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WORKING TOGETHER – DELIVERING IMPROVEMENT. Welcome. The Worshipful The Mayor Councillor Miss KRT Deere. Introduction. Leader Councillor Cheryl Green. THE IMPROVEMENT AGENDA. STEVE THOMAS CHIEF EXECUTIVE WLGA. THE CORPORATE IMPROVEMENT PLAN 2006 - 2009. DAVID BOWLES
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Welcome The Worshipful The Mayor Councillor Miss KRT Deere
Introduction Leader Councillor Cheryl Green
THE IMPROVEMENT AGENDA STEVE THOMAS CHIEF EXECUTIVE WLGA
THE CORPORATE IMPROVEMENT PLAN 2006 - 2009 DAVID BOWLES INTERIM CHIEF EXECUTIVE
View of the Organisation NOT as described by external commentators in the local media but: • Not a “can do” culture • Bureaucratic • Risk averse and lacking corporate innovation • Death by Working Group • Poor lines of accountability • Not corporate • Lack of officer leadership • Lack of performance management culture
Performance Trends – Internal Performance * The new Performance Measurement Framework was introduced in 2005/06 which means a limited number of the measures are comparable with previous years.
Performance Trends – Comparison with all Wales *Excludes financial indicators **These figures cannot be confirmed until after 31/10/06
Corporate Improvement Plan 2006-2009 The most important Plan for the Council
Purpose of the Plan • Primary focus of the Council • The business plan for the Council • A means of measuring improvement • There to be used by officers Underpins the performance management arrangements in the Council
Priorities • Do we need clearer, more specific priorities? • WAO - Relationship Manager’s Annual Letter: “..we identified that there was both a lack of strategic direction and corporate focus on key priorities.”
Priorities for Development Interim Chief Executive - Council 19 July 2006: • Not a history of explicit focus • The sense of direction needs to be clearly articulated • Captured in the Improvement Plan • Formal launch Therefore we have sought to identify priorities……
The CorporateImprovement Plan Consultation - Key Development Issues: • Community Strategy • Joint Risk Assessment • Performance Measurement • Whole Authority Planning Cycle • Corporate Objectives • Policy Agreement
Overview of Relationship between Key Aspects of the Improvement Programme COMMUNITY STRATEGY CORPORATE OBJECTIVES POLICY AGREEMENT WALES PROGRAMME FOR IMPROVEMENT Risk Assessment 3 -Year Whole Authority Planning Cycle 3 -Year Whole Authority Planning Cycle Agreed priorities Corporate Improvement Plan Directorate Business Plans Performance Measures Service Area Plans Service Unit Plans Personal Appraisal Objectives and Targets
Setting Priorities • Risk Assessment • Community Strategy • Service issues
Setting Priorities – Risk Assessment • Annual JRA exercise 11 July 2006 • Cabinet/CMB/Regulators • Agreement on 5 key risk areas: • Children’s Services • School Buildings, Surplus Places, Funding • Assessment and Care Management • Physical, Financial and Human Resources • Culture of the Organisation
Setting Priorities – Community Strategy • Improve quality of life for all • Look after our environment • Increase prosperity • Have safer communities • Achieve a healthier County Borough • Have a more inclusive County Borough
Setting Priorities – Service Issues • Scrutiny Reports • Objective 1 / Convergence Fund • Children Act 2004 • Falling School Rolls • Social Care Issues • Regulatory Reports • WPI Sustainability & Equality Issues • Wales – A Vibrant Economy • Making the Connections • Beecham Report – Beyond Boundaries • Etc.
Corporate Priorities • Creating Learning Communities • Children Today, Adults Tomorrow • Realising the Potential of Our Major Towns • Valuing Our Valleys • Supporting Our Disadvantaged Communities • Caring For Our Future: Re-modelling Bridgend’s Adult Social Care Services • Diverse and Sustainable Economy
Moving Forward • CIP Launch – Today 12th October 2006 • Revised Plan March 2007 – a business plan accompanied by the budget for 2007/8 • Including detailed action plans that support the agreed priorities Over to you……
The Corporate Improvement Plan 2006 - 2009 OUR CORPORATE PRIORITIES
The RationaleCouncillor Cheryl Green • Evidence of the need for clear priorities • Cabinet worked with Corporate Management Board support • Priorities examined by Cross Cutting Overview and Scrutiny and approved by Council • All Priorities underpinned by Equality and Sustainability
The Rationale cont’d.Councillor Cheryl Green • Priorities are “work in progress” • Priorities must be linked to the budget • Provide a clear Member / Officer agenda • Jointly owned by Members & Officers
Children Today, Adults TomorrowCouncillor Cheryl Green POTENTIAL EXPECTED OUTCOMES: • Early effective intervention / preventative strategies • Fitter, healthier children and adults • Greater take up of whole range of opportunities by young people • Empowerment of young people leading to active citizenship • Increased take up from disadvantaged groups through effective targeting
Children Today, Adults TomorrowCouncillor Cheryl Green • More community/extended use of schools • Better equipped parents • Integrated approach from all agencies in delivering outcomes • More provision, especially for young people with mental health difficulties
Creating Learning CommunitiesCouncillor Peter Foley POTENTIAL EXPECTED OUTCOMES: • Skills-led curriculum well-matched to pupils’ individual learning needs • Pupils with additional educational needs are well-supported • School sites and buildings in good condition with appropriate facilities • Accurate, timely and informative assessment of pupil progress and needs • Schools meet health and safety standards
Creating Learning CommunitiesCouncillor Peter Foley • Well-located local schools • Effective multi-agency working • Parents: positive engagement and mutual support • Reduction in performance variations between schools • A greater community focus • More opportunities for bi-lingual and Welsh language provision
