The preparation and completion of locality plans for the Scottish Borders under the 2015 Community Empowerment (Scotland) Act are well behind schedule while asset transfers to local groups have also been slow to take off.
This sluggish implementation of community powers comes in for criticism in Audit Scotland's Best Value Assessment report - the first detailed look at Borders local government services since 2010.
According to the auditors: "The CPP (Community Planning Partnership) has been slow to
implement the Community Empowerment (Scotland) Act 2015. The Act aims to give
communities more influence over how their council and its partners plan and
provide services. It also establishes ways for residents to get more involved
in local decision-making and service provision.
"A council is required to work
with its community planning partners to engage with community bodies and improve
local outcomes. Joint efforts and resources should be targeted on areas of greatest
need to reduce inequalities."
In the Borders case the CPP’s local outcomes improvement plan was
produced late. The CPP’s locality plans are two years late and incomplete.
"The
CPP’s strategic board decided to commission a locality plan for each of all
five Borders localities simultaneously. It did not prioritise localities or
communities with the worst levels of deprivation or the poorest outcomes on
issues such as health and education. All five locality plans remained in draft
when they were considered by the CPP’s strategic board in June 2019.
"Although
they reflect the themes of the community plan, they will not be integrated with
the community plan until they are finalised. Ambitions in locality plans have
not been costed and are therefore not yet reflected in budgets of the council
or its CPP partners. The strategic board was not advised when the locality
plans would be finalised."
Meanwhile, Community Asset Transfers (CATs), participation requests and
participatory budgeting are all at an early stage.
Since January 2017 community
groups have had a right to ask relevant public authorities to transfer land or
buildings that they feel they could use more effectively. The council developed
its own guidance on CATs in 2011.
"Council officers and the council’s CPP
partners have worked with community groups over the past two years to build
capacity to encourage CATs", says the report. "The CPP has also funded a Men’s Shed Development
Officer to build capacity on this specific issue. Nonetheless, the scale of
CATs has been limited.
"There have been over 30 enquiries regarding CATs during
the past two years. Of these, three have progressed to the submission of a
formal application and one has been approved. The council recognises it is
responsible for ensuring that CATs are viable and sustainable. They recognise
that progressing CATs is at an early stage and will require further promotion
and support by the council and its CPP partners."
And the report continues: "The CPP has been slow to empower and engage communities.
It is difficult for the council and its partners to
determine progress because some indicators and measures in the community plan
are not measurable or lack short-term and medium-term targets.
"Progress
reporting includes little analysis of how activities drive performance or
deliver improvements for local people. There are no arrangements to track the
implementation of locality plans and these are not linked to either the CPP’s
community plan or the council’s plans. A comprehensive performance management
framework is needed."
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