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Community Strategy
Performance Dashboard
Quarter Four 2013/14
Performance Management Framework
2009 2010 2011 2012
15,715 15,910 16,140 16,940
Q4 12/13 Q1 13/14 Q2 13/14 Q3 13/14 Q4 13/14
2,047 173 319 277 541
Apr 12 -
Mar 13
Jul 12 -
Jun 13
Oct 12 - Sep
13
Jan 12 - Dec
13
Apr 13 -
Mar14
61.3% 60.8% 61.1% 61.7% -
Community Strategy Performance DashboardPriorities: Growth, Public Service Reform and Place
Number of Businesses in ManchesterCalendar
Year
Resident employment rate based on
population aged 16 to 64
Net increase in number of new homes
0
2,000
4,000
6,000
8,000
10,000
12,000
14,000
16,000
18,000
2009 2010 2011 2012
Number of Businesses
Number of businesses in Manchester:
2013 figures will be released in December 2014.
There were 16,940 VAT/PAYE registered businesses in
Manchester in 2012, representing a 5.0% increase
compared to 2011. This is the largest increase
experienced compared to Greater Manchester, the
North West and the United Kingdom, all increasing by
1.2%, 0.5% and 1.3% respectively. There were 2,545
births of new enterprises during 2012, an increase of
6.5% since 2011 and an increase of 29.5% since 2009;
increases are likely due to the recession i.e. people being
made redundant moving into self-employment. The
increase in VAT registered businesses is encouraging but
the time lag may not reflect the current economic
conditions which are particularly impacting upon retail
businesses.
Net increase in number of new homes:
This is a measure of housing growth, linked to the
New Homes Bonus calculations and reported
cumulatively. The measure looks at the increase in
the number of dwellings on the valuation list
regardless of whether empty or not. In the financial
year 2013/14 1,238 new dwellings have been added
to the valuation list, against a target of 1,200 for
2013/14.
0
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
2,500
Q1
11/12
Q2
11/12
Q3
11/12
Q4
11/12
Q1
12/13
Q2
12/13
Q3
12/13
Q4
12/13
Q1
13/14
Q2
13/14
Q3
13/14
Q4
13/14
Net increase in number of new homes
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
Jul 10 -
Jun 11
Oct 10 -
Sep 11
Jan 11 -
Dec 11
Apr 11 -
Mar 12
Jul 11 -
Jun 12
Oct 11 -
Sep 12
Jan 12 -
Dec 12
Apr 12 -
Mar 13
Jul 12 -
Jun 13
Oct 12 -
Sep 13
Jan 13 -
Dec 13
Apr 13 -
Mar 14
Resident employment rate based on population aged 16-64
Resident employment rate based on population
aged 16 to 64:
Source: Annual Population Survey. There is a six
month lag on data availability for this indicator.
The latest result available is for Jan 2013 - Dec
2013. This indicator is reported within a 2.7%
margin of error, therefore performance will be
reported as 'no change' unless a percentage change
of more than 2.7% is seen.
Resident employment rate has increased by 0.6
percentage points compared to the previous
quarter, and has increased by 1.8 percentage points
compared to the same point last year. However,
these fluctuations are within the reported margin
of error.
Source: MCC Valuation List
Source: ONS Annual Population Survey
Source: ONS Annual Business Survey
Community Strategy Performance DashboardPriorities: Growth, Public Service Reform and Place
2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13
67.4% 70.0% 74.1% 73.8%
73.2% 79.7% 78.6% -
Nov-11 Nov-12 Nov-13 Nov-14
5.4% 4.9% 5.6% -
2008 2009 2010 2011
41.4% 39.8% 38.2% 36.6%
November
snapshot
Resident population aged 19 to 59/64
qualified to Level 2 or higher
Level 2 qualifications achieved by age 19
Academic
Year
Percentage of young people who are
NEET (academic age)
Snapshot as
at 31st
August
Percentage of children living in
workless or low income households
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13
Level 2 qualifications
19-59/64 qualified to level 2 level 2 achieved by age 19
Number of level 2 qualifications achieved by age 19
(Source: Department for Education):
There is an 18 month lag on data availability for this
indicator. 2011/12 figures are reported as provisional.
