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Agenda, decisions and minutes

Venue: Bodicote House, Banbury, OX15 4AA

Contact: Colm Ó Caomhánaigh  Tel: 07393 001096; E-Mail:  colm.ocaomhanaigh@oxfordshire.gov.uk

Link: video link https://oxon.cc/Cabinet20072021

Items
No. Item

64/21

Apologies for Absence

Minutes:

There were no apologies for absence.

65/21

Declarations of Interest

- guidance note opposite

Minutes:

There were no declarations of interest.

 

66/21

Minutes pdf icon PDF 526 KB

To approve the minutes of the meeting held on 22 June 2021 (CA3) and to receive information arising from them.

Minutes:

The minutes of the meeting held on 22 June 2021 were approved.

 

67/21

Questions from County Councillors pdf icon PDF 472 KB

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:

The questions received from County Councillors and responses are set out in an Annex to these Minutes.

68/21

Petitions and Public Address pdf icon PDF 181 KB

This Cabinet meeting will be held virtually in order to conform with current guidelines regarding social distancing. Normally requests to speak at this public meeting are required by 9 am on the day preceding the published date of the meeting. However, during the current situation and to facilitate these new arrangements we are asking that requests to speak are submitted by no later than 9am four working days before the meeting i.e. 9 am on Wednesday 14 July 2021. Requests to speak should be sent to colm.ocaomhanaigh@oxfordshire.gov.uk together with 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 9 am 2 working days before the meeting.

 

Where a meeting is held virtually and the addressee is unable to participate virtually their written submission will be accepted.

 

Written submissions should be no longer than 1 A4 sheet.

Minutes:

The following requests to address the meeting had been agreed by the Chair:

 

Item 10 – Draft Oxfordshire Plan 2050: Professor Richard Harding, Chairman, CPRE – The Countryside Charity

 

Item 13 – A40 HIF2 Smart Corridor: Graham Smith, Cyclox

 

69/21

A Fair Deal for Oxfordshire - Shaping Our Immediate and Longer-Term Priorities pdf icon PDF 237 KB

Cabinet Member: Leader

Forward Plan Ref: 2021/118

Contact: Claire Taylor, Corporate Director Customer, Organisation Development & Resources Tel: 07919 367072

 

Report by Chief Executive (CA6).

 

*** Annex 1 is to follow ***

 

Following the Oxfordshire County Council elections on 6 May 2021, a new administration was formed: the Oxfordshire Fair Deal Alliance.

 

This report sets out the policy objectives and areas of priority for the new administration. In line with the administration’s ambition to listen to our communities and to be open, transparent and ensure the organisation is more accessible to all, a clear one-page document has been developed.

 

Cabinet is recommended to:

 

a)           Approve the approach to the development of a new strategic planfor the period commencing 2022/23, including a programme of public consultation ‘Oxfordshire Conversations’ and stakeholder engagement to take place in the autumn.

  

b)           Endorse the priorities of the Oxfordshire Fair Deal Alliance as set out in paragraph 6 (and the attached annex) to form the basis of these conversations and a new strategic plan.

 

Additional documents:

Minutes:

Cabinet considered a report setting out the policy objectives and areas of priority for the new administration.  The report’s Annex had been updated in Addenda 3.

 

The Performance Scrutiny Committee had met on 16 July 2021 to consider this report.  Councillor Eddie Reeves, Chair, summarised the comments from that meeting.  He commended the new administration on publishing their priorities before the summer.

 

There had been varied views expressed on the priorities but Members were agreed that it will be ultimately judged on its delivery.  There were concerns expressed about the financial consequences of the proposals and while it was a noble aim to increase the funding available to the Council, the administration would inevitably be faced with a series of zero-sum decisions at some point.  Members could see what was being prioritised but struggled to see what would consequently be deprioritised.

 

Councillor Reeves asked when non-Cabinet Members would be able to engage with the further development of the corporate plan.  He suggested that the role of Localities be enhanced as a great resource.  Members had made the point that there should be more on prioritising children and young people.

 

Some Members of the Committee warned of a danger of consultation fatigue, particularly with the Oxfordshire Plan 2050 going into consultation shortly.  There were also questions about how we make best use of the data from consultation.

 

Decarbonisation was commended across parties but there were concerns about how that would be achieved beyond divestment of assets and the LED street lighting programme.

 

Councillor Liz Leffman introduced the report.  She stated that the new administration wanted to make its priorities clear and easy to understand.  These priorities would inform the budget and work towards a fairer and greener county.  Councillor Leffman moved the Recommendations.

 

Councillor Liz Brighouse added that promises made to the electorate in the recent Council elections were reflected in the document.  They intended it to be a living document and would engage with residents on it.  While it was the beginning of a process, the Cabinet had already started to deliver, for example by providing over 20,000 places for young people over the summer to participate in activities that they would not otherwise be able to access.  Councillor Brighouse seconded the Recommendations.

 

Councillor Calum Miller, responding to the scrutiny committee’s questions about the next stages, stated that he looked forward to working with colleagues to flesh out the proposals and demonstrate how, by aligning the resources with the priorities, a programme of change can be delivered.

 

Councillor Pete Sudbury assured Councillor Reeves that divestment from buildings will not be counted as a carbon saving – they will report on like for like.  It was also planned to include indirect emissions such as the data centre and road maintenance as well as reporting on the effects of Council decisions.

 

The Recommendation was put, including the revised Annex document in Addenda 3.

 

RESOLVED: to

a)            approve the approach to the development of a new strategic planfor the period commencing 2022/23,  ...  view the full minutes text for item 69/21

70/21

Business Management & Monitoring Report - May 2021 pdf icon PDF 2 MB

Cabinet Member: Cabinet Member for Finance

Forward Plan Ref: 2021/022

Contact: Louise Tustian, Head of Insight & Corporate Programmes Tel: 07741 607452/Hannah Doney, Head of Corporate Finance Tel: 07584 174654

 

Report by Corporate Director Customers & Organisational Development and Director of Finance.

 

This report sets out Oxfordshire County Council’s (OCC’s) progress towards Corporate Plan priorities for 2020/21 – April and May 2021.

 

Cabinet is RECOMMENDED:

 

a)            To note April and May 2021 business management and monitoring report.

 

b)           To approve the virement set out in Annex C- 2b and note virements set out in Annex C-2c;

 

c)            To approve the bad debt write off set out in paragraph 44 of Annex C

 

Additional documents:

Minutes:

Cabinet had before it a report setting out Oxfordshire County Council’s (OCC’s) progress towards Corporate Plan priorities for 2021/22 during April and May 2021.

 

Councillor Calum Miller introduced the report and moved the Recommendation.  He noted that of the 22 indicators 11 were Green, 4 Amber and 6 Red which was a small improvement on last month.  He also drew attention to two risks rated Red: demand management for children’s services and staff shortages in the construction industry.

 

Planned savings of £16.1m were expected to be delivered in this financial year, though it should be noted that 25% were rated amber and needed to be monitored closely.  Since the last Cabinet meeting the Government had allocated £10.9m to support the Council’s Covid response.  The specific recommendations on virements and writing off bad debts were within the Council’s budget.

 

Councillor Glynis Phillips seconded the Recommendations. She noted the continuing strong performance of the Customer Service Centre with a 96% satisfaction rating and 89% of calls resolved on first contact.  An improvement on figures for abandoned calls was expected when new features in the system upgrade take effect.

 

Councillor Liz Brighouse reported on developments in her portfolio including the expansion of the School Streets pilot, enabling children to have carbon-free journeys and a safer environment around their schools.  This was supported by Government finance but more was needed.

 

Councillor Brighouse added that there had been an inspection of the Youth Justice Service in May in which it had been seen very positively.  She paid tribute to the strong team.  Absence rates in schools were lower than the national average which was due to hard work by officers and schools.

 

The number of contacts to the Multi-Agency Safeguarding Hub (MASH) were 51% higher in May than in pre-Covid times.  This reflected the situation across the country and represented a major risk.  The Council was working to reduce its dependency on agency staff in children’s social care by training its own staff and working to retain them in the county.

