Title

SOCIAL CARE

Majority of lead members call for delay to social care reforms

The majority of senior councillors are worried social care reforms will make council services worse rather than better, according to the results of a new survey.

Most senior councillors are worried social care reforms will make council services worse rather than better, according to the results of a new survey.

The survey of lead members for adult care by the Local Government Association (LGA) found councils are becoming increasingly concerned about the capacity and financial resources required to deliver the Government's reform agenda.

It found 86% are calling for the reforms to be delayed, warning they are unable to deliver the changes within the current climate and to the current timescale.

Chairman of the LGA's community wellbeing board, David Fothergill, said: 'The reforms to the sector as they currently stand will make services worse rather than better if pushed through without the correct time and resource.

'Our survey found that 86% of lead members think that some or all the reforms should be delayed, and in response to these findings we have written to the secretary of state with our requests of reasonable adjustments to the timetable of implementation and to stress the unavoidable relationship between unfunded reforms and increased pressure on an already over-stretched system.'

A survey by the Association of Directors of Adult Social Services this week found almost 300,000 people are now waiting for an assessment of their needs by social workers.

The Levelling Up, Housing and Communities Committee also said the Government was not even close to ‘rescuing' social care.

SOCIAL CARE

The Top 10 councils powering ahead on productivity

By Ann McGauran | 05 February 2026

Local government’s leadership may be dealing with a maelstrom of challenges, but the councils whose productivity performance has earned them a place in the I...

SOCIAL CARE

Reform council calls for urgent asylum action

By William Eichler | 03 February 2026

Reform UK-led Kent CC has urged the Government to tackle soaring costs tied to caring for unaccompanied asylum-seeking children.

SOCIAL CARE

Political convenience is no justification for unconstitutional local election tinkering

By Colin Copus | 02 February 2026

The Government’s decision to ‘postpone or cancel’ local elections is ‘a travesty of constitutional propriety’ say emeritus professors Steve Leach and Colin C...

SOCIAL CARE

The NHS 10 Year Plan: Why listening at scale matters for local government

By Ruth Cousens | 28 January 2026

Ruth Cousens outlines what 250,000 voices reveal about prevention, place and the future role of councils.

Popular articles by Laura Sharman