This article is from the source 'bbc' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.

You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-northamptonshire-40610349

The article has changed 8 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.

Version 0 Version 1
Northamptonshire County Council: Inspectors say commissioners should be sent in Northamptonshire County Council: Troubled authority 'should be scrapped'
(35 minutes later)
Government commissioners should be sent in to "ensure the proper running" of cash-strapped Northamptonshire County Council, a report has concluded. Cash-strapped Northamptonshire County Council should be scrapped, according to a report from a government inspector.
In January, Secretary of State for Communities Sajid Javid ordered an independent inspection of the authority. In January, Communities Secretary Sajid Javid ordered an independent inspection of the authority.
The report said "living within budget constraints is not part of the culture" of the county council. The report recommends "a new start" in Northamptonshire, "best achieved by the creation of two new unitary councils".
It adds the findings are "very serious" for the council and its residents. Inspector Max Caller said government commissioners should be sent in to the authority.
He added that "living within budget constraints is not part of the culture" of the council.
The report said its findings are "very serious" for the authority and its residents.
Mr Caller said Northamptonshire should have two new unitary authorities by 2020, one covering Daventry, Northampton and South Northamptonshire and the other covering Corby, East Northamptonshire, Kettering and Wellingborough.
That would mean the county council would cease to exist.
In October, the council launched a campaign for fairer funding from central government.
However, the report said the authority had not been "particularly badly treated by the funding formula".
The report was als critical of the council's 'Next Generation Model,' which planned to outsource all services and create four new bodies for child protection, care of vulnerable adults, providing health and well-being services, and improving the county.
The report said the model did not have "any documented underpinning" of how it intended to deliver £68m of savings, and "served to obscure and prevent effective" budgetary control.