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 Roy Darke had given notice of
the following question to the Cabinet Member for Finance & Property:
"On item 7,
Financial Monitoring I notice that under Pooled Budgets (para 26)
that the
overspend is currently running at nearly £5m. and that this current
overspend
includes £2m carried forward from last year. Even when the PCT
element is taken
into account the Council is heading for nearly £2m
overspend. What
measures will the Cabinet Member be taking to take control
of this failure
to meet the budget?"
Councillor Couchman replied:
"As Councillor
Darke acknowledges the overspending which is the responsibility of the County
Council is £1.827m. In the next Monthly Monitoring report, he will see that
this overspending has fallen still further to £1.298m. All of this overspending
relates to social care for adults with physical disabilities (the much larger
element of the budget which relates to older people is currently showing that
spend is in line with budget). This overspending on social care for adults with
physical disabilities is not a reflection of a failure to control the budget
but reflects an increase in the number of people who require care.
This includes
students with physical disabilities who have come to study in
funding from the
Primary Care Trust. An action plan has been developed
which is looking
to find savings in the cost of care such as through the use of
supported living
arrangements and challenging high cost placements. However, this will not
eliminate the overspending which will need to be carried
forward into next
year. The budget agreed yesterday allocates extra
resources to
adults with physical disabilities to help manage the pressures
next year."
Councillor Jean Fooks had given notice
of the following question to the Cabinet Member for Growth & Infrastructure:
"The
proposals to build a Waste Recycling Centre at Kidlington, to cater for
the residual
household waste from the whole county, and to close facilities at
Ardley, Dean,
Stanford and Redbridge have generated much concern. Can
the Cabinet
member reassure us that the district councils, Kidlington Parish
Council and the
public will be properly consulted before any decision is taken
on these sites?
Will a full environmental assessment be done on the possible
extra traffic
generation they will cause?"
Councillor Hudspeth replied: “Yes.”
Supplementary: Councillor Fooks asked for information on the timetable.
Councillor Hudspeth replied that it would be over the Summer period and
that full information on the consultation would be available.
Councillor Richard Stevens had given notice
of the following two questions to the Cabinet Member for Adult Services:
Since the last
Cabinet meeting on 25 January 2011, has the Cabinet
member been able
to find any evidence of Oxfordshire benefiting from the £1
billion extra
nationally in the Personal Social Services Grant, as announced in
the Coalition's
Spending Review in October 2010?
Councillor Fatemian replied:
“It was stated at
the last Cabinet, that the £1bn had been included in the total
revenue support
grant, but it was not possible to determine what share was
available to
Oxfordshire. However, if it had not been included it would have
meant that the
total level of funding to the authority would have been further
reduced. This
position still remains the case.
“In the event
that the answer to the preceding question above is "no", has the
Cabinet Member written, or will he write, to the minister responsible to ask
where the money is?”
Councillor Fatemian indicated that Local Government had been given the
money as part of the total revenue support and was expected to act in a
responsible manner. He looked forward to using the money for adult Services in
the best way possible.
Supporting documents: