Agenda and minutes

Scrutiny Committee - Thursday, 2 November 2023 7.00 pm

Venue: Abbey House, Abbey Close, Abingdon OX14 3JE

Contact: Candida Basilio, Democratic Services Officer 

Items
No. Item

Sc14

Apologies for absence

To record apologies for absence and the attendance of substitute members. 

Minutes:

Apologies were received from Councillor Amos Duveen. Councillor Debby Hallett was present as substitute. Apologies were also received from Councillor Sally Povolotsky. Councillor Kiera Bentley was present as substitute.

Sc15

Urgent business and chair's announcements

To receive notification of any matters which the chair determines should be considered as urgent business and the special circumstances which have made the matters urgent, and to receive any announcements from the chair. 

Minutes:

There was no urgent business, but the chair ran through some housekeeping matters.

Sc16

Declaration of interests

To receive declarations of disclosable pecuniary interests, other registrable interests and non-registrable interests or any conflicts of interest in respect of items on the agenda for this meeting. 

 

Minutes:

There were no declarations of interest.

Sc17

Minutes of the last meeting pdf icon PDF 192 KB

To review the Scrutiny Committee minutes of the meeting held on 31 July 2023 and agree them as a correct record.

Minutes:

Resolved:

Committee agreed that the minutes of the Vale scrutiny committee meeting held on 31 July 2023 were a correct record, and the chair will sign them as such.

 

It was suggested that consideration should be given to the link between scrutiny and Cabinet, and a suggestion was made on forming a recommendation tracker. Chair explained that she attended Cabinet meetings to update them on scrutiny feedback, it was also added that Cabinet minutes were available. Cabinet receive a summary of recommendations and comments under an agenda item called “recommendations from other committees”. Democratic Services would take this discussion into consideration.

Sc18

Work schedule and dates for all Vale and Joint scrutiny meetings pdf icon PDF 175 KB

To review the attached scrutiny work schedule. Please note, although the dates are confirmed, the items under consideration are subject to being withdrawn, added to or rearranged without further notice.

 

Minutes:

The committee considered the work programmme.

Sc19

Public participation

To receive any questions or statements from members of the public that have registered to speak. 

Minutes:

None.

Sc20

Financial outturn report 2022-23 pdf icon PDF 282 KB

Scrutiny committee is recommended to note the overall outturn position of the council as well as the outturn of individual service areas.

 

Additional documents:

Minutes:

The financial outturn report 2022/23 was presented by Cabinet member for

Finance and Corporate Assets. Head of Finance and Strategic Finance Officer were also present to answer questions.

The papers for consideration contained summarised schedules of revenue and capital expenditure for 2022/23; they also presented an explanation of the significant variances against budget. This was presented by service. All the figures in the report were preaudit and may be subject to change following the conclusion of the audit of the statement of accounts.

 

Below is a summary of the discussion.

 

·       A member asked about the slippage on capital expenditure? – can we budget in year? It was explained that over the last two years effort had been on revenue. We are now challenging capital.

·       A member questioned whether there was mitigation in higher interest times.

·       Cabinet member was asked how he saw the council’s immediate financial health? Were there immediate concerns? Can scrutiny help? Cabinet member explained that reserves ran out in five years’ time. It was meant to be this year, so this is an improved position. We cannot increase council tax even though we are a low-cost council. We were in much better shape that 4 years ago.

·       Planning corporate transformation on page 11 – overspend on planning service – why was this? It was explained that this was actually an underachievement of income, the market cooled down for building so the department did not achieve the expected. The next budget will reflect this expectation.

·       Corporate transformation underspend – why was this underspend? Deputy Chief Executive for Transformation and Operations explained that there was a one-off budget about 750k carried forward for Planning, Customer Services, and grounds maintenance projects. There had been profiling of 16 projects, they had not been static and in 22/23 we chose to bring forward planning and changed the profile. IT systems will show in the budget in 23/24. A dedicated team was set up in 22/23 and naturally this takes time to settle in.

·       It was explained that refugee homes budget will show in 23/24 – this will be a housing department budget.

·       Development and Corporate Landlord – carparking fees were adjusted to make up shortfall? What is this? Cabinet member explained that this was looking forward to expected fee changes next year. Some discussion was had regarding the rationale for raising fees and what attracts people to use the carparks.

·       Grounds team overspent – it was expected that the transformation project would resolve this overspend.

 

 

Resolved:

Committee noted the report and the better financial position. They commented that they hoped to see more detail on the Beacon’s financial position in the options report that was due in December.

Sc21

Planning enforcement update report pdf icon PDF 375 KB

Scrutiny Committee is asked to consider the latest progress report of the new approach to planning enforcement (as set out in the Planning Enforcement Statement 2021) and provide any comments to the Cabinet Member for Planning and Development Management.

 

(Nb: The link to the 2021 statement above is an appendix document for this item, also mentioned on page 25 of the agenda pack. It has not been included as an attachment, so please access it via the link.)

