Decision details

Crisis and Resilience Fund 2026/27

Decision Maker: Director of Finance

Decision status: Recommendations Approved

Is Key decision?: No

Is subject to call in?: No

Decision:

That the Crisis and Resilience Fund for 2026/27 be allocated as follows:

 

Funding Strand

Allocation 2026/27 (£)

Proportion of total funding

What does this include?

Council administration

£109,272

4.37%

Officer capacity to administer crisis payments

Crisis Provision

£1,446,168

57.85%

Cash payments administered by Torbay Council £643,449

 

Foodbanks and social supermarkets - £354,969 (with requirements to provide data on use of the schemes)

 

Supermarket vouchers distributed via Family Hubs £80,000

 

White Goods/Home Essentials Replacement to be co-ordinated by partners £80,000

 

Council Tax reduction for households in immediate arrears £287,750

Resilience services

£355,000

14.20%

Age UK Torbay capacity (50+ includes hoarding support to prevent homelessness) £105,457

 

Citizens Advice capacity (working age and families) £110,201

 

Torbay Advice Network capacity (complex mental health/autism) £26,092

 

Employability support and mentoring £70,750

 

Mental wellbeing support where linked to financial crisis £42,500

Community Co-ordination

£135,000

£5.40%

Warm spaces winter 2026/27 £30,000

 

Community Helpline*/Triage conversations £50,000

 

VCSE application support (to assist with crisis payment and benefit applications) £25,000

 

Food Alliance co-ordinator* £30,000

Housing related

£454,536

18.18%

Housing payments £314,536

 

SWEP (to include onward signposting and referral to wrap around services £15,000

 

Rent in advance and deposits for homeless residents £85,000

Emergency furniture/white goods for residents moving from temporary accommodation £40,000

Totals

£2,499,976

100%

 

 

Reasons for the decision:

To meet the grant restrictions and to begin shifting from crisis support to helping improve the resilience of Torbay residents who are experiencing challenges, whether through homelessness, debt, food poverty or other issues.

 

Alternative options considered:

Torbay has well-established relationships with partners such as Age UK and Citizens Advice.  The Torbay Community Helpline and multi-agency VCSE partnership behind it offers proven, established infrastructure which de-risks the transition from crisis support to resilience.  Utilising partners provides additional data around residents’ broader life circumstances and supports resource being targeted appropriately.

 

Therefore, a partnership delivery model was proposed which ensures that a crisis payment becomes the entry point to holistic support, and long-term, sustainable solutions for people who are struggling.  Enabling a move from a crisis driven model to a model which supports informed and conversations to understand what is happening in a person’s life and directs them to a range of targeted support to improve their longer-term resilience.

Implementation:

This decision will be implemented immediately.

Information:

In April 2026, the Household Support Fund (HSF) was superseded by the Crisis and Resilience Fund (CRF).  CRF will run over three financial years from 2026/27 to 2028/29.  Torbay Council is responsible for the administration of the scheme throughout the three years.

 

The Council’s CRF allocation is £2,500,000.  Discretionary Housing Payments are subsumed within the CRF, renamed as ‘Housing Payments’, which need to be accounted for separately; after deducting these, a balance of £2,185,439 remains.  Of this amount, the Council may allocate up to 5% (£109,272) towards administration costs leaving £2,076,167 available for targeted service delivery.

 

The Council’s approach is to ensure that all proposed allocations comply with the required grant conditions whilst beginning to shift from providing crisis support to helping improve the resilience of our residents who are experiencing challenges, whether through homelessness, debt, food poverty or other issues.

 

The Council must administer the CRF to cover 4 strands:

 

Crisis Provision – a cash-first approach is recommended in the guidance, but vouchers, and goods in-kind may also be used.  Councils must adopt a person centred, needs based, trauma informed approach, with multiple application routes.  Crisis provision must act as a gateway to wraparound support.

 

Resilience Services – wraparound support which seeks to build financial resilience and address underlying causes of crisis. This includes advice, information, and advocacy around income maximisation, budgeting, debt management, and wider issues which may lead to financial hardship.

 

Community Coordination – strengthening local support networks and referral pathways to ensure that individuals access the right support which prevents, reduces, or delays the need for further statutory intervention.

 

Housing Payments – replaces Discretionary Housing Payments for Housing Benefit/Universal Credit housing cost claimants.

 

The transition from HSF to CRF represents a significant shift and opportunity, moving away from temporary relief to cultivating resilience within communities which will reduce dependency and improve outcomes in the longer term.

Interests and Nature of Interests Declared:

None

Publication date: 22/05/2026

Date of decision: 19/05/2026