The Asylum Transformation Programme
Public Accounts Committee
Closed
Inquiry
In 2021-22 the UK asylum system cost £2.1 billion and spending has increased rapidly in the last few years. The effectiveness of the asylum system depends on well-functioning case-working at the Home Office to support timely and accurate decisions. Making decisions quickly, fairly and accurately is important for the wellbeing …
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8
Recommendations
15
Conclusions
1
Report
1
Oral session
2
Letters
1
Event
Activity timeline 6 events
14 Feb
2024
2024
15 Jan
2024
2024
27 Oct
2023
2023
Report published
19 Sep
2023
2023
10 Jul
2023
2023
Oral evidence
10 Jul
2023
2023
Formal meeting (oral evidence session) · The Grimond Room, Portcullis House
Oral evidence sessions 1 session
10 Jul 2023
View on parliament.uk
The Asylum Transformation Programme
Abi Tierney · HM Passport Office and UK Visas and Immigration
Simon Ridley · Home Office
Sir Matthew Rycroft KCMG CBE · Home Office
Reports 1 report · click to expand
| Title | HC No. | Published | Items | Response |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Seventy-Sixth Report - The Asylum Transformation Programme | HC 1334 | 27 Oct 2023 | 23 | Responded |
Recommendations & Conclusions
7 results
3
Conclusion
Rejected
Seventy-Sixth Report - The Asylum …
Set out clear timeline to reduce and cease using hotels for asylum accommodation
The Home Office does not have a credible plan for ending the use of hotels to accommodate people waiting for a decision and the unacceptable cost this creates. The Home Office spent £2.3 billion on hotels in 2022–23 to accommodate …
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Government Response
The government disagrees with the recommendation, explaining that the use of hotels was a short-term measure and a plan is in place to reduce reliance, including closing over 50 hotels by January 2024. However, it states that modelling future demand is complex and uncertain, thus not committing to a specific date for ceasing hotel use.
HM Treasury
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5
Conclusion
Rejected
Seventy-Sixth Report - The Asylum …
Set out detailed measures to identify vulnerabilities and manage risks for asylum seekers sharing accommodation
The Home Office does not have adequate safeguards to protect against the risks of vulnerable people having to share accommodation with strangers. The Home Office has written to councils informing them that the number of people staying in hotels will …
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Government Response
The government disagrees with the recommendation, explaining that it already has a comprehensive safeguarding approach in place, with existing strategies, trained staff, collaboration with stakeholders, robust processes, and a Safeguarding Hub to identify vulnerabilities and manage risks for asylum seekers.
HM Treasury
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6
Recommendation
Rejected
Seventy-Sixth Report - The Asylum …
Publish updated business case for asylum transformation programme, clarifying intentions and impacts
The Home Office failed to convince us that it understands the full implications of its programme on the wider asylum system, affecting the ability of others to plan. The current business case for the asylum and protection transformation programme is …
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Government Response
The government disagrees with the recommendation, stating it does not intend to publish the business case as it is not standard practice. Instead, it offers to hold a private meeting with the Committee once HM Treasury approves the business case, which is anticipated by Summer 2024.
HM Treasury
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14
Conclusion
Rejected
Seventy-Sixth Report - The Asylum …
Home Office delayed updated asylum business case until after legacy backlog clearance date.
The Home Office told us it would include a wider range of costs and benefits in the next iteration of its business case, which it plans to produce early in 2024.36 It had previously told the NAO it would update …
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Government Response
The government rejects the committee's implied recommendation to publish the business case, stating it is not standard practice, but offers a private meeting to discuss it once HM Treasury approval is received by Summer 2024.
HM Treasury
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15
Conclusion
Rejected
Seventy-Sixth Report - The Asylum …
Home Office significantly behind targets for reducing costly asylum seeker hotel accommodation.
In 2022–23, the Home Office spent £2.3 billion on hotels to accommodate people waiting for a decision on their asylum claim and in April 2023, there were 48,000 people waiting for a decision in hotels.39 In his statement to the …
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Government Response
The government rejects the committee's implied criticism regarding hotel usage and bed provision, detailing a plan to reform asylum accommodation, reduce reliance on hotels by closing over 50 by January 2024, and continually review modelling assumptions.
HM Treasury
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18
Conclusion
Rejected
Seventy-Sixth Report - The Asylum …
Home Office lacks clear plan and timeline for ending asylum hotel accommodation.
The Home Office said it is very difficult to estimate how many people will claim asylum because of uncertain migration patterns, but that it has low, medium and high scenarios that it uses for planning purposes.53 When we asked the …
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Government Response
The government rejects the committee's implied recommendation for better planning, stating it has a clear plan to reform asylum accommodation, including closing over 50 hotels by January 2024, and will continue to review modelling assumptions despite inherent uncertainties.
HM Treasury
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22
Recommendation
Rejected
Seventy-Sixth Report - The Asylum …
Home Office lacks clear, detailed plans for ensuring safety in shared asylum hotel rooms.
When we asked the Home Office how it was ensuring the safety of the people it is pairing up to share a hotel room, it was unable to clearly articulate its plans and said that there “might be people for …
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Government Response
The government rejected the recommendation, stating it disagrees and that its existing safeguarding strategy, which includes staff training, collaboration with statutory agencies, and a Safeguarding Hub, already ensures the welfare and safety of asylum seekers.
HM Treasury
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Correspondence 2 letters
15 Jan 2024
Correspondence from Sir Matthew Rycroft KCMG CBE, Permanent Secretary, Home Office, re following the publication of the Seventy-Sixth Report of Session 2022-23 on the Asylum Transformation Programme, dated 9 January 2024
Parliament page
19 Sep 2023
Correspondence from Sir Matthew Rycroft KCMG CBE, Permanent Secretary, Home Office, re Asylum Transformation Programme, dated 18 August 2023
Parliament page