Partners IN Salford

Salford Agreement

Our new local area agreement (LAA) - the Salford Agreement - has now been completed and has received ministerial sign off.

The LAA will boost the city's public services and in turn help local people to achieve their ambitions. It will provide the focus for the partnership over the next three years.

Download the final Salford Agreement 2008-2011

What is the Salford Agreement?

The new local area agreement between Salford and central government sets challenging targets to be achieved between now and 2011. This second LAA is significantly different to the first Salford Agreement.

With the involvement of all strategic partners, we have chosen 23 priority issues for the city which will be at the centre of our business. These include concerns like the level of worklessness and anti-social behaviour, and opportunities like mediacity:uk. Success on issues like these will make a major difference to people's lives.

The improvement that we have committed to achieve for these 23 priority issues will involve a huge change in the way we work. We know that doing what we have always done will not be sufficient.

LAA launch event

The LAA was launched on the 12 September at the Digital World Centre and the event speakers were:

Please use the link at the bottom of the page to view the questions and answers raised from the event

LAA delivery model

Extensive work has been undertaken by partners to create the LAA delivery model (please see the two attachements below).

Our partnership priorities

Our chosen priorities are:

Smoking Obesity
Alcohol  Teenage pregnancy 
Older people  Safeguarding vulnerable adults 
Fear of crime  Anti-social behaviour 
Higher education  Parenting 
Providing affordable homes  Raising educational attainment 
Reducing the number of looked after children  Community cohesion 
Community engagement and empowerment  Child poverty 
Worklessness  Basic skills 
Developing mediacity:uk  Growing and developing business 
Climate change  Environmental attractiveness 
Ensure services and transport developments are coordinated   

Measuring success

For each priority, we have agreed one or more indicators - these are how we will measure our improvement.

We have agreed 35 indicators from the government's national indicator set (a list of 198 indicators which reflect the improvements that the government sees as a priority nationally) for our LAA.

These 35 indicators and the targets that go with them in the LAA are described as designated and government will monitor our progress towards them. Because we negotiated these with Government Office and they come from the national indicator set, we know that Salford is contributing towards achieving national priorities.

The remaining 32 indicators in our agreement are described as supporting. Some are from the national indicator set while others have been devised locally. The supporting indicators are just as critical as the designated ones, but will only be monitored locally.

The agreement also contains 16 statutory early years and education indicators.

Targets for each indicator for the three year duration of the agreement have been negotiated and local partners have signed up to achieving them.

Read the current list of indicators and targets. (Please note that some changes may still be made. The final version will be posted here when it's signed off.

Named partners

The Salford Agreement names certain partners for each target - either as a lead partner or an organisation that will make

a definite contribution to that target. These partners include:

Salford City Council Salford Primary Care Trust
Greater Manchester Police  Central Salford Urban Regeneration Company 
Jobcentre Plus  Learning and Skills Council 
Northwest Development Agency  Greater Manchester Fire and Rescue Service 
Greater Manchester Chamber of Commerce  Salford's colleges 
University of Salford  Salford Council for Voluntary Services 
MIDAS  Greater Manchester West Mental Health Foundation Trust 
Probation Service   

Other partners may not be specifically named in the agreement, but, as this is the statement of our city's priorities for the next three years, will be asked to contribute where they can.

Plans for delivering the LAA will be drawn up and these will give more details of how different partners can contribute.

In some cases the targets will be broken down further, so we might, for example set a target for reducing smoking in a certain part of the city or amongst target groups of people. Elected members, community committees and neighbourhood structures and communities of identity will have an important role to play in making these aims happen.

What about concerns and opportunities that aren't in the LAA?

It's important that we deliver on all of the city's objectives in the current community plan, which is being updated to become the sustainable community strategy. The LAA priorities were chosen because they are issues where we need to make a significant improvement and where partnership working could make a real difference over the next three years.

Remaining objectives will continue to be addressed by the city's thematic partnerships and individual organisations.

Download more information

Partners IN Salford, Salford Opportunities Centre, 2 Paddington Close, Pendleton, Salford M6 5PL   Telephone 0161-603 6800    partnersinsalford@salford.gov.uk