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MAIDSTONE BOROUGH COUNCIL
RECORD OF DECISION OF THE Cabinet
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Decision Made: |
11 August 2010 |
Budget Consultation
Issue for Decision
To consider the form of consultation on the 2011-12 Council budget.
Decision Made
1. That the consultation timetable and programme, as set out below, be agreed:
i) A 12 week consultation programme with the theme – My Council, What Matters to Me. The programme will raise awareness of the budget situation over the next three years, the statutory services the Council provides and the savings options already considered by Cabinet Members. The final phase of engagement activities will encourage consultees to indicate the non-statutory services which are most important to them and comment on the service options considered by Cabinet Members. A suggested timetable is set out below.
ii) August 2010 – General awareness raising including stakeholder communications, the local media, Borough Update, and staff communications.
iii) Week commencing 6 September – launch event with first engagement activity supported by news releases, website, Facebook and Twitter posts. The Council has 800 followers on Twitter and 250 friends on Facebook. These sites could be used to point people to the Leader’s Twitter site where he could engage with people about the issues facing the Council.
iv) September – October – My Council, What Matters to Me roadshow activities at events and meetings including some of the following as agreed with the Leader of the Council:
The Local Strategic Partnership
Neighbourhood Forums
Cabinet Roadshows
Business Forum
Youth Forum
Older Persons Forum
Transport Users Group and
Individual Ward events
Reasons for Decision
The initial view of the medium term financial strategy for
2011/12 was taken by Cabinet at its meeting in July 2010. That initial view
identified budget pressures for savings and efficiencies of £2.8m in 2011/12,
£1.6m in 2012/13 and £2.2m in 2013/14.
These pressures exceed the level required from this exercise
in previous years by a considerable amount. Recent targets for savings and
efficiencies have been: -
2010/11 £1.6m
2009/10 £1.4m
2008/09 £1.1m
In preparation for this Cabinet has developed a matrix of
services in order to identify those services at three priority levels and at
three investment levels.
Following on from this priority assessment, individual
Cabinet Members have reviewed their services with officers to identify saving
and efficiency proposals for Cabinet to consider in September 2010. The Shadow
Cabinet has also undertaken a similar prioritisation exercise. Agreement has
been reached on a number of topics which will be the subject of joint review
between Cabinet and Shadow Cabinet Members with service officer support.
In developing this initial view, Cabinet has a wealth of
information on public opinion from previous consultation on which it is able to
draw. Details of recent previous consultations are given below.
Previous Budget Consultations
The Council has consulted the public as part of the budget
setting process since 2002-03. Various qualitative and quantitative methods
have been used including a citizens’ panel, focus groups, road shows, meetings,
questionnaires, a Simultaneous Multiple Attribute Trade Off exercise, an online
budget simulator, and last year a market research exercise.
We have consulted to:
· inform residents of the budget setting process, the council’s spending levels and its services;
· find out or check priority areas for spending;
· find out how best to fund schemes or options for specific service elements;
· find out preferences for the funding of service improvements – council tax, increased fees, cuts in services or a combination of all three;
· test support for levels of council tax;
· find out public opinion on future council charges for parking, park & ride, waste removal and the Hazlitt Theatre;
· find residents’ preference for increases in council tax levels or cuts in service; and
· to invite suggestions for cuts in service.
Details of previous consultations and what we have learnt is
set out at Appendix A of the joint report of the Head of Finance & Customer
Services and the Head of Communications.
The 2011-12 Budget Consultation
Last year the Cabinet decided on a strategic approach to
future budget consultation to complement the medium term financial strategy.
It agreed that there should be a shift in focus away from questions that
consider the immediate future to ones that consider the medium term. It agreed
that there should be a rolling programme of subjects and consultation styles
over the period of the strategy to ensure the best use is made of resources.
In order to produce an initial view of the medium term
financial strategy for 2011/12 onwards, Cabinet has already commenced some work
in advance of consultation. For 2011/12 the approach has three stages as
detailed below, which this decision agreed stage three: -
a)
Stage One is raising public awareness of the current financial
situation. There has been wide media coverage of the country’s economic
difficulties, the Government’s and reaction to the situation. The consequences
for Maidstone Council have been outlined via a press statement made by the
Leader. The Leader of the Council and the Leader of the Opposition have spoken
to the Business Forum about the need for savings and they have been widely
reported in the local press. The next issue of Borough update, in August,
includes an article – Massive Savings must be Found;
b)
Stage Two is raising awareness of what the Council does and how it
spends the resources it receives on the services it provides; this information
will be provided via the media and as contextual information at Stage three;
c)
Stage Three is engagement on the choices around where the money is spent
in the future.
What to Consult About
The Government has said that it wants to reduce its spending
by 25% over the next four years to reduce the national annual spending deficit.
At its last meeting the cabinet accepted that based on the
most likely scenario of cuts in grants and other factors the Council will have
to make savings of £2.8m next year, and a total of £6.6m over the next three
years, in order to achieve a balanced budget.
Given that the Council will have to, and the public expect
the Council to have to, make unprecedented savings Cabinet considered if it
wants to consult and engage people to find out the services which are most
important to them. This would offer some assurance that priority services will
be protected.
Alternatively Cabinet Members considered the possibility of
consulting about specific options for savings and spending or on the Council’s
priority for prosperity.
A third option would be to combine the two proposals by consulting in two stages. Firstly, the plans the Council currently has to achieve savings and, secondly, the areas of service that the public would expect to provide the balance of savings required. In this option public opinion could be measured for major proposals under consideration.
Who to Consult
The Cabinet had to decide who to consult. This included
stakeholders such as staff, our local strategic partners, businesses, the
general public and hard to hear groups.
With high levels of public awareness of the need for public spending cuts and with the high level of savings needed by the Council, large scale public engagement is essential.
How to Consult
Given the need for large scale engagement, the Council will have to utilise all its communications channels and undertake a series of engagement events.
The Cabinet roadshows could be utilised and in order to achieve large scale engagement the number of events could be enhanced. The optimum would be to achieve a roadshow event in every ward with involvement of ward members supported by senior officers of the council.
In order to encourage participation and give assurance that priority services will be protected it was recommended that this phase is themed – My Council, What matters to me.
The Council has a modest budget for this consultation exercise and it is recommended that this is used to provide supporting materials including leaflets and display materials and a mechanism at engagement events for members of the public to indicate the services which are most important to them.
Cabinet Members felt it was important that the public are informed during the consultation what services the Council provide that are statutory and the budget associated with these services, together with a list of the non-statutory services the Council provides and the associated budget. Also, the Cabinet felt that this consultation should be used over the next 3 years.
Alternatives considered and why rejected
There are alternative approaches but the options above should complement previous consultations and provide valuable feedback for the council to consider in setting next year’s budget.
Background Papers
None
Should you be concerned about this decision and wish to call it in, please submit a call in form signed by any two Non-Executive Members to the Head of Change and Scrutiny by: 20th August 2010 |