Ensuring good practice
A professional debt adviser needs a mixture of skills, knowledge and attitudes, which together form the basis of good practice. For many years there was no qualification that recognised the profession of money advice or acknowledged the wide range of skills and knowledge that money advisers have. However, in 2010, the Institute of Money Advisers (IMA) (the professional association for full-time, part-time or volunteer/trainee debt advisers in England, Wales and Northern Ireland who deliver or promote free, confidential, impartial and independent debt advice services), in partnership with Staffordshire University, introduced a Certificate in Money Advice Practice. Worth 15 higher education credits and broadly equivalent to an NVQ level 4, this award is offered to IMA members with at least 12 months’ full-time (or the equivalent part-time) experience in debt advice casework or a related activity. The award is gained by studying a combination of skills and knowledge based on the national occupational standards for legal advice. The course is delivered online and involves a number of modules, each ending with a formative assessment, and finally an examination, which is taken online. It is supported by a continuing professional development requirement to ensure advisers keep their skills and knowledge up to date.
In 2013, the Money Advice Service (now part of the Money and Pensions Service (MaPS)) introduced its Debt Advice Quality Framework, with the aim of raising the quality and consistency of debt advice. It comprises two parts: an organisational quality framework and an individual quality framework. The framework enables quality standards, membership codes, training and qualifications used by the money advice sector to be independently assessed and accredited the Money Advice Service. Debt advisers working in agencies holding a MaPS-accredited quality standard or membership code must be able to show that they meet the requirements of the Quality Framework for Individuals for the type of activites they undertake. Agencies must therefore review the training or qualifications undertaken by all their staff involved in delivering debt advice to ensure this is accredited. Note: it is the agency, rather than the individual adviser, which is accredited.
In 2018, the IMA launched its Networking and Information Sharing Project (funded by MaPS) to support advisers by sharing information provided by partner agencies, including updates and articles from Shelter’s Specialist Debt Advice Service. The IMA’s project ended on 31 March 2021 with the result that live webinars, recordings of Money Advice Group speaker presentations, the adviser discussion forum and the monthly blog have been discontinued. However, information items continue to be available to IMA members in the Networking and Information Resources Directory on the IMA’s website and in existing Shelter information resources. Shelter continues to provide its monthly e-bulletin, including Enquiry of the Month and Spotlight articles. The directory also continues to host the MaPS Good Practice Toolkit, which includes sample letters and forms, templates and prompt lists, and income maximisation resources, together with guidance on when and how advisers should use these resources. Non-members can access the toolkit at debtquality.org.uk. Updates are made and new materials added as they become available. Shelter’s Specialist Debt Advice Service provides free, expert guidance on most client debt cases. The service is available to all local Citizens Advice, local authorities, housing associations, IMA members, AdviceUK members and other free sector agencies. The service is for advisers only. Advisers can submit an online enquiry at shelter.org.uk/debtadviceservice or call 0330 058 0404, 9am to 5pm, Monday to Friday. The provision of debt advice as discussed in this Handbook is a regulated activity, which generally requires the adviser (or her/his employer) to be authorised by the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA). Guidance on good practice is in the FCA’s Consumer Credit Sourcebook (generally referred to by the abbreviation CONC which is part of the FCA Handbook and is available at handbook.fca.org.uk/handbook) and CONC and other parts of the FCA Handbook are referred to in this Handbook where relevant.1FCA Handbook, CONC 8. ‘Debt advice’ applies to debt counselling, debt adjusting and providing credit information services, by both profit-making and not-for-profit bodies. Local authorities and members of the legal profession are exempt from the requirement to be authorised. See also P Madge, ‘Debt Advice Rules - OK?’, Adviser 175.