Our Chief Executive appeals for wealthy lawyers to donate thier Winter Fuel Payments

As reported in Edward Fennell’s Nov 17th In The City column in The Times.

With fuel prices rocketing and many of the elderly fearing a frosty winter Joanna Kennedy, formerly a leading London lawyer with Collyer Bristow and now chief executive of the charity Z2K, is appealing to wealthy lawyers over the age of 60 to donate their winter fuel payments to those who need it more. “This money will go directly to providing advice and assistance with fuel debts to help those who really need it,” Kennedy says.

To reroute your allowance visit www.justgiving.com/z2k/donate

Record Levels of Fines Uncollected: Privatisation of enforcement one of the factors to blame

Yesterday, The Sun carried an article detailing £2billion lost to magistrates courts in upaid fines and confiscation orders. However, as our Senior Lawyer Alan Murdie argues below, this is due to the ineptitude of privatised, and poorly regulated, bailiffs.

It is a truism that a legislative change that looked wonderful on paper can have wholly unexpected and detrimental consequences in practice. This can be seen with the decisions made since 2003 to outsourced and privatise the collections of fines which have resulted in record levels of fines not be recovered. This even made headlines in The Sun newspaper on November 22nd 2011 recording how over £ 1 billion owed remains unpaid, yet at a time when bailiffs collecting fines have more power than ever before. Obviously, the recession and growth in poverty play a part. But it has also been caused by procedural changes in the magistrates’ court system which the Zacchaeus 2000 Trust has long opposed. In the Courts Act 2003 and the Fines Collections Regulations 2006 laid the basis for a system whereby magistrates’ courts were no longer responsible for enforcing fines. Previously under the Magistrates’ Courts Act 1980 the clerk to the court (now the Justices’ Chief Executive) was responsible for fine enforcement using a wide range of statutory powers, including court bailiffs, attachment of earnings, income support, charging orders, the High Court and bankruptcy proceedings to recover the fine. Effectively, the court that imposed the fine was responsible for getting it back. If there was a problem with one method then it was sent back to court to try another way to make the defendant pay. If something went wrong on collection, the court could immediately step in and put it right. However, thanks to legislative changes the enforcement of fines was given to a fines collection officer and taken away from the court. At the same time private companies were hired to collect fines, in order to make a profit. As a result after bailiffs have failed to collect the fine by a letter or visit the matter does not go back to court to try another method (such as attachment of earnings or benefit deductions) is never attempted. Instead the bailiff holds on to the debt, hoping to recover the fine and fees in the future. It becomes just one of many fines on a long list. But the longer enforcement is left, the harder and less likely it is that the fine will be recovered. The position is worsened by the fact that many of the magistrates’ courts which imposed the original fines may no longer exist. The closure of magistrates’ courts and sell off of magistrates’ courts continues apace – so court that originally imposed the fine may well have shut down and the court staff transferred or made redundant. So it is quite possible no-one is left checking up on whether the fine is ever satisfied. Indeed, one may even wondered if there are any effective checks being undertaken by the Ministry of Justice on the bailiffs once they have collected some or all of the money. Clearly there is a risk to the public purse where private companies are doing what was originally a state function if no proper audit safeguards are in place, or where a bailiff’s firm sits on the money to earn interest before passing it back to the Ministry of Justice. Certainly, history does not show a positive record when fine and tax collection is farmed out to private individuals and companies. From the examples of bad tax collectors in the New Testament, in the Byzantine Empire as it failed and in pre-Revolutionary France, the farming out responsibility for money owed to the state or the Crown is a story of disaster. The latest dire figures suggest we may be seeing a 21st century equivalent here in Britain.

An open letter to Lord Freud

To The Minister for Welfare Reform.  

Listening to the debate on the benefit caps yesterday, and their obvious responsibility for increasing the unaffordability of housing for many of the poorest citizens in the UK, it became ever clearer that tenants are being asked to carry the pain of deficit reduction for the landlords and landowners;  who are untouched by the ferocity of measures in the bill creating debts, eviction and misery. That injustice is spelt out in the following letter which was put together with my colleagues in the Pro-Housing Alliance.

