Press release
Councils on track to slash costs but at what price?
14th November, 2005. Telewest Business study reveals public
services could be at risk as Central Government leaves many council
officials feeling their way in the dark Local councils in the UK
may be on track to achieve the savings outlined in the
treasury-backed Gershon Review but this is expected to come at a
huge price to public services and future council tax reviews. This
is at risk if councils don’t start getting more guidance from
Central Government, before they take drastic steps such as scaling
back on services or culling staff to meet cost-cutting
measures.
This was the key finding of a nationwide study commissioned by
Telewest Business, following the first anniversary of a Government
mandate on local authorities to achieve efficiency gains of at
least £6.5 billion by 2007-2008. The Telewest Business Local
Councils’ Efficiency Study, which polled 100 senior managers within
local authorities across the United Kingdom, was conducted on
behalf of Telewest Business by public sector research specialist
Vanson Bourne. Nearly three quarters of senior council officials
polled were confident that their council was on track to meet
Gershon’s targets, but an alarming 61 per cent felt that this could
not be achieved without impacting the availability of public
services. A quarter of councils felt that it was impossible to meet
targets without impacting council taxes.
“Local council priorities have shifted with Gershon, from
getting public services online to waking up about efficiency gains
across the entire organisation,” said Christopher Small, Director
of Public Sector at Telewest Business. “What’s shocking is that
many local authorities say they are feeling their way in the dark.
This implies a devastating risk to public services if more guidance
is not given centrally. For example, the research highlights the
impact new working practices such as remote working can have, but
its deployment is still limited. Such strategies could help
councils cut overheads such as office space without cutting
staff.”
A lack of guidance from Central Government was spotlighted by
the study with 64 per cent of councils feeling they were not
getting enough guidance on how to meet cost-cutting measures. In
addition, more than half of senior council managers polled felt
that councils needed more autonomy from Whitehall to cut out the
red tape and increase the rate of improvements in public services
to drive the cashreleasing efficiency gains expected.
With individual councils expected to achieve 2.5% per annum
savings the onus is on local authorities to boost internal
efficiency while still maintaining and running better services.
These efforts are expected to release money and other resources
that councils can reinvest in local services or hold to control
council tax charges. The Telewest Business study sought to examine
the views of councils on particular areas of efficiency gain such
as human resources, reducing overheads and deploying new
technologies to improve staff productivity.
A summary of the key findings is detailed below:
- The research identified three key success factors which would
increase a council’s ability to achieve targets: having people with
the right skills (53 per cent selected in their top 3 success
factors), reviewing council processes to cut out the red tape (53
per cent), and adopting new information technology to increase
staff productivity (51 per cent)
- 93 per cent of council officials suggested that it is a
challenge to find people with the right skills, and half of those
suggested that this situation was becoming increasingly difficult.
This could signal a skills crisis in the public sector that could
hamper public services in the next five years
- 65 per cent of local councils polled said they were coming
under increasing pressure to reduce office space. There were three
main reasons cited for this pressure: reducing costs, increased
adoption of technologies that enable home working, and the
restructuring of public services
- Remote working was highlighted as a driver for meeting
efficiency gains. The two areas where efficiency gains could be
made highlighted by the research were: increasing staff
productivity (65 per cent) and increasing staff retention (65 per
cent).
- The extent to which councils were currently deploying remote
working to achieve efficiency gains was found to be limited. Almost
half of the respondents said that their councils didn’t have a
remote working policy in place for more than 10 per cent of
staff.
“Significant savings can be achieved by councils by making more
effective use of IT and network technologies to deliver
efficiencies and rationalise current processes. The risk is that if
not all possible strategies are considered, councils may start
taking drastic steps which could be avoided. With some councils
succeeding more than others, this could also risk creating an
un-level playing field for the delivery of public services across
the UK,” added Small.