Any
county councillor may, by giving notice to the Proper Officer by 9 am on the working
day 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 Richard
Stevens had given notice of the following question to the Leader:
“1. Recent
research reveals that over 40% of GP's believe that the proposed changes
contained in the Health White Paper (Liberating the NHS) will lead to a postcode
lottery, with services to patients becoming more varied. The research also shows that over 70% of GPs
believe the changes will lead to much greater private sector involvement in the
NHS. Given these statistics, can the
Leader of the Council explain why his government is only consulting on the implementation
of these changes and not the actual changes themselves?”
Councillor Mitchell replied:
“These figures are taken from a small survey
of 300 GPs, compared to over 40,000 GPs in England. From the Government's own discussions with
GPs around the country, it is clear that many are enthusiastic about the
reforms. Indeed, 92% of GP practices are already part of practice-based
commissioning groups, a policy actively espoused by the Labour Government and our
proposals for GP-led commissioning simply build upon these.
The actual changes which the Government is undertaking are consistent with the
Coalition agreement: a strong local voice for patients through democratic
representation and the devolution of commissioning responsibilities to
GPs. The reforms the coalition
government has announced are simply the most cost-effective way of achieving
these changes and that is why the government is consulting on how to implement
them. The proposals are to be included in the proposed Health Bill and will
therefore be subject to Parliament’s approval.”
Councillor Liz
Brighouse, OBE had given notice of the
following question to the Leader:
“2. On Tuesday 14th September
Council agreed two motions concerning support for the most disadvantaged. In order to ensure the poorest people in the
county are not disproportionately affected by the fiscal policies of the
government, will the Cabinet assess each policy change required in relation to
its impact on poverty?”
Councillor Mitchell replied:
“The Cabinet will most certainly be
assessing the impact of public spending cuts on all of our residents and,
particularly, on the most disadvantaged.
However, "poverty" can be defined in many ways and is not
necessarily synonymous with disadvantage.
The Cabinet will be concentrating on assessing the impact of potential
decisions on all categories of disadvantaged people throughout its budget
deliberations and providing an evidence base for this.”
Supplementary: Councillor Brighouse referred
to news today of cuts to children’s projects across Oxfordshire. She asked that
in looking at issues of deprivation consideration also be given to rural
isolation. Given that the funding was in budgets she queried how much further
the cuts would go and how many more projects would be affected?
Councillor Mitchell replied that the current
government cuts were 25% compared to 20% envisaged by the previous government
and were the price for years of structural imbalance to bring spending into line
with income. Public Sector Borrowing had hit a record high in August 2010.
Rural deprivation would be one of the factors considered in action taken.
Councillor Roy Darke had given notice of the following question to the
cabinet Member for Finance & Property:
“3. David Cameron said earlier this year that
"This economy is going to recover when we get the private sector going, by
boosting enterprise." Given the recent announced job losses at the Cowley BMW plant, and the recent collapse of other local firms,
can the Cabinet Member for Finance explain exactly how cutting public sector
jobs in Oxfordshire is going to boost the private sector?”
Councillor Couchman replied:
“This question starts from the premise that the
country has an alternative to cutting public spending. It does not.
The last government spent more than it received in every year since
2001. This was well before a banking
crisis and recession. The last
government's level of indebtedness meant the country was ill prepared for the
measures necessary to counter the downturn.
The present government has inherited a structural imbalance which means
that there is £4 of spending for every £3 of income. It will inevitably take time to rectify this
structural deficit and, until then, we will be adding to the mountain of debt
and not reducing it. The question is not
"should we be cutting public spending" but "by how much and how
quickly must we make the cuts?".
Labour had already planned to cut public revenue spending by 20% and
capital spending by 50%. After seeing
the degree of the structural deficit, the coalition has increased Labour's 20%
of cuts to 25% on revenue and maintained Labour's cuts on capital at 50%.
Cutting public spending is bound to impact
on those parts of the private sector that deliver public services. It is inevitable. Oxfordshire is particularly vulnerable, given
our high dependence on public sector jobs.
This is why it is vital to promote conditions that will allow the
private sector to thrive. This involves
improving education and skills provision to equip school and college leavers
for successful and well paid careers; to enable workers of all ages to re-skill
and up-skill where necessary; and to help those not in education, employment or
training to gain confidence, skills and pride in employment. It involves making the planning system more
welcoming and supportive of the economy.
It means improving our transport system to make movement easier. It means stripping away some of the red tape
and blockages that inhibit economic growth.
It means welcoming overseas investment to a county with the most
exciting science and knowledge transfer facilities anywhere and a living
environment of equal quality.
That is why an Oxfordshire City Region
Enterprise Partnership is so important to capitalise on our assets, address our
shortcomings and support a vibrant and growing private sector as the public
sector necessarily declines. The country
cannot go on spending more than it earns.”
Supplementary: Councillor Darke referred to the comments of the Deputy Prime Minister
expressing concern over the possibility of a further downturn in the economy.
Does the County Council have a Plan B in the light of the decline in the
economy given that in recent reports Oxfordshire was seen as being particularly
susceptible?
Councillor Couchman replied that until the
Spending review in October and the local government settlement in late
November/early December there was no need for a Plan B. He awaited the outcome
with interest.
Councillor John
Sanders had given notice of the following question to the Cabinet member for
Transport:
“4. I was astounded to receive notification
of the proposed 25% increases in charges to residents for parking in Controlled
Parking Zones in Oxford.
The saga of these
charges and their unpopularity goes back several years. One of the strong objections put forward by
Oxford residents was that once the system was embedded, the Conservative-led
County Council would be free to increase charges as it saw fit. At that time an assurance was given that
increases would only be in line with RPI inflation. This was put in writing and repeated at
public meetings.
For example:
Cabinet report
19 Sept 2006 (page 29) in
response to an objection by residents that "The £40 charge will quickly be
increased to a much higher figure” the Council officer comment is “The Draft
Traffic Order limits increases in the charge to an adjustment once every three
years based on inflation over this period."
Proposed
Charges for Residents’ and Visitors’ Parking Permits: Consultation Information
(June 2006). "Adjustments
for inflation –The charges will be kept the same for three-year periods. After each three-year period the charges
would be adjusted for inflation using the Retail Price Index"
There is no
mention of slapping on a hefty increased charge.
Will the Cabinet
member for Transport explain why, only three years after a firm promise to the people
who reluctantly took part in the consultation, he now intends to renege on it?”
Councillor Rose replied:
“When the City council effectively handed
over the running of Oxford on-street parking to the County Council, as they
were unable to administer the scheme properly, the County were clear that the
charge would cover the administration costs. Since then, national legislation
increases in Penalty Charges has seen a 25% drop in offences. We could not have
foreseen this result, which has been reflected by other Authorities. We
finished up with other Council budgets subsidising the administration costs. In
the new climate of a National debt of £950,000,000,000 after 13 years of a
Labour government the Council can no longer continue to charge at less than the
costs involved.”
Supplementary: Councillor John Sanders
queried how much of the £950,000m could be attributed to running CPZ schemes in
Oxford. The level of national debt was comparable to that at the end of the
last Conservative government. He asserted that the new charges were to recoup
money wasted on a particular scheme and questioned when there would be an
admittance of incompetence.
Councillor Rose replied that the question
was factually incorrect so he was not going to answer it.
Councillor Richard
Stevens had given notice of the following question to the Cabinet Member for
Transport:
“5. Can the Cabinet Member for Transport
explain why nobody from the County Council is being made available to attend
the Area Committees to explain the recently proposed above-inflation increase
in parking charges that are to be levied on people in Oxford?”
Councillor Rose replied:
“All members whether county or city can put
their concerns down in writing to officially object to the proposals and I will
take their concerns into account when coming to my decision on this matter. The
service is not able to resource officer attendance at all of the Area
Committees prior to the decision committee. It would be inappropriate for me to
attend as this matter is coming before me to make the final decision at cabinet
member decisions.”
Supporting documents: