The Committee will be provided with an update on the Croydon Renewal Plan. The Committee is asked to consider what comments and any recommendations to make prior to the Croydon Renewal Plans’ consideration by Cabinet on 25 November 2020.
Minutes:
The Chief Executive of Croydon Council and the Leader of the Council outlined the details of the Croydon Renewal Plan in a Presentation
Following the presentation, Members were given the opportunity to ask questions.
Reassurance was sought from officers that going forward a higher level of care would be taken to ensure that risks were identified and appropriate mitigation put in place during the development of planned savings to prevent any repetition of past mistakes. Officers reassured Members that they were working diligently on testing proposed savings options to feed into the financial strategy. Extensive work was being undertaken with budget managers responsible for forecasting to ensure that extra care was being taken which included monthly budget monitoring. Rigorous development was also underway on the plan for lost income to ensure that the recovery plan was deliverable.
The Cabinet Member for Finance and Resources added that whilst it was unfortunate that a significant proportion of the identified savings had been double counted, once identified, corrections had been made immediately. Extra resources had now been pooled into that department to mitigate against the possibility of similar errors being made in the future.
A Member highlighted that the description of the culture of emerging policies alluded that Councillors could play a formative role in shaping of the policies and asked what this meant. Officers advised that they had listened to both Members and the Leaders’ request for greater involvement in shaping policies. The early dialogue and engagement with councillors and staff had been beneficial in exploring improvements to culture which would be good for governance.
In response to a question on the timing of the different reviews that were taking place alongside the renewal plan, the Leader said that all reviews were currently on track to be finalised shortly with recommendations being written. Strategic reviews had been commissioned to look in greater depth at specific work streams such as Brick by Brick and Croydon Affordable Homes with a paper due to be presented to the next Cabinet meeting to share work to date and initial analysis, with further work needed to identify the next steps. It was acknowledged that more work was needed on the Capital Programme Review which was due to be presented at the November meeting.
A Member questioned the extensiveness of the process for identifying savings proposals, including whether there was sufficient challenge and public consultation. The Leader responded that in terms of the savings proposals, there would be a number of areas that required consultation and the principles of co-design would further explore how to seek public responses in processes.
It was further questioned how the Council would seek to demonstrate to the Ministry of Housing Communities and Local Government (MCLG) that there was a thorough understanding of the financial challenge to give confidence that the capital directive would not leave room for underestimating of the Councils’ requirements. The Cabinet Member advised that officers were challenging budget assumptions and using a number of techniques to test their understanding of the financial position and the robustness of the action plans. Lead Members were taking responsibility to test proposals and seek assurance on deliverability and through the independent improvement board, there was further opportunity to test and triangulate plans and policies put forward.
The Chief Executive added that MHCLG would also be asking themselves the same question when they receive the Councils proposals and would look in detail at the operation of the organisation and its internal controls. The goals set by the organisation took effect immediately with the programme designed to be open to challenge from MHCLG and the independently chaired improvement board, as well as councillors.
Additionally staff on the team were being provided with extensive training to enable them to ask challenging questions. The Executive Leadership also had a responsibility to challenge each other as well as their staff and a tracking approach was being developed on savings.
The Chair reflected on how Scrutiny would seek reassurance and that it would have to explore different ways outside of formal committee meetings, which had its limitations, to maintain line of sight. It was important for Scrutiny to rethink its approach on seeking assurance and improve confidence in challenging decisions made by the Executive as well as Political Leadership of the Council.
It was questioned how the organisational management model that was being developed would help planning to ensure that cost cutting through reshaping of services was delivered whilst being informed by demand. Furthermore how would the impact of any changes be maximised to ensure value for money was delivered. The Leader advised that there was clear recognition the Council could not continue to operate in the way it had previously. The difficult circumstances had been marked by the issuing of the S114 notice. Steps had been taken to explore what was required to drive change and what could be achieved given the current circumstances. This had resulted in the three priorities and principles being set. It was important to note that this was the beginning of a journey with a lot of work required to change the Council’s approach including re-examining processes to maximise the delivery of statutory functions. This would be informed by protocols and process of other local authorities to ensure best practice. The goal was for the Council to operate within a sustainable balanced budget by 2024/25 and aspire to have £50million in reserves.
The Deputy Leader added that the importance of the capital direction was it would allow this year’s budget to be balanced and allow more time for savings to be made in a way that was safe and more strategic.
Another question was asked on how to rebuild trust as there was concern that those that were being entrusted to steer the Council through this situation were part of the previous leadership. As such reassurance was sought that the leadership had the right skills to steer the organisation thought this difficult journey. The Chief Executive responded that the Executive Leadership team had all given apologies for their involvement in the mismanagement which had created the financial challenge facing the Council. Moving forward, it was acknowledged that trust had been broken and there was a need to find ways to rebuild trust whilst working within an environment of accountability. An independent investigation was to be conducted by the Local Government Association (LGA) to understand the events that had led to the present situation. The details of the report will assist in rebuilding the organisation and any formal questions and processes that arise as a result of the investigation would be actioned.
In response to a question on Members’ being given the opportunity to review, in the spirit of transparency, the methodology used in the production of the renewal plan, Officers said that the opportunity to share was welcomed. The methodology behind the Renewal Plan was based on what was considered to be the best model, what was most effective and the use of judgement to identify immediate emerging priorities on obtaining support from government.
It was acknowledged that whilst the Improvement Board was necessary, there was currently a number of Boards in place, managing high level operations. As such it was questioned how the effectiveness of these Boards would be scrutinised as there could be no real accountability without scrutiny. The Leader and The Cabinet Member for Finance and Resource replied that the Improvement Board was one of the mechanisms to drive change, it was independent to enable robust challenge and questioning from external colleagues.
A Member asked what was being done to promote a meaningful culture of transparency, in particular access to information and routes to ensuring open dialogue with residents. Officers stressed that the Council was in the process of revising its protocol for access to information as recommended through the Governance Review. It was agreed that councillors needed to ensure that this promise was followed through by lobbying lead members on the matter, in particular for improved communications and engagement support by the organisations Communications department. It was highlighted that as a result of the issues previously experienced by Councillors a recommendation had been made by the Children & Young People Sub-Committee to Cabinet for communication and engagement resources be made available to support the work of Scrutiny.
It was asked if there was a clear engagement strategy on the renewal plan detailing the monitoring framework and lines of accountability, as it was imperative that the organisation got this right. Officers said that whilst detailed challenge was welcomed on the Action Plan, at present there was not a detailed resident engagement plan in place as it was important to acknowledge that this was an emerging plan and the organisation was in the process of working though priority items at present with a lot of work invested in managing that process well. The report in the public interest was one the first steps being taken as it emphasises accountability, by reporting against actions being taken, progress against action plans and the triangulation of further actions to be taken.
A Member reaffirmed that it was important that a culture of openness and transparency be cultivated, particularly as staff had been calling or this for a long time following many years of a Council that had been regarded as having deeply embedded issues with lack of openness. The Leader expressed concern at what had been learnt in the past few months about the experience of Council employees. The Council’s political leadership was keen to work with staff, to understand their perspective on solutions and improve standards. It was acknowledged that the organisation was going through a period of transition to deliver financial improvement and cultural change. In order to manage other challenges during this transition period, a rapid review of capacity to respond to challenges was being undertaken.
A Councillor in attendance commented that there had been a lot of reference to the organisation being open and transparent and it was one thing to talk about it, but another thing in practice. It was important that information was shared and made available regardless of whether it was good or bad in order to alleviate public suspicion. How the organisation handled its response in relation to reports such as finding from Pricewaterhouse Coopers (PwC) will characterise the immediate perception of the organisation.
The Chair thanked Officers, the leader, Deputy Leader and Cabinet Member for their attendance and responses to questions.
In reaching its recommendations the Committee came to the following conclusions:
The Committee made the following Recommendations:
Supporting documents: