Agenda and draft minutes
Venue: Council Chamber, County Hall, Ruthin and by video conference
Media
Webcast: View the webcast
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APOLOGIES Additional documents: Minutes: None. |
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DECLARATION OF INTERESTS Members to declare any personal or prejudicial interests in any business identified to be considered at this meeting. Additional documents: Minutes: Councillor Ellie Chard declared a personal interest in
business item 6, ‘Corporate Plan’, in her capacity as a Local Education Authority
(LEA) appointed governor on the Governing Body of Ysgol Tir Morfa, to which
reference was made within Appendix 1 of the report on this business item. |
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URGENT MATTERS AS AGREED BY THE CHAIR Notice of items which, in the opinion of the Chair, should be considered at the meeting as a matter of urgency pursuant to Section 100B(4) of the Local Government Act 1972. Additional documents: Minutes: No items of an urgent nature had been raised with the Chair
or the Scrutiny Co-ordinator prior the commencement of the meeting. |
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MINUTES OF THE LAST MEETING To receive the minutes of the Performance Scrutiny Committee meeting held on the 26 September 2024 (copy attached) 10:05am – 10:10am Additional documents: Minutes: The minutes of the Performance Scrutiny Committee meeting
held on 26 September 2024 were submitted.
It was: Resolved:
that the minutes of the Performance Scrutiny Committee meeting held on
26 September 2024 be confirmed as a true and accurate record of the
proceedings. Matters arising:
Page 6. ‘Minutes of the Last Meeting’:
it was confirmed that four elected members had accepted the recent
invitation, extended to all county councillors, to visit the Cefndy Healthcare and Manufacturing facility. All of those who had participated in one of
the arranged visits felt it had been a valuable and informative
experience. All had been impressed and felt
encouraged by the work undertaken there.
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CORPORATE RISK REGISTER To consider a report on the Corporate Risk Register from the Strategic Planning and Performance Officer reviewing the risks facing the Council and the Council’s risk appetite statement (copy enclosed). 10:10am – 11:00am Additional documents:
Minutes: The Lead Member for
Corporate Strategy, Policy, and Equalities alongside the Head of Corporate
Support: Performance, Digital and Assets, and the Insight, Strategy and
Delivery Manager presented the Corporate Risk Review, September 2024 report
(previously circulated). The report was an
update on the September 2024 review of the Corporate Risk Register and the
Council’s Risk Appetite Statement. It also informed the Committee of the
amended risk appetite statement regarding project financing which attempted to
reflect the present financial environment.
Therefore, it was suggested that it would be appropriate to amend the
Council’s ‘cautious’ risk appetite in relation to project financing to ‘open’. The Corporate Risk
Register was developed and owned by the Senior Leadership Team (SLT) alongside
the Cabinet. It was reviewed twice yearly by the Cabinet at Cabinet Briefing.
Following the February and September reviews, the revised register was
presented to the Performance Scrutiny Committee and the Governance & Audit
Committee. A summary of reviews was shared for information only to both
committees ahead of their January and July meetings. The Council
currently had 13 Corporate Risks on the Register. Summaries of the conclusions
following the latest review for this period were provided at the start of each
risk in Appendix 2. No risks had been de-escalated during this review. However,
a new risk, risk 53 (the risk that Transformational Programmes and Major
Project benefits are not fully realised), was proposed to be added to the
Register. This proposed addition would increase the total number of Corporate
Risks on the Register to 14 risks. Regarding the risk
appetite, officers clarified that seven risks, 01, 21, 34, 45, 50, 51 and 52
(54%), were currently inconsistent with the Council’s Risk Appetite Statement
(appendix 3). Nevertheless, this was expected as the register contained the
Council’s most serious risks. Officers stated that it was timely for the
Authority to review the Council’s Risk Appetite Statement (appendix 3), which
was last revised in April 2024, as the statement needed to reflect its appetite
now reflecting on the key external factors (Political, Economic, Sociological,
Technological, Legal and Environmental) that influence an organisation along
with internal dynamics and demands. An initial discussion had taken place at
the Budget and Transformation Board in July 2024 and at the Corporate Executive
Team (CET) in October 2024
to provide feedback on the appropriateness of the Risk Appetite
Statement as it stood at that time. The Committee was
also informed that discussions at the Budget and Transformation Board and CET
drew particular attention to the Council’s cautious risk appetite regarding
financial projects. As a result, it was proposed to move this risk appetite to
“open” to provide a more appropriate framework to support the organisation's
transformation to achieve financial sustainability and creative responses to
residents' requirements. Following the
comprehensive introduction by officers, members discussed the following further
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To consider a report on the Corporate Plan Performance Update: April to September 2024 to discuss the council’s performance and the improvement actions (copy enclosed). 11:10am – 12:00pm Additional documents: Minutes: The
Lead Member for Finance, Performance and Strategic Assets alongside the Head of
Corporate Support Service: Performance, Digital and Assets and the Planning and
Performance Officer introduced the Corporate Plan Performance Update: April to
September 2024 (previously circulated). The report aimed to update the
Committee on the Council’s performance against its Corporate Plan from April to
September 2024, including Strategic Equality objectives and the seven
governance areas (corporate planning, financial planning, performance
management, risk management, workforce planning, assets, and procurement).
Regular performance reporting was part of the Council’s values and principles.
It was an essential monitoring requirement of the Council’s performance
management methodology and a statutory duty.
Despite the current challenging financial climate within which local
government was operating there was some excellent performance in some service
areas, and staff were to be congratulated on these achievements in such
challenging circumstances. Of course,
there were other areas requiring improvement. The
report outlined progress against the Authority’s performance objectives. These
comprised of the Corporate Plan / Strategic Equality Objectives (which also
formed the Council’s Well-being Objectives under the Well-being of Future
Generations (Wales) Act 2015) and the seven governance areas (as set out in the
Local Government and Elections (Wales) Act 2021). The
report also identified indicators or activities that related to Equality
Objectives or contributed to the Welsh Language and Culture. The report also contained case studies to
exemplify good work. The Strategic Planning Team were continually seeking
further opportunities to improve the Performance Management Framework and
Performance Update Reports. Officers
emphasised that it was not possible to highlight all significant points of
interest included within Appendix 1.
However, some positive highlights and areas which had shown improvement
during April to September 2024 included:
Officers
stated that three improvement actions had been identified following discussions
with services about current performance.
The first two demonstrated the correlation between resources,
performance, and risk. These were:
Members
discussed the following further –
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SCRUTINY WORK PROGRAMME To consider a report by the Scrutiny Coordinator (copy enclosed) seeking a review of the committee’s forward work programme and updating members on relevant issues. 12:00pm – 12:20pm Additional documents:
Minutes: The Scrutiny Co-ordinator introduced the
report and appendices (previously circulated) which sought the Committee to
review its programme of future work. There were four
items listed for the January meeting.
These included progress report on Christ the Word School which had been
deferred from the current meeting’s agenda as specified in the report. The
Scrutiny Co-ordinator was awaiting confirmation whether the Economic &
Business Development Strategy would be available for examination at the January
meeting. It not, it would be deferred to
March’s meeting. There were three substantive items for January regardless of
the potential deferment. Members were
advised that following the recent meeting of the Scrutiny Chairs and
Vice-Chairs Group (SCVCG) no scrutiny requests had been allocated to the
Performance Scrutiny Committee. However,
the committee would be asked to be the ‘parent committee’ to formally establish
the task and finish group that would review the roll-out of the new waste and recycling
service, and in due course to receive its report. A report to formally
establish the task and finish group would be presented to the Committee in
January 2025. The Committee: Resolved:
subject to the inclusion of a report on the establishment and reporting
arrangements for the ‘Scrutiny Review of the Roll-Out of the New Waste and
Recycling Service’ on its forward work programme for the January 2025 meeting,
to confirm the Committee’s programme of future work. |
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FEEDBACK FROM COMMITTEE REPRESENTATIVES To receive any updates from Committee representatives on various Council Boards and Groups Additional documents: Minutes: The Chair and Vice-Chair informed the Committee that they
had attended a series of Service-Challenge meetings during November. All these meetings had been extremely
informative providing them with a good understanding of each Service’s
performance in delivering their services on a day-to-day basis, their
contribution to the delivery of the Council’s Corporate Plan, along with a
valuable insight into the budgetary pressures they faced and the consequential
impact on service-delivery. An early
insight was also given into potential Service transformation projects currently
under development, some of which were likely to be presented to Scrutiny for
consideration in the near future. The final Service Challenge meeting was
scheduled to be held in early December.
More detailed notes of the meetings would be available following the
conclusion of the Service Challenge process.
Members: Resolved:
to receive the information. Meeting concluded at 12.40pm |