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Town Hall report ignores crime, Council Tax and roads

It is so often cited as to have become clichéd, but in George Orwell’s vision of a dystopian future, the novel 1984, when the powers-that-be had bad news, it got its Ministry of Truth to erase it from the records and re-write the history to suit.

Steve O’Connell: his latest quarterly report is three months late and misses out key indicators

Welcome to Croydon in 2012.

The Croydon Council cabinet – the handful of Tory councillors who are supposed to be in charge of the borough – is to consider its latest half-term, performance report next week. But the report that is being put before them for approval conveniently makes no mention of key areas of the council’s performance, including Council Tax collection, crime, street cleaning and roads.

The executive summary to the report states that “based on feedback from Cabinet and the public, the look and feel of the report has changed”. New reports, it says, will offer a “sharper focus on priority issues and the impact that the Council is having” and “minimise reporting on inputs and processes and focus instead on outcomes delivered to residents”.

Of course, producing a “new” style report makes it virtually impossible to compare with previous performance reports. Impossible to judge whether the council is doing better or worse than before. And this is clearly deliberate.

In one respect, this latest performance report can be compared with previous versions: it is late.

The ever so busy Steve O’Connell, for a time Britain’s most overpaid local councillor, whose job it is to deliver these reports, has written the welcome note to the first quarterly report of 2012-2013, hoping that no one notices that it is already six months into that year, with the first and second quarters already behind us.

Judging by last year’s reports, it’s looking like “quarterly reporting” in Croydon is now happening only once or twice a year, and often with out-of-date information. This element of performance doesn’t appear in the performance report.

But according to O’Connell, these performance reports are better than when he first became a cabinet member for performance in 2007, because then he was only reporting… wait for it… once every two months. How’s that for progress?

Moving on to the “context” of the new reports – it states they “will focus on key issues that reflect priorities at the time of reporting” and that will change according to the instructions of cabinet members. So that gives our Brave Leader, Mike Fisher, and his top team the opportunity, if there’s something that they might, possibly, be embarrassed about, to choose to “focus” the next report on other “priorities”. It’s entirely Orwellian.

There can be no performance comparisons if the performance report shifts and changes from one period to the next.

In O’Connell’s introduction, he talks about achievements in the last quarter, but as the report doesn’t mention quarters anywhere else, it is unclear to what O’Connell is referring. Indeed, just how confusing the new, shifting reporting method can be is amply demonstrated in this introduction, where O’Connell writes about achievements in areas that the council is no longer reporting on.

Some of the achievements that O’Connell cites, while important, are not necessarily the best examples. Under “Empowering Communities”, all they mention is the number of Big Lunches that took place in the borough, but nothing about helping people in London Road or surrounding areas following the riots (remember, this non-quarterly quarterly report is supposed to cover the period from April to June this year). Is this an example of “sharper focus on priority issues and the impact that the Council is having”?

But the biggest indicator of what is really worrying Croydon Council’s key decision-makers is what is missing from the body of the report. These are the performance areas which, according to the cabinet members, in all seriousness, the people of Croydon are not interested in. These are indicators which have appeared in previous reports, but are notable by their absence from this first performance report of 2012.

Missing from O’Connell’s latest council performance report is:

In this latest report, our council – new motto “Proud to Swerve” – talks much about improving transparency. Yet this report is a magnificent example of full-on opacity.

Here are a few examples of some outcomes that haven’t been improved:

As a piece of public information, the performance report is therefore virtually worthless, except as a document that attempts to brush under the carpet the uncomfortable truths of the present council’s performance. Not so much “sharper focus on priority issues”, but merely an example on how the self-serving priority issue for too many of Croydon’s public servants is to protect their publicly funded allowances.


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