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New Local Area Agreements

New Local Area Agreements. Joanne Smithson Head of Community Strategy. The LAA Journey. The primary objective of an LAA is to deliver better outcomes for local people.

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New Local Area Agreements

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  1. New Local Area Agreements Joanne Smithson Head of Community Strategy

  2. The LAA Journey The primary objective of an LAA is to deliver better outcomes for local people. LAAs also have secondary objectives of improving Central and Local Government relations, enhancing efficiency, strengthening partnership working and providing a framework to enhance local authority leadership role. LAA Guidance 2006

  3. Role of LSP and Local Area Agreement • LSP is at the heart of the LAA • Community Strategy sets the context for LAA • Vision, Priorities and Outcomes reflected in both • Benefits for joining-up LAA and Community Strategy • Making clear how strategic priorities (performance & targets) are translated into action on the ground

  4. LAAs to date • LAAs: origins in Audit Commission and Gershon analysis: complex delivery chains and overlapping ABIs impeding public service delivery. • Rapid roll-out: from 21 pilots in 2005-06 to roll-out in all top tier areas by March 2007. £500m pooled so far – 20 funding streams. • LAA Evaluation: LAAs starting to deliver outcome benefits; main impact to date has been to stimulate stronger partnerships, more joined up working and better consideration of cross-cutting issues. • BUT - LAAs still peripheral to mainstream business; reporting requirements still layered on top of existing ones.

  5. Strong and prosperous communities • The White Paper positions LAAs at the heart of the new performance framework. • It applies to all outcomes delivered by local government working alone or in partnership

  6. Local Government White Paper Offers: a stronger role for local authorities to lead their communities, shape their areas, and innovate in response to local needs. In exchange for:more bottom-up accountability, better and more efficient services and tougher intervention when things go wrong.

  7. ‘Place-shaping’ and stronger partnerships • duty on LAs to develop LAAs in partnership with other agencies • duty on LAs & named partners to co-operate in agreeing LAA targets and to have regard to meeting them • LSPs as a single over-arching partnership setting strategy & priorities – delivery through individual partners and thematic partnerships • LA leaders to play a key role on LSPs, with the opportunity to agree the chair

  8. The Outcomes – Targets – Indicators Framework

  9. Local Challenges and Ambitions Sustainable Community Strategy NewLAAs Local consultation through the LSP with Partners and Stakeholders LSP view of local priorities CSR07 national priority outcomes & 200 national indicators Negotiation and agreement Cross –Govt view through GOs on local priorities ‘Non-designated’ targets monitored only by LSP local priorities & targets Better outcomes for citizens 18 statutory DfES targets local accountability to citizens ‘Designated’ targets monitored by LSP and GO ~35 targets LAA

  10. The future landscape • The White Paper moves LAAs from the margins to the mainstream – critical to delivery of the new central-local relationship • LAAs no longer about specific funding for specific targets. 35 (+18) agreed targets cover everything local govt delivers on its own or in partnership, supported by all resources in the area • LAAs to meet the challenges of and ambitions for place-shaping • New arrangements to be implemented collaboratively from 2008 – but preparation and capacity building can and must start now

  11. Comprehensive Area Assessment • From 2009, replaces CPA, JARs, APA and social care star ratings • Annual Risk Assessment • Shift from judging performance to risks & management of risks • Different kinds of risks & impacts • Scored Direction of Travel judgement • Scored judgement on Use of Resources • Need for other inspections determined largely by risk assessment; few programmes of rolling inspection, eg children in care • CAA intended to be a desk exercise, drawing on wide range of available evidence – lighter burden, but still providing robust independent assessments for managers, public & Government

  12. Are new LAAs really radical? • LAAs will be the only placewhere targets agreed with government on outcomes delivered by local government on its own or in partnership - with a radical reduction in overall target numbers • LAAs provide more freedom to include local priorities - with statutory underpinnings, but no requirement to report • Central government is committed to delivering the new arrangements - which are locked in through the CSR07 process • Will LAAs really reduce bureaucracy? • Is there a risk that as ‘the delivery agreement’ between central and local government, LAAs will fail to deliver a more devolutionary approach? • Will central Government be able to deliver its side of the bargain?

  13. Timetable New LAAs to be in place inall areas from April 2008, with all of the new performance framework implemented by 2009

  14. Key Milestones

  15. Feasibility Testing

  16. By Summer 2007: • Identify critical success factors for negotiating priorities and targets for new LAAs • Identify ways of overcoming specific challenges • Produce a clear and workable framework for local authorities, their partners, Government Offices and Central Government Departments to identify the priorities to be included in LAAs for 08/09 and the negotiation framework for improvement targets • Contribute to the development of operational guidance which is light touch and meets the information requirements for local authorities and their partners

  17. Scope of feasibility testing Work with 17 local authorities and their partners, Government Offices, central government departments and the Audit Commission to test and further develop proposals on: • What sources of evidence are or will be available to inform the national priorities and improvement targets included in each LAA negotiated for 2008/09 • How best to use the sources of evidence to inform the decision on priorities • How the decision making process might work, including: • how each local authority and its partners will identify and agree their priorities • how central government, government offices, local authorities and partners work together to agree priorities for each area • how to reach final agreement on the targets to be included in the LAA

  18. Approach • Problem solving, collaborative approach involving Partnerships, GOs, Departments and Audit Commission • Main focus on identification and agreement of up to 35 priorities and improvement targets, but also scope to consider themes in more detail (eg 2-tier areas, handling of LAAs focusing on overarching theme, how to work with particular Departments) • Led by consultants, with small group of Departments, GOs and Partnerships involved in early detailed design of the programme • Close links with development of the National Indicator Set • Participating Partnerships will be exempt from the formal LAA Annual Review process in June

  19. Outline programme 3 distinct phases, focused around 2 workshops • Phase 1: Preparation • Phase 2: Identification of Priorities • Phase 3: Negotiation/Dissemination

  20. Westminster Barking & Dagenham Suffolk Shropshire Coventry Leeds Sheffield Hartlepool Stockton Swindon Bournemouth Windsor & Maidenhead Kent Derbyshire Northamptonshire Oldham Cumbria Participating Areas

  21. Questions?

  22. Choosing the 35 • There will be 18 DfeS indicators covering early years and schools. Don’t include those in your 35 • Highlight in Green 35 (ish!) priority indicators • Highlight in yellow those that were up there but not quite in the top 35

  23. 20 minutes starting from now!

  24. To find out more…. www.hartlepoolpartnership.co.uk joanne.smithson@hartlepool.co.uk Tel. 01429 284147

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