Report Tells Councils to Focus on Core Services
THURSDAY 27 NOVEMBER
Report Calls for Councils to Focus on Core Services
Local authorities have strayed, at great cost, far beyond their core role of providing certain vital services to their local communities, according to a new report released today by the Local Government Forum.
The report, Local Government and the Provision
of Public Goods
Local Government Forum
chairman Don Nicolson said the report would be a valuable
tool for everyone involved in local government, particularly
given the reality that demands for services are unlimited,
but resources are scarce. "Local authorities have got
into the habit of steadily expanding their brief to provide
a whole range of services that could easily be provided by
the private sector. The end result has been an explosion in
rates. "Part of the problem is confusion over what a
'public good' actually is. It is not whatever might be
deemed 'good' for people, or anything at all that might be
regarded as in the public interest. "A public good,
for example street lighting or civil defence, is something
that no-one else would provide because it can't be
'user-paid'. You couldn't stop non-payers from using it, nor
could you limit access to it to those who've paid. As a
rule of thumb, if it is feasible and cost-effective to
charge directly for a service it is not a public
good.
"The role of local government is clearly spelt
out in legislation: it is to uphold local democratic
processes, set rules and regulations to govern local
activities, and ensure the provision of certain local
services and infrastructure, with recourse to local taxation
and charges to recover costs. "If local bodies are to
serve their communities well they should be clear about
which are the vital services they need to provide, and they
should excel at them. "Many other services communities
need are in the nature of private goods and can be provided
more capably either in partnership with private firms or by
the private sector exclusively," Mr Nicolson said.
The report provides helpful criteria for determining
what functions should be performed by local government and
recommends stronger legislative constraints to ensure that
decisions that are made are consistent with local
authorities' core roles. "We see this as an essential
primer on public goods that everyone involved in local
government should read", said Mr Nicolson. "We are meeting
with the new Minister of Local Government Hon Rodney Hide
today to offer our support for a reform programme that
streamlines local government and gets rate burdens
down." The publication can be downloaded here
ENDS