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Right benefit: how to maximise performance against the indicator

Good practice key drivers

This section includes good practice on:

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Introduction

The key activities which minimise incorrectness in the benefit caseload are:

It is important that customers are aware of their responsibility to report changes in their circumstances on time to minimise error arising in ongoing claims. Encouraging and educating customers to report changes themselves reduces the requirements for intervention at a later stage and can avoid the costly business of recovering any resulting overpayment.  Therefore it is essential to educate customers so that they understand the need to report relevant changes in their circumstances to promote a culture of self-reporting of changes. All means available should be explored to promote the need to report changes.

Where customers fail to report changes, interventions are a means of identifying them by proactively reviewing claims most likely to have had an unreported change. These are normally selected through some form of risk assessment, or in response to a predicted change that has been diary-dated but not reported by the customer. 

There are a number of reasons why customers do not report changes in their circumstances. These include:

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Encouraging customers to report changes of circumstances

Good practice includes:

Improving accessibility and responsiveness

Good practice includes:

Several LAs have reported some success with new procedures for taking changes of circumstance over the phone. While the customer is on the phone reporting the change, the LA makes an appointment for an officer to call out within the next few days to collect the necessary evidence to support the change.

Working with others to maximise the reporting of changes of circumstances

Good practice includes:

Maximising the use of available data and intelligence

Good practice includes:

Data-matches

Referrals from the Housing Benefit Database Matching Service (HBDMS) are a useful resource for identifying unreported changes of circumstance and LA error, including data input mistakes and unactioned work. The following good practice can equally be applied to internal data-matching, and to the results of the National Fraud Initiative.

Good practice includes:

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Interventions

Inevitably there will be some changes that are not reported by customers, and not identified through data-matching. Although DWP no longer set targets for interventions, recent research indicates that they are an effective means of sweeping up many of the remaining incorrect claims in the caseload.

Ensure that adequate administrative support is in place to prioritise work and identify the appropriate intervention method based on the level of risk.

Good practice includes:

LAs may find the following based on LAs’ experiences helpful.

Visiting

Telephone reviews

Telephone reviewing can be used for low risk cases, and in situations requiring a speedy resolution. Customers may want assurance before disclosing their telephone numbers, but many LAs now ask for this information at the initial claim stage.  Vulnerable customers can be notified by letter of the intention to review their case by telephone.

Postal reviews

Managing the process

Some incorrectness in the caseload is caused by weaknesses in administrative procedures, mistakes made by staff, and failure to action work or notified changes.

Good practice includes:

DWP have produced two e-learning packages on error awareness: the Guide for Assessors and the Manager’s Toolkit.

The Right Benefit toolkit contains a range of communication and evaluation products and aims to help LAs plan; implement; analyse; and evaluate results of any activities undertaken to improve the levels of correct benefit within caseloads.  A link to the toolkit is shown below:  http://www.dwp.gov.uk/housingbenefit/security/rightbenefittoolkit.asp