Tuesday 3 March 2015

A clash of ambitions

Today (Tuesday 3rd March) has been an interesting day for the contrast between my morning spent in London discussing the 2nd draft of the Laughing Boy Bill (LBBill), a movement to see enacted in law changes that will improve the lives of people with learning difficulties and/or autism, and this afternoon/evening spent following the debate to set the 2015-16 budget for Birmingham City Council (BCC) where the Labour administration is having to enact £85m of cuts for the next financial year alone.

Now I have considerable sympathy for the position that Sir Albert Bore et al find themselves in. This is unprecedented in terms of scale. Yet some of this has been self-inflicted by successive administrations to favour the city centre development over citywide responsibilities. So in my area of interest, adult social care, Birmingham City Council is underspending comparatively with other metropolitan areas by 2.5% of budget or £39million in cash terms. That is an outlier that is significant by any stretch of the imagination.

It cannot be said with confidence that the budget that will be set today will meet the statutory requirements on the city as the 2014 Care Act comes into effect from April. Its an difficult juxaposition where Whitehall expectations are increased while the grants for BCC are decreased. If the consultation, budget or any service provision were tested legally, BCC would probably have more difficulties than the contingency fund would allow.

Against this, the 2nd draft of the LBBill sits as a statement of intent. In particular, clause 4.4 of the 2nd draft which asserts duties above financial resources. As a principle, this is absolutely right. In practise, if this culture of austerity for local authorities continues, it will inflict more pain on the functioning of any authority. It makes me uncomfortable because I know that 2015-16 isn't the worst point for Birmingham City Council. 2016-17 and 2017-18 will be harder still as the cuts drive deeper. Its against this background that I and others hope that Sir Albert, John Cotton etc will start working with us and others interested parties from May 8th to help the city mitigate the worse aspects of 2016-17 onwards and close that gap with comparable cities. Its a hard road ahead.

Against that, the 2014 Care Act does reduce the ability of local authorities to use financial considerations as a basis for setting who qualifies as having statutory needs. The imposition of national standards does challenge the 1997 Gloucestershire Judgement that local authorities have used to tighten qualification of substantial or critical needs. So clause 4.4 can be said to work with the 2014 Care Act. This will be tested in court soon I suspect.

So the optimism I felt this morning at Monckton Chambers with the diverse and knowledgeable individuals and organisations around the table, both in person and the disembodied voices on speakerphone, has been tempered by the ugly reality that is occurring in Birmingham's Council House.

Yet the ambitions of LBBill has to happen. We cannot compromise on the principle that underpins LBBill that is everyone has the right to live their lives however messy that may be. That it may make local government's life more messy is something we'll have to live with.