Post on 25-Dec-2015
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Salford Neighbourhoods Summit Resource Pack: Contents
1. Introduction
2. Map of Salford’s Neighbourhoods 4
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6. Putting it all together IN Salford * 8
9. Key neighbourhoods data – ‘Narrowing the Gap’*
4. How neighbourhood working operates in Salford *
3. Salford Neighbourhoods’ Population
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5. Young Foundation Neighbourhood Analysis
8. What is Salford’s approach to neighbourhood working?
7. Seven Key Ingredients for Successful Neighbourhood Management 9
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(Items marked * are key reading)
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Salford Neighbourhoods Summit Resource Pack: Contents (cont)
11. Whole Systems working in Salford -
12. Whole Systems working in Salford – Future Search
13. Young Foundation Research
15. New Deal for Communities: Response to the Neighbourhoods Summit
14. Summary of Focus Group Sessions:
Findings and Key Strategic issues *
10. Whole Systems Working – How does it fit with Salford’s neighbourhood agenda?
(Items marked * are key reading)
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1. Introduction
This resource pack collates some key materials which will help Summit delegates contextualise their discussions about neighbourhood working in Salford in a broader arena. It is suggested that delegates pay particular attention to items which are asterisked on the contents page.
The pack contains information about:
• Salford
and
• National Research and Good Practice
The pack picks out materials that it was felt would provide useful background for Salford’s Neighbourhoods Summit – it is not intended to be the definitive guide to neighbourhood working.
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2. Map of Salford’s Neighbourhoods
There is one Community Committee for each neighbourhood within the city of Salford.Each neighbourhood contains between two and three wards. The boundaries for each neighbourhood are indicated on the map.
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3. Salford Neighbourhoods’ Population
Neighbourhood Ward Population Total Neighbourhood Population
Eccles
Barton 12,067
34,564Eccles 10,298
Winton 12,199
Worsley / BoothstownBoothstown & Ellenbrook 9,799
19,763Worsley 9,964
East Salford
Broughton 11,866
34,687Irwell Riverside 11,516
Kersal 11,305
IrlamCadishead 9,289
19,157Irlam 9,868
Claremont / WeasteClaremont 10,484
21,357Weaste & Seedley 10,873
Ordsall / LangworthyLangworthy 12,393
18,959Ordsall 6,566
Swinton
Pendlebury 11,499
33,492Swinton North 11,000
Swinton South 10,993
Little Hulton / Walkden
Little Hulton 12,713
34,124Walkden North 11,241
Walkden South 10,170
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5. Young Foundation Neighbourhood Analysis
The Young Foundation suggests there are 3 reasons why local authorities (and other public service providers) work in neighbourhoods.
Engagement - Use community engagement to improve• Citizen influence over local decisions• Belonging• Community cohesion
Governance - Improve and devolve decision making to improve• Trust in and sense of influence• Responsiveness in decision making• Turnout
Delivery - Ensure more responsive services to improve: • service coordination•Value for money•Citizen satisfaction with services
For Residents – Better Neighbourhoods
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6. Putting it all together IN Salford
Community commissioning
Neighbourhood charter &
performance management
Communitydevelopment
Participatory action plans and visioning
Youth forums
Co-locatedNeighbourhood
teams
Localscrutiny
NeighbourhoodPartnership Boards
Frontlinecouncillors
Housing Governance
e.g. Salix/City West
Health ActionPartnerships
Joint tasking
Joined-up services
Devolved community committee budgets
Devolved servicedecisions
Decentralised service
management
Communities of identity
Community-baseddelivery
One-stop access points
Delivery Governance
Communityengagement
Examples of the types of activity which fulfil each approach to Neighbourhood working
Support for community& voluntary sector e.g.SALT/Broughton Trust
Local partnership delivery groups
Volunteering
Children'slocality teams
Neighbourhoodpolicing
Budgetsubgroups
Participatorybudgeting
Community committees
Local forums
10DELIVERY FOCUS GOVERNANCE FOCUS
ENGAGEMENT FOCUS
Devolved Governance
Participatory Governance
Community Empowerment
Mixed Models
Neighbourhood Delivery
Localised Delivery
What is the focus of Salford’s neighbourhood delivery?
Where is Salford on this chart now?
Where do you think Salford should be aiming to be?
8. What is Salford’s approach to neighbourhood working?
Thanks to the Young Foundation for allowing reproduction of this diagram
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9. Key Neighbourhood Data – ‘Narrowing the Gap’
The following graphs give some indication of the ‘gap’ which exists between Salford’s neighbourhoods and between the city and the rest of the country. Neighbourhood working is often thought to be the best place to understand these challenges and to garner services and resources locally.
Distribution of DWP Out of Work Benefit Claimant Data by Lower Level Super Output Area
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
35%
40%
45%
50%
55%Central Salford Salford West
Salford Average 18.52%
NI 153 Break Point 25%
Source: DWP WPLS Longitudinal Study Feb 2008
National Average 11.7%
NW Average 14.7%
This graph shows huge differences (between 49% and 2%) of the number of residents who are on out of work benefits across Salford’s Super Output Areas (SOAs). SOAs are small geographical units used by the office of National Statistics to capture data. They contain an average 1500 residents.
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Bo
oth
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& E
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ok
, 0
Irla
m, 0
Sw
into
n N
ort
h, 0
Ca
dis
he
ad
, 1
Cla
rem
on
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Wo
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Ke
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, 3
Wa
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Ord
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Win
ton
, 5
Irw
ell
Riv
ers
ide
, 7
Bro
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Pe
nd
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ury
, 9
Lit
tle
Hu
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n, 1
2
Ba
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n, 1
4
We
as
te &
Se
ed
ley
, 14
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
NI 15 Serious Violent Crime (Rate per 1,000 population) (Source: GMP iBase) (LAA partial definition) (April-September 2008)
Bo
oth
sto
wn
& E
llen
bro
ok
, 61
Cla
rem
on
t, 7
1
Irla
m, 9
0
Wo
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0
Wa
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en
So
uth
, 96
Sw
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n S
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th, 9
8
Ca
dis
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ad
, 10
1
Sw
into
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ort
h, 1
16
Win
ton
, 13
5
Ec
cle
s, 1
41
We
as
te &
Se
ed
ley
, 14
3
Pe
nd
leb
ury
, 14
5
Wa
lkd
en
No
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, 15
1
Ba
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n, 1
70
Ke
rsa
l, 1
80
Lit
tle
Hu
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n, 2
17
La
ng
wo
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y, 2
20
Ord
sa
ll, 3
87
Bro
ug
hto
n, 4
21
Irw
ell
Riv
ers
ide
, 43
1
0
50
100
150
200
250
300
350
400
450
NI 16 Serious Acquisitive Crime (Rate per 1,000 population) (Source: GMP iBase) (April-September 2008)
Violent crime
Serious acquisitive crime
9. Key Neighbourhood Data – ‘Narrowing the Gap’
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Life Expectancy
% of Students achieving 5 or more GCSEs graded A-C
Bro
ug
hto
n
Pe
nd
leto
n
Ord
sa
ll
Bla
ck
fria
rs
La
ng
wo
rth
y
Lit
tle
Hu
lto
n
Ba
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n
Ec
cle
s
We
as
te a
nd
Se
ed
ley
Win
ton
Sw
into
n N
ort
h
Pe
nd
leb
ury
Ke
rsa
l
Wa
lkd
en
No
rth
Cla
rem
on
t
Irla
m
Sw
into
n S
ou
th
Ca
dis
he
ad
Wa
lkd
en
So
uth
Wo
rsle
y a
nd
Bo
oth
sto
wn
64
66
68
70
72
74
76
78
80
