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Agenda and minutes

Venue: Room 3 - County Hall, New Road, Oxford OX1 1ND. View directions

Contact: Scrutiny Team  E-Mail:  scrutiny@oxfordshire.gov.uk

Link: videolink to meeting

Items
No. Item

9/21

Apologies for Absence and Temporary Appointments

To receive any apologies for absence and temporary appointments.

Minutes:

Apologies received from Cllr Mallon (Cllr Bulmer substituting) and Cllr Middleton (Cllr Bennett substituting). It was noted that Cllr Haywood would be joining the meeting late.

10/21

Declaration of Interests - see guidance note on the back page

Minutes:

None

11/21

Minutes pdf icon PDF 435 KB

The Committee is recommended to raise any questions, receive information arising from them and, having raised any necessary amendments, APPROVE the minutes of the meeting held on 19 January 2023 as an accurate record.

Minutes:

The Committee resolved to AGREE the minutes as a true and accurate record.

12/21

Petitions and Public Address

Members of the public who wish to speak at this meeting can attend the meeting in person or ‘virtually’ through an online connection. 

 

To facilitate ‘hybrid’ meetings we are asking that requests to speak or present a petition are submitted by no later than 9am four working days before the meeting.  Requests to speak should be sent to the Scrutiny Team at scrutiny@oxfordshire.gov.uk

 

If you are speaking ‘virtually’, you may submit a written statement of your presentation to ensure that your views are taken into account. A written copy of your statement can be provided no later than 9am 2 working days before the meeting. Written submissions should be no longer than 1 A4 sheet.

 

Minutes:

Richard Parnham addressed the Committee in relation to item 6, the Council’s Communications and Engagement Strategy and gave what he described as “a personal view from a weary, annoyed, resident.” 

 

Mr Parnham highlighted the Government’s Consultation Principles 2018. Mr Parnham reminded the Committee of the Gunning Principles which set out that a consultation was only legitimate when all principles were met:

·       Proposals are still at a formative stage;

·       There is sufficient information to give ‘intelligent consideration’;

·       There is adequate time for consideration and response;

·       ‘Conscientious consideration’ must be given to the consultation responses before a decision is made.

 

Mr Parnham called on the Council to improve its approach to consultation considerably.  Mr Parnham called for the Council to engage with a wider range of people and to stress test the initial idea with a greater variety of stakeholders.  Mr Parnham expressed scepticism that the Council would modify any plans in response to consultation feedback unless it was required to do so.

 

Mr Parnham called for transparency and rigour when preparing documents for consultation and emphasised the need for clarity and succinctness.  Mr Parnham called for the Council to stop running consultations with too short a duration and during school holidays.  Mr Parnham criticised the Council for running consultations on similar subjects concurrently or in rapid succession.  This was insulting to residents and indicated that changes would not arise as a result of feedback.

 

He concluded by calling on the Council to:

1.     Include clear ‘support/oppose’ options and to publish the results of those;

2.     Draw on the ‘support/oppose’ response and consider potential impacts on particular groups as part of Equalities Impact Assessments;

3.     Inform those who have responded of the policy outcome of the item being consulted upon.

 

The Chair thanked Mr Parnham for his contribution and explained that any questions that had arisen would be considered under agenda item 6.

 

13/21

2023/24 Outcomes Framework pdf icon PDF 359 KB

To consider the Council’s Outcomes Framework for 2023/24 within the context of the Council’s Strategic Plan. This item will be led by Cllr Glynis Phillips, Cabinet Member for Corporate Services and will be supported by Susannah Wintersgill, Director of Strategy, Insight and Communications, and Rachel Brolly, Performance and Insight Team Leader.

 

Having considered the report and presentation, and asked any questions, the Committee is recommended to AGREE any recommendations it wishes to make arising therefrom.

Additional documents:

Minutes:

Cllr Glynis Phillips, Cabinet Member for Corporate Services, and Susannah Wintersgill, Director of Strategy, Insight, and Communications, attended for this item.

 

Cllr Glynis Phillips, Cabinet Member for Corporate Services, introduced the item and explained that, as part of the annual business planning review process, the Council’s strategic priorities and key performance indicators (KPIs) had been addressed.  Cllr Phillips reminded the Committee that the nine strategic priorities had been grouped into three following engagement with, and feedback from, residents.

 

Following feedback from the Committee last year, the number of KPIs was reduced from more than 100 to 27.  They were outcome-focused with the intention of them being SMART.  Operational measures were kept at a service level which continued to captured and reported on with the suite of measures intended to be fluid.

 

Final outturn data was intended to be taken to Cabinet in June 2023 and the measures would be continue to be reviewed and potentially revised with any changes being reported bi-monthly.  More detailed measures and data were contained in the Joint Strategic Needs Assessment.

 

In discussion, the following points were raised:

·       Whether the objectives were sufficiently detailed in order to track progress;

·       The lack of clarity as to how the Key Performance Indicators and Performance Measures related to the objectives;

·       Whether the information could be presented more appropriately in a visual format, demonstrating how they were linked but also including measures that were relevant but not wholly covered by a particular objective;

·       That each KPI had an action plan linked to it but that standardised reporting timeframes would aid tracking;

·       That partnership working with other authorities and agencies was essential to achieve any objectives and the links between health inequalities, educational outcomes, and economic success were well-documented;

·       How consultation data was measured and monitored, particularly of those who received social care;

·       Underlying data sets being accessible would have been useful;

·       Some measures that were not included seemed both important and relevant and consideration should be given to including them.

 

The Committee resolved to make the following observations to Cabinet:

 

·       The need for justification for removed indicators from last time;

·       The need for clarification over the data sets which underpin the KPIs

·       Clarification how the KPIs link to the objectives and whether they’re specific targets (must) or broader measurers (that are done in partnership – life expectancy)

·       Clarifying the degree to which the Council has influence over its objectives owing to the need for partnership working – may need

·       Transparency is improved by more standardised reporting timeframes wherever possible

·       Alternatives to add/think of:

o   Material measure around poverty

o   Nature recovery

o   Travel to school

o   Satisfaction of users in social care

o   Modal share targets

o   Vision Zero

o   Bus frequency/coverage

·       Where is information captured and where it is available?

·       Reminder that the motion is reflected in the Outcomes Framework to ensure embedded

 

14/21

Communications and Engagement Strategy pdf icon PDF 254 KB

The Committee is asked to consider the report on the Communications and Engagement Strategy. This item will be led by Councillor Glynnis Phillips, Cabinet Member for Corporate Services and supported by Susannah Wintersgill, Director of Strategy, Insight and Communications, Kerry Middleton, Head of Comms, Marketing and Engagement, and Carol Stow, Consultation and Engagement Manager.

 

Having considered the report and presentation, and asked any questions, the Committee is recommended to AGREE any recommendations it wishes to make arising therefrom.

 

 

Additional documents:

Minutes:

Councillor Glynis Phillips, Cabinet Member for Corporate Services, and Susannah Wintersgill, Director of Strategy, Insight, and Communications, Kerry Middleton, Head of Comms, Marketing and Engagement, and Carole Stow, Consultation and Engagement Manager, attended for this item.

 

Cllr Phillips introduced the report and highlighted that the strategy had two key aims:

 

·       To engage with and listen to residents and other partners in a more active and inclusive way. This includes listening to what residents value most, involving them in conversations about the things that affect them, and then using that feedback to help shape or improve services.

·       To widen the council’s reach so that we listen to diverse communities and audiences. This includes those whose voices are seldom heard, such as young people and the digitally excluded.

 

There was a detailed action plan and table summarising progress against that under the headings of:

1.     Building the right foundations;

2.     Enabling two-way conversations;

3.     Expanding the Council’s reach and being inclusive.

 

In discussion, the following points were raised:

 

·       Guidance had been drawn up for teams conducting consultations across the Council and the team was working hard to engage with services so that they were contacting the team and seeking its advice at the earliest opportunity.  There was a network of officers who were able to provide the advice and spread the message more widely.

·       The Council will be conducting its annual resident satisfaction survey and the Cabinet Member explained that she had asked for it to be sent to all members before it was issued and would be grateful for any feedback.  She explained that, in order to measure progress against previous years, it was important that the survey kept many of the same questions.

·       Approximately 4500 people signed up to the new e-newsletter which was an additional mechanism for engagement, used alongside social media and video and not instead of them.

·       A very limited number of officers was able to self-publish onto Let’s Talk and so engagement with either the Communications team or with other programme teams was required.

·       Let’s Talk was commended as a good platform and there was discussion about whether it could be developed as an app which could highlight consultations that were relevant to residents, based on their address.

·       A high number of consultation was felt to lead to ‘consultation fatigue’ and to lead to particular groups being more likely to participate rather than the wide swathe of the population that would be desirable.

·       It was important for the Council to acknowledge the responses of those who responded to consultations and to feedback to them what the Council planned to do after the consultations had concluded.  The distinction between consultation and engagement were highlighted as was the need to be clear when the Council was sharing information about its plans rather than seeking approval. 

·       Particularly for consultation exercises that were likely to be controversial, the idea of individual sign-off by Cabinet as an whole or by the relevant Cabinet member was raised.  It was suggested that the  ...  view the full minutes text for item 14/21

15/21

LGA Peer Review on Comms 6 Month Update pdf icon PDF 222 KB

Following the Committee’s request at its September 2022 meeting to receive an update on progress made against the recommendations made in the LGA Peer Review on Communications, the Committee is asked to consider the attached update report. This item will be led by Councillor Glynnis Phillips, Cabinet Member for Corporate Services and supported by Susannah Wintersgill, Director of Strategy, Insight and Communications, and Kerry Middleton, Head of Comms, Marketing and Engagement.

 

Having considered the report and presentation, and asked any questions, the Committee is recommended to AGREE any recommendations it wishes to make arising therefrom.

 

Additional documents:

Minutes:

Councillor Glynis Phillips, Cabinet Member for Corporate Services, Susannah Wintersgill, Director of Strategy, Insight, and Communications, Kerry Middleton, Head of Comms, Marketing and Engagement,attended for this item.

 

Cllr Phillips introduced the report updating the Committee on progress made against the recommendations made in the LGA Peer Review on Communications and also on the observations made by the Committee in September 2022.  The report set out the action plan relating to the seven recommendations. 

 

In discussion, the following points were raised:

 

-        The Chief Executive and the Leader met on a fortnightly basis with the Director Communications.  A member asked if it would be appropriate for the Deputy Leader to also join this meeting, given the nature of the coalition.

-        Political awareness training had taken place for Communications staff, as called for in the report.  This was a 90 minute long basic training and the team was seeking to consolidate that.  Concerns were raised about politicisation of press releases whilst it was also noted that part of the communications strategy was to promote the Council’s prioirities.

-        An overarching strategy had been put in place swiftly after the publication of the LGA report.  The Council had recently undertaken a review and audit of video content and had recently added Next Door to the social media it employed.  The Director of Communications, Strategy, and Insight highlighted that users of different media engaged with videos differently and the Council was keen to ensure that the content consequently differed across the suite.

-        Preparedness for crisis management responding to online disinformation was greater than previously with strong partnership working.

-        Responsibility for the Council’s website lay with ICT rather than with Communications and the wisdom of that was questioned.  It was noted that Communications were working much more closely with ICT than had previously been the case and had developed a close working relationship.  The question they were exploring was how to move the website away from simply being a transactional one to something more engaging and useful for residents.  It was explained that there had been changed to the music and to the recruitment sections of the website and that incremental improvements would continue.

 

The Committee resolved to make the following observations and recommendations to Cabinet:

 

-        Concern over the potential politicisation of communications, for example as with potholes

-        Priorities of the Council be embedded in the Council’s communications

-        The value of having a website led by Comms rather than ICT

-        Embedding the learning about partnerships and networks

-        That the action plan be reported on to the Committee

 

-        That recognising the make-up of the Council, whether the Deputy Leader should be involved in meetings around Comms

 

 

16/21

Committee Action and Recommendation Tracker

The Committee is recommended to NOTE the progress of previous recommendations and actions arising from previous meetings, having raised any questions on the contents.

 

NB This item is to follow and will be issued as an addendum to the agenda.

Minutes:

The Scrutiny Manager apologised that the tracker had not been included owing simply to an oversight.

17/21

Cabinet Responses to Performance and Corporate Services OSC Recommendations pdf icon PDF 10 KB

Attached are the Cabinet’s responses to the Committee’s recommendations concerning

i)                 the Council’s Strategic Plan 2022 – 2025, and

ii)               the post-consultation Budget proposals

 

The Committee is recommended to NOTE the responses.

Additional documents:

Minutes:

The Committee resolved to NOTE the responses.

18/21

Committee Forward Work Plan pdf icon PDF 152 KB

The Committee is recommended to AGREE its work programme for forthcoming meetings, having heard any changes from previous iterations, and taking into consideration the Council’s Forward Plan and any issues arising.

Additional documents:

Minutes:

There was some discussion as to whether the Social Value item could be brought to the meeting scheduled for 14 July 2023 and it was noted that the Committee would welcome a briefing from Cllr Phillips on the portal.

 

It was AGREED that the question of whether or not another meeting of the Committee needed to be scheduled should be considered by the Committee on 14 July, given the possibility of changes in the Committee’s membership after Annual Council on 16 May 2023.

 

Subject to these comments, the Work Plan was AGREED.