To approve the proposals for the allocation of Household Support Fund 2025/26 for the award of grant made by Gloucestershire County Council

July 18, 2025 Cabinet Member Safety and Communities (Cabinet member) Approved View on council website
Full council record
Content

The Household Support Fund (HSF), first
introduced in 2021/22, is funding that is made available via
Department of Work and Pensions (DWP) to County Councils and
Unitary Authorities in England to provide crisis support to
vulnerable households in the most need with the cost of essentials.
The secondary objective is to provide preventative support to
prevent vulnerable households from falling into – or falling
further into – crisis.

Gloucestershire County Council (GCC) has been allocated
£6,507,891 for the period 1 April 2025 to 31 March 2026. The
allocation of this funding has been agreed by the GCC’s
relevant Cabinet member which includes a sum of £
£1,424,000 allocated to the six district councils to enable
them to provide their own localised schemes to support vulnerable
people.

A sum of £262,329.50 has been allocated to Cheltenham Borough
Council to cover the period 1 April 2025 to 31 March 2026. The
Council was notified of this allocation on 22 April with the
request to submit a delivery plan.

Previous allocations of HSF were agreed by Cabinet in December
2022, June 2023, and July 2024.

This decision report sets out the allocation, distribution and
monitoring of the grant.

To approve the proposals for the allocation of Household Support
Fund 2025/26 for the award of grant made by Gloucestershire County
Council on behalf of the Department of Works and Pensions under the
Household Support Fund Programme 2025/26 as set out as set out in
section 3 and Appendix A;
To delegate authority to the Head of communities, wellbeing &
partnerships in consultation with the Cabinet Member Safety and
Communities to submit the delivery plan to Gloucestershire County
Council;
To delegate authority to the Head of communities, wellbeing &
partnerships in consultation with the Cabinet Member Safety and
Communities to enter into grant agreements with the provider
organisations to deliver the Household Support Fund Programme
2025/26.

Reasons for the decision

1 Background
The primary objective of HSF is to provide crisis support to
vulnerable households in the most need with the cost of essentials.
The main elements of this support to include:
• Food costs
• Energy and water costs
• Household essentials

The secondary objective is to provide preventative support to
prevent vulnerable households from falling into – or falling
further into – crisis. The main elements of this support to
include:
• Advice services
• Preventative support with the aim of providing longer-term
and sustainable solutions for vulnerable people

Each of the six district councils have the flexibility to develop
their own schemes that best meets the needs of their local
communities whilst complying with the conditions set by the DWP for
delivery of the grant to provide support with food, energy and
water bills, household items and other essential items.
In the guidance for County Councils and Unitary Authorities in
England, the DWP sets out their definitions of eligible spend
– as set out below.

Crisis Support
Authorities are expected to offer support to vulnerable households
in the most need with the cost of essentials. This is defined as an
immediate need where support offers immediate impact to those
households. Support can be delivered through cash, vouchers or
goods and services in kind.
There is no prescriptive list which provides a comprehensive
definition of eligible spend under crisis support, but it may
include spend on:
• Essentials – for example, energy, water and food
support. This may include support with energy bills for any form of
fuel that is used for the purpose of domestic heating, cooking, or
lighting, including oil or portable gas cylinders. It can be used
to support water bills including for drinking, washing, cooking, as
well as for sanitary purposes and sewerage. It can be used for food
support through vouchers, cash or goods-in-kind
• Wider essentials – the Fund can be used to support
wider essentials which may include support with bills, clothing,
period and hygiene products, essential transport-related costs such
as repairing a car, buying a bicycle, or paying for fuel.
• One-off payments – can also be provided to prevent a
crisis including insulation or energy efficient household items
which reduce bills such as insulating a hot water tank, fitting
draft excluders to a front door, or replacing inefficient
lightbulbs or white goods. Plus the purchase of equipment such as
fridges, freezers, ovens, slow cookers or costs associated with
obtaining these essentials, for example, delivery,
installation.
• Housing costs – the focus of support should be on
bills and that support for housing costs should only be given where
existing housing support schemes do not meet the need.
Preventative Support
Authorities are encouraged to deliver preventative support with the
aim of preventing poverty locally and building local resilience
through funding activities which prevent vulnerable households from
falling into crisis. This could include specific support to
individual residents or wider support within the broader community,
such as warm spaces, providing funding to local community groups
who deliver preventative services, or to signpost individuals to
organisations which provide this support.
• Advice services – the Fund may be used to provide
supplementary advice services to award recipients, including debt,
benefit and or employment advice, where appropriate. We anticipate
that a significant proportion of this might be through signposting
to existing advice services funded through other routes, such as
Help to Claim support, provided by Citizens Advice, which supports
anyone making a new UC claim, up until their first full correct
payment.
• Join-up between service providers - such as co-location
points including shared spaces where different services could be
delivered. For example, at community kitchens, there could be
representatives from advice services who may offer those in need
further support, such as checking benefit entitlement or offering
financial advice.
• Any support with the aim of providing longer-term and
sustainable solutions. This could include, but is not limited
to:
o assistance with and/or access to affordable food such as
subsidised food pantries and community kitchens
o provision of cooking lessons with an emphasis on cost-effective
methods

