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Inevitable post on Localism Bill

It’s almost obligatory to write something about the new Localism Bill – after all it’s going to have a huge effect on the world of local government – and I suppose the real question is exactly how local is it?

Before saying anything else, I have to agree with Anthony from DemSoc who blogged about exactly how arcane the wording is on this – anyone would think they didn’t want the public reading it…if they really want communities to get involved then they really need to use better language than this.  As it stands right now anyone who is not a lawyer will run the other way….
Which would be a shame because devolving more power to local government and to the neighbourhoods we all live in is, in my view, a very very good thing. Democracy makes most sense to us when it affects our day-to-day lives and if we want to get more people involved as active citizens then we need to show them the effect that they can have on their local environment. I am just not sure how much this bill achieves that.  You can get better analysis on this here at the LGIU and it’s also worth reading the briefing stuff from the CLG – I am just going to make a few notes of my own:

General power of competence

Petitions  – gone

Or not gone

Community right to challenge

Who is a public authority?

But does representation matter when it comes to running community assets?  Errr….I think yes.  It’s not enough to say that the people who want to be involved will be involved and that the rest should be passive recipients if we are talking about services which are core to a community. All the reasons why we ask councils to consult and why we make decisions on the basis of representative democracy still apply and removing these at the neighbourhood level may work for some, but is not going to work for us all as you still have the issue as to how you are going to connect all these smaller units into a coherent decision making whole that speaks for the entire community and not just a specific group.  So for me the Localism Bill is light on local democracy.  This Simon Jenkins piece says much the same thing and is worth a read.

Democracy is both expensive and inconvenient and the need for representativeness is clearly urking when you just want to get on and do stuff.  You can’t just act – you need to get consensus to act and often this dilutes purpose.  When you are trying to operate at an amorphous community level across thousands of tiny groups all across the country – many that don’t even exist yet then its even harder.  And of course when you have no money to ease any of this its even more difficult.  Against this backdrop is this Bill a good first step to passing more power to communities?  I’m really not sure – I think that ultimately ducking the issue of defining what a community is and being clearer about what they might do is a big hindrance, and the lack of democratic structure from the start of this will limit scalability of what is proposed.  However – their are inklings of change here and I guess that’s whats to be appreciated.  We shall have to wait and see what the Lords make of it.

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