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The ensuring council: An alternative vision for the future of local government CORE CAP A C I T Yt TICS t SOCI I L O AL P t IP t SH S T t EWA E C I T R S D U J LABOR A T I COL O N The ensuring council: An alternative vision for the future of local government The Association for Public Service Excellence (APSE) is a not-for-profit local government body working with over 300 councils throughout the UK promoting excellence in public services. APSE is the foremost specialist in local authority frontline service providers in areas such as waste and refuse collection, parks and environmental services, leisure, school meals, cleaning, housing and building maintenance. GB 11409 GB 11132 GB 14074 Local Government Research Unit (LGRU) The Local Governance Research Unit, based at Leicester Business School (De Montfort University), is an internationally recognised centre of excellence for theoretically informed, robust and rigorous policy relevant research into British and comparative local governance. Its recent work focuses on community cohesion and local citizenship, neighbourhood governance, local democracy and local politics. The Unit is committed to providing a strong and vibrant link between academic research and the needs of the research user. It undertakes research for a wide variety of bodies. The Unit has strong research links with other leading universities in the UK and across Europe and the USA. The research was undertaken as part of the Knowledge Transfer Partnership (KTP) between APSE and De Montfort University. With thanks to the authors and research team, Mark Bramah, APSE, Dr Catherine Durose, De Montfort University, Dr Steven Griggs, De Montfort University and Adele Reynolds, APSE / De Montfort University. Published by APSE May 2012 ISBN: 978-1-907388-13-2 2 Contents Foreward 5 1. Executive summary 7 2. Reimagining local authorities: mapping the terrain 9 3. Reading a Q Methodology study 13 4. Research findings: interpreting the data 15 5. Conclusions 23 Appendix 1: Q Methodology 28 Appendix 2: statement ranks for each viewpoint 30 3 The future of local government: APSE’s approach As local authorities strive to address the impacts on their communities of the economic downturn and reductions in public spending, a debate is taking place about alternative visions of the future shape of local government itself. APSE’s model of the ‘Ensuring Council’ endorses the role of local authorities as stewards of local wellbeing, recognises the strategic advantages of a strong core of in-house services delivered in collaboration rather in competition with alternative providers and grounding local decisions in politics and the values of social justice. This research study tested support for these principles among elected members and officers across local government. It found marked opposition to the model of the ‘Enabling Council.’ In contrast, local officers and councillors demonstrated broad support for the vision of the ‘Ensuring Council’, with three different viewpoints emerging as to how APSE might take its model forward. Moving forward - three viewpoints on the Ensuring Council: Public Stewards Strongly support the maintenance of core in-house service provision, not only for its strategic advantages over other forms of service delivery, but also as it ensures the capacity of councils to advance the social, economic and environmental wellbeing of local areas. Local Brokers Support in-house provision where it is the best option, whilst remaining sceptical of the long-term capacity of the third sector to deliver public services and therefore favouring a strong regulatory and interventionist role for local councils. Public Valuers Take the view that a mixed economy offers the best opportunity to deliver for the local community Promote local authorities as community leaders and guarantors of local democracy, placing importance on local community empowerment and the maintenance of in-house provision within a more mixed economy. 4 Foreword The current debate about the future of local government is taking place at a time when public spending cuts threaten to undermine both the capacity of councils to respond to a challenging economic climate; and the legitimacy of local authorities to both represent and respond to the diverse needs of our communities. It is this crisis of ‘capacity’ and ‘legitimacy’ which represents the greatest challenge for those of us who passionately believe in local government. The Coalition Government’s commitment to localism whilst indeed welcome lacks real substance when councils are grappling with the consequences of fiscal austerity and for many the rhetoric of the ‘Big Society’ fails to fill the void created. However this plays out in the long-term, most councils are entering a period of uncertainty and rapid transformation which means that the purpose and shape of local government is also changing. There are those who argue that in the future local government will be unable to manage change effectively unless it fulfils a purely ‘enabling’ or ‘commissioning’ role and ceases to be a service provider. But with so many alternative visions of what the future holds for councils, the voices of the main players across the sector – councillors, senior officers, service managers, staff and their trade unions – are often ignored or not properly taken into account when the policy ‘wonks’ and PR strategists get to work on defining what a council in the twenty first century should actually look like. It was this lack of an evidence based approach and the dominance of a single narrative about the future of local government, that led APSE and its academic partner, De Montfort University, through its 2 year Knowledge Transfer Partnership (KTP) on transformational change in local government, to try and give some weight to the real voices of local government. The objective being to articulate the hopes, fears, values and opinions of those whose daily job it is to make local government relevant to the communities it serves. When the balance of those views are taken into account we find that the majority of opinion within local government does not share the zeal and enthusiasm of the ‘uber’ enablers or wishes to divest itself of any capacity to intervene and to deliver for their communities. That is where the idea of the ‘Ensuring Council’ has its origins. Ensuring was a term used notably by Professor Anthony Giddens in his book on the ‘Politics of Climate Change’ to contrast the role of the active ‘ensuring’ state with that of the ‘enabling’ state. It is a term that carries greater resonance for those of us who work in and are committed to local government, because it means that councils retain responsibility to act as local leaders and place shapers, whereas ‘enabling’ is a term associated with handing over that responsibility to others. This report uses a research technique known as Q Methodology to drill down into the differing viewpoints of key players across the local government sector. Our research starts to articulate an alternative vision for the future of local government; one in which those charged with the responsibility of delivering on behalf of their communities can have confidence in and trust. It is built on ideas of democratic accountability, stewardship of place, a strong core of directly delivered services, promoting public value, social justice, civic entrepreneurship and innovation, financial capacity and empowering both local communities and the staff who serve them. We want to see a positive vision for the future of local government which is shared by all those who value its role in a modern and civilised democratic society. Our aim is to build a new consensus and to challenge the old orthodoxy of ‘enabling’ which has run its course for thirty years and has failed to offer a clear strategic vision for a modern local government fit for purpose in the twenty first Century. Paul O’Brien Chief Executive, APSE 5 6 1. Executive summary “The concept of the ensuring state: tEPFTOPUDBMMGPSUIFASFUSFBUPGUIFTUBUF tUBLFTGPSHSBOUFEBDPOUJOVJOHTUBUFSFTQPOTJCJMJUZGPSUIFDPNNPOHPPE tSFKFDUTUIFJEFBUIBUDIBOHFTJOTUBUFIPPESFEVDFTUBUFSFTQPOTJCJMJUZ An ensuring state must recognise that changes in statehood actually imply changes in the modes, style BOEJOTUSVNFOUTPGHPWFSOBODFOPUBSFKFDUJPOPGSFTQPOTJCJMJUZw Professor Gunnar Folke Schuppert Social Science Research Centre, Berlin Feb 2004 The starting point for APSE’s report on the ‘Ensuring Council’ was an understanding that the concept of ‘enabling’ fails to provide a convincing narrative about the role of the state in modern society and, in particular, the vital role played by local government in the social, economic and environmental wellbeing of local communities. The language of ‘enabling’ leads ultimately to the conclusion that there is only a minimal or residual role for local government, primarily a role which is founded in procurement and contract management. APSE has consistently argued that there is no real future for local government if it is stripped of capacity, knowledge, skills and the ability to intervene effectively on behalf of local communities. To be effective local government has to be able to ‘do things’ through a strong core of directly delivered services and get others to do things as well. In an age of fiscal austerity and deep spending cuts, the future of local government has been brought into a sharp focus with many commentators and organisations seeking to define what local government will look like in the future. One of the problems with many of these approaches is that they fail to connect with the experiences, opinions and instincts of those people who form the lifeblood of local government – councillors, chief officers, service managers and staff – whose commitment and dedication to delivering services that meet the needs of local communities gives real public value to the role of local government. This research aims to correct this omission using their values and beliefs to define and articulate a vision for the future of local government that could command widespread support across the local government community. This is in a sense an interim report. It is a piece of work in progress that aims to make a contribution towards a wider debate that needs to take place across local government. It broadly falls into three main sections: The first section (re-imagining local authorities: mapping the terrain) reviews the current debate about the future of local government identifying the limits of an ‘enabling’ approach which: firstly, relegates the role of politics to the margins and expresses the views of citizens through a form of ‘market democracy’ rather than ‘democratic politics’; secondly, equates ‘enabling’ with outsourcing, with all of the consequent market instability that follows, rather than being mediated through democratic choices and professional judgement; and thirdly, threatens to ‘hollow out’ the core capacities of local government, placing too much faith in contracts as a means of regulating service providers. In contrast, the report defines the principles underpinning an ‘Ensuring