LGA Corporate Peer Challenge - Cornwall Council

Feedback report: 13 to 16 January 2026


1. Introduction

A team of local government peers, led by the Local Government Association (LGA), delivered a Corporate Peer Challenge (CPC) of Cornwall Council from Tuesday 13 to Friday 16 January 2026 inclusive. This was the council’s third corporate peer challenge, with the previous one being in 2017. 

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, in addition to a focus on the council’s wholly owned companies. 

This report provides Cornwall Council with feedback on the peer team’s findings. It provides the council with a set of high-level recommendations, along with further suggestions within each of the CPC’s core areas. There is an expectation the council will publish this report and a clear action plan be drawn up to respond to the recommendations. 

2. Executive summary

Cornwall defines itself as “the UK’s fifth nation” and there is a tremendous pride in its identity, Celtic heritage and wider history, landscape and the potential of its communities and resources. Whilst famed for its tourism offer and attracting around four million overnight stays each year, the 2025 Indices of Multiple Deprivation reflects another side to the Duchy. The Cornwall Plan 2020-2050, developed and owned by the Cornwall and Isles of Scilly Leadership Board, reflects the scale of ambition that exists.

Council performance across its services is strong, with positive judgements for key statutory services. The council has a strong track record with Government and in the local government sector, engaging very effectively and being influential. It recognises its changing role and is demonstrating adapted ways of working – all in a context of diminishing funding and increasingly complex demand and challenges. Cornwall Council is an organisation that is open to, and indeed embraces, internal and external challenge and the drawing in of learning to enable it to progress and develop.

In relation to devolution, the Secretary of State has indicated that the Government is minded to designate the council as a Single Foundation Strategic Authority. This will represent a unique hybrid arrangement, adding to the unitary council even more of the powers traditionally held by mayoral authorities. The council will need to be mindful of the capacity demands this shift in role and responsibilities generates. The organisation has been effectively engaged in ‘double devolution’ to town and parish councils over many years. The approach is well established, shows tangible delivery and continues to develop and progress.

The Administration is placing a strong emphasis on enhancing communications and engagement with communities and making a tangible difference for them. The council is building on its established engagement mechanisms, operates twelve Community Area Partnerships and can demonstrate good and increasing examples of co-production and co-design. The direction and priorities of the council have been shaped through a combination of public engagement and a range of sources of insight and intelligence. The ‘Council Priorities Plan 2026-2030’ has emerged in the short time since the change in Administration. The document, designed to act as a ‘business plan’, has a high profile and is acting as a strong guiding framework for the organisation.

A key strategic consideration for the council that runs through our feedback is about the scale of the council’s ambition for Cornwall versus the reality of its capacity. This is an area that we recommend the council takes the opportunity to reflect upon over the coming months.

The calibre, commitment and passion of the council’s elected members and officers is palpable. The leader, cabinet, chief executive and other senior officers are widely held in high regard, both internally and externally. Good relationships have been formed between the Cabinet and senior officers and the way in which Cabinet has developed since the council elections in May 2025 has been widely valued. There is strong and clear leadership for Cornwall being provided by the Administration.

The council contributes to, and benefits from, excellent and mature partnerships, with genuinely shared ambitions, joint endeavour and ‘buy-in’ at both the strategic and operational level. External partners see benefit in taking stock over the coming months of the set of partnership bodies that exist at the strategic level for Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly. The purpose of this would be to ensure a clear focus for partnership activity and maximise effectiveness and is particularly pertinent in a context of the emerging concept of the Single Foundation Strategic Authority.

The culture in the organisation feels constructive and is the result of conscious endeavour and insightful leadership. Core aspects contributing to this include the council’s active facilitation of the growth and personal development of its people; the wide range of staff engagement mechanisms; having open and accessible leaders and managers; and arrangements for flexible working. These initiatives and approaches are underpinned by a clear formal outlining of the council’s values and principles.

Cornwall Council has loyal and experienced staff but people maintain a freshness and vitality through being in a dynamic environment and an organisation that embraces improvement and innovation. It is cognisant of the age profile of the workforce, the requirements for succession planning and the need for a greater emphasis on strategic workforce planning more generally.

The council has supported a change of more than fifty per cent in its elected membership in May 2025. Significant effort has gone into delivering a comprehensive elected member induction programme and there is a good focus on on-going training and development for councillors. Some refinement to the approaches to both may be beneficial though.

There is a strong sense of the council becoming more expressly elected member-led and there is a clear officer commitment to supporting all of the elected membership in their many and varied capacities and political groupings. The sharing across the political parties of the Chair and Vice-Chair roles on Overview and Scrutiny and other committees is seen as a positive development that encourages joint working and enhances relationships across the elected membership. Cabinet is committed to keeping people across the elected membership well informed. This forms part of a wider commitment that they are demonstrating and driving strongly around transparency and inclusivity.

The council’s financial planning has taken a step forward through the introduction last year of the comprehensive spending review (CSR) process, which is underpinned by a set of financial principles. Defining these principles has been a joint Cabinet and senior officer endeavour and is a positive initiative.

At the end of the calendar year 2025, the three-year medium-term financial plan (MTFP) was balanced. This indicated a challenging financial gap of £133m over the three years. That position has been exacerbated since by the provisional local government financial settlement, generating an additional gap of £13m for 2026/27. The scale of the challenge risks being increased by further growth in demand, particularly around social care, and there is acknowledgement within services of the scale of the challenge involved in delivering the identified savings.

The council’s track record in achieving savings has been good to date. This is generating confidence across the organisation and its leadership but also risks optimism bias. Although there is still some financial contingency provision, we would recommend the level of this is increased. Without that, we see a risk of the council having to fall back on making some very difficult decisions under a rapidly developed ‘plan B’ to preserve the financial sustainability of the organisation.

£60m of the medium-term financial gap is intended to be addressed through ‘transformation’ and £20m of investment has been agreed to support this. Although the transformation savings are of greatest significance in 2027/28 and 2028/29, we see it as being essential to achieve clarity quickly around what can be achieved across all the years of the MTFP and real ‘grip’ being established on delivery from the new financial year starting in April. A comprehensive and robust transformation programme needs to be developed that is owned and driven at strategic director level, with clear plans and accountabilities.

External Audit have raised concerns about the council’s Housing Revenue Account (HRA) and it will be important to bolster HRA reserve levels over time. Making progress against the Decent Homes Standard and preparedness for inspection by the Regulator for Social Housing are a key focus for Cornwall Housing and the council.

The council owns five companies with a range of purposes and objectives linked to the aspirations that exist for Cornwall communities. There are differing perspectives held by officers and elected members regarding the companies and the council’s approach to them. A review took place last year relating to them, focused on how to strengthen formal relationships and improve working between the companies and the council and amongst the companies themselves. Further individual company strategic reviews are taking place currently. The outcomes from these should be used to assess the companies’ future business plans.

There is a shared understanding between elected members, senior officers and Corserv of the challenges in relation to the airport, with the subsidy it provides being a significant issue that needs to be addressed strategically.

3. Recommendations

The following are the peer team’s key recommendations which have been prioritised on the grounds of urgency and importance and are listed here in the order that they appear in the report. 

3.1 Single Foundation Strategic Authority
Consider and plan for the capacity demands that becoming a Single Foundation Strategic Authority will generate

3.2 Ambition versus capacity
Reflect upon the scale of the council’s ambition for Cornwall versus the reality of its capacity

3.2 Strategic partnership bodies
Take stock, with external partners, of the set of strategic partnership bodies for Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly to ensure clear focus and maximise effectiveness

3.4 Financial contingency – Special Educational Needs and Disabilities (SEND)
Establish a financial contingency plan relating to SEND costs and deficits

3.5 Financial contingency - general
Increase the level of financial contingency generally for the council in a context of the overall set of financial challenges being faced

3.6 Transformation programme
Develop a comprehensive and robust transformation programme that is owned and driven at strategic director level, with clear plans and accountabilities – founded upon a stock take of what can be achieved financially, and when, following the forthcoming ‘transformation workshop’ 

3.7 Commercial strategy
Develop a commercial strategy for the council

3.8 Business plans – wholly owned companies
Utilise the outcomes from the current individual company strategic reviews to assess their future business plans and ensure the plans align with the proposed commercial strategy for the council – with the business plans then to come to Cabinet in due course.

3.9 Strategic workforce planning
Place a greater emphasis on strategic workforce planning and produce a workforce development strategy

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 context and focus of the council, with the LGA selecting peers based on their relevant expertise. The peers for this CPC were:

  • Sarah Norman, Chief Executive, Barnsley Metropolitan Borough Council
  • Councillor Lucy Nethsingha, Leader, Cambridgeshire County Council (Liberal Democrat)
  • Councillor Georgina Hill, Northumberland County Council (Independent)
  • Councillor Christopher Hudson, Suffolk County Council (Reform)
  • Rob Powell, Executive Director for Resources, Warwickshire County Council
  • Julian Jackson, Director of Place, Tameside Metropolitan Borough Council
  • Fiona Alderman, Director for Legal and Governance, London Borough of Haringey
  • Colin Ross, Political Officer, Liberal Democrat Political Group Office, LGA (shadowing role)
  • Chris Bowron, Peer Challenge Manager, Local Government Association

6. Action plan and progress review

The senior political and managerial leadership of the council will no doubt wish to review and reflect upon 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 16 April 2026.

There is also a requirement for the council to develop and publish an action plan within five months of the peer team being onsite – thus no later than 16 June 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 the council through a progress review which is due to be completed and published by 16 January 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 Cornwall Council would commission their next Corporate Peer Challenge to take place no later than January 2031.

7. Contact details

In the meantime, Paul Clarke, Principal Adviser for the South West region, is the main contact between your council and the Local Government Association. He is available to discuss any further support you require and can be contacted via [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.

In Cornwall, the CPC included an additional area of focus – that of the council’s wholly owned companies.

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.