LGA Corporate Peer Challenge: London Borough of Bromley

Final feedback report: 10 – 13 March 2026


1. Introduction

A team of local government peers, led by the Local Government Association (LGA) delivered a Corporate Peer Challenge (CPC) of the London Borough of Bromley from 10 to13 March 2026. This was the council’s first CPC. 

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.

The 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 the London Borough of Bromley with feedback on the peer team’s findings. It provides the council with a set of high-level recommendations alongside further suggestions for improvement within the body of the report. The council is expected to publish this report together with a clear action plan to respond to all the recommendations highlighted.  

2. Executive summary

Bromley is a well-performing council with a track record of delivering good outcomes at comparatively low cost. The borough has benefited from longstanding political and managerial stability, and the peer team observed a positive culture that has permeated through the organisation. The council has an earned reputation for sound financial management and value for money, although significant and growing financial risks have emerged. Many services are performing strongly despite operating within the lower quartile of spend per head across London.

The council is, however, operating in a significantly more challenging context. The impact of the Fair Funding Review, increasing demand in key service areas such as social care and housing, and the scale of the Medium-Term Financial Strategy (MTFS) gap means that Bromley will need to take increasingly difficult decisions to maintain financial sustainability.

The council’s long-term Corporate Strategy, 'Making Bromley Even Better (MBEB)', sets out a well understood organisational vision. Since its adoption in 2021, the operating context has changed significantly, and the peer team recommends that the council uses the period following the May 2026 elections to refresh MBEB to ensure it remains deliverable and reflects the priorities of the organisation and the wider borough.

Bromley benefits from effective organisational leadership. The peer team observed constructive member-officer relationships and heard consistently positive views about the Chief Executive and senior leadership team. The council is able to demonstrate many achievements, and the peer team would encourage it to build on this by confidently celebrating its successes, both internally and externally. At the same time, the council can be perceived as insular or "flying under the radar" compared to other authorities. There is an opportunity for the council to take a more outward-facing approach across the organisation - engaging more actively in regional and sub-regional partnerships, particularly at political level - to share strong practice and learn from others, given that a number of the financial challenges facing Bromley are shared across the sector.

The peer team regards effective communications and engagement as a key enabler of organisational and service transformation. There is an opportunity to modernise the council's approach, making greater use of digital platforms and video to deliver more engaging and targeted messaging to both internal and external audiences.

Partners spoke positively about the council as a trusted and constructive organisation with whom it is possible to have difficult conversations. Established partnerships, including the One Bromley Partnership and the Safer Bromley Partnership, appear to be operating effectively. However, it was also suggested that these could be more effective when working across service areas, with some frustration at ‘silo working’.

The council has also made positive progress in strengthening its approach to economic development and inward investment, notably through the establishment of Opportunity Bromley, which is seeking to position the borough as a pro-growth, business-friendly location. Building on this, the council should consider refreshing its Regeneration Strategy (2020 - 2030) to articulate an ambitious and cohesive borough-wide vision for regeneration and growth. While there are good examples of regeneration activity at a local level, a clearer strategic narrative - potentially supported by the master planning of key sites - would help demonstrate the council’s intent and provide greater confidence to partners and investors.

The peer team agrees with the external auditor that there are generally sound governance arrangements in place. However, the persistence of statutory recommendations issued following the 2023/24 audit, which have been carried forward into the 2024/25 audit, is a concern and requires urgent attention. The council has recognised this and identified additional resources through the 2026/27 budget to strengthen capacity and support the audit process.

The council appears well prepared for the May 2026 elections, with a refreshed member induction programme in development. This provides a valuable opportunity to strengthen the wider member development offer and ensure councillors are supported with appropriate training and development throughout the electoral cycle.

Financial sustainability represents the most significant challenge facing the council. While Bromley has historically taken a prudent approach, and kept costs low, the increasing reliance on using significant levels of reserves to set and balance the budget is not sustainable. The council needs to act now to address this reliance and avoid embedding a culture in which reserves are used to support recurrent expenditure.

Despite the scale of the financial challenge, there are a number of levers available which should be actively explored. These include maximising income generation, developing commercial opportunities, considering the role of council tax and making more strategic use of the council’s asset base. Bromley holds a substantial estate of over 4,000 assets and has undertaken significant work in recent years to optimise this, including generating over £30m in capital receipts through disposals. This positive progress should continue, supported by a clear long-term approach to asset optimisation and disposal where assets no longer support strategic priorities or deliver value for money.

Given the scale of Bromley’s financial challenge, the council will have to consider all options, move at pace and be willing to take increasingly difficult decisions, something which shall require political resolve and full transparency.

The Transforming Bromley programme is the council's primary vehicle for meeting this financial challenge. The programme is broad in scope, capturing all activity that contributes to savings, and is well known across the organisation. To date, it has delivered considerable savings through a range of improvement and efficiency activities.

However, given the scale of the MTFS gap and intensifying demand pressures, the nature of transformation will need to evolve. The next phase of Transforming Bromley should focus on a smaller number of genuinely transformative, cross-cutting opportunities, with greater emphasis on prevention, early intervention and demand management. Alongside this, the council should articulate more clearly what a transformed Bromley will look like - setting out a compelling future vision for the organisation and engaging staff, partners and residents in shaping it.

The peer team also recommends strengthening the council’s HR and organisational development (OD) offer to ensure it is equipped to support the next phase of transformation. This includes ensuring sufficient capacity within the HR service to provide both operational and strategic support, updating core policies to ensure compliance and investing in leadership development to build capacity and capability.

