Friday 5 June 2015

Managing our performance and celebrating our volunteers

Hello everybody

Our Performance Management Framework

I know you might think I am rather sad, but I was really excited this week to read my papers for the Executive Leadership Team for Wednesday and to see our Performance Management Framework set out diagrammatically, as the context for our performance report. This week has seen me in meetings and discussions on most of the eight aspects of our framework.

Our Performance Management Framework diagram

Business planning and risk management

On Monday, after diary planning with the leader, Councillor Warren Morgan, I met with the City Management Board finance leads from our public service partners in the city (universities, fire, police, health) and we continued on our quest to develop more ways of working together, producing better value for public money and improving services. This virtuous and challenging ambition is one that is already bearing fruit whether you look at the multi-agency safeguarding hub for children (MASH) developed jointly with the police, or our joint commissioning with health, or innumerable other examples. The risk management aspect of the framework was considered by the Leader's Group on Monday afternoon and they were properly seeking assurance that risk management is a living activity and not just a bureaucratic process. Indeed, that is the case; it is living and it’s action orientated.

That evening the leaving do for one of our long standing and well respected colleagues, Martin Randall, who has headed up planning for many years in the city was a valuing and celebratory affair and we wish Martin well.

Health & safety performance

Tuesday morning saw the health & safety aspect of our Performance Management Framework in action when I chaired the quarterly Corporate Health & Safety Board. Again we were reviewing performance over the year and noting that while the number of health & safety incidents has remained quite stable and the causes consistent (slips, trips and falls being the biggest cause) the number of days lost in sickness has dramatically increased. We agreed a number of actions to both investigate and seek to change this.

Performance and modernisation

My meeting with Rima Desai to consider performance and modernisation was an uplifting and reassuring session. The work that Rima has been leading on was considered in full and detail by the Executive Leadership Team and the Corporate Modernisation Board on Wednesday. We will be reporting to Policy & Resources on performance on 9 July.

Meeting with Rima Desai, Head of Performance Improvement and Programmes
A performance indicator for parenting was achieved by me this week when out of the blue I received a bunch of flowers through the post from my daughter who has recently started in full time work. How delightful and thoughtful.

Thoughtful flowers from my daughter
You may think that performance management is a crusty subject and you will now know that I don’t.

Celebrating our volunteers

On Wednesday evening at Brighton Museum it was a privilege to meet the many volunteers who carry out all sorts of functions for the city, and to celebrate their contribution. Last year, over 500 volunteers contributed 20,000 hours work with a value of £151,000. They volunteer in the Royal Pavilion and museums, our library service, healthwalks, City Parks, the Volks Railway and as City Greeters. More than 150 of them came to the celebration at Brighton Museum and I had the opportunity to meet a few of them.

Staff and volunteers at Brighton Museum
Claire Morgan, Parks Project Officer, who both volunteers, and works with Volunteers at The Level
I also met Peter Craske, Park Ranger with his stand showing conservation, planting and downland volunteer opportunities. I also heard a new word, “lookerers”. Lookerers are volunteer shepherds who walk around our conservation grazing flock.

Peter Craske, Park Ranger with his stand showing conservation, planting and  down land volunteer opportunities 
Councillor Gill Mitchell, Deputy Leader of the Council, joined me and Nicholas Owen in saying a few words of thanks to more than 150 volunteers gathered in the museum. We stood in front of a Wesley Emmett machine; he was the creative mind behind Chitty Chitty Bang Bang and his magical machines are being shown at our museums across the city.

With Councillor Gill Mitchell and Nicholas Owen next to one of Wesley Emmett's machine
Nicholas Owen is a great friend to the museum and the city, and is himself a volunteer for the Volks Railway. It was a delight to meet Nicholas and to hear from Stuart Strong, who manages the Volks Railway, what an important contribution volunteers make.

Nicholas Owen and Stuart Strong
During my visit I also met Jools Stone who is blogger in residence at the Royal Pavilion and museums. I have no doubt that he will be penning a few words on the event and we gained some positive and welcome publicity.

Jools Stone, blogger in residence at the Royal Pavilion
More volunteers will be helping out and providing sports and activities during our two-week TAKEPART festival at the end of June. Have a look at our website to find out more.

Active citizenship is already important in the city and will play a key role in the future as resources become ever more constrained, while needs and expectations increase. We know that volunteering is good for people as well as providing a wonderful public services. Don’t forget what Dr Tom Scanlon tells us about health and happiness coming from CLANG (being connected, learning, being active, noticing and giving) - volunteering ticks just about all of those boxes.

Delivering in our new administration

And so to delivery of our corporate plan and budget under the new administration. At Thursday’s six monthly Senior Managers Forum the top 200 or so managers in the authority had the opportunity to hear Councillor Warren Morgan, Leader of the Council, address them and answer questions on the new administration and its plans for Brighton & Hove.

At the Senior Managers Forum
Councillor Warren Morgan began by thanking everybody for the work that they do and acknowledging the challenges of the financial situation. His key message was that this authority will seek to learn from the good practice of co-operative councils and to draw on the good thinking of staff and managers in addressing the challenges of doing better with less. He gave particular emphasis to the failures of “trickle down” and the importance of tackling poverty, reminding us that one in six children in the city live in poverty, and one in three in his own ward. So tackling inequality and promoting fairness will be the watch words of this administration, and Warren went on to give examples of how this will be approached, particularly with the advent of the new Neighbourhood, Communities & Equalities Committee and the advent of the Fairness Commission.

Councillor Warren Morgan, Leader of the Council speaking at the Senior Managers Forum
Despite the challenging agenda we all face I was struck, as ever, by the positive engagement from managers and their preparedness to work together to continue to deliver on our purpose to provide civic leadership to the wellbeing and aspiration of our city and to gauge our progress by ensuring; a good life, a well run city, a modern council and a vibrant economy that everyone can benefit from.

Sunny weekend ahead

So the week ends with brighter skies than at its beginning and with a great deal of work to do but a spirit of endeavour and learning. Have a replenishing weekend.

Sunny Friday sky


Best wishes
Penny

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