Post on 18-Dec-2015
The Partington
Experience
Checking the options
for developing Extra Care – build new or remodel?
Louise Cumberland: Trafford MBC
Pippa Stilwell: Institute of Public Care
Institute of Public CareTrafford MBC
The Partington Experience
1. Challenges
Imperative to include and involve local people and their representatives in generating ideas and decision making
Politicians represent local wish to conserve existing resources for older people
But - Inadequate buildings – residential care doesn’t meet standards but great demand for places
Sheltered scheme offers bedsit accommodation: mostly empty: ceased letting: only 8 tenants
Perception that this was home for tenants and residents
The Partington Experience
2. Opportunities
Local context – what else is happening in Partington? Isolated geography, deprivation indices
Partington is the only area in Trafford that has attracted regeneration investment.
Opportunity to enhance and increase the quality and quantity of services in Partington
Strategic recognition that older people’s services no longer meet local needs and aspirations
Extra Care opportunities – for older people and to wider community, employment and business potential
The Partington Experience
3. Ideas
The scheme itself offers business opportunities for local shopkeepers, hairdressers, restaurant
Involving CHOICES – local employment initiative based in Health Living Centre works to identify local people who want to train to become carers.
Expanding the voluntary sector in Partington, especially Age Concern Trafford, Partington and Carrington Community Transport (PACT) and Trafford Care and Repair.
Offering better quality day care and home care opportunities based around the Extra Care scheme – better opportunities for the community through the provision of EC.
Intermediate care delivered through provision of a training kitchen
The thinking behind the
checklist
Need for rationale to balance immediate needs and wishes of residents and local people with current and future opportunities for community regeneration
Need to consider building potential – need for checklist to focus on all the issues relevant to decisions around bricks and mortar, including local and strategic overview, potential offered by regeneration and Extra care opportunities, Extra Care as a concept that includes and goes beyond the build environment.
Developing the checklist: key issues
Important not to fudge decision making – have you really considered everything? The checklist is designed to tease out hidden issues and to give clarity.
Do you know enough about Extra Care to facilitate the development of a flagship scheme in your area?
Are you burdened with lots of baggage – for example, offloading unpopular buildings in unsuitable areas, unworkable community dynamics – which doom your project to failure before you start? What can you change?
Will users like what you do enough to want to live there?
The checklist
Aims to make commissioners and housing providers think hard about all the issues involved in decision making
Offers a schematic way of examining the options
Is not a questionnaire
Does not give an arithmetic score at the end: does give the opportunity for setting out the main issues.
Overriding constraints
Does the scheme fit with strategic priorities – eg at regional level, Supporting People priorities, Local Delivery Plans, or Social Services older people’s strategies?
Is the site too far from goods and services, transport links etc? Is too steep? Are older people already choosing not to live there?
Is the site in an area where people feel at risk of crime and anti-social behaviour?
Is the existing building too small both to meet standards and deliver enough units?
Overriding constraints: contd
Will the building cost too much to build and maintain?
Will the target population be unable to afford rents, care and support costs and /or equity stakes?
Do local health and care providers have the will and the capacity to support the scheme?
Five options
Refurbish an ordinary sheltered housing scheme (internal, not structural change).
Remodel an ordinary sheltered housing scheme (major change to existing scheme: could involve enlarging bedsits, widening corridors, building new community/leisure amenities
Demolish and build new on the same site. Demolish and build new on a different site. Undertake more preparatory work Consider other ways of delivering housing with
support
Three sections
Consultation and planning
Building /design standards
Funding, costs and income
Expanding the checklist
Does the checklist cover all the likely issues? For example:
Will it tease out the main issues if one proposal masks lots of different agendas?
Will it make it easier to balance all the costs and benefits of a particular proposal?
Is decision-making properly informed by user and stakeholder views?
Does it reflect best practice in design and service delivery?
What have we missed?
Have we allowed for everything? Principles of: Knowing what will never work. Listening to local older people and other
stakeholders. Knowing what Extra Care is, and what constitutes
best practice in all its aspects. Building all the costs and constraints in the model. Strategic fit of proposals, linking with approved
programmes of potential funders. Regeneration, Neighbourhood renewal.
Links with partner agencies.
Further reading
General Building /Design standards Assistive Technology Remodel versus refurbish Appraisal Models of Extra Care