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Sir Michael Spicer: To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions when the Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State will reply to the letter of 31 January from the hon. Member for West Worcestershire. [57640]
Margaret Hodge
[holding answer 29 March 2006]: I replied to the hon. Member on 27 March 2006.
29 Mar 2006 : Column 1016W
Mr. Laws: To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions what the average time is for the Child Support Agency cases to spend in (a) the pre-application stage, (b) the application stage, (c) the information-gathering stage and (d) the calculation and collection set-up stage before first payment is received for (i) cases from parents with care receiving income support or income-related jobseeker's allowance, (ii) cases from parents with care not on income support or income-related jobseeker's allowance and (iii) all cases. [18787]
Mr. Plaskitt: The administration of the Child Support Agency is a matter for the chief executive. He will write to the hon. Member.
In reply to your Parliamentary Question about the Child Support Agency the Secretary of State promised a substantive reply from the Chief Executive. The Chief Executive is currently unavailable as he is communicating the Operational Improvement Plan to all Agency staff. I am responding on his behalf.
You asked the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions, what the average time is for the Child Support Agency cases to spend in (a) the pre-application stage (b) the application stage (c) the information-gathering stage and (d) the calculation and collection set-up stage before first payment is received for (i) cases from parents with care receiving income support or income related jobseeker's allowance (ii) cases from parents with care not on income support or income-related jobseeker's allowance and (iii) all cases.
The CSA does not collect data in exactly these categories but such information as is available is set out in the tables attached, together with notes describing each category.
The Agency defines an application as having cleared the overall application process if a maintenance calculation has been carried out and a payment arrangement between the parent with care and the non resident parent is in place. Additionally, since not all Child Support Agency applications result in a calculation, an application is also defined as cleared if the case is closed, the parent with care is identified as claiming Good Cause or is subject to a Reduced Benefit Decision, or the application is identified as being a change of circumstances on an existing case as opposed to a new application.
The time from application clearance to first payment represents the first stage of the compliance and enforcement part of the process, as by this point the onus will now be, to a large extent, on the non-resident parent to accept financial responsibility for their children and comply with the request for maintenance.
As you will notice, many of the cases yet to clear individual stages of the process are more than a year old, a level of performance which is clearly unacceptable to our clients. In the Operational Improvement Plan announced by the Secretary of State on 9th February 2006, the Agency set itself a target of reducing the backlog of uncleared new applications to the point where, by March 2009, 80% of applications will be cleared within 12 weeks and there will be no backlog in this area.
Mr. Laws: To ask the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions what his estimate is of the (a) annual running costs of the Child Support Agency and (b) annual saving in benefits as a consequence of Child Support Agency maintenance payments for each year from 1996 to 2005; and if he will make a statement. [21586]
Mr. Plaskitt: The administration of the Child Support Agency is a matter for the Chief Executive. He will write to the hon. Member with the information requested. Letter from Stephen Geraghty:
In reply to your recent Parliamentary Question about the Child Support Agency the Secretary of State promised a substantive reply from the Chief Executive.
You asked the Secretary of State for Work and Pensions what his estimate is of the (a) annual running costs of the Child Support Agency and (b) annual saving in benefits as a consequence of Child Support Agency maintenance payments for each year from 1996 to 2005; and if he will make a statement.
The table below shows the requested information as reported in the Annual Report and Accounts of the Child Support Agency.
Details of the annual savings in benefits are unavailable before 19992000, since they are not explicitly stated in the Annual Report and Accounts.
Since March 2003 Child Support applications have been dealt with under the new scheme. The new scheme introduced the Child Maintenance Premium, this is a £10 per week disregard of maintenance when calculating parent with care entitlement to Income Support. The Child Maintenance Premium was introduced to provide an incentive to parents with care to co-operate with the Agency and also to selectively target additional support to children in the poorest households. A consequence of child maintenance premium has been a reduction in the amount of maintenance collected by the Agency and paid to the Secretary of State to offset the annual cost of Income Support administered by Job Centre Plus.
The category of annual benefit savings covers only maintenance paid to parents with care in receipt of income support and jobseekers allowance. In recent years the proportion of the caseload that relates to non-benefit parents with care has increased. Failure to secure maintenance for this group of customers would result in some parents with care having to claim income related benefits.
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