Council’ which are: OStewardship: Ensuring the social, economic and environmental wellbeing of the local area. (This is the core principle of the ‘Ensuring Council’.) OCore capacity: Maintaining the strategic advantages of in-house services to meet local needs. OCollaboration: Working with a range of service providers on a co-operative and collaborative basis rather than through competition. OPolitics: Grounding local decision making in political choices and preferences. OSocial justice: Ensuring that the values of local government are founded on equality, solidarity and meeting collective community needs. The second section of the report (Reading a Q Methodology study) outlines the innovative Q Methodology utilised as part of the research. The Q Methodology study, which asks participants 7 to rank a set of statements, was specifically designed to draw out the viewpoints of a range of key influencers and actors from across the world of local government. Participants were drawn from both APSE’s own membership as well as the wider local government community. The third section of the report (Research Findings: Interpreting the Data) analyses the main findings of the Q Methodology study and sets out these findings as three distinct sets of viewpoints on the future of local government. These different viewpoints are identified as: Public stewards – They are people who believe that it does matter who delivers local public services taking the view that in-house services offer the best opportunity to control costs and deliver value for money. They have a strong commitment to the strategic advantages that in-house provision can provide over alternative forms of service delivery and they believe that local authorities need core capacity in order to help shape social, economic and environmental wellbeing of their local areas. Local brokers – They do not stand in opposition to public stewards as they endorse the strategic value of in-house services where this is as good as if not better than alternative modes of service delivery. However, local brokers are more open to different modes of service delivery where this can add real value and they demonstrate a clear focus on value for money and efficiency. This group of people expressed a strong degree of scepticism about the capacity of voluntary organisations and community groups to deliver public services in the long term and favoured a strong regulatory and interventionist role for the local authority. Public valuers – The third cluster of defined viewpoints was much more focussed on the role of the local authority a community leader and democratic guarantor. They were concerned with the importance of empowering local communities in order to achieve socially just outcomes for all citizens. They supported a more mixed economy of service provision including involving the voluntary and community sector, but also believed in the benefits of in-house provision. The broad conclusions of the study revealed grassroots support for the principles of the ‘Ensuring Council’ which stands in marked contrast to the prevailing orthodoxy of ‘enabling’ and strategic commissioning which is promoted in some quarters as the future of local government. There was a wide spectrum of opinion from those who fiercely opposed outsourcing and wanted a strong role for direct employment and in-house services, to those who believed that local government should embrace a range of different delivery modes including in-house provision. None shared a view of the future of local government without any capacity to deliver and reduced purely pulling the few strategic levers at its disposal – steering a boat without any oars! The language of ‘enabling’ does not offer a convincing narrative to those charged with the responsibility of delivering the vision for the future of local government. Whatever the differences of standpoint set out in this report and encapsulated in the three roles of ‘public stewards’, ‘local brokers’ and ‘public valuers’, they all shared a standpoint that was closer to ‘ensuring’ than ‘enabling’. The orthodoxy of ‘enabling’ only carries weight with those who have an ideological preference for the role of markets in local government and public services and those who unquestioningly follow in its wake. The concept of ‘ensuring’ captures more of the colour and vitality of those who are committed to a positive and inclusive future for local government. Time to break out the oars, so that those who are steering the boat can get to where they want to go. 8 2. Re-imagining local authorities: mapping the terrain Reductions in public spending have triggered yet another round of inquiries and self-examinations into the future role of local government. New visions and institutional designs for local authorities currently abound. In recent months, elected members and officers have witnessed the launch of the ‘Co-ordinating Council’, the ‘Catalyst Council’, the ‘Co-operative Council’, the ‘Commissioning Council’, as well as the ‘Future Council’, the ‘easyCouncil’ and the ‘Entrepreneurial Council’. Indeed, there is little doubt that across the world of local government, elected members and local officers have become gripped by the promise of transformation. As a recent study of local authority chief executives concluded, ‘what seems to be clear in all minds is the need for decisive and bold action.’1 However, within this maelstrom of competing institutional designs and policy priorities, what remains less clear is how local authorities should move forward and how they might best navigate through the challenges posed by processes of institutional redesign and transformation. Each vision sets out new ways of working or organisational guidelines to meet the challenges of the current political and economic context. They each offer local practitioners the promise of new ‘solutions’ and modes of organising. They call for local authorities to adopt a more entrepreneurial and commercial ethos; they stress the overarching responsibilities of local authorities to ‘join up’ disparate policy programmes; they posit a renewed customer-focus, devolved engagement or co-production with local communities; they advance the divestment of public services from local authorities to alternative providers; and they invoke the residualisation of local authorities with citizens paying for local services above and beyond locally agreed basic levels of provision. To coin a well-known phrase, with this array of apparently distinct pathways on offer, it is indeed difficult at first glance to ‘see the wood for the trees’. This report seeks to contribute to such ongoing debates over the future of local government. It is motivated by two primary concerns with the framing of current policy debates. Firstly, it seeks to go beyond the current orthodoxy of ‘enabling’. Closer inspection of many recent interventions into national debates suggests that such visions for local government tend to offer little variation on a common set of organising principles concerned with for example the redefinition of citizens as customers, the acceptance of private business practices within local authorities and the marketisation of public services. In fact, rather than offering a distinct set of choices for those local practitioners setting policy and delivering public services, most future visions can be mapped onto what are commonly understood as the defining characteristics of the ‘enabling’ authority. Secondly, this report seeks to give local practitioners and local elected members a greater ‘voice’ in current debates. Those charged with delivering the future of local government have been notable by their absence from much of the debate over the construction of a new vision for the future of local government. It is pertinent to question the extent to which different visions of local government have the support of elected members and practitioners across local authorities. Indeed, elected members and local officers are not mere ‘agents’ of national government initiatives, rather they translate national policies at the local level.2 Such recognition of the centrality of local actors in local policy and practice raises the question of the extent to which the ‘lived experience’ of local practitioners matches or resonates with the competing visions articulated nationally. In responding to these primary concerns, this research seeks to make an important and distinctive contribution to the debate by exploring the future of local government through the values, preferences and lived experiences of those charged with delivering it. In so doing, it begins to construct an alternative understanding of the future local authority, that of the ‘Ensuring Council’. The ‘Ensuring Council’, which stands in marked contrast to models of ‘enabling’, privileges an active strategic role for local government in the stewardship of local social, economic and environmental wellbeing and the commitment of councils to advance social justice and tackle issues that affect local communities as a whole. As such, it recognises the importance of effective local democracy that enhances both representative and participative forms of government. It acknowledges the strategic importance of 1 CIPFA Public Management and Policy Association (2011) Redefining local government, London: CIPFA, p.25. 2 Durose , C. (2011) ‘Revisiting Lipsky: Front-line Work in Local Governance’, Political Studies 59 (4): 978-995. 9 local government as a provider of public services and the comparative strategic advantages which come from public employment, as well as the capacity of local authorities and its workforce to engage in and support civic entrepreneurship. It thus calls for enhanced local financial capacity to redress the imbalance in the financial relationship between central and local government. Against this background, the rest of this introduction sets out the basic parameters of the ‘enabling’ authority. It briefly examines the main limitations or critiques of this dominant orthodoxy before exploring an alternative way of conceptualising the future of the local authority, which, as suggested above, is best characterised as the ‘Ensuring Council’. It is to such issues that the report now turns. The defining characteristics of ‘Enabling’ The framing of the local authority as an ‘Enabling Authority’ gained momentum under Governments of the 1980s and 1990s. At the time it was symbolised by the emergence of what became widely known as the ‘Ridley Council’: an authority which met once a year to hand out contracts3. The principles driving this change in the role of the local authority were the effectiveness of the purchaser-provider split in service delivery and alleged efficiencies that would come from the increased role of the market and competition in the delivery of public services. As Leach and Davies argued some fifteen years ago, the ‘Enabling Authority’ redefines the primary purpose of any local council away from that of a provider of services to that of a purchaser of services. The strategic function of an ‘Enabling Authority’ is to specify service requirements against local community needs, engaging with a market of