,201
Medway 1,409,696
Melton 162,371
Mendip 498,119
Merton 1,035,397
Mid Devon 312,899
Mid Suffolk 281,584
Mid Sussex 412,153
Middlesbrough 1,248,581
Milton Keynes 1,413,423
Mole Valley 279,423
New Forest 560,881
Newark and Sherwood 475,008
Newcastle under Lyme 561,630
Newcastle upon Tyne 2,018,395
Newham 2,865,022
North Devon 512,738
North Dorset 244,125
North East Derbyshire 437,592
North East Lincolnshire 1,124,950
North Hertfordshire 604,398
North Kesteven 337,794
North Lincolnshire 889,000
North Norfolk 464,516
North Somerset 1,045,252
North Tyneside 1,201,738
North Warwickshire 253,951
North West Leicestershire 351,936
Northampton 1,188,080
Northumberland 1,682,289
Norwich 1,196,895
Nottingham 2,593,838
Nuneaton and Bedworth 660,066
Oadby and Wigston 170,069
Oldham 1,350,632
Oxford 768,262
Pendle 546,849
Peterborough 1,203,533
Plymouth 1,783,310
Poole 649,011
Portsmouth 1,552,452
Preston 821,039
Purbeck 181,559
Reading 948,870
Redbridge 1,431,254
Redcar and Cleveland 930,425
Redditch 447,292
Reigate and Banstead 514,126
Ribble Valley 157,438
Richmond upon Thames 639,770
Richmondshire 223,335
Rochdale 1,366,578
Rochford 256,823
Rossendale 351,745
Rother 389,431
Rotherham 1,508,682
Rugby 421,315
Runnymede 288,425
Rushcliffe 305,356
Rushmoor 483,861
Rutland 114,863
Ryedale 208,132
Salford 2,084,075
Sandwell 2,347,861
Scarborough 710,435
Sedgemoor 619,340
Sefton 1,672,193
Selby 293,721
Sevenoaks 424,597
Sheffield 3,218,963
Shepway 633,867
Shropshire 1,230,362
Slough 881,639
Solihull 796,348
South Bucks 184,945
South Cambridgeshire 392,546
South Derbyshire 318,878
South Gloucestershire 1,015,645
South Hams 342,018
South Holland 342,602
South Kesteven 552,878
South Lakeland 348,455
South Norfolk 455,935
South Northamptonshire 189,541
South Oxfordshire 372,689
South Ribble 371,619
South Somerset 750,697
South Staffordshire 374,071
South Tyneside 1,161,219
Southampton 1,542,981
Southend-on-Sea 1,160,648
Southwark 3,296,845
Spelthorne 371,582
St.Albans 451,620
St.Edmundsbury 453,730
St.Helens 1,199,969
Stafford 484,372
Staffordshire Moorlands 328,878
Stevenage 534,409
Stockport 1,161,375
Stockton-on-Tees 1,243,988
Stoke-on-Trent 1,768,056
Stratford-on-Avon 456,049
Stroud 385,596
Suffolk Coastal 442,535
Sunderland 2,025,040
Surrey Heath 254,367
Sutton 982,406
Swale 761,420
Swindon 1,035,681
Tameside 1,418,884
Tamworth 373,399
Tandridge 285,212
Taunton Deane 528,115
Teignbridge 591,868
Telford and Wrekin 1,128,734
Tendring 888,599
Test Valley 431,641
Tewkesbury 293,426
Thanet 1,102,515
Three Rivers 344,544
Thurrock 902,300
Tonbridge and Malling 470,872
Torbay 1,057,573
Torridge 313,005
Tower Hamlets 3,539,581
Trafford 1,069,876
Tunbridge Wells 463,137
Uttlesford 235,771
Vale of White Horse 366,060
Wakefield 2,004,012
Walsall 1,938,992
Waltham Forest 1,913,048
Wandsworth 2,431,086
Warrington 937,681
Warwick 436,227
Watford 515,708
Waveney 683,706
Waverley 388,439
Wealden 413,771
Wellingborough 387,752
Welwyn Hatfield 588,086
West Berkshire 534,240
West Devon 236,841
West Dorset 408,109
West Lancashire 494,240
West Lindsey 389,854
West Oxfordshire 329,255
West Somerset 213,311
Westminster 2,147,504
Weymouth and Portland 411,611
Wigan 1,694,508
Wiltshire 1,864,188
Winchester 393,698
Windsor and Maidenhead 465,938
Wirral 2,153,890
Woking 348,201
Wokingham 299,278
Wolverhampton 1,966.315
Worcester 479,074
Worthing 451,127
Wychavon 406,888
Wycombe 614,292
Wyre 557,114
Wyre Forest 502,170
York 767,771
Wales
Blaenau Gwent 531,765
Bridgend 821,349
Caerphilly 971,286
Cardiff 1,947,796
Carmarthenshire 918,363
Ceredigion 344,344
Conwy 581,710
Denbighshire 556,308
Flintshire 642,094
Gwynedd 598,702
Isle of Anglesey 317,411
Merthyr Tydfil 478,042
Monmouthshire 339,661
Neath Port Talbot 873,648
Newport 972,837
Pembrokeshire 622,578
Powys 583,518
Rhondda Cynon Taf 1,479,359
Swansea 1,474,168
Torfaen 600,932
Vale of Glamorgan 541,898
Wrexham 679,300
Scotland
Aberdeen 977,933
Aberdeenshire 889,685
Angus 582,623
Argyll and Bute 509,556
Clackmannanshire 351,523
Comhairle nan Eilean Siar 164,140
Dumfries and Galloway 903,857
Dundee 1,336,398
East Ayrshire 864,567
East Dunbartonshire 347,389
East Lothian 465,841
East Renfrewshire 265,115
Edinburgh 2,620,391
Falkirk 855,661
Fife 2,033,128
Glasgow 5,722,990
Highland 1,154,053
Inverclyde 688,469
Midlothian 508,255
Moray 396,173
North Ayrshire 1,047,408
North Lanarkshire 2,156,586
Orkney 100,577
Perth and Kinross 697,353
Renfrewshire 1,268,203
Scottish Borders 619,928
Shetland 92,569
South Ayrshire 677,692
South Lanarkshire 1,624,948
Stirling 375,833
West Dunbartonshire 871,501
West Lothian 1,028,022.

