Any
county councillor may, by giving notice to the Proper Officer by 9 am two working
days before the meeting, ask a question on any matter in respect of the
Cabinet’s delegated powers.
The
number of questions which may be asked by any councillor at any one meeting is
limited to two (or one question with notice and a supplementary question at the
meeting) and the time for questions will be limited to 30 minutes in total. As
with questions at Council, any questions which remain unanswered at the end of
this item will receive a written response.
Questions submitted prior to the agenda being despatched are shown below and will be the subject of a response from the appropriate Cabinet Member or such other councillor or officer as is determined by the Cabinet Member, and shall not be the subject of further debate at this meeting. Questions received after the despatch of the agenda, but before the deadline, will be shown on the Schedule of Addenda circulated at the meeting, together with any written response which is available at that time.
Minutes:
Councillor Howson had given notice of the following question to
Councillor Nimmo Smith:
“
How many faults with streetlights have been reported each month since
the termination of the contract on street lighting; cumulatively how many
faults with street remained outstanding at 31st December?”
Councillor Nimmo
Smith replied:
“There are
approximately 66,000 streetlights, illuminated signs and bollards, subway
lights etc in Oxfordshire. At the end of December
there were 1,694 faults, which is just 2.5 per cent. This is broadly what
we would expect at this point in the calendar year as there are more faults
reported in the late autumn and winter months than at other times of the year.
Therefore 97.5 per cent of streetlights/illuminated signs etc
in Oxfordshire are in full working order and our interim contractor is working
hard on the list of current faults.
|
Month` |
Issued |
Completed |
|
April |
375 |
49 |
|
May |
228 |
44 |
|
June |
213 |
53 |
|
July |
214 |
161 |
|
August |
378 |
504 |
|
September |
252 |
140 |
|
October |
948 |
225 |
|
November |
702 |
356 |
|
December |
490 |
574 |
|
January |
|
|
|
February |
|
|
|
March |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Totals |
3800 |
2106 |
Councillor Howson had given notice of the following question to
Councillor Nimmo Smith:
“Can the
Cabinet member provide a date when a new contract dealing with street
lighting will be signed?”
Councillor Nimmo
Smith replied:
“Work on preparing a new contract
is well underway and the procurement is programmed to take place to enable award
at the start of September 2017. However, it is worth pointing out that the
council is not without a streetlighting contract,
last year the council appointed an interim contractor – Amey.
Amey have been
working on emergency repairs since mid-June which is a much better situation
than we envisaged back in the spring.
That is why we have a number of faults awaiting repair that is not
dissimilar to what we’d expect in most normal years in mid-Winter.”
Councillor Tanner had given notice of the
following question to Councillor Tilley:
“Donnington Doorstep is an independent family centre in my division
which until 2015/16 received an extremely helpful £60,000 a year from the
County Council to part fund Doorstep’s drop-in stay-and-play work. It has not
proved possible for Doorstep to replace all of the County Council funding in
one go. Doorstep is therefore being forced to reduce its drop-in service to
just one day a week from February 2017.
However the Doorstep board (of which I am treasurer) is confident that
in time we will be able to obtain sufficient extra income from trusts and the
local community. Will the Cabinet member ask the cross-party group of
councillors to look again at whether it is possible for Donnington Doorstep to
obtain some transition funding from the £1 million set aside by the County
Council for the purpose of supporting stay-and-play and other activities in the
now voluntary children’s centres?”
Councillor
Tilley replied:
“I appreciate the position that Donnington
Doorstep finds itself in and sympathise with the difficult times that the
voluntary sector as a whole are experiencing. You will be aware that we
previously commissioned a service from Donnington Doorstep under contract which
came to an end in March 2016.
Council discussed the transition fund at its
meeting on the 12th July with the motion resolved unanimously as:
Council continues to support the general principle that those in greatest need
should have the highest priority. However, Council regrets that it has
been compelled to abandon the concept of universal provision offered by our
children’s centres in Oxfordshire as a result of the Government’s cuts in Local
Authority Funding.
In the meantime, Council is aware that, as a
result of the focus of the most needy children and families in our county,
there will be large areas – particularly in the West which now have no
Children’s Centre buildings – the same areas likely to suffer most from rural
isolation as the council removes bus subsidies.
Ensuring that there were some compensation
for these areas was a key statement agreed by Council in its February
budget. Council therefore believes it is now essential that the effects
of the loss of Children’s Centres, in these areas is compensated for by:
1. Offering active
support to the parents, volunteers and parish councils taking over or hoping to
take over the vacated centres;
2. Persuading
district Councils to join us in giving as much support to these bodies as
possible;
3. That the £1m Transition
Fund agreed at the February budget should be committed to these areas to
achieve the above.
In addition to the above Cabinet agreed the
panel Terms of Reference and Grant Criteria on 20th February with
the guidance ‘to provide pump priming grants for establishing universal
provision of children’s services in communities.
The panel chairman Cllr Stratford advised
that the application was declined for funding on the basis that this did not
meet the criteria of the 12 July in that these services were outside of those
offered by our centres.
I feel it is clear that the discussion at
council was for supporting those groups to take over vacated centres as
outlined in number one and to direct the transition fund to these areas as
outlined in number three. I am aware that Donnington Doorstep have
resubmitted their proposal and that the Cabinet will be considering the
recommendations of the cross-party group when it meets in February.”
Supplementary: In response to a request for
an assurance that the Transition Funding Working Group would consider the
latest application Councillor Stratford, Cabinet Member for Finance and
Chairman of the Group confirmed that it had been looked at by the Group and
recommendations would come to the next Cabinet meeting.
Councillor Williams had given notice of the
following question to Councillor Tilley:
“Would the Portfolio Holder be willing
to restore the £60,000 grant withdrawn by the County Council to Donnington
Doorstep Family Centre. The reason being that this Childrens Centre being a
separate trust is not part of the local authority network of
provision and therefore cannot benefit from the concession on rents recently
granted by the Council to Children's Centres.”
Councillor Tilley replied:
In early 2013, Donnington Doorstep, following an open tender process, was awarded a contract by the Council to deliver the following services:
Agreed cost was just over £60k per annum.
The contract started on 1st July 2013 and ran in the first instance for two years to 30th June 2015. The contract was extended in October 2014, to run to 31st March 2016 when the contract ended
There is no budget identified in the Children Education and Family budget 2017 / 18 to commission providers such as Donnington to provide stay and play sessions.
Donnington Doorstep would not be eligible for concession on rent as this concession is only available to community groups delivering from OCC .
Supplementary: Asked whether the Cabinet in making its decision would take into account the impact on the Centre; that it was an independent centre and therefore not eligible for the rent waiver and in view of the work done during Bullfinch Councillor Hudspeth replied that recommendations would come to Cabinet and everything would be taken into account.
Supporting documents: