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A unique opportunity to shape the debate about new ways of designing, re-shaping and delivering public services. The conference offers inspiring keynote speeches and a range of practical workshops, as well as a participative World Café discussion, where all delegates will have the opportunity to discuss and develop new models of service delivery. Breaking the mould: Wales third sector public service delivery conference 2011 Cardiff City Stadium, Cardiff • Tuesday 28 June 2011 Supported by

Wales Third Sector Public Service Delivery Conference

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A unique opportunity to shape the debate about new ways of designing, re-shaping and delivering public services. The conference offers inspiring keynote speeches and a range of practical workshops, as well as a participative World Café discussion, where all delegates will have the opportunity to discuss and develop new models of service delivery.

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Page 1: Wales Third Sector Public Service Delivery Conference

A unique opportunity to shape the debate about new ways of designing, re-shaping and delivering public services.

The conference offers inspiring keynote speeches and a range of practical workshops, as well as a participative World Café discussion, where all delegates will have the opportunity to discuss and develop new models of service delivery.

Breaking the mould: Wales third sector public service delivery conference 2011

Cardiff City Stadium, Cardiff • Tuesday 28 June 2011

Supported by

Page 2: Wales Third Sector Public Service Delivery Conference

Breaking the mould: new ways of working

In the context of measures across Wales to improve efficiency and innovation in public services, the public sector is looking to the third sector for new ways of working.

WCVA’s Public service delivery conference 2011 will provide practical guidance to third sector organisations delivering public services, highlight the third sector’s contribution to innovation and change in the ways services are designed and delivered, and explore how public bodies and third sector organisations can work together to improve services for individuals and communities.

Speakers include:

• Rob Pickford, Director of Social Services Wales, who will deliver an opening address that sets the context and challenge of co-production.

• Shaun Jamieson, Partner at Hugh James will deliver an address which will explore the opportunities and challenges created for third and public sector bodies through the Localism Bill and other policy changes.

• Andrew Goodall, Chief Executive of Aneurin Bevan Health Board, who will open the afternoon’s discussions with an overview of the work that he has been doing over the past year in support of the Efficiency and Innovation Programme’s priority to promote ‘New models of service delivery’.

• Marcus Longley, Professor of Applied Health Policy at the University of Glamorgan and Director of WIHSC, who will deliver a closing address that responds to the day’s discussions and considers the future of public service delivery in Wales.

Workshops The morning session offers a range of informative workshops to help third sector organisations tackle some of the issues raised by delivering public services.

World Café The afternoon session presents an opportunity for all delegates to discuss new models of public service delivery, using the participative World Café format.

World Café is a process that enables people to have conversations while sitting cafe-style around small tables. Ideas and issues from the conversations are recorded. After about 20-30 minutes, people move to a new table and the conversation continues. One member of the initial group remains at the table to host the new conversation and help to build links between the different strands.

A report will be produced after the event, capturing discussions from the World Café, which will feed into Welsh Assembly Government’s ‘New models of service delivery’ workstream – part of the Efficiency and Innovation programme.

The ‘New models of service delivery’ workstream aims to promote the mainstreaming of successful innovation and good practice to make a much greater impact and encourage further innovation, particularly in joining up services around the citizen, especially those with complex needs; ways in which citizens help to design and deliver services and shifting interventions from cure to prevention.

Programme9.30 Registration and refreshments

10.00 Chair’s welcome and opening remarks Victoria Winckler, Director, The Bevan

Foundation & WCVA Trustee

10.10 The challenge of co-production: Rob Pickford, Director of Social Services Wales

10.30 Understanding the opportunities – the Localism Bill and other policy changes:

Shaun Jamieson, Hugh James

10.50 Workshops A (1 – 5) 1. Approaches to measuring and

demonstrating impact: Dr Bryan Collis, WCVA

2. Managing contracts successfully: Dawn Rowley, DHRinterim

3. New ways of working with offenders: developing a fully integrated approach to managing offenders: Tony Kirk & Emma Wools, Wales Probation Trust

4. Community benefits: Lisa Thomas-Lewis, Value Wales

5. Changing behaviour: Clare Sain-ley-Berry, Environment Wales

11.50 Break

12.10 Workshops B (6 – 10) 6. Consortium development:

Alan Cripps, Neadon Consulting 7. New ways of financing services:

Mike Walsh, Big Lottery Fund 8. How well do you know your

funders?: Sustainable Funding Cymru, WCVA and Margaret McLaughlin, Voluntary Action Merthyr Tydfil & Interlink

9. Unified assessment: Steve Vaughan, Welsh Assembly Government

10. Principles into practice: Participation Cymru

13.10 Lunch

14.00 New models of service delivery: Andrew Goodall, Chief Executive,

Aneurin Bevan Health Board

14.20 World Café – New ways of working (with refreshments throughout)

16.10 The future of service delivery: Marcus Longley, Professor of Applied

Health Policy and Director of WIHSC

16.30 Close

16.40 Drinks reception and networking – kindly sponsored by Hugh James

Page 3: Wales Third Sector Public Service Delivery Conference

1. Approaches to measuring and demonstrating impact Dr Bryan Collis, WCVA

The need to show how much your organisation or service contributes to service users’ well-being, the improvement in a deprived community’s economic situation or the reduction in anti-social behaviour has been growing in recent years. In the climate of funding cuts, showing the difference your organisation makes can mean the difference between survival and closure. Bryan Collis will draw on a number of approaches to show how, with care, indicators can be selected and a mixture of data sources can be used to provide evidence which will clearly demonstrate an organisation’s impact.

2. Managing contracts successfully Dawn Rowley, DHRinterim

After all the time and effort spent on tendering, what happens when you are successful in your bid? This workshop will offer guidance to third sector suppliers on successful contract management, providing advice on improving your relationship with your commissioners, as well as the key issues to consider before submitting your tender. It will cover contract negotiation, and monitoring and reporting your service. The workshop will also provide tips on how to maximise the benefit of contract management meetings, and put you in a good position to negotiate a contract extension or successfully re-tender when the time comes.

3. New ways of working with offenders: developing a fully integrated approach to managing offenders Tony Kirk & Emma Wools, Wales Probation Trust

The workshop aims to explore the delivery of a new partnership approach based on the principles of Integrated Offender Management (IOM).

A presentation on Bont, Cardiff’s Integrated Offender Management programme will include:

• Local IOM arrangements

• Governance

• Operational Delivery Model

• Offender cohort

• Partnership working to deliver interventions and services to offenders

• Impact of IOM approach on reducing reoffending

The workshop will discuss how Wales Probation Trust can ensure that providers from the voluntary and community sector can be equal partners in the delivery of this integrated approach.

4. Community benefits Lisa Thomas-Lewis, Value Wales

The public sector in Wales buys a vast amount of goods and services each year, and has the potential to achieve considerable added value through its procurement activities. Value Wales have been actively encouraging public sector procurers to consider social, environmental and economic value by the inclusion of Community Benefits in their procurement processes. This workshop will explain what is meant by Community Benefits, the different approaches purchasers might use to secure added social value in their procurement activities, and the implications for third sector suppliers.

5. Changing behaviour Claire Sain-ley-Berry, Environment Wales

One of the common issues that service delivery organisations face is how to change the behaviour of their service users. How do you identify the barriers that prevent people from changing their habits? And how do you engage people and help move them from awareness to action? The Supporting Sustainable Living Grant scheme aims to help organisations explore some of these issues and to develop evidence-based behaviour change projects. The grant scheme will support initial research and scoping; piloting of project ideas; and roll out of projects that have successfully changed peoples’ lifestyle choices to bring about either reductions in greenhouse gas carbon emissions or increased community resilience to the impacts of climate change. The workshop will provide more details of the scheme and how to apply.

Workshops A (1 – 5)

Hugh James is one of the top 100 law firms in the UK and continues to prosper as the largest law firm in Wales. It delivers a comprehensive range of legal services across the UK from offices in Cardiff and London to clients from leading public, private and third sector organisations and private individuals.

Page 4: Wales Third Sector Public Service Delivery Conference

6. Consortium development Alan Cripps, Neadon Consulting

Many public bodies across Wales and the UK are advocating that suppliers work in consortia in order to tender for public service contracts. But developing a tender with partners can throw up a number of technical and operational challenges. This workshop will offer guidance about different models of joint tendering, exploring how to build good working relationships at the same time as developing a coherent service delivery model. Alan Cripps brings extensive experience of supporting collaborations, including developing and delivering Housing Associations’ Charitable Trust’s (HACT) Collaborate Programme, which developed a range of ways in which small Supporting People providers could find a place in the market through collaborative tendering.

7. New ways of financing services Mike Walsh, Big Lottery Fund

Restrictions on public spending are likely to limit the opportunities for public sector organisations to fund preventative interventions which may offer long-term savings in addition to improved social outcomes for individuals and communities. Organisations from all sectors are therefore seeking new sources of financing preventative interventions, including investment from non-government sources. Social Impact Bonds (SIBs) offer a means of attracting private investment in new models of public service delivery where there is an expectation of financial savings in the long-term. An SIB involves service providers being commissioned by a statutory organisation to deliver social outcomes under a ‘payment by results’ contract. The intervention is funded via an SIB by private investors, who receive a return on their investment if improved social outcomes – and the resulting savings to the public purse – are achieved.

This workshop will discuss the potential for SIBs in Wales, and explore the implications for third sector service providers delivering services under contracts funded by an SIB.

8. How well do you know your funders? Sustainable Funding Cymru, WCVA and Margaret McLaughlin, Voluntary Action Merthyr Tydfil & Interlink

This workshop offers an insight into improving communication and building effective and sustainable relationships with public sector funders. It will discuss methods of engagement and how to influence decision making. Drawing on the experiences of developing a Code of Practice for commissioning in Merthyr Tydfil and Rhondda Cynon Taf, it will also explore the principles and process of working with commissioners.

9. Unified assessment Steve Vaughan, Welsh Assembly Government

It was a commitment in Fulfilled Lives, Supportive Communities, the 10 year strategy for social services in Wales, to create a streamlined common assessment system drawing on the best of the existing unified assessment process. Steve Vaughan, from Welsh Assembly Government’s Health & Social Services Directorate, will explain the plans for the unified assessment, how it will lead to standardising processes between health and social care, and explore the implications for third sector suppliers.

10. Principles into practice Participation Cymru

Recently, National Principles for Public Engagement have been developed and disseminated to all public service organisations in Wales. The aim of these principles is to encourage good quality, consistent engagement activity with service users and the general public by those who provide services. This workshop will enable participants to familiarise themselves with the principles, to seek any guidance and clarification needed and to learn how best to put these principles into practice. If you are involved in the design and delivery of public services then these principles and their practice will be important to you.

Workshops B (6 – 10)

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Dates for your diary:

WCVA Volunteering conference 14 September 2011

WCVA Third sector funding conference 11 October 2011

WCVA Trustee conference 26 October 2011

WCVA Annual conference 24 November 2011

Page 5: Wales Third Sector Public Service Delivery Conference

Dyma gyfle unigryw i lunio’r ddadl am ffyrdd newydd o ddylunio, ail- ffurfio a chyflenwi gwasanaethau cyhoeddus.

Mae’r gynhadledd yn cynnig areithiau allweddol calonogol ac amryw o weithdai ymarferol, yn ogystal â thrafodaeth Caffi’r Byd cyfranogol, lle bydd gan yr holl gynrychiolwyr y cyfle i drafod a datblygu modelau cyflenwi gwasanaethau newydd.

Newid y drefn: Cynhadledd cyflenwi gwasanaethau cyhoeddus y trydydd sector yng Nghymru 2011

Stadiwm Dinas Caerdydd, Caerdydd • Dydd Mawrth 28 Mehefin 2011

Gyda chefnogaeth

Page 6: Wales Third Sector Public Service Delivery Conference

Newid y drefn: ffyrdd newydd o weithio

Yng nghyd-destun mesurau ledled Cymru i wella effeithlonrwydd ac arloesedd gwasanaethau cyhoeddus, mae’r sector cyhoeddus yn dilyn y trydydd sector o ran ffyrdd newydd o weithio.

Bydd Cynhadledd cyflenwi gwasanaethau cyhoeddus WCVA 2011 yn rhoi arweiniad ymarferol i fudiadau’r trydydd sector sy’n cyflenwi gwasanaethau cyhoeddus, yn amlygu cyfraniad y trydydd sector i arloesedd a newid yn y ffyrdd y caiff gwasanaethau eu cynllunio a’u cyflenwi, ac ystyried sut y gall cyrff cyhoeddus a mudiadau’r trydydd sector gydweithio i wella gwasanaethau ar gyfer unigolion a chymunedau.

Mae’r siaradwyr yn cynnwys:• Rob Pickford, Cyfarwyddwr Gwasanaethau Cymdeithasol

Cymru, a fydd yn rhoi anerchiad agoriadol sy’n gosod y cyd-destun a’r her o gyd-gynhyrchu.

• Bydd Shaun Jamieson, Partner yn Hugh James yn cyflwyno anerchiad a fydd yn ystyried y cyfleoedd a’r heriau a grewyd ar gyfer cyrff y sector cyhoeddus a’r trydydd sector drwy’r Mesur Lleoliaeth a newidiadau polisi eraill.

• Andrew Goodall, Prif Weithredwr Bwrdd Iechyd Aneurin Bevan, a fydd yn agor trafodaethau’r prynhawn gyda throsolwg o’r gwaith y mae wedi bod yn ei wneud dros y flwyddyn ddiwethaf i gefnogi blaenoriaeth y Rhaglen Effeithlonrwydd ac Arloesedd i hyrwyddo ‘Modelau newydd o gyflenwi gwasanaethau’.

• Marcus Longley, Athro Polisi Iechyd Cymhwysol ym Mhrifysgol Morgannwg a Chyfarwyddwr Athrofa Iechyd a Gofal Cymdeithasol Cymru, a fydd yn rhoi’r anerchiad clo mewn ymateb i drafodaethau’r dydd ac yn ystyried dyfodol cyflenwi gwasanaethau cyhoeddus yng Nghymru.

Gweithdai Mae sesiwn y bore yn cynnig amryw o weithdai llawn gwybodaeth i helpu mudiadau trydydd sector i fynd i’r afael â rhai o’r materion sy’n codi o gyflenwi gwasanaethau cyhoeddus.

Caffi’r Byd Mae sesiwn y prynhawn yn rhoi’r cyfle i bob cynrychiolydd drafod modelau newydd o gyflenwi gwasanaethau cyhoeddus, gan ddefnyddio’r fformat cyfranogol Caffi’r Byd.

Mae Caffi’r Byd yn broses sy’n galluogi pobl i sgwrsio tra eu bod yn eistedd o amgylch byrddau bychain fel mewn caffi. Caiff syniadau a phroblemau sy’n deillio o’r sgyrsiau eu cofnodi. Ar ôl tua 20-30 munud, bydd pobl yn symud i fwrdd arall a bydd y sgwrsio’n parhau. Bydd un aelod o’r grwp cychwynol yn aros wrth y bwrdd i gynnal y sgwrs newydd a hwyluso cysylltiadau rhwng y gwahanol sgyrsiau.

Caiff adroddiad ei lunio ar ôl y digwyddiad, i gyfleu’r sgyrsiau o Gaffi’r Byd, a fydd yn bwydo i ffrwd waith ‘Modelau newydd o gyflenwi gwasanaethau’ Llywodraeth Cynulliad Cymru – rhan o’r rhaglen Effeithlonrwydd ac Arloesedd.

Nod ffrwd waith ‘Modelau newydd o gyflenwi gwasanaethau’ yw hyrwyddo prif ffrydio arloesedd ac arfer da llwyddiannus er mwyn cael effaith llawer yn fwy ac annog arloesedd pellach, yn enwedig o ran uno gwasanaethau o amgylch y dinesydd, yn enwedig y rheini sydd ag anghenion cymhleth; y ffyrdd y mae dinasyddion yn helpu i lunio a chyflenwi gwasanaethau a symud o wella ymyriadau i’w hatal.

Rhaglen9.30 Cofrestru a lluniaeth

10.00 Croeso gan y Cadeirydd a sylwadau agoriadol – Victoria Winckler, Sefydliad Bevan ac Ymddiriedolwr, WCVA

10.10 Yr her o gyd-gynhyrchu: Rob Pickford, Cyfarwyddwr Gwasanaethau

Cymdeithasol Cymru

10.30 Deall y cyfleoedd – y Mesur Lleoliaeth a newidiadau polisi eraill: Shaun Jamieson, Hugh James

10.50 Gweithdai A (1 – 5) 1. Dulliau o fesur a dangos effaith:

Dr Bryan Collis, WCVA 2. Rheoli contractau yn llwyddiannus:

Dawn Rowley, DHRinterim 3. Ffyrdd newydd o weithio gyda

throseddwyr: datblygu dull integredig o reoli troseddwyr: Tony Kirk ac Emma Wools, Ymddiriedolaeth Prawf Cymru

4. Buddion Cymunedol: Lisa Thomas-Lewis, Gwerth Cymru

5. Newid ymddygiad: Clare Sain-ley-Berry, Amgylchedd Cymru

11.50 Egwyl

12.10 Gweithdai B (6 – 10) 6. Datblygu consortiwm:

Alan Cripps, Neadon Consulting 7. Ffyrdd newydd o ariannu

gwasanaethau: Mike Walsh, Y Gronfa Loteri Fawr

8. Pa mor dda rydych chi’n adnabod eich cyllidwyr?: Cyllid Cynaliadwy Cymru, WCVA a Margaret McLaughlin, Gweithredu Gwirfoddol Merthyr Tudful ac Interlink

9. Asesu unedig: Steve Vaughan, Llywodraeth Cynulliad Cymru

10. Egwyddorion ar waith: Cyfranogaeth Cymru

13.10 Cinio

14.00 Modelau newydd o gyflenwi gwasanaethau: Andrew Goodall, Prif Weithredwr, Bwrdd Iechyd Aneurin Bevan

14.20 Caffi’r Byd – Ffyrdd newydd o weithio (yn cynnwys lluniaeth)

16.10 Dyfodol cyflenwi gwasanaethau: Marcus Longley, Athro Polisi Iechyd

Cymhwysol a Chyfarwyddwr Athrofa Iechyd a Gofal Cymdeithasol Cymru

16.30 Diwedd

16.40 Derbyniad o ddiodydd a rhwydweithio – noddir yn garedig gan Hugh James

Page 7: Wales Third Sector Public Service Delivery Conference

1. Dulliau o fesur a dangos effaith Dr Bryan Collis, WCVA

Mae’r angen i ddangos sut mae’ch mudiad neu wasanaeth yn cyfrannu at les y defnyddwyr gwasanaethau, y gwelliant i sefyllfa economaidd cymuned ddifreintiedig neu leihad mewn ymddygiad gwrthgymdeithasol wedi tyfu yn y blynyddoedd diweddar. Mewn cyfnod o doriadau ariannol, gall dangos y gwahaniaeth y mae’ch mudiad yn ei wneud olygu’r gwahaniaeth rhwng y mudiad yn parhau neu’n cael ei ddiddymu. Bydd Bryan Collis yn tynnu ar nifer o ddulliau i ddangos sut, gyda gofal, y gellir dewis dangosyddion a defnyddio cymysgedd o ffynonellau data i roi tystiolaeth a all ddangos effaith mudiad yn glir.

2. Rheoli contractau yn llwyddiannus Dawn Rowley, DHRinterim

Ar ôl yr holl amser ac ymdrech a dreuliwyd yn tendro, beth sy’n digwydd pan fydd eich cynnig yn llwyddiannus? Bydd y gweithdy hwn yn cynnig arweiniad i gyflenwyr trydydd sector ar reoli contractau’n llwyddiannus, rhoi cyngor ar wella eich perthynas gyda’ch comisiynwyr, yn ogystal â materion allweddol i’w hystyried cyn cyflwyno eich tendr. Bydd yn cwmpasu negodi contract, a monitro a chofnodi eich gwasanaeth. Bydd y gweithdy hefyd yn rhoi argymhellion am sut i gael y budd mwyaf o gyfarfodydd rheoli contract, a’ch rhoi mewn sefyllfa dda i negodi estyniad i gontractau neu ail-dendro’n llwyddiannus pan ddaw’r amser.

3. Ffyrdd newydd o weithio gyda throseddwyr: datblygu dull integredig o reoli troseddwyr Tony Kirk ac Emma Wools, Ymddiriedolaeth Prawf Cymru

Nod y gweithdy yw edrych ar gyflenwi dull partneriaeth newydd yn seiliedig ar egwyddorion Rheoli Troseddwyr yn Integredig (IOM).

Bydd y cyflwyniad ar Bont, rhaglen Rheoli Troseddwyr yn Integredig Caerdydd yn cynnwys:

• Trefniadau IOM lleol

• Llywodraethu

• Model Cyflenwi Gweithredol

• Carfan troseddwyr

• Gweithio mewn partneriaeth i ddarparu ymyriadau a gwasanaethau i droseddwyr

• Effaith dull IOM ar leihau ail-droseddu

Bydd y gweithdy yn trafod sut y gall Ymddiriedolaeth Prawf Cymru sicrhau y gall darparwyr o’r sector gwirfoddol a chymunedol fod yn bartneriaid cyfartal wrth gyflenwi’r dull integredig hwn.

4. Buddion cymunedol Lisa Thomas-Lewis, Gwerth Cymru

Mae’r sector cyhoeddus yng Nghymru yn prynu nifer helaeth o nwyddau a gwasanaethau pob blwyddyn, ac mae ganddo’r potensial i ychwanegu gwerth sylweddol drwy ei weithgareddau caffael. Mae Gwerth Cymru wedi bod wrthi’n annog caffaelwyr i ystyried gwerth cymdeithasol, amgylcheddol a’r gwerth economaidd drwy gynnwys Buddion Cymunedol yn eu prosesau caffael. Bydd y gweithdy hwn yn egluro beth a olygir gan Fuddion Cymunedol, y dulliau gwahanol y gallai prynwyr ei defnyddio i sicrhau y caiff gwerth cymdeithasol ei ychwanegu at eu gweithgareddau caffael, a’r oblygiadau ar gyfer cyflenwyr y trydydd sector.

5. Newid ymddygiad Claire Sain-ley-Berry, Amgylchedd Cymru

Un o’r problemau cyffredin sy’n wynebu mudiadau cyflenwi gwasanaethau yw sut i newid ymddygiad eu defnyddwyr gwasanaethau. Sut rydych yn nodi’r rhwystrau sy’n atal pobl rhag newid eu harferion? A sut rydych yn ymgysylltu â phobl a helpu eu symud o fod yn ymwybodol i fod yn weithredol?

Nod y cynllun Grant Cefnogi Byw’n Gynaliadwy yw helpu mudiadau i edrych ar rai o’r problemau hyn a datblygu prosiectau newid ymddygiad sy’n seiliedig ar dystiolaeth. Bydd y cynllun grant yn cefnogi cwmpasu ac ymchwil cychwynnol; cynnal peilot o syniadau am brosiectau; a chyflwyno prosiectau sydd wedi llwyddo i newid dewisiadau pobl o ran ffordd o fyw gan arwain ar naill ai leihad mewn allyriadau carbon nwyon ty gwydr neu gynnydd mewn gallu cymunedol i wrthsefyll effeithiau newid yn yr hinsawdd. Ceir mwy o fanylion am y cynllun a sut i wneud cais yn y gweithdy.

Gweithdai A (1 – 5)

Hugh James yw un o’r 100 prif gwmni cyfreithiol yn y DU ac mae’n parhau i ffynnu fel y cwmni cyfreithiol mwyaf yng Nghymru. Mae’n darparu ystod gynhwysfawr o wasanaethau cyfreithiol ledled y DU o swyddfeydd yng Nghaerdydd a Llundain i gleientiaid o fudiadau blaenllaw’r sector preifat, y sector cyhoeddus a’r trydydd sector ac unigolion preifat.

Page 8: Wales Third Sector Public Service Delivery Conference

6. Datblygu consortiwm Alan Cripps, Neadon Consulting

Mae llawer o gyrff cyhoeddus ledled Cymru a’r DU yn argymell bod cyflenwyr yn gweithio mewn consortia er mwyn tendro am gontractau gwasanaeth cyhoeddus. Ond gall datblygu tendr gyda phartneriaid arwain at nifer o heriau technegol a gweithredol. Bydd y gweithdy hwn yn cynnig arweiniad am nifer o fodelau o gyd-dendro, edrych ar sut i adeiladu cydberthnasau gwaith da ar yr un pryd â datblygu model cyflenwi gwasanaethau cydlynol. Mae gan Alan Cripps brofiad helaeth o gefnogi cydweithio, yn cynnwys datblygu a chyflenwi rhaglen Gydweithredol HACT, a ddatblygodd amryw o ffyrdd y gallai darparwyr Cefnogi Pobl weld bwlch yn y farchnad ar gyfer cyd-dendro.

7. Ffyrdd newydd o ariannu gwasanaethau Mike Walsh, Y Gronfa Loteri Fawr

Mae toriadau mewn gwariant cyhoeddus yn debygol o gyfyngu ar y cyfleoedd ar gyfer mudiadau trydydd sector i ariannu ymyriadau ataliol a all gynnig arbedion hirdymor yn ogystal â chanlyniadau cymdeithasol gwell ar gyfer unigolion a chymunedau. Mae mudiadau o bob sector felly’n chwilio am ffynonellau newydd o ariannu ymyriadau ataliol, gan gynnwys buddsoddiadau gan ffynonellau nad ydynt yn dod o’r llywodraeth. Mae Bondiau Effaith Gymdeithasol (SIBs) yn cynnig modd o ddenu buddsoddiad preifat mewn modelu newydd i gyflenwi gwasanaethau cyhoeddus lle bo disgwyliadau am arbedion ariannol yn yr hirdymor. Mae SIB yn cynnwys darparwyr gwasanaethau yn cael eu comisiynu gan fudiad statudol i ddarparu canlyniadau cymdeithasol o dan gontract ‘taliad drwy ganlyniadau’. Caiff yr ymyriad ei ariannu drwy SIB gan fuddsoddwyr preifat, sy’n cael elw ar eu buddsoddiad os caiff canlyniadau cymdeithasol gwell - ac arbedion i’r pwrs cyhoeddus o ganlyniad – eu cyflawni.

Bydd y gweithdy hwn yn trafod y potensial ar gyfer SIBau yng Nghymru, ac edrych ar y goblygiadau ar gyfer darparwyr gwasanaethau yn y trydydd sector o dan gontractau a ariennir gan SIB.

8. Pa mor dda rydych chi’n adnabod eich cyllidwyr? Cyllid Cynaliadwy Cymru, WCVA a Margaret McLaughlin, Gweithredu Gwirfoddol Merthyr Tudful a Interlink

Mae’r gweithdy hwn yn cynnig golwg ar wella cyfathrebu a meithrin cydberthnasu effeithiol a chynaliadwy gyda chyllidwyr y sector cyhoeddus. Bydd yn trafod dulliau ymgysylltu a sut i ddylanwadu ar y broses o wneud penderfyniadau. Gan dynnu ar brofiadau o ddatblygu Cod Ymarfer ar gyfer comisiynu ym Merthyr Tudful a Rhondda Cynon Taf, bydd hefyd yn edrych ar yr egwyddorion a’r broses o weithio gyda chomisiynwyr.

9. Asesu unedig Steve Vaughan, Llywodraeth Cynulliad Cymru

Roedd yn ymrwymiad yn Bywydau Bodlon, Cymunedau Cefnogol, y strategaeth ar gyfer gwasanaethau cymdeithasol yng Nghymru dros y degawd nesaf, i greu system asesu cyffredin symlach a fyddai’n tynnu ar yr agweddau gorau ar y broses asesu unedig bresennol. Bydd Steve Vaughan, o Gyfarwyddiaeth Iechyd a Gwasanaethau Cymdeithasol Llywodraeth Cynulliad Cymru yn egluro’r cynlluniau ar gyfer yr asesu unedig, sut y bydd yn arwain at safoni prosesau rhwng iechyd a gofal cymdeithasol, ac yn ystyried y goblygiadau ar gyfer cyflenwyr y trydydd sector.

10. Egwyddorion ar waith Cyfranogaeth Cymru

Yn ddiweddar, mae Egwyddorion Cenedlaethol ar gyfer Ymgysylltu’r Cyhoedd wedi cael eu datblygu a’u dosbarthu i bob mudiad sector cyhoeddus yng Nghymru. Nod yr egwyddorion hyn yw annog safon da, gweithgarwch ymgysylltu cyson gyda defnyddwyr gwasanaethau a’r cyhoedd gan y rheini sy’n cyflenwi gwasanaethau. Bydd y gweithdy hwn yn galluogi cyfranogwyr i ymgyfarwyddo’r egwyddorion i geisio unrhyw arweiniad ac eglurhad sydd eu hangen a dysgu’r ffordd orau o roi’r egwyddorion hyn ar waith. Os ydych yn ymwneud’r broses o ddylunio a chyflenwi gwasanaethau cyhoeddus yna bydd yr egwyddorion hyn a’r broses o’u rhoi ar waith yn bwysig i chi.

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Dyddiadau ar gyfer eich dyddiadur:

Cynhadledd Gwirfoddoli WCVA 14 Medi 2011

Cynhadledd Cyllido trydydd sector Cymru 11 Hydref 2011

Cynhadledd Ymddiriedolwyr WCVA 26 Hydref 2011

Cynhadledd Flynyddol WCVA 24 Tachwedd 2011