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Season’s Greetings and a Quick Round Up from the Monday Discussion Group

Posted on 21/12/2025 by Malcolm

Season’s greetings from everyone at Visionary Network and the Revenues and Benefits Discussion Group. As we wrap up for Christmas, we wanted to share a quick look back at the themes we have covered recently, and a look ahead to what is coming next.

Over the past few weeks, our sessions and briefing pack have tracked a familiar thread: rising demand, tighter governance expectations, and a steady shift towards more complex administration across revenues, benefits and wider corporate services.

On council funding and local government resilience, we looked at the emerging shape of the 2026 to 2027 settlement and the continuing debate about fairness, deprivation and distribution. Alongside that, we discussed the practical reality for billing and contact teams when councils face unusually large council tax rises, including the knock-on effects for Council Tax Reduction, hardship, complaints and recovery capacity. We also covered where governance and process can go wrong, for example the legal error that forced a council to refund second homes premiums, and what that means for decision timetables, scrutiny and audit trails.

We spent time on economic and labour market signals, including easing inflation and what that does, and does not, mean for household pressure and arrears risk. We also discussed rising youth unemployment and the implications for employment support, skills pathways and how national policy choices can either widen access to entry level work or unintentionally narrow it.

On welfare reform and system design, we explored several stories that share a common lesson: complexity drives cost, errors and stress. That included the carer’s allowance overpayments crisis and what it tells us about guidance, letters, compassionate recovery practice and organisational culture. We also discussed the government’s child poverty strategy, the end of the two-child limit, and the administrative implications of policy change flowing through to local safety nets. On fraud and error, we covered DWP’s updated approach to Universal Credit redeclarations and the operational trade-offs between prevention activity, customer friction and service standards.

We also looked at capacity and delivery challenges beyond revenues and benefits, where they still land on council operations. That included early SEND intervention through Family Hubs, the growing importance of digital leadership in local government reform, and the case for treating systems integration as a whole service change programme rather than just a technology project. We also reviewed early lessons from Scotland’s Adult Disability Payment compared with PIP, focusing on what appears to improve claimant experience, and what still creates pressure in reviews, redeterminations and administrative workload.

Finally, we kept an eye on governance, transparency and public trust: FOI enforcement and backlogs; anti-corruption expectations in procurement; grant and charity governance risks; and internal fraud cases that highlight the need for clear HR controls and management practice, especially in hybrid working environments.

Looking ahead, the discussion group returns on Monday 12 January.

We are also running a practical series of AI training sessions in February. These will be 60-to-90-minute online sessions, focused on safe, day to day use in revenues and benefits. We will cover things like writing clearer reports and letters, handling enquiries, supporting staff workflow, improving stakeholder communications, designing take up activity, and using data more effectively, with a strong emphasis on governance and guardrails. To register your interest, email info@visionarynetwork.co.uk.

Thank you for the energy, generosity and good sense you bring to the discussions. Wishing you a Merry Christmas, and a peaceful, healthy New Year.

The Independent Revenues & Benefits Discussion Group continues to provide a vital forum for expert analysis, shared learning, and open debate at a time of significant policy flux.

For more information or to join future sessions, contact Malcolm Gardner at Visionary Network. info@visionarynetwork.co.uk

Please note that the handout contains additional slides covering other items of interest in the news and job adverts, which are provided in partnership with Business Smart Solutions (https://www.businesssmartsolutions.co.uk/).

Files to download

IR&BDG 20251222Download
36.37_HO_JACU-Strategy_v12b_FINAL_WEBDownload
AJC-Addressing-Disadvantage-Final-Report-FINALDownload
Delivering-dignityDownload
Localis-Connected-Devolution-A5-Report-NOV2025-PRF02Download
Looking-to-2050-Future-of-local-government-in-EnglandDownload
PACDownload

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