WHO’S WHO IN YORKSHIRE AND HUMBER York CVS 14 March 2013 Rosie Seymour Localities Lead for North...
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Transcript of WHO’S WHO IN YORKSHIRE AND HUMBER York CVS 14 March 2013 Rosie Seymour Localities Lead for North...
WHO’S WHO IN YORKSHIRE AND HUMBERYork CVS
14 March 2013
Rosie SeymourLocalities Lead for North Yorkshire and York
Localities Manager role
Work with local areas to:
• Develop practical relationships to ensure that local areas have a way to ensure honest and regular dialogue, support and signposting where necessary to central Government. And ensure that DCLG has the intelligence and level of engagement with local areas that we need to inform policy.
• The role also helps us shape things like Ministerial visits and parliamentary responses, and enables us to explain policy and opportunities to local areas.
A whirlwind of change
Budget Reductions
Localism, Localism, Localism
Welfare R
eform
Bu
siness R
ates R
etentio
n
LEPs, local growth funding & City Deals
Troubled Families
Health
& W
ellbein
g
Acad
emies &
Free S
cho
ols
Local Government Response
Mix of measures:
- making efficiencies- organisation change- streamlining back office- outsourcing- service transformation
Prioritising adult social care and children’s services
Reducing (disproportionately) planning, housing and central services
Cutting discretionary functions
•Mike to insert chart
-50%
-40%
-30%
-20%
-10%
0%
10%
2011-12
2012-13
Highw ays
Childrens social care
Adult social care
Housing
Cultural
Environmental
Planning
Central services Total
Where next: through to April 2013
What Next? – A New Financial Relationship
-
10,000,000
20,000,000
30,000,000
40,000,000
50,000,000
60,000,000
70,000,000
Before After
Unhypothecated grant
Local share
Sales fees and charges
Council tax
2012-13 Formula Grant funding and if the rate retention model already in place (including police)
Locally based funding – c. 60% to c.80%
• Moody’s downgrading of the UK economy.
• Taking longer to climb out of debt with slow GDP growth
• Continuing reductions in public sector spending since 2010 “emergency” budget
Autumn Statement set a spending envelope for 2015-16:
•total spending will fall at same rate as in SR10. •Within that, capital spending will grow in line with inflation from 2014-15 onwards.
Will look for total additional savings of at least £10 billion.
26 June announcement.
Fiscal consolidation andSpending Round 2013
The Strategic Context for communities
Huge wealth of knowledge, experience and expertise in local communities that is not being tapped into. Local communities know what’s best for them and their community, it makes sense to use that knowledge, experience and expertise for the community good
Financial climate is difficult and will remain so for the next few years
Innovation is needed to do more and better with less
Our role as central government is an enabler: enthusing, informing, networking and supporting communities
Governance and Accountability
Powers to Communities
Freedom over governance structures
Transparency
Autonomy for local government
Freedom to act(General Power of Competence)
Greater control over finance
Freedoms for Cities
Right to Bid (Assets of community
value)
Right to Challenge
Right to Build
Neighbourhood Planning
Localism ActWhat difference does it make?
What does it do?
Neighbourhood plans help local communities to have a much greater say in how the areas that they live and work in develop and grow.
Neighbourhood planning gives the right to parish councils or designated neighbourhood forums to produce a Neighbourhood Plan or Neighbourhood Development Order or both.
How?
Once a Neighbourhood Plan is brought into force after a referendum it becomes part of the statutory development plan for the local area and is part of the basis for deciding planning applications in that area.
A Neighbourhood Development Order will automatically grant planning permission for development proposals which comply with the order.
Neighbourhood Planning
Neighbourhood Planning
Myth busting: Neighbourhood planning is not.....
• A way to stop development happening• Only for rural areas and parish councils• A system which requires the production of very comprehensive technical plans
– neighbourhood plans can be as concise or as comprehensive as communities want and address just a few simple concerns or a range of very complex planning issues
• A legal requirement – it is a right which communities can choose to exercise
Neighbourhood planning is..... • An opportunity to shape the development of a local area by producing a plan
with real statutory weight• An opportunity to turn ambitions into reality through a development order• An opportunity to build new and improve existing partnerships
Neighbourhood Community Budgets – supporting areas to redesign services
Parish Councils
Ilfracombe;Haverhill;
VCS
Queens Park;Little Horton (Bradford);
Poplar (Tower Hamlets);
Castle Vale (Birmingham);
Balsall Heath (Birmingham)
Local Authorities
Cowgate, Kenton Bar & Montague (Newcastle)
White City;Norbiton;Sherwood (Tunbridge Wells);
Shard End (Birmingham);
Type Neighbourhood Themes
Troubled families; Health & well being;Community assets;
Housing;Worklessness;
Social enterprise;Local Economic Growth;
Anti social behaviour;Gang violence;