2 Process for preparing the 2025/26 delivery plan
As in previous years, the DWP’s focus on food, energy and
household essentials means that the Council can draw on the support
of a number of community-based organisations that are working
closely with those vulnerable households in the most need.

The Council already works closely with these partners via the
Facing Hardship multi-agency group that aims to reduce the impacts
of poverty and stigma through a collective approach to supporting
communities. Members include; Citizen Advice, Caring for
Communities and People (CCP), Maggies, Feed Cheltenham (YMCA),
Cheltenham Housing Aid Centre (CHAC), Jobcentre Plus (DWP), Aspire
Children’s Centres, Gloucestershire County Council,
Gloucestershire Hospitals and the Council. The group is chaired by
a representative from Citizens Advice.

Initial engagement regarding the 2025/26 HSF took place at the
Facing Hardship group on 15 May to capture partners thoughts. It
was agreed that potential delivery partners would be encouraged to
submit an expression of interest form setting out what they could
deliver, to how many people and at what cost.
The completed expressions of interest were reviewed at a follow up
session Facing Hardship group on 5 June – the proposed
allocation was then shared with the Council’s Leadership
Team.

If the plan is approved by the Cabinet member for Safety and
Communities, a delivery plan will be submitted to GCC for
sign-off.

3 Proposals for 2025/26 delivery

The full proposals are set out in appendix A – but summarised
below.

In terms of food support, it is proposed that a total of
£80,375 is allocated to 9 community food providers. The
providers include the six community food pantries in Cheltenham;
Springbank, West Cheltenham, Cornerstone, CCP, Lakeside and School
House Café; the Cheltenham Food Bank and Open Door. We will
also work with #FeedCheltenham to provide supermarket food
vouchers. The contribution of £80,375 will enable 2,795 food
support awards to be made.

In terms of needs – providers have set out how demand
continues to rise – Springbank’s demand has grown by
over 40% in the past 12 months. Many of their members are working
households, disabled individuals, or single parents struggling to
make ends meet in the face of rising inflation, housing costs, and
stagnating wages.

Cornerstone Pantry in Oakley has been running for 4.5 years, note
that with the continuing rise to the cost of living, they have had
many new sign-ups, with people who have never used the community
centre before coming through their doors for help with food, and
other issues they are facing e.g. debt, housing, short-term cash
flow challenges caused by unexpected expenditure (e.g. domestic
appliance breakdown, start of school term).

Open Door provides a safe and warm, welcoming environment to people
experiencing homelessness, housing issues, addiction, mental health
issues, challenging situations and isolation in and around
Cheltenham. They provide a two course lunch Mon-Thurs for up to 100
people and cooked breakfast on Sundays for around 60.

In a survey of members of West Cheltenham Pantry, which had 56
responses; mental health and budgeting difficulties were the main
reasons for joining the pantry. 80% of the respondents stated that
it would be a struggle for them to eat without use of the
pantry.

Across the network of pantries, the host organisations are still
using their own financial resources to remain stocked with
high-quality, nutritious food and household items.

In terms of energy support, it is proposed that a total of
£42,500 is allocated to two providers; Springbank and
Citizens Advice to provide emergency support for people struggling
with bills.
Springbank will provide short-term fuel support for individuals
identified through their pantry and outreach programmes. These
interventions are swift, non-judgemental, and life-saving in some
cases – particularly for older adults, young families, and
those with long-term health conditions. They note that fuel poverty
remains one of the most urgent challenges in their community with
rising energy prices having pushed more households into crisis,
with many people unable to afford to heat their homes, cook food,
or charge medical equipment. Via a contribution of £12,500 to
Springbank, an estimated 100 people will be supported.

Citizens Advice will offer grants to those in need to include
support for energy costs and water bills as well as insulation and
energy efficient one-off costs. The payments only given once all
other advice options are exhausted. Via a contribution of
£30,000, an estimated 120 people will be supported.
The Council and its partners will also have access to support from
Severn Wye Energy Agency, who are in receipt of £400k via
GCC’s allocation of their HSF.

In terms of household essentials, it is proposed that a total of
£25,000 is allocated to three providers; Springbank, Aspire
Foundation and the Council – for two projects.

