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The Role of Local Government in Sport and Recreation Lee Preston Sport and Leisure Lead Manchester City Council

The Role of Local Government in Sport

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Page 1: The Role of Local Government in Sport

The Role of Local Government in Sport and Recreation

Lee PrestonSport and Leisure LeadManchester City Council

Page 2: The Role of Local Government in Sport

Contents

1. Our Journey

2. Our Role

3. Our Landscape

4. Our Manchester

5. Our Future

Page 3: The Role of Local Government in Sport

1. Our Journey

Why Sport and Recreation?

• Regeneration• Economic Growth• Social Fabric Transformation• Global Brand Position • From provider to enabler• For well being and for individual, community and

economic development

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Page 5: The Role of Local Government in Sport
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• Insert picture of today

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2. Our Role• Strong civic leadership.• Clear vision and strategy.• Represent all resident needs.• Create the conditions for

success.• Constitutional obligations. • Statutory responsibilities.• To “do more with less”.• To innovate and drive change.

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2. Our Role - Community Provision (without collaborative intervention)

• Parks and Schools in communities with inconsistent provision, some activated and some not

• Some Leisure Centres are less accessible in terms of travel time

Dr William Bird’s research acknowledges that without a varied, targeted and localised offer, physical activity will often become isolated.

Leisure Centre’s

Schools

Parks

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2. Our Role - Community Provision (Collaborative SPA / Health intervention)

• Provision needs to be very local

• The offer needs to be broad, insight led and meet the needs of all residents

• In a variety of different settings: Sport Centres, Parks, Church halls and community centres

The research highlights the importance of activating the whole community:

Sports HallsSports Club

Swimming Pool

Park

Church Hall

Community Centre

Schools

Youth Centre

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3. Our Landscape – Current Position

• LA budget and workforce has halved in 5 years.

• Circa £100m capital investment in LA sport and recreation facilities.

• Contracting and Commissioning model for elite and community sport and leisure facilities (Trust / GLL / Third Sector).

• A provider led approach to delivery.

• Lack of co-commissioning at any level.

• Rapidly growing population – schools, homes, businesses investment programme.

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3. Our Landscape - Impact

• 40.3 % of adults (14+) participate once a week

• 70.3% of all adults want to do more sport or PA

• 29.2% of adults doing less than 30mins per week.

40.3% of 10 / 11 yr olds are overweight or obese

Lower life expectancy than national averages

£10m – Annual Health costs of Physical Inactivity

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3. Our Landscape - Transformational Investment

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3. Our Landscape - Key Sector Messages

• This is not business as usual - Demonstrate the difference

• Place based working is key.

• A knowledgeable, flexible and adaptable workforce

• Transformation requires a shift in the paradigm:

• from responding to crises, to a radical upgrade in population health

• Commissioning collaboratively to achieve outcomes

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3. Our Landscape - Messages for the sector

• Perceived as at the margins.

• Not fully getting it.

• Capability and capacity but very fragmented.

• Absence of narrative and robust evidence of business case.

• Business model is contradictory to the Business case.

• Understanding transformational?

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3. Our Landscape – Social Value of Sport• Wealth of research

• Crime reduction and Community Safety• Education and Lifelong Learning• Social Capacity and Cohesion

• National - DCMS - Culture and Sport Evidence (CASE) Programme:

• YP’s participation in sport = 8% increase in numeracy scores than non participants.

• ROI for “At risk” YP estimated at £7.35 of social benefit for every £1 spent.

• Local – Manchester

• SROI - £37m per annum of social benefit (2013 study)• “Moves tool” – MCC Active Lifestyles programme - £23 : £1• Economic Value - £173.2m per annum (£44m Volunteering)

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4. “Our Manchester”• . Our vision is for Manchester to be in the top flight of

world-class cities by 2025, when the city will:

• Have a competitive, dynamic and sustainable economy.

• Possess highly skilled, enterprising and industrious people

• Be connected, internationally and with the UK

• Play its full part in limiting the impact of climate change

• Be a place where residents feel safe, can aspire, succeed and live well.

• Be clean, attractive, culturally rich, outward looking and welcoming

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4. “Our Manchester”To deliver the vision for “Our Manchester” a RADICAL NEW APPROACH is

required, the principles for which include:

• A shift of power to people• A new relationship between residents and council• A new consistent policy framework for growth and reform• A behaviour – strength based model of reform• An asset based approach• Permission to work imaginatively• Be Positive - take pride• Be Courageous - be open to do things differently• Be Accountable - be responsible for making things happen

"How we do things is as important as what we do"

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4. “Our Manchester”Asset Based Thinking:

• Strength based.

• What can I do, what can you do.

• We’re all in this together.

• People have the answers.

• People can control their lives and made decisions.

• How can we create community spirit.

Deficit Based Thinking:

• Problem orientated.

• How to fix the problem.

• Us verses them.

• Problems are embedded.

• Do things to people.

• People are the problem.

• People can’t be trusted to be in control / make decisions.

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5. “Our Manchester” - ExamplesFostering Great Citizenship

• Broadway Community Development Group

• We Love Withington Baths

• Community Libraries in partnership with RSL’s

• Park Run

• Manchester Volunteer Sports Bureau

• Sporting Edge

• Didsbury Sports Ground

• Levi Massive Facebook page

This is not a provider led one size fits all operating model.

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5. Our Future - Emerging opportunities• Early Years (Note: not in scope with Sport England)

• Work and Health

• Learning difficulties

• Care pathways and long term conditions

• Ageing Well – healthy ageing and lifestyles

• Workforce – our own and others

• Other lifecourse priorities

• Place based work (Locality Plans / Integrated wellness offer)

• Social movement

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5. Our Future – Next Steps

• Progress, Challenges and Opportunities ahead.

• Build a new evidence base for the sector.

• Sector repositioning: from the margins to the core as a preventative strategy to improve health outcomes.

• Maximise mass market engagement for SPA across the life course.

• More collaboration, be transformational, embed cross boundary, cross sector co-commissioning in our approach.

• We need to move at scale and at pace.

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