More smoke and mirrors from DCLG

Copied from Local Government Chronicle online

A forecast increase in business rates income next year will mean little extra cash for councils, it has emerged.

Earlier this week local government minister Marcus Jones trumpeted a £386m increase in the rates due to be paid by businesses in 2016-17. He claimed the rise was due to a 900,000 increase in the number of businesses.

However, figures published by the Department for Communities & Local Government show that £284m of the extra cash available was due to the end of ‘retail relief’, which councils could grant to retail businesses with low rateable values.

As councils were compensated for this discount by the government under section 31 grants, and will only keep 50% of rates income, the actual additional cash available to local government is minimal.

Neil Benn, director of Pixel Financial Management, told LGC it was “obvious” when looking at the figures that the end of retail relief was behind the change.

He said: “More rates will be paid but it’s offset for councils by lower DCLG compensation grant so Her Majesty’s Government is the only gainer.”

Once the £284m is stripped out the increase is 0.4%, rather than the 1.7% claimed by the DCLG earlier in the week. This is less than the annual inflationary increase in the business rates multiplier which has been set at 0.8% for 2016-17.

Alan Gay, deputy chief executive at Leeds City Council, told LGC the combined impact of the increase in the multiplier and the ending of retail relief meant income should have increased by around £500m.

“To me it suggests there is actually a decline in business rates,” he said.

Mr Gay also suggested there was often an “element of optimism” in the forecasts submitted to DCLG at the beginning of the year on which the figures are based.

“I would be surprised if there is not a similar shortfall to that we have seen in previous years,” he added.

As LGC reported in November, there was a £750m shortfall in the amount of business rates collected in 2014-15 compared to forecasts for the year, a discrepancy blamed on losses to appeals.

That year the actual net business rates income, once deductions had been made for discounts and appeal losses, was £21.6bn compared to a forecast of £22.4bn. The total net income in 2016-17 is forecast to be £23.5bn.

In a statement the DCLG maintained their position.

A spokeswoman said: “It is beyond dispute that there are now 900,000 more businesses than in 2010 and the latest figures show that, after stripping out changes in reliefs, multiplier and appeals provisions, the increase in the number of businesses has contributed to real growth in rate income between 2015-16 and 2016-17.”

Why stop at council websites?

I’m beginning to like the cut of this government Minster’s jib, when it comes to how local government should be preparing for the future.  His suggestion that councils should share the resources used to produce their internet presence makes total sense, but should not be limited to just websites.

All councils do a range of activities and deliver a range of services that are virtually identical.  No matter how many times you hear councils claim to be different, or even unique – which is of course is true geographically – people are people and what they require from their local council, tends to be very much the same.  So why do the four hundred plus councils across the UK continue to insist on purchasing something as expensive as software, using an individual, or in some cases, bespoke approach?

Historically, councils didn’t tend to need to talk to each other and were very inward looking and protective of their way of doing things.  Part of this was of course was an element of self-preservation.  As we have now seen in many councils in recent years, sharing resources, including staff, leads to efficiencies, which in turn leads to a need for fewer specialist staff.

The one place local government seems to be slow to make progress, is when it comes to sharing software systems.  I’ve little doubt that this will be due, in part, to the software companies making life difficult when it comes to a genuine shared procurement arrangement between councils.  However, it’s also likely that both central and local government play a significant part in not seeking combined software solutions, when a new duty, or service is introduced, because they think there’s bound to be a need to do something different in their area from every other council in the country.

Copied from Local Government Chronicle online

Minister proposes ‘open source’ solution for council websites
23 October, 2015 | By Sarah Calkin

Local authorities should not be spending money developing their own individual web portals when a single system could be developed and shared across councils, a government minister has said.

Speaking at a conference on public service reform on Wednesday, cabinet office minister Matt Hancock praised the Government Digital Service and its approach of developing platforms which could be shared across government for free.

The service developed the gov.uk platform now used for all Whitehall department websites.

Mr Hancock said GDS was now developing “core digital infrastructure for common activities like making and receiving payments, or tracking the status of an application” which would allow the public to deal with government “through one simple interface”.

Asked whether councils would be able to use the product he said: “The product should be available to local government… We are looking at what we can do to ensure that specific requirements of local government, as opposed to the source code more broadly, are available, that’s part of the spending review.”

Many local authorities are currently developing their own individual web portals, working with companies such as Agilisys and Civica, allowing residents to access services on line and conduct secure transactions, such as paying council tax.

Asked by LGC whether they should wait for an ‘off the shelf’ government product, Mr Hancock said he would “hate to see every council spending the development money to develop their own portal”.

“One portal written in open source software could be used by lots and lots of different councils and joined up that way,” he said.

