our Self Assessment
Transcription
our Self Assessment
Coastal Housing Group – Self Assessment January 2015 Context 2014 was a year of change for Coastal. Our longstanding Chief Executive, Tim Blanch retired and our Group Finance Director, Debbie Green, took over the Chief Executive role in April 2014. We had other changes at the top too, our Development Director left in January 2014, our Housing and Maintenance Services Director retired in the autumn. Our Head of HR was promoted to a newly created Director post created a Head of HR vacancy. So after some rigorous but successful recruitment we have some excellent candidates who will bring us new skills; we will have our virtually new senior management team in place by March 2015. At a time when we have had two vacancies at Director level, we have worked closely and collaboratively with our Board to develop a governance model where we have the right structures in place and the right culture to promote an appropriate mix of support and challenge. Our Board established a Governance and Remuneration committee to take our Governance strategy forward and to own Board performance. In 2014 we also appointed new Chairs to our Board, Finance and Development Committee and Governance and Remuneration Committee. We have recently co-opted a new Board member with accountancy skills who joined us in January 2015 as Treasurer and will be taking over as Chair of our Audit and Risk Committee. The Board of our “for sales” subsidiary, Pennant, runs co-terminously with the Coastal main Board. We are pleased to have a skilled and diverse Board both in relation to gender, age and length of service. We manage strategic risk collectively as a Board and Management Team. We jointly attend a annual strategic risk workshop facilitated by Zurich Risk Consultants which assesses sector risk and strategic risk specific to Coastal. In terms of service delivery, 2014 was a year of transition. Coastal already has a reputation for delivering excellent landlord services. In the light of Welfare Reform, and through an organisation wide debate about “the right thing to do”, we are moving towards a more pro-active, person centred and community focussed housing management service. Our frontline staff have asked tenants in our communities the open questions; “What matters to you about Coastal’s services?”, and “What does a good life look like to you?” Working with Vanguard consultants we have used the answers to these questions to develop a whole organisation “outside-in” approach to service redesign. Because our change programme is a holistic one Vanguard have worked with us on an action learning basis commencing in 2014 and lasting into spring 2015. For the detailed programme see Appendix 1. We remain financially strong and took part in the early round of financial viability assessments this year achieving a pass. 1 Content This document tells the story of where we are now, what we will be doing over the next few years, and why; the detailed documents appended will provide additional evidence to back up this self assessment. Core Principles of Self Assessment and their application within Coastal The Housing Association Circular Self Assessment, Guiding Principles for Housing Associations in Wales, sets out a number of principles that could underpin an effective self assessment; they assume a top down approach to learning, change and improvement. The Vanguard method of systems intervention works in the opposite way; bottom up, and aims to create a self organising (complex adaptive) system that has the flexibility and capacity to deliver what matters to individual tenants and service users. The following section lists the main working principles that Coastal uses in applying the Vanguard method to learn and improve, and explains for ease of reference what the equivalent principles are in the Welsh Government document. It is important to note that the two methods follow a different logic, by following the Vanguard method Coastal will not be seeking to apply the core principles in the manner described in the circular. For a detailed read across for self assessment principles to systems thinking continuous improvement principles see the table “Systems thinking is a better way to make the work work” – Appendix 2 “Use self assessment as a live tool, WG” - in Coastal we use systems thinking as a live tool which facilitates continuous improvement. “Assess your performance by reference to issues and services that matter most to your customers, WG” – Our systems are designed at the outset to deliver “what matters most” to our customers, in this way we put citizens at the heart of everything we do. We ensure we know what customers want through capturing and analysing demand and identifying value demand and failure demand. Some examples of demand we have captured are contained in Appendix 3. We then measure our systems capability to deliver the work so that the customer receives the right service at the right time. We have a set of leading and lagging measures for our key systems; leading measures relate to what matters to customers, e.g. was a repair done when they wanted it and fixed right first time, lagging measures are a consequence of doing this; these are typically reducing costs, increasing capacity, more satisfied customers and more engaged staff. Work that does not deliver what matters to the customer is waste and eliminated. This is a self adjusting system so that receiving feedback from customers is done systematically, that is as part of the day to day work, so does not require a separate “performance assessment” and changes to the system are made in real time in response to the information we get from our customers and our measures. 2 “Consider broader community based achievements, WG”- we know that “what matters” to tenants predictably includes the quality of the wider community environment, relationships with their neighbours and communities and the ability to use their skills and give something back; precisely what this means in practice will vary from community to community. Our community based intervention work carried out at our Cwmfelin Estate in Swansea, and more recently in our Swansea North East Area, illustrates how we are designing work to address issues that matter to customers, and also pulls in broader community based work. Equally “engagement with residents and other service users, staff and key external partners, WG” happens systematically as a result of “pull” and design of the work, our community intervention described below evidences how this works in practice. “Ensure that improvement priorities are managed effectively, WG” – in Coastal, eliminating failure demand and waste and ensuring that systems deliver value work, “what matters”, is the responsibility of staff in the work and frontline team leaders and managers. Improvement priorities are integrated with the work by the people doing the work and are implemented by staff who have delegated authority to act on the system; therefore no top down management is required. By application of continuous improvement methodology supported by the Vanguard method, a manager’s job is specifically to ask the following performance related questions all the time, and resolve the systems issues raised: What are we here to do - what matters to tenants, service users and customers?” How do we currently do it and why do we do it that way? What gets in our way or wastes our time? How do we know if we have done it well?” “Ensure that assessments of performance are objective and based on outcomes, or end results for customers, and provide evidence for your judgements, WG. We use measures to assess performance and alongside these we consistently ask the “what matters” question. Examples of evidence includes measures, data on our business intelligence system Qlikview; collated “what matters” answers from the community intervention, and surveys such as Coastal’s 2012 Tenants’ satisfaction survey; the Big Tenants Survey by Housing Partners 2014, and the All Wales Tenants Survey, 2014. These surveys are all submitted as part of the Welsh Government checklist of documents required. Performance reporting to Board is described in more depth below. “Ensure there is active board engagement and ownership of the self assessment, WG” – In Coastal, the Board’s role in conjunction with senior management is to act on the system, understand and support the can do culture, know what system reviews and other initiatives are taking place, and recognise what we are learning from them and how improvements are being implemented. 3 In May 2014 at the Board away day the Chief Executive presented on the external environment, the implications for our tenants and for how we need to deliver our housing services in the future, in the knowledge that assessing “where we are now” would not deliver the right services and support for tenants in the light of welfare reform. A copy of the presentation is provided in Appendix 4. As a consequence of the ensuing discussion the Board decided to invest in the work with Vanguard and commence our current change process. During the course of 2014 there has been a rolling programme for Board members of presentations by staff and reports. This enables Board members to satisfy themselves with regards to our delivery outcomes, and how we are applying systems thinking, for example: February Welfare Reform Update Report March Presentation on Lean Review of applications process Targeted Recruitment and Training Update May Presentation on Lean Review of Rent Management July Presentation on the Community Intervention – purpose and methodology August Stakeholder Survey Report and Discussion September Lean Intervention Programme Update November Presentation on Digital Inclusion Targeted Recruitment and Training Update Maintenance - Repairs Team Performance and WHQS update Strategic Risk Update Supporting People Update. Performance reporting to Board In addition the Chief Executive provides a general written update to each meeting, the quarterly management accounts pack is extensive and contains performance data on voids and arrears as well as other key areas, and key maintenance statistics including gas safety, void and repairs performance are regularly reported. We have recently reviewed our quarterly performance reporting and we will be producing a new report “our performance”, sent as part of the WG document request, which we will be publishing on our website and in our magazine. 