There is a fundamental injustice at the heart of deficit reduction in the UK . Landlords have annually taken billions of pounds of taxpayers’ money in housing benefit by raising their rents to keep up with a housing market in short supply,  but awash with the reckless lending of many financiers in the City of London since deregulation was allowed by Parliament in the 1980s. It rose to £21 billion in 2010. Around £3.5 billion was paid to sustain the unhealthy tenancies of neglectful landlords that give rise to significant but avoidable costs for the NHS in 2009, when 4.7 million (21%) of England’s 22 million homes were unhealthy, unsafe and poorly maintained.

The coalition’s response to the inevitable crisis has been to take a total of £18 billion from welfare claimants and nothing effective from landlords. It would be squeezing an already dry lemon to expect claimants to take any more cuts. Parliament should look for alternatives which require landlords and landowners to pay their share. It is essential to create  a coherent national housing and land policy, the first in living memory, to cover every aspect of housing for all, rich and poor, that puts decent housing at the heart of national health and wellbeing.

Parliament should also explore how a land value tax could replace council tax, business rates, and abolish the other inefficient taxation measures such as stamp duty, capital gains exemptions, and second home council tax discounts that have helped create the current inequalities of health and wealth in our society.

Stephen Battersby, President, Chartered Institute of Environmental Health.

Peter Ambrose, Visiting Professor in Housing and Health, University of Brighton.

Peter Archer, Chair, Care and Repair, England.

Stephen Hill, Director- C2O futureplanners.

Rev Paul Nicolson, Chair, Zacchaeus 2000 Trust.

Good Bailiffs want Regulation

The Sunday Times ran a peice yesterday on disreputable bailiff companies and their disgraceful practices. In it Julie Green-Jones, who owns one of the countries 5 most profitable bailiff companies – Rossendales, claims she has been campaigning for better regulation to stamp out bad practices.

This tallies with our earlier post which broke the story that the coalition plans to renage on its promise to introduce new regulation for debt collection agencies as it clashes with another promise in the coalition agreement to not introduce any more red tape for small businesses. This despite those in the industry, such as Green Jones, crying out for it.

Z2K and our chairman, Paul Nicolson (pictured left giving a lecture at Tent City University as part of the occupy protests), also got a mention – making the case for just how desperately such regulations are needed if we are to protect the vulnerable from current sickening practices.

 

Z2K calls for a Voluntary and Public Sector Services Hub

On Friday 11th of November, Children England, the National Housing Federation and child poverty initiative 4in10 gathered members of the housing and voluntary sectors as well as local authority officers from around London to discuss the impact of housing and welfare reform on the capital’s poorest children.

A common theme noticed was the impact of the cuts on local authority services and the voluntary sector organisations that rely upon council funding. Council officers and charity workers often call on referrers, only to find the shelter, family charity or after school club is no longer running or providing the service they need.

There are still organisations out there that provide help to London’s most vulnerable people but in the current climate of rapid change and greater austerity it is becoming increasingly hard for people to know which services still exist and which have moved or closed down.

We need tools to maximise what is currently available to London’s most vulnerable. We need a committed body to be constantly checking with local authority services and compiling this information for public use. A central ‘Hub’ where charities and public sector organisations can quickly see where services are on-going and where has the capacity to help the poorest among us across London.

Welfare Reform: amendments to protect claimants

Our Chairman, Rev Paul Nicolson, had this letter on Welfare Reform published in yesterday’s Observer:

This week peers will discuss two amendments to the welfare reform bill tabled by Baroness Hollins and Lord Ramsotham, related to the coalition’s careless imposition of damaging debt on our poorest fellow citizens. They are supported by the Royal College of Psychiatrists, Mind and 20 other NGOs. Officials of job centres and local authorities are currently legally prohibited from enforcing recovery of overpayment of benefits against claimants who could not have known they were being overpaid; that sensible bar has been removed by the Commons. Peers will try to retain it.

They will also endeavour to ensure that officials will make themselves formally aware of the facts and circumstances of claimants, including their health, before they decide to reduce their poverty incomes by imposing sanctions and penalties, and therefore debts. This is the normal legal procedure, but ministers have expressed their disdain for the law by saying they prefer officials to use “common sense” and that appeals to tribunals don’t need legal aid.