Good news as BHT-led partnership is given the go-ahead to bid for £9.2 million Big Lottery funding

We have had some very good news this week which is attracting some media interest.  A consortium, being led by BHT, is in the running for funding from the Big Lottery of up to £10 million over 8 years.  The initiative is designed to improve services for men and women with complex needs (a combination of mental ill health, homelessness, offending behaviour and substance misuse problems) in Brighton, Eastbourne and Hastings. Between now and September, a full bid and business plan needs to be prepared.  A decision will then be made by the Big Lottery and the new services will begin from April 2014.

The purpose of this funding is to bring about lasting change in how services work with people with multiple and complex needs; this funding is a vehicle to help bring about that change. The legacy of the 8 year programme will be that systems and services in all 3 geographical areas will better meet the needs of this group.

At this stage we have been awarded funding to develop the bid on behalf of our partnership which includes partners in local government and in the third / charity sectors.  Should the partnership be successful, it won’t just be BHT staff (contrary to what the Argus reported this morning) who will provide services.

My colleagues, Nikki Homewood and Jo Berry, are leading on this initiative for BHT. Nikki said: “As the lead partner for the Brighton and Hove, Eastbourne and Hastings area, BHT is thrilled to receive funding to develop our partnership bid to ensure better service provision for people with the most complex needs.

“Using the wealth of knowledge and expertise within our local Core Group, comprising seven voluntary sector organisations and five statutory partners including commissioners, along with the 60+ organisations in our Partnership Group, we will develop a programme that will truly bring about change for the clients the programme work with, and local communities.

“Our vision is to bring about long-term systemic change by putting service users at the heart of services, fully understanding what they need in order to move forward with their lives: thorough monitoring and evaluation will result in well-evidenced findings, which will then be used to influence future commissioning.”

BHT’s partners in this initiative, and who are represented on the local Core Group, include: Brighton and Hove City Council, Brighton Women’s Centre, CRI, East Sussex County Council, Eastbourne Borough Council, Hastings Borough Council, Homeless Link, Sanctuary Supported Living, Southdown Housing Association, Sussex Oakleaf, Sussex Probation Service

Brighton’s night time economy is tarnishing the city’s brand

On September 26th, I am speaking in a debate being organised by the Brighton and Hove Chamber of Commerce.  The question is: “This house believes that Brighton’s night time economy is tarnishing the city’s brand”.  I will be speaking in favour of the question.  Other speakers include Justin Manning from the Queen’s Hotel, Nigel Liddell of the Brighton & Hove Business Crime Reduction Partnership, and Ian Chisnall, organiser of Brighton & Hove Street Pastors.

I would be interested in what you think so that I can properly think through the issues.

I come to this issue as someone who feels that, put quite simply, aspects of the night time economy threatens the economy of Brighton, including other parts of the night time economy which are essential for the economic well being of the City.

For example, take so called ‘party houses’. Rather than the traditional tourist infrastructure (hotels, restaurants, etc.) benefiting from weekend visitors and other tourists, these houses are a nightmare for neighbours. They facilitate the ‘front-loading’ of alcohol before these visitors descending on the town centre where their behaviour is often not conducive for others (guests staying in hotels, families out for dinner, theatre goers, etc.).

The spending power of those on alcohol-fuelled weekend breaks (hen and stag events) is limited.  They are focused on alcohol outlets that encourage/facilitate further drinking.  Having lived in the town centre for many years, and having represented Regency Ward on the old Brighton Borough Council, I now actively avoid going into the centre of Brighton after 8pm on a Friday or Saturday evening.  My spending power is thus denied those restaurants and facilities that might otherwise have benefited from it.

For a year I chaired the Licensing Committee on Brighton Borough Council.  That year, because of close co-operation between the Council, Sussex Police and licensees, we were able to regulate the night time economy in a way that incidents of violence were clamped down on.  Licensees who failed to co-operate risked having their Public Entertainment Licences revoked.  The result was that on New Year’s Eve 1986, there was not a single arrest for violence or drunken disorder in Brighton.

Unless we ensure that the night time economy is robustly managed, the image of the City will become tarnished, at great cost to businesses and residents alike.

Let me know what you think.

 

(Note: when this item was first posted I referred to no arrests in 2006. It should have been 1986.  My apologies).

Housing Benefit and Under 25’s

In a speech later today, the Prime Minister will say that he is considering removing housing benefit from those under-25s.  This appears to be one of the most ill-thought through, headline grabbing policy announcements that I can recall.

