Title

HEALTH

Listen to the experts on the front line

Heather Jameson says that if the Government’s mantra is that it will take the evidence over opinion and listen to reason, it should be listening to local government – those on the front line who have to deal with everyday issues.

Since the start of the coronavirus crisis, the Government's mantra has always been the same: they will listen to the expert advice.

Remember the days – those gloriously simple days – when we were all up in arms over Brexit, experts were out and the ill-informed amateur was calling all the political shots? The red wall ruled and heartfelt opinions far outweighed the facts. One deadly virus later and we are all about the experts now.

But, alas, we are not. Forget the political rows over Sage, the misdemeanors of members and the questionable influence of the Prime Minister's most controversial aide. Let's set aside the advice, which saw the UK late to lockdown, the death rate soar and – tragically – coronavirus tearing through our care homes.

Let's not dwell on personal protective equipment (PPE). The farcical failure to get basic safety equipment to the front line. And the constant reinvention of the wheel – creating central systems to bypass existing local institutions.

Despite the catalogue of errors, I can't help but think I am still far more in favour of expert advice. But then, it all depends on which expert you listen to.

For all the rhetoric, central government is not quite hearing the message from the experts in local government.

Social services directors are now writing publicly to ministers after private warnings went unheeded. They said the fund set up to tackle coronavirus in care homes is weighed down with bureaucracy and, worse still, can't be spent on PPE.

Public health directors have also spoken out over plans to lift lockdown and local authorities are refusing to drop the stay at home message in the face of rising virus rates outside the capital.

This is not councils playing politics – these are professional bodies raising real concerns in the face of a major crisis. This is expert advice, straight from the front line.

If the Government's mantra is that it will take the evidence over opinion and listen to reason, it should be listening to local government – those on the front line who have to deal with everyday issues.

HEALTH

Closing the confidence gap

By Emmet Regan | 23 April 2026

Emmet Regan looks at why government has lost the confidence to ‘do big things’ and says rebuilding it is a collective endeavour that spans public servants, p...

HEALTH

Why CfGS is needed now more than ever

By Ed Hammond | 23 April 2026

As Ed Hammond departs for pastures new, the Centre for Governance and Scrutiny’s deputy chief executive reflects on 17 years at the centre – and how governan...

HEALTH

'Banging the table for children'

By Ann McGauran | 22 April 2026

The new president of the Association of Directors of Children’s Services’ passionate belief in the rights of children and young people shines through. Ann Mc...

HEALTH

Moving SEND mainstream

By Martin Ford | 16 April 2026

The Government’s blueprint for reforming the SEND system has landed, but important details are still to be confirmed – while the task of implementing it fall...

Heather Jameson

Popular articles by Heather Jameson