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What can we learn from the Community Budget pilots?

What can we learn from the Community Budget pilots?. Paul Gallagher Inclusion. Andy Bowie Avanta. Introductions. Paul Gallagher Associate Director, Inclusion. Andy Bowie Director of Business Development, Avanta. Overview of Session. Background to Community Budgets

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What can we learn from the Community Budget pilots?

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  1. What can we learn from the Community Budget pilots? Paul Gallagher Inclusion Andy Bowie Avanta

  2. Introductions • Paul Gallagher Associate Director, Inclusion • Andy Bowie Director of Business Development, Avanta

  3. Overview of Session • Background to Community Budgets • What are Community Budgets? • Importance of Community Budgets? • Community delivery and young people • Community Budgets in practice • The Avanta experience • Challenges to Community Budgeting • Future-gazing – where next? • Discussion and Conclusions • Policy and delivery implications for the future

  4. Government Perspective ‘We can no longer afford the luxury of fruitless, uncoordinated investment. The damaged lives and communities. So don't dither or fret. Um and ah. Don't pass the buck. This is it....Think of this as a race to deliver by 2015. If you motor along then we'll play catch up. But if we get there first - you'll find yourselves behind the agenda. And I'm sorry about people who tell me they've already got a programme that deals with this. Well, if it was all dealt with we wouldn't be here. One or two projects along the right lines isn't nearly enough to solve this problem. So be in no doubt - we are in a hurry, we mean to deliver. You don't need to talk about it or show empathy. I want you to get on with it’. Eric Pickles Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government October 2011

  5. Background to Community Budgets • What are Community Budgets? • Less ring fencing and direction over budgets • Localisation and redefining service delivery • Pooling and aligning of budgets of local partners • Targeting Families With Multiple Problems (FWMP), ‘rocket boosted’ since August 2011 • Builds on LAA’s, Total Place, co-design pilots, Family Intervention Projects etc

  6. Community Budgets in Numbers • £8bn estimated spend on FWMP – ‘welfare millionaires’ • 120,000 FWMP in England • 16 Pilot areas covering 28 Local Authorities – 25% of English population • 10,000 families supported by end of this parliament

  7. Numbers in Context • Cost per family between £150,000 - £330,000 • 3.88m households where no-one is in work • Households where no-one has work = 297,000 • Children living in households where no-one has worked = 330,000

  8. Background to Community Budgets • Importance of Community Budgets? • Key initiative for the coalition to manage reduced budgets and deliver more effective public services • Step change in the way that services are commissioned and funded – route for delivering on localism and devolution • Testing ground for Payment By Results (PBR) • Repositions policy to consider models of non-traditional family • New approaches – prevention, early intervention, outcomes

  9. Community delivery • Over view of the 16 Pilots: • Variance in approaches and progress • Key workers/lead agency • ‘Shared pot’ – pooled or aligned budgets? • ‘Whole systems’ not ‘individual services’ • FWMP loosely defined – drug & alcohol, reducing recidivism, early years intervention etc

  10. Community delivery and young people • Examples of good practice for supporting young people (within context of ‘family’) • Keeping young people in school, college or alternative learning (including measures for improving attendance and attainment) • Addressing ASB and agreeing new behaviour codes (including reducing offending and re-offending) • Addressing alcohol/drug issues • Supporting teenage pregnancies and young parents

  11. Myths & Misnomers

  12. The Avanta Academy

  13. Priorities for Avanta Culture: Contestability Early Intervention Not more Money! Bonds and PBR Data Sharing Free Schools

  14. Hurdles for Community Budgeting • Scale of transformation - Longevity of approach? • Change in working/professional cultures • Consistency – local/national • Bureaucracy and complexity of ‘government’ • New actors and approaches • Data sharing • Simple analysis; simply solutions • Is the challenge only about FWMP?

  15. Discussion and Questions Conclusions

  16. Future-gazing – where next? • Policy and delivery implications for the future • Need for consistency over what is trying to be addressed – size of challenge • Need to be more ambitious and to move at a faster pace • From intervention to saving to re-thinking service provision

  17. Future-gazing – where next? • Policy and delivery implications for the future • Best practice and models that work • Removal of barriers • Evaluation – understanding what works, but more importantly why • Data sharing

  18. Contact Details Paul Gallagher Associate Inclusion Paul.gallagher@cesi.org.uk M: 07976 081003 Andy Bowie Director of Development Avanta Andy.Bowie@avanta.uk.com M: 07968 021 428

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