Issue - meetings
NORTH WALES DIGITAL CONNECTIVITY STRATEGY AD LOCAL FULL FIBRE NETWORK PROGRAMME
Meeting: 18/12/2018 - Cabinet (Item 7)
7 NORTH WALES DIGITAL CONNECTIVITY STRATEGY AND LOCAL FULL FIBRE NETWORK PROGRAMME PDF 135 KB
To consider a report by Councillor Hugh Evans, Leader and Lead Member for the Economy and Corporate Governance (copy enclosed) updating Cabinet on the digital work carried out to date by the North Wales Economic Ambition Board and seeking approval of authorisations for the work going forward.
Additional documents:
- DIGITAL CONNECTIVITY REPORT - APP 1 E, item 7 PDF 4 MB
- Appendix 2, item 7 PDF 299 KB
- Appendix 3, item 7 PDF 127 KB
- Appendix 4, item 7 PDF 103 KB
- Appendix 5, item 7 PDF 18 KB
- Well Being Assessment, item 7 PDF 104 KB
- Appendix 6, item 7 PDF 96 KB
- Webcast for NORTH WALES DIGITAL CONNECTIVITY STRATEGY AND LOCAL FULL FIBRE NETWORK PROGRAMME
Decision:
RESOLVED that Cabinet –
(a) adopts the North
Wales Connectivity Strategy;
(b) approves Denbighshire County Council’s
role as Lead Body on behalf of the North Wales Economic Ambition Board for the
LFFN Project and agrees that the Council enters into a suitable Inter Authority
Agreement with the other partner bodies in respect of the LFFN Project, and
(d) authorises the
Corporate Director Economy and Public Realm in consultation with the S151
Officer, Monitoring Officer and Leader to agree the final terms of the Inter
Authority Agreement.
Minutes:
In the absence of Councillor Hugh Evans,
Councillor Richard Mainon presented the report updating Cabinet on the digital
work carried out to date by the North Wales Economic Ambition Board (NWEAB) and
seeking approval of authorisations for the work going forward.
The NWEAB had approved a Digital Connectivity
Strategy for the region and the Local Full Fibre Network (LFFN) project was an
important project to help deliver that Strategy. The Board had agreed to develop and submit a
regional bid to the UK Government’s LFFN Programme Challenge Fund and that
Denbighshire County Council would be the lead authority for the project. The LFFN Bid had been approved in principle
by UK Government and the proposal currently stood at approximately £9m
investment in the region. The investment
would be directed to improving connectivity across the public sector resulting
in wider enhancement of networks serving communities. Cabinet was asked to formally adopt the Digital
Connectivity Strategy and approve the Council’s role in delivering the LFFN
project.
Councillor Mainon highlighted the benefits of
the project which would deploy a full fibre network throughout North Wales
linking up to 400 public buildings including schools, libraries, local
government offices and also involved the Health Board and GP surgeries. The project presented a positive step in
terms of bringing much needed digital infrastructure into the region and Denbighshire
was particularly well placed to benefit with 95 of the premises to be upgraded
located in the county. There was also
huge potential for ancillary benefits to other properties as part of that
process. The focus of the report was
improving public sector connectivity and there were other digital schemes
working in parallel to address digital requirements in other sectors. The Economic and Business Development (EBD)
Officer added that the intention was to commence the project in March 2019 for
completion in March 2021 which was a challenging timescale but given the
procurement route arranged by Welsh Government there was confidence that it
would be delivered.
Cabinet welcomed the project and noted the
positive benefits across the region. In
response to questions Cabinet was advised that –
·
the
potential scope of public sector building upgrades had been detailed in the
Strategy however the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport had
recently asked that further sites be proposed with a view to further extending
full fibre into rural areas and a review would be carried out in that regard
·
in terms
of health partners the technology would enable them to modernise their services
and build further resilience – whilst they may choose to make Wi-Fi available
in waiting areas they would not be compelled to do so. There would also be huge benefits to other
public buildings such as schools and libraries
·
scrutiny
arrangements would be carried out locally at this stage and the project could
be called in for scrutiny by the Council; there was potential for regional
scrutiny of regional projects in the second phase of the Growth Deal.
Questions were also invited from non-Cabinet
members and Councillor Mainon and the EBD Officer responded to those further
questions as follows –
· regarding calls for other community buildings to benefit from the project it was confirmed that the distribution of smaller community/town council buildings across the region was potentially a means of deploying full fibre further into more rural areas – all of the work identified by the project would be subject to survey work by Openreach on a quarterly basis which would identify the extent and location of that impact on communities. Whilst much of the broadband work in Wales had been overseen by the Welsh ... view the full minutes text for item 7