There are some questions that demand answers:

  • How can parents be obliged to take their adult children back into the home, and what happens to those young people where they can’t ‘go home’?
  • What protection will there be for children and young people who have left their family home to avoid abuse and domestic violence?
  • What happens in those cases where the parents have “done the right thing” by moving to smaller houses once their children have move out and there is now no spare room?
  • What happens if there is no room in the parent’s home for other reasons, such as second families with children?

I have to ask why David Cameron is bringing this proposal forward now?  We are already witnessing the most profound changes to the benefit system in my lifetime.  If this is such a pressing issue, why was it not identified and enacted when all the other changes were introduced?

The BBC’s political correspondent, Vicki Young, has suggested that Mr Cameron’s speech will be seen as an attempt to reconnect with disgruntled Tory backbenchers.  I don’t know if that is true, but if there is even a hint of reality in her analysis, it ill becomes a Prime Minister to risk a huge rise in youth homelessness for internal party expediency.

This isn’t the pressing problem it is being made out to be. Those under 35 living in the private rented sector are entitled to just £77 housing benefit per week. Just 6% of those under 25 living in the private rented sector currently receive housing benefit.

92% of new claims for housing benefit are from those in work.  They are already “doing the right thing” but this measure will hit young people already in jobs.

The consequence of this proposal will be an increase in overcrowding, homelessness, begging, crime, and prostitution.

Real Life Stories: Wayne’s Story

This is the fourth in a series of posts that record the experiences of men and women who have used one of BHT’s various services. In his own words, this is Wayne’s story:

“I’m born and bred in Brighton, lived here all my life. I felt very lonely, isolated and scared as a child and was abused sexually and in other ways. I grew up distrusting life and people in general. My progression into drugs and drink was very fierce and full on. Age eight I tried glue and gas. This then spiralled into dope, speed, acid, ecstasy, crack, drink and then heroin. I spent a total of 34 years in active addiction. My needle fixation was extreme as was all of my addiction.

“I spent a total of nine years in and out of prison due to committing crime to fund my addiction. Also many trips to hospital intensive care units, overdoses, fits, seizures, collapses and a coma.

“After trying to get clean many times through BHT’s Detox Support Project over the last eight years, I finally managed to get my recovery after completing a two and a half month detox at Detox Support Project in January 2011 and then spending eight months at the Recovery Project. The support I’ve had has been fantastic, and the staff team brilliant. My keyworker Anne at the Recovery Project I hold dear to my heart. Words cannot describe how much she helped me.

“I have a strong recovery now as I have a 12 step programme in my life. I mentor a client at Detox Support Project and also do lots of volunteer work there and at Recovery project. I’m coming up to one and a half years clean, completely free from addiction and I have a life not just an existence. How lovely to be able to give back what was freely given to me from Blythe and her team. God Bless.”

A BHT service that is reducing crime, homelessness and many thousands of Pounds for the tax payer

Each week Patrick Allen, the Chair of the BHT Board of Management and I visit a different project around the organisation. It gives us a chance to deepen our understanding of the work of the organisation which is diverse and complex.

This week’s visit was rather different as we visited our HMP Lewes to Brighton project based at Lewes Prison. The Project works with prisoners with complex needs, including those with mental health and substance misuse problems, who would be homeless on release from the prison, by identifying support and accommodation needs and keying them into appropriate services.

Most of these clients are serving sentences of under 12 months, have a local connection to Brighton and Hove, and are repeat offenders.

During 2011 our worker, Sean, supported 60 individuals, ensuring that 93% were housed at the point of their release. Because most have accommodation, and Sean is able to support them, a very small minority (less than 15%) commit further offences and are returned to prison.

It costs approximately £40,000 to keep someone in prison each year, with a disproportionate share of the costs being incurred at the point of reception and induction. Given the number of repeat offenders entering a prison such as HMP Lewes, a scheme such as HMP Lewes to Brighton reduces re-offending. Because it is a significant factor in reducing repeat offending, it saves the Prison Service, and thereby the tax payer, tens and more likely hundreds of thousands of Pounds each year.

The Project works closely with a housing officer, also based in the prison, employed by Brighton and Hove City Council. Together, in their separate but mutually supportive projects, mean that prisoners from Brighton and Hove are well served. The impact of their work is a reduction in homelessness, less anti-social behaviour, and less crime. The modest investment in these services pays dividends, and it is a model that other localities in Sussex would be well advised to replicate.

The HMP Lewes to Brighton project is funded jointly by the Prison Service, Brighton & Hove City Council and the Henry Smith Charitable Trust.

Tenancy Fraud

Last week the Housing Minister, Grant Shapps, announced that tenants who illegally sub-let their social housing should face prosecution leading to fines or imprisonment.

I support this proposal for three basic reasons:

1. Need – social housing is a safety net and a foot up. If a tenant no longer requires the accommodation to meet his or her housing need, it should be made available to someone who does.

2. Public subsidy – the subsidy that allowed the property to be built, and often the subsidy (through housing benefit) that helps pay the rent, should not be turned into profit for an individual no longer in housing need.

3. Playing into the hands of extremists – in certain parts of London extreme right wing groups are using the illegal subletting of social housing to recently arrived immigrants as ‘evidence’ that social housing discriminates against the “indigenous population”.

It is said that tenancy fraud may be accompanied by other issues such as anti-social behaviour, illegal immigration, drug cultivation and other illegal activities. It can also result in tenants who are living in a sublet property being seriously overcrowded which can do damage to both their health and the fabric of the home.
 
Social landlords have responsibility in all this. Some lack knowledge of who is living in the homes they let. A model of good practice is offered by Affinity Sutton which is one of only a handful of housing associations to employ a dedicated team to investigate tenancy fraud.  Since January 2010, they have funded their own dedicated Neighbourhood Auditor team to investigate allegations of tenancy fraud and in 2011 recovered 41 properties, up from the previous year’s total of 33.
  
Funding to combat tenancy fraud is currently paid solely to Local Authorities and it is not ringfenced.  Given that half of social housing is managed by housing associations I believe that housing associations should be funded directly to enable them to investigate tenancy fraud.

At BHT we are small enough to know first hand and by their first name the overwhelming majority of our tenants. We are able to visit routinely most tenants annually, and from April this will increase to twice a year. This forms part of our processes for auditing who is living in our homes and for ensuring that tenancy fraud is not an issue within BHT.  

The Big Alcohol Debate is essential for a healthy and happy Brighton and Hove

I am delighted that a wide-ranging debate on alcohol and its impact on Brighton andHoveis to take place between now and the new year.

The Big Alcohol Debate is long overdue.  I have previously posted statistics and comments on this issue, and it is worth repeating some that were printed in today’s Argus in an excellent centre page spread by Siobhan Ryan.

  • Men lose on average 12.3 months of life due to alcohol while women lose on average 5.6 months;
  • Male deaths directly due to alcohol are 23.7 per 100,000 of the population, for women it is 9.5 per 100,000;
  • There are 689.3 male alcohol-specific hospital admissions per 100,000 and 333.5 female admissions;
  • There are 9.2 alcohol-related recorded crimes for every 1,000 people in the City.

Dr. Tom Scanlon, Brighton and Hove’s Director of Public Health, said: “We have raised concerns in the past on regular occasions in terms of deaths and illnesses linked to alcohol, and the noise and the nuisance and the crime.

“We are basically asking everyone what they think about alcohol in the city and what they would do about it.  The idea is to build up a picture of what exactly is going on.  Some may say nothing needs to be done, some may say lots needs to be done.  Some may say fewer off-licences are needed and there should be an extension of the cumulative impact zone to make it more difficult to open up licensed premises,  Or maybe we should be focusing on something else?”

My personal view is that the situation has become substantially worse in the City following the liberalisation of licensing laws by the previous government.  There is a direct correlation between the ease of supply and harmful use and addiction.

There are many good people in Brighton and Hove seeking to do something about the problems caused by alcohol to individuals, families, the community and the economy of Brighton andHove.  But they have both hands tied behind their backs by current legislation.  The outcome I am hoping to see from the Big Alcohol Debate is that our three members of parliament, Simon Kirby, Caroline Lucas and Mike Weatherley, unite to put pressure on the government to bring in sensible licensing laws that allow local councils, the police and magistrates to bring in and/or enforce proper restrictions on the availability of alcohol.  That would be a good example of localism.

(An aside: In welcoming the Big Alcohol Debate I have been tweeting one concern – the Debate promotes a website Think Drink Drugs that fails to mention abstinence-based services in Brighton and Hove.  I have been raising this as a concern since I first heard about the Big Alcohol Debate but, as yet, abstinence-based services remain excluded from where people can get help.  It is not the only example of where this happens.  I have asked whether excluding such services is policy or attitudinal.  I await an answer but will continue tweeting about it until a more balanced approach is used by the City Council and Health Promotion).

Reflections on the debates on drugs organised by Caroline Lucas and Mike Weatherley

During September two of our local Members of Parliament, Caroline Lucas (Brighton Pavilion) and Mike Weatherley (Hove), had the courage to organise debates on a major issue facing Brighton and Hove: drugs.  I say courage since drugs is an issue that many politicians will shy away from.

The two events were quite different, one behind closed doors with senior officers from statutory and third sector agencies, the other in public.  I am grateful to both Caroline and Mike for the invitations to speak at both events. 

The topics under discussion ranged from health and social care to decriminalisation and legalisation.  If I may offer one criticism of both events, the subjects under discussion were too wide-ranging.  To do justice to each topic, they should have been considered at different meetings, health and social care at one, decriminalisation and legalisation at another, rather than all issues being discussed at both meetings.

While Caroline and Mike are not often found lining up together, they are both to be applauded for their separate initiatives in addressing the reasons for Brighton and Hove’s high rate of drug-related deaths.  They work together through the All Party Group on Drug Reform.

I remain firmly of the view that there needs to be a move away from a medical approach (as opposed to a health and social care approach) when dealing with drug addiction.

A medical intervention is important in stabilising individuals and then detoxing them quickly and with as little discomfort as possible.  After that there is little need for any medical involvement (unless there is a co-existing yet separate medical condition).  After that social care, housing and self-help interventions should take over aimed at helping clients to become independent and to sustain a drug-free lifestyle.

I am not a supporter of decriminalisation, and a strong opponent of legalisation.  I have always felt that helping addicts achieve and maintain abstinence is the best form of harm minimisation and removes the need for criminal activity.

What the impact will be of the events organised by Caroline Lucas and Mike Weatherley is unknown.  I know what I want to see: all local agencies, and all their staff, championing abstinence, and I hope to hear fewer people writing off the potential of all addicts with comments such as “abstinence is not for everyone”.  My advice to them is it’s not your place to say that.

The ambition of abstinence is key to tackling drug addiction

This is the text of an article I wrote that first appeared in the Brighton Argus on 21st June 2011 and in Drink and Drug News in July 2011:

In the last week I bumped into two former clients of Brighton Housing Trust’s Recovery Project. The project offers an abstinence based programme which provides a route to life without use of illegal drugs or prescribed substitutes.

Rob (not his real name) is just finishing his final exams at Sussex University. He looked well although stressed and tired due to lack of sleep. The next day I saw Rachel (again not her real name) who spoke about how much she was loving her new job – she had recently been promoted to become a manager within her organisation. I remember her 15 years ago when many would have written her off as another “hopeless junkie”.

One had left the Project four years ago, the other more than a decade ago. They have remained abstinent and have turned their aspirations into reality. Both are happy. Both are an inspiration to me and others, showing that recovery from addiction is possible.

In the same week I read the comments of two leaders in the City with whom I often agree, Caroline Lucas MP, and the head of Brighton police, Chief Superintendent Graham Bartlett, who have called for the decriminalisation of drugs and a harm-minimisation, health-based response. They said that “the war on drugs” has failed, that a new approach is needed that looks at the problem from a health perspective, with more prescribing to reduce crime and social dysfunction.

Like them I am deeply concerned about the high death rate of addicts in Brighton and Hove. However, I was frankly depressed by their proposals since (apart from the call for formal decriminalisation of private use) they are simply advocating a view which has dominated government policy since at least 1997. It is a policy that has failed. This policy has seen ever-increasing numbers maintained in drug use, with spiralling costs to addicted individuals and the wider community that cannot be sustained in ethical or economic terms.

The coalition government has signalled a fundamental change in approach, although this has yet to be translated on the ground. It says it wants to change the way drug addiction is tackled, with more people with problems diverted away from prison and into treatment as part of what it calls a “rehabilitation revolution”. Its strategy involves “championing abstinence” and the Department of Health said its aim is to get users “off drugs for good”.  I support all of this.

The Department says the current annual cost of maintaining treatment for 320,000 problem drug users is made up of £1.7bn in benefits, £1.2bn for looking after their children and £730m for prescribing the heroin substitute methadone.

A key issue is one of ambition or rather what can now be seen, in hindsight, as a poverty of ambition. Do we think that it is acceptable to tolerate the £3.6bn now spent on treating users with drug substitutes like methadone and keeping them on benefits each year, not to mention the wasted potential of 320,000 (a conservative estimate) addicts who are maintained in their drug use. Is it acceptable that addicts who wish to be abstinent have for many years now been all too often either denied the detoxification facilities they need or have been actively encouraged to use heroin substitutes?

It is a simple matter of logic that things cannot improve if much of what we do is to maintain people in their addiction. Clients in the Recovery Project testify that, before entering our abstinence programme and when on maintenance scripts, they ‘topped up’ with street drugs. There is also an active market in prescribed drugs which are sold on by addicts supposedly ‘in recovery’. Those addicted in this way may not use or commit crime at the same rate, but they are certainly still stuck in the drug using culture and often acting illegally and destructively.

It is surely ethical that addicted people should be helped to achieve genuine abstinence since it is only when abstinence is achieved that healthy relationships, safe parenting, genuinely secure housing, education, training and employment become viable options.

I fully support the call made by the think tank, the Centre for Policy Studies (CPS), for “a real transfer of power from large distant organisations to small innovative providers” for

rehabilitation.  I agree that small units such as the Recovery Project have a better chance of getting addicts off drugs completely, not least because they tend to involve abstinent users in the planning and delivery of services.

Kathy Gyngell, from the CPS, said prescribing methadone to addicts delays their recovery. “The state is subsidising people to be any number of years on methadone, which has turned out not to be a cheap option and will only subsidise the tiniest proportion – 2% – to go into a rehabilitation unit that would actually free them from dependency and allow them to live their life.”

The CPS states “There is one simple measure of success: that of six months abstinence from drugs.” As the CEO of an organisation which offers both harm minimisation services and genuinely abstinence-based treatment, I am ambitious on behalf of our clients. I maintain that 6 months abstinence is readily achievable and would go a step further. Treatment providers should be judged on whether the client is genuinely abstinent – from all mood-altering drugs – six months after finishing treatment.

 Recovery from addiction is possible. Those of us involved in policy making, commissioning services and delivering treatment for addicts have an ethical duty to offer safe care to using addicts, but to ensure that treatment leads, in each and every case, to abstinence. Too many lives depend on it.

Why I don’t support the decriminalisation of drugs

The outgoing president of the Royal College of Physicians, Sir Ian Gilmore, has said the laws on misuse of drugs should be reviewed and that their supply should be regulated. 

While there are many superficial benefits, I have never supported decriminalisation because there are a number of basic questions that have not been properly thought through.

For example, from what age do you decriminalise drugs?  Should it be 18, as with alcohol?  Then what about the 14, 15, 16 year olds in our towns and cities who are using?  Do you leave under 18s in the hands of “violent gangsters”?  Or do we say there is no minimum age?  There can be nobody in their right mind who would advocate drug use amongst children.

Would we place restrictions on users? For example, would we require users to forfeit their driving licences since some drugs stay in the system for 4 weeks and influence reaction time and other performance?

Would we say that users should be allowed to have custody and responsibility for children?  We know that incidents of domestic violence and child abuse increase due to alcohol use.  Are we certain that by giving respectability to drug use that there will not be similar increases in neglect?

Do we really want to write off hundreds of thousands to a life of worklessness and benefit dependency?  I wouldn’t employ someone who is drunk at work, nor would I employ someone who is under the influence of drugs.  Most employers want clear minded, focused employees.

Alcohol use is closely related to availability. Things have become so much worse since the last government liberalised alcohol availability.  It seems shear lunacy to go down the same road with drugs and expect to arrive at a different destination.

Research by Exeter University identified its illegal status as the main reason why the majority of 15 year olds don’t experiment with cannabis

I support the policy changes being introduced by the coalition government to champion abstinence. Policy for the last 25 years has often resulted in addicts being supported to stay on drugs. I welcome the government’s greater ambition to commit itself to helping people to come off, and stay off, drugs.

A spokesperson for the Home Office said: “Drugs such as heroin, cocaine and cannabis are extremely harmful and can cause misery to communities across the country.  The government does not believe that decriminalisation is the right approach. Our priorities are clear; we want to reduce drug use, crack down on drug-related crime and disorder and help addicts come off drugs for good.”

I think the government has got it just right.