Article 2(3)

SCHEDULE 2 Schedule to be substituted for Schedule 1A to the 1998 Order

Article 12(1)(c)

SCHEDULE 1A Additional amount of subsidy: Activities to reduce fraud and error

Interpretation

1. In this Schedule—

“participating authority” means an authority which notified the Secretary of State on or before 29th February 2016 that it is participating in the Fraud and Error Reduction Incentive Scheme in the administration of housing benefit described in the Housing Benefit Circular HB A17/2014 ( 15 ) and extended as described in the Housing Benefit Circular HB A2/2016 ( 16 ) ;

“performance”, in relation to any participating authority and any period, means the amount by which payments of housing benefit by the authority are reduced in that period as a result of relevant activities;

“performance period” means the period of 3 months beginning with any of 1st April 2016, 1st July 2016, 1st October 2016 or 1st January 2017;

“relevant activities” means activities carried out by a participating authority in order to reduce fraud and error in payments of housing benefit.

Additional amount: relevant year beginning with 1st April 2016

2. —(1) This paragraph and paragraphs 3 and 4 have effect for the purpose of determining the additional amount of subsidy, if any, payable to a participating authority under article 12(1)(c) for the relevant year beginning with 1st April 2016.

(2) The additional amount is determined as follows—

Step 1

Calculate the percentage (“the out-performance percentage”), if any, by which the performance of the authority exceeds its baseline performance in the performance period beginning with 1st April 2016 (see paragraph 3 for the meaning of “baseline performance”).

Step 2

Work out which band in column (1) of the following Table the authority falls into in accordance with paragraph 4.

Step 3

Look up the percentage (“the additional amount percentage”) specified in column (2) of the following Table in the row applicable to the authority’s band.

Step 4

Multiply the additional amount percentage by the administration subsidy for the authority.

Step 5

Repeat Steps 1 to 4 for each of the other three performance periods.

Step 6

Add the amounts determined for each performance period under Step 4.

Table
Band (1) Additional amount percentage (2)
Band 1 0 per cent.
Band 2 0.45 per cent.
Band 3 0.59 per cent.
Band 4 0.74 per cent.
Band 5 0.90 per cent.
Band 6 1.25 per cent.
Band 7 1.65 per cent.
Band 8 2.10 per cent.
Band 9 2.60 per cent.
Band 10 3.15 per cent.
Band 11 3.75 per cent.

