Vulnerable adults in Somerset aided by £2.5m housing plan
- Published
A £2.5million project will provide homes in Somerset for adults with autism or learning disabilities.
Somerset County Council has been working with housing providers and NHS England to provide the three new supported living sites.
Councillors unanimously approved plans for sites at Bishop's Lydeard, Minehead and Yeovil last week.
They also pledged that similar schemes will be considered in the future.
Councillor Mandy Chilcott, cabinet member for resources, said: "I'm really pleased that these facilities are dotted around the county.
"It's really important for people to be supported near their families.
"I'm sure moving forward that we'll be looking to do more than this."
The homes aim to provide adults with complex needs on-site care while retaining a degree of independence, the Local Democracy Reporting Service, external said.
The Bishop's Lydeard project will see seven one and two-bedroom bungalows built by firm LiveWest off Taunton Road for affordable rents.
It is hoped they will be available by June.
In Minehead, up to seven individuals will be accommodated within the former Kingsway Guest House after Purpose Social Homes Ltd was granted planning permission last year.
And in Yeovil, a five-bed bungalow scheme will be provided on The Avenue for people "stepping down" from a hospital stay, with leases of up to two years at affordable rent levels being offered before they move on to more permanent accommodation.
While the precise location of this scheme is unclear, the county council has indicated a care provider will be appointed shortly, with the facility expected to be open by May 2023.
The new facilities will be run on five-year contracts by care providers, with the three contracts being worth a combined total of £2,569,960.
Councillor David Huxtable, cabinet member for adult social care, said moving to the new unitary authority in April 2023 would enable more schemes like this to be delivered.
He said: "We have a lack of suitable supported allocation for people with learning difficulties and autism.
"We do look forward to the unitary authority so we can have a more joined-up system, which will help with the planning going through."
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- Published15 March 2022
- Published2 February 2022
- Published2 February 2022