Venue: Room 2&3 - County Hall, New Road, Oxford OX1 1ND. View directions
Contact: Scrutiny Team Email: scrutiny@oxfordshire.gov.uk
Link: video link https://oxon.cc/PLO22042026
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Apologies for Absence and Temporary Appointments To receive any apologies for absence and temporary
appointments. Minutes: There were none. |
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Declaration of Interests See guidance note on the back page. Minutes: At the beginning of item 8, Cllr Thomas declared an interest as Leader of the Vale of the White Horse District Council. She considered it most appropriate to withdraw from the room for that item. |
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The Committee is recommended to APPROVE the minutes of the meeting held on 4 February 2026 and to receive information arising from them. Minutes: The minutes of the meeting on 04 February 2026 were AGREED as
a true and accurate record, subject to substituting “Oxfordshire Liveable
Streets” for “Oxfordshire Liverpool Streets.” |
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Petitions and Public Addresses Members of the public who wish to speak on an item on the
agenda at this meeting can attend the meeting in person or ‘virtually’ through
an online connection. Requests to speak must be submitted no later than 09.00
three working days before the meeting, i.e., Friday, 17 April, 2026. Requests should be submitted to the Scrutiny Officer
at scrutiny@oxfordshire.gov.uk. If you are speaking ‘virtually’, you may submit a written
statement of your presentation to ensure that if the technology fails, then
your views can still be taken into account. A written copy of your statement
can be provided no later than 9am on the day of the meeting. Written
submissions should be no longer than 1 A4 sheet. Where there are a number of requests from
persons wishing to present similar views on the same issue, the Chair may
require that the views be put by a single spokesperson. It is expected that
only in exceptional circumstances will a person (or organisation) be allowed to
address more than one meeting on a particular issue in any period of six
months. Additional documents:
Minutes: The Committee heard the following public addresses on the
Minerals and Waste Planning item: Rita Atkinson of Sutton Courtenay Parish Council requested
that the Committee recommend Cabinet commission an independent review of
Minerals and Waste planning processes, citing long running impacts on Sutton
Courtenay and Appleford from Minerals and Waste operations. She highlighted
frustration with repeated section 73 applications extending site lifespans,
delays in application determination, and the difficulty for communities in
understanding original intents. She argued that an independent review would support
more meaningful community engagement and reduce cumulative impacts. Greg O’Broin of Appleford-on-Thames Parish Council also
spoke about the Minerals and Waste Policy item.
He raised concerns about the repeated use of section 73 applications to
extend permissions beyond agreed end dates, distorting the planning system and
undermining public confidence. He cited ongoing non compliance with planning
conditions and section 106 agreements, limited enforcement action, and
insufficient staffing for monitoring and enforcement. He asked the Committee to
seek an independent review of processes, enforcement practice and resource
adequacy. Robin Draper stated that parish council concerns regarding
the Minerals and Waste function related to processes, procedures and culture
rather than individual officers. He criticised delays, multiple consultations
on section 73 applications, limited enforcement action and a perceived lack of
supervision and accountability. He urged the Committee to challenge performance
and recommend an independent review to examine why statutory timescales and
enforcement powers were not being used more robustly. Councillor Peter Stevens endorsed the parish councils’
concerns and supported their request for an independent review. He argued that
multinational operators were able to exploit the system, resulting in repeated
extensions and uncertainty over restoration outcomes. He called for clearer
restoration visions, stronger enforcement powers, defined end dates, and
greater alignment with neighbourhood plans and future infrastructure proposals. At the opening of item 11, the Committee heard public
addresses on the Congestion Charge Monitoring Scheme Reporting. Richard Parnham asked the Committee to request improvements
to how congestion scheme monitoring data is reported, stating that current
presentations lacked context and made it difficult to identify trends,
localised impacts and significance across different roads. He argued that
benefits appeared to be fading in some locations, with traffic displacement
disproportionately affecting areas such as Cowley and routes serving the
hospitals. He raised concerns about gaps and inconsistencies in reported data, including
bus journey time impacts and their absence from recent analysis. Geoffrey Sutton, of Reconnecting Oxford, argued that the
congestion charge had separated the city centre and hospital catchments without
sufficient understanding of their distinct travel patterns, disadvantaging
access to the hospitals. He questioned the accuracy of the Oxfordshire
