2. Essex: delivering the best quality of life
Essex County
• 1.4 million residents
• 368,000 hectares
• 596,500 homes
• 60,000 businesses
• 4,642 miles of road
• £20 billion local economy
Essex County Council:
• £2.13 billion gross budget – but shrinking rapidly
• 48,000 employees (34,000 in schools)
• 210,000 pupils across 571 state and 52 private schools
• Partners include 5 PCTs, 12 district and borough councils, two
unitary authorities, 270 parish councils
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3. The Essex economy – some key issues
Enterprise
• Births of new enterprises has slowed down – from c6,900 new enterprises created in 2007 to
5,900 created in 2010
• Enterprise failures have increased – c5,900 ended in 2008; nearly 7,000 died in 2009 and
2010
• Total number of enterprises fallen from around 59,000 to below 58,000
Education
• Behind national average at GCSE, Early Years and Adult Skills levels 2, 3 and 4
• Boys falling behind girls
• A less skilled workforce - higher skills levels lower than national average
Earnings
• Resident population earnings higher in 2011 than 2009; working population earnings slightly
lower in 2011 than 2009 (but did recover 2010-11)
• Working population average earnings (c£21k pa) lower than resident population average
earnings (c£24k pa)
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4. Essex Integrated County Strategy:
Key components of the strategy for growth
Employability
& skills
Enterprise
Places
& innovation
Infrastructure
& utilities
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5. Objectives
• To help Essex businesses to be more productive, innovate and grow and create jobs for local people
by securing the infrastructure and environment that they need to attract investment and unlock
sustainable growth opportunities.
• To help Essex businesses to compete and trade internationally, thereby expanding the county’s
international connections and market opportunities.
• To help individuals to prepare for and access work opportunities and better paid jobs through an
education and skills offer that meets the needs of businesses.
• To improve the life chances of people in our most deprived areas by recognising and investing in
social capital.
• To support and create vibrant communities, helping to ensure that citizens can access jobs and
public services in an efficient and sustainable way.
6. IS Strategy for Essex County Council
End User Computing
Includes data, voice, video & conferencing
Reduced cost per user per annum for device, file storage, security, connectivity & support
Information Governance Convergence via the
Supports Freedom of Information Act, Data Protection Act, Next Generation Network
Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act & compliance e.g. Munro Review of Child Protection and PSN
Collaboration
Social Networking, SharePoint, Collaboration, Etc.
IT Skills & Capacity
Professionalism, Capacity & Capability
Customer Centric Services
Business Applications, Cloud Services,
Business Intelligence, Application Programming Interfaces
7. Information
BI and GIS are the growth areas for public sector ICT over the next few years:
• Politicians need much more detailed, dynamic information to make harder decisions about
deploying fewer resources
• Organisations need to be able to better manage diminishing resources around
workforce, property and delivery
• The public are already becoming very demanding about knowing where the money is going
• Our information is still spread all over the place
So, politicians, business and the public all want it and we can deliver it as a key enabler for helping to
better manage resources and change as well as better informing our propulations
9. ICT Delivery in public services
ICT Shared service initiatives have been focussed on organisations, not services. This is changing:
• Other shared services are already quite mature in HR and a number of front line operations
• ICT as a service now growing in library services, elements of core social care and BI
• There is a renewed interest in education ICT support and schools broadband is holding up well
• Converged networks looking really good and is unlocking wider opportunities on shared
accommodation and mobility
So, a different slant on ICT as a shared service and a real opportunity to grow beyond local
government into new markets. We can help with skills growth too
10. Economic Growth
Corporate value add:
• Converged networks combined with infrastructure investment offers huge potential now and
for the future, with communications infrastructure playing into local planning frameworks
• Our combined buying power and reach based on location will help us unlock hard to reach
areas. We don’t just operate in the Broadband UK silo
• Job creation and skills development, the Council ICT function and apprenticeships, partnering
and buying from local technology SMEs
• Inward investment opportunities by bringing our knowledge to the economic development table
So, we should be in there with the Adult learning, Further Education and Higher Education
communities to help on skills and looking beyond our internal customer base to exploit our assets
11. Digital divide and the Voluntary Sector
We can use our assets and commercial links to support both:
• Community computer schemes, re-using spent ICT end user devices for charities to reach the
digitally excluded, working with not for profits and large ICT commercial outfits through social
capital
• Unlocking our infrastructure and estates (physical and technology) for controlled use by third
sector. PSN based converged networks should enable that provided we don’t all start wiring in
IL3 infrastructure!
• Our knowledge and skills to help the voluntary sector?
• Collaboration environments to help community groups and low cost/no cost wifi
Local government is a long standing supporter of voluntary sector through grants. As they reduce we
can replace some of that with services in kind.
12. ICT at the heart of community and economic growth
• Excellent public access to services beyond just web, libraries of the future as gateways to
facilitated service provision? Hubs? Collaboration space?
• Improving basic access – training, equipment, bandwidth, location
• Partners – voluntary sector play a major role in all this, technology must enable joint working –
collaborative solutions with communities
• Transparency – data stores available to all and information governance that spans all service
delivery partners and information owners (citizens)
• Business Intelligence that helps answer complex and cross service questions on delivery
• People able to operate across organisations through role based access control in a virtual end user
computing world
• Tech infrastructure as an integral part of local development planning
• No longer just about local government, it’s about public service delivery
• Skills and education, right skills for a future workforce