Social Capital and Community Capacity Building18th April 2012 – ADASS Spring Seminar
Workshop D 12.05pm and 2.15pm
IntroductionAndrea Pope Smith- ADASS WM Branch Chair
• Objectives for the day- Show practical examples of how community capacity is developing in the light of both Think Local Act Personal and the Localism Act- Enable a short group discussion about barriers and successes to
stimulating community capacity
• Housekeeping- Mobiles to silent please - No scheduled fire alarm
The Role of Social Capital in Supporting Transformation
George Julian- Director RIPFA
‘Care must again be about reinforcing personal and community resilience, reciprocity and responsibility, to prevent and postpone dependency and promote greater independence and choice’ (DH, 2010)
Clear evidence for two types of outcomes•Effectiveness: improvement of wellbeing•Cost-effectiveness: from given resources, achieve better outcomes for service users, carers and those at risk of needing support
Building community capacity is effective and cost-effective
•Individual level (e.g. trust, independence, participation, reduced isolation)•Community/societal level (e.g. neighbourhood improvements, inclusion, finding employment)
Evidence: Boyle 2005, Bruce et al 2011, Eversole 2010, Fisher et al 2011, McCabe 2010, Knapp et al 2012,
Milton et al 2011, Sherrieb et al 2010
Costs and economic consequences of time banks per person per year(Knapp et al, 2012)
Calculation Mean value
Cost of intervention See table 1 £607 (£312-£902)
Economic consequences
Employment 0.045*£11,132 £501 Reduced benefit claims 0.045*£80*52 £187 Volunteering Value of services received
0.09 (midpoint DCLG citizenship survey 0.06-0.12) *£5.8*12.5hrs/months*12 29hrs*£17.5
£78 £508
Net benefit (government) £667
Quality of l ife improvements (38/365)*(1-0.69)*£20,000 £645
Net economic value £1,312
Calculation Mean value (range)
Cost of intervention Lowest value: 12hrs*£4.8=£58 Highest value: 12hrs*£10=£120
-£90 (£58-£120)
Economic consequences Reduction in health services costs (and home helps)
2.62*£14.5 +£38
Net (cashable) benefit -£52
Quality of l ife improvements (reduction in depressive symptoms 3-12 months)
Lowest value: (38/365days)*(1-0.69)* £20,000* 0.25=£162 Highest value: (38/365days)*(1-0.69)*£20,000=£645
+£404 (£162-645)
Net economic value +£424
Return on investment 0.58-4.71
Costs and economic consequences of befriending per person per year(Knapp et al, 2012)
Case Study 1: Encouraging Community Enterprise, Innovation & Active Citizenship
Mick Ward- Head of Commissioning Leeds City Council
• Enterprise; Volunteering, Corporate Social Responsibility and Third Sector models
• Ideas that Change Lives• NNS ‘Combining Personalisation with
Community Engagement’ project
Better Lives Through….Enterprise• Volunteering
– Social Capital– Recognition and Reward– It’s Good For You!
• Corporate Social Responsibility– Long Term Relationships– Shared Vision and Values– Investment, Not a Gift
Better Lives Through….. Enterprise• Encouraging a Range of Social Enterprise
Models– Co-Operatives– User Led Organisations– Community Interest Companies– Micro Enterprises
Better Lives Through….Enterprise• Ideas that Change Lives - Investment Fund and
Business Support for Social Enterprises– CASA– Get Cooking– Experience Community– Careforce– Beat It Music
Better Lives Through….Enterprise• Combining Personalisation with Community
Engagement– Further Develop the Neighbourhood Networks in Leeds– Joint Assessment in the Community– A ‘New Offer’ to meet needs identified; local universal
services, expanded provision by the NN’s, brokering care services
– Savings to be shared between ASC and the community– Resources and control move to the community
Case Study 2: Encouraging Providers to Change
Paul Johnston- Impact Change Solutions & Matt Bowsher ADASS West Midlands
Shaping the Market = Mobilising Community Capital
Robust Intelligence
Robust Intelligence
Productive Relationships
Productive Relationships
Accessible ProvidersAccessible Providers
Provider StimulusProvider Stimulus
Active Maintenance
Active Maintenance
• New relationship with Providers: Warwickshire’s Market Facilitation Team
• Support for Peers: Staffordshire’s Mentoring Service
• Improving Quality within Nursing & Residential Care: Walsall’s Quality Assurance Team
Strategy into Practice
A New RelationshipWarwickshire’s Market Facilitation Team• New function within Strategic Commissioning• Focus on ‘developing the market’• Proactive engagement with providers• Gathering & sharing intelligence & priorities• Collaborative working in a competitive environment• Addressing shared challenges and co-designing
solutions
The Power of PeersStaffordshire’s Mentoring Service• 2010 pilot leading to contract from April 2011 (Age UK South Staffs)• 40 hours per month mentoring support for up to 12 CVS organisations at
any one time• Mentoring aims to help organisations to:
– develop their business management skills; – develop their capacity to deliver services; – develop their services to support the Council’s Personalisation Agenda; – assist to create an environment for a thriving third sector.
• £10k pilot costs, £30k pa contract for 2 years• Improved viability, access to external funding, diversification
Incentivising Quality: Walsall• Joint Quality Board• Proactive resident engagement• LA Quality Assurance Team • Building relationships with sector• Range of financial incentives (CHQIIS)• Quality Requirements and Incentives reflect improvement
priorities• Changes to contract monitoring arrangements
Q+ A SessionQuestions for the panel & please highlight successes and challenges in building community capital locally
Additional Resources• http://www.ripfa.co.uk/user-led-organisations
(RIPFA on building social capital) • http://www.marketshaping.co.uk/mobilising-community-capital
(Impact Change Solutions – strategy and tools to support market shaping)• http://wwwjipwestmidlands.blogspot.com
(ADASS West Midlands ebulletin)
Additional Queries to Matt Bowsher (M) 07500 944 766(E) [email protected]
Closing Remarks Andrea Pope Smith- ADASS WM Branch Chair
• Key points arising• Slides and supporting resources available via
ADASS• Thanks for participating