 

RESOLVED:

 

a)            To note April and May 21 business management and monitoring report.

 

b)           To approve the virement set out in Annex C- 2b and note virements set out in Annex C-2c;

 

c)            To approve the bad debt write off set out in paragraph 44 of Annex C.

 

71/21

Capital Programme Monitoring Report - May 2021 pdf icon PDF 349 KB

Cabinet Member: Finance

Forward Plan Ref: 2021/020

Contact: Hannah Doney, Head of Corporate Finance Tel: 07584 174654

 

Report by Director of Finance (CA8).

 

The report is the first capital programme update and monitoring report for the 2021/22 financial year and focuses on the delivery of the capital programme based on projections at the end of May 2021 and new inclusions within the overall ten-year capital programme.

 

The Cabinet is RECOMMENDED to:

 

a)               agree the inclusion in the Capital Programme of the following grants funded schemes:

                       i.       £1.5m Green Homes Grant programme (Paragraph 27);

                     ii.       £2.1m Public Sector De-Carbonisation Grant programme (Paragraph 28),

  

b)              agree the inclusion in the Capital Programme of the following schemes:

                       i.       the New St Edburg’s expansion to 3 Form Entry Primary School with a budget of £10.3m funded from s106 contributions (Paragraph 42);

                     ii.       the A420 Coxwell Road Junction scheme with a budget of £1.80m funded from s106 contributions (Paragraph 44),

 

c)               agree the increase in the budget for the following schemes:

                       i.       £2.2m for the Benson Relief Road scheme funded from Housing & Growth Deal grant and s106 contributions (Paragraph 46);

                     ii.       £0.5m for the Carterton Community Safety Centre funded from s106 contributions (Paragraph 29),

 

d)              note the risk that forward funding of up to £7.0m may be required on the A40 Access to Witney scheme (Paragraph 48) ahead of receipt of s106 contributions,

 

e)               approve the updated Capital Programme at Annex 2 (taking into account recommendations 1-4)

 

Additional documents:

Minutes:

Cabinet considered the first monitoring report and Capital Programme update for 2021/22, setting out the monitoring position for 2021/22 based on activity to the end of May 2021 and providing an update to the Capital Programme approved by Council in February 2021 to take into account additional funding and new schemes.

 

Councillor Calum Miller drew particular attention to the increases outlined in paragraphs 3 and 4.  The forecast expenditure for 2021/22 had increased by £3.4m compared to the latest approved capital programme which was largely due to deferred expenditure from the previous year.

 

The 10 year Capital Programme had increased by £49.2m compared to the capital programme approved by Council in February 2021, due equally to slippage from last year and new grant funding.

 

Borrowing for this year was estimated to be £70m some of which was borrowed on behalf of others, such as OxLEP.  Councillor Miller thanked officers for their prudent management of borrowing in the past.  He referred to the recommended additions to the capital fund, in particular, potential forward funding for the A40 Access to Witney Scheme ahead of the receipt of S106 contributions.

 

Councillor Miller stated that he was confident that these represented prudent capital investments for the Council and moved the Recommendations.

 

Councillor Glynis Phillips seconded the proposal.

 

RESOLVED to:

 

a)           agree the inclusion in the Capital Programme of the following grants funded schemes:

                   i.          £1.5m Green Homes Grant programme (Paragraph 27);

                  ii.          £2.1m Public Sector De-Carbonisation Grant programme (Paragraph 28),

  

b)           agree the inclusion in the Capital Programme of the following schemes:

                   i.          the New St Edburg’s expansion to 3 Form Entry Primary School with a budget of £10.3m funded from s106 contributions (Paragraph 42);

                  ii.          the A420 Coxwell Road Junction scheme with a budget of £1.80m funded from s106 contributions (Paragraph 44),

 

c)           agree the increase in the budget for the following schemes:

                   i.          £2.2m for the Benson Relief Road scheme funded from Housing & Growth Deal grant and s106 contributions (Paragraph 46);

                  ii.          £0.5m for the Carterton Community Safety Centre funded from s106 contributions (Paragraph 29),