Life expectancy at birth for all persons (Experimental Statistics 1999-2003) (Salford wards pre-2004)
Lit
tle
Hu
lto
n, 3
9.3
%
Irw
ell R
ive
rs
ide
, 4
4.8
%
Ord
sa
ll, 4
6.4
%
Wa
lkd
en
No
rth
, 5
2.1
%
La
ng
wo
rth
y, 5
5.0
%
Bro
ug
hto
n, 5
8.5
%
Win
ton
, 6
0.1
%
Ba
rto
n, 6
0.8
%
Ke
rs
al, 6
1.8
%
We
as
te a
nd
Se
ed
ley
, 6
5.9
%
Sw
into
n N
orth
, 6
8.4
%
Wa
lkd
en
So
uth
, 6
8.8
%
Cla
re
mo
nt,
72
.9%
Sw
into
n S
ou
th, 7
5.3
%
Pe
nd
leb
ury
, 7
6.6
%
Ec
cle
s, 7
7.0
%
Irla
m, 7
8.7
%
Wo
rs
ley
, 8
4.3
%
Bo
oth
sto
wn
an
d E
lle
nb
ro
ok
, 8
5.6
%
Ca
dis
he
ad
, 8
9.3
%
0.0%
10.0%
20.0%
30.0%
40.0%
50.0%
60.0%
70.0%
80.0%
90.0%
% of students achieving 5 or more GCSEs graded A*-C (2008) (Source: Children's Services)
9. Key Neighbourhood Data – ‘Narrowing the Gap’
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Principles of ‘Whole Systems’ thinking
Whole Systems thinking requires you to
• understand how systems operate and interlink: at both a micro level (such as families, neighbourhood and village communities, and work teams) and macro level (such as large organisations, politics and the economy). For example in the case of worklessness how does Job Centre Plus, local community and voluntary sector provision, and the decisions of those who are seeking employment fit together?• use tools and approaches which foster ’whole systems’ working, where planning, research and evaluation seek to engage the full range of stakeholders including services users, communities, front-line staff, councillors, middle and senior managers. People with authority, resources, expertise, information and need should be engaged to get a rounded understanding of the issue being addressed.
10. Whole Systems Working – How does it fit with Salford’s neighbourhood agenda?
The challenges faced by Salford’s neighbourhood are complex and multi-dimensional, such challenges demand solutions that utilise the skills, expertise and resources of all partners. From April 2009 Comprehensive Area Assessment (CAA) will hold local public services ‘collectively to account for their impact on better outcomes. This means that CAA will look across councils, health bodies, police forces, fire and rescue services and others responsible for local public services, which are increasingly expected to work in partnership to tackle the challenges facing their communities (Audit Commission). ‘‘Whole systems’ thinking and working will enhance Salford’s ability to address the CAA’s demands.
‘Whole systems’ thinking has been embraced by Salford at both a city and a neighbourhood level. During 2006/07, Salford’s Strategic Partnership was supported by a team of Neighbourhood Renewal Advisors (NRAs) in developing delivery plans for the Partnership’s first LAA. This team concluded that only a different response to the City’s challenges would achieve transformational (rather than incremental) change. They suggested that a ‘Whole Systems’ approach would help the Partnership to address the city’s most deep-seated challenges.
Salford’s Connecting People to Opportunities paper (2007) clearly articulated the strategic need for transformational change for the city to seize the wealth of forthcoming opportunities (eg. mediacity:uk). (see http://www.partnersinsalford.org/connectingpeople.doc). The paper summarised the scale of challenges faced by Salford. At the heart of this challenge is the aim to ‘narrow the gap’ between the most and least deprived areas within Salford, and between Salford and the rest of the country. This demands that the seemingly intractable issues of child poverty, the poverty of aspiration, low skills and worklessness have to be tackled in a different way. The challenge for local services is that these issues are both complex and interdependent. Effectively tackling them lies beyond the scope of any one individual partner. They do not lend themselves to easy solutions.
The Partnership has embraced the challenge set by the NRAs. Spotlighting, a way of using ‘whole systems’ approaches to public service reform at a neighbourhood level has been used in the City from 2007 to date. It also approved the use of Future Search, a three day, whole city, whole system dialogue to address the key issues faced by Salford. The Partnership are currently updating our community plan to be come a sustainable community strategy; it will be a plan for the ‘whole system’.
Whole system approaches can be seen as a set of principles for effective partnership working and improving service delivery. It moves beyond thinking about issues in professional silos. The key principles are outlined here.
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11. Whole Systems working in Salford –
5 - 6Week
Stage
Products&
Tasks
(up to) 1
Planning
Business case.Team.
MethodsMapping
Stakeholders
2 - 3
The issue
Cause and effect
analysis:Families,
individuals, places.
3 - 4
The response
Delivery Chain
analysis: Systems,
structures, incentives
Delivery Agreements
Commitment to change –
made to high level panel.
Bi Monthly
Stock takes
Regular high level
checks on
delivery
‘Quick wins’ – supporting local ideas
6 onwards
Delivery
Quick wins.
medium and long
term reform.
Spotlight is a ‘whole systems’ process inspired by the Priority Review Model developed by the Prime Minister’s Delivery Unit. It injects pace, urgency and analytical rigour and accountability to the job of dealing with key issues – things like worklessness, young people who aren’t in education employment and education, and making sure that Salford is a clean, green and safe place to live. It’s a rapid (six to eight week) analysis designed to understand the issue in a local context, understand how services link together and their strengths and weaknesses (and in some cases fatal flaws!). Spotlight seeks to understand an issue in detail at neighbourhood level and to assess how public services might join up to deliver more effective outcomes at for citizens and service users. It engages the ‘whole system’ in a structured six week process which is outlined below.
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10. Whole Systems working in Salford –
Spotlight is designed to make sure that the right stakeholders (communities, service providers, and politicians) are brought together with a real sense of urgency to develop innovative solutions to address some of the city’s most difficult issues. Finding these solutions involves agencies working in partnership to understand the cause and effects of a critical issue in a local context – and its impact on places, families and individuals. From this Spotlight develops a clear picture of the reforms that need to be made and, most critically, to get the key people in organisations to agree that these changes need to be made. Spotlight supports the delivery of Salford’s Local Area Agreement (LAA).
What has Spotlight achieved?
• has generated real energy and ‘broken the stride’ of local partnerships;
• has developed an integrated approach to analysing issues, and highlighting critical gaps in our knowledge and understanding – particularly a lack of performance measures at local level, which in some cases has led to service providers not being sure that they are delivering the services that local residents want.
• has brought new providers into the delivery of services which weren’t previously part of their role, for example, we have changed GP contracts to encourage the referral of people on incapacity benefit to employability advisers, and hope to give registered social landlords an important role in supporting workless tenants.
• has identified barriers to community and voluntary (third sector) organisations being commissioned to provide local services and developed a commitment to remove these. On worklessness we have commissioned third sector organisations into the system for the first time.
• has developed clear, evidence-based examples of how large public sector agencies are not always encouraged to deliver on things that matter to local people.
For example:
In Ordsall and Langworthy the police’s objectives are dominated by edge of city centre theft from motor vehicles when local people care most about anti social behaviour.
On worklessness, Jobcentre plus do not have strong incentives to deliver in at a small area level, much less in the toughest areas.
The learning from Spotlight has led to the police, Jobcentre Plus and other partners being committed to addressing this at a local level. This understanding and commitment will enable us to have ‘real’ conversations about flexibilities and central/local priorities with agencies and Government Office/Government about the delivery of Salford’s Local Area Agreement.
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Key messages from Spotlight for neighbourhood working:There have been common themes which have emerged during the Spotlights. By understanding in detail the way in which services do or don’t join up from a customer perspective the process has identified some common issues to be addressed. These are summarised on the chart below.
10. Whole Systems working in Salford –
StrategyOperational PlanningProcurement
Quantitative DataPerception DataCommunity Engagement
Understanding need Planning & deciding
Reviewing Delivering
THE CUSTOMER JOURNEY
See www.partnersinsalford.org/salfordagreement/spotlight.htm for more details.
