Transcript Document

8th REGENERATION MANAGEMENT RESEARCH
NETWORK
Matching rhetoric with reality: the challenge for
third sector involvement in local governance
Wednesday 18th June 2008
Matthew Jackson, Senior Policy Researcher
About CLES and our work on local
governance
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The role of the third sector
in local governance?
‘The voluntary sector, described by Kendall and Knapp (1995) as a
‘loose and baggy monster’, is made up of many diverse
organisations ranging from the multitude of unregistered and
unincorporated associations through national and international
service providers and multi-million pound organisations, but there is
no universal agreement on the exact nature of the beast’
(Myers and Sacks, 2001)
Why are CLES bothered
about the third sector?
local economic contributors
service delivery fairness
social equality and justice
local knowledge – local solutions
compliment the local authority
some strategic skills
a variety and diversity
local government modernisation
The changing view of the
third sector
Not
Not
Not
Not
Not
Not
fluffy but hard
grants but contracts
peripheral but central
just volunteering but employment
necessarily small scale
disorganised but professional
The waves of third sector
involvement in local governance
Two Waves?
Increasing central value of their role
Wave 1 – ‘voice’
Major regeneration programmes
City Challenge
SRB
Community Empowerment Networks
Local Strategic Partnerships
Wave 2 – ‘strategic engager and deliverer’
Strategic governance
contracts AND grants
Sustainable Community Strategies
Local Area Agreements
What are Local Area Agreements?
Funding
National
Priorities
LAA
Local
Community
LSP
Sustainable
Communities
Strategy
Enterprise & Economic Development
Healthier communities, and older people
Safer and stronger communities
Children and young people
---------------------------------------------------
LAA Reward Grant
Local Partners
Commissioning
Scrutiny
Monitoring
and
Reporting
Outcomes
The policy rhetoric
Delivery focused PSA Target
Funding for infrastructure, knowledge and capacity
Statements of involvement for LSP/LAA/LDF/
A central commitment
‘grants’ to ‘contracts’
Efficiency AND effectiveness
The reality
A mixed picture across the country
Involvement dependent upon
quality of umbrella representative bodies
approach of local authority
time and capacity
size of organisation
Understanding of the role of the sector
aspirations around funding
Barriers to engagement
A range of barriers to engagement
Lack of trust
Poor communication
‘junior partners’
What do the third sector do?
Low levels of professional skills
Perceived reliance upon grants
Good practice in reality
Playing the local governance game
A build upon existing strong relationships
Play to your strengths
Base involvement upon effective delivery
Co-ordinate and deliver
The benefits of involvement
Growth and influence
Delivery sustainability
An opportunity for engagement
An opportunity to communicate
National indicators, new LAAs and
the third sector
Local Government White Paper Ramped Up Importance of Local Area
Agreements:
role of local authority
New Duties for development, negotiation and delivery
New performance indicators
The Third Sector
Funding the LAA
Performance indicators
A typology of indicators
1. Easy to measure through national data sources
NI 151 – Overall employment rate
2. Partner dependent
2. N1 152 – Working age people on out of work benefits
3. Perceptive and service user focused
3. NI 1 - % of people who believe people from different backgrounds
get on well together in their local area
4. Strong link to policy priorities
4. NI 117 – 16 – 18 year olds who are not in education, training or
employment
5. National priority focused
NI 35 – Building resilience to violent extremism
6. Difficult to measure
NI 7 – environment for a thriving third sector
The spectrum of third sector
involvement
How could the third sector be involved in local governance – a
spectrum of roles:
Level 1
As a
Communicator
of activities
Level 2
As a Local
Authority/
Community
Broker
Level 3
As an
advocate
of policy
Level 4
Through a
Third Sector
Infrastructure
Body
Level 5
As a
Thematic
Partner
Level 6
As a
Strategic
Partner /
Lead
Level 7
As a
Service
Deliverer
Level 8
As a
Strategic
Deliverer
The future role – what do the sector
need to do?
Organisations need to ask themselves a series of questions:
Does the organisation have the capacity to be involved in local
governance activities?
Does the organisation have the strategic capacity?
Does involvement in local governance distract from project activity?
Does involvement in local governance correlate with the ethos, aims
and objectives of the organisation?
Does involvement in local governance come based upon strong
existing links or is the organisation in effect moving into new
themes and arenas and geographical areas?
How will involvement in local governance affect the organisations
service users and members?
The future role – what do local
governance mechanisms need to
do?
Local governance mechanisms need to:
Understand the diversity of the sector
Understand the variety of the sector
Assess the strategic capacity of the third sector
Look beyond the usual suspects
Build up relations with and listen to third sector umbrella bodies
Engage the third sector in service planning as well as strategic
governance
Conclusion
Are the third sector ready for this?
Is there the local authority commitment to third sector delivery?
Does it really mean better outcomes and more effective delivery?
Are the third sector really a loose and baggy monster?
Further information
0161 236 7036 [email protected]