Government has ‘long way to go’ to satisfy asylum backlog purpose

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fforts to clear the asylum backlog have to considerably enhance to satisfy Rishi Sunak’s goal of coping with older instances by the tip of the yr, a spending watchdog mentioned.

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The National Audit Office (NAO) questioned whether or not the plans have been sustainable, saying it might take 2,200 selections on instances every week to clear the backlog by the tip of the yr – however throughout April simply 1,130 weekly selections have been made.

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The NAO estimated that £3.6 billion was spent on asylum help in 2022-23, virtually double the quantity within the earlier yr.

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In December, the Prime Minister pledged to clear the backlog of round 92,601 “legacy” instances which had been within the system as of the tip of June 2022.

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The NAO mentioned: “The Home Office is starting to reduce the backlog of ‘legacy’ claims, from more than 100,000 at the beginning of July 2022 to about 77,000 by the end of April 2023.

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“However, to achieve this it has decided to abandon its ambition to make decisions on ‘newer’ claims within six months, meaning the backlog of ‘newer’ claims is growing.

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“The Home Office estimates the number of ‘newer’ claims awaiting a decision will increase from almost 61,000 in April 2023 to around 84,000 by the end of December 2023.”

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In whole, some 173,000 folks referring to 134,000 claims have been ready for an preliminary asylum resolution on the finish of March.

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The NAO added that “some senior Home Office staff described how pressure to deliver on short-term political priorities made it hard to focus on the longer-term strategy”.

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The watchdog mentioned the enterprise case for the Home Office’s asylum and safety transformation programme package deal of reforms was “based on a range of highly uncertain assumptions”.

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NAO chief Gareth Davies mentioned: “Despite recent progress, the asylum and protection transformation programme is a long way from meeting government’s ambitions to reduce the cost and improve the quality of the service.

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“The Home Office has nearly doubled the number of decisions made each week, although it is unclear whether it will be enough to remove the backlog of older asylum decisions by the end of 2023. To date, the programme is not on track to achieve the expected benefits.

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“The changes the Home Office plans to implement through the programme are necessary, but not on their own sufficient, to address the pressures in the asylum system.

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“To achieve value for money, the Home Office needs to better co-ordinate and manage the impacts of these changes, otherwise the department risks moving backlogs and cost pressures to other parts of the system – including local authorities – rather than resolving them.”

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The Government is working continuous to cut back the asylum backlog and ship cheaper, extra orderly alternate options to resort lodging

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Dame Meg Hillier, Labour chairwoman of the Commons Public Accounts Committee, mentioned: “The backlog of 173, 000 people waiting for an asylum claim decision costs taxpayers billions every year.

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“The asylum and protection transformation programme was supposed to make asylum decisions quicker and sort out accommodation costs, but Government still has a very long way to go to deliver on its promises to abolish the backlog of initial decisions.

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“Unless the Home Office better understands and manages how the asylum system works on the ground, the programme will shunt issues to other areas by increasing the number of appeals and removals, and further breach the trust of asylum seekers and the public.”

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The Home Office insisted it was on observe to clear the legacy backlog by the tip of the yr.

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“The Government is working non-stop to reduce the asylum backlog and deliver cheaper, more orderly alternatives to hotel accommodation,” a Home Office spokesman mentioned.

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“As the NAO acknowledges, we have already doubled the number of caseworkers and cut the legacy backlog by 20%, but we know more must be done to bring the asylum system back into balance.

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“The Illegal Migration Bill will stop the boats by detaining those who come to the UK illegally, and swiftly returning them to their home country or a safe third country.”

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Shadow immigration minister Stephen Kinnock mentioned: “The Conservatives have lost control of the asylum backlog, which has risen from 19,000 in 2010 to an astonishing 172,000 today at an astronomical cost to the taxpayer.

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“Today’s NAO report shows that the cost of the asylum system last year was even greater than previously reported – almost doubling to an astonishing £3.6 billion.

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“The NAO is right to highlight how the Prime Minister’s focus on the ‘legacy claims’ is in essence a red herring, and that the actual backlog is likely to see an influx of another 23,000 claims by December.”

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