Issue - meetings
Commissioning of Resettlement Support Service (formally a Refugee Integration and Support Service)
Meeting: 10/07/2023 - Cabinet (Item 22)
Additional documents:
- Resettlement Support Business Case Part One V1.4, item 22 PDF 215 KB
- EIA Resettlement Support SIGNED, item 22 PDF 125 KB
Minutes:
Councillor Chris
Penberthy (Cabinet Member for Housing, Co-operative Development and
Communities) introduced the report and highlighted;
a)
Plymouth had been designated a dispersal City for Asylum Seekers
under the 1999 Immigration and Asylum Act and had a proud history
of accepting and settling refugees from before the act and
since;
b)
The services offered by PCC helped those arriving in Plymouth to
navigate their way through the cultural and organisational systems,
enabling them to resettle, connect and become part of the city in a
positive way;
c)
Many refugees experienced traumatic experiences in their home
countries and in their journeys to their new country of residence
as well as during the process of gaining status and it was
important to improve legal support, access to education and
employment opportunities, and improve housing conditions;
d)
The report recommended the approval for the recommissioning of the
previous Refugee Integration Service to support the smooth
resettlement and integration of people with refugee status into the
community;
e)
The voluntary and community sector organisations across the city
provided integral support;
f) There were approximately 350 asylum seekers living in Home Office commissioned dispersal accommodation at any given time in Plymouth and that was increasing.
Emma Crowther (Interim Head of Commissioning) added;
g)
The service was jointly funded by Community Connections, Strategic
Commissioning and NHS Devon Integrated Care Board and would take an
asset-based approach to provide help and support with access to
housing, improved English language skills, increased
self-sufficiency via employment and community
integration;
h)
The work would also contribute towards community cohesion within
Plymouth and support other organisations to become more culturally
aware;
i)
The service would learn from what had and hadn’t worked in
the past and reflect the current migration patterns and the latest
legislative requirements.
The Cabinet agreed to:
1.
Approve the business case, including the proposed procurement
process for the resettlement support service to ensure continuity
of provision of an integration and resettlement service;
2.
Delegate to the Strategic Director for People the authority to
award contract(s) where they would not already have the authority
to do so;
3. Ensure providers evidence co-production and co-delivery at the heart of the service, with local providers, and those with lived experience, having a clear voice woven through both delivery and management of the service.