external providers to deliver local services.4 Moves to embed these principles continued under the Labour Governments of Blair and Brown, although there were repeated attempts to redefine understandings of ‘enabling’ away from its association with marketisation. In her study of the shifting conceptions of ‘enabling’ under New Labour, Helen Sullivan thus draws out the attempts to rearticulate the practices of ‘enabling’ within the discourse of community leadership and public value.5 In such moves ‘enabling’ became an expression of local community will and place shaping, with the ‘Enabling Authority’ acting as a network manager or co-ordinator, which looked to facilitate political debate over achieving service outcomes across networks of public, private, community and voluntary organisations. Nonetheless, as Sullivan points out, it is difficult to escape the broad conclusion that Ridley’s conception of ‘enabling’ has come to dominate the current public policy context. The principles of choice and competition enshrined within the 2011 Localism Act6 and Open Public Services White Paper7 offer much support for such conclusions. Indeed, the current Coalition Government has successfully linked the principles of ‘enabling’ with moves towards the Big Society, thus rearticulating ‘enabling’ once again as a form of market democracy, in which the ‘Enabling Authority’, citizen involvement and divestment of public services are chained together under the banner of the ‘new localism’. Put differently, the role of local authorities as a ‘strategic commissioner’ or ‘enabler’ is currently represented as a form of local democracy, citizen engagement and community empowerment, with all of these laudable policy objectives ultimately resting however upon market involvement in public services. The limits of ‘Enabling’ Whilst the rhetoric of ‘enabling’ might be the new ‘common sense’, as an organising paradigm for local councils it has attracted a range of criticisms. Three primary concerns are commonly voiced: Firstly, ‘enabling’ stands accused of propagating forms of managerialism and market democracy, which relegate politics to the margins. Transforming politicians into service managers and citizens into consumers who express their democratic rights in the market place for local services. Secondly,‘enabling’has become closely associated with outsourcing, devaluing the strategic advantages 3 Ridley, N. (1988) The local right: enabling not providing, London: Centre for Policy Studies 4 Leach, S. and Davies, H. (1996) ‘Introduction’ in S. Leach, H. Davies and Associates Enabling or Disabling Local Government, Buckingham: Open University Press, p. 3. 5 Sullivan, H. (2011) ‘Governing the Mix: How Local Government Still Matters’ in J. Richardson (Ed.) From Recession to Renewal. The Impact of the Financial $SJTJTPO1VCMJD4FSWJDFTBOE-PDBM(PWFSONFOU, Bristol: Policy Press, p.178-198. 6 HM Government (2011) Localism Act, London: TSO 7 HM Government (2011) Open Public Services White Paper, London: TSO 10 of public employment. It draws over generalised dichotomies between the unresponsiveness and inefficiency of public sector monopolies and the flexible consumer focused benefits of the private and voluntary sector. At the same time, the ‘enabling orthodoxy’ fails to recognise that private providers can indeed fail with significant implications for the sustainability of service delivery. Driving such claims is the fundamental belief that it is the outcome that matters and therefore it does not matter who delivers local services. Finally, ‘enabling’ effectively leads to the ‘hollowing out’ of local government, placing too much faith in the effectiveness of contracts as a means of regulating service providers and exercising governance. It actually removes from local government many of the instruments and policy resources that allow it to act as a local steward of place. These ‘tools’ are derived from local authorities retaining the core capacity to deliver services and intervene directly in the well being of local communities. Towards an ‘Ensuring Council’ Anthony Giddens argues that governments have to move beyond ‘soft’ versions of ‘enabling’ towards that of an ‘ensuring government’ which maintains the capacity to ‘ensure’ political, economic and social policy objectives.8 Similar concerns are expressed by Helen Sullivan who sets out the importance of a ‘logic of care’ in the structuring of relations in the public sector. Such a ‘logic of care’ starts from the assumption that individuals are nearly always situated in communities or networks, which demand collaborative, interdependent relationships between public authorities and local communities.9 Building upon these initial criticisms and proposals for change, an alternative vision for the future of local authorities begins to emerge; one which stands in stark contrast to the current dominant frame of ‘enabling’. Borrowing from the language of Giddens, the vision of an ‘Ensuring Council’ builds upon the responsibility of local authorities as stewards of their local communities (operationalising in part Sullivan’s logic of care), whilst bringing to the fore its leading role in local representative democracy over that of market democracy. As suggested above, this vision for local authorities brings to the fore the responsibilities of local government for advancing social justice through its strategic mobilisation of public employment and civic entrepreneurship, while benefitting from increased financial capacities as part of a renewed contract between central and local government. Table 2.1: Comparison of ‘Ensuring Council’ and ‘Enabling Council’ ‘Ensuring Council’ ‘Enabling Council’ Core organising principle Stewardship of Place Strategic Commissioning Operating principles In-house provision of core services and public employment Expresses an explicit preference for the private and voluntary sectors as service providers Maintenance of core capacity within the public sector Divestment to alternative service providers Collaborative relationships Contractual relationships Local representative and participative democracy Market democracy and individual choice Collective community outcomes Individual user outcomes Joined up services meeting the needs of local communities and delivering wider strategic objectives Fragmented services that lack the overall strategic co-ordination to deliver on wider policy objectives ‘ 8 Giddens, A. (2009) The Politics of Climate Change, Cambridge: Polity Press 9 Sullivan (2011) Governing the Mix, p.191-192. 11 The structure of the report The remainder of this report seeks to capture the preferences and understandings of elected members and local officers in relation to different futures for local government. At the heart of its analysis sit the findings of an innovative Q Methodology study of local councillors and practitioners. Q Methodology studies are specifically designed to capture participant’s viewpoints on particular problems or issues - what is commonly referred to as people’s ‘subjectivity’. Through the deployment of this innovative methodology, this report examines the different perspectives and beliefs of local practitioners towards ‘enabling’ models, while assessing the potential support for, and ways of operationalising, the core principles of the ‘Ensuring Council’. The next section outlines the methodology used in this study and the underlying assumptions of Q methodology. The report then turns to the analysis of the findings of the study. It firstly sets out the significant points of consensus among participants on the future of local government. Here it identifies the broad support for the role of local stewardship, the grounding of services in political rather than market or technical service efficiency decisions, matched by the rejection of the role of strategic commissioning and the outsourcing of local services. Importantly, it goes on to surface three different interpretations of the ‘Ensuring Council’: public stewards, local brokers and public valuers. While these different interpretations share certain core values, they each bring different strategic and operational considerations to the understanding of ensuring. The report then concludes with the implications of these findings for current debates over the future of local government and for the Coalition Government’s localism agenda. 12 3. Reading a Q Methodology study 10 What is a Q Methodology study? This study deploys Q Methodology which is a research methodology used to study people’s attitudes, or how groups of people think about a particular topic. In other words, it is a means of identifying different viewpoints on a given topic, be it understandings of austerity or the range of thinking on how to address climate change. Such viewpoints are captured by asking participants to rank-order a set of statements on the issue under investigation. Individual rankings are then clustered together through a factor analysis which draws out the similarities and differences between how participants have ranked the different statements, surfacing the shared viewpoints or common patterns of responses across different groups of individuals. Interviews are then undertaken to explore in greater detail why selected participants positioned particular statements as they did. It thus offers an important tool for examining points of agreement or disagreement and where and how new policy settlements might emerge between different groups of stakeholders.11 Central to the validity of a Q Methodology study is the selection of the statements which participants are asked to rank. Selected statements must reflect the broad range of views and positions that are being voiced in the public debate on the particular issue under investigation. The strength of the research findings thus rest primarily on the representativeness of the selected statements rather than the number of participants or their broad social and political characteristics. Indeed, Q Methodology studies typically engage around forty to sixty participants.12 Further details on how this study used Q methodology are to be found in the appendices to this report. This section goes on to set out how participants completed this particular Q Methodology study, in preparation for examining how the data generated by the study can be ‘read’. How do respondents take part in a Q Methodology study? Filling in a Q Method study is a relatively straightforward process but it does pose its own particular challenges. Participants are asked to place statements on a grid in the shape of an upturned pyramid (see Figure 3.1). The design of this grid forces participants to rank statements and compare their level of agreement or disagreement with one statement against another. In this particular study, for example, the grid used gave participants two slots within which to place statements with which they strongly agreed, while offering six slots within which to place more ‘neutral’ statements. Levels of agreement or disagreement were indicated through a scale of ‘plus four’ through to ‘minus four.’ Participants were presented with thirty four statements reflecting the breadth of the current public debate on the future of local government. First, they were asked to carefully read this set of statements, before being sorting them into three piles: those they agreed with, those they disagreed with, and those towards which they were fairly neutral. Next, they were asked to position the statements on the grid, placing two statements in the slots allocated for those statements they most agreed with (+4), two statements in the slots for those they most disagreed with (-4), and so on. Finally, participants were presented with the statements with which they most strongly agreed or disagreed and asked to comment on why they ranked those statements as they did. Participants took on average forty eight minutes to complete the study. 10 We would like to thank Stephen Jeffares for his value support and advice in undertaking this study. As usual, all interpretations and misinterpretations are those of the authors. 11 See Dasgupta, P. (2005) ‘“Q Methodology” for Mapping Stakeholders Perceptions in Participatory Forest Management’, Incorporating Stakeholder Perceptions in Participatory Forest Management, DFID Natural Resources Systems Programme, Project No. R8280, March, available at www.geog.cam. ac.uk/research/projects/harda/reports/B3-QReport.pdf accessed 22 April 2012. 12 See Jeffares, S. and Skelcher, C. (2011) ‘Democratic Subjectivities in Network Governance: A Q Methodology study of English and Dutch Public Managers’, Public Administration 89:4, pp. 1253-1273. 13 Figure 3.1: Online distribution grid Making sense of the returns The analysis resulting from a Q Methodology study seeks to identify sets of viewpoints on a particular given topic. Part of the task of interpreting the significance of the returns is to move from the specific analysis of how individuals ranked each statement to the identification of commonalities and differences. In other words, it is a question of analysing how individuals begin to cluster around different collective viewpoints on the future of local government. In making such judgements, it is possible to aggregate individual returns according to different configurations, running the data through different numbers of viewpoints. One important consideration is the extent to which participants identify with particular factors or viewpoints. In this particular study, having reflected upon the legitimacy of two, three, four and five viewpoints, it was apparent that the organisation of the returns into two different viewpoints blurred significant differences across our research findings, while any more than three viewpoints began to over-accentuate insignificant or minor differences. In analysing particular viewpoints, it is important to identify the consensus statements which different participants have placed in similar positions on the grid. Such statements reveal points of potential agreement between different viewpoints, whether it is opposition to the beliefs and ideas expressed in a particular statement or common support or indeed ambivalence towards another set of statements. Equally, consideration should be given to those statements which reveal points of difference between participants; statements which for example one group of participants tend to rank negatively and another endorses positively. One final consideration is to examine carefully the distinguishing statements of each viewpoint - those beliefs or values that make it stand out from the others. 14 4. Research findings: interpreting the data This section sets out the findings of the Q Methodology study. It maps three distinct sets of viewpoints on the future of local government. These different viewpoints are identified as: O Public stewards OLocal brokers OPublic valuers. Each displays distinct preferences and policy positions, notably towards in-house services and mixed forms of provision, as well as the extent of community engagement in decision-making processes. This said, the boundaries between public stewards, local brokers and public valuers are permeable, with individuals identifying more or less strongly with each viewpoint and certain participants straddling more than one viewpoint. Indeed, the viewpoints display significant points of consensus. This section thus begins by examining these common viewpoints which it argues demonstrate support across local government for the fundamental principles of the ‘Ensuring Council’. It then goes on to analyse how the three viewpoints, public stewards, local brokers and public valuers, opt for different policy and organisational commitments or alternative ways of delivering in practice upon the principles of the ‘Ensuring Council’. Support for the ‘Ensuring Council’ Whether public stewards, local brokers or public valuers, participants demonstrated support for the core principles of the ‘Ensuring Council’. They broadly endorsed the stewardship role of local government and the value of public employment; stood in opposition to the role of strategic commissioning and the divestment of local public services; and voiced demands for a fair financial settlement between central and local government. Firstly, when asked to explain their opposition to strategic commissioning, participants argued that it was motivated by the increasing conflation of commissioning with outsourcing and its potential to ‘hollow out’ the core capacities of local authorities. One elected member commented that strategic commissioning was “in many cases [...] a cover for outsourcing,” adding that “commissioning in itself isn’t a bad thing, it is how it is used and how it is distorted that makes it a bad thing because then it is just a subterfuge for outsourcing.” Such opposition to the divestment of local services cannot be divorced from support for the stewardship role of local authorities (see Table 4.1). Indeed, the divestment of local services was interpreted by participants as reducing the capacities of local authorities to exercise its very responsibilities of stewardship. Explaining the interweaving of such statements in favour of stewardship and against outsourcing, one service manager insisted on the need to maintain core capacity to ensure stewardship, arguing that “if local government is going to make a difference to the lives of the people who live in the locality, it has to be able to influence their ability to function economically, the way that communities interact and the extent to which communities see a future for themselves.” Table 4.1: Support for stewardship and concerns over strategic commissioning Ranking Statement number Consensus statements Stewards Brokers Public valuers 29 Local councils should be strategic commissioners of services facilitated through but not provided by local government. -4 -3 -3 30 Local government has a responsibility for stewardship of place ensuring economic, social and environmental wellbeing and sustainability +3 +4 +2 Secondly, all viewpoints defended public employment and the value of in-house public provision of local services (see Table 4.2). One participant explained the strategic advantages of public employment 15 arguing that “the public sector acts as a standard bearer for employment standards” and “local authority workers spend a large proportion of their income within the local authority boundaries.” Participants also displayed strong opposition to claims that public sector monopolies protect vested interests. One service manager argued that in-house provision has faced “difficult decisions taken on a commercial basis that would have matched private sector companies,” drawing attention to local processes of accountability and the “high level scrutiny [which] does not allow for protection in the political world in which we [local authorities] operate.” Participants offered significant support for the efficiency of in-house services, particularly when judged against private providers and voluntary and community groups. Again, such commitments cannot be divorced from opposition to the divestment of public services. Across the different viewpoints, there was a commitment towards collaboration with alternative providers rather than the divesting of services to such providers. One service director thus explained that “it is not an issue of ceding control but working with stakeholders.” Table 4.2: Support for in-house services Ranking Statement number Consensus statements Stewards Brokers Public valuers 14 Greater involvement of the third and voluntary sector in public service provision will be best achieved by collaboration not divestment +1 +2 +3 17 Public sector monopolies protect the vested interests of public sector workers and should be challenged -3 -3 -2 31 In house services can be equally as dynamic and efficient as their private sector counterparts +4 +4 +2 Thirdly, participants expressed a broad disagreement with the belief that decisions over service delivery should be set apart from politics (see Table 4.3). Local decisions over service delivery were not considered to be solely technical decisions, but were perceived to be local political decisions that should be led by local elected members. One elected member put it this way: “Local government service provision should be based on the democratic decisions of elected members whose values and policies have been voted for by most citizens.” However, there was support across different viewpoints for an open dialogue or engagement with communities in local decision-making, with public stewards, local brokers and public valuers demonstrating different interpretations of how this might be achieved. Table 4.3: Support for local politics Ranking Statement number 22 Consensus statements Stewards Brokers Public valuers Local politics should be kept at bay from service decisions in order to promote their efficient delivery -2 -2 -3 Finally, there was only mild support for increased powers to raise taxation locally and to charge for services. However, participants did endorse demands for central government to ensure a ‘fair financial settlement’ (see Table 4.4). This demand attributed central government with its own national stewardship responsibilities, articulating concerns amongst participants over the potential for growing inequalities between local authorities if financial controls on authorities were to be further loosened. When questioned, research participants commonly understood a ‘fair financial settlement’ to mean one that is “based on the needs of communities rather than purely on a basic cut of population.” One elected member reflected such concerns, stating that: “If you are making decisions that disproportionately disadvantage those that are in need whilst letting those that are not in so much need have more then that can’t be right.” Another elected member was keen to point out that “fairness should be central” to any system of government funding and that “deprivation should be a key factor in determining the allocation of resources.” 16 Table 4.4: Support for a ‘fair’ financial settlement Ranking Statement number Consensus statements Stewards Brokers Public valuers 24 Central government should ensure a fair financial settlement across local authorities +3 +3 +3 25 Local authorities should be able to raise local taxation and charge for services as they see fit. -1 0 +1 Overall, therefore, the findings of the study and, in particular, the consensus statements across participants clearly resonate with the principles of the ‘Ensuring Council’. Broad support for the role of local stewardship, the grounding of services in politics rather than markets, matched by the rejection of strategic commissioning as a procurement tool rather than an improvement tool and outsourcing of local services, all fit broadly within the frame of an ‘Ensuring Council’. They suggest marked opposition to the appeals of ‘enabling’ which have come increasingly to privilege the commissioning role of local authorities, the role of the market and the divestment of public services. One chief officer aptly summarised opposition to this residual vision of the ‘enabling’ local authority by explaining that “how services are delivered is equally as important as the commissioning of services because it is actually through the delivery arrangements that fundamental differences to people’s lives can be made”. “Reducing its role to enabling,” it was suggested, “diminishes the capacity of local government to flexibly respond to the needs of its customers.” Against this background, the analysis now turns to examine the different operational interpretations and priorities attributed by participants to how the ‘Ensuring Council’ should and indeed does operate in practice. The next section thus discusses in greater detail the operational differences between public stewards, local brokers and public valuers. It is important however to note that such distinctions between these viewpoints are informed by a strong consensus over the core role and responsibilities of local authorities; in other words, they do not represent deep-seated cleavages within the world of local government. Viewpoint One: Public Stewards Public stewards are best characterised by their support for in-house public service delivery and their recognition of its strategic advantages over alternative forms of service delivery (see Table 4.5). They demonstrate opposition to claims that public sector monopolies protect vested interests, while recognising the dynamism and efficiency of in-house services. They believe that it does matter who delivers local services. Indeed, public stewards prioritise the maintenance of in-house core capacities within local authorities, acknowledging how such core capacities facilitate the shaping by local authorities of local social, economic and environmental wellbeing. Table 4.5: Public stewards and support for in-house core capacity Statement number Defining statements Stewards’ ranking 17 Public sector monopolies protect the vested interests of public sector workers and should be challenged -3 27 Local government’s role is as an enabler for the delivery of services -4 31 In house services can be equally as dynamic and efficient as their private sector counterparts +4 33 Core capacity to deliver services should be retained within the public sector +4 Public stewards, define themselves in marked opposition to ‘enabling’, condemning what they see as its hostility towards the delivery of public services by local authorities. Typically, one public steward, an elected member, defined the ‘Enabling Council’ as one which “works with partners to achieve outcomes rather than directly involving itself in the provision of those outcomes.” Another respondent pointed out the detrimental long-term consequences of outsourcing the delivery of 17 services, outlining a scenario in which “local authorities will quickly lose capacity and capability to manage the contractors they employ,” only for those contractors “to then increase cost and reduce levels of provision to drive shareholder value or profit,” leaving the public to “ultimately pay more for less.” In short, public stewards tended to call for an ‘active state’ which as one steward declared “interacts with citizens and provides them with the services they need, not one which distances itself from any responsibility for delivery.” Public stewards also grounded local decisions over the nature of service delivery in the realm of politics, as political rather than technical decisions. Maintaining or restoring the link between politics and the way that services are provided was seen by stewards as being central to the future of local government. Direct service provision, it was suggested, enhanced the capacity of local councillors to act as representatives of local communities, with one respondent arguing that it “is important that services are in touch with the needs of users and therefore elected representatives should be able to intervene on the public’s behalf and not be told there’s a contract in place.” Equally, public stewards stand in opposition to the current orthodoxy that a diversity of service provision automatically increases innovation. Public stewards tend to disagree with such claims, as one service manager put it: “there should not be an assumption that diversity of provision automatically leads to better services. Public sector provision properly directed and led and involving the ideas of its workforce and other stakeholders can be just as innovative and outcome focused as the private or third sectors.” Indeed, it follows that public stewards, whilst not opposing the delivery of services by community or voluntary sector groups, do express doubts over the capacity of community groups to deliver ongoing and sustainable improvements to the delivery of public services. As one elected member reflected: “The assumption that community groups can provide better quality services cheaper is often wrong. Sometimes community groups can do this; but often it just means worse pay and conditions.” Table 4.6: Public stewards; politics and voluntary and community groups Statement number Defining statements Stewards’ ranking 3 Local government will need to enthusiastically cede control to others including local communities -2 5 There is an increasing need to question the assumption that local democracy and direct service provision are inseparable -3 12 Community groups can achieve radically improved public service outcomes at much lower cost -2 22 Local politics should be kept at bay from service decisions in order to promote their efficient delivery -2 34 There has to be a recognition that businesses, charities, social enterprises or a combination of providers can innovate and deliver better outcomes at a lower cost -3 Finally, and exemplifying their commitments to public stewardship, public stewards demonstrate strong support for understanding the impact of public services according to their overarching collective benefits for local communities rather than their impact on individual service users. At the same time, they are particularly supportive of the green agenda and the role of local authorities in advancing sustainable policy initiatives. One elected member spoke of the importance of engaging with this green agenda for its collective benefits in delivering social and economic wellbeing: “It is one of the few areas of opportunity that local government actually has to demonstrate how activity within the community cannot just benefit the community socially; but also economically and environmentally. It isn’t just about putting solar panels on people’s roofs, it’s about all those other things, the skills agenda, training and fighting fuel poverty.” 18 Viewpoint Two: Local Brokers Local brokers should not be understood as standing in stark opposition to public stewards (see Table 4.7). They also endorse the strategic value of in-house services typically explaining that “if service managers are given the right environment to operate in then there is no reason why they can’t be as good if not better than private sector partners.” When questioned, local brokers thus expressed support for a core of directly provided services as a means of promoting efficiency. In the words of one local broker, a service director, in-house core capacity was “often of benefit in extracting the best price from outside the authority.” In addition, local brokers did not view third sector provision as a substitute for local government (see Table 4.7), expressing similar doubts to public stewards as to the capacity of the voluntary sector and community groups to deliver public services over time. Indeed, local brokers displayed in many ways more heightened concerns over the capacity of voluntary organisations or community groups to deliver public services. In explaining such concerns, one project director at a local authority thus reflected that: “there is a level of robust analysis and critique of local government that gets lost when services are transferred out. Local community groups tend to be loose in their accountability.” Table 4.7 – Local brokers; in-house service provision and involvement of the voluntary and community sector in public service delivery Statement number Defining statements Brokers’ ranking 12 Community groups can achieve radically improved public service outcomes at much lower cost -4 13 The third sector is not a substitute for often complex core public service provision +3 27 Local government’s role is as an enabler for the delivery of services +2 31 In house services can be equally as dynamic and efficient as their private sector counterparts +4 33 Core capacity to deliver services should be retained within the public sector +1 Upon closer observation, however, local brokers are distinguished from public stewards by their comparative openness to different modes of service provision. Their commitment to in-house services tends to rest on a case-by-case evaluation of the efficiency of in-house services. As one chief officer explained: “If an authority can evidence strong and VFM direct service delivery arrangements the mixed economy should be built around these directly provided services. Outsourcing should be limited as an alternative option to areas of weakness where there is no defined capacity for improvements.” Such an appeal to efficiency was endorsed by another local broker, a director of an arm’s length body, who declared that ‘services should be delivered by whoever can do the best job at the best value. Nobody has the sole right for their delivery’. This belief was restated by another local broker who argued that ‘services should be provided by whoever is best placed to provide a quality service and an effective price’. One interpretation of such arguments is that while the support of public stewards for public services rest on more embedded beliefs in the value of in-house provision, that of local brokers arises from their belief in the efficiency of such arrangements. In fact, local brokers arguably display less support than stewards for the maintenance of in-house core capacity, while demonstrating more openness to charging for services (see Table 4.8). They offer a qualified endorsement of the ‘enabling’ role of local authorities, although their support for public services and opposition to strategic commissioning stands in opposition to dominant understandings of ‘enabling’ in national policy debates. One local broker