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/PLO24092025
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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: There were none. |
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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, or present a petition, 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 19 September, 2025. 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. Minutes: There were none. |
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Local Government Reorganisation Progress Update Cllr Liz Leffman, the Leader of the Council, has been invited to present a progress update on the Council’s work on Local Government Reorganisation. Martin Reeves, Chief Executive, Lorna Baxter, Executive Director of Resources and s.151 Officer (Deputy Chief Executive), and Helen Mitchell, Programme Director: Local Government Reorganisation, have also been invited to attend and to 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. The report, annexes 1-4, and the background paper are attached. Annexe 5 is to follow. Additional documents:
Minutes: Cllr Liz Leffman, the Leader of the Council, was invited to
present a progress update on the Council’s work on Local Government
Reorganisation. Martin Reeves, Chief Executive, Lorna Baxter,
Executive Director of Resources and s.151 Officer (Deputy Chief Executive), and
Helen Mitchell, Programme Director: Local Government Reorganisation, were also
invited to attend and to answer the Committee’s questions. The Leader introduced the Local Government Reform (LGR) item
outlining the statutory requirements driving the process, emphasising the
Council’s duty to engage with the City Council as the local planning authority
and to fulfil its own responsibilities as the highways and transport authority.
The Leader highlighted key benefits of LGR, such as the opportunity for more
integrated and efficient service delivery, improved strategic planning, and
better use of public assets. Partnership working was underscored as essential,
with the Leader noting ongoing close collaboration with Oxford City Council and
other public sector partners to ensure that the reform would support both local
priorities and statutory obligations, and to maximise the positive impact for
residents and the wider community. The Executive Director of Resources and s.151 Officer
presented the financial analysis for Oxfordshire's single council proposal,
noting PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) appraisal of one and two unitary options
with a standard methodology for direct comparison. The analysis used revenue
reports from local authorities and assessed reorganisation benefits in staff,
third-party spend, property, and democracy. Disaggregation costs were only
relevant for two and three-unitary models; transition costs like redundancies,
IT, and consultation were considered. The Executive Director of Resources and
s.151 Officer confirmed the methodology was typical for business cases, not
government-mandated, and expenditures were aggregated as a starting point. The
appraisal targeted net benefits and payback periods, estimating roughly £27
million annual savings for a single unitary council, with the analysis pending
final due diligence. The Committee raised the following questions and comments: ·
Whether the financial analysis for local
government reorganisation accounted for diseconomies of scale, particularly if
more services were devolved to town and parish councils, and about the
treatment of pension strain in the calculations. The Executive Director of
Resources and s.151 Officer responded that diseconomies of scale were not
expected to be significant, as county-wide procurement would likely offset any
such effects. Regarding pension strain, the Executive Director of
Resources and s.151 Officer explained that it referred to the cost to the
pension fund when someone over 55 was made redundant, and that it was difficult
to calculate precisely for each individual. However,
she confirmed that, for consistency, none of the three business cases included
pension strain in their calculations. · A question was asked about the powers of mayoral strategic authorities, referencing a recommendation from the Centre for Governance and Scrutiny (CfGS) that suggested the City Council might retain powers over areas such as the economy, business, tourism, planning, and licencing. The question also sought clarity on the concept of clusters, the powers and budgets of area committees, how a larger council could be closer to communities, whether the county ... view the full minutes text for item 4/25 |