Strategic Model, stating that missing data had undermined forecasts and
contributed to unanticipated impacts on bus operators and journey times. He
asked the Committee to scrutinise governance, risk management, performance metrics
(including accident rates), and the lack of effective monitoring of business
and hospital impacts. Bernadette Evans, of Oxford Business Action Group, stated that small businesses had been adversely affected by the congestion charge and ... view the full minutes text for item 13/26 |
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Committee Action and Recommendation Tracker The Committee is recommended to NOTE the progress of previous recommendations and actions arising from previous meetings, having raised any questions on the contents. Minutes: The Committee NOTED the action and recommendation tracker. |
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Responses to Scrutiny Recommendations Attached are the Cabinet responses to the Place Overview and
Scrutiny Committee reports on: · Infrastructure Funding Statement and s.106 · Movement and Place Plans The Committee is asked to NOTE the response. Additional documents: Minutes: The Committee NOTED the Cabinet response to the
report on Infrastructure Funding Statement and s.106 and the one on Movement
and Place Plans. |
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Committee Forward Work Plan Recognising that its membership may change in the forthcoming municipal year, the Committee is recommended to AGREE a provisional work programme for forthcoming meetings, taking account of the Cabinet Forward Plan and of the Budget Management Monitoring Report. Minutes: The Committee AGREED the proposed work
programme, recognising that additional items would be scheduled once the
membership of the Committee for the upcoming municipal year was confirmed. |
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Minerals and Waste Planning The Committee has requested a report on minerals and waste
planning in Oxfordshire. Cllr Judy Roberts, Cabinet Member for Place, Environment and
Climate Action, Robin Rogers, Director of Economy and Place, David Periam,
Planning Development Manager, have been invited to present the report and answer
the Committee’s questions. The Committee is asked to consider the report and raise any
questions, and to AGREE any recommendations it wishes to make
to Cabinet arising therefrom. Minutes: Councillor Thomas withdrew for the duration of this item. Councillor Judy Roberts, Cabinet Member for Place,
Environment and Climate Action, attended to introduce a report providing an
overview of the Council’s statutory responsibilities as the Minerals and Waste
Planning Authority. She was accompanied by Robin Rogers, Director of
Environment and Place, Jason Sherwood, Head of Regulatory Something, David
Periam, Matthew Case, Team Leader: Applications, Charlotte Sims, Team Leader:
Minerals and Waste Policy, and Neal Richmond, Team Leader: Enforcement. The report explained that Minerals and Waste Planning was a
specialist function, distinct from district planning responsibilities, and was
delivered through three inter related functions: Minerals and Waste Policy and
Strategy, Minerals and Waste Development Management, and Minerals and Waste
Monitoring and Enforcement. Members noted that Minerals and Waste planning differed
significantly from other planning functions owing to its scale, operational
complexity and long term nature, with development sites often operating over
several decades. It was highlighted that decisions had to operate within
national planning policy and enforcement frameworks, and that failure to
determine or enforce decisions lawfully and in a timely manner could have
exposed the Council to appeals and potential intervention. Officers gave a presentation to provide context on the range
and distribution of Minerals and Waste sites across Oxfordshire. This included
quarries, recycling and waste transfer facilities, landfill and restoration
sites, sewage works, energy recovery facilities, and examples of restored
mineral workings returning land to agriculture, nature conservation or other
beneficial uses. Examples of enforcement action were also described, including
the use of temporary stop notices and subsequent resolution through planning
applications. Members discussed the adequacy of resourcing across Minerals
and Waste functions. Concerns were raised regarding reliance on temporary and
agency staff, vacancies within specialist roles, and the sustainability of
current arrangements in light of the requirement to prepare a new Minerals and
Waste Plan within a statutory 30 month timetable. Officers advised that the
number in the team was supplemented with temporary and agency support to
respond to workload pressures, and that further recruitment and reorganisation
proposals were being developed to stabilise and strengthen the service. The Committee discussed workforce culture and capability.
Officers advised that the team comprised highly specialised officers, that
demand and complexity were significant, and that there was an ongoing need for
recruitment, succession planning and skills development to maintain service
resilience. Members acknowledged the challenges posed by hard to fill
specialist roles and constraints across partner organisations. Members considered monitoring and enforcement arrangements.
It was noted that there were currently no nationally prescribed performance
indicators for Minerals and Waste site monitoring and that developing
meaningful KPIs was challenging due to the variability and complexity of cases,
particularly where voluntary resolution was pursued or where enforcement action
was subject to appeal. Officers confirmed that work was ongoing to identify
proportionate and useful measures. The Committee discussed liaison arrangements for major sites. Officers explained that liaison groups were generally informal and varied from site to site, with some secured through planning obligations and others ... view the full minutes text for item 17/26 |
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The Committee has requested a report on school streets in
Oxfordshire. Cllr Andrew Gant, Cabinet Member for Transport Management, Paul
Fermer, Director of Environment and Highways, Mark Gregory, Team Leader: Behavioural
Change and Travel, Cathy Champion, Operations Manager: Civil Enforcement, and
Melissa Goodacre, Sustainable Transport Manager, have been invited to present
the report and answer the Committee’s questions. The Committee is asked to consider the report and raise any
questions, and to AGREE any recommendations it wishes to make
to Cabinet arising therefrom. Additional documents: Minutes: Cllr Thomas resumed her place. Councillor Andrew Gant, Cabinet Member for Transport
Management, attended to introduce the report the Committee had requested on the
School Streets programme. He was accompanied by Paul Fermer, Director of
Environment and Highways, Robin Rogers, Director of Economy and Place, Mark
Gregory, Team Leader: Behavioural Change and Travel, Cathy Champion, Operations
Manager: Civil Enforcement, and Melissa Goodacre, Sustainable Transport
Manager. Members discussed the process for identifying and
progressing School Street schemes. Officers explained that expressions of
interest could originate from schools, parents, parish and town councils,
councillors, or through officer engagement, and that each scheme was developed
through a school travel planning process with formal consultation. The
Committee noted that phases four and five were in development, informed by the
external review, and that delivery capacity was constrained by funding and
officer resources. The Committee discussed issues of enforcement, particularly
exemptions for taxis and other vehicles under ANPR arrangements. Members raised
concerns about perceived misuse of exemptions and the lack of granular
monitoring data. Officers explained that enforcement was strictly governed by
national legislation and data protection requirements, limiting the extent of
data captured for exempt vehicles. Members noted that while abuse could be
addressed through licensing authorities in specific cases, there were practical
limits to wider enforcement. Members welcomed the scheme’s aims but expressed concern
about geographic concentration in early phases and the applicability of School
Streets in rural areas or on main roads. Officers outlined how School Streets
were supplemented by “soft” active travel measures, including park‑and‑stride
schemes, Bikeability, cycle libraries, walking buses
and behaviour‑change initiatives, and how physical infrastructure was
addressed through Local Walking and Cycling Infrastructure Plans and Movement
and Place Plans. The Committee discussed displacement of traffic and parking.
Officers acknowledged the concern and explained that School Streets were
intended to reduce congestion directly around school gates, often by
encouraging safer parking locations nearby. Members requested greater clarity
on whether displacement was being monitored and how impacts on surrounding
streets were assessed. Members also discussed the integration of School Streets
principles into new school and housing developments. Officers advised that
newer schemes were increasingly designed with active travel and access
considerations in mind, but that many recently-opened
schools had been approved before current policies were in place, limiting
available interventions in the short term. Members raised the role of independent schools in generating
traffic and noted ongoing discussions with school operators around travel
behaviour, park‑and‑ride arrangements and bespoke bus services. It
was acknowledged that solutions varied by location and age range and required
stakeholder buy‑in. The Committee recognised the positive outcomes achieved ... view the full minutes text for item 18/26 |
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Bus Services and Rural Transport including Mobility Hubs The Committee has requested a report on bus services and
rural transport, including mobility hubs, in Oxfordshire. Cllr Andrew Gant, Cabinet member for Transport Management, Cllr Judy Roberts, Cabinet member for Place, Environment, and Climate Change, Paul Fermer, Director of Environment and Highways, and Ben Smith, Strategic Transport Manager, Melissa Goodacre, Sustainable Transport Manager, Ashley Hayden, Team Leader: Area Travel Plans, Dave Harrison, Team Leader: Public Transport, Eric Manners: Technical Leader: Active Travel, have been invited to present the report. The Committee is asked to consider the report and raise any
questions, and to AGREE any recommendations it wishes to make
to Cabinet arising therefrom. Minutes: The Committee considered a report on bus services, rural
transport and mobility hubs in Oxfordshire. Councillor Andrew Gant, Cabinet Member for Transport
Management, and Councillor Judy Roberts, Cabinet Member for Place, Environment
and Climate Action, attended to introduce the report. They were accompanied by
Paul Fermer, Director of Environment and Highways, Robin Rogers, Director of
Economy and Place, and Ben Smith, Strategic Transport Manager, Melissa
Goodacre, Sustainable Transport Manager, Ashley Hayden, Team Leader: Area
Travel Plans, Dave Harrison, Team Leader: Public Transport, Eric Manners: Technical
Leader: Active Travel. Councillor Gant outlined the background to the Council’s bus
strategy following the withdrawal of all bus subsidies in 2016 and the
subsequent rebuilding of the network. Members were informed that, since July
2024, all parishes with a population of 500 or more were served by a scheduled
bus service, and that this represented a significant achievement when compared
with national trends. The Committee heard that bus services were delivered through
a mix of funding sources, including the Bus Service Improvement Plan, the
enhanced partnership with operators, contributions from public institutions,
community transport organisations and, in some cases, private employers. The
popularity and financial impact of the “MyBus” ticket
offers, particularly the young person’s day ticket, were noted, with Members
recognising both the social benefits and the pressure placed on Council
finances. Councillor Roberts introduced the section of the report on
mobility hubs, emphasising their importance in improving rural connectivity and
enabling modal shift in a predominantly rural county. Members noted that over
300 potential hub locations had been identified through public engagement and
that pilot schemes were being progressed, alongside integration with Movement
and Place Plans, the Oxfordshire Rail Plan and wider corridor studies. Officers
advised that £1.4m had been committed to the programme, although some sites
would be taken forward through related strategic transport schemes due to
design or location constraints. Officers also highlighted the Council’s rural active travel
and behaviour‑change work, including delivery of Local Walking and
Cycling Infrastructure Plans, the Oxfordshire Greenways programme, Quiet Lanes
pilots, school travel initiatives and incentive schemes. It was emphasised that
these initiatives were intended to support healthier places and reduce inequalities,
particularly in rural areas. Members discussed rural connectivity and accessibility of
bus services. Concerns were raised about limited frequency on some rural routes
and the impact on access to education, healthcare and employment. The Committee
discussed the potential role of feeder or shuttle services linking smaller
settlements to main bus corridors, noting changes in legislation which might
allow greater flexibility and cross‑subsidisation. Officers advised that
community transport, Council‑operated services and the Comet bus already
played an important role, and that cost, demand and value for money had to be
carefully balanced when considering frequency improvements. The Committee discussed the relationship between bus services, park and ride provision and wider network performance, including the implications of the Botley Road closure and its eventual reopening. Officers advised that improved journey time reliability would enable better use of existing resources ... view the full minutes text for item 19/26 |
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Temporary Congestion Charge Scheme Monitoring Report At the time it considered the implementation of the temporary congestion charge scheme in August 2025, the Committee agreed to receive a monitoring report in April 2026. Cllr Andrew Gant, Cabinet member for Transport Management, Paul
Fermer, Director of Environment and Highways, and Aron Wisdom, Programme Lead:
Central, have been invited to present the report. The Committee is asked to consider the report and raise any
questions, and to AGREE any recommendations it wishes to make
to Cabinet arising therefrom. At the conclusion of this item, the Committee will
adjourn and will reconvene at 13.30. Minutes: The Committee considered a monitoring report on the
Temporary Congestion Charge scheme and heard representations from members of
the public regarding traffic impacts, data transparency and business effects. Councillor Andrew Gant, Cabinet Member for Transport
Management, introduced the report and was accompanied by Paul Fermer, Director
of Environment and Highways, and Aron Wisdom, Programme Lead: Central . He
emphasised that the primary purpose of the scheme was to reduce congestion at
known pinch points and improve safety, and stated that the scheme had succeeded
in doing so. He explained that the scheme should be seen as part of a wider
package of transport measures, including bus service enhancements, congestion
management and hospital access arrangements. Councillor Gant clarified that the
key performance measure related to bus productivity rather than speed alone,
and that improvements to bus services had been delivered during the temporary
scheme. Members discussed the presentation and accessibility of
congestion and traffic monitoring data. Concerns were raised that the current
data was difficult to interpret, lacked sufficient context and did not clearly
demonstrate trends or localised impacts. Members requested clearer, more
longitudinal reporting to support effective scrutiny. The Committee discussed impacts on specific areas, including
outer routes and areas near hospitals, and noted evidence of traffic
displacement. Officers advised that anticipated changes broadly aligned with
modelling assumptions and that mitigation measures were being pursued,
including signal re‑phasing, service retiming and engagement with private
schools and NHS partners. Members noted that continued monitoring would be required as
circumstances changed, including following the reopening of Botley Road and
introduction of traffic filters. Members discussed impacts on businesses and expressed
concern that promised monitoring of footfall and spend had been delayed due to
data reliability issues. Officers advised that alternative data sources were
being validated and that spend data was expected to be published shortly,
alongside an independently‑run business survey. Members stressed the
importance of publishing this information before further decisions were taken. The Committee discussed customer engagement data and noted
that while headline figures were provided on volumes of enquiries, there was
insufficient information on the nature of feedback received. Members requested
a clearer breakdown of themes and issues raised by residents and businesses. The Committee discussed the timing of the transition from
the congestion charge to traffic filters. Officers confirmed that
implementation would follow the reopening of Botley Road and that preparatory
work was under way, subject to confirmation of Network Rail’s programme. The Committee requested the following actions: 1. That
a written response to the questions posed by Oxford Business Action Group be
provided and circulated to the Committee. 2. That
a breakdown and summary of customer engagement enquiries and feedback themes be
provided to the Committee. 3. That,
in future reports to the Committee, congestion monitoring data be presented in
a clearer and more contextualised format, including trend analysis and
localised impacts, to support effective scrutiny. The Committee agreed to make recommendations to Cabinet
under the following headings: 1. That business monitoring be strengthened, with footfall ... view the full minutes text for item 20/26 |
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Illegal Waste near Kidlington c. 13:30 The Committee has requested an interim report on the illegal waste site near Kidlington.
The Committee has invited Cllr Liz Leffman, the Leader of the Council, Cllr Judy Roberts, Cabinet member for Place, Environment, and Climate Change, Robin Rogers, Director of Economy and Place, Nicola Riley, Cherwell District Council’s Assistant Director: Wellbeing and Housing Services, Simon Hawkins, the Environment Agency’s Director of Operations for East and South East England, to attend as well as officers from the Council’s regulatory planning and enforcement service. The Committee is asked to consider the report and raise any questions, and to AGREE any recommendations it wishes to make to Cabinet arising therefrom. Minutes: The Committee had requested an interim report updating the
Committee on the illegal waste site at Hampton Poyle, near Kidlington. Councillor Liz Leffman, the Leader of the Council, and
Councillor Judy Roberts, Cabinet member for Place, Environment, and Climate
Action, attended to present the report. They were accompanied by Robin
Rogers, Director of Economy and Place, as well as Nicola Riley, Cherwell
District Council’s Assistant Director: Wellbeing and Housing Services, and
Michael Adcock, Deputy Chief Fire Officer, Jason Sherwood, Head of Regulatory
Planning Enforcement, David Periam, Planning Development Manager, Neal Richmond,
Team Leader: Enforcement, and Matthew Case, Team Leader: Applications. The Chair noted that the Environment Agency was not
represented owing to their interpretation of guidance on the pre-election
period and hoped that that, if the Committee were to consider another report on
the topic, that the Environment Agency would be represented then. The Leader of the Council introduced the report and thanked
residents, local members, officers and partner agencies for their work in
responding to the incident. The Leader emphasised the seriousness and
complexity of the illegal waste activity, its links to organised criminal
behaviour, and the impact on the local community. Councillor Leffman
highlighted the importance of partnership working, particularly with the
Environment Agency and district councils, and advised that progress had been
made in securing the site and commencing clearance, noting the national
relevance of the lessons emerging from the incident. Councillor Roberts supported those remarks and reflected on
the technical sophistication and speed of the illegal operation. The Cabinet
member acknowledged that, whilst the response once the scale of the issue was
understood had been strong, there were lessons to be learned about internal
escalation and member communication. Councillor Roberts stressed the
importance of improving early intelligence and governance arrangements. Robin Rogers, Director of Economy and Place, shared
photographs to provide visual context, explaining the site’s scale, proximity
to the River Cherwell and drainage features, and the vegetation that initially
concealed the activity. He described how flooding exposed the waste and
increased risk, the protective measures installed to prevent pollution, the
creation of a raised working compound to mitigate flooding, and the logistical
challenges of removal, including overhead power cables that added to the site’s
risk profile. In discussion, the Committee explored the following: Members asked how a waste site of this scale could have developed without earlier detection. Officers explained that the waste had been deposited very rapidly over a short period, rather than gradually over time, and that the site had been deliberately selected and prepared to minimise visibility. Dense vegetation, bunding and partial burial of waste were used to conceal the activity, and vehicle movements were not initially obvious given the site’s location. The full extent of the waste only became apparent later, particularly after vegetation thinned and flooding occurred. The Committee queried when the County Council first became aware that the activity constituted illegal waste disposal rather than engineering or land‑use activity. Officers advised that initial intelligence in late June and ... view the full minutes text for item 21/26 |