(3) In this paragraph, “administration subsidy” in relation to an authority, means the amount specified in relation to that authority in—

(a) the Annex to HB Subsidy Circular S9/2015 for authorities in England ( 17 )

(b) the Annex to HB Subsidy Circular S10/2015 for authorities in Scotland ( 18 ) ;

(c) the Annex to HB Subsidy Circular S11/2015 for authorities in Wales ( 19 ) .

Baseline performance

3. —(1) For the purposes of paragraph 2, a reference to the “baseline performance” of a participating authority in a performance period is to the amount determined in accordance with sub-paragraphs (2) to (5).

(2) For the performance period beginning with 1st April 2016 the baseline performance is the higher of the following amounts—

(a) the amount by which, in the Secretary of State’s opinion, the total payments of housing benefit made by the authority in the period of 3 months beginning with 1st April 2014 were reduced as a result of relevant activities; and

(b) the average of—

(i) the amount specified in paragraph (a); and

(ii) the amount by which, in the Secretary of State’s opinion, the total payments of housing benefit made by the authority in the period of 3 months beginning with 1st April 2013 were reduced as a result of relevant activities.

(3) For the performance period beginning with 1st July 2016 the baseline performance is the higher of the following amounts—

(a) the amount by which, in the Secretary of State’s opinion, the total payments of housing benefit made by the authority in the period of 3 months beginning with 1st July 2014 were reduced as a result of relevant activities; and

(b) the average of—

(i) the amount specified in paragraph (a); and

(ii) the amount by which, in the Secretary of State’s opinion, the total payments of housing benefit made by the authority in the period of 3 months beginning with 1st July 2013 were reduced as a result of relevant activities.

(4) For the performance period beginning with 1st October 2016 the baseline performance is the higher of the following amounts—

(a) the amount by which, in the Secretary of State’s opinion, the total payments of housing benefit made by the authority in the period of 3 months beginning with 1st October 2013 were reduced as a result of relevant activities; and

(b) the average of—

(i) the amount specified in paragraph (a); and

(ii) the amount by which, in the Secretary of State’s opinion, the total payments of housing benefit made by the authority in the period of 3 months beginning with 1st October 2012 were reduced as a result of relevant activities.

(5) For the performance period beginning with 1st January 2017 the baseline performance is the higher of the following amounts—

(a) the amount by which, in the Secretary of State’s opinion, the total payments of housing benefit made by the authority in the period of 3 months beginning with 1st January 2014 were reduced as a result of relevant activities; and

(b) the average of—

(i) the amount specified in paragraph (a); and

(ii) the amount by which, in the Secretary of State’s opinion, the total payments of housing benefit made by the authority in the period of 3 months beginning with 1st January 2013 were reduced as a result of relevant activities.

Determination of out-performance percentages

4. —(1) A participating authority falls into the band set out in column (2) of the relevant Table in the row applicable to the authority’s out-performance percentage.

(2) The “relevant Table” in relation to a participating authority means whichever of Tables 1 to 6 in sub-paragraphs (6) to (11) the Secretary of State determines applies to the authority in the relevant year.

(3) The determination in sub-paragraph (2) is based on the caseload management information percentage relating to the authority for the relevant year beginning with 1st April 2014 ( 20 ) .

(4) For the purpose of sub-paragraph (3), “caseload management information percentage” is calculated in accordance with the following formula—

where—

(5) The Secretary of State’s opinion in sub-paragraph (4) is based on—

(a) the size of the authority’s individual housing benefit caseload;

(b) the types of housing benefit claimants in that caseload; and

(c) the value of the housing benefit reductions that tend to occur in that caseload in the normal course of events, given the rent levels found in the authority’s area and other relevant factors.

(6) Table 1 is as follows—

Authority’s out-performance percentage (1) Band (2)
Less than 2.5 per cent. Band 1
At least 2.5 per cent. but less than 3.5 per cent. Band 2
At least 3.5 per cent. but less than 4.5 per cent. Band 3
At least 4.5 per cent. but less than 5.5 per cent. Band 4
At least 5.5 per cent. but less than 7.5 per cent. Band 5
At least 7.5 per cent. but less than 9.5 per cent. Band 6
At least 9.5 per cent. but less than 11.5 per cent. Band 7
At least 11.5 per cent. but less than 13.5 per cent. Band 8
At least 13.5 per cent. but less than 15.5 per cent. Band 9
At least 15.5 per cent. but less than 17.5 per cent. Band 10
At least 17.5 per cent. Band 11