interpreted commissioning as a technical exercise of identifying the needs of a local area and then “making a decision about what services need to be commissioned and how best to deliver those services.” Support for charging was understood as an alternative to local authorities ceasing to provide the service and/or generate income for the local authority. Brokers also displayed opposition to the statement that the local state is best placed to ensure equal access to services. Such commitment potentially reflects again support among local brokers for more diversity of service provision. Indeed, local brokers stood out from other participants by their endorsement of the efficiency savings to be 19 gleaned from local authorities combining services. Such developments were interpreted by many local brokers as support for shared services, with the director of one arm’s length body supporting the financial savings of such initiatives as “there is often duplication of management, accommodation, fleet, plants and equipment.” Table 4.8 – Local brokers; generating efficiencies and charging for services Statement number Defining statements Brokers’ ranking 9 Rather than local authorities simply ceasing to provide specific services, citizens should be given the option to pay for that service if they want to use it, in a fair way +2 11 By combining a range of services local authorities will be able to drive down costs and produce efficiencies +3 16 There are certainly activities that could be provided on a charged for basis to ensure their survival and generate surpluses to invest in others +2 In summary, many of the distinguishing viewpoints of local brokers lie not in their strong opposition or support for specific measures, but in their relative neutrality or openness to different modes of service provision alongside core in-house services. Much of this openness in comparison for example to public stewards emerges from their prioritisation of efficiency as a key criteria of decision-making. Local brokers demonstrate less attachment to the restoration of the direct link between decisions over service delivery and politics. They are also more open to flexible modes of service delivery, whatever the clear and evidenced advantages of the public sector, rejecting notions that one size fits all. Viewpoint Three: Public Valuers Public valuers, like brokers and stewards before them, demonstrate support for in-house delivery of public services and local stewardship of place. They strongly disagree with claims that public sector monopolies support vested interests, while objecting to claims that politics should be kept at bay from making decisions about service delivery options. In support of the stewardship responsibilities of local authorities, public valuers perceive the role of local government as going beyond the provision of equal access to that of redistributing wealth and tackling inequalities. They thus judge the impact of services in terms of collective rather than individual benefits. Nonetheless, public valuers are distinguished from other local practitioners and officials by their more positive attitudes towards the engagement of the voluntary and community sector in the delivery of public services (see Table 4.9). They are far less opposed to a greater involvement of the third sector and voluntary groups in the delivery of services than both public stewards and local brokers. For example, they disagree with the assertion that only the local state can ensure access to services by disadvantaged groups. In contrast, stewards are relatively ambivalent about this statement, while brokers oppose it, but not to the same degree as public valuers. In addition, public valuers question the need to maintain core capacities within the public sector, unlike local brokers who are relatively ambivalent about this statement and public stewards who position it as a defining characteristic of their approach to service delivery. Typically, public valuers shed doubt on the value of protecting core capacities. Indeed one elected member reflected that: “it is the outcome that matters not who delivers the service.” 20 Table 4.9: Public valuers, democratic engagement and third sector provision Statement number Defining statements Valuers’ ranking 7 Only the local state can ensure that the poor can enjoy equal access to the same services as the rich -4 10 It does matter who delivers local services and so decisions about this need to be made within a framework of values generated and endorsed by local citizens +3 13 The third sector is not a substitute for often complex core public service provision -2 14 Greater involvement of the third and voluntary sector in public service provision will be best achieved by collaboration not divestment +3 19 To improve public services there must be democracy, the users and the workforce must have a voice and people must be accountable +4 33 Core capacity to deliver services should be retained within the public sector -2 In addition, public valuers privilege a more direct engagement with public sector workers, community groups and citizens in the processes of decision-making and the running of public services (see Table 4.9). Unlike both stewards and brokers, they strongly support the claim that improvement in service delivery derives in part from the renewed accountability and engagement of the ‘voice’ of the workforce and users. Engaging with local communities is thus important to public valuers who tend to value an open dialogue with the public. Indeed, public valuers strongly agreed that decisions over service delivery should be undertaken within “a framework of values generated and endorsed by local citizens.” Their support for directly provided services is thus more qualified than that of public stewards or local brokers. Public valuers did not significantly value the benefits of direct service provision for enhancing the practices of local democracy and responsive government. In fact, they did not question the implication of labelling local authorities as ‘enablers’ and they gave qualified support to the assumption that restricting the diversity of provision hampers innovation. This said, despite their relatively open views on the involvement of the voluntary sector in public services, public valuers did not promote contractual relations with alternative providers. Rather, they tended to support collaboration with local communities and voluntary organisations. Summary: different modes of ‘ensuring’: public stewards, local brokers and public valuers This analysis has identified support across the world of local government for the principles of the ‘Ensuring Council’. Broad commitments to the role of local stewardship, the grounding of services in political rather than market decisions, the rejection of strategic commissioning and the outsourcing of local services, all fit within the frame of an ‘Ensuring Council’. They suggest marked opposition to the appeals of ‘enabling’ which privileges the commissioning role of local authorities, the role of the market and the divestment of public services. Three different viewpoints emerged as to how support for the ‘Ensuring Council’ might be put into practice. Public stewards articulate a vision of the future of the ‘Ensuring Council’ which recognises the value of public service delivery and the protection of core in-house services as a means of delivering on its responsibilities for local stewardship which clearly grounds decision-making over services in the political domain. Local brokers exhibit stronger preferences for an ‘Ensuring Council’ which actively mediates competing local demands while coordinating local service providers to enhance service efficiencies. In other words, they support the delivery of local outcomes through core in-house services, but only where they can demonstrate efficiency. Public valuers place a higher emphasis on the engagement of the ‘Ensuring Council’ with community groups and the third sector to deliver public services and advance democratic decision-making. They seek to open up a more effective dialogue with local communities and local public sector workers. However, such differences should not be overplayed, as they are best understood as variations within the framework of the ‘Ensuring Council’. It is to the implications of such findings for policy and practice that the report now turns. 21 Yt LABORAT I COL O N 22 CORE CAPA C IT TICS t SOCI I L O AL tP IP t SH CE t STEWAR I T S D JU 6. Conclusions Local voices, those of elected members and officers, have been noticeably absent from the recent round of visions and plans for the future of local government. This report has sought to address imbalance in current debates. It has strived to capture the understandings, beliefs and values of councillors, senior officers and service managers and how they are ‘making sense’ of the current moves towards localism put forward by an array of think tanks, lobbies and indeed government departments. In its Open Public Services White paper published in July 2011, the Government characterised the role of the state and local authorities as purely ‘enablers’: A*OUIFTFSWJDFTBNFOBCMFUPDPNNJTTJPOJOHUIFQSJODJQMFTPGPQFOQVCMJDTFSWJDFTXJMMTXJUDIUIFEFGBVMU from one where the state provides the service itself to one where the state commissions the service from BSBOHFPGEJWFSTFQSPWJEFST13 However, this study has found that across local government this view is not broadly shared. Whilst there are nuances in the way people view the roles and responsibilities of local government, where ‘strategic commissioning’ is seen merely as an extension of ‘procurement’ or ‘contract management’ then it is a future perspective which does not resonate with the majority of opinion in the local government sector. Significantly for current debates, this study has revealed grassroots support for the fundamental principles of an alternative model, that of the ‘Ensuring Council’. In marked contrast to the prevailing orthodoxy, local practitioners and elected members demonstrate core support for the development of an ‘Ensuring Council’ in which the ethos of stewardship and the value of public employment are central to the role of local government while grounding local decisions in the political accountability of directly-elected local political representatives. This vision for local authorities brings to the fore the responsibilities of local government for advancing social justice through its strategic mobilisation of public employment and civic entrepreneurship, while benefitting from increased financial capacities as part of a renewed contract between central and local government. Against this background, this concluding section examines the lessons for local policy and practice. It first analyses the implications of support for the core principles of the ‘Ensuring Council’ before considering the next steps for the ‘Ensuring Council’ and how it might offer an alternative to the prevailing logic of ‘enabling’. Finally, the study concludes by setting out the challenges of the ‘Ensuring Council’ for the current policy agenda of the Coalition Government. Support for the principles of an ‘Ensuring Council’ The lessons of this study lie in the framing of current debates over the future organisation of local authorities and the demands for new localism. Specifically, through its analysis of the beliefs and values of councillors, senior officers and service managers, this report suggests that ongoing debates need to address the concerns of those working to implement policy change with local communities and manage the impacts of the recent round of spending cuts in the field of local government. More specifically, three key messages would benefit from further attention within current debates: the strategic advantages of public employment; the value of local political accountability; and the support for collaboration rather than divestment. The demand to reconnect stewardship with the strategic advantages of direct public employment There is a high level of support among local councillors and officers for local stewardship of place. Such support is not new.14 The Lyons Inquiry endorsed such a place-shaping role for local government, establishing its ‘convening role’ through which local councils ATIPVMECFSFDPHOJTFEBTUIFCPEZJOUIF MPDBMJUZXJUIUIFSFTQPOTJCJMJUZPGCSJOHJOHUPHFUIFSUIFFõPSUTPGUIFQVCMJDTFDUPSBOEBMTPPGSFMFWBOUQBSUT PGUIFQSJWBUFBOEWPMVOUBSZTFDUPSTUPTFDVSFMPDBMXFMMCFJOH Yet, Lyons equally endorsed ‘enabling’ arguments that suggest that it does not matter who delivers public services. Stewardship, he 13 HM Government (2011) Open Public Services White Paper, p.29. 