email to a friend

Less Paperwork for Third Sector Service Delivery Partners

New guidance will save charities and other voluntary & community organisations time & money by reducing the paperwork they are currently required to collect when providing public sector-commissioned services.

 

The practical guidance, published by the National Audit Office (NAO) along with the Office of the Third Sector (OTS) in the Cabinet Office and HM Treasury, will help government cut paperwork, while still enabling it to monitor the £12bn it gives to charities and other voluntary & community organisations each year. 

 

OTS has also unveiled principles for the monitoring of funding for the third sector.

 

Charities that receive public funding have to account to government funders for how they have spent this money and should show the impact they have achieved with it.  The cost of producing this information, however, must be proportionate to the risks & benefits involved. 

 

Cutting unnecessary red tape can free up time and money that would be better spent focusing on the key services charities and others provide.  The term for achieving this balance and avoiding poor practice is intelligent monitoring’.

 

The NAO guidance, Intelligent Monitoring, provides practical, step-by-step help for government funders.

 

Alongside this, the OTS has launched its Principles of proportionate monitoring and reporting.

 

The aim of the principles & guidance is to lessen the unnecessary burden of monitoring on charities, social enterprises & voluntary organisations and help them and departments gain better value from it. 

 

The OTS’ principles commit Government departments to understanding the cost of reporting for third sector organisations and to working closely with them when establishing monitoring requirements. 

 

The principles will apply to all new funding streams.

 

Rob Prideaux, director of Third Sector Value for Money studies at the NAO, said:

"Government departments have a responsibility to make sure that public money is being spent properly.

 

However, when monitoring goes from being a safeguard to a hindrance to those delivering services, often to the most disadvantaged in our society, it no longer provides value for money. 

 

The aim of this practical guidance, which supports OTS’s new principles on monitoring, is to help Government, taxpayers, the third sector and service users to benefit from better and more reasonable monitoring of expenditure”.

 

Angela Smith, Minister for the Third Sector, said:

"Across public services, we are sweeping aside the barriers that hold back the third sector’s potential to play a central role in modern public services that respond to the needs of individuals.

 

The new monitoring principles and guidance will save charities, voluntary groups and social enterprises time and money that can be spent on doing more good for those who need support. 

 

Charities, voluntary groups and social enterprises have particular strengths like reaching out to the most disadvantaged people, taking risks and finding new innovative ways of doing things.

 

This announcement is one step in a programme of reform to bring the third sector’s strengths into public services."

 

 

Further information

Full guidance - Intelligent Monitoring

 

Office of the Third Sector (OTS) - Principles of Proportionate Monitoring

 

Mutual Action, Common Purpose: Empowering the Third Sector

 

Partnership in public services action plan: Two years on

 

Working in a consortium: A guide for third sector organisations involved in public service delivery

 

 

Related articles

Public Funding of Large National Charities

 

Third Sector to Transform Public Services

 

Less Red Tape for Small Charities

 

Local Area Agreements and the Third Sector: Public Service Delivery

 

Third Sector to get 2,000 Local Commissioners

 

NAO reviews Full Cost Recovery

 

A New Legal Form for Charities



To find a business you can trust, click on the related categories below: