http://www.thisislondon.co.uk/standard- ... at-last.doThe outsourcing firms waiting to swoop on the wizened remains of the UK's public-spending projects at last waved around evidence that their highly anticipated plethora of contracts was close today, sending the boys and girls of the City rushing to grab a slice of the lucre.
Two questions arise for me: (1) will such companies be able to provide services more efficiently than Lewisham, and (2) what sort of local democratic control would that leave?
On (1) I have little doubt that at least some, and probably the majority of services, could be done better if managed by some organisation other than Lewisham Council - but not all. At the Sydenham Assembly this Saturday, however, the senior officer present did not seem to be aware of any comparisons done between Lewisham's efficiency and the potential alternative providers - in the public sector - that they said they were looking at. Not a good starting point for trying to make real efficiency gains.
On (2), it will depend on the terms and transparency of the contracts. With Lewisham's previous enthusiasm for complex arrangements such as PFIs and 'Building Schools for the Future', it's not clear that they will be able to deliver the sort of local democracy anyone should want. Instead we are liable to picked off by the next generation of commercial interests.
And Robin, when I write 'we', it is not just the 'sharp-elbowed middle classes' I refer to, since Council Tax is effectively capped by central government. Rather it is the poorest and most vulnerable, the beneficiaries of those Council services which will get cut because of general inefficiency.