 

d)           note the risk that forward funding of up to £7.0m may be required on the A40 Access to Witney scheme (Paragraph 48) ahead of receipt of s106 contributions,

 

e)           approve the updated Capital Programme at Annex 2 (taking into account recommendations 1-4)

 

72/21

SEND Top-Up Funding for Schools pdf icon PDF 219 KB

Cabinet Member: Deputy Leader

Forward Plan Ref: 2021/112

Contact: Hayley Good, Deputy Director of Education Tel: 07551 680562

 

Report by Corporate Director for Children’s Services (CA9).

 

To seek agreement of the SEND top-up funding arrangements for academic year beginning September 2021.

 

The Cabinet is RECOMMENDED to

 

a)               Agree an increase in Top-Up funding for Early Years settings, mainstream Primary, mainstream Secondary and Special Schools. The increase will only be available in the year 2021-2022. 

 

b)              Note that for Secondary Schools, the increased top-up is applicable where the formulaic approach is insufficient for schools to meet the needs of the child. This decision would not reduce the amount of Top-Up funding a Secondary school currently receives.

 

c)               Note that system reform is required for SEND in Oxfordshire. A public consultation on this is planned for later in 2021. The interim arrangements above for Top-Up funding are a holding position while the detailed work in this complex area are worked through.

 

Minutes:

Cabinet considered a report recommending that the increase in Top-Up funding for 2020-21 be maintained for the academic year 2021-22.

 

Councillor Ian Corkin, Shadow Cabinet Member for Children, Education and Young People’s Services, spoke to support the Recommendation which was an extension of the policy of the last administration.  He described the problems in this area as complex with a complicated financial backdrop across the country.  He paid tribute to the work by the Corporate Director for Children’s Services, Kevin Gordon, and his team in trying to resolve the situation.

 

Councillor Corkin suggested that the long-term solution should include

·                strong partnership working in co-production with parents, carers and young people at the formative stages of policy development;

·                joint commissioning across education, health and social care;

·                a focus on core processes so that needs can be identified early and accurately;

·                a commitment to deliver specialised in-county provision including a ‘mainstream plus’ option.

·                preparation for adulthood which should include engagement with local employers

 

Councillor Liz Brighouse thanked Councillor Corkin for his support and responded that the points he had raised were being examined.  The problem was that a solution was needed quite quickly but there would be a consultation process in the autumn. 

 

Councillor Brighouse added that when the previous administration provided the top-up funding, they had envisaged that the government review would be complete by now but it had been further delayed.  She asked Councillor Corkin to use his network to impress upon government the urgency of the matter.

 

Councillor Glynis Phillips proposed an amendment to Recommendation a) to include the amount of the increase - £3.2.  This was seconded by Councillor Brighouse.

 

The following comments from the Performance Scrutiny Committee that discussed this Cabinet proposal at its meeting on 16 July 2021 were read out:

 

·         Members supported this important provision.

·         The pressure on schools had increased following cuts to other services for children with SEN.

·         Training for teaching staff was a key support.  There was a need to recognise that fatigue can be a significant factor.

·         What was being done to achieve a more sustainable solution and to create more capacity for special needs education within the county?

·         Did the increase in numbers of children with SEN reflect an actual increase in need or were we getting better at identifying these needs?  Do we need to re-evaluate the criteria?

·         Some schools have a much higher proportion of children with SEN.  Should the funding allocations take account of that?

·         When it came to looking at reform, schools and teachers were key stakeholders that needed to be central to any consultation.

 

Kevin Gordon thanked the scrutiny committee for the points which were very relevant and useful.  He was pleased to see an overall consensus on the problems.  He had been working with schools for the last nine months on the new approach.  The SEND budgets belonged to schools – the Council was a custodian of the funds. He proposed to come back to future meetings with more briefings on reforms that will  ...  view the full minutes text for item 72/21

73/21

Draft Oxfordshire Plan 2050 Reg 18 (Stage 2) pdf icon PDF 429 KB

Cabinet Member: Travel & Development Strategy

Forward Plan Ref: 2020/048

Contact: Dawn Pettis, Strategic Planning Team Leader Tel: 07771 983395

 

Report by Corporate Director Environment & Place (CA10).

 

*** The draft Plan (Annex 1) is included in this agenda pack.  The other documents it references are published separately as Supplementary Documents due to their size and number. ***

 

The draft Oxfordshire Plan 2050 Reg 18 (Stage 2) consultation document is being considered for endorsement by all local planning authorities in Oxfordshire (Cherwell District Council, Oxford City Council, South Oxfordshire District Council, Vale of the White Horse District Council and West Oxfordshire District Council) in July. Once the draft Plan is endorsed, it will go out for public consultation on 30th July for 10 weeks to 8 October.

 

The Cabinet is RECOMMENDED to

 

a)            Consider and agree the process for the Oxfordshire Plan Regulation 18 (Part 2) document for public consultation commencing on 30 July;

b)           Further consider the Plan at its meeting on 21 September after an all member seminar, with a view to making formal representations on the Oxfordshire Plan Regulation 18 (Part 2) by the closing date of 8 October 2021.

 

Additional documents:

Minutes:

Cabinet had been asked to agree the process for public consultation on the Oxfordshire Plan and further consider the Council’s formal response at the September Cabinet meeting.

 

The following speaker had been agreed with the Chair:

 

Professor Richard Harding, Chair, CPRE - The Countryside Charity welcomed the commitment in the draft to carbon reduction and environmental protection.  However, they were concerned that the consultation document was not fit for purpose because

·         it did not make clear the tough decisions needed

·         it will let the Oxford-Cambridge Arc proposal dominate

·         it will undermine the role of local councillors.

 

The draft plan presented a wide range of policies which were to be imposed on all the local councils because otherwise different approaches might be taken and this could result in less certainty and clarity for developers.

 

Professor Harding maintained that the public deserved a revised consultation document that sets out the preferred growth and spatial options and provides adequate information to allow the impacts, risks and benefits to be compared.

 

Councillor Duncan Enright introduced the report.  The plan involved a new partnership enabling the County, City and Districts to speak with one voice.  It would actually reinstate local democratic control.  The main themes chosen from public consultation were climate change, environmental quality, strong communities, travel, jobs and homes.  Five spatial options were listed for feedback.  It was expected that the next stage will draw from all five options.

 

Councillor Enright stated that the plan took into account the local plans already adopted up to the 2030s.  Oxfordshire had been one of the most enthusiastic supporters of the Arc and in fact the leaders of the Arc were thinking of taking a similar planning approach to Oxfordshire’s in other areas.  The document was not intended to be proscriptive so this would be a genuine consultation.

 

Other Members of Cabinet made the following observations:

 

·         Everyone should get involved in the consultation especially anyone who had concerns about the level of growth planned in Oxfordshire.

 

·         The Plan set out what good growth looked like.  However, current policies were going in the opposite direction – particularly in regard to carbon reduction.  It will be very difficult to set out a plan to 2050 that will meet the challenges in this paper.

 

·         Green spaces had provided a lifeline for people during the pandemic lockdown.  The Cabinet Member for Public Health will be looking closely at the proposals for healthy place shaping.

 

·         The Plan involved a lot of weighty documents.  An executive summary would be appreciated.  Members need to engage with their communities and parish councils to ensure that we get their views on the questions asked and not rely just on the website for feedback.

 

·         Standards need to be prescriptive in the final document and not advisory, to ensure that they are effective.  Carbon offsetting should not be accepted.  Buildings need to be efficient in themselves and reducing the financial drag of energy costs would be a big help to the poorest families.

 

·         Some of the poorest  ...  view the full minutes text for item 73/21

74/21

A40 Access to Witney - In Principle Use of Statutory Powers pdf icon PDF 465 KB

Cabinet Member: Travel & Development Strategy

Forward Plan Ref: 2021/054

Contact: Tom Shuttleworth, A40 Programme Lead Tel: 07908 059132

 

Report by Corporate Director Environment & Place (CA12).

 

*** Due to the size of the document, Appendix A is published separately as a Supplementary Document ***

 

To seek approval to pursue the implementation of statutory powers to enable the project; and issue Requisition for Information notices.

 

The Cabinet is RECOMMENDED to

 

a)            Note the progress in developing the A40 Access to Witney project specifically the recent public engagement event undertaken to inform the preferred scheme options.

 

b)           Approve Officer’s preferred option recommendation and for the formal adoption by the Council of the A40 Access to Witney as an approved scheme.

 

c)            Approve in principle the development of The Oxfordshire County Council (A40 Access to Witney) Compulsory Purchase Order 202[x] in parallel with negotiations for private acquisition, with such powers of compulsory purchase used only as a matter of last resort, in order to bring forward the timely development of the A40 Access to Witney project. Formal authority for the making of The Oxfordshire County Council (A40 Access to Witney) Compulsory Purchase Order 202[x] will be reported to Cabinet, and necessary approval sought, following public engagement on preferred options and submission of a planning application for the scheme.

 

d)           Approve the preparation and service of statutory notices for the Requisition of Information pursuant to Section 16 Local Government (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1976 (as amended) to assist with determining the interests in the land required for the delivery of the scheme.

 

e)            Approve the preparation of The Oxfordshire County Council (A40 Access to Witney) Compulsory Purchase Order 202[x] in draft , together with a draft Order Map, draft Order Schedule, draft Statement of Reasons and all necessary land referencing activity in advance of seeking formal authority to make the Order.

 

Additional documents:

Minutes:

Cabinet had been asked to approve the preferred option and in principle use of a compulsory purchase order for this scheme.

 

Councillor Duncan Enright summarised the report.  The scheme was making changes around the periphery of Witney designed to reduce traffic in the town and improve air quality as well as making walking and cycling more attractive.  He proposed the Recommendations.

 

Councillor Pete Sudbury referred to the predicted increases in traffic outlined in the report and noted that he and his Cabinet colleagues were working to turn that around.  He asked if this scheme would still be necessary if they were successful in that.

 

Councillor Enright responded that the need for a scheme similar to this one had been identified as long as thirty years ago so it was long awaited.

 

Councillor Sudbury seconded the Recommendations.

 

RESOLVED to:

 

a)            Note the progress in developing the A40 Access to Witney project specifically the recent public engagement event undertaken to inform the preferred scheme options.

 

b)           Approve Officer’s preferred option recommendation and for the formal adoption by the Council of the A40 Access to Witney as an approved scheme.

 

c)            Approve in principle the development of The Oxfordshire County Council (A40 Access to Witney) Compulsory Purchase Order 202[x] in parallel with negotiations for private acquisition, with such powers of compulsory purchase used only as a matter of last resort, in order to bring forward the timely development of the A40 Access to Witney project. Formal authority for the making of The Oxfordshire County Council (A40 Access to Witney) Compulsory Purchase Order 202[x] will be reported to Cabinet, and necessary approval sought, following public engagement on preferred options and submission of a planning application for the scheme.

 

d)           Approve the preparation and service of statutory notices for the Requisition of Information pursuant to Section 16 Local Government (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act 1976 (as amended) to assist with determining the interests in the land required for the delivery of the scheme.

 

e)            Approve the preparation of The Oxfordshire County Council (A40 Access to Witney) Compulsory Purchase Order 202[x] in draft , together with a draft Order Map, draft Order Schedule, draft Statement of Reasons and all necessary land referencing activity in advance of seeking formal authority to make the Order.

75/21

A40 HIF 2 Smart Corridor - Preferred Options and Funding pdf icon PDF 442 KB

Cabinet Member: Travel & Development Strategy

Forward Plan Ref: 2021/082

Contact: Tom Shuttleworth, Programme Lead (A40) Tel: 07908 059132

 

Report by Corporate Director Environment & Place (CA13).

