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England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Ealing London Borough Council v The Audit Commission for Local Authorities & Anor [2005] EWHC 195 (Admin) (17 February 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2005/195.html Cite as: [2005] EWHC 195 (Admin) |
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ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Between:
____________________
Ealing London Borough Council | Claimant | |
and | ||
The Audit Commission for Local Authorities and | ||
the National Health Service in England and Wales | Defendant |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Richard Gordon QC and Maya Lester (instructed by R.Hamilton) for the Defendant
Solicitor for Audit Commission
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE WALKER:
"(1) The Audit Commission must from time to time produce a report on its findings in relation to the performance of English local authorities in exercising their functions.
(2) A report under sub-section (1) must (in particular) categorise each English local authority to which the report relates according to how the authority has performed in exercising its functions."
By section 99(7) "English local authority" is defined so as to include the claimant, which I shall call "Ealing".
The categorisation process
10. The CPA framework brings together judgements about:
core service performance in education, social services, housing, environment, libraries and leisure, benefits, and use of resources; and
the council's ability measured through a corporate assessment.
12. Each of the individual service judgements and the use of resources judgement are awarded a score of 1 to 4, with 1 being the lowest score and 4 being the highest. These are then combined into an overall core service performance score of 1 to 4.
13. Each of the themes scored within the corporate assessment (ambition, prioritisation, focus, capacity, performance management, achievement of improvement, investment, learning and future plans) are also awarded a score of 1 to 4. These are then combined to reach an overall council ability score ranging from 1 to 4.
14. The overall CPA category ('excellent', 'good', 'fair', 'weak' and 'poor') is reached by combining the overall core service performance and council ability scores in the form of a matrix (see below). Where a council has not achieved a specified level of performance on education, social care or financial management (or scores a 1 on any other service), rules apply which limit a council's overall category, see paragraphs 29 - 30.
Scores | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | |
COUNCIL | 1 | poor | poor | weak | fair |
ABILITY | 2 | poor | weak | fair | good |
3 | weak | fair | good | excellent | |
4 | fair | good | excellent | excellent |
Rules
29. Rules limit a council's overall CPA category where a council's score falls below a specified level on education, social care or financial standing, or scores a 1 on any other service.
30. The rules are as follows:
[Rule 1] A council must score at least 3 (2 stars) on education, social services star rating, and financial standing to achieve a category of 'excellent' overall;
[Rule 2] A council must score at least 2 (1 star) on education, social services star rating, and financial standing to achieve a category of 'fair' or above; and
[Rule 3] A council must score at least 2 (1 star) on all other core services to achieve a category of 'excellent' overall.
"5. The AC [i.e the Audit Commission] is an independent public body responsible for the ensuring that public money is spent economically, efficiently, and effectively in the areas of local government, housing, health, criminal justice and fire and rescue services. The AC helps those responsible for public services to achieve better outcomes for citizens, with a focus on those people who need public services most.
6. The AC assesses the overall performance of every council in England, through the CPA scheme, which looks at, amongst other things, how well the council delivers services such as education, social care and housing. CPA is operated by the AC, working closely with the specialised services of inspectorates (which Ealing of course accepts that the AC is entitled to do). Its purpose is to ensure that local authorities are performing well in providing services, including by designing ways to improve services where weaknesses are identified, and has the corporate ability to deliver continuous improvement.
7. The AC has undertaken a programme of local authority inspections, since 2000. the CPA scheme was first announced in 2001 in the Government's White Paper entitled 'Strong Local Leadership Quality Public Services'which incorporated a number of the AC's recommendations for the creation of a "national framework of standards and accountability" and "regular coprehensive performance assessments for all councils, identifying how they are performing against these standards". The White Paper was implemented by the Local Government Act 2003, which includes the duty at section 99 which is the subject of the present challenge.
8. The 2001 White Paper set out the basic features of the CPA scheme. The AC would work with specialised inspectorattes to bring together evidence "gathered from a wide range of different assessments" including "Ofsted, the Social Services Inspectors, the Benefit fraud Inspectorate, and other service based inspections and assessments The result will be a balanced scorecard compiled by the AC with assistance from other inspectorates and bodies with an assessment role, and working with councils themselves". The information gleaned from CPA would lead to targeting of councils' weaknesses and needs, public information about councils' performance, and early action to tackle it .
9. As for the performance rating for social services, the White Paper said "Comprehensie performance assessment builds on the development of social services performance ratings, to be published for the first time in Spring 2002-3. The social services performance stars will provide judments of performance for social services in a way that is understandable for the servie users and the general puhic. Social services performance assessment brings together evidence from indicators, inspections and in-year monitoring As well as the single star rating for overall social services performance, judgments on services for children and services for adults will be presented. Judgments will be made on the basis of current performance but will also include prospects for improvement The social services performance ratings will feed into the comprehensive performance assessment for all local authority services"
10. The Government implementation plan for the White Paper made it clear that it was for the AC, working with the other inspectorates, to develop and implement CPA. During 2001-2002 the AC embarked on an extensive series of consultations with local authorities as to the methodology that should be used to undertake CPA. The Commission held a number of conferences and seminars for local government representatives. It also brought together leading experts in the field of local government (Chief Executives, leading politicians, academics and professionals) to formulate and debate aspects of the emerging policy. The focus of this activity was the consultation document entitled 'Delivering Comprehensive Performance Assessment'.
11. This comprehensive and exhaustive consultation resulted in a framework entitled "The final CPA assessment framework for single tier and county councils 2002". It was clear to the AC that in order to fulfill its remit to report on local authorities' functions and performance it would haveto gather together assessments made by expert bodies (such as Ofsted, CSCI and so on). This was fully in line with Government policy in the White Paper as set out above. Moreover, it would have to make a number of carefully considered policy decisions (after consultation with relevant parties) as to how best to make categorization decisions, and which functions of local authorities should have most weight in those decisions.
3.18 Evidence on councils performance is currently gathered from a wide range of different assessments. The comprehensive performance assessments will draw these together. Each councils performance and capacity to improve will be assessed, taking into account local circumstances, bringing together:
- performance indicator data (on current performance and past trends);
- OfSTED, the Social Services Inspectorate, the Benefit Fraud Inspectorate and other service based inspections and assessments together with audit reports; and
- a corporate governance assessment of the authority as a whole, undertaken in dialogue with the authority and incorporating an element of peer review.
3.19 The result will be a balanced scorecard compiled by the Audit Commission with assistance from other inspectorates and bodies with an assessment role, and working with councils themselves. This will identify each council as either:
- high-performing near the top of the performance spectrum, with high performance in priority service areas, no poorly performing services and with proven capacity to improve;
- striving not necessarily at the top of the performance spectrum but with proven capacity to improve;
- coasting not at the top of the performance spectrum and with limited or no proven capacity to improve; or
- poor-performing consistently near the bottom of the performance spectrum and with limited or no proven capacity to improve.
The social services performance rating |
Comprehensive performance assessment builds on the development of social services performance ratings, to be published for the first time in Spring 2002-03. The social services performance stars will provide judgements of performance for social services in a way that is understandable for the service users and the general public. Social services performance assessment brings together evidence from indicators, inspections and in-year monitoring. Each year, the Social Services Inspectorate meets with each council to review performance and identify key improvements for the year ahead. As well as the single star rating for overall social services performance, judgements on services for children and services for adults will be presented. Judgements will be made on the basis of current performance but will also include prospects for improvement. A range of freedoms will be available for the best performers. Three-star councils will have access to their share of the social services performance fund by right, for example. This approach will be extended to other grants and the Government is considering how, for those performing well, planning requirements could be reduced and a lighter touch inspection regime introduced. The social services performance ratings will feed into the comprehensive performance assessment for all local authority services. |
Social Care CPA Assessment 2004
108. The core service score for social care is included in the overall score for core service performance in CPA.
109. The social care assessment is the responsibility of Commission for Social Care Inspection (CSCI) and is given as two separate judgements for both adults and children's services. In both cases, a judgement for both current performance and capacity for improvement is given. Only the current performance judgement will be used in the social care core service score for CPA. The categories for judging current performance (serving people well?) are no, some, most, and yes.
110. For the purposes of the CPA assessment framework the current performance judgement is converted into a score of 1 4 as follows:
CSCI current performance CPA social care
judgement (serving people core service score
well?)
No 1
Some 2
Most 3
Yes 4
111. The judgements for adults and children are treated separately in the assessment framework.
112. CSCI also produce overall star ratings, given as 0* to 3*, with 3* being the highest. The overall star ratings are not used in the CPA social care core service score but will be used to determine whether a council will be held back by a rule limiting the CPA category they can achieve. (see paragraphs 29 30 in section one of this document for further details on rules).
The statutory functions of CSCI
"I am writing to inform you of the latest performance ratings for your Council's Social Services. This rating constitutes the social services component of the comprehensive performance assessment for all local government services.
The judgments and rating for your council are as follows:
Services for Children: Serving people well: most. Capacity for improvement: uncertain.
Services for adults: Serving people well: some. Capacity for improvement: poor.
Star ratings: your social services performance rating is Zero star.
The final decisions on star ratings were made by the Chief Inspector. "
Ealing's complaint and the Audit Commission response
"The CSCI rated the Council a "zero star" authority. The Council (whilst not accepting the justification of this rating) have decided not to challenge it for reasons which it is neither necessary nor relevant to set out here. Should the issue become material between the Council and the Commission, then those reasons can be elaborated upon at that stage. For the moment, it is sufficient to state that the Council consider it inappropriate to challenge that rating.
The effect of the rating, however, is the automatic and indeed dramatic relegation of the Council's overall CPA categorisation from what would otherwise be a very high "Fair" (or even low "Good") (depending on the outcome of the other pending service scores) to "Weak", exclusively and directly in consequence of the application of a rule that no authority can be rated higher than "Weak" where it has received a zero star rating from CSCI. That is an effect which the Council is unable and unwilling to ignore, particularly given the consequences of categorisation as weak (which we do not need to spell out) and the work in which the Council has engaged over the last two years to advance its position from (originally) "Weak" to the edge of "Good".
We consider the rule referred to above to be unlawful. Section 99 of the Local Government Act 2003 requires the Commission from time to time to produce a report on "its findings" in relation to the performance of English authorities. It is trite law that a body whose duty it is to exercise a statutory function cannot fetter itself by allowing an outside body to dictate to it, but must exerise the function itself (see e.g. Lavender & Sons v Minister for Housing and Local Government [1970] 1 WLR 1231, DC).
While we do not question the right of the Commission in making its "findings" under CPA to take full account of the views of and scores awarded by other inspectorates, the rule it has imposed is legally offensive because it binds the Commission (both in advance and subsequently), regardless of the circumstances or its own judgment, to categorise authorities as "Weak", with all of the intended disadvantages and restrictions which such a classification imposes, purely because of the judgment of an outside body which is not the body charged by Parliamant to perform the CPA function. It is in this way that the Commission has fettered its judgment and allowed itself to be dictated to by an outside body."
"As you acknowledge, the CSCI as the statutory regulator for local authority social services has awarded Ealing a zero star rating this year. According to CSCI's Operating Policies this is a serious matter which means that the Council is now subject to special measures, the terms of which I understand will be determined in due course. The level and form of engagement or intervention will be approved by relevant Ministers on a recommendation from CSCI. In our view it would be odd indeed for the Commission to award the Council a "fair" or "good"overall CPA rating when it has performed so very badly in its social services as to attract special measures from government. Such a result would tend to bring the system of performance assessment for local government into disrepute.
As a separate but equally compelling point, by demanding the withdrawal of the rule in question you appear to be going so far as to say that the zero rating awarded by CSCI should have no impact whatsoever on the Council's overall CPA categorisation due to be announced this week. Once again, in the Commission's view this would be quite wrong.
Your contentions about delegation and fettering miss the point. In particular, you appear to misunderstand the way in which the Commission discharges its obligations pursuant to Section 99 of the Local Government Act 2003. I quite accept that the Act requires the Commission to make findings in relation to the performance of English local authorities. It is, however, a fallacy to imply any requirement for separate evaluation by the Commission of matters that are the subject of a comprehensive scheme of complementary regulation.
CSCI is required to award an annual performance rating to local authority social services, pursuant to Section 79 of the Health and Social Care (Community Health and Standards) Act 2003. That provision requires CSCI to exercise its functions according to criteria it has devised which are approved by the Secretary of State for Health. CSCI has developed a comprehensive methodology, set of procedures and criteria which have been approved by the Secretary of State for Health, and which are all transparently set out in its Operating Policies. CSCI was fully cognisant of the role that the star rating system would play in CPA, and we believe has devised its system appropriately. Assuming, of course, that it is not suggested that CSCI has performed its functions unlawfully, the Commission may take into account the CSCI rating in its CPA categorisation and attach significance to that rating in the way that it has. In the result the Commission has found that your client's social services have performed so badly as to attract a zero star rating this year from the statutory regulator, CSCI. This is as much a finding for the purpose of section 99 as any other, and nothing in the rest of the Commission's evaluation of the Council for the purposes of CPA tends to cast doubt on it.
It is of course, the Commission, not CSCI, which has evaluated and determined the role which CSCI's star ratings should play in the matrix of scores and judgments which go to make up a local authority's overall CPA category. In this way it is the Commission, not CSCI, which discharges the duty to categorise each local authority according to how it has performed pursuant to Section 99(2) of the Act. There is no question of CSCI being able to dictate a result to the Commission.
As regards the rationale for the rule in question, the Commission consulted on the role of other inspectorates' judgments in its CPA framework. It reached the considered view that the rule served an important purpose, in that it gave an incentive to authorities to take corporate responsibility for and ownership of failure in key service areas that serve the most vulnerable client groups.
You have plainly indicated in your letter that you do not seek to challenge the CSCI rating. In those circumstances we cannot see how you can complain if the Commission regards that unchallenged CSCI rating as a relevant factor to take into consideration in the manner that it has. In any event, it is difficult to understand how you can base your argument on a criticism of CSCI's methodology if in fact you accept its conclusion."
Submissions of the parties
" [the Minister] has said in language which admits of no doubt that his decision to refuse permission was solely in pursuance of a policy not to permit minerals to be worked unless the Minister of Agriculture was not opposed to their working It seems to me that by adopting and applying his stated policy he has in effect inhibited himself from exercising a proper discretion (which would of course be guided by policy considerations) in any case where the Minister of Agriculture has made and maintained an objection Everything else might point to the desirability of granting permission, but by applying and acting on his stated policy, I think the Minister has fettered himself in such a way that in this case it was not he who made the decision for which Parliament has made him responsible. It was the decision of the Minister of Agriculture not to waive his objection which was decisive in this case, and while that might properly prove to be the decisive factor for the Minister when taking into account all material considerations, it seems to me quite wrong for a policy to be applied which in reality eliminates all the material considerations save only the consideration, when that is the case, that the Minister of Agriculture objects. This means, as I think, that the Minister has, by his stated policy, delegated to the Minister of Agriculture the effective decision where the latter objects "
"Cairns L.J. ruled...that when Parliament expressly confers powers and imposes duties and responsibilities of an important kind upon a particular body, it is, as he put it, improper for the court by the appointment of a manager...itself to assume those powers and duties. That ruling clearly could be looked at again and, if necessary, overruled by the House of Lords, but its reasoning does not depend upon pre-1873 Chancery practices but on a clear view that parliamentary intentions so expressed should be respected."
"Closely akin to delegation, and scarcely distinguishable from it in some cases, is any arrangement by which a power is in substance exercised by another. The proper authority may share its power with someone else, or may allow someone else to dictate to it by declining to act without their consent or by submitting to their wishes or instructions. The effect then is that the discretion conferred by Parliament is exercised, at least in part, by the wrong authority, and the resulting decision is ultra vires and void. So strict are the courts in applying this principle that they condemn some administrative arrangements which must seem quite natural and proper to those who make them. ..."
" an issue falls within a judge's discretion if, being governed by no rule of law, its resolution depends on the individual judge's assessment (within such boundaries as have been laid down) of what it is fair and just to do in the particular case. He has no discretion in making his findings of fact. He has no discretion in rulings on the law. But when, having made any necessary finding of fact and any necessary ruling of law, he has to choose between different courses of action, orders, penalties or remedies he then exercises a discretion. It is only when he reaches the stage of asking himself what is the fair and just thing to do or order in the instant case that he embarks on the exercise of a discretion".
"As regards the question whether there is an unlawful fetter of discretion, I cannot think that a clear system for incentives within the prison can sensibly be expected to operated if its administrators have to consider whether in any individual case the schemes established criteria ought to be disapplied, or if this court were to hold that such criteria legally bad in the first place on the ground that there should be room for discretion in individual cases. There is no principle of administrative law which says in a milieu such as this, that there cannot be black-and-white rules."
Analysis
Conclusion
(1) This claim for judicial review succeeds because the Audit Commission's downgrading of Ealing was an automatic consequence of some-one else's decision. In this case the someone else was CSCI, a body with specialist expertise in its area, but it was unlawful for the Audit Commission to refuse to consider whether there were circumstances which made an automatic downgrading inappropriate.
(2) Nothing in this judgment inhibits the Audit Commission from adopting the findings of specialist bodies where local authorities do not object. It is entitled to limit objections to those which would be determinative of the Audit Commission's own findings or categorisation. The Audit Commission can set short time limits for any such objection and need only consider whether there is good reason why the specialist body's conclusion should not be adopted, or if adopted should not lead to downgrading of the finding or categorisation which the Audit Commission would otherwise make.
(3) Ealing confined its challenge to points which it considered were obviously sound and could be dealt with speedily. That was commendable. I have not been asked to consider any argument that Rule 2 was unreasonable or disproportionate or prevented authorities from making representations which they were entitled to make under the rules of natural justice, nor any argument that the Audit Commission misdirected itself in law either in the way it had regard to capacity for improvement or in adhering to Rule 2 in order to give "an incentive to authorities to take corporate responsibility for and ownership of failure in key service areas that serve the most vulnerable client groups." I would not wish it to be thought that I had considered and rejected such arguments.
Appendix to Judgment of Walker J in R (Ealing LBC) v Audit Commission
Extracts from the SCSI Policies:
1. INTRODUCTION
1.1 The following operating policies are intended to guide Social Services Inspectorate (SSI) Inspectors/Commission for Social Care Inspection (CSCI) business relationship managers and other staff through the annual cycle of assessment of councils with social services responsibilities, leading to the judgements that underpin published performance (star) ratings. They have been agreed between SSI and the shadow CSCI for the 2004 performance assessment cycle.
2. THE PERFORMANCE ASSESSMENT CYCLE 2004
OVERVIEW
Purpose
2.1 The purposes of performance assessment are to:
promote improvement in the quality of care to service users;
support effective performance management of social services in local councils;
provide annual independent judgements of the performance of local councils with social services responsibilities;
establish what action each council needs to take to improve the quality of their social services;
provide information to service users and the general public about the performance of their local council in providing social services;
assess progress in implementing the Government's policies for social care.
Process
2.2 The assessment process comprises two main parts. Firstly, a continuous element, co-ordinated by the SSI inspector/CSCI business relationship manager who links with a small number of councils with social services responsibilities. This entails the assessment of agreed performance evidence to form an overall picture of performance over time, covering both qualitative and quantitative aspects of performance, and forms the basis of dialogue with the council about improvement. It includes an annual review. The second part comprises a performance review report and a published judgement about the standard of service over the preceding year, and the capacity for improvement in the coming year.
Summary
2.3 SSI/CSCI social care ratings inform each council's comprehensive performance assessment (CPA) rating and their improvement planning for the council as a whole and for their social care provision. By the time of the CPA ratings for 2004, SSI/CSCI aims to have:
agreed with each council their priorities for improvement leading to the production of delivery and improvement statements (DIS) by June;
ensured that the SSI link inspector/CSCI business relationship manager has reassessed the evidence and that regional SSI/CSCI teams have validated the approach to improvement they are pursuing with the council;
shared the evidence set with senior council managers and agreed it factually;
met with senior council figures to review the latest performance position against improvement plans and new evidence;
written up a performance review report and checked its factual accuracy with councils;
refreshed records of assessment as necessary with each council, taking into account the 2003-04 performance indicators (PIs);
made rating judgements, and carried out consistency checks.
3. THE PERFORMANCE ASSESSMENT CYCLE
The Overall Performance Assessment Cycle
3.1 The personal social services (PSS) performance assessment process has developed to fit with the timing and improvement emphasis of the CPA process. The internal analysis and assessment process, annual review meeting and performance reports is being developed and strengthened by a process of systematic and continuous contact between inspectors/business relationship managers and social services managers.
3.2 The "new year" begins in late 2003 with discussion between SSI link inspectors and council managers about the priorities for local improvement in the coming 12 months, stemming from the CPA process. It leads to the production of a set of (proportional) DISs, which are tracked (again, proportionally) during the year: through the judgement of evidence to the publication of star ratings in the autumn, prior to the CPA ratings for the council overall.
Sequence and timetable: December 2003 December 2004
following the publication of the PSS ratings and CPA in November 2003, SSI engages with social services managers from December 03 to agree priorities and strategies for improvement, linked to the corporate agreement on the inspection and audit plan for each council;
the spring DIS is completed by the council to set out local improvements for 2004/05, and evaluated during June -July;
in early June CSCI produces evidence maps for each council, collating and analysing the admissible performance evidence against a set of standards;
in the period June August 04, CSCI carries out a review of performance in 2003/04, working with key partners. Drawing on inspection results and the council's DIS and from provisional statistical returns to Department of Health DH, CSCI meets formally with the council's managers and other senior figures at a review meeting to confirm an understanding of past performance and to discuss the council's stated improvements;
a report is sent to the council (by the end of August 04) with a profile of the previous year's performance, and highlighting the improvement priorities for the remainder of the current year. CSCI forms provisional judgements for the overall assessment ratings;
provisional judgements are reached, and star ratings internally validated, taking account of new evidence (and meeting with councils to follow up as necessary). This includes the final set of PI data for 2003/04. Finally, ratings are determined by the chief inspector in October, prior to publication and feeding into the CPA;
following publication of CPA and PSS overall assessment ratings, improvement-planning discussions continue in the new round and feed councils' internal processes.
4. THE ASSESSMENT PROCESS - MAIN COMPONENTS
Councils' Improvement Plans and Social Care Delivery and Improvement
Statements
4.1 SSI/CSCI policy is to make judgements against nationally applied standards and criteria for performance assessment, covering both current performance and capacity for improvement (see below for details): and to ensure that the assessment of social services dovetails with the CPA. At local level, this process takes into account, and begins with the agreement of overall council improvement priorities through discussion between external Inspectorates and each council on an annual basis. These improvements are then incorporated into the council's own local plans and strategies and are published in summary in the best value performance plan in June.
5. PERFORMANCE (STAR) RATINGS
5.1 The ratings summarise the CSCI's independent judgements of performance across all social services, on a scale of zero to three stars. Supporting this, separate judgements for services for children and services for adults are also given. The ratings are made individually against published standards and criteria (ie they are not allocated against a pre-determined quota of performance bands).
Informing the Public
5.2 The ratings are intended to improve public information about the current performance of services, and the capacity for improvement at local, regional, and national levels. Social services have wide responsibilities for the care and support of families in difficulty, and the protection of children at risk of harm: for helping older people to live as independently as possible, and for supporting people with disabilities. People have a right to know how well their councils are performing in meeting these responsibilities, whether they are receiving such services themselves, have a family member receiving such services, or are a council tax payer. Central government needs to know how well each council is meeting the aims and objectives for improvement it has set for social services.
Relationship with Comprehensive Performance Assessment
5.3 The ratings contribute the most recent social care evidence available to the CPA of local councils, led by the Audit Commission. This is part of a wider strategy to align the programmes of public service inspectorates, and has led to a better co-ordinated assessment process.
What the Ratings mean for Councils
5.4 The ratings provide an objective starting point for planning, carrying out and reviewing improvements to services. This is important for all councils, whether their performance is good or poor. The best performing councils have an increased level of freedom in the way they use centrally provided grant funds. They also have a proportionate programme of inspection and monitoring, and reduced requirements for planning and monitoring information.
How the Ratings are Presented
5.5 As well as the overall star, judgements for children and adults services are given, and these carry equal weighting. In both cases, a judgement for both current performance and capacity for improvement is also shown. The categories for judging current performance (serving people well?) are no, some, most and yes. The categories for judging capacity for improvement are - poor, uncertain, promising, and excellent. Current performance is weighted more heavily than capacity for improvement.
5.6 This results in a total of four judgements underpinning the overall rating, Once the judgements have been reached, a set of rules is used to combine them with the weightings to produce a final star rating.
How the Ratings are Produced
5.8 Performance ratings are a product of a wider performance assessment process bringing SSI/CSCI and the councils into continuous contact throughout the year. Assessment includes evidence from inspections and joint reviews, monitoring, performance indicators and other admissible evidence, to form an overall picture of performance over time on both qualitative and quantitative aspects of performance. The assessment culminates in an annual review meeting with each council, which focuses on the high-level challenges to the council in improving the quality of care to service users. Following the annual review, provisional judgements of performance are formed and then subjected to a series of consistency checks before final determination is made by the chief inspector of CSCI.
5.9 The ratings are produced annually for all councils with social services responsibilities, and are linked to CPA.
5.10 Ratings are built up from judgements against standards and criteria, placed on a summary matrix and then translated into a star rating. Details of the rules for translating judgements to star ratings are at Annex 1.
6. CONSISTENCY AND VALIDATION OF PERFORMANCE RATINGS
Internal Procedures
6.1 In order to achieve fair and consistent judgements of performance, CSCI carries out a series of checks on the provisional rating judgements reached after annual review meetings have been completed. There are several stages:
CSCI business relationship managers, inspectors and directors in regional teams review provisional ratings at regional level to check that the evidence against the standards and criteria supports the provisional judgements reached;
provisional judgements are entered onto CSCI's evidence database performance assessment data & information (PADI). An analysis of the main evidence components is carried out by a central team, to check for consistency the range of judgements from inspections, joint reviews, PIs and monitoring; average band scores for the PIs for adults and children are calculated for comparative purposes;
any judgements that appear as inconsistent with other evidence are then reviewed by the regional director and business relationship manager: where appropriate, judgements are amended;
CSCI directors in the regions are paired to scrutinise a selection of provisional judgements: this may lead to further amendments;
provisional judgements are then re-charted prior to a final validation meeting. This meeting leads to a set of recommendations for the chief inspector, who takes the final decisions on ratings, independently of ministers.
6.3 In arriving at his final determination of judgements the chief inspector will take a holistic view of all the admissible evidence. The key and other PIs are taken into account within the rounded view of all the admissible evidence available to him.
7. STANDARDS AND CRITERIA
7.1 The standards and criteria in use for 2004 are a development of the version used by the SSI in 2003. They provide a guiding framework within which SSI/CSCI judges the overall performance of a council in delivering its social care functions.
7.2 SSI/CSCI standards are high-level statements describing overall performance for all service user groups that characterises the delivery of "good" social care. They:
describe the quality of service expected;
reflect the Government's strategic priorities for modernisation;
are derived from legislation and regulation, government policy and guidance (including national objectives and national service frameworks), and understandings of good practice; and
are structured within the domains of the performance assessment framework; and elaborated by more detailed statements, referred to as criteria.
7.3 The six overall standards in the model reflect the existing five domains used in the performance assessment framework (PAF), (and for best value) plus a standard describing capacity for improvement or the potential to sustain good performance. The term "capacity for improvement " has been adopted since 2003 for the sixth standard, and this focuses on the effectiveness of the social services infrastructure and the council's partnership with others. This replaces the former "prospects" category used in 2002.
Criteria
7.4 Criteria are given to define each standard in more detail, and are intended to apply generically to all user groups and services. Each criterion is graded with descriptors designed to help refine judgements across the four bands. This is consistent with the scaling applied to the overall judgements of performance, prior to the calculation of star ratings. SSI link inspectors/CSCI business relationship managers link performance with the standards and criteria in order to demonstrate the basis for rating judgements.
7.8 The overall standards and criteria describe except where it would be inappropriate to do so four levels of performance to assist in this. But judgements will not be arrived by a numerical summation or formal weighting. The essence of the approach is that it includes an element of professional judgement. The important thing is that we arrive at judgements between councils and across the regions, which are consistent with each other, so councils are treated equitably. The consistency checking process is crucial to this.
8. FAILING PERFORMANCE
Note: These policies reflect current practice, but will be subject to change as both DH andDepartment for Education and Skills (DfES) policy on intervention and engagement in adults' and children's social care is further refined: and when the relationship between both departments CSCI is defined.
8.1 SSI/CSCI works with failing councils to deliver effective improvement on behalf of government ministers. The nature and scale of engagement depends on the degree of service deficit and assessment of a council's capacity to change. The SSI/ CSCI role is to ensure that the council understands its' failings and is committed to addressing them, has a realistic improvement plan and sufficient capacity to deliver it, sign-post the council to external support where appropriate and monitor both the rate and extent of effective, sustained change. Where it is appropriate within an overall improvement plan, SSI/CSCI can negotiate additional support either through internal resources, or by recommending that Ministers appoint a performance action team to work alongside the council.
Councils to Whom the Policy Applies
8.2 All zero star rated councils are subject to special measures. The decision that a council should be so rated will normally be taken as part of the chief inspector's annual performance rating determination. In exceptional circumstances usually where the seriousness of the situation requires urgent remedial action - a council can be reduced to a zero star rating in year.
Making Judgements about Performance and Capacity.
8.8 As with all councils, the performance assessment process, including the overall performance standards and criteria, provides the framework for reaching a judgement on a council's service performance and capacity.
8.9 SSI/CSCI aims to be specific about the nature and extent of service failings, because this will become the benchmark against which improvement or further deterioration will be measured. A judgement about a council's capacity for change can be more difficult to describe in specific and measurable terms than service failings, but is essential because it impacts on:
the scope of engagement;
the targeting of improvement support;
expectations of the rate of change over time the change "trajectory";
the quality of advice on progress to ministers, and
will be key factor in considering statutory intervention.
Timing and action when a Council is Placed on Special Measures.
8.10 A council is subject to special measures from the point at which their zero star rating is formally announced. This will usually be when the chief inspector's annual performance rating determination is publicly released or, for in-year changes, when a council's reduction to a zero star rating is made public.
8.11 Subject to ministerial agreement, at the same time as the above announcement the chief inspector will write to the chief executive of the council notifying them of their zero star rating and confirming that the council is now on special measures. The letter will conclude with an invitation for the leader of the council, lead councillor for social services, chief executive and director of social services to meet with the chief inspector.
8.12 The purpose of this meeting is to assess whether the council understands the seriousness of the situation, is prepared to take action and has the capacity to do so. This meeting will inform a later submission from the chief inspector to the relevant minister on what action should be taken to improve services within the council in a timely way.