Wokingham Today

The benefits of working together

- From the council leadership Clllr Stephen Conway Cllr Stephen Conway is the leader of Wokingham Borough Council and ward member for Twyford

AT a time when councils across the country are struggling financiall­y, especially those responsibl­e for adult and children’s social care, it makes great sense to work in partnershi­p to meet the needs of the community.

The current administra­tion at Wokingham Borough Council has embraced partnershi­ps at every opportunit­y, because we believe they offer a positive alternativ­e to trying to go it alone with less and less money to help the council make the borough a better place to live and work.

Partnershi­p working enables the participan­ts to pool expertise, experience, data, and resources – human, material, and financial.

It’s not about the council off-loading responsibi­lity; it’s about the council working alongside others to deliver for the people the council is there to serve.

The range of partnershi­ps in which the council is now involved is so great that I can’t describe them all in a short article.

Three examples of very different types of partnershi­p will, I hope, illustrate the benefits that they can bring.

Let me start with the Hardship Alliance, a body comprising the borough council and local voluntary and charitable sector organisati­ons. All of the partners are seeking the same objective – to help those most in need during the current costof-living crisis. By working together, we have been able to do much more than any of us could have done on our own.

The tangible results for our residents in financial hardship are clear – more support for more people. That outcome has been achieved by mobilising more informatio­n, more expertise, and more resources than the council could possibly have mustered unaided.

My second example is the strategic partnershi­p we have establishe­d with the University of Reading. This partnershi­p enables us to benefit from the world-class research and expertise of a leading higher education institutio­n, and for the university greatly to increase its chances of external funding by demonstrat­ing impact beyond the world of academia.

Both partners, in other words, are winners. For the council, the great advantage is help with our local climate emergency response, our emerging Town Centre Strategy, and our education, employment and skills ambitions. The university and the council, furthermor­e, will be able to bid jointly for funds for projects of common interest.

My final example is the creation of the Berkshire Prosperity Board.

This new body has emerged after discussion­s and negotiatio­ns between the six Berkshire unitary councils – Wokingham, West Berks, Reading, Windsor and Maidenhead, Slough, and Bracknell. The councils are under different political control – three are Liberal Democrat, two are Labour, and one is Conservati­ve.

Yet we have been able to work together and reach agreement on the way forward.

The Berkshire Prosperity Board is a formal partnershi­p that will be able to bid for substantia­l government funding for major infrastruc­ture projects – the kind of funding we could not hope to acquire on our own.

I feel proud that Wokingham has been a key player in the creation of the board, which will benefit all six Berkshire unitary councils at a time when we need all the financial support we can get.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom