Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byBuck Brooks Modified over 8 years ago
1
Scrutiny in Rural Communities Nick Grubb Regional Regeneration Manager and Peter Kent Customer Board Member Moorlands Housing 8 th June 2011
2
Session aims Brief intro to Moorlands Housing, Harvest Housing Group and our Scrutiny Journey Achievements, Challenges and Lessons learnt Scrutiny in Rural / dispersed stock Sharing / best practice
3
Housekeeping
4
Moorlands Housing Established in 2002 2,900 stock in Staffordshire Moorlands Joined Harvest Housing Group in 2007 Provide; Housing, Regeneration, Support, Income and Repairs services direct Managing agent for 650 units in Cheshire and Derbyshire Group and local support to Customer Involvement / Scrutiny
5
Embedded Customer Involvement
6
Harvest – Scrutiny Phases Phase 1 (Apr 2010) Frontis D&S Moorlands Greater Manchester East Lancs West Lancs Partington Phase 2 Home Owners (June 2011) Older Persons (Dec 2011) Phase 3 Group (Apr 2011)
7
Where are we now? Recruited Members Chairs Appointed Terms of Reference and Code of Conduct 12 months of meetings Profile Forms Completed Individual member Training & Skills Assessment
8
‘Group recipe Local flavour’ Agendas set locally Pre-meeting Customer led, officer supported Thread of involvement Agreed local offers Defined Involvement methods Their own budget
9
Achievements Effective and supportive team - productive meetings Learning about Moorlands Housing Speed dating and Section updates Key wider themes explained Making a bond with the office team Identified training and learning needs and development of each member plus rewards Real Scrutiny of real services
10
Lessons Learned You can give too much too soon…. Recruitment and development of members takes time
11
Challenges ahead Recruitment and representation Continued training programme Optimise timing of all meetings Further developing e-scrutiny Further establish links; Moorlands Housing staff Harvest employees Moorlands Board
12
Potential Barriers (Rural or otherwise!) Nothing is wrong…? I don’t have time and can’t get there…. I don’t want to go to a meeting… They don’t talk about things that matter to me… I don’t ‘fit in’ with those people… What’s in it for me…?
13
Meaningful Message Mobility Identify key issues Trailer and Roadshows Community Buses Piggy - backing Local facilities and pre-existing meetings Mobility of message, not necessarily staff…
14
Technology E-panels Scrutiny with provision of laptops and broadband Interactive games / Wii Facebook / Twitter Texting
15
Partnerships Other agencies Fun days and Sporting events Importance of local offers and N’hood planning Customer Profiling / Training / Resources
16
Making it worthwhile Recognition and Identity Personal Development; –Training –Help with Curriculum Vitae –References Reward involvement? –Personal Rewards –Community Rewards
17
Case Study – High Peak Issues… Rural location Managed stock Only 160 properties Lack of attendees at meetings No ‘relationship’ with officers or organisation Complaints about ASB and maintenance performance
18
Case Study – High Peak Solutions High ‘visibility’ staff Small interventions Joint agency events Local offer centred around repairs Individual newsletter and performance stats Trialling e-scrutiny
19
Future - Flexible Scrutiny? Is it about locality or accessibility? What is scrutiny? Identify a range, formal and informal and be proud of it – one size does not fit all! Fluidity and imagination, development and ‘reward’ – make it fun if possible. Establish links with established bodies (Board etc) to maintain golden thread.
20
Future - Flexible Scrutiny? Make data and service areas relevant You are not alone – work together Flexible and reactive systems – instant scrutiny? Regular Review – Scrutinise the scrutiny! Publicise outcomes and achievements
21
Groupwork Over to you…… Share your successes, learning and best practice
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.