Realising the Potential of Our Major TownsCouncillor Bob Burns POTENTIAL EXPECTED OUTCOMES: • Improved infrastructure • Improved marketing opportunities e.g. coastal path, stop off destinations • Creating market opportunities • Maintenance of the day visitor culture • Centres that serve the local population • Increase the tourism offer
Realising the Potential of Our Major TownsCouncillor Bob Burns • High quality design • Increased housing with affordability • Economic development • Protecting investment • Improved community facilities • Ensuring north /south links are captured and developed (economic, tourism links)
Valuing Our ValleysCouncillor Patricia Hacking POTENTIAL EXPECTED OUTCOMES: • Investment in people and places (capturing skill needs, social issues and economic and physical aspects) • Skills for all • Enriching family life • Healthy hearts and minds • Encouragement in the use of technology to remove perceived barriers • Communicate and build upon existing achievements • Mindset away from physical to social
Supporting Our Disadvantaged CommunitiesCouncillor Patricia Hacking • Increased housing with affordability • Improved community facilities • Ensuring north /south links are captured and developed • Continuing and developing the Communities First agenda • Implementing the Pilot Estate initiative in partnership with Valleys to Coast
Caring for Our FutureCouncillorRalph Hughes POTENTIAL EXPECTED OUTCOMES: • Move away from traditional public service delivery to a more person centred approach • Greater use of technology to assist vulnerable people to remain in their own homes for longer • More effective information and accessibility for those requiring our support • Greater support for carers enabling them to access wider opportunities for themselves e.g. employment prospects
Caring for Our FutureCouncillor Ralph Hughes • To develop a citizen model that will deliver services that will enable greater choice and interdependence • De-commissioning of services, where appropriate, to a more mixed and modernised economy of care. • Services which are efficient and effective • Greater involvement of service users in the design, commissioning and reviewing of services • Making a reality of the vision for adult social services outlined in the 10 year Social Services Strategy, “Fulfilled Lives, Supportive Communities”
Diverse and Sustainable EconomyCouncillor Matthew Voisey POTENTIAL EXPECTED OUTCOMES • Growth of good local indigenous SMEs • Good provision of accommodation • Flexible lease requirements • Promoting local employment opportunities
Diverse and Sustainable EconomyCouncillor Matthew Voisey • Plugging the skills gaps- linking in with the local college and schools to deliver this- carers, catering/hospitality • Job intensive rather than capital intensive • Infrastructure provision (IT and transportation especially) • Graduate trainee provision within the Council- policy development targeting initially local people
ConclusionCouncillor Cheryl Green • Work in progress • Realism regarding budgets • Realism regarding capacity • Full detailed plans to support the Priorities by March 2007
The Performance Management Framework Hilary Anthony Executive Director - Learning
Why manage performance? Cha(lle)nging times… • Globalisation • Technology • Social & demographic change • Diminishing resources • Rising demand / expectations • Diversity
But not all ‘progress’….. • High levels of economic inactivity • Aging population & falling school rolls • Obesity & health problems • Impact on environment etc….. This requires: • Redefined roles and priorities for the public sector • Doing things differently • Early intervention & prevention • Greater efficiency & effectiveness
What is Performance Management? Culture Systems & Processes
Culture • Commitment to continuous improvement • Clarity about priorities & values • High expectations • Aspirational but realistic targets • Effective use of performance indicators & targets
Culture cont’d. • Not risk averse • Accountability • No blame culture • Internal challenge & honest self evaluation • Embedded throughout the organisation at all levels
Systems & Processes • Integrated • Linking priorities, plans, targets & resources • Consistent & coherent • Key performance indicators • Regular monitoring & evaluation • Involving all levels of leadership &management
The Purpose • Be more ‘business like’ in the way that we do our business • Be clear about what we are trying to achieve • Set out exactly what we are going to pursue and how we will do this • Develop a cyclical approach to business planning and reviewing • Monitor whether we are achieving our objectives • Report on how well we are doing
SETTING THE VISION OR STRATEGY Where do we want to go? e.g. Community Strategy, Corporate Improvement Plan, Children & Young People Plan MONITORING AND REPORTING AND ADAPTING Have we got there, and how did we do? e.g. Monitoring action plans, individual appraisals, identify changes ESTABLISHING THE ACTION PLAN How are we going to get there? e.g. Service Business Plans, objectives and target setting, identify resources needed MAKING IT HAPPEN Are we getting it done? e.g. Setting objectives for individuals/teams, allocating resources The Basic Elements
The Bridgend Approach Consultation Community Strategy Monitoring & Reporting on achievements against action plans and targets Corporate Improvement Plan & other Strategic Plans Core Values, Legislative and Corporate Policy Framework & Corporate, Corporate Budget Process Individual appraisal & performance review Directorate & Service Plans Individual Objectives Unit / Team Service Plans
Next Steps Training Implementation: • IT support • Start date • Business plans format • Quarterly Business Reviews • Continually evolving • Role of the Corporate Improvement Group
Corporate Improvement Group • Promoting the improvement culture throughout the Council • Leading the drive for service improvement • Developing the performance management arrangements • Monitoring change & impact • Evaluating progress
Questions & Answers The Panel: Steve Thomas, Chair Cabinet Corporate Management Board
Conclusion David Bowles Interim Chief Executive