The Housing Benefit and Universal Credit (Supported Accommodation) (Amendment) Regulations 2014
Citation and commencement1.
(1)
These Regulations may be cited as the Housing Benefit and Universal Credit (Supported Accommodation) (Amendment) Regulations 2014.
(2)
This regulation and regulation 3 come into force on 10th April 2014.
(3)
Regulation 2 comes into force on 3rd November 2014.
Amendment of the Universal Credit Regulations 20132.
(1)
(2)
In Schedule 1 (meaning of payments in respect of accommodation)—
(a)
in paragraph 1 (interpretation)—
(i)
““exempt accommodation” has the meaning given in paragraph 4(10) of Schedule 3 to the Housing Benefit and Council Tax Benefit (Consequential Provisions) Regulations 20065;”;
(ii)
omit the definition of “upper-tier county council”.
(b)
in paragraph 3 (payments excluded from being rent payments)—
(i)
omit paragraph (e);
(ii)
“(h)
payments in respect of accommodation specified in paragraph 3A.”;
(c)
“Specified accommodation3A.
(1)
The accommodation referred to in paragraph 3(h) is accommodation to which one or more of the following sub-paragraphs applies.
(2)
This sub-paragraph applies to accommodation which is exempt accommodation.
(3)
This sub-paragraph applies to accommodation—
(a)
which is provided by a relevant body;
(b)
into which the claimant has been admitted in order to meet a need for care, support or supervision; and
(c)
where the claimant receives care, support or supervision.
(4)
This sub-paragraph applies to accommodation which—
(a)
is provided by a local authority or a relevant body to the claimant because the claimant has left the home as a result of domestic violence; and
(b)
consists of a building, or part of a building, which is used wholly or mainly for the non-permanent accommodation of persons who have left their homes as a result of domestic violence.
(5)
This sub-paragraph applies to accommodation—
(a)
which would be a hostel within the meaning of paragraph 29(10) (renters excepted form shared accommodation) of Schedule 4 (housing costs element for renters) but for it being owned or managed by a local authority; and
(b)
where the claimant receives care, support or supervision.
(6)
In this paragraph—
“domestic violence” has the meaning given in regulation 98 (victims of domestic violence)6;“relevant body” means a—
(a)
council for a county in England for each part of which there is a district council;
(b)
housing association;
(c)
registered charity; or
(d)
voluntary organisation”.
(3)
““exempt accommodation” has the meaning given in paragraph 4(10) of Schedule 3 to the Housing Benefit and Council Tax Benefit (Consequential Provisions) Regulations 20068;”.
Amendment of the Housing Benefit Regulations 20063.
(1)
(2)
In regulation 75C(2)(a) (manner of calculating the amount of welfare benefits) for “exempt accommodation within the meaning paragraph 4(10) of Schedule 3 to the Consequential Provisions Regulations” substitute “accommodation specified in regulation 75H (specified accommodation)”.
(3)
“Specified accommodation75H.
(1)
The accommodation referred to in regulation 75C(2)(a) is accommodation to which one or more of the following paragraphs applies.
(2)
This paragraph applies to accommodation which is exempt accommodation within the meaning of paragraph 4(10) of Schedule 3 to the Consequential Provisions Regulations.
(3)
This paragraph applies to accommodation—
(a)
which is provided by a relevant body;
(b)
into which the claimant has been admitted in order to meet a need for care, support or supervision; and
(c)
where the claimant receives care, support or supervision.
(4)
This paragraph applies to accommodation which—
(a)
is provided by a relevant authority or a relevant body to the claimant because the claimant has left the home as a result of domestic violence; and
(b)
consists of a building, or part of a building, which is used wholly or mainly for the non-permanent accommodation of persons who have left their homes as a result of domestic violence.
(5)
This paragraph applies to accommodation—
(a)
which would be a hostel within the meaning of regulation 2(1) (interpretation) but for it being owned or managed by a relevant authority; and
(b)
where the claimant receives care, support or supervision.
(6)
In this regulation—
“coercive behaviour” means an act of assault, humiliation or intimidation or other abuse that is used to harm, punish or frighten the victim;
“controlling behaviour” means an act designed to make a person subordinate or dependent by isolating them from sources of support, exploiting their resources and capacities for personal gain, depriving them of the means needed for independence, resistance or escape or regulating their everyday behaviour;
“domestic violence” means any incident, or pattern of incidents, of controlling behaviour, coercive behaviour, violence or abuse, including but not limited to—
(a)
psychological abuse;
(b)
physical abuse;
(c)
sexual abuse;
(d)
emotional abuse;
(e)
financial abuse,
regardless of the gender or sexuality of the victim;
“relevant body” means a—
(a)
council for a county in England for each part of whose area there is a district council;
(b)
housing association;
(c)
registered charity; or
(d)
voluntary organisation.”.
Signed by authority of the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions
These Regulations amend the Housing Benefit Regulations 2006 and the Universal Credit Regulations 2013 (“the Universal Credit Regulations”).
Paragraph 3 of Schedule 1 to the Universal Credit Regulation lists types of accommodation in respect of which no housing costs element is payable. Regulation 2 of these Regulations amends paragraph 3 to remove the provision referring to exempt accommodation and adds a new category of specified accommodation. This is accommodation for which housing benefit will be payable. A new paragraph 3A has been inserted listing these types of accommodation. It includes exempt accommodation, the definition of which in paragraph 1 has been amended to link directly to paragraph 4(10) of Schedule 3 to the Housing Benefit and Council Tax Benefit (Consequential Provisions) Regulations 2006 (S.I. 2006/217) (“the Consequential Provisions Regulations”). It also lists three additional categories of accommodation:
accommodation provided by a county council, housing association, registered charity or voluntary organisation in which the claimant has been placed in order to meet an identifiable need for care, support or supervision and where the claimant receives that care, support or supervision;
refuges for victims of domestic violence where these are managed by local authorities, county councils, housing associations, registered charities or voluntary organisations;
hostel accommodation provided by local authorities where care, support or supervision is also provided.
Regulation 2(3) amends the definition of exempt accommodation in Schedule 4 to the Universal Credit Regulations so that it aligns with the definition in Schedule 1.
Regulation 3 amends the Housing Benefit Regulations 2006 so that when a local authority calculates the amount of a claimant’s welfare benefits for the purposes of applying the benefit cap under Part 8A of those Regulations, it uses an amount of nil in respect of housing benefit for cases where housing costs are met by way of housing benefit rather than universal credit. This includes the three categories of accommodation listed above and exempt accommodation within the meaning of paragraph 4(10) of Schedule 3 to the Consequential Provisions.
A full impact assessment has not been produced for this instrument as it has no impact on the private sector or civil society organisations.