Commissioners: council lacks focus and robust delivery plans

CROYDON IN CRISIS: Government releases report critical of the lack of progress and slow pace of improvements in finances under Tory Mayor Jason Perry. By WALTER CRONXITE, Political Editor

Six weeks out from the local elections, the government has published a damning report from its Commissioners at Croydon Council which is hugely critical of failed Mayor Jason Perry and council bosses Katherine Kerswell and her successor as chief executive, Eliane Jackson.

The council’s plans to end its repeated deficit budgets are “at risk due to a lack of focus, prioritisation and robust, agreed delivery plans”, the report says. This is after almost six years of Section 114 notices, Reports In The Public Interest from external auditors, and oversight from the Commissioners’ predecessors, the “improvement” panel.

Unimpressed: Commissioner Ged Curran’s report won’t help Mayor Jason Perry

The latest report, written by lead Commissioner Ged Curran, states that the council’s reliance on interim managers and a high level of “churn” among staff is also undermining any continuity in efforts to fix the problems.

The Commissioners’ report states that the council’s budget for 2026-2027, which was only passed last month with the latest, 5% Council Tax increase, will need to be updated in May after further work by the council’s new finance director, Conrad Hall.

That revised budget seems likely to include more spending cuts and further reduction in Council Tax support for the borough’s poorest and most vulnerable.

Curran’s report states that council staff have “engaged well” with his team of Jackie Belton, Abi Brown and Debbie Warren, and it nods approval at the recent senior appointments in Jackson and Hall, following the departures of CEO Kerswell and finance chief Jane West.

But critically, the report says that the council risks failing to deliver on its agreed “transformation plan” – a programme of cut-backs – which was key to the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government agreeing a £119million bail-out (capitalisation directive, in councilspeak) as recently as last month.

“Croydon has… changed the perception that the council believes that it has done all it can to improve its financial position,” Curran says in his report, without offering either examples or evidence of that changed perception.

“The Council continues to carry a high level of debt and to run a deficit and has identified a number of steps it can take to improve its position in addition to its Transformation Programme.

Slow motion: Jason Perry has failed to deliver changes at the pace expected

“The Transformation Programme has the potential to contribute to the savings needed, but delivery is at risk due to a lack of focus, prioritisation and robust, agreed delivery plans. Urgent action by the Council is needed to address this if the Transformation Programme is to deliver the projected savings.

“Further risks to delivery include the lack of a consistent performance management culture which would enable the council to make the best use of its limited resources.

“A significant number of interim managers and in some areas high staffing churn within the council makes this long-term cultural change harder to establish.”

Off the back of a very bad few weeks for Tory Perry, losing a High Court challenge over his money-spinning low traffic neighbourhoods and the collapse of a £22million property deal in Coulsdon, the eight-page report from the Commissioners, their first since they were appointed last July, is broadly dismissive of most efforts over the past five years to sort out the cash-strapped council’s finances.

Croydon Council has debts of £1.4billion, just as it did when Perry was elected Mayor in 2022.

Since then, Perry has increased Council Tax by 33%.

And since 2023, Perry’s council has borrowed an additional £320million in emergency financial support.

Inside Croydon approached Jason Perry for his reaction to the Commissioners’ report, but he had not responded by the time of publication, probably too busy at some lame photo op as he tries to salvage his political career.

Read more: £84,000 per year Tory Mayor approves his own pay rise
Read more: Budget-buster Perry hires another six-figure salaried ‘interim’
Read more: Council’s agency staff bill includes £726 per hour consultant
Read more:
Kerswell takes another pay-off as she quits as council’s CEO


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News, views and analysis about the people of Croydon, their lives and political times in the diverse and most-populated borough in London. Based in Croydon and edited by Steven Downes. To contact us, please email inside.croydon@btinternet.com
This entry was posted in Abi Brown, Adult Social Care, Children's Services, Commissioners, Conrad Hall, Council Tax, Croydon Council, Debbie Warren, Elaine Jackson, Ged Curran, Jackie Belton, Jenny Rowlands, Katherine Kerswell, Mayor Jason Perry, Stabilisation Plan and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

8 Responses to Commissioners: council lacks focus and robust delivery plans

  1. Chris Cooke says:

    The Commissioners say their next report to the Government is due in June.

    That puts a marker down for the new Mayor that they need to get cracking on producing their detailed policies and strategies on reining in unnecessary spending and switching priorities to bring the councils finances under control.

  2. Mark says:

    Did you read the same overall positive report? I have to say your journalistic/reporting skills are somewhat lacking.

    • Yes. It is nothing like an “overall positive report”.

      Maybe that’s why you’ve posted an anonymous comment: too ashamed to put your real name to such a ludicrous remark.

  3. Moya Gordon says:

    Labour are always at the Conservatives’ throats. It’s hardly surprising Labour appointed Commissioners aren’t going to do their best to discredit a Tory.

    • You should try reading the last report by the “improvement” panel who, after five years, pretty much recommended the appointment of Commissioners and aired the same reservations about the council’s mismanagement as the Commissioners have just done.

      And the “improvement” panel (each of them paid £900+ per day) were appointed by Michael Gove. Remember him? Don’t think he’s ever been a Labour supporter.

      • Mark says:

        What exactly is your agenda? Why don’t you go to Timbooktu? I don’t think anyone wants you here. You sensor comments to your posts when anyone has the audacity to call you out. There is a genuine desire by dedicated people to improve Croydon but I guess that doesn’t fit with your agenda. What happened to free speech?

        • We operate a rules-based system. It prevents people from posting comments while hiding behind anonymity, as you have done.

          It’s censor, by the way. And you’re wrong. We just don’t allow moral cowards like you to spout false shit.

          Our agenda? None, apart from the truth, something you appear to know nothing about.

    • Chris Cooke says:

      “discredit a Tory.”

      Well if PPP wasn’t so PP they’d be nothing for the Commissioners to discredit.

      BTW one of the Commissioners – Cllr Abi Brown – is a Tory Councillor (and former leader) on Stoke City Council. So perhaps not the hit job you think it is.

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