Troubled Families Programme

Communities and Local Government written statement – made at on 10 September 2013.

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Photo of Eric Pickles Eric Pickles The Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government

I am pleased to update hon. Members on the progress of the troubled families programme. The latest information shows that this groundbreaking programme has successfully turned around the lives of nearly 14,000 of England’s toughest families in just 15 months.

This Government have set out an ambitious goal of turning around the lives of 120,000 troubled families in England by the end of this Parliament: getting children back into school; cutting youth crime and antisocial behaviour across the whole family; getting adults into work; and reducing the estimated £9 billion per year that these families cost the taxpayer. Full details of the Government’s payment by results framework for troubled families can be found on my Department’s website at:

https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/the-troubled-families-programme-financial-framework.

Up to the end of July 2013, upper-tier local authorities have reported that they have turned around nearly 14,000 troubled families. The figure represents a sevenfold increase from January which means children are back in school for at least three terms where they were previously playing truant or excluded; high levels of youth crime and antisocial behaviour are down over at least six months; and adults are getting off benefits and into work for at least three months.

The tough and sustained outcomes which this programme demands mean that it can take in excess of a year to achieve these results and claim success.

Considering the often long-standing and deep-seated nature of these families’ problems and the inherent time lags in these results, the progress achieved in such a short space of time is a huge achievement and a testament to the hard work of colleagues in local government and the workers who directly helped the families.

In June 2012, I announced that all 152 upper-tier local authorities had signed up to deliver the troubled families programme and, for most, this started with the substantial task of identifying the families most in need of Intervention. As of the end of June 2013, they had identified over 80,000 troubled families who will be targeted for intervention by the programme. Of these families, nearly 50,000 families are already being worked with—up from 35,000 in March. This represents a significant increase in the pace and scale of work with troubled families across England.

The figures from local authorities on progress within the first 15 months of the Government’s troubled families programme have been collated from the latest quarterly returns submitted to DCLG’s troubled families team from all 152 upper-tier local authorities in England. I am grateful to local authorities for providing us with these figures. Full details of these returns can be found on my Department’s website at:

https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/troubled-families-progress-information-at-30-june-2013-and-families-turned-around-at-29-july-2013.

I am arranging for copies of this information and the details of the payments by results framework to be placed in the library of the House.

placed in the Library

This phrase is often used in written answers to indicate that a minister has deposited some relevant information in the House of Commons Library. Typical content includes research reports, letters, and tables of data not published elsewhere.

A list of such depositions can be found at http://deposits.parliament.uk/ along with some of the documents. The Library is not open to the public, but copies of documents can be requested if they are not on that website. For more information, see the House of Commons factsheet: http://www.parliament.uk/documents/upload/P15.pdf

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