Trevor Holden, chief executive of Luton BC, advocated a centralised approach at a recent Society of Local Authority Chief Executives & Senior Managers event.

He told LGC he welcomed the minister’s comments and called for a single piece of research and development work to develop the software, coordinated by central government or the Local Government Association.

“The vision has to be buy it once and buy well,” he said. “There should be a single portal it should be local and central government in the first instance but with an aspiration for the whole public sector so [for example] it knows who your GP is as well and you could book appointments through the system.”

Music to our ears, but will the public accept this approach?

Matt Hancock has captured very nicely the quandary so many councils, councillors and of course officers find themselves in when proposing new projects, or trying to do things differently – fear of failure and the subsequent criticism from local taxpayers for wasting ‘their’ money.

Neither he nor I would suggest that local government should be cavalier in the way it uses public money.  However, if we are going to do things differently, as we are constantly being entreated to do, we have got to take a certain level of risk in order to be successful in our endeavours.  If something that was being proposed was a racing certainty, we probably would have been doing it years ago, or certainly would have given it serious consideration, even if it had not been pursued, because of the level of upfront investment required.

However, we are now in a world where it’s literally sink or swim when it comes to not just surviving as ‘the council’, but actually growing and continuing to be relevant and important to the area we represent and care about.  

So, will we see another project like the Red Lion Quarter in Spalding being pilloried by all and sundry, simply because one minor element of it didn’t work?  Very probably, it seems to be the nature of the beast when it comes to the activities of government and the spending of the taxpayers’ cash.  The supermarkets and in particular Tesco, can get their business model seriously wrong, spending millions of pounds on the wrong approach, or the wrong projects and bounce back, reputation intact a few years later.  However, if the local council makes a mistake and a project doesn’t deliver as expected, certain elements of the public and local business organisations, will continue to drag it up at any opportunity, until their dying day.  

On the positive side, given the plans this government has for local government – a self sustaining, non-public money funded service provider – we should be free to rise from the ashes, reputation untarnished as needed, just like Tesco’s will, should anything go askew in that brave new world.  Of course there’s always the fate of the likes of Woolworths, Comet, Whittards, MFI, HMV, etc, etc, to consider……and then there’s always Detroit.

Copied from Local Government Chronicle online

Cast aside caution on transformation, minister urges22 October, 2015 | By Sarah Calkin

Local government has been too risk adverse and should be prepared to confront failure as it reforms services, a Cabinet Office minister has said.
During a speech on public service reform in central London yesterday, Matt Hancock also said greater control over business rates would allow councils to reform services to make savings.

Mr Hancock said: “The first question for government shouldn’t be what’s the best model for delivering public services, but rather what is the user need?

“Getting this right inevitably involves trial and error… In public services we are too cautious about using that phrase.”

Speaking to LGC after the speech, Mr Hancock acknowledged local government faced further funding constraint this parliament but insisted ministers were offering the sector freedom to reform and improve services.

“Reform both in terms of giving more freedom to operate according to how people on the ground see fit, policy freedom and the big business rate freedom that was announced,” Mr Hancock said. “These freedoms are given with the knowledge that people can use them to meet very tight spending limits.”

Asked how genuine this freedom was, Mr Hancock highlighted the general power of competence introduced by the previous government under the Localism Act 2011. This allows councils to do anything an individual can do, provided it is not prohibited by another law.

Mr Hancock said local authorities were free to try new things as long as they complied with relevant legislation, for example the Data Protection Act or rules governing social care.

He added: “I believe in the power of human ingenuity which includes the ability of people working on the frontline to constantly improve the services they deliver.”

Telegraph worried war on countryside to recommence

Ever since the NPPF hit the streets, the suspicion is, that the developers have not just gained the ear of government, they’ve ‘possessed’ their souls.
Clearly, having now been given a license to build pretty much anything they like, as long as it passes building regs, the developers still want more, with those annoying Local Plans becoming their latest target.

andrew lainton's avatarDecisions, Decisions, Decisions

Telegraph

Campaigners fear government plans to streamline planning rules will herald a “war” on rural areas and blight the countryside with new buildings.

Brandon Lewis, the planning minister, has hired an eight strong team to “slash” the amount of time it takes for councils to set up local plans which set out where building can take place.

But half of the group have backgrounds which have involved with the construction of more homes and other buildings, prompting fears that the needs of developers will be put first.

John Howell MP – the architect of the Tory policy which underlies the new National Planning Policy Framework – is also on board as well as a former senior planning inspector.

Other members include John Rhodes, a planning consultant, Adrian Penfold, the head of planning at developers British Land, and Richard Harwood, a senior barrister who specialises in planning

Liz Peace, the former…

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Another government minister with double standards – now there’s a surprise!