 

In summary, the A40 HIF2 Smart Corridor scheme includes three highway enhancement elements, which have now reached preferred option stage informed by the outcome from a recent public engagement exercise:

a)         Element 1: A40 Dual Carriageway extension

b)         Element 2: A40 Integrated Bus Lanes

c)         Element 3: A40 Dukes Cut

 

The report seeks Cabinet approval for the formal adoption of the preferred scheme in order that a planning application can be progressed in parallel with the bringing forward of a Highways Compulsory Purchase Order. Reference the latter statutory powers the in principle use of which was the subject of a report to Cabinet in June 2021 (2021/059).

 

The report sets out how development of the project to preferred option stage has followed the Department for Transport’s Transport Appraisal Guidance (TAG) guidance which provides best practice and guidance on major transport scheme option appraisal and design development.

 

It then goes on to detail how the presented schemes have changed in response to feedback gathered through the recently undertaken public consultation exercise. These changes are now part of the preferred scheme for which formal approval is sought.

 

The financial section confirms that the revised HIF funding allocation will cover all current scheme costs to the value of £106.756m, available through to the end of February 2025.

 

Lastly, the report sets out the statutory blight regime under which the delivery of this project would fall, as a consequence of formally approving the adoption as a preferred scheme. This is supported by a recommendation for a delegation to officers to address any claims made.

 

The Cabinet is RECOMMENDED to:

 

a)            Note the progress in developing the A40 HIF2 Smart Corridor project specifically the recent public engagement event undertaken to inform the preferred scheme options.

 

b)           Approve Officer’s preferred options recommendation and for the formal adoption by the Council of the A40 HIF2 Smart Corridor as an approved scheme.

 

c)            Note the preferred options are confirmed as fully funded following the recent agreement to amend the Grant Determination Agreement with Homes England, securing the full £106.756m budget.

 

d)           To notify Cabinet of the Statutory Blight regime that requires the Council to respond to claims for Statutory Blight pursuant to Part VI, Chapter II and Schedule 13 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 (as amended) which would be a consequence of it formally approving the preferred route.

 

e)            In respect to Statutory Blight delegate authority to the Director for Property, Investment & Facilities Management and the Director of Law and Governance to agree appropriate terms in accordance with statutory provisions.

 

Additional documents:

Minutes:

Cabinet had before it a proposal to approve the scheme, preferred options and finding for this project.

 

The following speaker had been agreed:

 

Graham Smith, Cyclox and representative of Cycling UK, called for improved safety measures for walking and cycling at the Eynsham Roundabout.  The original design to widen the approaches had no crossing facilities.  There were now Toucans in the East-West directions which were welcome.  However, consultation showed that safe crossing facilities were needed on the other roads.  Officers have said that this was not feasible and suggested alternatives but Members needed to take back control and insist that safe crossings are provided for walkers and cyclists.

 

Councillor Duncan Enright responded that the details on the scheme were still being worked out and there was still an opportunity to make safety improvements at the roundabout.

 

Other Cabinet Members asked if the crossing was used by children travelling to school and if Cabinet would have a further opportunity to ensure that the concerns around the design of the roundabout had been taken on board.

 

Councillor Enright confirmed that the roundabout was used by school children and also noted that a medical centre was proposed that would require pedestrian and cycling access.  He agreed that it was important to provide safe options for the north-south axis at the roundabout and noted that there was also a separate proposal for an underpass being examined.  The scheme was to go for planning approval in September with detailed design from October.

 

Councillor Enright proposed the Recommendations which were seconded by Councillor Pete Sudbury

 

RESOLVED to:

 

a)            Note the progress in developing the A40 HIF2 Smart Corridor project specifically the recent public engagement event undertaken to inform the preferred scheme options.

 

b)           Approve Officer’s preferred options recommendation and for the formal adoption by the Council of the A40 HIF2 Smart Corridor as an approved scheme.

 

c)            Note the preferred options are confirmed as fully funded following the recent agreement to amend the Grant Determination Agreement with Homes England, securing the full £106.756m budget.

 

d)           To notify Cabinet of the Statutory Blight regime that requires the Council to respond to claims for Statutory Blight pursuant to Part VI, Chapter II and Schedule 13 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 (as amended) which would be a consequence of it formally approving the preferred route.

