Issue details

24/00005 - Supported Living - Contract Extension

Proposed decision:

 

Extend the Supported Living Contract, for a maximum of up to three years from 15 June 2024 to 14 June 2027 and delegate authority to the Corporate Director Adult Social Care and Health to take other relevant actions, including but not limited to finalising the terms of and entering into required contracts or other legal agreements, as necessary to implement the decision.

 

Reason for the decision:

 

The Care Act 2014 gave local authorities in England, the NHS and the Care Quality Commission clear legal responsibilities for managing different elements of the adult social care market that include considering need, provider sustainability, value for money and integration.

 

Framing Kent’s Future and Securing Kent’s Future and the Adult Social Care Making a Difference Everyday Strategy Kent identify New Models of Care and Support as a key priority by recognising the importance of health and social care integration, building effective strategic partnerships with our providers through coproduction whilst being innovative in the way we look to redesign services to improve quality and importantly respond to budget constraints.

 

To help achieve this, the council has procured external expertise to undertake three distinct pieces of work that will help with the redesign of a new service. This will help inform the commissioning intentions for adult social care services and provide commissioners with the required information to design new specifications and a robust commissioning and procurement process.

 

The commissioning exercise will include extensive engagement with people who use care and support services to develop a new specification which ensures high quality and cost-effective services in the future.

 

This is a demand driven service and due to increases in complexity, increased demand and fees in excess of that funded for inflation, spend has grown year on year. It is recognised that during the contract extension period mitigations will be put in place to help halt the increased spend to the service through the development of a robust savings action plan. This will require a collaborative approach across Kent County Council (KCC) and NHS Kent and Medway Integrated Care Board (ICB) colleagues and proactively engaging with providers to determine fair costs for both legacy and new placements.

 

The council will need to consider looking to develop alternative care and support offers which support people to remain in their own home for longer. These include an enhanced technology offer, integrated reablement service, homecare offer, increasing direct payments and support that can be purchased such as personal assistants and niche services delivered by the voluntary sector and micro providers.

 

Commissioners will develop new models, supported by the cost of care exercise completed by the external consultants, which will ensure best value for future services. The extension will allow this activity to be completed.

Supported Living is intended to allow people with disabilities and other long-term conditions to remain independent and have their own home. The features of the contract include suitable housing, paid for by the resident with support to help with everyday life activities or in the event of physical or mental health challenges. The contracting arrangements offer access to anyone over the age of 18 years old, as this is the legal age that a person can sign a tenancy agreement.

 

The contract is a closed framework with 94 providers contracted to provide support to adults across Kent through approximately 700 properties.

 

When the contract went live (in 2019) there were 500 properties on the framework. The Supported Accommodation Team in Commissioning have added approximately 250 properties to the framework providers’ portfolios and ensuring these are of a good standard by checking that all new properties meet the minimum design specification (developed in 2017 and in line with housing legislation), introduced at the point of tender, as well as due diligence checks to ensure safety.

 

The current contract end date is 14 June 2024 and there is an optional 3-year extension built into the contract, which could take the contract through to 14 June 2027.

 

An extension to the current contract is required to allow the external consultants to complete the assessment and for the new service to be procured. However, it is anticipated that the exercise carried out by external experts will not be finalised until March 2024. This will enable a full procurement process to commence once the extensions to the contract has been implemented.

 

The proposed extension will be put in place for a maximum of up to three years. However, a robust reprocurement exercise is to be completed as quickly as possible and break clauses will be written into the contract extension to allow the council to terminate the contract when appropriate and to fit in with the mobilisation of a new contract.

 

Subject to the outcome of the work currently being undertaken by consultants, we expect to commence the procurement process in April 2024 with a view to implement from early in 2025.

 

The proposed decision supports objective 2 of Securing Kent’s Future to deliver savings from identified opportunity areas to set a sustainable 2024/25 budget and MTFP and priority 4 of Framing Kent’s Future – New Models of Care and Support.

 

Options (other options considered but discarded): The council can choose not to extend the current contract. However, there are significant risks, as set out below, to choosing this option and no benefits have been identified.

 

Legal and Policy: The council commissions services from the independent sector to meet the needs of individuals deemed to be eligible in accordance with and following a Care Act assessment. If the contract ends the Council will be pressured to fully meet its statutory obligation under the Care Act with regards to providing a high quality, safe service that is at an affordable price.

 

Financial: A lack of robust fee setting mechanisms and contractual leverage may result in a significant increase in placement costs which will be challenging to control. Savings targets set out by the council and to be met through greater partnership working and negotiation will be difficult to achieve through spot purchasing agreements and providers will be within their right to give notice on individual placements that may be hard to source at an affordable price.

 

Reputational: A shift to partnership working with providers will be challenged as the expectation from providers is that the contractual arrangements with the Council will be maintained due to the mutual benefits to both parties. People using this service expect a robust oversight of the service and the perception will be that this is not the case if the service is not part of a KCC Contract.

 

Resource Implications: If the contract ends there will be a requirement for the review, renegotiation, and repurchasing of all individual placements with new contract and terms and conditions established. This will also require significant system and process updates.

 

Financial Implications:

 

The initial contract cost is set out below along with the current cost. Various market pressures and increase in demand and complexity of care has resulted in an increased spend on the service. Robust actions are being put in place to limit this spend.

 


Contract

Initial contract cost advertised (per annum)

2022/23 spend

Supported Living

£68,000,000

£138,000,000

 

Dedicated commissioning and finance resources will be required to ensure a collaborative approach to determine a robust fee model and pricing guide and the identification of any financial risk.

 

Legal Implications:

 

Anextension is necessary to enable the council to undertake a detailed Cost of Care review, which is likely to be completed by 28 February 2024. As such, the council will not be in a position to undertake a reprocurement, based on the outcome of the review, in time for a new service to be in place in 2024. Therefore, a change is not proposed at this time for economic or technical reasons. Any procurement of the service, prior to the completion of the Cost of Care review, will cause significant inconvenience and substantial duplication of cost. It is also unlikely that a procurement will attract market interest, as providers may be reluctant to bid, prior to the completion of the Cost of Care review.

 

An extension is available to be utilised in the contract. The extension was included in the Contract / PIN Notice advertising the original procurement of this service and therefore the extension is permissible and compliant under PCR 2015 regulations.

 

 

 

Decision type: Key

Decision status: Recommendations Approved

Notice of proposed decision first published: 09/01/2024

Decision due: Not before 7th Feb 2024 by Cabinet Member for Adult Social Care and Public Health
Reason: To allow 28 day notice period required under Exeuctive Decision regulations

Lead member: Cabinet Member for Adult Social Care and Public Health

Lead director: Richard Smith

Department: Social Care, Health & Wellbeing

Contact: Steve Richards, Finance Policy Officer Email: Richard.ellis@kent.gov.uk or 03000 410077 Email: stephen.richards@kent.gov.uk.

Consultees

Public consultation undertaken planned:

No public consultation has been undertaken in relation to this decision, however as part of the commissioning intentions for adult social care services extensive engagement will be undertaken with people who use care and support services to develop a new specification which ensures high quality and cost-effective services in the future.

 

Cabinet Committee consultation planned:

The proposed decision was discussed and endorsed at the Adult Social Care Cabinet Committee meeting on 18 January 2024.

 

Financial implications: Please see details above

Legal implications: Please see details above

Equalities implications: Equalities implications: To ensure KCC’s statutory obligations under the Equalities Act 2010 are met, a full Equality Impact Assessment (EqIA) has been undertaken for recommissioning purposes. This has also been considered for the purposes of the contract extension and no major issues were identified. This will be refreshed to encompass any new negative or positive impacts identified due to the new service model. Data Protection Implications: A Data Protection Impact Assessment has been completed and no anticipated new data protection implications have been identified.

Decisions

Agenda items