Warning against accepting tobacco firms’ help to clean streets

The Sunday Telegraph reports that local authorities have warned against accepting help from tobacco companies to clean up the streets. An estimated 122 tons of daily UK street litter is from cigarette butts, cigarette packets and used matches. 

In January, Kris Hopkins, then a local government minister, said he wanted tobacco companies to “make a contribution to put right the wrongs as a consequence of their product”. The companies offered to fund measures to help clean the country’s streets last month, but the offer was rejected by Rory Stewart, a junior environment minister. 

In a letter to the Tobacco Manufacturers’ Association, Mr Stewart said that a tie-up risked undermining councils’ work in promoting public health. Mr Stewart said it was “for local authorities to decide whether they wish to work with the tobacco industry”, but added that councils should take their own legal advice before accepting the support. He said: “Since April 1 2013, local authorities have had responsibility for improving the health of their local populations and for public health services. The Government’s view is that where a local authority enters into a partnership with a tobacco company, this fundamentally undermines the authority’s statutory duty to promote public health.” 

Clive Betts, the chairman of the Commons communities and local government committee, said: “Tobacco products are a major contribution to the litter problem. Councils have to be very careful in any arrangements which would enable them to improve their image. The best solution would be for the Treasury to give up a small amount of tobacco revenue to help councils clean up.”

The Sunday Telegraph, Page: 13 The Sun, Page: 18

Comment

This story appears to be a classic case of government talking out of both sides of its mouth again. It was not so long ago that some minister or other, was suggesting that the polluter should pay. From memory, this was suggestion was focussed on the fast food industry detritus that our roads and motorways were and are awash with, but both the principle and the issue are the same.  

Councils are now lumbered with the job of stopping us all from becoming 250lb burger eating, booze swilling chain smokers, whilst at the same time being told, by George Osbourne, to do it all with reduced funding.  
Taking ‘juniors’ message to its logical conclusion.  This means that all of the revenue the government receives from tobacco and alcohol taxes, along with various taxes received from the companies that produce the stuff and those that produce and peddle any form of fast food, is somehow tainted and should not be accepted by any government department charged with improving public health – well that’s the NHS screwed then!
Just as farcical, is the junior minister’s suggestion that councils should spend thousands of pounds of cash taking legal advice – I wonder if this particular Minster has any outside interests involving the legal profession? Parliament is of course full of lawyers and barristers.  

Personally, I don’t mind being ‘undermined’ a bit in the public health role – whatever that means in legal terms- if it helps me to get a bit more rubbish of of our streets!
 

Charity calls for s106 changes to ensure more affordable homes

This charity clearly has its heart in the right place as they say, but they haven’t listened to this government’s rhetoric on the subject of housing, either pre or post the May elections.
Successive ministers have re-profiled the term affordable, as referred in the planning guidance to mean something very different from what the previous labour government meant.
When Labour were in power and decided to ‘streamline’ the planning system, by introducing the onerous and impossible to achive LDF process, as its replacement for Local Plans, it was clear what affordable meant in planning terms.
Affordable housing was for rent and either became part of the local councils housing stock, or was managed by an RSL, otherwise known as a housing association. Such housing could also be provided on rural exception sites, that would otherwise not be permitted for development.
The coalition and now majority Conservative government, quickly redefind the affordable, as houses that those in fulltime employment, could aspire to own. Combine this with the recent changes to Right to Buy and dabbling with rents and even a blind man would be hard pressed not see this all as a state sponsored anti-social housing campaign.
Of course, the paranoid side of my character, could also see this as a campaign on behalf of all those developers that have the ear of Conservative ministers and have been whining about their paltry profit margins since the banking crash.

Planning Portal Content Team's avatarPlanning Portal Blog

Viability assessment guidelines should be introduced to make it more difficult for developers to reduce affordable housing in planning agreements, top research charity the Joseph Rowntree Foundation (JRF) has proposed.

It has published a report on planning obligations (s106 agreements) which concluded that recent changes to the planning system have made it more difficult for planning agreements to ensure homes are built for those on the lowest incomes.

The charity argued that the National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF), introduced by the coalition government, has led to negative impacts, including a greater emphasis on viability assessments, giving developers more ability to renegotiate agreements if they can show they make the scheme unworkable.

JRF has made the case for the introduction of viability assessment guidelines, which would set parameters for building costs and land values and allow councils to extract an amount from the rise in land value resulting from the granting of planning permission. The charity stressed this…

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More local government funding misery on the way

Clearly central government, along with its myriad of money hungry departments, expects local government to be flattered, when it comes to the combination of new burdens and funding cuts being visited upon it.    As well as being required to take on new service delivery, such as the management of council tax benefit – that came with a 10% reduction in funding from day one – it now has the new public health agenda to deliver and the national housing deficit to address.

Copied from Local Government Chronicle online

Ministers must consider the knock-on effects of their policies – 10 June, 2015 | By Keith Cooper

Ministers could impose further cuts on councils’ 2015-16 budgets, the chief executive of the Local Government Association has warned in correspondence seen by LGC.  The e-mail was circulated to council chief executives last week, as the chancellor announced £4.5bn of in-year cuts to departmental budgets across Whitehall.

These included plans to slash £200m from the Department of Health’s public health budget, a reduction that will be passed onto councils.  While the Department for Communities & Local Government saw its departmental budget cut by an additional £230m in last week’s announcement – equivalent to an 8.5% reduction- its funding for local authorities was left untouched.

In an email to local authority chief executives, LGA chief Carolyn Downs said the local government finance settlement “must be considered vulnerable”.  It adds: “Even if the government conclude, as they did in 2010, that practical considerations would make it very difficult to reopen the local government finance settlement there has to be a danger of any 5% cut being incorporated into the baseline used for the 2016-17 settlement before any 2016-17 reduction.”

A 5% cut applied to the DCLG’s local government budget for 2015-16 would be equivalent to a further £500m reduction, on top of the £3.7bn year on year reduction already applied.
While the emergency budget in a month’s time is expected to set overall tax and spend totals for the whole of this parliament, detail of further cuts are likely to be announced in a spending review, due in the autumn.  The emergency budget following the 2010 general election did not cut the local government finance settlement but did reduce specific grants.  Ms Downs said a “similar scenario” to 2010 “cannot at this stage be discounted”.

She added: “The LGA will continue to put forward the case for local government in the run-up to the spending review.”
A statement from the Treasury said the savings to the DCLG had found further in-year savings of £230m, largely though the sale of assets owned by the department and its arm’s-length bodies, such as the Homes and Communities Agency.  Asked if councils could face further in year cuts in July’s emergency budget, a spokesman for the DCLG said: “There has been no reduction in DCLG funding to local authorities.

“The 2015-16 local government settlement will not be reopened.”

Statement to Parliament on Starter Homes Initiative – Another (Unworkable) Amendment to #NPPF

Just like the commercial conversions policy, there is a danger that this will see residential development sited cheek by jowl, with just the sort of commercial and industrial developments that generates noise, smell, light and various other complaints.
There’s also the very real danger that those who end up marooned in these developments, will have little, or no access to the sort of amenities that other residential areas take for granted. Even the most poor quality residential development, is likely to have some form of green space, or maybe even a corner shop.

andrew lainton's avatarDecisions, Decisions, Decisions

Hansard Written Statement – numbers are only half those in the PMs Speech today, clearly Grant Shapps got his red pen out overnight and forgot to tell Brandon Lewis.

I would like to update hon. Members on the outcome of the Government’s consultation, launched by the Prime Minister in December, seeking views about our proposals for planning reform to support the development of 100,000 new high quality, low cost Starter Homes for young first time buyers.

We are determined to ensure young people are not denied what their parents took for granted – the opportunity to buy their own home, settle down and enjoy the security that home ownership brings. Nearly 192,000 households have now been helped by the Government to buy or reserve a home since 2010, through schemes like Help to Buy and the reinvigorated Right to Buy. But we know there are still far too many hardworking young…

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The Starter Homes Initiative Will Fail Because of the Requirement for Gardens

What a pity they didn’t offer some flexibility in this proposed policy, when cooking it up around the cauldron.
Surely, given the choice between what will, inevitably, be a ‘deceivingly spacious’ rabbit hutch (because we’ve seen not a sniff of a minimum room size spec from government have we?) with a garden and a house with decent sized rooms and good internal and external storage, what do you think most people would choose?
These decent homes, without gardens, would then have easy access to a nearby area of green space, that would be shared with their near neighbours. A much better way of promoting some feeling of community, than having everybody sat in their postage stamp size gardens, surrounded by a 1.8m fence.

andrew lainton's avatarDecisions, Decisions, Decisions

The influence of the Astroturf Group Create Streets and Roger Scruton led Design Panel at work

Telegraph

“We’ve shown what we expect Starter Homes to look like not rabbit hutches or shoe boxes, but decent, well-built, homes with gardens – places to start and raise a family.

‘With Gardens’  these are starter homes not palladian villas, how many developments of brownfield sites in low affordability areas and targeted at first time buyers these days are houses with gardens, none, zero, and this if a requirement will make them unaffordable.

Consider the advice Peter Holland of Pins gave St Albans last week.

Mr Holland was told that “one problem for St Albans is that many in-migrants from London are able to pay considerable sums for housing.

“Consequently with much of the development … involving the redevelopment of sites containing older traditional family homes, even modest new family homes in St Albans…

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