Memorandum from Westminster City Council (BOP 40)
1. Summary
1.1 Westminster
City Council welcomes the opportunity to contribute to the Communities and
Local Government Select Committee inquiry into the balance of power between
central and local government. We intend
to focus our submission on three elements of the inquiry - our use of existing
powers, where we would seek further devolution, and where we think there is a
case to be made for greater financial autonomy.
1.2 Our
headline argument is this. Local
government has proved itself to be the most efficient and effective part of the
public sector. Excellent councils like Westminster are part of a
new generation of local authorities who listen to their communities, take an
evidence-based approach to understanding them, and build strong partnerships
locally to deliver good-value services that best meet their needs.
1.3 We
know that most people's direct interaction with the state comes through local
government. But when citizens ask local
authorities to direct resources towards their top priorities - whether these
are more police officers by the tube station at night or better affordable
housing provision - too often they are told that the decision is out of their
local representatives' hands. It is
hardly surprising that they become frustrated and disengage.
1.4 We
want to bring our citizens back to the table and reinvigorate their support for
local democracy. We call this "localism
with purpose". In our submission, we seek
recognition of the current limitations of the power of well-being and propose
the granting of a general discretionary power to councils.
1.5 With
a general discretionary power, excellent councils such as Westminster would be given full freedom to
spend according to local priorities using un-ring fenced and non-prescriptive
Area Based Grant. They would be able to
raise a greater proportion of their expenditure locally, including through a
supplementary business rate, and retain a greater proportion of their business
rates and housing subsidy to meet identified local needs.
1.6 In
addition, under a general discretionary power, councils would have far greater
autonomy in target setting, the authority to compel partners to share data, and
an improved ability to hold other public agencies to account.
1.7 We justify
our proposal using strong examples of where we are using our existing powers to
secure better outcomes for local people and by highlighting where the lack of
further devolution from central government or financial autonomy is acting as an
impediment to our further progress.
2. Use
of existing powers
2.1 The power of well-being
2.1.1 The
power of well-being promotes local authorities' community leadership role,
allowing them to undertake any action to improve the social, economic and
environmental wellbeing of their area.
However, the power is limited by the fact that councils are prohibited
from charging for services, restricted to covering the costs of providing
specific services, and required to charge at a level determined by central
government.
2.1.2 Its
effective use is also hampered by the loose definition of how the "duty to
co-operate" applies to partner authorities[1]. For example, police borough commanders have
to balance and prioritise the community safety priorities agreed through the
LAA and the separate targets set centrally by the Home Office.
2.1.3 Westminster
City Council has taken the lead in establishing strong local partnership
arrangements. The Leader of the Council chairs the Local Strategic Partnership,
through which a wide range of local agencies and individuals have committed to jointly
delivering the objectives of the Sustainable Community Strategy (SCS) and the
improvement priorities identified through consultation on the new Local Area Agreement.
2.1.4 The council
recognises that there will be some local issues and priorities that are not
picked up through these consultation methods.
Westminster
has therefore introduced a new neighbourhoods programme that gives greater
voice to communities by empowering ward councillors to act as more effective
champions for their local area. This is
a year ahead of the new "duty to involve" which comes into force on 1st
April 2009.
2.1.5 Case
Study: Neighbourhoods
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The council has introduced neighbourhood budgets
of £100k per year for each ward for the next two years (2008/09 and
2009/10). The neighbourhood budgets
give all Westminster's
wards equal scope to address local issues and have both increased the
influence of frontline councillors and acted as a catalyst for increased
civic participation.
In addition to devolved budgets, Westminster's neighbourhoods programme:
- provides a new dedicated team to support councillors' enhanced role
through data and analysis, action chasing and casework progression;
- assigns a senior council manager to each ward to act as a champion and
help to "unblock" issues;
- creates new neighbourhood profiles, bringing together data on public
priorities, satisfaction and service performance at ward level, as well as
information on planned local service delivery, projects and partnership
working;
- empowers councillors to more easily arrange bespoke engagement events
on local cross-cutting issues.
To date, all wards have discussed with residents
their spending priorities. As a
result, we have seen the number of residents who feel that the council takes
account of their views when taking decisions increase from 41% to 47%. There has also been a 50% increase in
turnout at the council's Area Forums (regular consultation events).
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2.1.6 The council
is leading a new programme of work to establish how the Local Strategic
Partnership can better exercise the power of well-being, while making
efficiency savings. Described as an
audit of the totality of public spending across Westminster, the project involves:
- Consulting LSP partners, relevant government departments and other major
"spending" organisations in the city to establish a headline position of total
government spending over the past three years.
- Disaggregating information to ward level and matching activity to
spending.
- Working with partner organisations to collate and analyse results, and
develop proposals for increasing efficiency and effectiveness across local
public services.
2.1.7 We
are also exploring the development of an online bulletin board for community
recommendations. This would provide
residents with real-time information about their local area, allow them to
report streetscape, crime and other issues to the council, and make
recommendations for local improvement priorities via online fora.
2.2 Specific
examples of use of the power of well-being
2.2.1 In
2008, our top priorities are closely aligned to the principles of the power of
well-being. The following case studies
outline the issues we face in Westminster
and how we will be addressing them. They
highlight our commitment to community leadership, the strength of our
partnership engagement, and the legitimacy we draw from addressing the stated
priorities of our residents and customers.
2.2.2 Case
study: Families at Risk
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What is the issue?
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Approximately 3% of Westminster's families are at high risk of
social exclusion, which has a disproportionate and negative effect on local
communities. Some are involved in
crime and anti-social behaviour, while others suffer from health
inequalities. Others have problems
with housing, schooling, unemployment or substance abuse, or a combination of
the above.
Although individual services in Westminster are rated as excellent, lack of
effective co-ordination means the combined effect of their interventions is
weaker than it should be. Duplication
of effort and intervention only when problems have become entrenched also
results in higher costs to the tax payer.
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What do we intend to do?
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We will:
- Identify the top 3% of families who are most resource intensive for
the council and its partners.
- Map their circumstances and needs and the services they receive from
all public sector agencies
- Integrate services by establishing local multi-agency teams.
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What partners are involved?
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Council services (Children's and adult services,
housing, welfare and benefits, community protection, youth services, schools,
substance misuse services, mental health services); police, NHS, voluntary
sector.
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How does this exercise the power of well-being?
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The council is exercising its community
leadership role by bringing together partners to tackle social and economic
disadvantage among Westminster's
most vulnerable residents.
The project is in line with the stated aspiration
within the SCS to create "a city of opportunity where everyone can improve
their life chances, well-being and health".
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What currently hinders our ability to act?
What changes would we seek?
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There is currently a lack of clear guidelines for
information-sharing which hinders partnership working with families. We would encourage the Government to work
with local authorities and their partners to develop these.
We would also seek a more effective working
relationship with the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) and Job Centre Plus
(JCP) to support our efforts to tackle worklessness and to provide a seamless
service to residents (see section 2.2.4).
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2.2.3 Case
study: Community Build
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What is the issue?
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Demand for affordable housing in Westminster is high. Westminster
has experienced population growth of 15% since 2001, the highest of any local
authority in England and Wales.
High land costs make it very difficult to develop
housing that is affordable to most residents and, as a densely developed
urban area, there is little scope for new development.
Overcrowding is a severe challenge. The census shows nearly 5,000 overcrowded
households across all tenures.
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What do we intend to do?
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We will
- develop new housing opportunities within our existing stock, with an
appropriate mix of unit sizes and tenures;
- undertake a programme of early and detailed local consultation to
gauge other related needs, such as childcare, training space, and health
facilities;
- take these needs, as well as environmental and sustainability
considerations, into account when taking forward developments.
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What partners are involved?
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Council, CityWest Homes (the council's ALMO), Local
Area Renewal Partnerships, community organisations (such as the Dolphin
Square Charitable Foundation).
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How does this exercise the power of well-being?
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The council is taking an innovative approach to
addressing one of the top local priorities for residents, working together
with a range of partners.
This project is in line with the stated SCS
principle, that "addressing the shortage of affordable housing and high
levels of housing need including homelessness and overcrowding, are key
issues in maintaining and improving overall quality of life in Westminster".
There are also two LAA improvement priorities
linked to housing need.[2]
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What currently hinders our ability to act?
What changes would we seek?
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Setting up this scheme has proved very complex as
we need to take the finances off the balance sheet to relieve the Public
Sector Borrowing Requirement (PSBR) and need to make the programme tax
efficient through the creation of a charity.
Greater powers to extend the council's tax
umbrella to other council owned companies would greatly assist.
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2.2.4
Worklessness
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What is the issue?
