Title

DEPARTMENT FOR LEVELLING UP, HOUSING AND COMMUNITIES

Please sir, I want some more

After suffering starvation for three months with his companions, Oliver Twist said: ‘Please sir, I want some more.’ Likewise, as a sector, local government must continue to ask for more, says Tony Kirkham.

The independent chair of our audit committee asked me if there is anything keeping me awake at night. Although I'm pleased to say I am still sleeping, I have to admit over the past few weeks my concerns about local government funding have been at the forefront of every waking day. Like all my colleagues who hold a statutory responsibility, we are having to weigh up what our organisations want and need to do with what we can afford to do while meeting the COVID-19 challenge.

With gallows humour, a few colleagues and I started trading R.E.M. songs and lyrics to express how we were feeling, including, I Can't Get There From Here…It's the End of the World As We Know It (but I don't feel fine)…(I'm pushing an elephant up the stairs)…(I'm looking for answers) from The Great Beyond…and perhaps a little obscure…(wash off the 151) a take on Oddfellows Local 151.

Certainly, we can't claim to be shiny happy people and we certainly won't be holding hands for some time.

Broadly, the recent financial returns from local authorities to the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government (MHCLG) strongly indicate that the Government support committed so far is roughly a third of what councils need. The Local Government Association (LGA) is open to this being independently evaluated but at the time of writing there is no firm commitment from Government to provide the balance needed or a timescale as to when this will be resolved and so we must now consider planning for the worst.

This could be time-consuming when our organisations need to be wholly focused on responding to the crisis, keeping people safe while planning our way through what looks like to be a long recovery. This is not the time to be rationing resources to frontline services.

After suffering starvation for three months with his companions, Oliver Twist said: ‘Please sir, I want some more.' Likewise, as a sector, local government must continue to ask for more.

Tony Kirkham is director of resources at Newcastle City Council

DEPARTMENT FOR LEVELLING UP, HOUSING AND COMMUNITIES

A system for success

By Heather Jameson | 23 December 2025

Luton Council’s bold 2040 vision prioritises jobs, homes and safety. Heather Jameson talks to chief executive Mark Fowler about taking a systems-based approa...

DEPARTMENT FOR LEVELLING UP, HOUSING AND COMMUNITIES

Regeneration: Tenacity, not tenure: keeping a long-term project on track

By Nick Eveleigh | 23 December 2025

Delivering a new train station in Chelmsford has been a decades-long project. Nick Eveleigh reflects on the long-term nature of delivering what really matter...

DEPARTMENT FOR LEVELLING UP, HOUSING AND COMMUNITIES

Scrooge Says: Bah Humbug to Local Elections

By Colin Copus | 22 December 2025

Labour said nothing about LGR in its manifesto and, as well as moving to create 'huge' new unitaries, ministers have made councils responsible for sticking t...

DEPARTMENT FOR LEVELLING UP, HOUSING AND COMMUNITIES

The only constant, other than change, is our ambition for our place.

By Caroline Green | 22 December 2025

Oxford City Council has been focusing on what it needs to accelerate for the city to be in the best possible position to transition to a unitary future, says...

Tony Kirkham

Popular articles by Tony Kirkham