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 Janet Godden had given notice of the following question to Councillor Rose:
“What has been the total cost of the work to realign the junction at
the A34 slip road /
Councillor Rose replied:
Question
·
What
has been the total cost of the work to realign the junction at the A34
slip road /
Answer
The capital budget for the scheme is
£248,232. The scheme has just finished on site and so the final (outturn) cost
of the scheme is not yet available as some bills have yet to be received.
Question
·
If
section 106 monies have been used, what alternative eligible local schemes
could these have been used for?'
Answer
The scheme is being fully funded from S106
developer contributions.
The proposed funding of the scheme this year
will come from a variety of S106 funds comprising around (because the actual
cost is not yet available one can’t be specific)
o
£198k
from development sites within
o
£50k
from development sites within
Because the various S106 agreements (the
funds from which are to be put towards the cost of the West Way improvements)
are not tying contributions towards specific named/identified schemes it is not
practical to identify a specific list of alternative schemes to which the
contributions could be used.
But any such alternative eligible schemes
would need to fall within the scope of:
o
Transport
infrastructure between Botley and Oxford City Centre
and/or
o
Measures/aims
within the Oxford Transport Strategy and/or
o
Traffic
management/highway safety measures in the vicinity of such as
Councillor Zoe Patrick had given notice of the following question to
Councillor Carter:
“Why did the Council contract out the school admissions work
to Capita who subsequently failed to provide a good service to the residents of
Oxfordshire who did not receive responses to their emails? This was made
worse by subsequent telephone calls to the council not being
answered. Is there not sufficient capacity in the service?”
Councillor Carter replied:
"I should start by clarifying the precise nature
of our connection with Capita in relation to the admissions issues you raise.
No admissions functions have been contracted out but the directorate does use
Capita software for the administration of school admissions (which assists in
the process of logging , processing, allocating and, if it works as
it should, advising parents of places allocated).
The regrettable failure of the Capita system earlier this
year to send out automatic confirmation e-mails to about
6,500 families compounded the challenge that was already being
faced as result of a significantly increased number of
children in the cohort (an increase of over 500 from last year) in parallel
with a much smaller number of surplus places. There has been a
steady increase in the number of applications to be processed over the
last 5 years (rising from 12117 in 2007 to 14131 in 20110) but
during this time the size of the admissions team has remained the same
The Directorate recognises that the service provided
for customers this year has not been good enough and is taking steps to
remedy the position. Two additional posts will be recruited to the
Customer Services Centre (CSC) to provide a better ‘front line’ response
service to parents when the CSC will be able to assist with aspects
of the Admissions function later this year."
Supplementary: Councillor Patrick referred to problems with
highways enquiries and Councillor Carter undertook to investigate, involving Councillor Rose and
to respond to Councillor Patrick.
Councillor Jenny Hannaby had given notice of
the following question to Councillor Fatemian:
“At the Council meeting on 10 July during consideration of the Cabinet
report to Council a question was put to Deputy Leader Councillor Rodney Rose by
Councillor Alan Armitage regarding the Corporate Plan
Performance and Risk Management report for the Fourth Quarter 2011/12
The report indicates some areas are not meeting their targets.
Councillor Armitage asked if Councillor Rose
was confident that all targets will be met.
Councillor Rose answered Yes without further comment.
My question to Cabinet Member for Adult Services and Public Health
Councillor Arash Fatemian
is can he confirm he agrees with this statement, and if so, is he
confident that the delayed transfer of care target will also be met.”
Councillor Fatemian replied:
Delayed Transfers of Care have steadily reduced between April and June
2012. The figures for the end of June were 148, compared to 182 at the end of
March. As reported at the Health and Overview Scrutiny Committee targets have
been agreed across the local health and social care system to reduce delays to
·
146 delays at
July 1st
·
103 by September
30th
·
72 by January 10th,
2013
·
Monthly average
of 72 by March 31st 2013
These targets should ensure Oxfordshire is no longer in the
bottom quartile of authorities.
We are currently 1% off hitting the first target which is
well within the fluctuations that happen from week to week. This means that it
was quite reasonable for Councillor Rose to respond as he did.
Supplementary: Councillor Hannaby sought assurances that patients released would receive care at home or care in a nursing home as appropriate. Councillor Fatemian gave an assurance that no-one would be fast tracked unless appropriate care packages were in place.
Supporting documents: