<p>Social Care Funding </p>

Part of 2. 2. Questions to the Cabinet Secretary for Health, Well-being and Sport – in the Senedd at 2:56 pm on 29 March 2017.

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Photo of Rebecca Evans Rebecca Evans Labour 2:56, 29 March 2017

Well, the majority of funding, as you’ll know, provided by the Welsh Government to local authorities is unhypothecated through the revenue support grant, so that does give local authorities the freedom to spend this funding according to their own priorities and their own needs that they’ve found. But, it’s important to recognise that specific grants do have a role to play in ensuring that new priorities are resourced and given sufficient importance in delivery terms. So, I’d refer you particularly to the additional £10 million funding that we’re providing to local authorities to meet the challenges of the national living wage. This will be allocated to local authorities using the standard spending assessment formula, but half of that grant will be made available upon commitment of local authorities to the terms, grants and conditions, and then the second payment will be contingent on our confidence that the grant is delivering its objectives. So, meeting the pressures that the national living wage put on the sector is extremely important in terms of giving us a workforce that is sustainable and that is well paid, well remunerated and respected and that eventually will lead to a career that people want to come into, where they see career progression. Obviously, the work that Social Care Wales will be taking forward from Monday as of next week will be important in that, as will the registration of domiciliary care workers from 2020.