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Frankwell Quay
Shrewsbury
SY3 8HQ
Self Scoring Corporate Assessment: Summary
| Theme | Score | Weighted | Key Strengths | Key Weaknesses |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ambition |
3 |
1 |
The Council has a clear vision for the future, based on the Community Strategy and has a systematic approach to communicating ambitions The Council has specific long-term ambitions for the area which are realistic and robust The Council has a sound and mature approach to partnership Ambitions for improving local quality of life over 5-10 years Realistic (reflect problems and opportunities and achievable) Robust (clarity, sustainable outcomes, long-term targets) Determined by working with partners and community Gives clear leadership to strategies to build cohesive communities Effectiveness of leadership within organisation Councillors have visioning workshops to explore issues which impact on realisation of ambitions The Council is effective at offering internal and external leadership |
To develop clearer outcomes and milestones for the five to ten year period of baseline services |
|
Prioritisation |
3 |
1 |
The Council has a sound approach to developing communicating internally and externally and resourcing priorities and priorities for improvements There is a clear basis for the Council’s priorities which are in line with key objectives from the Corporate Plan and Community Strategy The Council has shifted resources to maintain priorities The Council is clear about non-priority areas Ability to set clear priorities that underpin ambitions Has used effective consultation dialogue and research Views etc. of all sections of community considered Ability to balance local and national priorities Effectiveness of external communications about priorities Effectiveness of internal communication and ownership of priorities Extent that resources are targeted against priorities and shifted |
The Council’s approach to communicating priorities is still developing and should use the PIP process to highlight priorities rather than activities |
|
Focus |
4 |
1 |
The Council has a track record of staying focused on what matters and it does not get distracted The Council has a systematic approach to keeping track of big issues major projects and service performance The Community Strategy provides the strategic focus for the organisation and partners The Council’s policy of keeping its council tax increase within 3% provides focus for service improvement and development Ability to sustain focus over time with examples Avoiding getting distracted Effectiveness of mechanisms and tools |
|
|
Capacity |
4 |
1 |
The Council has the capacity and skills to deliver change and has a track record of doing so Officers and Members are clear about what they are responsible and accountable for The Council has adopted a strategic approach to HR The Council has the financial resources and a strong ethical framework to deliver its ambitions and priorities Quality of members and managers Effectiveness of member/officer meetings Clarity about roles and responsibilities Understanding of and response to new ethical framework Use of HR policies and practices Capacity of staff resources re morale, sickness turnover etc. Financial capacity and reserve levels Approach to alternative means of service delivery Ability to work in partnership to deliver positive outcomes The Council has an effective outcome oriented approach to partnerships which add to capacity to deliver priorities and ambitions |
As scrutiny function evolves ways of engaging public interest need to be further improved |
|
Performance Management |
3 |
1 |
The Council has a performance management culture, and robust performance management systems and processes involving employees and members to manage performance effectively Staff and Managers know what is expected of them and know whether it is being achieved The Council has developed local Quality of Life indicators through the Community Strategy. Risk Assessments have been carried out on projects corporately and for services The Council is introducing corporate service standards so that customers are aware of the standard of service that they may expect The Council monitors and manages income and expenditure to deliver value for money Ambitions and priorities link to service plans and targets Ability of people to use and understand the system and manage performance System enables individuals to understand their role Service standards and targets available to users and complaint management Systematic approach to performance management Robust risk management strategy in use Management of financial performance and achieving value for money |
The Council’s comprehensive approach to Risk Management is at an early stage The application of Comprehensive Service Standards is at an early stage |
|
Service Quality |
3 |
3 |
The Council’s record of achieving service quality as evidenced by PI trends and improvement plans is generally favourable The quality of services is in line with priority needs There is recognition of the importance of performance management in achieving service quality The level of quality is realistic in relation to local context and constraints 65% of citizens are satisfied with the overall service provided (2001/02) and 2003 Best Value improvement plans focus on the effects on the end user Current level of service quality High levels of quality in priority service areas Level of quality is realistic re context and constraints Current levels of stakeholder satisfaction Some local standards and targets have been developed Service improvements relate better to priorities set in the Community Strategy and corporate plan Service quality is externally validated in Building Control and Land Charges |
Stakeholder satisfaction and the means of assessing it needs to be improved on. |
|
Improvement |
3 |
3 |
The Council can evidence a range of improvements based on priorities driven by the Corporate Plan and Community Strategy The Council had embraced the Modernising agenda and has made considerable strides in developing as an improving organisation Very significant progress has been made since 2000 in service delivery and implementation of major schemes and services which are visible to local people Communities and users recognise improvements made There are numerous improvements achieved in organisational, environmental, economic, community and learning terms Improvements in services impacting on quality of life Evidence of what is not improving Improvements sustainable and in line with priorities Real outcomes seen and experienced by users and community Contributed to a more sustainable and cohesive community Extent in relation to baseline performance and context |
Some BVPI indicators are worsening Over time the Council needs to develop a consistent and sustained trend of improvement of Priority Performance Indicators |
|
Investment |
4 |
2 |
The Council has the right building blocks in place to make progress. These include strategic partnerships at local and County level There is major investment in buildings, ICT and systems to improve organisational effectiveness and customer focused services are being procured Investment in organisational development is evidenced through increases in the training budget The Council has a strategic approach to treasury and fund management There has been investment in community engagement and capacity building Corporate asset management, procurement and risk management strategies as a medium term financial plan have been introduced Right building blocks in place Gaps where investments are not being made Tangible progress on building blocks Robust medium term financial planning, use of external funding Open to internal and external challenge BV Reviews etc. driving improvement |
Staff training and development is introduced to support new ways of working |
|
Learning |
3 |
1 |
The Council has a track record in learning and sharing learning through participation in the Beacon Scheme, networks and the WMLGA Performance and Improvement Scheme The Council is self-aware The Council’s leadership is supportive of training and development The Council is not afraid to acknowledge and learn from its experiences Self aware of successes and failures Proactively learning through experience Culture that encourages staff to test new ideas Proactively seeking out learning from partners, users etc. Systematic sharing of learning across Council |
The Council is at an early stage of sharing learning from comments, compliments and complaints |
|
Future Plans |
4 |
1 |
The Council has a track record in producing realistic plans, both statutory and local which set our how it will achieve ambitions Many plans are prepared with extensive public involvement and in partnership with others The local plan adopted in 2001 is being reviewed in the context of the new requirements of the Local Development Framework Robust plans with milestones, underpin ambitions etc. Quality and suitability of statutory plans Responding to failure to improve Extent of staff and community involvement Plans linked to assessment of capacity Continual reassessment of current and future priorities Anticipation of diverse needs |
|
|
Total: |
50 |
15 |
||





