Abstract
Local Public Service Agreements (LPSAs) are one of a number of policy instruments introduced by New Labour to facilitate service improvement in local government. Situating LPSAs in debates about central – local relationships, this paper examines their impact to date. It compares the expectations of LPSAs amongst central and local stakeholders, delineates the experiences of each in attempting to work in a new way, identifies those aspects of the LPSA process which ‘worked’ and those which did not, considers evidence of impact and identifies implications for future policy and practice. The paper concludes that LPSAs have led to improvements in the systems and processes of local government, contributed to local partnership working and stimulated limited changes in central – local government relations. Early data indicate that LPSAs have had some impact on service improvement but there remain important questions about sustainability.
Acknowledgements
This paper draws on data collected for, and funded by ODPM as part of its evaluation of Local Public Service Agreements. The views expressed are those of the authors. The authors would like to acknowledge the contribution made to the evaluation by our colleagues from OPM, UWE and the University of Cardiff.
Notes
1 This section draws on a workshop run jointly with Shared Intelligence, and the paper that emerged from that workshop (Evaluation of Local Public Service Agreements Working Paper 4: Exploring the Sustainability of Local Public Service Agreements: Findings from a Workshop of Local Government Practitioners. Shared Intelligence, Office for Public Management (OPM), University of the West of England. March 2005).