4 Structure of the self-assessment The narrative of this document follows the flow of Coastal’s purpose rather than the order of the delivery outcomes. However for ease of reference where referred to the delivery outcomes and demonstration points are shown in red. We make sure our purpose is clear and we achieve what we set out to do - knowing who does what and why - We have strong, accountable leadership, with clear, informed, transparent decision-making to ensure we achieve our purpose; the whole organisation is aligned to delivery of purpose and has the capacity, skills and tools to deliver successfully. Our planning, selfassessment and performance management, (using the Vanguard method) supports delivery of our purpose, and ensures we continually improve. Vision and values Vision - Coastal is a values led organisation; historically Coastal’s vision has been to “offer a choice of homes that you, your friends, your parents, or your children would be proud to live in, and that meet the needs of the communities that we serve. To contribute to the social and economic development of the areas within which we work.” We believe we have met the aspirations of our original vision and that this is embedded in our work. Building on the original vision, since 2014 we have been working towards a new vision, which has emerged from a narrative amongst our staff, which is to “provide homes and services that enable our tenants to thrive and the communities we serve to prosper, supported by, growing our social business and extending the reach of our homes and services “ Values - We are informed in all that we do by our values which are Trust we trust our staff to get the job done Respect we respect our tenants and our staff and have a no blame culture Innovation we try new things so we can do things better Learning & growing we think about what we do and learn from it High Standards – we are proud of what we do and aim always to deliver the right service at the right time Purpose We have been clarifying our purpose so that we are fit for the future and to ensure that “the whole organisation is aligned to delivery of its purpose and has the capacity, skills and tools to deliver successfully”. Our new Chief Executive and the Board has led a process to engage with our tenants, our stakeholders and our staff with a view to shaping future service delivery. Our stakeholder survey was completed in June 2014 and is included in the documents requested. 5 In our community intervention, which commenced in our Cwmfelin Estate, as well as asking the “what matters” question” we also asked tenants individually what a good life looks like for them, see the section on our Community Intervention. Our community intervention project Our corporate plan consultation, also in the list of documents submitted, describes how we have engaged with different groups of stakeholders and what we are asking. What happened next? Tenants - we are continuing to roll out our community intervention work into new communities. The success of our intervention now means that we are embedding this new way of working; we have recently started to do this in the whole of Swansea North East where we have roughly one third of our stock, and using the learning to inform how we structure the department, and deliver all our housing management services in a way that further supports our tenants’ lives, more information on these changes is outlined in Our community intervention project below. Stakeholders – we held a stakeholders event to feedback the results from the stakeholder survey at which the Chief Executive gave the following presentation, Appendix 5 – “Coastal Housing Where Next?” Staff – we held an all day staff event in late September 2014 to talk about our future, looking at both the work and how we support and engage our people. The Coastal Away Day presentation is in Appendix 6. Corporate plan Our new interim corporate plan “supports delivery of our purpose, and ensures we continually improve”. The plan, submitted as part of the requested evidence, contains a detailed narrative against which the management team deliver. We will be reviewing our plan in early summer once our new Director of Homes, Communities and Services, and our Finance Director are in post. Achieving clarity of purpose As a result of the work we have undertaken in 2014 we are clear that our purpose is to: Sustain tenancies Sustain communities Sustain our local economy, and Sustain Coastal This is a whole organisation approach, working as one team that asks itself the question; “If what we do doesn't contribute to purpose, why are we doing it?” 6 Principles - We also have a set of principles which guide how we make decisions in the work. We have specific principles for: sustainable lettings sustaining tenancies and communities maintenance that matters developing sustainable homes and communities providing services to support Coastal, and leading and improving in a systems thinking environment (our management team principles) These are contained in Appendix 7 We design systems to deliver against our purpose as described above. The rest of our assessment is therefore split into four sections; sustaining tenancies, sustaining communities, sustaining our local economy, and sustaining Coastal. For ease of understanding we describe our innovative community intervention project as an introduction to the four sections because it contains information and learning which is influencing all areas of our work. Our community intervention project This innovative piece of work was designed to fulfil a number of interlinked objectives Embed the continuous improvement principles behind the Vanguard Method Understand the likely impact of Welfare Reform on our tenants and our communities Understand our Housing System from the perspective of a Community – a whole system approach Recognise how we can learn about and support community development Introduce an “assets based approach” that sees tenants as people with potential, so a resource with skills and talents, not a cost Deal with demand from our tenants and service users proactively not reactively, and Invest our resources where they can best make a difference in the community The project involves working with Simon Pickthall from Vanguard and learning by talking to tenants out in their communities. We have released a number of staff from their days jobs to focus on this work and the project is being led internally by two relatively junior staff who are also being trained up in this methodology; Kevin Hedges, our Applications team leader, and Emma Denyer, our ADAPT Housing assistant. We have also made available a dedicated space for the team, a “community intervention zone” on the first floor in our offices; staff from other teams often drop in to find out what’s going on and what we are learning. This is a significant evolutionary change process; by managing it “bottom up” so learning from tenants out in our communities and staff “in the work”, we are achieving buy in, understanding of, and commitment to the changes we are making. 7 Fundamentally we are developing an “assets based” approach to community development. We started to pilot this approach in the summer of 2014, talking to tenants in their homes in Cwmfelin where we have approximately 200 units comprising a mix of flats and houses and also a supported scheme and some low cost home ownership properties. First of all we visited tenants and asked them open questions about “what maters to them in relation to Coastal’s services”, and “what does a good life look like to them”, see appendices 8-9. We also mapped community assets by asking tenants what skills and abilities they have. In addition we used our business intelligence system to pull together all the data we already hold on the area, analysing it from a number of different perspectives. In addition we undertook a piece of work in Sandfields to understand demand and the waiting list better. We asked questions to learn what maters to people on the waiting list, we looked at a sample of applications, and the predictability of length of tenancies and tenancy ends. The community intervention meeting notes for October 2014 in Appendix 10 summarise what we learnt and what we wanted to do next as we moved on to a wider piece of work in Swansea. The staff team themselves decided that they wanted to roll out the work into the whole of a team leaders “patch”, Swansea North East, and this will be followed by embedding this approach into the remainder of our stock in the Spring. During this transitionary period we are gaining more knowledge, challenging our assumptions and changing our approach, and the community intervention team are learning new skills. This initiative is wide ranging and is influencing how we think about and deliver our landlord services across the board as described below. SUSTAINING TENANCIES We place the people who want to use our services at the heart of our work - putting the citizen first - we design our systems so that we know our current and potential service users and tailor our services and activities accordingly, for example by asking the “what maters” and “good life” question”. Our services are designed flexibly and have the capacity to respond to individual demand, therefore they are “shaped” in real time with performance being measured in relation to the question - did tenants and service users receive the outcome that matters to them? If we are unable for any reason to deliver the service that tenants want, then staff feed back to their teams and managers so that we can review and change our systems to better meet tenants’ needs and lead to better outcomes. Normally if “things go wrong” we put them right either straight away or very quickly without recourse to senior management, as a consequence we receive very few formal complaints. When things “predictably” go wrong this is a system issue and we act on the system to resolve it. 8 Contacting Coastal - Our tenant survey and our answers to the “what matters” question indicate that tenants are happy that we are “are easy to contact, and respond in a timely, efficient manner”. Because we have a generic area based housing management system tenants have a relationship with their housing manager which means “we make it easy for people to understand what to expect from our services and how to access them”. This also means that housing managers are individually “accountable to our tenants and service users” Contacting us by phone - We know that 83.7% of our tenants contact us by phone; our main phone line comes through to our housing services team and on average is answered within 7 seconds. We have introduced a degree of specialism within the team so we now have a general phone group, and groups looking after applications and lettings, and a group looking after rents; maintenance calls are put through to our repairs schedulers. We have good phone monitoring software and know that on average we only lose 2-3% of calls and we follow lost and abandoned calls up as a matter of course. 82% of our tenants find us easy to get hold of and 90.8% find us helpful, against benchmark figures of 75.5% and 86.1% respectively. Use of texting – We have automated texting facilities, for example tenants can text “Balance” and receive their up to date rent balance, or text “Repair” for us to contact them to book a repair. We can send repairs reminders, text tenants about issues such as arrears and communicate any major scheme issues such as , lift breakdowns, and heating problems. Our website - Our website contains a comprehensive tenants’ area. We have improved the content of our website over the last year and the “bounce rate” that is people looking at the welcome page and then going no further has halved over the last year. We also know that the majority of traffic to the website now is from tenants accessing the tenants’ area. We are in the process of security testing a web front end to our housing system that will enable tenants to look up their rent balance, report repairs on line, look up repairs appointments etc. Before this goes live we will test the prototype with a group of tenants. Social media - We use a variety of social media and we publish our in house magazine “220” so that we can “communicate information and advice in an appropriate, timely, effective manner, readily understood by the communities we serve.” http://www.coastalhousing.co.uk/Pages/Magazine.aspx We will be surveying our tenants in February to make sure that our communications are fit for purpose and that our tenants can contact us easily and through the channels that they prefer. Our internal auditors have just completed an audit of our Customer Services function; their report is very positive and is included within the list of documents requested. 9 We let homes in a fair, transparent and effective way and we manage our homes effectively. We are proud of our housing management and landlord services; our tenants’ surveys performed in 2012 and 2014 were both very positive, particularly when looking at the underlying data which shows that the levels of very satisfied tenants are materially higher than the benchmark of our comparable peer groups (2012), and than the Welsh sector average, (2014). Our tenants’ surveys are submitted as part of our evidence list. In addition the Big Tenant Survey carried out across the UK by Housing Partners ranked us second overall in the UK based on the question “are you likely to recommend your landlord to other people”; the net promoter score. However we are acutely aware that in the light of welfare reform unless we have a wider service offer, we will not be able to help tenants sustain their tenancies. We need to understand them more holistically, engage with them more proactively and offer better support. When we talk about support we mean helping people to help themselves; so an asset based approach. By facilitating Asset-Based Community Development we are ensuring the sustainable development of our communities based on their strengths and potential. By asking the question “What skills do you have?” we are assessing the resources, skills and experience available in our communities, and helping the community organise itself around resolving those issues that are most important there. The work we have been doing throughout 2014 and continuing into 2015 is about realigning the whole organisation behind this approach, not only because we believe we need to do this to help tenants pay their rent, but more fundamentally because we believe it is the right thing to do. Whilst this process is an evolutionary one, building on our culture and our successes to date, it is still a major change programme. In early 2015 we rolled out the community intervention work to Swansea North East; so the whole of one of our three team leader’s patches, roughly one third of our stock, is now working in this way and asking tenants “what matters” to them. This will help us to decide what structural changes we will need to make, what new skills staff might need and how best we might support them to learn these when we embed the approach across all our stock. There are also complimentary initiatives running with Vanguard to embed our new approach. Our waiting list, lettings and approach to homelessness We are starting to work with applicants and future tenants on our waiting list, and our local authority partners in a different way, to help “ensure routes into our housing are well publicised, easy to understand and simple to use” We maintain our own waiting list which was designed on the back of a lean review some years ago; we also let homes to tenants on our transfers list and take nominations from our local authority partners. Both local authorities are currently reviewing their approach to ensuring housing accessibility. Swansea – in Swansea we are actively involved in the “Improving Access to Housing Project Group”. This project aims to ensure that partners work together to deliver the homelessness duty, and that there is a common access point for applicants as follows. All providers will: 10 provide information on availability on their website ensure information feeds in to the Swansea housing council website share potential applicant information with other providers for assessment, and provide information on homelessness. Neath Port Talbot – in Neath Port Talbot the local authority is working on developing a Common Housing Register and Policy, and is considering moving to choice based lettings. We are actively involved in this group, in particular to help with a systems thinking approach, to share the learning from Swansea, and, to ensure that whatever system is adopted is lean and fit for purpose. Coastal – we are starting to have different conversations with people looking to access our housing. Historically we have developed area based housing registers as we know that generally speaking because people have networks and commitments in place, they can only accept housing in specific areas. In addition we are now aiming to get tenancies right from the start. What we mean by that is by having a full understanding of peoples’ circumstances we are better able to support them, either directly ourselves or by working with other organisations, and give them the right service, understanding that sometimes housing may not be the best answer in solving their problems. Homelessness duty - Who we let our homes to may be one of the most difficult decisions we have to make, we cannot house everyone in housing need due to limited supply, and we have to make these difficult decisions balancing degrees of need with how we best create sustainable tenancies and sustainable communities. To “ensure that access to our homes is fair and open” our housing team has developed a set of principles, our overriding principle is that “We will actively work with applicants and allocate tenancies to people where we can add the most value” Adhering to this principle consistently means that we can define what “fair” looks like in relation to lettings, therefore “we give reasonable preference to those who are in greatest housing need or are homeless and we work with other organisations to prevent and alleviate homelessness maximising choice and sustaining communities”. We consistently work with vulnerable and homeless clients, at the moment we are working with a prison leaver and a long-term homeless person, using our new proactive approach to help them manage and sustain a tenancy. Nominations - In the last annual reporting periods the nominations received for Swansea were running at 53%. The process is different in Neath Port Talbot because the majority of nominations come from people in temporary accommodation etc., and also because of our stock profile. In light of this the local authority accepts that the 50% target is hard to achieve. We are working with them to understand the concept of sustainable tenancies, for example we know that if a tenant wants to live in Neath, offering them a property in Sandfields, Port Talbot, away from family and support networks is unlikely to result in a successful tenancy. We are running the innovative Tenancy Sustainment Course in Neath Port Talbot, see Tenancy Sustainability Scheme below, and this should result in placing applicants in a better position to be able to sustain a tenancy. 11 Homelessness and Voluntary partners - We also work closely with voluntary partners such as Dewis and Swansea Young Single Homeless Project, SYSHP, to help prevent and alleviate homelessness. We support Shelter Cymru’s activities locally and have provided speakers for and sponsored their last two local conferences. Preventing homelessness – In England and Wales in 2014 the number of tenants evicted hit record levels largely due to welfare reform and benefits cuts. However because we have a pro-active approach to housing management we act to prevent homelessness and put support in place for those at risk of becoming homeless; only 23 tenancies in 2014 ended in an eviction; 15 due to rent arrears, 7 due to ASB and one due to deception. Currently tenancies in Margam, Neath town centre and Mount Pleasant, Swansea are most likely to fail, and we put more intensive housing management in place in these estates. We also create balanced communities, in partnership with the local authority, for example through our City Living scheme, which is sensitive to the need to support urban regeneration, described further under “sustainable communities” below. Getting it right from the start - To support our approach to fair and sustainable lettings we undertook some experimental work in the Sandfields area of Port Talbot; we phoned everyone on the waiting list in that area to understand them better and to ask them “what matters”, to help us to make better decisions when letting properties and to “get it right from the start”. In addition one of our initiatives involves matching properties with potential tenants sooner so that tenants can see properties when they become void. This means that tenants can have input into decisions about whether they want to keep existing carpets, curtains or any furniture or white goods that may be left in the property. Also they can discuss with us what their expectations are with regards to redecoration etc. This means that not only are we letting “homes we are proud of” but also that tenants are deciding “what matters” and defining on a bespoke basis what “ready to let” means for them. Overall this approach means that “we know and are responsive to people’s individual housing support needs and help them to sustain their tenancies. This process is explained in a flowchart for viewings: see Appendix 11. Our tenancy sustainability scheme is a complimentary initiative. Launched in Autumn 2014 this is run in conjunction with Open Communities and Welsh Tenants. The programme is the first of its kind in Wales and is targeted at prospective tenants who are looking to begin a tenancy for the first time as well as existing tenants who are struggling to sustain their tenancies, equipping them with all the skills and knowledge they will need. All those who successfully complete the course receive a Tenants Accreditation Scheme Award in Tenancy Sustainment and are offered an optional third day of IT Skills training. 12 Specialist skills - We are learning that we need a variety of specialist skills to help tenants sustain their tenancies. We have undertaken some initial training with Sian Williams from the Toynbee Institute on financial inclusion. We work closely with the credit union, especially Neath Port Talbot Credit Union and also helped establish Moneyline Cymru in Swansea. We understand that we may also need money advisors in house and we will be considering this further as part of our intervention work in Swansea North East. We participated in a digital inclusion project funded by Communities 2.0 focussed on older people, and have continued to invest in this post out of our own resources spreading the work over a wider tenant profile. We are trialling a “digital inclusion hub” in the Waun Wen Area of Swansea in an empty shop premises with Communities 2.0 and we will be providing free training and classes to the end of March. Measurement - To measure how a tenant that we are working with feels that they are progressing and how we are supporting them to add value to their lives, we are beginning to use the outcome star model. This data is kept on our web-based database Harmonia so that we can measure trends over time and aggregate information at an estate based level. Employability and Skills - We have created two new roles, Employability and Skills Manager, and an Employability and Skills advisor so that we can focus on employment and skills development with our tenants and build on the work placements we already have. We are also looking at volunteering opportunities for tenants and are collaborating with Shelter in their Western Bay project which creates opportunities for their service users and our tenants to train as homelessness advisors. We are targeting initiatives for younger people, for example we will work with Shelter to set up a Duke of Edinburgh Awards Programme, commencing June 2015. We have also made links with the Princes Trust. Tenancy Support Scheme - We continue to provide tenancy support services for tenants with more intense support requirements such as mental health issues, substance abuse issues, learning difficulties etc, some of this work being funded through relatively small amounts, circa £200k in total, of supporting people monies. In addition we are increasingly investing our own resources and mainstreaming support work for all but those with the most complex needs. Our independent living assistants provide a peripatetic support service for older people across all our stock. We continue to run the award winning ADAPT scheme for partners in Swansea and more recently in Neath Port Talbot and we “ensure that our adapted homes are available to those who need them” We have roughly 500 homes where our tenants are supported by a variety of managing agents, for example Swansea Young Single Homeless Project (SYSHP), Dewis, Community Lives and Esgyn (now part of Gofal). Part of our work in 2015 is to work even more closely with these partners and other third sector organisations such as Caer Las and Shelter so that we can map out how best to use our resources collectively to provide the right support for our tenants at the right time. 13 Domestic abuse / violence Coastal Housing is on board with “Raising Awareness of Domestic Abuse”. We have policies and procedures on Domestic Abuse for both Housing (tenants) and Workplace (staff) which are accompanied by the comprehensive document “Domestic Abuse - Guidance, Information and Resources”. All staff receive Domestic Abuse Awareness Training run by Calon DVS, Welsh Women’s Aid. For our documents on Domestic Abuse see Appendix 12 The approach we are now taking with our housing management is a more intensive, proactive, support based service; in recruiting our new Director of Homes, Communities and Maintenance Services we have deliberately recruited someone with a support and asset based background to take our housing management service forwards. We are also considering reducing the size of patches that our housing managers look after, and concentrating more staff in these small area based teams. We have taken an outline proposal along these lines to our November Board and will be working up the proposal in more detail as part of the budget and resource planning process in early 2015. A diagram depicting how we want housing management and maintenance services to work is contained in Appendix 13. Welfare reform Across the sector welfare reform is one of the major strategic risks. In addition to the work we are doing with tenants individually, we undertook an extensive tenant profiling exercise in 2013 and that data is available in an easy to interrogate format on our business intelligence system, Qlikviiew. We reported our progress in responding to Welfare reform in the Welsh Government in October 2013. More recently the community intervention project is allowing us to indentify people that may not previously have been identified as being at risk. For example it has become clear that a life changing event triggers risk and we need to be able to identify when this occurs. Tenancy sign up - In relation to tenancy management at tenancy sign up “we make clear the rights and duties of the tenant and landlord, and act to uphold these rights and duties in a fair and responsible manner and we use the most secure form of tenancy compatible with the purpose of the housing.” We also “support tenants to prevent arrears of rent and service charges arising and act quickly to avoid arrears building up. We recover any arrears fairly and effectively, whilst helping tenants to meet their due payments” As a result of our in depth work in Cwmfelin, we have a better understanding of various “trigger points” that adversely impact tenants ability to pay their rent; for example the initial costs of moving and furnishing a new home, a breakdown of a relationship and changes in working hours for those in part time work or on zero hours contracts. We are in the process of introducing new working practices so that we are systematically alerted to these triggers and provide support to tenants, including financial advice, as quickly as possible. When we are letting properties, as described above, we are asking the “what matters” question so we can leave the right furnishings in properties and we will be looking to do a wider piece of work so that we can help tenants source recycled white goods etc. 14 Roll out of universal credit - Neath Port Talbot is one of the areas where Universal Credit will be commencing in February, 2015. Initially only new claims from single people and couples will be included in the Pilot. We attend local DWP forums etc and information we gain from the pilot will assist with the eventual roll out to all our stock; we will trial our own Direct Payment Pilot later in the year. Because the roll out of Universal Credit is still at a very slow pace this will enable us to change our ways of working with tenants in time for the large scale switch over to Universal Credit. “We manage our homes to ensure that they are in demand, maintained, modernised and adapted, as people’s needs change and by doing so we keep empty homes to a minimum to maximise the number of homes available and our revenue” The majority of our stock is in good condition and in areas that people want to live. Where we have older rehabilitated properties, for example in the Mount Pleasant area of Swansea, we have a specific strategy where we will dispose of those which are least fit for purpose and have a potentially high maintenance liability. We re-invest the proceeds in renovating and reconfiguring other stock in the area, for example converting properties from a number of bedsits into a smaller number of one bedroom flats. Our rents are affordable to households on low incomes, take account of the costs of managing and maintaining our houses, and enable us to service borrowings. We set, apportion and collect rents and service charges in a clear, fair and accountable manner, giving a say on the nature and quality of services we provide which are not covered by rent. 83.8 % of tenants consider that the rent they pay is good value for money, All Wales Tenant Survey 2014. However our stock is 1.1% (85p per week on average) over the target rent band set by Welsh Government due to historic factors caused by the rent benchmark regime because we have a high proportion of smaller properties, one and two bedroom flats, within our stock. We will therefore not be applying the full rent rise of 2.7% and are taking a proposal to our Board in January which considers different options we could follow to work towards rent convergence in accordance with the policy. The maximum financial impact of these options is estimated to be around £37k so not material in our overall budget. Our rent roll gives us adequate resource to manage and maintain our homes and service our borrowings. We consult with our tenants in relation to improvements which are service chargeable, and make sure that we provide improvements and services that they want at a reasonable cost. For example tenants support the installation of CCTV, parking barriers etc and highly value our caretaking service which is largely service chargeable. Housing younger people - We have also sought to respond to an increasing housing crisis amongst younger people who can no longer get on the housing ladder, we are one of the partners in the Welsh Housing Partnership joint venture and by the end of 2015 will have acquired an additional 284 houses that are predominantly let to younger people and families at intermediate rent. We are also at the early stages of establishing a lettings agency, again very much aimed at providing a rental product for younger people via a more responsibility run lettings agency with transparent costs and fair rents. 