Oxford City Council misses benefit claim processing targets

BENEFIT claims processing targets have been missed by Oxford City Council for the past three years, a report has revealed.

In a document due to be looked at by the council’s audit and governance committee on Thursday, the council has admitted a rise in the number of claims has led to problems.

The internal targets for processing claims for housing and council tax benefit are 14 days for new claims and 10 days for changes to existing claims.

In the 2012-13 council year so far, the average response time was 24 days. It was 17 in 2010-11 and 19 in 2011-12.

Labour councillor Van Coulter, the executive member responsible for benefits, said: “I can see that it’s not ideal. We’re within the statutory 30-day limit, but we want to provide a better service.

“We have taken on a resilience contract so if we do hit difficult times some of the work can be taken on by an external agency.

“I have had discussions with senior managers and I’m satisfied that we’re making improvements.”

He said the delays were caused by increased numbers of claims compared to previous years, and a “volatile” private rental market in Oxford, which meant people had to make more regular changes to the details they registered.

A report to the committee said: “Benefit caseloads have been at increased levels for the past four years. The caseload at Oxford increased by approximately 20 per cent three years ago.”

Comments(2)

Andrew:Oxford says...
12:16pm Sun 24 Feb 13

If the local rental market is "volatile" then surely it is "business as usual" for the area. No excuse.

Sounds like there is a need for formal resourcing and work-flow analysis.

Myron Blatz says...
3:40pm Mon 25 Feb 13

Is City Council taking itself to Court over its admitted delays, in the same way it takes those to Court who are late with Rent and Council Tax payments? Could one reason for Labour-led City Council being 'overwhelmed' be because it has been cutting-back on Staff for years - and not just since 'Cowboy Cameron' and 'Buttered Osborne' took over the derelict bombsite (otherwise known as the UK economy) from the previous Labour government?

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