14 Sharpe, L.J. (1970) ‘Theories and Values of Local Government’ Political Studies 18 (2): p.153-174. 23 suggested, was to be exercised in part through market shaping, with the policy focus on ABQQSPQSJBUF SFHVMBUJPOBOEFõFDUJWFDPNNJTTJPOJOH 15 The findings of this report, or rather the views of local councillors and officers, contradict such assumptions and question moves to further ‘hollow out’ the capacities of local councils. Participants suggest that the effective stewardship of local communities rests on the retaining of core capacity and the valuing of local public employment. There is opposition to strategic commissioning where it is seen to be in direct contradiction with the effective stewardship of place. The direct delivery of public services is attributed significant advantages, with participants keen to emphasise that if local authorities are to meaningfully fulfill their role as ‘stewards of place’ then they must retain the capacity to intervene effectively in local communities. As one research participant argues: “if local government is going to have a role in ensuring outcomes and shaping local communities, then there is a real need to EFMJWFSTPNFTFSWJDFTEJSFDUMZBOESFUBJODBQBDJUZUPBEESFTTNBSLFUGBJMVSFw As a consequence, there was significant support for collaboration with, rather than divestment of services to, voluntary organisations and the third sector. In short, there is a demand to bring back in to existing policy debates the direct provision of public services by local councils which offers important strategic advantages for the exercise of stewardship. Grounding local decisions in the political accountability of elected local representatives Decisions over service delivery, this report suggests, are best seen by local practitioners as primarily political rather than technical decisions. Such decisions impact upon the patterns of social inclusion and well-being across local communities. They should thus be grounded, it is argued, in local representative accountability. Locally elected members, accountable through the ballot box, are the only legitimate actor to arbitrate between competing demands across local communities and for which, Lyons admits, there might be ‘no “right” administrative answer’16; and for which the aggregation of individual decisions of ‘customers’ in the marketplace may produce negative collective outcomes. One chief officer put it this way: A4UFXBSETIJQPGBMPDBMJUZJTCFTUQMBDFEXJUIMPDBMMZFMFDUFESFQSFTFOUBUJWFT BTUIFEFDJTJPONBLFSTXJUIBEJSFDUMJOFPGBDDPVOUBCJMJUZUPMPDBMQFPQMF In summary, current debates should be once again rebalanced in the interests of local democracy and the role of local authorities in determining outcomes in the wider interests of localities and communities. The Next Steps: taking the ‘Ensuring Council’ forward It is tempting to seek to draw up a set of prescriptive policy measures which best characterise the ‘Ensuring Council’ and which local authorities should adopt. One of the lessons of this report is that the defining principles of the ‘Ensuring Council’ can be operationalised in different ways and means according to specific local contexts and the values and beliefs of local players. It is not a question of imposing upon local decision-makers the constraints of a ‘one size fits all’ approach to the future of local government. On the contrary, this study sets out three particular interpretations of the ‘Ensuring Council’, which all articulate the core principles set out here, but with a different emphasis on the relative importance of different factors. ‘Public stewards’ notably support the continued delivery of core in-house services. ‘Local brokers’ are more open to different options of service delivery and the efficiencies to be gained from the effective combination of services, in particular through shared services. ‘Public valuers’ put a higher emphasis on the capacity of community groups and third sector to deliver public services and the democratic engagement of communities in the decision-making process. However, whilst there is a difference of emphasis, all three viewpoints embrace core principles of an approach in which local capacity is important and local authorities are not purely enablers and contract managers. However, two immediate concerns of the ‘Ensuring Council’ pose particular challenges within the current local and national policy context, namely the balance to be struck between competing modes of local democracy, and the rethinking of the financial settlement between central and local government. 15 Lyons, M. (2007) Lyons Inquiry into Local Government, London: The Stationery Office, p.62. 16 Lyons (2006) Lyons Inquiry, p.59. 24 Local democracy and the role of councillors Firstly, recent reforms to local governance have layered new forms of democratic engagement upon established practices of representative democracy, generating complex and often competing modes of democratic accountability and legitimacy. Representative democracy now sits alongside ‘network democracy’ typified by collaborative decision-making, ‘market democracy’ associated with individual decisions of consumers within markets, and ‘participative democracy’, those forums which engage citizens more broadly in collective decision-making.17 While Sweeting and Copus argue that over half of councillors express low levels of support for market models of democracy18, one challenge facing the ‘Ensuring Council’, and all models of local government for that matter, is how to design an effective interface between representative and participative democracy while seeking to anchor forms of network democracy in representative democracy.19 What was clearly articulated by public stewards, local brokers and public valuers, albeit it to different degrees, was that there is a balance to be struck between representative democracy and more participative forms of democracy. However, this raises the question of how this balance is to be best understood and given effect. A fair financial settlement for local government Secondly, there was support for a ‘fair financial settlement’. This demand was a core component of the consensus statements shared by our participants. Importantly, it was not expressed through any noteworthy support for local powers to raise significant new resources through taxation or engage in risk based trading activities, although there was support for increasing the capacity of local authorities to generate additional revenue through innovation and civic entrepreneurship (such as identifying new opportunities through local renewable energy schemes to supplement existing resources). However, this commitment towards a ‘fair financial settlement’ did stand in opposition to the current Government’s localism agenda. At the heart of the Government’s localism agenda is an explicit rejection of pursuing equality of outcomes reflected in the removal of ‘ring fenced’ funding targeted at areas of relative deprivation. There is a simmering resentment expressed by councillors and officers reflected in this study about the ‘unfairness’ of this approach and the withdrawal of resources from the areas of greatest need. There are significant concerns over the continued responsibility of Whitehall to address inequalities between and across local authorities. This posited a role for central government to exercise its own stewardship of place in its negotiation of financial settlements, and the generation of policy programmes, to address the different financial capacities of local councils across the country. The determination of the principles of such a ‘fair financial settlement’ and indeed the mechanisms for its delivery within the framework of an ‘Ensuring Council’ would thus benefit from further consideration as part of a broader contribution to an ongoing national debate over the future of centre-local relations. Lessons for government The most important lesson of this report is in many ways reserved for government, more specifically the current localism agenda of the Coalition Government. This study suggests that its move towards the divestment of local public services, as well as its conception of local councils as strategic commissioners, fails to address the current concerns of grassroots practitioners and elected members. Rather, it risks, in the view of our participants, hampering the capacity of local government to deliver effective local outcomes. Its adherence to the principles of ‘enabling’ ignore commitments to the strategic value of directly delivered services and the maintenance of the core capacity of local authorities, adding to the difficulties of grounding local decisions in the accountability of directly elected political representatives. Such commitments, this study suggests, pose a number of challenges to the effectiveness of local authorities as local stewards. Such claims are too easily dismissed as the rhetoric of ‘vested interests’ resistant to change and ‘out of step’ with the current direction of policy change and local democracy. Recent local changes towards innovative forms of service delivery or spaces of participative democracy have been negotiated and renegotiated in recent years by the very same local officers and local elected members that have 17 Sweeting, D. and Copus, C. (2012) ‘Whatever happened to local democracy?’, Policy and Politics, 40 (1): 21-38. 18 Sweeting and Copus, Whatever happened to local democracy?, p. 30. 19 See Sørensen, E. and Torfing, T. (2005) ‘The Democratic Anchorage of Governance Networks’, Scandinavian Political Studies 28(3): 195-218. 25 allegedly become resistant to transformation. It might just be that the practical experience of these local professionals offers an alternative understanding of what works at a local level and the conception of the ‘Ensuring Council’ offers a more appropriate way of articulating the future of local authorities and their capacity to address the complex ‘wicked issues’ of economic, social and environmental wellbeing. A new consensus The concept of an ‘Ensuring Council’ represents an opportunity to define a future for local government which combines the best traditions of our municipal past with the tools required to meet the considerable challenges facing localities, not least as a result of fiscal austerity and the economic crisis. If anything this report has shown that the primary concerns of councillors and officers across local government is not retrenchment in the face of financial cuts, which denudes the role of local government, but is rather about finding the means to ensure that local authorities can act to support local communities and economies and have the capacity and wherewithal to intervene effectively as local stewards. The language of ‘enabling’ in this context reduces the role of local government to that of a passive bystander without the means or the critical mass to play a meaningful role as a steward of place. It becomes effectively little more than a market manager. ‘Ensuring’ on the other hand resonates more closely with the deeply held views of councillors and officers about the proper role of local government in defining a positive future for our localities. APSE offer this approach as a contribution to the debate about the future role of local government and as effective alternative to a suffocating orthodoxy which fails to reflect the viewpoints of those best placed to set out a vision of an effective and meaningful local government fit for the twenty first century. 26 Appendices 27 Appendix 1: Q Methodology Drawing on the approach set out by Stephen Jeffares, we followed four commonly recognised steps in conducting our Q methodology study: mapping the debate; selecting the participants; collecting the data; and analysing and interpreting the data.20 A full discussion of these stages is outlined below. Stage 1: Mapping the debate The first stage of the study involved researching the full spectrum of debate around the future of local government. There are different ways of delineating the ‘concourse’ or the field of arguments and debates articulated on a specific issue.21 This study used the methodology of a comprehensive literature review, surveying relevant academic journals, government policy documents, think tanks reports and discussion papers, professional publications and newspapers. We also undertook reviews of organisational webpages and new media sources such as Twitter and policy and professional blogs. To ensure that the search was undertaken systematically, a list of sources and key search terms were defined. This literature review identified an initial sample of one hundred and eighty five short statements. These statements collectively represented a cross-section of the different streams and boundaries of the current policy debate on the future of local government. The statements were then systematically sorted into a 3x6 grid. Along one dimension of the grid, statements were sorted into those that represented the ‘Ensuring Council’, those that represented the ‘Enabling’ Council and those that were a hybrid of the two. Along the other dimension, statements were sorted in terms of the principles being described: that is, whether they referred to an ethos of stewardship, local financial capacity, public value, civic entrepreneurialism and innovation, local democracy, engagement and participation or social justice. Once these one hundred and eighty five statements had been mapped onto the grid, there was a further round of selecting statements in order to generate a reasonable number of statements within each section representing the full diversity of opinion on the future of local government. This process generated a final set of thirty four statements. Stage 2: Selecting the participants In stage two, the research team strategically selected a sample of one hundred participants made up of key elected members and officers across the United Kingdom as well as other key stakeholders from across the sector. Participants were identified through the professional networks of APSE in order to ensure access and ease of contact. Responses were received from forty participants.22 It is worth noting that the representativeness of the Q Methodology study is derived from the representativeness of the statements, which draw upon the full spectrum of debate that exists on the future of local government. Q-methodology studies normally engage somewhere between 40 to 60 respondents (see Section 4). Stage 3: Collecting the data In stage three, participants sorted the statements into a distribution grid online using flash q software.23 An online method was thought to be the most efficient way of carrying out the study as it allowed participants to complete the q-sort or ranking of statements in their own time. 20 For an analysis of these stages, see Jeffares and Skelcher, Democratic Subjectivities in Network Governance: A Q Methodology study of English and Dutch Public Managers’, pp. 1253-1273. 21 See Jeffares and Skelcher, Democratic Subjectivities in Network Governance: A Q Methodology study of English and Dutch Public Managers’, pp. 1253-1273. 22 One of the responses had to be discounted due to the study being completed incorrectly. 23 The q-sort was web enabled, utilising flash-q software, which is a flash application for performing q-sorts online. See here for more information, http:// www.hackert.biz/flashq/home 28 Stage 4: Analysing and interpreting the data The research team analysed the responses to the survey using PQ method software24, which is specifically designed to analyse statistically Q method data, through undertaking a factor analysis to determine how groups of participants clustered around particular sets of statements or viewpoints. Follow-up interviews with participants provided more lengthy contextual information about why they held certain viewpoints. Participants for interviews were selected based on how they loaded on particular viewpoints. 24 The Q Methodology study was analysed using PQ method software, which is a statistical program tailored to the requirements of q-methodology. See here for more information, http://www.lrz.de/~schmolck/qmethod 29 Appendix 2: statement ranks for each viewpoint Viewpoints Valuers Brokers Stewards Statement number Defining statements 1 Local Government must develop a respect for people’s capacity to run their own lives 0 0 0 2 Public services shouldn’t just be open to scrutiny, but also subject to the individual and collective choices of active citizens -1 0 +1 3 Local Government will need to enthusiastically cede control to others including local communities -2 -4 0 4 It is vital to restore the connection between service provision and politics in local government -2 -1 0 5 There is an increasing need to question the assumption that local democracy and direct service provision are inseparable -3 -3 0 6 Driving change from the centre with target led reforms or imposing the market on a needs led service will fail to reform or improve public services 0 1 -1 7 Only the local state can ensure that the poor can enjoy equal access to the same services as the rich 0 -2 -4 8 It is the role of local government to provide equal access to services not to redistribute wealth or tackle inequality -2 -1 +4 9 Rather than local authorities simply ceasing to provide specific services, citizens should be given the option to pay for that service if they want to use it, in a fair way -1 -2 0 10 It does matter who delivers local services and so decisions about this need to be made within a framework of values generated and endorsed by local citizens +2 +1 +3 11 By combining a range of services local authorities will be able to drive down costs and produce efficiencies 0 +3 -2 12 Community groups can achieve radically improved public service outcomes at much lower cost -2 -4 0 13 The third sector is not a substitute for often complex core public service provision +2 +3 -2 14 Greater involvement of the third and voluntary sector in public service provision will be best achieved by collaboration not divestment +1 +2 +3 15 To innovate in public services there has to be a rediscovery of professionalism, listening to public sector workers +1 -2 -3 16 There are certainly activities that could be provided on a charged for basis to ensure their survival and generate surpluses to invest in others 0 +2 +1 17 Public sector monopolies protect the vested interests of public sector workers and should be challenged -3 -3 +2 18 Innovating around the green agenda to create jobs and a better environment is central to the future of local government +2 -1 +1 19 To improve public services there must be democracy, the users and the workforce must have a voice and people must be accountable +1 -1 +4 20 One size fits all models of service provision do not meet the needs of citizens. Services should be tailored and personalised to individual needs -1 +1 -1 21 The impact of public services should be understood in terms of their collective benefit for society as a whole, not simply in terms of their impact on individual service users +3 -1 +4 22 Local politics should be kept at bay from service decisions in order to promote their efficient delivery -2 -2 -3 23 A renewed focus on a stronger democracy combined with a more open dialogue with the public can restore faith in public services +1 +1 +2 30 Viewpoints Stewards Brokers Valuers Central Government should ensure a fair financial settlement across local authorities +3 +3 +3 25 Local authorities should be able to raise local taxation and charge for services as they see fit -1 0 +1 26 Local Authorities need the financial levels to allow them to determine their own direction +1 0 +2 27 Local Government’s role is as an enabler for the delivery of services -4 +2 0 28 Restricting diversity of provision means there is less innovation and less improvement in service delivery -1 0 +1 29 Local Council’s should be strategic commissioners of services facilitated through but not provided by local government -4 -3 -3 30 Local Government has a responsibility for stewardship of place ensuring economic, social and environmental wellbeing and sustainability +3 +4 +2 31 In house services can be equally as dynamic and efficient as their private sector counterparts +4 +4 +2 32 Organisations who deliver nothing, quickly erode their capacity to manage anything 0 0 -1 33 Core capacity to deliver services should be retained within the public sector +4 +1 -2 34 There has to be a recognition that businesses, charities, social enterprises or a combination of providers can innovate and deliver better outcomes at a lower cost -3 -2 -1 Statement number 24 Defining statements 31 32 LOCAL SERVICES LOCAL SOLUTIONS PRICE APSE Members £20.00 APSE Non-members £40.00 Association for Public Service Excellence 2nd floor Washbrook House Talbot Road, Manchester M32 0FP telephone: 0161 772 1810 fax: 0161 772 1811 34