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Community renewal programme hit by staff shortages and in-fighting

Posted: 23 October 2003 | Subscribe Online


The government's flagship £2bn regeneration programme is struggling to retain staff and control infighting, according to a report released this week.

The New Deal for Communities was launched in 1999 to tackle deprivation in England's poorest neighbourhoods. A national evaluation of the initiative has found many community representatives leave the schemes because they suffer "burnout".

The 10-year programme is intended to tackle crime, education, health, employment and housing problems in 39 areas, but the success of some schemes is being threatened by high staff turnover.
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According to the report, commissioned by the Neighbourhood Renewal Unit, "chief executives leave, chairs of boards are replaced and agency representatives move on", all of which places a heavy burden on those who stay.

Many partnership boards are in a "state of flux", with four-fifths reporting changes in membership in a year and a third saying their chairperson has changed.

More than half of community representatives believe that the time commitments involved in the work are "excessive" and becoming worse.

Less than half of the schemes - 40 per cent - are fully staffed, and there are difficulties recruiting people with the specialist skills to carry out the work.

Only about two-thirds of the projects have an evaluation plan. Levels of community involvement, a core element of the NDC programmes, are variable.

As well as facing burnout, some representatives feel they are compromised, while some schemes are dominated by small groups or cliques, says the report.
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Researchers at the Centre for Regional Economic and Social Research based at Sheffield Hallam University also found that some of the schemes were split by tensions.

Nearly halfway through the programme, problems surrounding the management of some schemes and disagreements about how to spend the £50m allocated to each are still surfacing.

Office of the Deputy Prime Minister junior minister Yvette Cooper said it was inevitable that some NDCs had faced early problems. But she emphasised that the government would continue to support troubled schemes.

New Deal for Communities: the National Evaluation available from www.neighbourhood.gov.uk/formatteddoc.asp?id=548


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