Springbank note that many of the individuals and families they
support are living without the most basic domestic items, such as
cookers, fridges, beds, or tables and chairs. This is especially
common among those transitioning from temporary accommodation,
leaving abusive relationships, or living on very low incomes. Lack
of white goods and essential furniture contributes to poor health,
hygiene, and mental wellbeing. Via a grant of £5,000, they
will supply key household items to 50 individuals and families most
in need, assessed through our existing referral and outreach
network.

The Aspire Foundation (Cheltenham Children’s Centres) will
address the urgent need for crisis support among vulnerable
families with children under the age of 11 who are struggling to
afford basic household essentials. They state that many of those
they work with face financial hardship due to rising living costs,
insecure employment, and unexpected life events, leaving them
unable to provide adequate food, heating, clothing, and other
necessities for their children. Their support aims to alleviate
immediate hardship, promote stability, and protect the health and
well-being of young children by ensuring access to essential items
that every household needs to function with dignity and security.
Via a total contribution of £15,000, an estimated 150 people
will be supported.

In addition, it is proposed that an allocation of £5,000 is
made to the Council to bolster its school uniform project which is
delivered by the Benefits and Money Advice Team, plus a further
£5,000 to support the Help2 project that provides essential
household items such as white goods, carpets and furniture using an
e-voucher system.

In terms of advice provision, it is proposed that a total of
£70,000 is allocated to three providers; Cheltenham Foodbank,
Cheltenham Housing Aid Centre and the Council’s Benefits and
Money Advice Service.

Cheltenham Foodbank will use £20,000 of the funding to secure
additional capacity from Citizens Advice who will supply generalist
and debt advisors on site. In the year 24/25 the advice provision
achieved £258,000 in income gains for clients accessing the
foodbank and £86,687 of debt written off.

The Council’s Benefits and Money Advice Service will use
£25,000 of funding to enhance their service to residents,
specifically targeting those who require home visits which are not
currently provide by Citizens Advice.

Cheltenham Housing Aid Centre note that their work helps to prevent
poverty and builds local resilience which prevents vulnerable
households from falling into crisis. They work in partnership with
a network of other support, housing and general advice providers to
ensure that a joined-up provision is provided to all of their
clients. It is proposed that CHAC are allocated £25,000 from
the fund.

In terms of preventative support, it is proposed that a total of
£18,440 is allocated to two providers; Springbank and YMCA
Cheltenham with a third provider yet to be identified.

Via an allocation of £10,000, Springbank will continue to
deliver their Early Intervention Programme that works with pantry
members to build independence, improve financial literacy, and
reduce reliance on emergency aid. It includes:
• Budgeting support and money management advice
• Cooking on a budget workshops
• Support accessing benefits, grants and debt advice
• Skills-building sessions to increase employability
• Digital inclusion support for managing finances online

The programme, which previously received a grant of £10,000
in the Q4 2024/25, has already demonstrated measurable impact in
reducing food bank dependency and increasing personal
resilience.

Via an allocation of £6,000, FeedCheltenham (YMCA) will
deliver life skills courses and dentistry support via their
Community Connect programme. The life skills courses complement
FeedCheltenham’s food support programme, via supporting
individuals and households to increase resilience through one to
one and group work – cooking, budgeting, life skills, and
referrals to other providers who can support needs.

In terms of the dentistry project, according to GCC statistics,
Cheltenham was the area with the highest rate of tooth decay in
year six children in Gloucestershire in 2023. The proposal to
provide regular free toothbrushes and toothpaste, as well as
brushing advice, will support better dental health care in the
town. Many people who are facing hardship are not able to budget
for dental care, and this is then ‘put off’ until a
later date. The project will be delivered via the community food
pantries.

It is also proposed that a sum of £2,440 is set aside to
support winter related schemes such as children’s coat
project and winter fuel allowances. The provider for this is yet to
be identified.

Working within the government guidance and within the terms of
funding set out by GCC, we have engaged with the partners set out
above to assemble the delivery plan and they have agreed to be part
of the delivery plan.

Grant agreements will be entered into with the 13 delivery partners
that will set out the terms by which the HSF grant is
offered.

Alternative options considered

As set out above, the Council in the main has
chosen to work with its community partners as they are the
organisations that are working closest with those made vulnerable
across Cheltenham.

As an alternative, the Council could have chosen to procure and run
its own food and energy voucher schemes. However, this option was
dismissed as it would duplicate existing voucher schemes in
existence, particularly the GCC voucher scheme and more locally the
#FeedCheltenham voucher scheme. Additionally, it would have created
a significant draw on staff time to manage the scheme.

Details

OutcomeRecommendations Approved
Decision date18 Jul 2025