Possible Issues:Weak local dataWeak analytical capacityEngagement not influencing delivery enough
Possible Issues:Patchy evaluationWeak mainstreaming practice
Possible IssuesPlans not locally specificLocal governance not connected to LSPBarriers to entry
Possible IssuesFragmentationWeak cross referralLack of incentives to meet local standards Weak collective actionInstability
Operational Delivery
Performance MonitoringEvaluationLearningChanging Delivery
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Were there any themes around neighbourhoods which emerged from the Future Search?• Neighbourhoods were viewed as an important and appropriate scale on which to engage people and deliver services. • 28 out of 80 Future Search actions fall under the ‘Think Neighbourhood’ banner.• Participants identified common ground statements which stressed the value of neighbourhood. These are listed here.
Future Search Common Ground Statements
Neighbourhoods Group: We ensure that neighbourhood delivery is needs based, inclusive of all minority groups and accountable to local communities. We commit to deliver cleaner, safer, well connected and well maintained areas by full partnership working.
12. Whole Systems working in Salford – Future Search
In July 2008 Partners IN Salford held a Future Search conference called ‘Seizing Salford's Moment: Connecting People with Opportunities’. mediacity:uk and other developments will bring massive opportunities and new prosperity to the city. We need to make the most of these chances, and ensure that everyone in the city feels that they benefit and their lives improve. The conference, which was attended by over 50 people from all walks of life. They were chosen for their experience and knowledge, to think creatively about the answers together.
Families Group: Our city is full of happy well supported families, living in energy efficient houses in clean, safe, active neighbourhoods.
Two of the eight Future Search theme groups included neighbourhoods as a headline in their statements about the Vision for Salford in 2024.
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Low Carbon Economy Group: Stressed the importance and potential challenges of delivering the low carbon agenda at neighbourhood level. In particular focusing upon:
• The additional infra-structure cost of low carbon actions when regenerating neighbourhoods. Low carbon needs to be the ‘normal’ way of designing.
• Communities’ behaviour needs to change to accommodate low carbon lifestyles. How can we encourage this change? Neighbourhood or sub-neighbourhood level is the most appropriate scale to do this.
Health Group:Enhanced Neighbourhood Working(Multi-agency working, outreach to services)• No wrong door ( any agency can signpost people to the right service).• Account manager (linked to above – named worker to guide users through the right services• 1 stop shop, co-location of services• Gateway Centres (co-located council and health services)• Idea of Citizen’s pathway of care (how citizens experience the journey of accessing services)• Better engagement & use the 3rd sector – gives local legitimacy
12. Whole Systems working in Salford – Future Search
What learning can we take from Future Search that might inform partnership working at
neighbourhood level?1.The value of whole systems working – get the whole system in the room 2.Working towards a collective understanding of issues and challenges – encourage diverse perspectives through listening and constructive dialogue with other stakeholders. Organise meetings that will encourage this kind of dialogue.3.The principle of finding common ground – focusing on what partners can agree on and using this as a basis to forge partnership working. This avoids getting ‘stuck’ in complex and/or intractable disputes that can get in the way of making progress. We can and have to help and contribute to each others’ agendas.
A further two Future Search groups felt that working at a neighbourhood level was the key to ensuring that their actions were effectively delivered.
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Respectful attitudes from agencies and their representatives
Evidence of being listened to even whentheir wishes cannot betaken on board
Improvements to crime, street scene & public real through crime prevention & youth provision
Seeing tangible
results
Streamlined consultation process
Priorities shared by Communities:
Are these found in Salford?
13. Young Foundation Neighbourhood Research
Priorities for local authorities:
Are these found in Salford?
member roles at the local level
How LAs structure their overall approach to neighbourhoods within corporate plans,
LAAs & LSP
Developing and evolving neighbourhood working
Embedding community engagement throughout activities
Youth engagement
The Young Foundation’s empirical research in 15 local authorities found that these areas faced many similar issues. Are these issues for Salford?
