Title: Local Area Agreements
1Local Area Agreements
- Bronwyn Hill Steve Bone
- Regional Director Assistant Director
- GOSW Poole, Bournemouth, Dorset
Somerset - GOSW
2Local Area Agreements
- What is an LAA ?
- Lessons from the pilots
- What could this mean for Poole?
3What is an LAA ?
4The aim
- Local government is a key player in the delivery
of central government priorities. It is best
placed to lead the definition of local needs. - Local Area Agreements try to recognise this dual
role they are a negotiation of equals, owned
jointly by central and local government, and that
should be their strength. - The Rt. Hon. David Milliband MP
- Minister of Communities and Local
Government 20 May 2005
5(No Transcript)
6- ..contract between central and local government
to deliver the priorities of local people - ..shared objectives delivered through strong
and inclusive local leadership - ..freedoms for local partners to work in a more
joined-up way - ..minimising bureaucracy and maximising delivery
- ..better outcomes for people and improved public
services - ..a healthy dose of local ambition, backed by
local knowledge and understanding of what works
best to achieve both local and national
priorities.
Rt Hon David Milliband, MP Minister of
Communities and Local Government Sir
Sandy Bruce-Lockhart Chairman, LGA
7LAAs and how they fit into the strategy for Local
Government
Citizen engagement participation
Vibrant local leadership
localvision
Service delivery performance framework
A new settlement
8LAAs How they work
9What should local partners aims be?
A variety of aims
A spectrum of ambition
10Lessons from the pilots
11Lessons Learnt
- Support for concept but needs time to develop
- Some confusion and cynicism letting go
- Timetable too short
- Needs stronger project management
- Strong leadership essential (political/LSP/CEx
and Partners Directors) - A broad range of aims, aspirations and objectives
- Challenged strength of partnership working
- Being effective and inclusive
- Lack of guidance help or hindrance?
- Policy making on the hoof
12What did the pilots look like?
- All very different!
- The average LAA had
- 25m of pooled funding
- 3 Freedoms and flexibilities
- 50 targets and 60 indicators
- Work in progress
- Detailed funding, targets and indicators to be
developed
13What could it mean for Poole?
14New developments
- Improved package of support and guidance
- Starting the process earlier
- Stronger project management
- Communication strategy for partners, wider
groups, the community - Time for innovative thinking
- LAA Reward Element
- New Economic Development block
15An opportunity to align.
- Shaping Pooles future your vision for Poole
- The Councils own Corporate Strategy
- The strategies and plans of other partner
organisations
16- What could an LAA look like for Poole?
- An outcomes framework based around four
blocks - children and young people
- safer and stronger communities
- healthier communities and older people
- economic development and enterprise
- Cross-cutting themes
- Brings together public service deliver partners
more effectively to deliver local aspirations - Builds an effective way of ensuring this happens
17Timetable
- Announced 22 June
- Project plan - end July
- Long list of ideas to GOSW - end September
- Refined short list - end October
- Negotiations - Oct to Dec
- Draft agreements 31st Dec
- Agreements signed end Feb 2006.
- .to start 1 April 2006
18Children and Younger People
- Stay safe, be healthy, enjoy and achieve through
learning), achieve economic well-being, make a
positive contribution to society - Synergy with the Children and Young Peoples Plan
- Examples reducing child poverty and improving
fitness and health through a more holistic
approach to employment, childcare, education,
housing and homelessness and to teenage support - Child obesity and sexual health egs of link
across to health strand
19Safer and Stronger Communities
- Reduce crime by 15, reassure the public, reduce
fear of crime and anti social behaviour, reduce
harm caused by drugs - In the pilots many e.g.s of engaging the CVS
across all blocks through citizens panels,
community learning networks and groups
representing interests based on faith, age,
disability, race, gender and sexuality - Capacity building will be important. In Dorset
the Big Lottery was engaged in helping to develop
the capacity of local groups and community
organisations - Think outside the box regeneration and jobs and
improved housing and a cleaner environment helps
create safer and stronger
20Healthier Communities and Older People
- Improve health of population, increased life
expectancy, reduce health inequalities, improved
quality of life and independence of vulnerable
older people - Bending funding streams? Derbyshire, Sheffield
and Suffolk did a persuasive case to DfES and
DH for including Child and Adult Mental Health - Egs of improving
- health in the workplace
- Independence of older people
- Increasing volunteering around older people
21Economic Development
- outcomes around productivity, job creation,
skills, worklessness, community enterprise, etc. - Block provides an opportunity to bring into the
LAA sphere issues around enterprise (and social
enterprise) which would particularly benefit for
private sector involvement. - SWRDA has committed to LAAs
22.and to conclude..
- Dont feel constrained by the blocks
- Think creatively what might be possible across
blocks - Success will mean..
- Improved quality of life
- Generation of civic pride
- Services which better meet local needs
- Better alignment of actions by service deliverers
- A way of delivering your community strategy
- BUT
- Please dont try to do everything. Focus on
where you think LAAs will really be able to make
a difference.