- 10 communities across England will get ‘innovation squads' as
part of £100 million government reform programme to deliver the
Plan for Change.
- Flagship reform will end ‘Whitehall knows best' and focus on
testing solutions directly in local areas with frontline workers
and communities who know best.
- Policy officials, tech specialists and other experts will be
deployed to directly test new ways of fixing some of the biggest
local problems.
Working people across England are set to benefit from better
public services, with ‘innovation squads' sent in to back
community ideas and work with the frontline as part of a £100
million ‘Test, Learn and Grow' reform programme to deliver the
Plan for Change.
The teams, deployed to the places from central government will
work alongside local government and service users to tackle the
biggest challenges directly affecting local communities and
people.
Challenges the teams will look at will include increasing the
uptake of Best Start Family Hubs to support parents and young
children, establishing neighbourhood health services, better
supporting children with special needs, getting more people into
work, rolling out breakfast clubs, and tackling violence against
women and girls.
The squads, working with tech specialists and other experts will
have an explicit mandate to try new things and be creative,
collaborating directly with frontline workers and people using
services.
Cabinet Office Minister, said:
For too long residents and frontline workers have had to navigate
fragmented and underfunded public services, people feeling like
they have to arm up to battle to get the support they need.
We are going to end this. The test, learn and grow programme will
bring the centre of government out of Whitehall and into
communities, working with those who deliver and use public
services to solve problems together, as part of our Plan for
Change. We will reform public services from the ground up so
people always come first.
The programme is a flagship part of the government's reform
programme. Instead of trying to devise perfect solutions from
Whitehall, the teams will work directly with affected communities
to test out what works.
The ‘test and learn' approach - outlined by the Chancellor of the
Duchy of Lancaster in December - will help tackle our biggest
national challenges and make better policy across the
board.
The approach has already been trialled successfully in four areas
across England. Earlier this year, ‘innovation squads' tested new
ways to get more families through the door of local family hubs
in Sheffield, resulting in many more local families using the
hubs. In Liverpool they worked with the council to build an
innovative data-led platform to manage temporary
accommodation.
The news comes following the launch of a new partnership for the
programme, working with external experts, academics and local
authority networks to further enhance and spread learnings from
the programme across the country.