1 What the WFD will mean for local authorities November 2007.
Working with Local Authorities – what does it mean to us? TdBD May 2009.
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Transcript of Working with Local Authorities – what does it mean to us? TdBD May 2009.
Working with Local Authorities – what does it mean to us?
TdBD May 2009
The Background - LSC
• Created 2001, with the merger of FEFC and Training and Enterprise Councils (TECs)
• Responsible for planning and funding all post 16 Further Education
• National Office in Coventry, 47 local offices• National Office oversaw placements to Independent
Specialist Colleges (ISCs)• 2006, creation of regional LLDD teams and reduction
in size of local teams
Machinery of Government (MoG) Progress
• June 2007 DfES became DCSF and DIUS. • Apprenticeships , Skills, Children and Learning
Bill, 4 Feb 09• LAs to have duty for securing education and
training for all 16 -19 & 19-25 LLDD 1/04/10 • Young People’s Funding Agency ( YPLA)
receive grant Letter 16 -19 & 19-25 LLDD • Skills Funding Agency (SFA) 19+ or 25+ LLDD
Current place
• LLDD Knowledge transfer : LSC to LAs • Connexions 139 / 140 consultation out• Connexions commissioned for up to 3 years • Commissioning Support Unit LA based• 14-25 strategies in place in many LAs• Financial and planning shadow arrangements
in place in LAs
LA driversIdentify key national and local drivers for change • LAA and CYPP• The Children’s Plan• 21st Century Schools• National Challenge• 14-19 Agenda guidanceAnalyse need / demand for services Analyse the results of performance reviews + benchmark with
other authoritiesIdentify key directions for change / implications Develop procurement and market management plans
What’s missing?
In public policy:• Grasp of the issues around shift from national to local • A bridge between LSC / LA cultures• Time for a planned transition• Understanding of the unintended consequencesOn the ground in practice:• Capacity to manage role moves plus the day job• Learner focused change management process• Capacity in all areas to re-shape to new vision • LA commitment to secure provision• Clarity around placement for learners and parents
Two different games
The LLDD ball the LSC is throwing is a National paradigm• National funding framework• National capital process• National data processes, sets and standards• Secured provisionThe SEN ball the LA is catching is a local paradigm • Spot purchasing growing into Outcomes’ based commissioning• Local political capital priorities • Local indicator sets• Locally and politically described relationships
What gets in the way? 1
• Flexibility of funding – policy / practice divide– Viability of providers dependent on “core business” of long
term placements. Outreach / indirect services often seem a “loss leader”
– Local Authorities struggling to meet costs of existing placements under Gershon Efficiencies– inhibits imaginative and collaborative thinking
– Commissioning still in early stages of development – few areas in a position to think about commissioning innovative new services and “placement as last resort” approach dominant. Limited pooled budgets.
What gets in the way? 2
• Culture:– Relationships between LAs and providers are mostly
positive but complex histories in some areas– Provider culture can be resistant to change – core business
“secure” for 200 years etc. “Business” language unfamiliar / uncomfortable for staff and Board. Charity “fantasy”.
– LA culture can be resistant to collaboration - most officers have a NMISS “horror story” about fee increases or quality. Illusions of “Tesco” charities.
– Gap between LA commissioning policy and practice
Toolkit for survival - external
• NASS Outcomes’ framework for National Schools Contract - needs individualising
• NASS Guiding principles on Outcomes’ for 3 National Contracts & National Strategies Achievement for All - Outcomes’ based
• Commissioning support website / networks• Children's Trust Board• Aiming Higher for Disabled Children funding• ESF / LSC funding for Supported Employment• New markets gaps being identified• Aggressive collaboration strategy
Toolkit for survival - internal
• Accurate market analysis – in what ways does the market really need your expertise?
• Reshaping your provision – have you the capacity to deliver what the market wants today?
• Internal structure – does it support tomorrow?• Value chain analysis –what do parents / LAs etc think they are
buying?• Unit costing – how much does it really cost?• Partnership – could you work more effectively / spread the risks
more evenly?• Parents – are you shaping and directing their energies? • Quality – don’t wait for the lightning to strike
What will they have to commission?
In a ideal world, some of the following:• Teaching and learning provision which meets the needs of
young people with complex, medical or therapeutic needs • Specialist knowledge and expertise, which can be evidenced
by nationally recognised qualifications• The breadth of services provided including therapies and
medical • A curriculum focus on independent living• Residential provision which provides additional opportunities
for learning, transference and application of skills and can cover respite and short breaks
What can you do today?Basic immediate advice would be:• Contact your LA and find out what is going on with regard to
14-25 provision• Uncover any local data on the LA drivers• Contact all your local Non-maintained Specials Schools
(through NASS) and ask for help• Focus your Board on the need for change • Look at the flexibility of your management structure• Review your capacity and identify your gaps • Plan for partnership now to fill your gaps• Do not dilute your specialism