Transcript Slide 1

LEADING LOCALITIES
The councillor role in local area
agreements and local strategic
partnerships
Updated June 2008
what is a LAA?
• an agreement, drawn up between a local
area and central government
• setting priorities for the area, both national
and local
• a statement of commitment to achieve
specific targets, from all key local partners
• a 3 year rolling action plan for the area’s
sustainable community strategy
a very brief history
• 2004-7 saw first
generation of LAAs
• an experiment that worked
(by and large)
• 2006 White Paper set way
forward on ‘place-shaping’
• 2007 LGPIH Act
introduced statutory
framework for LAAs
political consensus on localism
• ‘The significance of the new LAAs is that they fundamentally redraw
the relationship between central government and local areas… they
set a new balance that is better for central government and local
agencies and most important, better for local communities’
(John Healey, Minister of State November 2007)
• ‘local democratic control works, well - locally: it allows communities
to tailor customised solutions to local problems, rather than having
to fit into a national template (David Cameron Nov 2007)
• ‘We would restore to local Councils the financial and political
capacity to determine priorities for their communities and ensure
decisions are taken as closely as possible to the people they affect,
including a redistribution of powers from Westminster and quangos
to accountable, decentralised government’ (Lib Dems Sept 2007)
what’s in it for councillors?
• better integrated government for local people
• the chance for elected members to steer the
totality of public services in their area
• LSP partners reinforcing local priorities
• scope to win ‘hearts and minds’ on long-term
challenges (climate change, cohesion, health)
• improved local quality of life
• payback from constituents, if all this can be
achieved
Councillor perceptions of early LAAs
• LAAs too technocratic
• officers ‘running the show’
• targets fixed by Government
Offices
• too many partnerships with
too little accountability
• counties dominating districts
• lots of process for too few
results on the ground
• complexity, jargon, and
acronyms
but the picture is changing
• more councillors taking on growing roles in
LAAs and local partnership working
• influencing and steering the work of all local
partners an area
• brokering solutions
• getting buy-in from local people
• handling the politics of two tier areas
• standing up to Government Offices
• tracking the outcomes achieved from LAAs
the key roles of councillors
• leadership: steering and influencing
partnership working, ensuring democratic
accountability
• strategy development: making real the
local evidence base and ‘story of place’
• scrutiny: with new powers to scrutinise
‘named partners’ under the 2007 Act
• neighbourhood representation: taking
the LAA approach to small area level
2008 a ‘year of devolution’
• new LAAs prepared for all 150 upper-tier English
local authority areas
• up to 35 ‘improvement targets’ identified in each,
chosen from new set of 198 national indicators
• negotiated with Ministers, via Government Offices
• sitting alongside local priorities in each LAA
• new duty on LSP partners to co-operate in
achieving both sets of outcomes
• LAAs and LSPs move from ‘margins to
mainstream’ of national performance framework
what’s in a LAA?
National priorities, e.g
Local priorities, e.g
 reducing 16-18
NEETs
 town centre alcohol
issues
 CO2 reductions
 supporting problem
families
 teenage conception
rates
 net additional homes
 access to private
rented housing
 re-offending rates
 better local transport
new ‘duty to co-operate’ applies to both sets
overseeing totality of public expenditure
LOCAL SPENDING REPORT FOR COUNTY
OF BLANKSHIRE
• an expectation on LSPs
• area based grant (ABG)
removes most ring-fences
• LSP partners encouraged
to align their resources
• Local Spending Reports
will map most local
expenditure from April 2009
COUNTY COUNCIL
1,800
DISTRICT COUNCILS
400
LEARNING & SKILLS
300
HEALTH
1,200
HIGHER EDUCATION
400
RDA
200
FIRE AND SAFETY
DWP/JOB CENTRE PLUS
POLICE
THIRD SECTOR/VCS
TOTAL
50
2,900
300
20
£7.6bn
LAAs in two-tier areas
• county-wide sustainable community
strategy should recognise geographic tiers
• dual democratic mandates can be
brokered, but not ignored
• simplifying partnerships helps, but must
respect boundaries and autonomies
• joint scrutiny is possible
• many examples of successful two-tier
working
LSPs evolving into new roles
• there is no fixed model
• LSPs remain non-statutory
bodies
• leader and portfolio
holders expected to take
active role in LSP ‘family’
• CLG guidance July 2008
Your local LSP
VCS and business sectors
involved in LSP and in
overview/scrutiny of LAA
Police
Local council
Central Govt
Wider LSP
(sets SCS)
Health
GO
Emp.
LSP
‘main board’
Others
negotiations
Denotes democratic lead
Local area agreement
(sets outcomes)
Childrens
services
Crime and
disorder
Economic
and env.
Health and
wellbeing
LGA view of local partnership landscape, with lead members/portfolio holders
taking an active role in LSP and thematic partnerships in developing the LAA
Multi area agreements (MAAs)
• around a dozen areas
trying out different ideas
• defining their own new
governance arrangements
• securing powers and
funding streams devolved
from regional level
• first few due to be signed in
July 2008, others to follow in
the future.
• focus on capital and longterm development
• not the only model for subregional working
is all this anything new?
• in many ways, a return to
roots of local government
• parallels with city
leadership in Victorian era,
using ‘permissive’
legislation
• part of wider cultural
change in Whitehall and
town halls
• putting the ‘governing’ back
into local government
useful sources
•
IDEA website at www.idea.gov.uk/laa has guidance, FAQs, case studies
(Partnership and Practice library) and Communities of Practice for sharing
ideas and experience
•
LGA publications www.lga.gov.uk
 a very english revolution – delivering better and bolder LAAs’
 Pushing back the frontiers (Multi-area agreements)
 A councillors guide to the new LAAs
•
IDeA and LGIU publications on scrutiny www.idea.gov.uk
a wider conversation - effective scrutiny of LSPs’
how to win friends and influence partners
•
Leadership Centre for Local Government publication ‘politics of place’
www.localleadership.gov.uk
•
Communities and Local Government website www.communities.gov.uk
for statutory and operational guidance on LAAs and LSPs.