BID: Greenwich Cooperative Care Compact and Workers Network
- March 2025
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Looking at Post-16 transition across LA boundaries to reduce the size of NEET cohort and better target resources – focuses on utilising existing research to support local interventions and linking to the impact of long-term socio-economic factors affecting households across the city region influencing post-16 destination choices, particularly those most affected by poverty, worklessness and low level educational qualification attainment. Including looking at data sharing as one of the issues to address, with the intention of aiding a quicker understanding or post-16 destinations, reducing the NEET cohort quicker and ensuring an increasingly stretched resource is best served in areas of need.
We see this is an area of work where many Cooperative Councils will have similar challenges – and where developing an ecosystem of good practice can provide innovative approaches to help maximise the effectiveness of this work – leading to better outcomes for both young people and councils delivering services.
1. Peer-learning sessions between different parts of the country, through at least 2 study visits. We have brought in 2 other “core cities” Birmingham and Liverpool to the project and will aim to use these links to broaden the knowledge base on the project.
2. GM workshops to knowledge share on cross-border activity. GMCA and the 3 GM councils will develop an in-depth model for how to knowledge share.
3. Developing a digital toolkit and approach to knowledge sharing to help develop an eco-system of best practice and collaboration. The approach to the knowledge base will be developed out of the workshops, and in particular, to ensure that the use of the toolkit can be valuable to those council’s working in this area. We will look at how we sustain this work going forward.
Adrian Slatcher
Principal Policy Officer
Manchester City Council