9/10/2007 - Quantum leap in county council care facilities receives councillors' backing

People will soon be asked to give their views on plans to invest millions of pounds in new modern care facilities for older people in Cumbria.

Cumbria County Council's cabinet today gave the go-ahead for detailed evaluation and widespread consultation on a 10-year package of proposals which have at their heart a multi-million pound investment in six new, state-of-the-art residential homes.

All the homes would be built in partnership with the health service on the sites of both new and existing community hospitals. The plans build upon Cumbria Primary Care Trust's recently launched Closer to Home consultation which calls for the creation of residential care facilities on community hospital sites.

Each home would be the centrepiece of a 'resource centre' - campus-like facilities where older people would be able to access medical, physiotherapy, respite support, extra-care housing and other community services all in the same place.

Age Concern has, over the last six months, chaired working groups representing every part of the county.

These working groups were tasked by the council to look at how its care facilities could be improved to meet the demands of the county's growing number of older people.

Staff at the council's residential homes have been independently assessed as being well-trained and providing excellent care. But the working groups believe that with better care homes, older people's dignity and independence could be vastly improved.

This is because residents and their belongings are currently squeezed into tiny bedrooms and often forced to share a bathroom with up to seven other people. Homes frequently have to turn away potential residents who need wheelchairs because the narrow corridors and small bedrooms cannot accommodate them.

Councillors have agreed to undertake a widespread public consultation on proposals to use the Government's Community Ventures Scheme to fund the replacement of six existing council-run residential homes with modern new homes in Wigton, Keswick, Millom, Alston, Penrith and Brampton. This would take place over the next five years.

Most of the new homes could be located on the site of existing community hospitals in each town. The Brampton home would be built on a new site in the town alongside a brand new community hospital, GP practice and a resource centre.

Council staff would move with residents who would have the opportunity to help choose bedroom colour schemes and other design features in their new homes.

Cabinet members have also agreed to proceed with more evaluation work on longer term proposals to upgrade and replace several homes in Barrow, Kendal, Staveley, and Windermere.

Under these plans, which the council predicts would take 5-10 years to deliver, residential care would be delivered on fewer sites and the total number of council-run residential and nursing care beds available in each area would increase.

Homes not included in the ten year package of proposals will continue to receive year on year investment.

Councillor Oliver Pearson, cabinet member responsible for Adult Social Care and Health at the county council, said: "The plans agreed today herald a quantum leap in the quality of council-run residential care facilities in Cumbria.

"They are not some cost-saving measure to appease the bean counters but a package of serious recommendations on how more dignity and choice can be provided for Cumbria's growing number of older people through a major increase in public investment.

Jill Stannard, Cumbria County Council's Director of Adult Social Care and Health, said: "The opportunity to work hand-in-hand with the health service in developing these proposals is particularly exciting at a time when more work than ever before is being done to provide seamless health and social care services. 

Joanna Leith, Director of Carlisle and District Age Concern, said: "Age Concern organisations in Cumbria have welcomed the opportunity of being involved in the review of key residential services supporting older people in the county. We have been pleased that the county council has sought to draw in a range of opinions and fresh-thinking in its effort to improve council-run care facilities for older people in Cumbria. 

"The plans will now be going out to the public for consultation and it is essential that, both now and in the future, the views of older people are at the centre of the decision making process and are clearly reflected in the final proposals."

Cumbria Primary Care Trust's Director of Corporate Affairs Ross Forbes, said: "These proposals herald a new era in joined-up working and joined-up thinking delivering the best possible results for the people who matter - those who use the services."

ENDS

Media enquiries to Mark Graham, Media Officer on 01228-606337

Notes

The proposals concerning Wigton, Keswick, Millom, Alston, Penrith and Brampton will go out to public consultation before the end of this year. The county council's Adult Social Care Scrutiny Panel will also consider the proposals. 

The views of the Scrutiny Panel and the results of public consultation will be reflected upon before final proposals are submitted to councillors sometime in early 2008.

Evaluation work on the longer term proposals to upgrade and replace several homes in Barrow, Kendal, Staveley, and Windermere is unlikely to be completed in the short-term and detailed proposals will not be ready for public consultation until next year at the earliest.

Follow this link to find the cabinet paper and appendicies (agenda items 21) agreed to by councillors at today's meeting