Reference: Transforming Neighbourhoods: Lessons from 15 Local Authorities
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• How to tackle service involvement: in particular, how to involve services that do not traditionally have a locality focus, including Children’s Services in many areas.
• Mainstreaming neighbourhood working: making neighbourhood activities part of core business and stopping over-reliance on short-term external funding
• Tools and tactics to bring together services at the very local level: in particular, a question emerged about how neighbourhood charters or mini LAAs can work most effectively?
• The fit between neighbourhood bodies and LSPs: how to align strategic-level partnership with very local partnerships and initiatives?
13. Young Foundation Neighbourhood Research
• Transition to new models of governance: how to evolve existing area structures to accommodate a greater interest in the very local?
• Risk management: balancing the desire to give greater responsibility to residents or the third sector and the need to safeguard the equitable spending of public money. This issue becomes more acute as residents are given more influence over services.
• Exploiting new technologies: for example, the joint My Society and the Young Foundation website, ‘Fix My Street’
• Unblocking sticking points: services and neighbourhood groups often face legacies of difficult history and become stuck in conflicts
Several themes and related questions emerged during the Young Foundation’s research:
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The Young Foundation suggest that it is the way that the changes around the current legislative drivers around empowerment (in particular Sustainable Communities Act 2007, Local Government and Public Involvement in Health Act 2007 and Empowerment White Paper) are managed a locally will have the greatest impact on empowerment.
‘[W]here local government manages these demands well and empowers all the key players - residents, councillors and community representatives - it benefits hugely from their enthusiasm and dedication, and together they can improve local services and create better neighbourhoods.’
(From Transforming Neighbourhoods: lessons from working in fifteen areas - Young Foundation and IDea 2007)
13. Young Foundation Neighbourhood Research
Structures - closer you get to the ground the less structures matter and the more your approach to work matters - the converse is true. For Neighbourhood working to be effective it needs to be driven from the centre and embedded in department business plans
People - nurturing people with different roles is important. Community activists may feel exhausted and disillusioned, councillors feel that the renewed interest in local leadership is what they have been doing anyway. Officers have to negotiate the competing demands of all groups and often carry high levels of risk. Need to develop 'skills, experience and trust to enter into the sort of mature dialogues needed to resolve complex local issues'
Process - most areas embarked on reviews of neighbourhood working/structures governance. Different processes were taken. What was key was not the nature of the structure but the processes that were put in place to shape, design, and implement the structures.
Organisational culture - need to be able to overcome silo mentalities, embed neighbourhood working into core service planning and into LSP LAAs. Need to develop a culture which enables officers and members to take risks and innovate to meet community demands.
Four dimensions emerged as critical for effective neighbourhood working
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Local authority & statutory agencies
Neighbourhood
Mainstream services tailored to local needs
Possible neighbourhood services?:
Services that can be tailored or devolved to n’hoods. Service
standards shaped or set by n’hood.
Strategic services:
Services that require central planning, delivery & oversight. Service standards set by LA.
Education
Health
Social services
RecylingCommunity
safety
Public space & infrastructure
Frontline youth services
Housing management
Waste management
Frontline services delivered at n’hoodlevel & tailored to local needs through partnerships with service providers &
participatory planning.
Mainstream services delivered authority-wide. Scope for local priorities to be reflected through
consultative processes.
Neighbourhood
Devolved or top-up services commissioned or delivered by
neighbourhoods. Priorities & service standards set through community-led
participatory planning.
Neighbourhood policing
Source: Young Foundation, April 2006
Youth & play facilities
Top-up social care
Health & well-being
Crime
Local transport
Parking
Cultural services
Road safety
Locally-controlled “top-up” services
Locally-controlled devolved services
Mainstream services influenced by local
priorities
Skills & work
How does Salford deliver services at neighbourhood level? Some food for thought.
13. Young Foundation Neighbourhood Research
Thanks to the Young Foundation for allowing reproduction of this diagram