LGA Corporate Peer Challenge: Bracknell Forest Council

Feedback report: 3 - 6 March 2026


1. Introduction

A team of local government peers, led by the Local Government Association (LGA) delivered a Corporate Peer Challenge (CPC) of Bracknell Forest Council from 3-6 March 2026. This was the council’s third CPC, following the previous CPC in 2021.

CPC is a well-established and respected improvement and assurance tool that provides robust, strategic and credible challenge and support to councils. Further details about the CPC process can be found in Appendix A.

Our peer team consisted of highly experienced and knowledgeable senior local government councillor and officer peers (see section four). We considered the five core areas covered by all CPCs: local priorities and outcomes, organisational and place leadership, governance and culture, financial planning and management and capacity for improvement.

This report provides Bracknell Forest with feedback on the peer team’s findings, illustrated by quotes (in italics that supported the peer team’s findings. It provides the council with a set of a high-level recommendations alongside further recommendations under each of the CPC’s core areas. There is an expectation the council will publish this report and a clear action plan to respond to all the recommendations highlighted.

2. Executive summary

Bracknell Forest is a well-respected authority delivering good services to residents. The council is leading impressive work to support regeneration and economic development within the town centre and wider area and can highlight well regarded and innovative practice in many different areas.

Members are engaged and visible and there are capable staff doing good work, with both dedicated to what they are doing and the local place. There are positive personal relationships between members and officers, and largely constructive relationships between members, with a transparent and open culture across the organisation. The council is widely seen to be a values-led organisation that lives the ethos of being ambitious, inclusive and always learning.

The CPC came at a significant juncture for the council; accidentally, with the peer challenge coinciding with an unexpected change of council leader a year before all out elections in 2027, and with the council facing a much more challenging financial position than it has to date.

It is almost three years since the current administration and many new councillors were elected, following the retirement of a long-serving chief executive a few months beforehand. Despite being much closer to the next election than the previous one, the peer team felt there is a tendency for the organisation to still think of the chief executive, and members in particular, as ‘new.’ The organisation should move on from this framing.

Although relationships between members and officers are good, there is a need to reset roles and responsibilities between them, to fully enable members to set the direction for the organisation and area through visible political decision-making which officers translate into operational implementation.

In support of this, the council could strengthen the impact of key committees to ensure there is appropriate challenge and to provide enhanced assurance about how the council operates. This should form part of a wider piece of work to ensure that the council’s governance is fully match fit for the outcome of the next election and what is likely, based on national trends, to be a more complex political environment.

The confirmation of a new council leader is an opportunity to identify a clear set of priorities for the final year of the administration. Alongside this, there is scope to simplify the council’s multiple vision, strategy and priorities documents, which have left both staff and partners confused as to the council’s strategic ambitions and priorities. Linked to this, there is a need for a simple place narrative for Bracknell Forest that summarises its story, its strengths and where it’s going. This will be important to articulate as the council increasingly operates in a larger footprint across the Thames Valley. Political leaders and senior staff are recognised to have played an important role in convening cross-Berkshire work on devolution to date; a stronger narrative for Bracknell Forest will support continued leadership on this agenda.

The council is in the early stages of designing a new Target Operating Model, with three design principles – continuous evidence-led decisions, empowering communities, and collaborating and innovating for results – identified. As it takes forward the development of the new way of working, the council will need to work closely with its partners, communities, town and parish councils and residents. Partnerships are generally strong in Bracknell Forest; partners praised the council’s collaborative, accessible and proactive approach. However, work is needed to build relationships with the six town and parish councils in the borough, all of which are relatively large and will be crucial to the implementation of the model.

The target operating model is one part of a change approach necessitated by a considerably tougher financial picture following the fair funding review, with the council reliant on drawing on £5m of its existing reserves to balance its 2026/27 budget. Yet while budget shortfalls are a new and difficult challenge for Bracknell Forest, the council is nevertheless in a comparatively favourable financial position, with lower demand pressures than other councils, a comparatively healthy level of reserves and investment assets to draw on.

In this context, there remains an opportunity for the council to take proactive action to address its budgetary issues, rather than rely on external solutions to do so, but there is a need to urgently clarify plans to balance the budget in the short as well as longer term. The council will need to clarify quickly how its emerging change work dovetails with the 2027/28 budget setting timetable; the timetable should build in early engagement with political leaders to ensure clear political direction on savings opportunities.

On its approach to change, the peer team recommends that the council draw together the different elements of its change work into a single, council wide change programme, then draw on the advice that will be provided by the external transformation partner it is currently procuring. The council should empower staff to lead change through processes that enable rather than hinder, facilitating invest to save opportunities and building a positive mindset for change across the whole organisation.

3. Recommendations

The following are the peer team’s key recommendations which have been prioritised on the grounds of urgency and importance.

3.1 Recommendation 1: reset roles and responsibilities between politicians and senior officers to improve how political decision making translates into operational implementation.

3.2 Recommendation 2: consolidate different visions and strategies to clarify priorities for the council and place. Develop and promote a clear vision for Bracknell Forest.

3.3 Recommendation 3: strengthen the council’s financial management arrangements and clarify the 2027/28 budget timeline to help address the immediate and future funding gap.

3.4 Recommendation 4: take steps to bring together disparate transformation work into a single, whole council programme that supports political priorities and helps address the budget gap.

3.5 Recommendation 5: empower staff to lead change and innovation; actively develop an organisational mindset and processes that promote change. Create funding routes for staff to tap into to support change, potentially through a corporate invest to save pot.

3.6 Recommendation 6: build on existing governance and assurance to ensure there is appropriate challenge and oversight from members and key committees.

3.7 Recommendation 7: recognise the importance of a strong relationship with parish and town councils. Consider involving them more, and earlier, and it will pay dividends in supporting your new operating model.

In addition to the key recommendations, section five of this report captures our detailed feedback and additional recommendations within each of the CPC’s core areas of focus.

4. Peer team

Peer challenges are conducted by experienced LGA peers, including elected councillors and senior officers. The composition of the peer team was shaped by the specific focus of the challenge, with the LGA selecting peers based on their relevant expertise. The peers for this CPC were:

  • Tracey Lee, Chief Executive, Plymouth City Council​
  • Cllr Pete Marland, Leader, Milton Keynes City Council ​
  • Cllr Richard Clewer, Conservative Group Leader, Wiltshire Council ​
  • Alan Foster, Head of Finance, South Tyneside Council ​
  • Chris Sivers, Executive Director, Department for People, South Gloucestershire Council ​
  • Sally Agass, Solace Associate / Interim Director of Place​
  • Bev Thomas, Adviser, LGA ​
  • Ellie Greenwood, Peer Challenge Manager, Local Government Association (LGA)

6. Action plan and progress review

The senior political and managerial leadership of the council should review and reflect on the findings and recommendations from this CPC.

To promote the principle of transparency, it is a requirement of the CPC process that the final report of the peer team is published in-full within three months of the review being completed. In this instance, this requires the report to be published no later than 6 June 2026.

There is a requirement for Bracknell Forest Council to develop and publish an action plan within five-months of the peer team being onsite, no later than 6 August 2026. This action plan should provide clarity on the activity, milestones, and timelines that the council will work to in responding to the team’s findings. 

The action plan will also be central to the peer team’s re-engagement with Bracknell Forest Council through a progress review which is due to be completed and published by 6 March 2027.

The Ministry for Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) have published the Best Value Standards for Local Authorities. These standards expect every council to engage in a Corporate or Finance Peer Challenge at least every five-years. It is expected that Bracknell Forest would commission their next Corporate Peer Challenge no later than March 2031.

7. Contact details

In the meantime, Ellie Greenwood, Senior Regional Adviser, is the main contact between your council and the Local Government Association. As outlined above, Ellie is available to discuss any further support you require and can be contacted on [email protected]

Appendix A – What is CPC?

CPC is a valued improvement and assurance tool that is delivered by the sector for the sector. It involves a team of senior local government councillors and officer peers undertaking a comprehensive review of key information and spending three days at the council to provide robust, strategic, and credible challenge and support.

CPC forms a key part of the improvement and assurance framework for local government. It is underpinned by the principles of Sector-led Improvement (SLI) put in place by councils and the LGA to support continuous improvement and assurance across the sector. These principles state that councils are responsible for their own performance; accountable locally, not nationally; share a collective responsibility for the performance of the sector; and rely on the LGA to provide the tools to support them. CPC is also key to councils in meeting their Best Value duty. UK Government expect all councils to have a CPC at least every five years. 

Scope and focus

The peer team considered the following five areas which form the core components of all CPCs. These are critical to councils’ performance and improvement.

  1. Local priorities and outcomes - are the council’s priorities clear and informed by the local context? Is the council delivering effectively on its priorities? Is there an organisational-wide approach to continuous improvement, with frequent monitoring, reporting on and updating of performance and improvement plans?
  2. Organisational and place leadership - does the council provide effective local leadership? Are there good relationships with partner organisations and local communities?
  3. Governance and culture - Are there clear and robust governance arrangements? Is there a culture of challenge and scrutiny?
  4. Financial planning and management - Does the council have a grip on its current financial position? Does the council have a strategy and a plan to address its financial challenges? What is the relative financial resilience of the council?
  5. Capacity for improvement - Is the organisation able to bring about the improvements it needs, including delivering on locally identified priorities? Does the council have the capacity to improve?

As part of the five core areas outlined above, every CPC has a strong focus on financial sustainability, performance, governance, and assurance

The peer challenge process

Peer challenges are designed to support improvement, not inspection. They are not intended to provide a detailed or technical assessment of plans and proposals. Instead, the peer team uses its experience and knowledge of local government to reflect on the information shared with them, the things they observe, and the material they review.

To prepare, the peer team looks at a range of documents and information to understand the council and the challenges it is facing. This includes a position statement prepared by the council before the visit, which sets out the local context and highlights areas for the team to focus on. The preparation also involves reviewing an LGA Finance briefing (based on public reports from the council’s website) and an LGA performance report that shows benchmarking data across a range of measures. The performance report is produced using the LGA’s local area benchmarking tool, LG Inform.

The peer team then spends three or four days at the council. During this time, they gather evidence, information, and views by meeting with council staff, councillors, and external stakeholders. This helps them build a rounded picture of the council’s strengths and areas for improvement.