Agenda and draft minutes
Venue: Council Chamber, County Hall, Ruthin and by video conference
Media
Webcast: View the webcast
No. | Item |
---|---|
APOLOGIES Additional documents: Minutes: Apologies for absence were received from Councillors Bobby Feeley and Diane King, as well as from Councillor Gill German, Lead Member for Education, Children and Young People, and Councillor Barry Mellor, Lead Member for Environment and Transport. |
|
DECLARATION OF INTERESTS PDF 118 KB Members to declare any personal or prejudicial interests in any business identified to be considered at this meeting. Additional documents: Minutes: The following members declared a personal interest in business item 6, ‘Estyn Inspection Report 2018’, in their role as school governors. Councillor Ellie Chard Local Education (LEA) Governor at Ysgol Tir Morfa Councillor Martyn Hogg Parent Governor at St Asaph VP School Councillor Carol Holliday Town Council/Community Governor on the governing bodies of Ysgol Penmorfa & Ysgol Clawdd Offa Councillor Alan Hughes Governor at Ysgol Caer Drewyn Councillor Paul Keddie Governor at Ysgol Bryn Collen Councillor Gareth Sandilands LEA Governor at Ysgol Clawdd Offa Councillor Martyn Hogg also declared a personal interest in business item 8, ‘Denbighshire’s Revised Draft Climate and Ecological Change Strategy 2021/22 – 2029/30’ in his role as a member of the ‘Climate Change and Ecological Emergency Working Group’. The Monitoring Officer clarified that members were required under the Code of Conduct to declare their roles as school governors, but membership of internal Council boards or groups did not require to be declared. |
|
APPOINTMENT OF VICE CHAIR PDF 185 KB To appoint a Vice-Chair for Performance Scrutiny Committee for the municipal year 2024/25 (copy of Role Description attached). Additional documents: Minutes: Nominations were sought for the office of Vice-Chair of Performance Scrutiny Committee for the 2024/25 municipal year. Councillor Ellie Chard nominated Councillor Gareth Sandilands for the role of Vice-Chair, Councillor Carol Holliday seconded the nomination. No other nominations were received, therefore the Committee: Resolved:
that Councillor Gareth Sandilands be elected Vice-Chair of Performance
Scrutiny Committee for the 2024/25 municipal year. Councillor Sandilands thanked Committee members for their support and entrusting him with a further term as Vice-Chair of the Committee. |
|
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 to the commencement of the meeting. |
|
MINUTES OF THE LAST MEETING PDF 565 KB To receive the minutes of the Performance Scrutiny Committee meeting held on the 18 April 2024 (copy attached). Additional documents: Minutes: The minutes of the Performance Scrutiny Committee meeting held on 18 April 2024 were submitted. It was: Resolved:
that the minutes of the Performance Scrutiny Committee meeting held on
18 April 2024 be received and approved as a true and accurate record of the
proceedings. Matters arising: In response to members’ questions the Scrutiny Co-ordinator advised that: Page 10, ‘Minutes of the Last Meeting’: a copy of the letter relating to ‘Elective Home Education’ sent to Welsh Government Minister for Education and Welsh Language had been circulated to Committee members for information the previous day. The Head of Education confirmed that Welsh Government (WG) officials had acknowledged receipt of the letter and advised that its contents would be fed into a piece of work currently underway in relation to elective home education and children missing out on educational opportunities. The outcome of that work would be reported back to members in due course. Page 12, ‘Internet Connectivity in Denbighshire’: the future sustainability of the Council’s Digital Officer role would form part of the 2025/26 budget setting process. |
|
ESTYN INSPECTION REPORT 2018 PDF 222 KB To consider a report by the Head of Education (copy attached) on the progress made in addressing the recommendations in the 2018 Estyn inspection report of Denbighshire County Council education services. 10.15am – 10.45am Additional documents:
Minutes: In the absence of the Lead Member for Education, Children
and Young People the Head of Education introduced The recommendations from the inspection were to reduce the
variability in outcomes in secondary schools, and secondly to ensure that the
evaluation of services for pupils educated out-of-county and in resourced-based
settings focused clearly on measuring the outcomes that children and young
people achieved through those services. The Head of Service The schools and local authorities still held the data but
strictly were not permitted to publish it. The data could still be viewed by
the public using the WG’s My Local School website . The data should be used to
drive decisions for improvement within each school. The Service was intending to bring a report to the Committee
to detail how Denbighshire schools were performing against national performance
targets, which would examine the outcomes in Denbighshire against outcomes
nationally, just not against schools within Denbighshire. Under recommendation two the Head of Service advised that
with respect of out of county placements that there has been a lot of steps
taken to address this aspect, including a panel that met on a fortnightly basis
to discuss individual learners’ progress, regular visits from the Service
officers to the schools, and where appropriate joint working between social
care and education as well as Health Service personnel with a view to
monitoring, supporting and securing continued improvement in the pupil’s attainment. Following on from the inspection, the Service
was confident that it had a well-informed hold on all out of county placements.
The Chair then opened the discussion out for questions. Responding to members’ questions the Head of
Service advised:
|
|
To consider a report from the Head of Finance and Audit (copy attached) which seeks the Committee’s feedback on matters relating to the Council’s Medium Term Financial Strategy and Plan for the period 2025/26 to 2027/28, as well as on the Authority’s assessment of its financial resilience and sustainability. 10.45am – 11.30am Additional documents:
Minutes: The Lead Member for Finance, Performance and Assets and Head
of Finance and Audit presented the Medium-Term Financial Strategy (MTFS) and
Plan (MTFP) report (previously circulated).
They advised members that the Committee would have a key role going
forward in the budget and medium-term financial strategy/plan monitoring
processes and that its views would be feedback to Cabinet. The Lead Member provided an overview of what
each appendix presented and invited questions from Committee members. Responding to the questions raised the Lead Member and Head of Finance and Audit advised: · that in relation to how up to date the data presented was and whether real time data was available to elected members - embedding the new T1 finance management system would be a priority over the summer in order to ensuring it was working efficiently and effectively. The Finance department were constantly looking at the balance sheets. There would be a further update on the savings made to date to the July Cabinet meeting. Unfortunately, there would always be a slight time lag in data due to time required for preparing reports prior to publication deadlines. · that whilst Adult Social Care and Homelessness spend and savings figures were grouped together, because they were both under the same Head of Service, the Finance Service did hold individual figures for the separate service areas which could be shared with members. Individual service area figure would be shared during the upcoming workshops. It was emphasised that Adult Social Care was the Council’s biggest area of spend because it was based on demand and the area had a large older people demographic profile, people were living longer therefore the demand on service increased. · that, in relation to the number of fora that discussed the contents of this particular report, this was a significant report which contained the details of the main barrier to the Council delivering its services and ambitions for the foreseeable future. It was therefore imperative that all the Council’s main decision-making committees and operational groups had sight of it and fed-into the scrutiny of it. The report was in the first instance presented to the Senior Leadership Team (SLT), then Cabinet prior to Full Council approving it. The Governance and Audit Committee had a role to play in ensuring that the Council had an adequate budget setting process in place, whilst Performance Scrutiny Committee’s role centred around budget and savings monitoring, early identification of slippages in order to formulate recommendations with a view to addressing those slippages. As each committee/group had a different role to fulfil in relation the MTFS and MTFP its presentation to each one did not equate to the duplication of work · that arrangements were underway to hold a meeting with City, Town and Community Councils (CTCC) to update them on the budget position · that with regards to the staff voluntary exit schemes and their impact on service delivery, vacancy controls were still in place. Under the vacancy control policy any requests from managers/heads of services for staff recruitment were presented to the Corporate Executive Team (CET) for endorsement prior to advertising the posts. Members registered concerns on whether these schemes had prompted other officers to leave the Authority’s employment in parallel but not via these schemes, as they felt that a lot of well-known officers within Denbighshire County Council were leaving in the near future which would result in a loss of knowledge and experience. Members were concerned that the perceived high number of experienced staff leaving for a variety of reasons was an unintended negative consequence of the voluntary exit schemes. · that enquires would be made in ... view the full minutes text for item 7. |
|
DENBIGHSHIRE'S REVISED DRAFT CLIMATE & ECOLOGICAL CHANGE STRATEGY 2021/22 - 2029/30 PDF 246 KB To consider a report by the Interim Climate Change Programme Manager (copy attached) which seeks the Committee’s views on the Council’s Draft Climate & Ecological Change Strategy 2021/22 – 2029/30 following the year 3 review and refresh of the Strategy. 11.45am – 12.15pm Additional documents:
Minutes: In the absence of the Lead Member for Environment and
Transport the Head of Corporate Support Service - Performance, Digital & Assets,
and Climate Change Project Manager presented the report and reviewed draft
strategy (previously circulated). The Strategy required to be reviewed every three years, and
this was the first review. Appendix 2 to the report detailed the initial
findings of the public consultation on the draft document, whilst Appendix 3
listed the proposed amendments which would be made to the strategy following
the consultation. The Head Service advised that the Council was making good
progress in implementing and delivering the Strategy, but due to the pace of
change and budget pressures they could not guarantee that the Authority would
achieve its ultimate ambition by 2030. Responding to members’ questions the Head of Service and
Climate Change Project Manager advised that:
Members suggested that it may be good practice in future for
planning permission for new builds to stipulate the need to install EV charging
points as part of the planning criteria during the planning application
process. Members discussed whether
possibility of utilising the new financial management system for tracking
carbon emissions data for the Council. Following a comprehensive discussion, the Committee: Resolved: subject to the above feedback and observations, to acknowledge the work undertaken to develop the Year 3 reviewed and refreshed Climate and Ecological ... view the full minutes text for item 8. |
|
COUNCIL PERFORMANCE SELF-ASSESSMENT REPORT 2023/24 PDF 326 KB To consider a report (copy attached) from the Strategic Planning and Performance Officer which analyses the Council’s performance against its functions, including Corporate Plan and Strategic Equality objectives and seeks the Committee’s views on the progress to date. 12.15pm – 12.45pm Additional documents:
Minutes: The Lead Member for
Finance, Performance and Strategic Assets introduced the report and appendices
(previously circulated) stating that the Council had set itself an ambitious
Corporate Plan, which since its approval had become even more of a challenge to
deliver given the current financial climate facing local authorities and public
services. The Head of
Corporate Support Service - Performance, Digital & Assets, provided an
overview of the progress made, and outlined the challenges that lay ahead
against the Corporate Plan themes. She advised that it was a live document,
where items were considered as having a red status, they were still being
worked upon, it did not mean they had been paused, in some instances progress
may be slower for some areas due to budget pressures. Also attached as an
appendix to the report was the draft scope for the Panel Performance Assessment
for members’ observations. Responding to
members’ questions the Lead Member, Head of Service and other officers
explained that: ·
the
‘trauma informed status’ schools referred to an all-society Framework to
support a coherent, consistent approach to developing and implementing
trauma-informed practice across Wales, providing the best possible support to
those who need it most. It related to how schools and individuals within them
took into account adversity and trauma, recognising and supporting the
strengths of an individual to overcome these experiences in their lives and
setting out the support they could expect to receive from the organisations,
sectors and systems that they may turn to for help. It did entail training
which was quite intensive and dependent on grant funding. One school in
Denbighshire had achieved the status to date and two other schools were part
way through the process. In June 2023, a programme of two-day school senior
leadership training had taken place; 87 senior leaders had been trained between
June and November 2023. The county also
had 86 school and county staff who had completed the diploma as Trauma Informed
Practitioners. The Council was currently waiting to receive confirmation of the
roll out of free general trauma informed awareness training. ·
the
main areas of overspend, which contributed to the Corporate and Service budget
variant of £2,780,000 at the end of March 2024, continued to be in Education
and Children’s Services, Highways and Environmental Services and Adult Social
Care and Homelessness. The report presented to the Committee outlined the steps
taken in recent months to achieve a balanced budget i,e, voluntary exit
schemes, staff savings schemes, the package of savings proposals approved
earlier in the year, implementation of spending controls (including vacancy
controls). It was important to remember
that the budget was viewed as an evolving process rather than a one-off event
in January of every year. Significant engagement on the budget and financial
pressure across the Council, with members and with communities would continue. ·
The
flexible working policy, which meant that some officers were working from home
for some of their time and from Council buildings when Council-business demand
it, had been approved by the Council.
This policy enabled staff to have a work/life balance, with the
interests of the business being foremost.
It saved the Council money and had freed up office buildings, it also
reduced time spent travelling to meetings and between different locations and
helped reduce carbon emissions. There were no plans to review the policy at
present. The Corporate Director:
Governance and Business advised members that if an officer was not
responding to councillors in a timely fashion, they should raise it with the
officer’s Head of Service, as working from home should not delay a response. At the conclusion of the discussion ... view the full minutes text for item 9. |
|
SCRUTINY WORK PROGRAMME PDF 153 KB 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. 12.45pm – 1pm Additional documents:
Minutes: She advised that a request had been received
to reschedule the presentation of the Economic and Business Development
Strategy from the July 2024 to the one in January 2025. The reason for the request was that the Council
had engaged consultants to develop the Strategy and therefore the draft
document would not be available for scrutiny until later in the calendar
year. Due to pressures on the Committee’s forward
work programme, and with a view to securing balanced business agendas and
sufficient time to examine each item at every meeting, the Committee agreed the
following changes to its forward work programme, that the presentation of the: ·
Draft Economic and Business Development
Strategy be rescheduled from July 2024
to January 2025 ·
Report on Recruitment, Retention and Workforce
Planning be rescheduled from September 2024 to November 2024 ·
Initial Findings of the Working Group examining
Library Service/One Stop Shop Provision be rescheduled from November 2024 to
January 2025 During the course of the meeting the
Committee had agreed to monitor the delivery of the Council’s Climate and
Ecological Change Strategy on an annual basis, starting in the autumn of
2025. Members were reminded to complete a ‘Member
Proposal Form’ (Appendix 2 to the report) if there was a topic or area of work
which in their view merited examination by Scrutiny. All completed forms would be considered by
the Scrutiny Chairs and Vice-Chairs Group (SCVCG) who would determine whether
the topics put forward met the criteria for Scrutiny. At May’s meeting of the SCVCG the Group had
agreed that Performance Scrutiny should in future have a role to play in the
budget setting and Medium-Term Financial Strategy & Plan monitoring
process, hence the consideration of the report presented at the current
meeting. Similar reports would be
presented to the Committee, either as agenda items or as information reports,
at regular intervals throughout the year.
In addition, the SCVCG had considered
Scrutiny’s approach to the Council’s Transformation Programme and had resolved
that each of the Scrutiny Committees be allocated one of the Transformation
Programme’s themes to examine, as and when they were sufficiently
developed. The themes would be allocated
as follows: · Commercialisation
and Enterprise – Communities Scrutiny Committee · Collaboration
and Partnership – Partnerships Scrutiny Committee · Influencing
Demand and Digital – Performance Scrutiny Committee Nevertheless, the Council’s thematic
scrutiny structure had sufficient flexibility to enable any of the Committees
to examine matters relating to any of the above themes if the ‘designated’
committee did not have capacity to do so at the required time. The Committee: Resolved: subject to the above inclusion and
amendments, to confirm its work programme as set out in Appendix 1 to the
report. |
|
FEEDBACK FROM COMMITTEE REPRESENTATIVES To receive any updates from Committee representatives on various Council Boards and Groups Additional documents: Minutes: None. Meeting concluded at 12.50pm. |