Minutes:

Cabinet Member for Planning and Development Management introduced the Planning Enforcement update report. The Enforcement Team Leader and Head of Planning were present to answer questions.

The report sought Scrutiny Committee’s comments on the progress made in the last year in reducing the on-hand enforcement case work to enable improvement in the performance of timely responses to investigations.

 

It was explained that there was continued improvement in the service. The addition of two members of staff, now permanent, had created consistency in the on-hand reduction.

 

The report was for the period of September 2022 – September 2023. The team reduced open cases from 229 to 161. There were external factor complications (such as Covid backlog where staff couldn’t site visit). In April, two new staff were employed, creating a consistent 6-week reduction figure as a result.

The team had not achieved the target of having decisions made on 80% of new cases within a 6-week period from the initial application, but they were heading in the right direction.

 

Comments were as follows:

 

  • Page 22 graph 1 – members asked about the difference between on-hand and open. Officers confirmed open is a new case.
  • A member said they would have liked a last year’s comparison and costs. Officer added that triage deals with varying case difficulty. Lots of people complaining doesn’t mean a case was dealt with quicker – planning harm was the measure for triage.
  • Officers confirmed that there is currently no national target for enforcement, but the planning reforms has proposed some; waiting for Govt confirmation. Other councils had contacted the enforcement team on what they were achieving and how, this was a testament to the improvements made.
  • Members commended the team for producing a clear report.
  • Stuck old cases – members asked officers to maintain pressure on those.
  • Biodiversity net gain – chair asked officers if they could put the onus onto developers and landowners. Officers responded that they needed steer from government and that this would be a major piece of work in future, liaising with the climate team. Officers added that they had proactive working themes where they focus on a particular area of work for a period of time.
  • In response to a question, officers confirmed that some planning officers from the wider team were viewing the enforcement cases and joint working / discussing.
  • Parish questions on enforcement – officers confirmed that they’ve done a round of parish training on planning. Officers have not received any complaints about the process over the last 6 months. People are understanding that the enforcement team cannot provide updates during the investigation, but the team will update when the investigation has concluded.
  • Members asked whether drainage was part of enforcement. Officers explained that drainage was not always a breach of planning control – but the team did work with the drainage team, Thames Water etc if the enforcement team were made aware of a drainage case.  Usually, County Council were alerted first because it tended to be a highways  ...  view the full minutes text for item Sc21

Sc22

Consultation and engagement annual report pdf icon PDF 219 KB

Scrutiny Committee is asked to note the consultation and engagement carried out by the council during 2022-2023 and make any comments to Cabinet for consideration.

Additional documents:

Minutes:

Cabinet member for Communications presented the report, supported by the Communications and Engagement Manager. The Head of Corporate Services was also present online.

 

In the last financial year, the Consultation and Engagement team conducted 22 consultations, launched 21 feedback forms, supported four neighbourhood plan consultations and five conservation area appraisals. The new annual report highlighted the key findings from each project and the actions the councils have taken from the outcomes of these engagement activities.

 

The report showed the variety of engagement the councils carried out and demonstrated how consultation and engagement findings have led to changes in council services.

 

Below summarises the main discussion of the committee.

  • Members found that the inclusion of district demographics data in the report was very useful.
  • Members asked how were people asked? And what were the different platforms for consultation? Officers responded that the team used software called SmartSurvey and had obtained lots of email addresses particularly during Covid, when online surveys became the default method. The officer present suggested that the team needed to get out and about which was resource intensive but effective.
  • The Joint Local Plan (JLP) consultation was approaching, and the team had plans to consult residents in cafes and schools . The officer felt that the JLP is likely to have an impact on college age residents as future homeowners – therefore we needed to try and reach these groups. Facebook and direct mail were successful methods.
  • A member asked whether we can benchmark against other authorities to assess the effectiveness of resources used and their impact? The officers responded that we needed to define what was a successful consultation. The South and Vale team was comprised of three members of staff in addition to the manager. We do need to see how much each consultation costs in terms of staffing costs, yet it was thought to be more efficient than outsourcing. Response rate was a crude measure and not necessarily a sign of quality consultation exercises.
  • It was noted that for The Beacon consultation project, the  team reached out in person to users of the facility and not just via social media.
  • The impending JLP and Corporate Plan consultations will use the teams new, more interactive software called Citizen Space.
  • A member queried a governance review where only 5 people replied – in response the officers responded that some topics only affect a few people hence a smaller response rate.
  • A member asked were we ready to respond to varied answers of those we only start reaching now? (underserved residents).
  • A members suggested a Youth Council as an engagement method – officer added that they were not keen on consulting the identical group of people each time. The team continued to look at best practices for example, West Oxfordshire District Council created a good charter for young people.
  • Other suggested methods from members were consulting businesses on the high street, a Citizens Assembly, telephone polls and residents’ panels.
  • The officer added that we had a large  ...  view the full minutes text for item Sc22