15 We repair and maintain homes in an efficient, timely and cost effective way. “We provide an efficient and effective responsive repairs service which meets the requirements of our tenants”, our tenants survey shows that our tenants are happy with our repairs service, 85.3% compared with the all Wales average are satisfied with our service of which 61.6%, compared with the average of 45%, are very satisfied. We are currently completing all our repair jobs in an average of 5.53 days. Our 2012 survey showed we were out performing our peer group less in relation to “attitude of workers” and “dirt and mess” less than in other areas of repairs. One of the factors influencing our decision to set up our own repairs team in 2013 is that this gives us better control over the work, informal feedback suggest that tenants like the Coastal repairs team and performance in attitude and quality of work has improved. We will be using automated texting to send a repairs survey to tenants immediately after a job has been completed. Building on the success of establishing a small multi-skilled team, we have also TUPE’d over our electrical repairs contractors, bringing the size of our repairs team to 21. We have recently put in place scheduling software integrated with our systems so that we can allocate work more effectively and we have also introduced a repairs app. which means that we can log repairs jobs in real time. Our maintenance team have been working with Vanguard on understanding systems thinking, being clear about purpose, fixing right first time and to the right quality at the time convenient for the tenant, and developing a new set of measures. We currently fix 77% of jobs first time. Due to the success of this team we will be employing four more team members. Existing stock and WHQS “We have deliverable and affordable plans for the lifetime maintenance and improvement of our houses and we deliver maintenance programmes efficiently and effectively”. We have met WHQS and 96.5% of our tenants are satisfied with the quality of their homes of which 59.5% are very satisfied, compared with the all Wales average of 82.9% and 44.6%, respectively. We manage replacement works flexibly and sympathetically; for example we will not carry out component replacements if tenants do not want them, typically older tenants may not want the disruption. We have a comprehensive and detailed asset and maintenance management strategy which was approved by our Board in November 2014; the document is included within the requested documents. Health and Safety Gas safety – during 2014 we changed the way we programme gas servicing to a 12 month ‘rolling’ cycle of services with the aim of commencing the service 4 weeks before it is due. There are also changes around the number of letters that are sent out before taking legal action and forming closer working relationships with the Housing department to try and achieve 100% compliance. We report gas servicing statistics to the Board regularly, our most recent report (December 2014) showed up-to date gas safety certificates at 99.62%. We have also just implemented a gas safety app which means our contractors can now update our system with the up to date CP12 (gas safety certificate) at the point the test is complete. For further details see our Gas Servicing Process provided as part of the documents requested. 16 Fire Safety - We have surveyed all of our schemes comprising communal areas and all have an up to date fire risk assessment (FRA). THE FRA has either been undertaken in-house (on smaller schemes or properties) or by external consultants for larger and more complex schemes. We are also working closely with Mid and West Wales Fire Service (MWWFS), and we regularly discuss schemes and scheme related risks with them. In 2013 Coastal partnered with MWWFS to work on new lettings. On new lets Coastal provide the Fire Service with tenants details and they arrange a home visit where they assess the tenant’s risk and discuss and offer fire safety advice to the new tenant. On some of our larger city centre schemes we have recently invited residents to meet the Fire Officer and Housing Manager who participate in a ‘Q & A’ session with them. The Officer also visits individual flats if tenants are vulnerable or have particular concerns. For further details see our Fire Safety Policy provided as part of the documents requested. Asbestos - All our schemes containing communal areas have had an asbestos survey undertaken on them and details are updated on our asbestos register. Our system allows us to tell staff or contractors where asbestos may be present on their work order so that they have this information before starting work. We will be undertaking asbestos surveys on our older properties, that is those built before 2000, and we have a rolling programme to complete this over the next 3 years. For further details see our Asbestos Policy provided as part of the documents requested. Legionella - We perform legionella surveys and have reports on all our schemes that contain centralised hot and cold water storage systems and we have upgraded the storage systems in some of our older schemes. For further details see our Legionella Policy provided as part of the documents requested. SUSTAINING COMMUNITIES We engage with others to enhance and maximise outcomes for our service users and the community. We know, from the results of our tenants’ survey, and asking the “what matters” question, that tenants believe that “neighbourhoods, where our properties are located, are attractive, well-maintained, safe places to live, where people want to settle and stay and provide a good quality of life for our tenants and their neighbours” Simply put our tenants think that we are a good landlord. Our community intervention project, described above, is about how we develop a whole organisational approach, working closely with our partners, to delivering proactive support services for our tenants and communities. Anti-Social Behaviour We are proactive in dealing with incidents that could develop into anti-social behaviour. These issues are dealt with by our Housing Managers quickly and holistically and not in isolation from other tenancy issues. Therefore there is no passing on of responsibility and issues are predominantly “nipped in the bud”. Seven tenancies ended in eviction in 2014 due to ASB issues. 17 Collaboration and Partnership Working Coastal tends to work in informal partnerships rather than formal collaborative arrangements. We engage in partnerships when by doing so we can better deliver our services to tenant, so a demand led approach, and we have a reputation for being an excellent partner to work with; “When asked about their experiences of working in partnership with Coastal Housing, interviewees were almost exclusively positive. The organisation was variously described by its partners as open, honest, helpful, accommodating, accessible, friendly, professional, flexible and supportive”, - excerpt from our stakeholders survey. For more on partnership working and stakeholders see “Coastal Housing Group Partners' Perception Study 2014” our stakeholder survey included within our documents requested. We engage with all relevant parties and organisations and embrace the principles of partnership working to enhance our delivery, and we work collaboratively, and form appropriate alliances to develop and deliver enhanced services, managing risks appropriately and protecting our housing assets. One recent example of engaging with others to enhance and maximise outcomes for our service users and the community is Coastal’s involvement with Walsingam and Keyline Builders Merchants to renovate a garden and develop vegetable patches, flowers beds and a patio area at the Willows, a scheme which supports people with learning disabilities. The vegetable patches and other new additions will provide the nine supported residents with a fantastic environment to grow plants and food, which in turn will support skill development. Our work supports the Local Authority in the delivery of its strategic housing role and we have a strong relationship with Local Authorities in the geographical areas where we operate, that enable us to find effective solutions to local issues, and improve outcomes for communities. For example Coastal has also worked with the local authority and Swansea Young Single Homelessness Project (SYSHP) to design a new supported living scheme in Gorseinnon for eight service users supported by SYSHP. Coastal has worked up the design and will be developing a bespoke scheme having helped SYSHP with their community consultation which was successful in being granted planning permission and winning round local residents despite some initial opposition. Community Decline We have a very small number of estates in the Neath Valley area which are remote. One of these is Bron Allt, Crynant an estate of 56 flats in the Dulais Valley. The flats are of a good quality, but there was very little demand. As a response we established a tenant management co-operative, there is now a good community spirit and flats are easier to let. We have agreed with the local authority that 2 bed flats in the scheme can be re-designated as 1 bed with a study to alleviate bedroom tax issues. LIFT Programme - Also in the Neath Valleys one of our schemes, Ynys Lee, is in one of the Communities First areas covered by the LIFT programme. As not all the flats are in demand in the scheme we are in the process of undertaking the business planning for changing the use of one of the blocks of flats on the estate to a biking centre to take advantage of Afan Forest Park’s mountain bike trails. We are being supported by CHC’s building enterprise programme in terms of business advice and are working closely with the local Communities First representative. We are currently forecasting that we will deliver training outcomes, work placement opportunities; preparation for full time employment opportunities and potentially 8 jobs, for details see Appendix 14. 