The role of BNDfC Partnership

The 5 main areas of activity in the Strategy contain over 20 actions to be done. The Burngreave partnership is not in charge of them all and will not necessarily pay for or grant money towards their costs.

The actions are listed in the table which follows and the role of the partnership is shown in the columns.

Actions

Passive (Mainstream)

Active Promotion

Proactive Animation

Change Agent

Lead Initiator

Access to Employment Stepping Stones

Engaging

Enhanced IAG

Neighbourhood Learning

Job Search

Job Opportunities & Matching

Aftercare

Workforce Development:

Individuals

Employers

Business Boost:

Business Networks

Mediating

In-reach Support

30-49 Start Ups

Promotion

Incubation

Physical Regeneration:

Spital Hill

Carlisle Street Area

Investment Fund

Promotion

Complementary:

Alert Projects

Projects into Enterprises

NDfC Jobs

Other Themes' Outputs

Public Sector Capturing

Coalition

Underpinning:

ED Learning

Research Observatory

°

°

Project Skills

°

°

°

To explain each of these roles:

  • being passive and allowing mainstream organisations to get on with their work in Burngreave is a possible partnership role. But it would not be good enough so there are no markers in this column;

  • actively promoting the Strategy is where the partnership encourages other organisations, who run services like advice to learners or supporting businesses, to pay proper and sufficient attention to Burngreave;

  • proactive animation means the partnership persuades organisations running services to pay more attention to specific Burngreave issues and to other organisations in the area rather than doing exactly the same as they do everywhere else;

  • being a change agent would be where the partnership exerts much more influence as a champion for Burngreave, a challenger for changes and where New Deal for Communities money may buy extra levels of services that are not already paid for by other means;

  • taking the lead and initiating projects is where the partnership directs new developments and initiatives to tackle unmet needs or to seize new opportunities. Here the partnership may take on and run a project itself or may find and choose an organisation with whom to work together.

At the bottom of the table is a section headed ‘underpinning’ – this is where the partnership helps spread ideas and good practice on economic development, supports local research and helps develop local skills to run economic development projects.

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This document was last modified by Jamie Marriott on 2005-03-15 16:30:33.