º£½ÇÊÓÆµ

Oops.

Our website is temporarily unavailable in your location.

We are working hard to get it back online.

PRIVACY
Opinionopinion

Birmingham Labour group must clamour for change or get behind Sir Albert Bore

Few seem to grasp seriousness of Improvement Panel's damning review of Birmingham City Council

Sir Albert Bore

Birmingham City Council had a pretty bleak time of it last year with Government commissioners sent in to run key departments following the and the before finally suffering the ultimate indignity of .

This, of course, laid all the institutional frailties bare – the council was found to be high-handed in its relations with others, resistant to change, had a short-term attitude to finances and more worried about internal politics than driving the city forward.

At the time or he was going to take it over wholesale.

But after such a dismal time the tables seemed set to turn – the Government appointed Independent Improvement Panel i – not least his old friend, Leeds council leader Keith Wakefield.

And then the combative Mr Pickles was replaced with Greg Clark who is more interested in big cities and their potential than his predecessor.

Sir Albert even tried to spin Kerslake as a great opportunity to instigate the sweeping changes he had been saying it needs since he first used the phrase ‘the end of local government as we know it’.

He has several times tried to change the way the council works through constitutional rewrites, new budget setting processes and departmental overhauls but the .

And any thought that the tables had turned were quickly dismissed this week when the .