(7) Table 2 is as follows—

Authority’s out-performance percentage (1) Band (2)
Less than 3 per cent. Band 1
At least 3 per cent. but less than 4 per cent. Band 2
At least 4 per cent. but less than 5 per cent. Band 3
At least 5 per cent. but less than 6 per cent. Band 4
At least 6 per cent. but less than 8 per cent. Band 5
At least 8 per cent. but less than 10 per cent. Band 6
At least 10 per cent. but less than 12 per cent. Band 7
At least 12 per cent. but less than 14 per cent. Band 8
At least 14 per cent. but less than 16 per cent. Band 9
At least 16 per cent. but less than 18 per cent. Band 10
At least 18 per cent. Band 11

(8) Table 3 is as follows—

Authority’s out-performance percentage (1) Band (2)
Less than 3.5 per cent. Band 1
At least 3.5 per cent. but less than 4.5 per cent. Band 2
At least 4.5 per cent. but less than 5.5 per cent. Band 3
At least 5.5 per cent. but less than 6.5 per cent. Band 4
At least 6.5 per cent. but less than 8.5 per cent. Band 5
At least 8.5 per cent. but less than 10.5 per cent. Band 6
At least 10.5 per cent. but less than 12.5 per cent. Band 7
At least 12.5 per cent. but less than 14.5 per cent. Band 8
At least 14.5 per cent. but less than 16.5 per cent. Band 9
At least 16.5 per cent. but less than 18.5 per cent. Band 10
At least 18.5 per cent. Band 11

(9) Table 4 is as follows—

Authority’s out-performance percentage (1) Band (2)
Less than 4 per cent. Band 1
At least 4 per cent. but less than 5 per cent. Band 2
At least 5 per cent. but less than 6 per cent. Band 3
At least 6 per cent. but less than 7 per cent. Band 4
At least 7 per cent. but less than 9 per cent. Band 5
At least 9 per cent. but less than 11 per cent. Band 6
At least 11 per cent. but less than 13 per cent. Band 7
At least 13 per cent. but less than 15 per cent. Band 8
At least 15 per cent. but less than 17 per cent. Band 9
At least 17 per cent. but less than 19 per cent. Band 10
At least 19 per cent. Band 11

(10) Table 5 is as follows—

Authority’s out-performance percentage (1) Band (2)
Less than 4.5 per cent. Band 1
At least 4.5 per cent. but less than 5.5 per cent. Band 2
At least 5.5 per cent. but less than 6.5 per cent. Band 3
At least 6.5 per cent. but less than 7.5 per cent. Band 4
At least 7.5 per cent. but less than 9.5 per cent. Band 5
At least 9.5 per cent. but less than 11.5 per cent. Band 6
At least 11.5 per cent. but less than 13.5 per cent. Band 7
At least 13.5 per cent. but less than 15.5 per cent. Band 8
At least 17.5 per cent. but less than 19.5 per cent. Band 9
At least 17.5 per cent. but less than 19.5 per cent. Band 10
At least 19.5 per cent. Band 11

(11) Table 6 is as follows—

Authority’s out-performance percentage (1) Band (2)
Less than 5 per cent. Band 1
At least 5 per cent. but less than 6 per cent. Band 2
At least 6 per cent. but less than 7 per cent. Band 3
At least 7 per cent. but less than 8 per cent. Band 4
At least 8 per cent. but less than 10 per cent. Band 5
At least 10 per cent. but less than 12 per cent. Band 6
At least 12 per cent. but less than 14 per cent. Band 7
At least 14 per cent. but less than 16 per cent. Band 8
At least 16 per cent. but less than 18 per cent. Band 9
At least 18 per cent. but less than 20 per cent. Band 10
At least 20 per cent. Band 11.

Article 3(3)

SCHEDULE 3 Part to be substituted for Part 2 of Schedule 4A to the 1998 Order

PART 3 WEEKLY RENT LIMITS FOR THE PURPOSES OF PART 2: AUTHORITIES IN ENGLAND

RELEVANT YEAR 2016-2017

Authority (1) Weekly rent limit (£)
Adur 95.05
Arun 92.39
Ashfield 69.55
Ashford 90.66
Babergh 90.78
Barking and Dagenham 99.58
Barnet 109.13
Barnsley 76.19
Barrow in Furness 76.39
Basildon 88.60
Bassetlaw 73.68
Birmingham 84.26
Blackpool 72.86
Bolsover 83.34
Bournemouth 83.85
Brent 118.16
Brentwood 95.78
Brighton and Hove 85.89
Bristol 82.60
Broxtowe 75.86
Bury 78.07
Cambridge 104.82
Camden 123.43
Cannock Chase 76.79
Canterbury 89.85
Castle Point 90.04
Central Bedfordshire 103.86
Charnwood 75.75
Cheltenham 81.83
Cheshire West and Chester 83.96
Chesterfield 81.14
City of London 110.18
City of York 80.77
Colchester 89.06
Corby 80.28
Cornwall 72.19
Crawley 104.81
Croydon 108.02
Dacorum 110.54
Darlington 72.38
Dartford 91.40
Derby 80.21
Doncaster 74.53
Dover 85.81
Dudley 84.30
Ealing 103.37
East Devon 82.96
East Riding of Yorkshire 80.78
Eastbourne 81.00
Enfield 103.32
Epping Forest 101.12
Exeter 76.67
Fareham 92.75
Gateshead 77.99
Gosport 85.62
Gravesham 91.29
Great Yarmouth 76.33
Greenwich 105.03
Guildford 112.82
Hackney 102.47
Hammersmith and Fulham 118.12
Haringey 108.28
Harlow 94.17
Harrogate 82.14
Harrow 115.97
Havering 98.34
High Peak 74.50
Hillingdon 110.60
Hinckley and Bosworth 79.89
Hounslow 104.74
Ipswich 83.71
Islington 122.15
Kensington and Chelsea 130.53
Kettering 82.99
Kingston upon Hull 76.54
Kingston upon Thames 114.74
Kirklees 71.18
Lambeth 110.21
Lancaster 78.69
Leeds 75.29
Leicester City 73.33
Lewes 91.07
Lewisham 98.19
Lincoln 70.07
Luton 88.37
Manchester 74.57
Mansfield 74.45
Medway Towns 83.38
Melton 78.68
Mid Devon 80.00
Mid Suffolk 83.78
Milton Keynes 87.41
New Forest 101.17
Newark and Sherwood 79.75
Newcastle upon Tyne 76.70
Newham 98.69
North East Derbyshire 82.85
North Kesteven 77.98
North Tyneside 77.97
North Warwickshire 89.24
North West Leicestershire 80.28
Northampton 84.86
Northumberland 69.69
Norwich 80.87
Nottingham 76.49
Nuneaton and Bedworth 79.70
Oadby and Wigston 80.80
Oldham 74.74
Oxford City 111.21
Poole 86.87
Portsmouth 86.51
Reading 106.85
Redbridge 104.99
Redditch 80.03
Richmondshire 79.03
Rotherham 77.24
Rugby 88.45
Runnymede 111.95
Salford 76.32
Sandwell 83.01
Sedgemoor 79.01
Selby 79.70
Sheffield 73.30
Shepway 83.13
Shropshire 82.94
Slough 107.89
Solihull 83.70
South Cambridgeshire 109.20
South Derbyshire 81.19
South Holland 77.26
South Kesteven 80.30
South Tyneside 76.50
Southampton 86.69
Southend-on-Sea 87.66
Southwark 110.06
St.Albans 115.38
Stevenage 99.81
Stockport 76.17
Stoke-on-Trent 71.79
Stroud 83.93
Sutton 109.18
Swindon 84.53
Tamworth 81.85
Tandridge 100.09
Taunton Deane 83.97
Tendring 84.96
Thanet 82.46
Thurrock 87.48
Tower Hamlets 112.90
Utttlesford 101.05
Waltham Forest 104.13
Wandsworth 127.45
Warwick 95.80
Waveney 79.52
Waverley 115.80
Wealden 85.62
Welwyn Hatfield 108.07
West Lancashire 77.91
Westminster 126.30
Wigan 78.52
Wiltshire 89.50
Winchester 103.21
Woking 105.98
Wokingham 117.89
Wolverhampton 81.37.

Article 3(4)

SCHEDULE 4 Part to be substituted for Part 5 of Schedule 4A to the 1998 Order

PART 5 AMOUNTS FOR THE PURPOSES OF PART 4, PARAGRAPH 4: AUTHORITIES IN WALES

RELEVANT YEAR 2016-2017

Local authority (1) Specified amount “O” (£) (2) Guideline rent increase “P” (£)
Caerphilly 78.91 3.08
Cardiff 89.18 3.22
Carmarthenshire 78.52 3.07
Denbighshire 76.29 3.05
Flintshire 79.35 3.10
Isle of Anglesey 75.15 3.03
Pembrokeshire 80.09 2.97
Powys 80.35 3.09
Swansea 77.24 3.08
Vale of Glamorgan 86.21 3.19
Wrexham 78.53 3.08.
( 1 )

1992 c.5 . Sections 140B and 140F were inserted by paragraph 4 of Schedule 12 to the Housing Act 1996 (c.52) . Section 140B was amended by section 10 of, and paragraph 7 of Schedule 1 to, the Social Security Administration (Fraud) Act 1997 (c.47) (“the Fraud Act”). Sections 140B and 140F were repealed, to the extent they related to council tax benefit, by section 147 of, and paragraph 1 of Schedule 14 to, the Welfare Reform Act 2012 (c.5) with effect from 1st April 2013 and subject to savings and transitional provisions in articles 9 and 10 of S.I. 2013/358 . Section 189(1) and (4) was amended by paragraph 109 of Schedule 7 to the Social Security Act 1998 (c.14) . Section 189(1) was amended by paragraph 57(2) of Schedule 3 to the Social Security Contributions (Transfer of Functions, etc.) Act 1999 (c.2) (“the Transfer of Functions Act”) and paragraph 1 of Schedule 6 to the Tax Credits Act 2002 (c.21) . Section 189(4) was amended by S.I. 2013/252 . Section 189(7) was amended by paragraph 24 of Schedule 9 to the Local Government Finance Act 1992 (c.14) and paragraph 10 of Schedule 1 to the Fraud Act. Section 189 was repealed, to the extent it related to council tax benefit, by section 147 of, and paragraph 1 of Schedule 14 to, the Welfare Reform Act 2012 with effect from 1st April 2013 and subject to savings and transitional provisions in articles 9 and 10 of S.I. 2013/358 .

( 2 )

Section 189(8) was amended by paragraph 3(5) of Schedule 13 to the Housing Act 1996, paragraph 10 of Schedule 4 to the Social Security (Recovery of Benefits Act 1997 (c.27) , paragraph 3 of Schedule 4 to the Tax Credits Act 2002 (c.21) , paragraph 29 of Schedule 1 to the Pensions Act 2007 (c.22) and paragraph 57(3) of Schedule 3 to the Transfer of Functions Act.

( 3 )

Section 176(1)(b) was amended by paragraph 3(4) of Schedule 13 to the Housing Act 1996 and was repealed, to the extent it related to council tax benefit, by section 147 of, and paragraph 1 of Schedule 14 to, the Welfare Reform Act 2012 with effect from 1st April 2013 and subject to savings and transitional provisions in articles 9 and 10 of S.I. 2013/358 .

( 5 )

Schedule 1 was substituted by S.I. 2015/1784 .

( 6 )

Schedule 1A was inserted by S.I. 2015/1784 .

( 7 )

Schedule 4A was inserted by S.I. 2004/646 .

( 8 )

In Part 2 of Schedule 4A, paragraph 3(3) was substituted by S.I. 2015/1784 .

( 9 )

Part 3 of Schedule 4A was substituted by S.I. 2015/1784 .

( 10 )

Part 5 of Schedule 4A was substituted by S.I. 2015/1784 .

( 11 )

Article 17 is substituted by S.I. 2009/2580 and amended by S.I. 2010/2509 .

( 12 )

Article 17A is inserted by S.I. 2009/2580 and amended by S.I. 2010/2509 .

( 13 )

Article 17B is inserted by S.I. 2010/2509 .

( 14 )

Article 17C is inserted by S.I. 2010/2509 .

( 20 )

Authorities to which Table 1 applies had the greatest caseload management information percentage and authorities to which Table 6 applies, conversely, had the least. See https://www.gov.uk/government/statistics/housing-benefit-entitlement-reductions-2015-to-2016-experimental . Hard copies are available from the Department for Work and Pensions, Caxton House, Tothill Street, London SW1H 9NA.

Status: This is the original version (as it was originally made). This item of legislation is currently only available in its original format.
The Income-related Benefits (Subsidy to Authorities) Amendment Order 2016 (2016/986)

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