18 City Living - We also create balanced urban communities; where we are engaged with urban regeneration, especially in Swansea City centre, we have developed in partnership with the local authority the “city living” scheme which aims to bring people back into work or ensure employment is more sustainable by facilitating easy access to city centre jobs. Health Strategies - We have developed the NPT Local Health Board Surgery, and more recently we have started to engage with the Chair and the senior team of ABM ULHB to explore opportunities for working together. The Health Board are particularly interested in using our knowledge and relationship with our communities to ask health related questions which will help them in delivering on preventative health initiatives and we will be meeting with them to discuss how we might progress this in early 2015. Managing a Housing Development Programme We build and renovate homes to a good quality - We build good quality housing which is sustainable and meets the long-term needs of the area in which it is to be built and of existing and intended residents; our proposals for new and renovated homes demonstrate financial viability and represent value for money now and in future. We consider risks and manage them to protect our core housing activity. Coastal has a large development programme in Swansea and Neath Port Talbot, is contributing to the WG agenda of increasing the supply of affordable housing, and has developed a specialism in complex mixed use urban regeneration schemes. We built 216 homes during 2013/14 and will build at least a further 139 by 2017. Pennant Homes built 13 homes for sale in 2013/14 and is committed to building a further 22 new homes by 2016. Our financial viability judgement states “The level of committed development included in the forecast is within our expectations of what the Group can achieve and is sufficiently funded. There is a track record of the Group delivering schemes of a similar size in the past to those currently being undertaken.” As a result of our successful track record Coastal is the preferred partner with the local authorities in Swansea, Neath Port Talbot and Bridgend town centre for their Vibrant and Viable Places and People programmes. Environmental Sustainability - Coastal took part in a Code 4 pilot for sustainable homes in building its scheme for over 55’s in SA1, Harbour Quay and we continue to work closely with Professor John Littlewood at Cardiff Metropolitan University in the department of ecological built environment research and enterprise. We make sure we create sustainable communities and our development decisions are taken in close liaison with our housing managers and also our Board who take a long term view of how we create and sustain communities, for example we will take into account factors such a proximity to schools, public transport routes etc when thinking about where we might acquire development sites. Our development department work closely with our finance team in terms of working up financial viability of schemes and ensuring also that we can meet the cashflow commitments of development spend as and when they fall due. 19 Our development department are currently working with Vanguard to look at development as an end to end system and how we can best learn from decisions we make about design, materials and components so that we “build right first time” and do not create medium or long term liabilities for our maintenance department. This review involves talking to tenants about what matters to them about how their homes are designed; and we are looking to embed tenant engagement as a natural part of the process in terms of project reviews, ensuring feedback is sought through meaningful dialogue and interaction with residents rather than sending out questionnaires. We will also use this information as evidence to feedback into any WG DQR review process. We provide fair and efficient services for owners We sell houses fairly and efficiently through Right-to-Buy/Right to acquire schemes and we provide fair, efficient and effective services to leasehold and shared ownership owners. In addition to our rented products, we offer a range of other housing options, including building for outright sale, Homebuy and leasehold schemes. All these options receive the same services at the same cost as our rented tenants. Right to Buy and Acquire - Applications to buy are dealt with by Pennant, our “for sales” subsidiary. Pennant determines whether the applicant is a qualifying person and the property, a qualifying one. Pennant will instruct the valuer and obtain details of service charges, if any, and long term maintenance and will make the offer in accordance with the regulations. We also have our own scheme “Disposal of Housing Stock to Sitting Tenants” for tenants who want to purchase their home but whose property is not covered by the right to buy or acquire schemes. This scheme sets out the criteria which have to be met for us to consent to the sale. Leasehold owners – We have two leasehold schemes in Swansea, Oaklands Court and Runnymede, with 25 and 32 leaseholders respectively, and we have established relationships with the residents of those schemes. Each of the leasehold schemes has a residents’ committee whose role is to advise us on the effectiveness of services; to determine how services should be delivered; to provide feedback on repairs; and to ensure that provision is cost effective and reasonable. We have also sold properties under the Right to Acquire, 20 of which are flats sold under lease Shared ownership properties - historically we provided houses for shared ownership, thirty of which remain and they are scattered throughout our stock. We also built and sold 80 shared ownership apartments for older people at Mariners Court in SA1. Homes for Sale - Pennant Homes is currently building houses for sale and Homebuy at Parc y Dderwen in Pontardawe, and Maes y Ffynnon near Cross Hands. 20 SUSTAINING OUR LOCAL ECONOMY We improve economic, social and environmental circumstances in the local community. We aim to promote community regeneration as well as physical and urban regeneration; we know that much of our stock is located in areas of high levels of poverty and multiple deprivation including some of the Communities First areas, and we believe that it is important for Coastal to play its part in alleviating poverty and inequality, and sustaining and growing the local economy as this will in turn benefit our tenants and our communities. Urban Regeneration and Commercial Property We are specialists in urban regeneration and our flagship regeneration scheme is Urban Village Swansea. As well as 76 social housing flats, including 10 wheelchair adapted units, we have built seven new retail units and circa 40,000 square foot of office space, part of which now provides the location for Coastal’s main office. We have been successful in attracting the Evening Post and the Community Interest Company, Indycube to the office space and we have successfully filled all the retail units, five on commercial terms and two with meanwhile use occupants. Our commercial property portfolio now stands at roughly £10m on our balance sheet and we have been successful at letting units at good covenants, therefore maintaining balanced sheet values. Supporting new local enterprises - As part of the High Street regeneration initiative we offer new independent local businesses favourable terms to bring activity and employment back to the area. For example we offer progressive rental structures and have adapted individual shop units in Urban Village to suit the needs of the particular shop owners such as Raspberry Cakery, where we helped with the fit out and even painted the ceiling pink for free. Jobs and training - We employed a Targeted Recruitment and Training Co-ordinator to ensure that we maximise the community benefits derived from development and maintenance contracts. We are one of the five housing associations that took part in the pilot of the Value Wales toolkit for measuring community benefit. To date for every £1 spent as a result of a contract we have created a return of £2 community benefit in the local economy. In 2014 we created 101 opportunities including placements, job opportunities and apprenticeships. Building on this success we have just created the post of Employability and Skills Manager which will more explicitly target opportunities for work experience, training and apprenticeships and job opportunities at firstly our tenants and secondly our local communities. This role will be supported by an Employability and Skills Advisor. We also employ a Community Inclusion Manager to address the more complex issues in our communities, for example taking forwards the work in the Afan valley LIFT area in our estate in Ynys Lee, and promoting our Tenancy Sustainability Scheme. 21 Innovative community engagement and support - In addition we are working with the artistic and social enterprise community in the High Street in Swansea as part of our creative cluster initiative linked to the Urban Village. We are lead partner, working in conjunction with Volcano Theatre, in the successful Ideas People and Places project located in the High Street which is funded by the Arts Council. We are also taking forwards an initiative to develop the old Iceland store in High Street as a community resource for which we have sourced free business advice support from Community Housing Cymru’s Building Enterprise scheme. SUSTAINING COASTAL We make sure our purpose is clear and we achieve what we set out to do knowing who does what and why, and we live public sector values, by conducting our affairs with honesty and integrity. How we align the organisation behind purpose and our values is described on page 5. Our values were elicited through a series of workshops with staff and Board. We demonstrate good governance through our behaviour - Our governing body exercises proper control over our activities, and acts in the best interest of the organisation and its tenants and service users. We are independent from other bodies and operate in line with an appropriate constitution. Governance Coastal’s Board are supportive of CHC’s code of governance and their Chief Executive has contributed towards it development. Coastal has put in place a governance strategy and improvement plan, which, amongst other things, has resulted in the formation of the Governance and Remuneration Committee. This committee meets quarterly and had its inaugural meeting in September 2014. Coastal has processes in place for the recruitment of new Board members and we recently recruited the new Treasurer through an open recruitment process. We have updated our skills matrix and believe that we have the right skills mix to meet the demands facing the organisation over the next few years. The Board is also diverse in terms of age and also gender, with seven female members and four male members; there are three tenant members one of whom is our Vice Chair. We undertook one to one reviews with all Board members in 2014 and developed a plan based on the feedback. Our committee structure enables the Chair of the Governance Committee to take the lead on Board performance and improvement. Board performance is crucially also about Board culture; as a result of a number of away days, strategic risk workshops and close involvement in the recruitment to a number of senior posts our Board has got to know each other well and is able to work as a cohesive team ensuring that everyone’s skills and capabilities are being fully utilised. There is a constructive relationship between the Chair and the Chief Executive and the Board and the wider management team, with an appropriate balance of challenge and support. 22 Board renewal has largely happened naturally due to the needs for new skills or members standing down for personal reasons. Currently are Board members have served on average circa four years. We have a Board succession policy in place which balances the need to refresh the Board whilst maintaining the necessary skills mix appropriate for managing our strategic risks. Our Board has responded to the recent consultations in relation to governance; Coastal has a track record of attracting a good standard of Board members including those with legal and financial skills and is not intending to pay Board members or have the Executive on the Board. Tenant involvement and participation in governance We currently have three tenant members on the Board. In line with our ethos of a more ‘person centred’ and ‘asset based approach, we see tenants as a wealth of resources with skills and talents to be tapped into and used to their full potential. Therefore we want to develop an approach that supports tenant participation by working with tenants who are naturally active in their communities. These are people who typically have the skills that we would be looking for, they know their local areas and communities well, have established contacts and links, and are interested and engaged in their neighbourhood. We want to create a “road-map” that gives these tenants a chance to get involved with Coastal in a number of ways which would give them an opportunity to gain experience of different facets of the organisation. This would be a platform that allows tenants to come together to really make a difference to a wide range of services. Tenants are ideally placed to identify gaps, opportunities, and duplication in service delivery, and contribute to service improvements. They could then use the experience of this involvement as a platform for applying to become a Tenant Board member. This bottom up, community led approach to tenant participation complements our systems thinking approach to involvement and creates a natural progression path within Coastal to Board membership. Group Structure - Our group structure supports the delivery of our purpose and efficiently manages resources for the benefit of tenants, service users and the wider community. We are explicit about interdependencies within the group, have clear and separate identities, control potential conflicts of interest and ensure our assets are not put at risk by subsidiaries. Diversification into other activities Coastal Housing Group has one subsidiary, Pennant Homes, which is a non-charitable RSL, through which the Group provides its sales and low cost home ownership; Pennant employs the staff engaged in direct sales. Pennant has its own Chair but the Boards are run coterminously. The relationship between the two organisations is clear; the activities of the subsidiary are managed so as not expose the Group to risk, and our financial information shows the activities of Pennant on a stand-alone basis as well as showing the results of the combined entity, so that the Board can ascertain that Pennant is viable in its own right and is not putting the assets of the parent at risk. 23 Public sector values We are open about what we do, publish balanced information about our activities and provide information on request, in an accurate, timely and efficient way unless there are justifiable reasons for withholding it. We publish a substantial and engaging tenants’ magazine, 220, that also goes to stakeholders. We publish a simple annual report with essential information about the organisation and comprehensive information is available on our website, www.coastalhosing.co.uk We make extensive use of our social media; we have 2,386 followers, and growing, on our active twitter account, @coastalhousing, and an active and informative Facebook account, https://www.facebook.com/CoastalHousing We regularly hold open events for the public and our new open plan offices are designed to welcome visitors. We welcome both positive and negative feedback and use every opportunity to learn from others. In 2012 we invited Academi to carry out a study of our communications via an “organisational raid”. Over twenty public sector managers spent three days interviewing staff and stakeholders, and came back with recommendations on how to improve communications which we have since adopted, for example creating more ways of communicating “company” messages, through staff away days, and the creation of the staff intranet. We held a successful stakeholders event in September 2014 to communicate the results of our stakeholder survey and our future plans, and are incorporating the feedback into our corporate plan. We have an open culture, with members of the public, tenants and stakeholders such as councillors able to speak directly to the people who are responsible for the area of work. They are also able to speak to senior staff directly. We have good systems of information and are able to retrieve information quickly. We are also part of the All Wales Continuous Improvement Community, run by Welsh Governments Academi, and will be hosting a ‘Learn and Share’ event in May or June for other public and private sector organisations to give them an insight into our latest systems thinking initiatives. Equality and diversity Our activities and services reflect the diversity of the communities where we operate, are free from discrimination and promote equality of opportunity. Our current community intervention and new way of working means that we understand who our customers are and what matters to them. This means that we are able to provide accessible and appropriate services and resources, individually tailored to meet people’s needs within the communities we serve. Our communities are designed to accommodate households of different sizes, ages and economic status. New developments have a range of property types. For example at Cwmfelin we have provided one and two bedroom flats, bungalows for disabled people and two, three and four bedroom houses. Some supported accommodation is provided in the flats, where people who are wheelchair disabled are supported by Gwalia. 24 Where we let to people in work their take home pay is below the average. In Swansea in 2013/14, 53% of households housed in general needs housing were in employment and their average take home pay per week was £279 against an overall average in Swansea of £427 per week. In Neath Port Talbot the 40% of general needs tenants were in work and their take home pay was on average £259. We are learning that significant numbers of these people, whilst in work, may be in more financial difficulty and have problems with budgeting, than tenants in receipt of full housing benefit. This is because of the unpredictability of their incomes caused by zero hours contracts or periods with no work. We are therefore able to put services in place to support this group of tenants. We ensure that we “reflect the diversity of the communities”, by for example measuring the lettings made to BME households. We know that there is a demand, particularly from Asian families for houses in and around the City Centre and we have converted some HMOs which we no longer required, so that they are suitable for occupation by large Asian households. Over the past 3 years over 3% of allocations were made to BME households. We work with a number of support organisations and provide flats and houses in the communities in which people wish to live; where they feel safe; and where they can receive family support Equality Impact Assessment - We are committed to ensuring that the way we work does not discriminate against anybody. Coastal is a member of Tai Pawb and our Head of HR has recently joined their Board. Because equality impact assessments generally focus on assessing policies, and Coastal is not a policy led organisation, we are working with Tai Pawb to develop a methodology to perform equality impact assessments in a systems thinking environment. In other words we want to be able to assess what actually happens, rather than what a policy says should happen; we will be looking at how we provide landlord services on the ground, especially focussing on how we deliver “what matters” and how we respond to the “good life” question. We treat the Welsh and English languages on the basis of equality. We are able to provide our services in Welsh and English. We have Welsh speakers available among the staff across departments and we hold a register of Welsh speaking staff including what level their ability to read, write, speak and understand Welsh is. We run continuous Welsh lessons for staff and we are supporting some of our staff to undertake exams this year. We are surveying our tenants to make sure that we have up to date information to tell us what language they choose to communicate in and what their preferences are for written and verbal communication. Leadership, culture and staff engagement - Our culture supports the delivery of our purpose and outcomes, innovates, seeks new ideas and evaluates learning from others. Good governance also depends on leadership, clarity of purpose and engagement of staff in delivering our purpose and outcomes. Focus on purpose is described in pages 5-6 above. With clear purpose our culture empowers staff to take ownership and try new things to deliver better. Staff are encouraged to learn through the work and through engagement with the sector and by application of continuous improvement methodology supported by the Vanguard method, for example: 25 ‘Check’: The What and Why of Current Performance What are we here to do? – what matters to tenants How do we know if we have done it well? (employees make decisions based on knowledge) How do we currently do it and why do we do it that way? Applying the Vanguard method ensures that “the whole organisation is aligned to delivery of its purpose”, can work innovatively across boundaries and “has the capacity skills and tools to deliver successfully” Coastal describes itself as an innovative and learning organisation and supports our staff to innovate, try things out and not worry about the fact that things will occasionally go wrong, but rather to learn from it; a no blame culture. Our stakeholders, in the 2014 survey, support this view with the word most commonly used to describe Coastal being “innovative”. Coastal is open to learning from other organisations, for example we visited Bromford Group to learn about “the Bromford Deal” and we visited Wales and West and hosted and visit from Wales and West to talk about their directly employed repairs service and job scheduling, applying systems thinking to the development process, housing services, welfare reform and arrears management, and implications for management behaviour of working with systems thinking. We also carry out informal benchmarking from time to time with our peers, for example in relation to maintenance performance. We have participated in the Times 100 Best Companies to work for survey for the last three years and have just received our results for 2014. We have retained our two star status with a marginally improved score from the previous year. We will be analysing our results and put a programme of workshops in place to improve further where we have strength and address any areas where we are less strong. We are a financially sound and viable business. We are adequately resourced to meet current and future business and financial commitments. Our financial viability judgement for 2013-14 is a pass. The document states that “Our judgement of the Group’s financial viability remains unchanged from last year. The Group has adequate resources to meet its current and forecasted future business and financial commitments. We have a robust financial management framework. Financial management at Board level - Key financial reports such as the management accounts are produced monthly with the quarterly accounts being presented to and approved by Board. These show a detailed variance analysis against budget and a forecast spend to the financial year end. The quarterly management accounts pack is a comprehensive document; the supporting pages to the accounts show what the factors influencing the numbers are through a combination of further numerical analysis and a clear narrative. This is an evolving document to make sure it contains adequate detail for the Board to understand the financial position and performance of the Group, what the risks are and how they are being managed. 26 We have run financial training sessions with our Board to help them to understand and interrogate the information. We also have people with specific financial skills on the Board, our Treasurer is a qualified accountant with experience in the not for profit and supported housing sector, and the Chair of our Governance and Remuneration Committee, the Chief Executive of Swansea Building Society, has extensive experience in financial services and treasury management. Overview of tools for monitoring financial performance - For measuring and monitoring financial performance, viability and liquidity over the short to medium term the Group relies primarily on management accounts, cashflow forecast including projected gearing forecast over a three year period, lenders covenant compliance reporting, treasury reporting and the 5 year business plan. Asset Register - Coastal recognises the importance of an up to date asset register. The Register ensures that all the assets of the Group are identified and listed. In addition it is reconciled to Land Registry title records in order to ensure that changes which arise from for example charging property as security for release of private finance, or releasing surplus security from lender’s portfolios, are properly reflected. Title plans are also embedded into the Register in order to facilitate easy identification. Because the register is integrated into Coastal’s rents system, other information such as tenure type can also be reported at the same time, making the register a very powerful management tool. The valuations which arise as part of loan agreements are fed into the Register in order to provide a comprehensive valuation of the Group’s property. Over the longer term the Group uses the 30 year plan to inform our views about borrowing and capital and interest repayment profiles and the impact of the development programme over the medium to longer term. Risk Management We can identify and appraise risks and prudently manage those risks. Our strategic risk register, strategy and policy are contained in the requested documents list. The Group’s Board and management team annually take part in a Strategic Risk Workshop facilitated by Zurich Risk. The results of this exercise are contained in the Strategic Risk Management Report. As a result the Group has identified key high level risks which if unmanaged could impact on the Group’s ability to deliver its strategic priorities. The current risks, in order of perceived risk, are: 1. Welfare reform – particularly the inability to identify vulnerable tenancies and support and sustain tenancies 2. Local authority reorganisation 3. Engaging in merger activity, either forced to step in, or through restructures, which jeopardises our own business 4. Failing to regenerate the High Street effectively 5. Inability to deliver the product mix as per the development strategy 27 6. The Regulator does not understand our way of working and forms negative view of Coastal 7. Failure to demonstrate good Governance to the Regulator 8. Maintaining longstanding stakeholder relationships with a virtually new management team in place 9. Delivering refreshed vision and direction for next 3-5 years and having the right management team with the skills to deliver 10. Shortage of free, uncharged, security 11. Data protection failure 12. Health and safety failure in relation to gas, fire, asbestos, legionella 13. Getting whole organisation understanding of the need to balance social purpose with commercial activity and skills 14. Risks of not ensuring developments are sustainable and built in the right locations to the right design – change in demographics and markets 15. Inability to recover from a major incident Strategies for mitigating identified risks - The Group actively focuses on managing down these strategic risks by considering current performance and looking to make strategic interventions to deliver sustainable performance improvements. Our progress is reported to Board on a six monthly basis, and the detailed report prepared for our November 2014 Board meeting, is included in the list of documents as requested. Sector risks facing Housing Associations in Wales Sector risks identified are financial and non-financial. Financial risks - The following risks have been addressed by the Regulator as part of the financial viability judgment process, income (including Supported Housing), liabilities (existing debt and new debt), accounting issues (new standards), costs, pension costs, and differential inflation rates. In Coastal these risks are managed down and controlled by the robust financial management framework described above. Non-financial risks – Our approach to these is described within the assessment. Hyperlinks to the relevant sections are provided below: 1. Governance 2. Risk Management 3. Welfare reform – but also see throughout the assessment as have a whole organisation approach to tackling tenancy sustainability issues caused by welfare reform 4. Managing a Housing Development Programme 28 5. Diversification into other activities - we have a “for sales subsidiary” Pennant– see Diversification into other activities – we also have a commercial property portfolio, see Urban Regeneration and Commercial Property 6. Existing stock and WHQS 7. Community Decline 8. Over-stretch and stagnation – we are successfully managing the challenges of a large development programme – see Managing a Housing Development Programme – Stagnation is not considered a risk 9. Service risks: Welfare reform – see above Health and Safety sections on fire, gas, asbestos, and legionella Tenant participation, engagement, accountability – these are referenced throughout the document, also see Our community intervention project, SUSTAINING TENANCIES, and Tenant involvement and participation in governance See Existing stock and WHQS for delivery of WHQS, quality of work and customer care Our waiting list, lettings and approach to homelessness – through to p14 Anti-Social Behaviour Domestic abuse / violence Equality and diversity 10. Collaboration and Partnership Working Value for money - We achieve value for money in delivery and procurement, to make best use of our own and public resources. As set out in our corporate plan Coastal aims to sustain tenancies, sustain communities, sustain our local economy and sustain Coastal. Coastal has a “Value for Money Strategy”, which directly supports our corporate objectives. Value for money savings will be used to: reinvest in sustaining tenancies and service improvements, reinvest in our stock, reinvest in our communities and local economy, reduce financing costs of delivering new homes, and make capital repayments on loans, and by doing so sustain Coastal. Value for money methodology - The drive to pursue and achieve value for money is both explicit and implicit in the way we work at Coastal. Achieving value for money is not something that is considered separately from the day job, it is an integral part of it. In practice a number of interlinked practices support the delivery of value for money: 1. lean systems thinking, 2. engaged empowered staff and an entrepreneurial culture, 3. a collaborative governance model, 4. pro-active relationships with stakeholders, 5. procurement, and 6. treasury management For full details of our Value for Money Strategy and Value for Money Outcomes see Appendix 15. 29 Financial Probity Our activities demonstrate the highest standards of financial probity. Financial probity is about ensuring that financial transactions are conducted in a principled, legal, prudent, effective and transparent manner. Measures in place to ensure this are the Association’s Governance Structure and the oversight of the main Board, the Finance and Development Committee, the Governance and Remuneration Committee and the Audit Committee, the Associations Code of Conduct which governs the overall conduct of Board members and staff, the Group’s Financial Regulations and Standing Orders and underlying policies and procedures, contracting with internal auditors, to confirm that these standards and systems are in place and are working as intended, and specifically maintaining the Association’s Audit Committee which receives these reports. Our external auditors attend Board meetings at the beginning of each audit to discuss audit plans and audit risks directly with members, and when the audit is complete to report extensively on their audit findings and present and discuss the audited accounts. Our internal audit plans are designed to focus on risk and operational performance. DG on behalf of Coastal - 30 January 2015 30