Following each annual release, the data for all previous
years is re-matched and this can alter the attainment
figures slightly (either increasing or decreasing figures).
Therefore, the 2011/12 final figures will be released once
the 2012/13 provisional figures are made available.
Resident population aged 19 to 59/64 qualified to
Level 2 or higher (Source: ONS Annual Population
Survey):There is a 12 month lag on data availability for this
indicator. Targeted funding provided by the Skills Funding
Agency has supported increased numbers of adults
attaining level 2 qualifications. Increases in Level 2
apprenticeship starts year by year for this age group will
also have had a positive impact on performance however
there has been a slight decrease between 2011/12 result of
74.1% and 2012/13 statistic of 73.8%. We will continue to
work on increasing Level 2 qualification levels for both
residents in and out of work through initiatives such as the
City Deal and Employer Ownership of Skills.
0%
1%
2%
3%
4%
5%
6%
Nov-11 Nov-12 Nov-13
% of young people who are NEET (academic age)
Percentage of young people who are Not in
Education, Employment or Training (NEET):
Whilst data is released on a monthly basis from
Connexions, the reference date for the year is
November. National comparisons cannot be made due
to the different methodologies used in the calculation of
local and national NEET rates. It should be noted that
November is the best time to monitor NEET rates and
also that percentage changes relate to relatively small
volumes. The NEET rate has increased by 0.77
percentage points compared to the previous year; there
were 874 young people reported as NEET in Nov-13.
Please note that 6.48% of the Nov-13 cohort were
unknown (1,004 young people). We are working with a
range of providers delivering the Youth Contract, NEET
provision and other initiatives such as the GM Youth
offer to support more young people into training and
employment. The newly announced Talent Match
service which starts later this year, will further plug gaps
in support.
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
35%
40%
45%
50%
2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12
% of children living in workless or low income households
Percentage of children living in workless or low
income households:
There is a 24 month lag on data availability for this
indicator. The HMRC Children in Low-Income Families
Local Measure provides a broad proxy for relative
low-income child poverty as set out in the Child
Poverty Act 2010 and enables analysis at a local level
(the Households Below Average Income (HBAI)
publication provides the definitive national measure
of relative child poverty but is not directly
comparable with the local measure due to
methodology). The significant time lag on this
indicator makes it difficult to interpret. The work of
our Community Budgets model is key in addressing
child poverty but there will still be some challenges
around the nature of work available to parents and
sufficiency of flexible childcare to allow parents to
work in retail and call centres in particular, where
there are generally more vacancies. Source: HMRC children in low income families local measure
Source: Connexions
Community Strategy Performance DashboardPriorities: Growth, Public Service Reform and Place
Q4 12/13 Q1 13/14 Q2 13/14 Q3 13/14 Q4 13/14
78.8% 79.6% 75.3% 78.1% 77.3%
64.1% 66.1% 67.0% 64.6% 65.6%
2009 2010 2011 2012
483,784 492,598 502,902 510,772
Jan 12 - Dec
12
Apr 12 -
Mar13
Jul 12 -
Jun 13
Oct 12 -
Sep 13
Jan 13 -
Dec 13
1504.7 1533.0 1534.6 1510.1 1503.4
1106.5 1129.4 1109.1 1061.8 1058.3
Quarterly Telephone Survey:
Satisfaction with local area as a place to
live
Satisfaction with the way the council runs
things
All Age All Cause Mortality Rate (per
100,000):
Men
Women
Mid-yearONS Mid-Year population estimate
0
200
400
600
800
1,000
1,200
1,400
1,600
1,800
Dec-11 Mar-12 Jun-12 Sep-12 Dec-12 Mar-13 Jun-13 Sep-13 Dec-13
Monthly AAACM Rate (estimated data)
Men Women
All Age All Cause Mortality (AAACM) rate:
(Monthly estimates based on 12 month rolling
averages) Please note that these figures have all been
adjusted to take account of the new 2013 European
Standard Population (ESP) and therefore appear
higher than those presented in previous versions of
the dashboard.
Men:
The AAACM rate for men in Manchester for the 12
month period ending Dec 2013 is estimated to stand at
1503.4 per 100,000. This is 0.1% lower than the
corresponding figure for the 12 months ending Dec
2012.
Women:
The AAACM rate for women in Manchester for the the
12 month period ending Dec 2013 is estimated to stand
at 1058.3 per 100,000. This is 4.4% lower than the
corresponding figure for the 12 months ending Dec
2012.
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
Q1
11/12
Q2
11/12
Q3
11/12
Q4
11/12
Q1
12/13
Q2
12/13
Q3
12/13
Q4
12/13
Q1
13/14
Q2
13/14
Q3
13/14
Q4
13/14
Quarterly Telephone Survey (Local Area and Council Satisfaction)
Satisfaction with local area satisfaction with council
Quarterly Telephone Survey Indicators
(Satisfaction with Local Area and Council):
These indicators are reported within a 3% margin of
error, therefore performance will be reported as
'no change' unless a percentage change of more
than 3% is seen. The Q3 12/13 survey had a larger
sample than usual (3,300), resulting in a +/- 1.7%
margin of error. No surveys were carried out in
quarter one and quarter two 2012/13 due to
Manchester's quarterly telephone survey contract
being retendered.
Satisfaction with local area as a place to live
decreased by 0.8% and satisfaction with the way
the council runs things increased by 1% this
quarter, although these fluctuations are within the
3% margin of error.
200,000
250,000
300,000
350,000
400,000
450,000
500,000
550,000
2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
ONS Mid-Year population estimate
ONS Mid-Year population estimate:
Manchester’s Mid-Year Estimate (MYE) population in
2012 was 510,772. This was an increase of 7,900, or
1.6%, since the 2011 MYE. Since 2001, the population
has grown by 87,900, or 20.8%.
Between the beginning of July 2011 and end of June
2012 (Mid-Year Estimate date), births exceeded
deaths by 4,800. Migration (internal and
international) and other changes accounted for a net
increase of 3,100 people between July 2011 and June
2012.
Source: MYE (and revised 2008, 2009
and 2010 MYEs), Office for National
Statistics, Crown Copyright.
Source: ONS death registrations and
population statistics
Source: Quarterly Telephone Survey
Community Strategy Performance DashboardPriorities: Growth, Public Service Reform and Place
Q4 12/13 Q1 13/14 Q2 13/14 Q3 13/14 Q4 13/14
698.5 - - - -
Q4 12/13 Target 13/14 Q1 13/14 Q2 13/14 Q3 13/14 Q4 13/14
8.35 7.75 7.67 7.71 7.58 7.73
Q4 12/13 Target 13/14 Q1 13/14 Q2 13/14 Q3 13/14 Q4 13/14
51.95% 54% 51.92% 51.8% 52.1% 54.49%
Alcohol-related hospital admission
rate (per 100,000)
Delayed transfers of care
(per 100,000)
Social Care customers
requiring no further care
following reablement
intervention
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
900
Q1
11/12
Q2
11/12
Q3
11/12
Q4
11/12
Q1
12/13
Q2
12/13
Q3
12/13
Q4
12/13
Q1
13/14
Q2
13/14
Q3
13/14
Q4
13/14
Alcohol-related hospital admission rate
Alcohol-related hospital admission rate:
The latest published data relates to Quarter 4
2012/13.
The rate of hospital admissions in the fourth quarter
of 2012/13 was 698.5 per 100,000 population - a 5%
decrease from the corresponding quarter in 2011/12.
The number of admissions for the same period was
2,957 - a reduction of 133 admissions (4%) on
2011/12.
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Q1
11/12
Q2
11/12
Q3
11/12
Q4
11/12
Q1
12/13
Q2
12/13
Q3
12/13
Q4
12/13
Q1
13/14
Q2
13/14
Q3
13/14
Q4
13/14
Delayed transfers of care
Delayed transfers of care (per 100,000):
The final result for the year ending in March 2014 is
a rate of 7.73 delays per 100,000 population. This
result is better than the previous year's result (8.35
delays per 100,000 population) and is within the
local target of 7.75 delays per 100,000 population.
The number of patients delayed in February was
the highest in the year, but the good performance
in previous months contributed to a good result
overall.
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
Q1
11/12
Q2
11/12
Q3
11/12
Q4
11/12
Q1
12/13
Q2
12/13
Q3
12/13
Q4
12/13
Q1
13/14
Q2
13/14
Q3
13/14
Q4
13/14
Social Care customers requiring no further care following reablement
intervention
Social Care customers requiring no further care
following reablement intervention:
The result for quarter 4 is 54.49% which is better
than the previous year's result of 51.95% and the
target of 54%. This is a good result considering that
hospital referrals for reablement customers
increased from 34% of the total of referrals in
2012/13 to 40% in 2013/14. This 6% increase in
hospital referrals comes as a result of improved
integrated working with health across Manchester,
but this means the customers coming through are
likely to have greater complexity of need, and are
less likely to leave with no further care.
Source: North West Public Health Observatory (NWPHO)
Source: Unify2 System, NHS
Source: MCC Reablement Service
Community Strategy Performance DashboardPriorities: Growth, Public Service Reform and Place
Q4 12/13 Q1 13/14 Q2 13/14 Q3 13/14 Q4 13/14
32,101 17,096 31,313 44,283 52,316
Q4 12/13 Q1 13/14 Q2 13/14 Q3 13/14 Q4 13/14
90.4% 90.6% 90.4% 89.2% 90.0%
86.8% 85.7% 87.5% 88.6% 91.2%
Q4 12/13 Q1 13/14 Q2 13/14 Q3 13/14 Q4 13/14
64.7% 68.6% 65.2% 67.4% 70.4%
12.9% 12.2% 12.6% 13.7% 9.3%
Agreement that people from different
backgrounds get on well together
Self-reported levels of happiness
Quarterly Telephone Survey:
People who agree that police and LA are
dealing with ASB and crime issues
People who perceive high levels of ASB in
their local area
Quarterly Telephone Survey:
Number of volunteer hours
Number of volunteer hours:Direction of travel compares current quarter's performance
to same quarter in previous year, i.e. Q1 13/14 compared
to Q1 12/13. Q2 11/12 figures include Q1 11/12 figures.
The numbers of volunteer hours recorded are for
Manchester Event Volunteers and across MCC libraries,
galleries and leisure. Note that we are continuing to make
improvements to the data collection process, therefore
increases in volunteer activity may be as a result of better
reporting. Volunteers now assist with Community and
Cultural Services through a wide range of opportunities,
most notably through the Manchester Volunteer Sport
Bureau. Volunteering activities also captured include
Friends of Parks, Macmillan Support Service, Galleries,
Libraries' Summer Reading Challenge and Local Studies and
Archives.
0
10,000
20,000
30,000
40,000
50,000
60,000
70,000
Q1
11/12
Q2
11/12
Q3
11/12
Q4
11/12
Q1
12/13
Q2
12/13
Q3
12/13
Q4
12/13
Q1
13/14
Q2
13/14
Q3
13/14
Q4
13/14
Number of volunteer hours
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
Q1
11/12
Q2
11/12
Q3
11/12
Q4
11/12
Q1
12/13
Q2
12/13
Q3
12/13
Q4
12/13
Q1
13/14
Q2
13/14
Q3
13/14
Q4
13/14
Quarterly Telephone Survey (Aspiration) different backgrounds
Happiness
Quarterly Telephone Survey (Aspiration):
These indicators are reported within a 3% margin
of error, therefore performance will be reported as
'no change' unless a percentage change of more
than 3% is seen. The Q3 12/13 survey had a larger
sample than usual (3,300), resulting in a +/- 1.7% margin
of error. No surveys were carried out in quarter one
and quarter two 2012/13 due to Manchester's
quarterly telephone survey contract being
retendered.
Self-reported levels of happiness have increased by
2.6% this quarter, compared to the previous
quarter and have increased by 4.4% compared to
the same period last year.
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
Q1
11/12
Q2
11/12
Q3
11/12
Q4
11/12
Q1
12/13
Q2
12/13
Q3
12/13
Q4
12/13
Q1
13/14
Q2
13/14
Q3
13/14
Q4
13/14
Quarterly Telephone Survey (Perception of crime and ASB)
ASB & Crime dealt
ASB perception
Quarterly Telephone Survey (Crime and ASB):
These indicators are reported within a 3% margin of
error, therefore performance will be reported as 'no
change' unless a percentage change of more than 3% is
seen. The Q3 12/13 survey had a larger sample than
usual (3,300), resulting in a +/- 1.7% margin of error. No
surveys were carried out in quarter one and quarter two
2012/13 due to Manchester's quarterly telephone
survey contract being retendered.
Confidence plans have now been developed and include
key areas of work that will be developed over the
coming weeks / months. There has been a significant
amount of partnership work to address residential
burglary and Asian Jewellery shop burglaries on the
South SRF. A joint agency meeting and site visit has
taken place, risk assessments conducted and crime
prevention advice given. Crime prevention devices (light
timers and window alarms) have also been distributed in
a targeted way. In addition, the impact of Integrated
Neighbourhood teams and visible partnership work
could well be starting to impact on public perceptions.
Source: Quarterly Telephone Survey
Source: Quarterly Telephone Survey
Source: MCC Databases (MVSB, MACC and MCC workbook returns)
Community Strategy Performance DashboardPriorities: Growth, Public Service Reform and Place
Q4 12/13 Q1 13/14 Q2 13/14 Q3 13/14 Q4 13/14
11,081 11,102 11,196 12,143 11,660
Q4 12/13 Target 13/14 Q1 13/14 Q2 13/14 Q3 13/14 Q4 13/14
407 354 154 266 338 -
Apr 12 -
Mar 13Target 13/14
Jul 12 -
Jun 13
Oct 12 - Sep
13
Jan 13 - Dec
13
Apr 13 -
Mar14
6.1% 8.8% 6.2% 6.9% 8.1% -
Victim based crime - Number of
recorded offences
Re-offending of the IOM
cohort - Number of
convictions
Successful drug
treatment completions
for opiate clients
0
2,000
4,000
6,000
8,000
10,000
12,000
14,000
Q1
11/12
Q2
11/12
Q3
11/12
Q4
11/12
Q1
12/13
Q2
12/13
Q3
12/13
Q4
12/13
Q1
13/14
Q2
13/14
Q3
13/14
Q4
13/14
Victim based crime - Number of recorded offences
Victim based crime - Number of recorded offences:
Victim based crime has decreased by 4% (483) this
quarter.
A total of 46,010 victim based crimes were reported
across the city between April 2013 and March 2014, a
3.5% increase compared to the same period the
previous year. Compared to 2012/13 the number of
robberies reduced by 6.6% (from 1,868 to 1,745), the
number of offences linked to violence with injury
decreased by 2.5% (from 3,883 to 3,784), increases were
seen in theft offences which rose by 4.9% (28,346 to
29,730) - within this category the largest rise was seen in
domestic burglaries which increased by 9.5% (from
4,782 to 5,238). Theft from person offences mainly
involves the theft of mobile phones and across the city
these crimes increased by 4.1% (from 3,393 to 3,531).
The number of vehicle crimes reported across the city
rose by 3.8% (from 5,207 to 5,403).
Re-offending of the IOM cohort - Number of
convictions:
The 2012/13 conviction count of 407 has been set as
the baseline for 2013/14. Target 13/14: 13%
reduction on 2012/13 level by year end. Results are
usually reported a quarter in arrears and will be
adjusted due to the time lag in offences going through
the Criminal Justice System; latest figures are
reported as provisional. For the 2013/14 IOM Cohort
for Manchester to achieve a 13% reduction against
the baseline, the maximum number of proven
offences for the 2013/14 IOM Cohort for Manchester
is 354. At the time of writing the report the IOM
Cohort had accumulated 338 convictions in Quarter 3.
Although the overall reduction in offences has not
reached 13%, there has been a significant
improvement in the number of Serious Acquisitive
Crime (SAC) and Serious Violent Crime (SVC) across
the IOM Performance Cohort in comparison to the
previous year.
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
Q1
11/12
Q2
11/12
Q3
11/12
Q4
11/12
Q1
12/13
Q2
12/13
Q3
12/13
Q4
12/13
Q1
13/14
Q2
13/14
Q3
13/14
Q4
13/14
Re-offending of the IOM cohort - Number of convictions
0%
2%
4%
6%
8%
10%
12%
Jul 10 -
Jun 11
Oct 10 -
Sep 11
Jan 11 -
Dec 11
Apr 11 -
Mar 12
Jul 11 -
Jun 12
Oct 11 -
Sep 12
Jan 12 -
Dec 12
Apr 12 -
Mar 13
Jul 12 -
Jun 13
Oct 12 -
Sep 13
Jan 13 -
Dec 13
Apr 13 -
Mar 14
Successful drug treatment completions
Successful drug treatment completions for opiate
clients:
There is a one quarter lag on data availability for
this indicator.
The latest available data is for the 12 month period
1st January 2013 - 31st December 2013. Successful
completion of drug treatment for opiate clients has
increased during this period, compared to the
previous 12 month period, although performance is
still slightly below target.
Source: GM Probation Trust
Source: Greater Manchester Police
Source: National Drug Treatment Monitoring System
and Public Health England DOMES Quarterly Reports
Community Strategy Performance DashboardPriorities: Growth, Public Service Reform and Place
Jan 11 - Dec
11
Apr 11 -
Mar 12
Jul 11 - Jun
12
Oct 11 - Sep
12
Jan 12 - Dec
12
27.7% 29.4% 29.5% 26.2% 27.0%
Target 13/14 Q1 13/14 Q2 13/14 Q3 13/14 Q4 13/14
100 0 71 21 781
3,000not
available
not
available
not
available
not
available
Target 13/14 2011/12 2012/13 2013/14
19 17 18 19
Organisations participating in
Environmental Business Pledge
Number of "local sites" and "sites of
biological importance" in active
conservation management
Financial
Year
Early estimates of proven re-offending
rates for adult drug-misusing
offenders
Tonnes CO2 reduced from:
Schools participating in low carbon
programmes
0
100
200
300
400
500
600
700
800
900
0
500
1,000
1,500
2,000
2,500
Q1
11/12
Q2
11/12
Q3
11/12
Q4
11/12
Q1
12/13
Q2
12/13
Q3
12/13
Q4
12/13
Q1
13/14
Q2
13/14
Q3
13/14
Q4
13/14
SchoolsOrganisations Tonnes CO2 Reduced
Schools
Organisations
Tonnes CO2 reduced:Schools:
Schools and academies have made a reduction in their
carbon emissions in Q4 (10,790 tCO2) compared to Q4
(11,544 tCO2) in 2012/13. 754 tCO2 have been saved in Q4
resulting in a 7% reduction. This may be partly explained
by the warmer winter than the previous year. The textiles
campaign that has seen textiles diverted from landfill, has
saved 6 tCO2 this quarter.
Organisations:
The original funding agreement for EBP expired in April
2013. Groundwork were contracted to provide support to
progress companies through the EBP criteria and also
undertake EBP audits until September '13 during which 26
companies achieved a bronze,silver,gold award. Since then
Manchester and other GM districts have been exploring
how EBP can continue to be delivered in the face of
significant funding restraints. It is hoped that a new model
for delivery will be agreed and rolled out across GM. AGMA
are now running the 'Growing the Green Economy'
programme to provide resource efficiency support to GM
businesses. Work is underway to establish the best
approach for promoting this to Manchester businesses.
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
18
20
2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13 2013/14
Sites in active conservation management
Performance Target
Number of "local sites" and "sites of biological
importance" in active conservation management:
A new SBI (Site of Biological Importance); Park Wood
was designated in Wythenshawe, although this is not
deeemed as in "active conservation" management
yet. However Castle Hill SBI was brought into active
conservation management.
Note that the number of SBIs can change annually
as sites are lost and gained, hence why DEFRA
annual figures are provided as % of sites in active
conservation management.
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
35%
40%
45%
50%
Apr 09 -
Mar 10
Jul 09 -
Jun 10
Oct 09 -
Sep 10
Jan 10 -
Dec 10
Apr 10 -
Mar 11
Jul 10 -
Jun 11
Oct 10 -
Sep 11
Jan 11 -
Dec 11
Apr 11 -
Mar 12
Jul 11 -
Jun 12
Oct 11 -
Sep 12
Jan 12 -
Dec 12
Early estimates of proven re-offending rates for adult drug-misusing offenders
Early estimates of proven re-offending rates for
adult drug-misusing offenders :
The recently released early estimate quarterly bulletin
for April 2012 - March 2013 was only for adult re-
offenders managed by the probation trust. Other
breakdowns that were previously available in the
quarterly bulletin, such as proven re-offending for
local authorities, youth offending teams, drug-
misusing offenders and prolific and other priority
offenders, will be now be available only for the
calendar year based cohort (January to December)
which is published in October. Therefore, from now
on we will only be able to report on the "re-offending
rates for adult drug-misusing offenders" measure on
an annual basis, with the next update due in October
2014 for the period January 2013 to December 2013.
Source: Ministry of Justice
Source: MCC Environmental Strategy Team and Enworks
Source: MCC Environmental Strategy Team
Community Strategy Performance DashboardPriorities: Growth, Public Service Reform and Place
2010/11 2011/122012/13
(Final)
-4.0% -2.0% 0.0%
-7.1% -6.2% -6.1%
Q4 12/13 Q1 13/14 Q2 13/14 Q3 13/14 Q4 13/14
76.0% 76.0% 76.0% 81.0% 79.0%
Apr 12 -
Feb 13
Jul 12 - May
13
Sep 12 - Aug
13
Dec 12 -
Nov 13
Mar 13 -
Feb 14
57.7% 62.4% 65.4% 66.4% 65.8%
Difference between Manchester and National averages:
Academic
YearKey Stage 2: level 4+ in Reading, Writing and Maths
Key Stage 4: 5+ A*-C GCSE grades including English
and Maths
Proportion of children aged 0-5 in
contact with an NHS dentist in the
previous 24 months
Proportion of schools judged to be
good or outstanding in their most
recent Ofsted inspection
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
Q2 11/12Q3 11/12Q4 11/12Q1 12/13Q2 12/13Q3 12/13Q4 12/13Q1 13/14Q2 13/14Q3 13/14Q4 13/14
Schools judged 'good' or 'outstanding'
Proportion of schools judged to be 'good' or
'outstanding' in their most recent Ofsted
inspection:
There have been 20 schools inspected during the
quarter, 2 of these were judged to be requires
improvement having previously been judged to be
good, causing the slight dip since last quarter.
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
Jul 10 -
Jun 11
Oct 10 -
Sep 11
Jan 11 -
Dec 11
Apr 11 -
Mar 12
Jul 11 -
Jun 12
Oct 11 -
Sep 12
Jan 12 -
Nov 12
Apr 12 -
Feb 13
Jul 12 -
May 13
Sep 12 -
Aug 13
Dec 12 -
Nov 13
Mar 13 -
Feb 14
Children aged 0-5 in contact with NHS dentist in previous 24 months
Proportion of children aged 0-5 in contact with an
NHS dentist in the previous 24 months:
There is a one quarter lag in reporting for this indicator.
A rolling annual average is reported each quarter. From
Q3 12/13 through to Q1 13/14 this indicator was based
on a rolling 11 month average. Usually a rolling 12
month average is reported. Although previous and
future results are not directly comparable, the
percentages reported will be very similar as there is only
one month difference in reporting and contact does not
tend to vary drastically from month to month.
The latest figures for the period December 2013 to
February 2014 show a lower rate than the previous
quarter. This can be explained by dental practitioners
having reached their contracted quota of treatment in
previous months.
