1 / 26

Thames Valley Police & Crime Commissioner

Thames Valley Police & Crime Commissioner. Information exchange for providers of victims support services June 2014. Agenda. 10.00 : Welcome & introductions 10.15: Local commissioning intentions 10.50: Needs-led funding, emerging themes 11.20: Break (refreshments)

Download Presentation

Thames Valley Police & Crime Commissioner

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. Thames Valley Police & Crime Commissioner Information exchange for providers of victims support services June 2014

  2. Agenda 10.00: Welcome & introductions 10.15: Local commissioning intentions 10.50: Needs-led funding, emerging themes 11.20: Break (refreshments) 11.35: Needs-led provision (table discussions) 12.15: Collaboration and commissioning 13.00: Concluding remarks, next steps Light lunch provided 13.30: Close

  3. LOCAL Commissioning intentions

  4. Commissioning Landscape • Currently MoJ grant fund victim’s services, including Victim Support services. • From October 2014, MoJ will continue to commission some national services (Homicide Service, Witness Service, Trafficking Service, Rape Support). • From October 2014, PCCs will be responsible for commissioning specialist victims services. • From April 2015, PCCs will be responsible for commissioning non-specialist services for victims

  5. Local services • Non-specialist service • Thames Valley will commission a ‘referral centre’ function and the onwards non-specialist support for victims with Surrey and Sussex • Specialist services • Funding will be directed into frontline services • Transitional grant funding allocated will be on a one-off basis (no commitment of repeat funding) • The PCC must comply with the EU Directive on Victims Victims’ Services Commissioning Intentions: PCC report provided

  6. Total funding available • First Phase Victims & RJ Grants (May 2014) • Approx. £600,000 grants to support services for victims and RJ • Second Phase Victims and RJ Grants (Sept 2014) • Approx. £800,000 grants to support services for victims and RJ, excluding MoJ ‘top slice’ for non specialist and including PCC commissioning costs • Third Phase Commissioning (Oct-March for 2015/16) • Approx. £2,467,000 Victims’ Grants (to cover full costs of the non specialist referral services, RJ and local specialist services

  7. NEEDS-LED FUNDING

  8. Needs-led funding • Outcome-focussed commissioning, for services to achieve high level outcomes, to help victims • Copewith the initial impact of crime, and • Recoverfrom the harm experienced • Needs assessment, emerging themes include: • Restorative justice • Domestic violence • Sexual violence and exploitation • Young people’s provision • Counselling provision

  9. Commissioning “Commissioning is the process of specifying, securing and monitoring services to meet people’s needs at a strategic level. This applies to all services, whether they are provided by the local authority, NHS, other public agencies, or by the private and voluntary sectors.” (Audit Commission) It is a complex process with responsibilities ranging from assessing local population needs, prioritising outcomes, procuring services to achieve those outcomes and supporting service providers to enable them to deliver outcomes for individual service users and communities."

  10. Procurement Procurement is the technical and legal process involved in acquiring goods, services or other works from an external source Public bodies must follow a number of rules and regulations when they procure services: EU procurement law and regulation working through UK regulation (the Public Contracts Regulations 2006) and the body’s own policies and procedures

  11. Grants A grant is a gift. There is no legal difference between a grant and a donation. Grants can be made by public bodies to support services provided by an organisation. Giving a grant often assumes that the recipient organisation needssubsidy to deliver a service on a self-sustaining basis at the required standard. The grant must be freely given and the donor receives nothing in return. Grants are outside the scope of VAT. EU rules on public procurement do not apply.

  12. Contracts A contract is a legally enforceable agreement between the contractor/purchaser &service provider • It assumes the provider is a viable, self-sustaining organisation: the purchaser buys an agreed service, at an agreed standard, for an agreed price • It is a mutual bargain with consideration paid: both purchaser and provider benefit. • EU rules on public procurement apply.

  13. NEEDS-LED PROVISIONTABLE DISCUSSIONS

  14. Guiding principles • Investing in the capability and understanding the capacity of providers for: • Thames Valley coverage • Single contract/ leader provider or consortia • Table discussions: • Partnership working, needs-led in priority area eg. ‘young people’s services’

  15. COLLABORATION AND COMMISSIONING

  16. Mixed economy • Any qualified provider • Private, public and voluntary sector • Small, medium and large • Specialist and generalists • Local regional and national organisations • Solo, partnerships, consortia • Commissioner’s role • To “manage” the market • To animate and connect all available resources to best meet need

  17. Market purpose Open market Managed market To meet need, reduce costs and improve quality through competition To meet need, build social value and improve quality through collaboration

  18. Range of VCS players

  19. Open market Commissioners

  20. Prime and sub contractors Prime Commissioners

  21. Loose partnership Commissioners

  22. Lead agency consortium Commissioners Lead agency Consortium or partnership agreement

  23. Consortia elsewhere • More VCS consortia formed or forming • Many as a result of commissioning (i.e. funding driven) • Mixed results (cost/benefit a key consideration) • However • A number working well (sufficient lead time, clear purpose, strong relationships, clear role for consortium, robust consortium agreements)

  24. Ministry of Justice MoJ workshop on 8 May 2014 • Commissioning landscape • Understanding procurement • Local context • Building relationships • Transition to delivery • Set of background papers, provided

  25. CONCLUSIONS ANDNEXT STEPS

  26. Thank you For further information • http://www.thamesvalley-pcc.gov.uk/Partnership/Victims-Services.aspx Other inquiries • jhopkins@citadelcommunications.co.uk

More Related