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: Immediately address the reliance on reserves to balance the budget

Set a clear expectation that the 2027/28 budget and refreshed MTFS are balanced without the use of reserves. This should be underpinned by a strong, council-wide focus on reducing demand and managing unsustainable growth in high-cost services, working with partners to drive system-wide change and going further on income generation and savings. As part of this, the council should consider the role that council tax will need to play in securing medium-term financial sustainability.

3.2 Recommendation 2: Evolve your transformation ambitions and programme

Build on the success of Transforming Bromley while sharpening the programme’s focus on a smaller number of genuinely transformative, cross-cutting opportunities. This next phase should place greater emphasis on prevention, early intervention and demand management. The council should work to articulate what a transformed Bromley will look like and how this differs from the organisation today.

3.3 Recommendation 3: Unlock the opportunities from digital, Artificial Intelligence (AI) and customer services transformation

Review and update the digital and AI strategy to ensure that it is firmly grounded in service redesign rather than technology alone. Ensure strong alignment between Transforming Bromley and digital programmes, with digital positioned as a key enabler of transformation. This should support a more consistent, digital-first approach to customer services, improving user experience, increasing productivity and delivering sustainable savings through channel shift.

3.4 Recommendation 4: Celebrate your achievements and learn from others

Adopt a confident and consistent approach to celebrating the council’s achievements: internally, with residents and across the wider sector. Undertake a more concerted organisational effort to learn from others and share Bromley's best practice. Ensure the council’s narrative strikes an appropriate balance between acknowledging financial challenges and communicating the strong outcomes being delivered, in a way that motivates and empowers the organisation to take the necessary decisions ahead. This should include the organisation being open and transparent about areas for improvement as well as celebrating success.

3.5 Recommendation 5: Refresh the Corporate Strategy

Refresh the Corporate Strategy to reflect the significantly changed context since its adoption in 2021, using the post-election period as an opportunity to update priorities and organisational vision. Ensure the refreshed strategy is clearly aligned with political priorities, the MTFS and a refocused transformation programme.

3.6 Recommendation 6: Develop a clear, unified borough-wide vision for regeneration and economic growth

Set out a single prioritised framework to unlock commercial, development and investment opportunities across the borough, incorporating the different roles and identities of Bromley’s key economic assets. This should be closely aligned to the emerging Local Plan and provide a strong, accessible narrative for investors, partners and communities, clearly articulating Bromley’s long-term vision and ambitions as a place.

3.7 Recommendation 7: Unify the council’s approach to resident and service user engagement

Bring together the insight and data collected across services into a stronger corporate framework. Reduce fragmentation, enable a clearer whole-organisation view of demand and resident experience, and support more evidence-led decision-making and improvement. Similarly, develop a more consistent corporate approach to managing councillor enquiries, reducing siloed systems and improving oversight, responsiveness and organisational learning.

3.8 Recommendation 8: Develop a more engaging and modern approach to communications

Refresh both the internal and external communications approach with greater use of digital platforms, video and more proactive storytelling to better engage staff, residents and partners. Treat communications as an underpinning enabler of transformation to develop a clear programme of targeted campaigns aligned to the council’s priorities and transformation ambitions, building on the ongoing programme of foster carer recruitment and the Shared Lives campaign.

3.9 Recommendation 9: Strengthen human resources (HR) and organisational development (OD)

Review and update core HR policies and strengthen the council’s OD offer, including more robust succession planning for key roles with a clear recruitment and retention strategy. This should be complemented by targeted leadership development opportunities and a significant improvement in appraisal completion and recording rates.

3.10 Recommendation 10: Strengthen the member development offer

Use the 2026 elections as a catalyst to enhance the overall programme, including a comprehensive and engaging induction for new and returning councillors. This should be complemented by tailored training and ongoing development for key roles (for example, portfolio holders, planning, audit and scrutiny and committee chairmen), drawing on external support where needed to enhance the offer. Ensure there is a sustained member development training programme across the electoral cycle.

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:

  • Stephen Evans, Chief Executive, Royal Borough of Windsor & Maidenhead
  • Baroness O'Neill of Bexley OBE, former Leader, London Borough of Bexley
  • Kathy Freeman, Strategic Director of Resources (S151), London Borough of Havering
  • Rachel Crossley, Corporate Director of Service Reform and Strategy, London Borough of Brent
  • Adam Bryan, Director of Place, Medway Council
  • Gavin Handford, Director for Policy, Change and Customer Services, Reading Borough Council
  • Emily Nice, Director of Human Resources & Organisational Development, London Borough of Sutton
  • Harry Parker, Peer Challenge Manager, Local Government Association.

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 is published in-full within three months of the review being completed, therefore no later than 13 June 2026.

There is a requirement for the London Borough of Bromley to develop and publish an action plan within five-months of the peer team being onsite, therefore no later than 13 August 2026

The action plan will also be central to the peer team’s re-engagement with the London Borough of Bromley through a progress review which is due to be completed and published by 13 March 2027.

The Ministry for Housing, Communities and Local Government 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 therefore expected that the London Borough of Bromley would commission their next CPC no later than March 2031.

7. Contact details

In the meantime, Mona Sehgal, Principal Adviser for London, is the main contact between Bromley and the LGA. Mona is available to discuss any further support you require and can be contacted on [email protected]

8. 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 four 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 put in place by councils and the LGA to support continuous improvement and assurance across the sector. 

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? 
  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 peer team then spent four days with Bromley. During this time, the team gathered 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.