1 / 10

Local Area Agreement Progress Report

Local Area Agreement Progress Report. Tim Ferguson Head of Partnership and Performance Walsall Partnership 26 January 2009. Where we are. ‘Old’ LAA stretch targets and PRG. ‘New’ LAAs…. Set out the priorities for a local area agreed between central government and the local area

xavier-dunn
Download Presentation

Local Area Agreement Progress Report

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Local Area AgreementProgress Report Tim Ferguson Head of Partnership and Performance Walsall Partnership 26 January 2009

  2. Where we are...

  3. ‘Old’ LAA stretch targets and PRG

  4. ‘New’ LAAs….. • Set out the priorities for a local area agreed between central government and the local area • Contain up to 35 NIS indicators and targets for a three year period • Reviewed and refreshed annually • Reward paid on achievement across the whole LAA not a handful of stretch targets • Give local authorities the flexibility to direct funding to meet their priorities with £5bn of grants mainstreamed over the next three years

  5. Walsall’s LAA 2008…. • Sustainable Community Strategy priorities used as the starting point for deciding which indicators were chosen • Concentrates on cross-cutting indicators which benefit from being delivered in partnership • ....and which are likely to have the greatest impact on SCS priorities • 25 Indicators + 5 Local Indicators

  6. People People from different backgrounds who get on well together People who feel they can influence decisions Satisfaction with local area A thriving third sector Adults who participate in sport Serious acquisitive crime Re-offending by young offenders Assault with injury Re-offending by Prolific and Priority Offenders Childhood Obesity All age/all cause mortality Local Domestic violence Perceptions of ASB Teenage Conceptions Our Indicators….. Places Carers receiving needs assessment or review People supported to live independently People achieving independent living Additional houses Fuel poverty Adapting to climate change Household waste per head Children travelling to school; mode of transport used Local CO2 emissions Prosperity Young people's participation in positive activities Children in poverty NEETs People on out-of-work benefits Level 2 qualifications Businesses showing employment growth Local Support to new and existing business

  7. Review and Refresh to cover…. • Unfinished business on remaining targets • Report limited performance data available • Verify LAA outcomes still reflect local priorities • Delivery arrangements are in place and likely to bring about desired outcomes • Performance management arrangements are robust

  8. Progress • 17 targets still to be negotiated. Of which 4 rely on the results of the Place Survey and 11 are still awaiting target setting advice from Government • 14 are RAG rated Green or Amber • One is RAG rated Red – additional houses which is being re-negotiated

  9. Target Action Planning – the process.... • Review current evidence and trends • Map current activity and funding • Identify priorities, best practice and performance gaps • Options appraisal • Define future activity

  10. Target Action Planning – progress.... • 10 Completed, or nearing completion • 5 where workshops have been held and the TAP is being written (plus one workshop scheduled) • 10 outstanding

More Related