 

e)            In respect to Statutory Blight delegate authority to the Director for Property, Investment & Facilities Management and the Director of Law and Governance to agree appropriate terms in accordance with statutory provisions.

 

76/21

Fibre Broadband for Public Buildings pdf icon PDF 229 KB

Cabinet Member: Corporate Services

Forward Plan Ref: 2021/045

Contact: Craig Bower, Programme Director Tel: 07711 411744

 

Report by Director of Digital & ICT (CA14).

 

To seek approval to move to contract with chosen preferred supplier.

 

The Cabinet is RECOMMENDED to

 

Approve delegated authority to the Corporate Director, Customers, Organisational Development and Resources, in consultation with the Cabinet Portfolio Holder for  Corporate Services for awarding a contract to the winning bidder of the council’s procurement of full-fibre broadband for public buildings, up to the value of £8m (Oxfordshire County Council Funding of £5m and Department of Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) funding of £3m).

  

Additional documents:

Minutes:

Cabinet had before it a proposal on awarding a contract to the winning bidder of the council’s procurement of full-fibre broadband for public buildings.

 

Councillor Glynis Phillips introduced the report.  Since 2013/14 broadband has been seen as an essential service.  The previous Cabinet went to public procurement to provide lower cost broadband for council and other public sector buildings.  This report detailed the outcome from that and proposed to delegate authority to award the contract.  She move the Recommendation.

 

Councillor Neil Fawcett welcomed this provision especially for libraries and heritage facilities.  The previous year had shown how important digital access had become.  He seconded the Recommendation.

 

Councillor Phillips thanked Craig Bower, Programme Director, Digital Infrastructure Team, in particular for his negotiating skills.

 

RESOLVED to approve delegated authority to the Corporate Director, Customers, Organisational Development and Resources, in consultation with the Cabinet Portfolio Holder for  Corporate Services for awarding a contract to the winning bidder of the council’s procurement of full-fibre broadband for public buildings, up to the value of £8m (Oxfordshire County Council Funding of £5m and Department of Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS) funding of £3m).

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Delegated Powers - July 2021

Cabinet Member: Leader

Forward Plan Ref: 2021/023

Contact: Colm Ó Caomhánaigh, Committee Officer Tel: 07393 001096

 

Report by Director of Law & Governance.

 

To report on a quarterly basis any executive decisions taken under the specific powers and functions delegated under the terms of Part 7.1 (Scheme of Delegation to Officers) of the Council’s Constitution – Paragraph 6.3(c)(i).  It is not for Scrutiny call-in.

 

There were no executive decisions taken in the relevant time period April to June 2021.

 

Minutes:

It was noted that there had been no executive decisions taken in the period reported April to June 2021.

 

 

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Forward Plan and Future Business pdf icon PDF 240 KB

Cabinet Member: All

Contact Officer: Colm Ó Caomhánaigh, Committee Officer Tel: 07393 001096

 

The Cabinet Procedure Rules provide that the business of each meeting at the Cabinet is to include “updating of the Forward Plan and proposals for business to be conducted at the following meeting”.   Items from the Forward Plan for the immediately forthcoming meetings of the Cabinet appear in the Schedule at CA16.  This includes any updated information relating to the business for those meetings that has already been identified for inclusion in the next Forward Plan update.

 

The Schedule is for noting, but Cabinet Members may also wish to take this opportunity to identify any further changes they would wish to be incorporated in the next Forward Plan update.

 

The Cabinet is RECOMMENDED to note the items currently identified for forthcoming meetings.

Additional documents:

Minutes:

The Cabinet considered a list of items (CA16) for the immediately forthcoming meetings of the Cabinet together with changes and additions set out in the schedule of addenda.

 

RESOLVED:to note the items currently identified for forthcoming meetings.

 

It was agreed to adjourn the meeting and consider Item 11 Department for Transport Active Travel Fund – Tranche 3 at a time and date to be confirmed in order for the Cabinet to obtain more information.