Ten years later, is anyone checking up? My guess is that in some areas things have improved, but others not. Obviously, the fair comparison is not so much between now and then, but relative to improvement or deterioration in comparable boroughs which have not gone for a directly elected Mayoral system.Paul Richards, Society Guardian, 10 Jan 2001 wrote:the true test of the new political system will be whether the tenant with the broken window, the library user wanting longer opening hours, or the dog walker wanting a graffiti-free park, will notice any difference
I strongly suspect that no one is checking. This was as much as admitted by Aileen Buckton when in response to a question of mine at a Sydenham Assembly, she said that Lewisham did not know where its strengths and weaknesses were, so all they could do was to cut 25% across all departments, instead of investing in efficient departments as Lewisham pooled services with other boroughs, and concentrate the cuts in poorly performing departments. It also tallies with the now defunct Audit Commission who distinguished Lewisham with a Green Flag for its innovative approach to community engagement, or some such language, with nothing said about results. I think by this they meant exciting experiments with things like ... directly elected Mayors, the Young Mayor, and maybe even our Local Assemblies.
I was thinking of this at a recent meeting of the London Forum of Civic Societies, at which Tony Travers spoke about the Localism Bill, which is coming our way. In response to a question about the sorts of initiatives in the Localism Bill - which include more directly elected Mayors - he said it was a generally recognised problem that policy makers are forever coming up with initiatives - and doubtless advancing their careers - and no one ever looks at the outcomes. The public sector equivalent of reckless City traders blowing up their employers' balance sheets, and moving on to another job with their bonuses safely banked.
If there is anyone checking up in Lewisham, it should be the members of our Public Accounts Select Committee. I wonder if any of them could comment?