-12.0%
-10.0%
-8.0%
-6.0%
-4.0%
-2.0%
0.0%
2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13
Difference between Manchester and National averages
Key Stage 2
Key Stage 4
Key Stage 2:
The Department for Education no longer calculate an
overall English level, so the English and Maths
measure is no longer monitored. Results from
2010/11 onwards have been revised using the new
definition which is Level 4+ in Reading, Writing and
Maths. Final results for 2012/13 show performance
in Manchester is now the same as the national
average for this measure, with 75% of pupils
achieving level 4+ in reading, writing and maths.
Key Stage 4:
Final results show performance in Manchester has
decreased slightly from 2012 but the gap to the
England average has narrowed slightly as national
results decreased more than in Manchester. For the
2012/13 academic year 53.1% of pupils achieved 5 or
more A*-C GCSE grades including English and Maths
in Manchester, compared to the 59.2% national
average.
Source: Department for Education
Source: Dental practitioner returns (FP17) from Dental Services
Division of NHS Business Services Authority.
Source: Ofsted
Community Strategy Performance DashboardPriorities: Growth, Public Service Reform and Place
Target 12/13 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13
23.4% 24.0% 23.7% 23.6% 24.7%
Jan 11 - Dec
11
Apr 11 -
Mar 12
Jul 11 - Jun
12
Oct 11 - Sep
12
Jan 12 - Dec
12
52.4 51.6 47.8 47.2 45.0
2007-09 2008-10 2009-11 2010-12
15.3 15.4 15.4 15.8
18.2 18.3 18.8 18.8
Under-18 conception rate
(per 1,000 women aged 15-17)
Three Year
AverageMen
Women
Obesity in Year 6
schoolchildren
Academic
Year
Life expectancy age at 65 (years):
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
2008/09 2009/10 2010/11 2011/12 2012/13
Obesity in Year 6 schoolchildren
Performance Target
Obesity in Year 6 schoolchildren:
Data from the National Child Measurement
Programme for 2012/13 shows a small, but not
statistically significant increase, in the proportion of
Year 6 schoolchildren who are classed as being obese
(from 23.6% in 2011/12 to 24.7% in 2012/13). There
has also been a big increase in the proportion of
children in this age group that have been measured
(from 88.1% to 92.5%) meaning that more children
are being identified as being overweight or obese and
directed towards appropropriate interventions and
services.
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
Jan 10 -
Dec 10
Apr 10 -
Mar 11
Jul 10 - Jun
11
Oct 10 -
Sep 11
Jan 11 -
Dec 11
Apr 11 -
Mar 12
Jul 11 - Jun
12
Oct 11 -
Sep 12
Jan 12 -
Dec 12
Under-18 conception rate (per 1,000)
Under-18 conception rate (provisional figures):
Provisional quarterly conception figures are
published 14 months after the quarter has ended.
A rolling annual average over the past four quarters
is reported by calendar year, with the year end
result being January 2012 - December 2012 (2012
calendar year). Following the full quality assurance
of the annual dataset, final quarterly figures are
published.
The under-18 conception rate for the 12 months
ending December 2012 was 45.0 per 1,000 women
aged 15-17 years. This represents a reduction of
14.3% compared with the 12 months ending
December 2013.
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
18
20
2007-09 2008-10 2009-11 2010-12
Life expectancy at age 65 (years)Men Women
Life expectancy at age 65:
(2008-10 is the baseline set for these indicators)
Men:
Data on life expectancy at age 65 for men in
Manchester shows a slight increase between 2009-
11 and 2010-12. However, there has been no
change to Manchester's rank relative to other areas
and the city continues to have the lowest male life
expectancy at age 65 of any local authority in
England and Wales.
Women:
Data on life expectancy at age 65 for women in
Manchester shows no increase between 2009-11
and 2010-12. However, there has been a slight
improvement in Manchester's rank relative to other
areas and the city now has the 3rd lowest female
life expectancy at age 65 of any local authority in
England and Wales (compared to the 2nd lowest in
2009-11).
Source: NHS Information Centre
Source: ONS & Department for Education
Source: ONS