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Worklessness has a significant impact on the
health and economic well-being of Westminster's
residents.
Around 18,000 residents in the city are out of
work and claiming benefits and a similar number of residents have no
qualifications.
Benefits payments paid to out of work residents
in Westminster
cost approximately £135m per annum (equivalent to the council's combined
expenditure on adult social care and community protection).
Westminster has an impressive track-record in reducing the
number of young people not in education, employment or training (NEET)[3]
and supporting local job-seekers into work - over 5,000 into work via
brokerage agencies in the last 7 years.
However, additional support is required to make a difference in the
areas where worklessness is concentrated in order to build on the
achievements to date.
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What do we intend to do?
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We are taking a multi-agency and cross-border
approach to tackling worklessness under the Westminster Works project. This includes:
- additional employment outreach to
families in areas where worklessness is highest;
- neighbourhood enterprise schemes to
support entrepreneurs and businesses in renewal areas;
- 'super' advisors to help low income
and workless families make sense of benefits entitlements to supplement
incomes;
- peer support networks providing
workless families with encouragement and mentoring;
- a new package of measures to engage
local businesses, council contractors and employers with the worklessness
agenda;
- shared management systems between
agencies to ensure that we are able to track the progression of families on
their journey into work and once in employment .
The council is also introducing a new
apprenticeship programme locally while developing proposals with local
partners for an innovative Group Apprenticeship Programme for Central London.
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What partners are involved?
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Council, Paddington Waterside Partnership,
Paddington Development Trust, Colleges, JCP, LSE, London Development Agency, Adult
Education Service, private sector and Local Area Renewal Partnerships
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How does this exercise the power of wellbeing?
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The combined impact of these schemes will improve
the life chances of the next generation of Westminster residents, while providing a
cost-effective solution to skills shortages.
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What currently hinders our ability to act?
What changes would we seek?
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The council has signed up to improvement
priorities to reduce worklessness via the LAA, yet budgets are largely out of
the Partnership's control.
DWP manages the contracts for key services and
there is no local accountability and connection to highly effective services;
such as Paddington First[4];
sponsored by the City Council and the LSP.
JCP does not reference the LAA targets within its
business plan, although the Council has instigated a memorandum of
understanding setting out roles and responsibilities.
The outcome is a dual commissioning strategy:
commissioning by the Government via DWP/JCP and commissioning by the Council
and the LSP. This is confusing for
residents looking for work and messy for services operating within this
structure.
We would seek:
- working with the London Development Agency as a broker between local authorities
and JCP, to establish a local commissioning board, (possibly covering more
than one local authority area) which would include DWP;
- to have a budget drawn from existing DWP expenditure in an area;
- powers to influence contractors and be accountable to local residents;
- for JCP / DWP to share anonymised data of their customers with
partners charged with strategy.
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2.3 Trading
powers
2.3.1 The
Local Government Act 2003 provides local authorities with the explicit power to
trade for a profit with public bodies and private organisations.
2.3.2 Westminster
City Council is making full use of this power.
Using expertise from its highest rated services; including
communications, parking, CivicWatch (community safety), and finance and
performance management; Westminster
offers practical and consultancy support to other local authorities,
consultants operating within the sector, and commercial third parties.
2.3.3 Westminster has set up a
limited company, WestCo Trading Limited, to act as its trading arm. The WestCo "offer" includes direct services
such as:
- a fixed price review of any service which the customer believes has
capacity for improvement;
- "off the shelf" operating models for the customer to work towards;
- seconded staff from the council to operate an improved service or
transfer their skills, knowledge and experience to the customer's own staff;
- licensing to the customer the right to use the systems that have been
developed by Westminster
and its partners.
2.3.4 In
addition, WestCo is exploring options for trading a range of indirect services
to partners to support their own bids to local authorities and joint ventures
with commercial third parties.
2.3.5 Case
study: Communications
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Westminster's communications team offers a consultancy
service under powers originally in the 1972 Local Government Act, and from
more recent legislation. This allows local authorities to trade with other
public authorities, as long as they do not subsidise them nor make an 'excess
surplus' from these activities.
Over the past five years Westminster's team has developed a trading
operation billing fees of £1.4 million 2007-8. The surplus, about 15% of the
total fees, is ploughed back into council services.
Westminster offers a range of communication services to
clients, but one of the key skills is the ability to reduce costs and improve
outputs. Projects and advice to re-organise disparate communications
functions to make them more efficient have been undertaken for councils
including Oldham, Birmingham,
Hillingdon and Southwark.
The council sees three benefits to this work.
First, it shares knowledge with other authorities. Work in reviewing and
recommending improvements to communication functions including Merton, Richmond upon Thames and the Isle
of Wight has led to improvements in the communication functions
of these authorities. Second, it retains income and knowledge within the
sector rather than losing it to the private sector. Third, it enhances the
quality of Westminster's
staff through the experience of the consultancy work that they undertake.
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2.3.6 By
utilising its trading powers in this way, Westminster
is taking a proactive and innovative approach to meeting the financial
challenge posed by the changing nature of the local population and the
settlement received through the latest Comprehensive Spending Review. As an indication, WestCo's target turnover
for the financial year 2008/09 is £1 million.
2.3.7 However,
it would be possible for the council to do more if the Government clarified the
procurement rules surrounding the purchase of services by public bodies from
local authority trading companies. Westco has encountered some confusion
amongst different local authority procurement departments about which purchases
have to be competitively tendered in accordance with the EU Directives, and
which purchases are excluded from these Directives. Clear and encouraging
guidance from the Government on the procurement of services from other local
authorities and their trading companies could significantly increase the use of
shared services between local authorities delivering efficiency savings through
economies of scale.
2.4 Charging
powers
2.4.1 The
Government is concerned that local authorities are not effectively utilising
their charging powers[5]. However, Westminster's use of these powers to raise
revenue is well-documented. Examples
include parking charges (for cars and motorcycles) and fees for local land
charge searches.
Parking
charges
2.4.2 In
2007/08, the council's net revenue from on-street parking was £38 million and
net revenue from off-street parking was £4.1 million. This funds transport-related expenditure
throughout Westminster,
including road maintenance, car park maintenance and improvement, and helps to
subsidise residents' parking permits.
2.4.3 The council
has recently introduced charges for motorcycle parking, responding to an
identified need. Occupancy surveys
conducted in March-April 2008 indicated that on-street motorcycle provision
remained significantly over-subscribed, despite a 25% increase in the latter
half of 2007. The revenue from charging
will be used to fund an additional 900 spaces in the council's off-street car
parks as well as on-street security devices (to prevent theft) in residential
areas.
Land
charges
2.4.4 Under
the terms of the Local Land Charges Act 1975, councils provide solicitors,
conveyancers and their clients with information about the land or property they
are interested in acquiring in exchange for a fee. In the past, councils have had discretion
around the level of charge they can impose for official searches. This has allowed Westminster to generate a surplus which has
been used to modernise and improve data systems. However, the government is currently
consulting on proposals to only allow councils to recover costs.
2.4.5 Our
ability to generate a surplus has been significantly reduced by competition in
the property search market. This
situation would be exacerbated if set fees were to be enshrined in legislation. National monitoring of charges also
contradicts the Government's commitment to lifting the burden of monitoring on
councils through the new performance framework.
2.4.6 We
believe that all charges for property search services should be deregulated to
individual council level. This would
allow us to generate a surplus that could be used to fund future investment.
3. Further
devolution and financial autonomy
3.1 The examples
above demonstrate how Westminster
is effectively using its well-being, trading and charging powers to deliver
better outcomes for local people.
3.2 We believe
that this makes a strong case for further devolution. Whilst central government has a legitimate
interest in national minimum standards, we believe that all places are
different and all require local solutions, mandated through local democratic
accountability structures.
3.3 We would
argue that central government should devolve decision-making on most issues to
local government and provide local authorities with fiscal autonomy to match their
decision making. This could be achieved
through the granting of a general discretionary power. This approach would truly empower communities
and their democratically elected representatives to determine local priorities
and direct service provision accordingly - localism with purpose.
3.4 There
are three headline categories under which we make our case: strong and
sustainable communities; fairness; and economic development. Under each category, this submission will
provide examples of the particular local issues we face, outline what is
hindering our ability to act, and make practical suggestions as to how a
general discretionary power would allow us to deliver better outcomes for our local
communities.
3.5 Strong
and sustainable communities
3.5.1 Population
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What is the issue?
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The population base used to drive national
funding formulae does not take into account short-term migrants or
"part-time" residents and therefore never reflects the totality of the
population which the council serves.
In any case, the population figures used for
funding and determining the most basic socio-economic features such as
unemployment rates are subject to such significant revisions that there is a
widespread loss of confidence that they reflect reality.
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What is hindering our ability to act?
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The inflexibility of the definition of the
population base imposed.
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What change do we seek/how would a general
discretionary power help?
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In areas with very high levels of migration or
part-time residents we would wish to be able to use a more realistic
population base derived from administrative sources for funding, planning,
and performance purposes. This would
be tenable if agencies were obliged to share details which capture resident
numbers with the council.
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3.5.2 Community
safety
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What is the issue?
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Community safety is a major issue for Westminster as for London
as a whole.
Residents continue to identify reducing crime and
anti-social behaviour as their top priority in Westminster's annual City Survey.
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What is hindering our ability to act?
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Funding for partnership community safety activity
is provided to the council in piecemeal fashion and subject to a variety of
different restrictions and accountability structures. In particular the methodology for granting
Safer Stronger Communities Funding (SSCF) and Basic Command Unit (BCU)
funding outside of LAA arrangements is flawed.
This hinders our ability to plan projects and be
proactive. To give a specific example,
the fact that BCU funding is controlled by the Borough Commander with no
lines of democratic accountability, means that agreed local community safety
priorities may be usurped at short notice by a directive from the Home Office
to the police.
Similarly, the target setting process for CDRPs
is contradictory. The process for the most recent round of target setting
(for 2008-11) required us to nominate 'spotlight indicators' for specific focus
prior to any public consultation taking place. This goes directly against the
concept of the LAA and removes our ability to focus on local concerns.
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What change do we seek/how would a general
discretionary power help?
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We would seek a formal, agreed degree of
influence over resources, autonomy in target setting and the ability to hold
the police to account for their performance. The first step toward this would
be to stop the Metropolitan Police from having their own target setting and
accountability processes separate to LAA arrangements. This would force CDRPs
to be held accountable as a partnership, not as individual agencies
controlling discrete resources.
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3.6 Fairness
3.6.1 Redistribution
of housing subsidy
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What is the issue?
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Our residents tell us that housing is one of
their top priorities (3rd top in 2007) and we have two designated
LAA improvement priorities linked to housing.
The current financial system doesn't allow us to meet that need.
Our HRA tenants' top investment priorities for
their estates are improved estate security, working lifts and environmental
investment that is not funded through the present system.
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What is hindering our ability to act?
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The current funding regime under-funds the real
cost of maintaining our stocks by up to 40%.
It fails to recognise the wider environmental needs of the council's
stock which is predominantly made up of flats (94%). This includes investment in lifts, digital
television, estate roads, security, works on common areas, and other costs associated
with a predominantly high-rise inner London
stock.
Westminster's asset management plan identifies the need to
invest £1.3bn on council homes over the next 30 years but the subsidy system
allows us to spend only £900m. From
2011 we will have to start paying money back into the government pool and
overall will have to pay back £177m over 30 years. Over the next 5 years we need to reduce our
investment programme by about £50m.
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What change do we seek/how would a general
discretionary power help?
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We would argue for a fair and equitable funding
regime that fully recognises our need to spend and allows local determination
around our own priorities and a self-sufficient Housing Revenue Account.
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3.6.2 Provision
of temporary accommodation
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What is the issue?
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Recent developments in housing policy have tended
to benefit households entering the social housing system over existing
tenants. For example, homelessness
legislation enables new arrivals, often with only a limited local connection,
the opportunity to secure valuable long term public housing. Meanwhile, targets to reduce bed and
breakfast usage and temporary accommodation have resulted in fewer transfer
opportunities for existing tenants.
In Westminster,
this has contributed to problems such as long waiting times and significant
levels of over-crowding. Community
cohesion is adversely impacted when the perception develops that new arrivals
get priority for housing. Finally, the
cost of providing accommodation for new arrivals falls on local taxpayers.
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What is hindering our ability to act?
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The cap on subsidy is set at a level which
doesn't cover costs which means that the shortfall has to be met by the
council tax payer.
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What change do we seek/how would a general
discretionary power help?
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We would seek the ability to set the cap on
subsidy at the appropriate market rate for Westminster. We would also encourage the government to
review the local connection measures in homelessness legislation.
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3.7 Economic
development
3.7.1 Retaining
business rates
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What is the issue?
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As London's "shop
window" Westminster
is responsible for keeping the most visible part of the capital clean, safe
and attractive. Maintaining incredibly
busy streets like Oxford Street
incurs significant expense.
Business rates are one source to support us in
fulfilling our place-shaping role in relation to business areas. However, the link between business
ratepayers' contributions and the service improvements or investments that
they perceive in their areas has been weakened significantly in the present
national business rates redistribution system.
It is difficult for local authorities to predict the level of funding
available for economic development as they are managed by various central
government departments, and may be bid-based or only available for a short
period of time. For example, the Local
Authority Business Growth Initiative (LABGI) was set to be a key contributor
to delivery of the Oxford,
Regent and Bond Streets' action plans.
However, the total level of resources for the whole of the CSR07
period is only £150m, which represents an 85% reduction compared to the
previous spending review period. In
addition, the government will be using a new methodology to distribute LABGI
in 2009-10 and 2010-11, with a stronger focus on distributing resources on a
per capita basis rather than individual authorities' performance on economic
growth or business rate contributions.
This means that business hubs in major cities such as Westminster will receive a much smaller share
of the LABGI grant compared to the previous scheme.
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What is hindering our ability to act?
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Westminster currently
contributes over £1bn in business rates to the central pool for
re-distribution to other local authorities; however, the City Council only
receives about £154m of business rates income via formula grant.
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What change do we seek/how would a general
discretionary power help?
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The City Council would be in favour of modifying
the business rates system to develop a partial re-localisation of business
rates.
In the shorter term, we would argue that the new
LABGI scheme should place a stronger emphasis in the distribution methodology
on business rates or economic growth contribution.
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3.7.2 Supplementary
business rates
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What is the issue?
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The Government has committed to introducing the
Supplementary Business Rates (SBR) scheme from 2010.
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What is hindering our ability to act?
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For London,
the power to set the levy and the income will be retained by the GLA to
contribute to the CrossRail scheme.
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What change do we seek/how would a general
discretionary power help?
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We would argue that all local authorities,
including London
boroughs, should be able to set and retain a local Supplementary Business
Rate.
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4. Conclusion
In this submission, Westminster
City Council has made a strong case for further devolution and financial
autonomy for local authorities.
We have highlighted a number
of specific examples where the existing powers, regulations and cultures in
government hamper our ability to deliver better outcomes for local people. These include:
- contradictory target-setting processes, for example between the council and police, which
makes it difficult to address community safety concerns;
- lack of support for data sharing between central government agencies, such as Job
Centre Plus, and local authorities, which impedes us in accurately counting the
local population and developing appropriate strategies to tackle worklessness;
- lack of autonomy to raise income and manage funding
locally to support new housing and economic development
activities.
- restricted ability to hold partners to account for
their performance
in addressing local priorities, including community safety and worklessness.
We have argued that excellent
councils such as Westminster
should be granted a general discretionary power which would allow us:
- full freedom to spend through un-ringfenced and non-prescriptive Area
Based Grant;
- more influence over partnership resources;
- the ability to raise a greater proportion of our expenditure locally,
including through a supplementary business rate;
- to retain a greater proportion of our business rates and housing subsidy
to meet local needs;
- autonomy in target setting
- and stronger authority to compel partners to share relevant data with us
and to hold them to account for their performance.
We base our argument on
evidence of the excellent use of our available powers, including our
well-being, charging and trading powers.
We believe that by bringing
decision-making back to local democratically-elected representatives we stand
the best chance of delivering "localism with purpose": better outcomes for our
communities and reinvigorated support for local democracy.
September 2008
[1] Partner
authorities are described as persons or bodies that must be consulted by a
responsible authority when it prepares its LAA, must co-operate with the
responsible authority to determine LAA targets, and must have regard to LAA
targets it has agreed.
[2] LAA 7 "To increase access
to good quality affordable housing"; LAA 8 "To meet housing need and tackle the
consequences of housing shortage".
[3] By January 2008, 235 young
people were NEET (5.1%), ahead of the Westminster
target of 8.5%.
[4] A
local job-brokerage which delivers employment support in community venues based
on estates. It is run by a private sector led partnership and matches the
skills of the job-seekers to those of the employer. Over 5,000 people have been
supported into work since 2001.
[5] "Only
one in five councils are using charging to the full potential. Not just to cover costs but to shape their
area". John Healey, Minister for Local
Government, in a speech to the Local Government Association, August 2008.