If you were sitting down with a blank sheet of paper to invent a framework for local councils for the first time, what you created would bear absolutely no resemblance to what we currently have.
Local councils self-regulate. I'm not completely against the concept of self-regulation in life, but it fails more than it succeeds. We allow untrained councillors to employ unqualified clerks to administer our affairs. Between them, they select an unqualified internal auditor to scrutinise our work, often a former untrained clerk or the untrained clerk of a neighbouring local council. But then Big Brother steps in, in the form of the principal council's Monitoring Officer - somebody who has a proper day job and no interest whatsoever in becoming embroiled in the petty squabbles of local councils, with virtually no statutory remit to force them to oversee us. What could possibly go wrong? But fear not. The electorate will not tolerate this. Failing councils will face the wrath of their parishioners and be consigned to the wheelie-bin of history (collected fortnightly, if you're lucky!) The revolting peasants will take over their councils and uncontested elections will be a thing of the past.
There are some fantastic councils out there, working hard to follow the rules and transform the lives of their local communities, but there are also far too many Dibley Parish Councils. I'm a rules and regulations man, as you'll see from many of my posts on the forum, but so often we see questions from people along the lines of "My council has broken the rules. What can I do about it?" The honest answer? Sweet FA! Without a radical rethink, I don't see the situation improving in my lifetime. The Local Government Act is nearly as old as I am. It's had a few tweaks here and there, but surely it's due for a re-write soon?