Agenda, decisions and draft minutes
Venue: by video conference
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POINT OF NOTICE Due to the current restrictions on travel and requirement for social distancing as a result of the coronavirus pandemic the meeting was held remotely by video conference and was not open to the general public. All members had been given the opportunity to attend as observers and the Local Democracy Reporter had also been invited to observe. |
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APOLOGIES Decision: There were no
apologies. Minutes: There were no
apologies. |
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DECLARATION OF INTERESTS PDF 116 KB Members to declare any personal or prejudicial interests in any business identified to be considered at this meeting. Decision: Councillors Meirick Davies and Arwel Roberts declared a personal interest in agenda item 6 – Finance Report Minutes: The following members declared a personal interest in agenda
item 6 – Finance Report – Councillor Meirick Davies – School Governor Ysgol Cefn
Meiriadog Councillor Arwel Roberts – Trustee Cylch Meithrin Ysgol Dewi
Sant |
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URGENT MATTERS 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. Decision: Statements were made on the following – (i)
the difficult decision to close primary schools
early for face to face learning from 16 December in line with other primary
schools across North Wales (ii)
an update on the latest tranche of Welsh
Government grant funding to support businesses affected by Covid-19
administered by the council, and (iii) a reflection on the challenges faced by the authority over the last year. Minutes: Statements were made on the following – (i)
The Corporate Director Communities reported upon
the difficult decision to close primary schools early for face to face learning
from 16 December with remote learning for pupils on 17 and 18 December. The decision had been made following
discussions with the Lead Member for Education, Head of Education and in
partnership with the county’s primary schools.
It was felt that making a decision for schools to remain open for the full
week was untenable given the position in Wales and with other primary schools
closing across North Wales. The Lead
Member for Education also expressed his disappointment that Welsh Government
had decided to close secondary schools in favour of remote learning from 14
December. At that time there had only
been 5 recorded cases of Covid-19 in Denbighshire’s schools with 98% of pupils
in school as of 14 December which demonstrated the effective control measures
within schools, with less control following the school closures and potential
community impact. (ii)
Councillor Julian Thompson-Hill referred to a
briefing note emailed to members providing an update on the latest tranche of
Welsh Government grant funding to support local businesses affected by Covid-19
administered by the council. The additional
grants had been made available following further restrictions within the
hospitality, tourism, leisure, retail and supply chain sectors from 4 December
2020. An overview of the two schemes had
been provided with final guidance issued late the previous week. Staff had worked tirelessly to put the
necessary arrangements in place to administer the schemes and tribute was paid
to their hard work in that regard. Those
businesses in the hospitality sector who were in receipt of the firebreak
grants would have a payment processed that week with over 400 businesses
receiving payments totalling over £1.4m. (iii)
The Leader felt it was timely at the end of 2020
to reflect on the challenges faced by the authority over the last year. Main thoughts were with residents and their
families who had suffered due to the Covid-19 virus across Denbighshire and the
wider region. He thanked all staff for
their work and commitment, many of who had gone above and beyond the call of
duty, keeping day to day services running and protecting the vulnerable and
supporting local businesses. Thanks were
also extended to public service partners for their support and to members, with
particular acknowledgement of the work of Group Leaders, in the operation of
democratic processes. It was a relief to
note that vaccines were being made available and the authority would play its
part in rolling out the vaccination programme.
In the meantime a bleak winter was being faced with the rolling average
of people testing positive for the virus across Wales rising and the reality of
long term lockdown after Christmas. In
closing the Leader wished everyone safe and well and a peaceful and relaxing
Christmas. |
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To receive the minutes of the Cabinet meeting held on 24 November 2020 (copy enclosed). Decision: Vote taken: 8 in favour, 0 against, 0 abstentions RESOLVED that the minutes
of the meeting held on 24 November 2020 be received and confirmed as a correct
record. Minutes: The minutes of the Cabinet meeting held on 24 November 2020
were submitted. RESOLVED that the minutes
of the meeting held on 24 November 2020 be received and confirmed as a correct
record. |
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DCC COMMUNITY BENEFITS POLICY PDF 130 KB To consider a report by Councillor Julian Thompson-Hill, Lead Member for Finance, Performance and Strategic Assets (copy enclosed) seeking Cabinet approval of the council’s proposed Community Benefits Policy and recommendations in support of its use. Additional documents:
Decision: Vote taken: 8 in favour, 0 against, 0 abstentions RESOLVED that Cabinet – (a) approves the Community
Benefits Policy document, and (b) confirms that it has
read, understood and taken account of the Well-being Impact Assessment attached
as Appendix 2 to the report as part of its consideration. Minutes: Councillor
Julian Thompson-Hill, Lead Member for Finance, Performance and Strategic Assets
presented the report seeking Cabinet approval of the proposed Community
Benefits Policy. In
June 2019 the Programme Board for Young People and Housing approved the
creation of a Community Benefits Hub (CB Hub) to support and enable services to
include community benefits in contracts at the earliest opportunity to increase
value for council spend. A CB Hub
Manager and Officer had been appointed earlier in the year and developed the
policy which had been presented to all Member Area Groups and reviewed by
Communities Scrutiny Committee who recommended the policy for approval. The policy would provide a framework for both
internal and external stakeholders and work to support the CB Hub in monitoring
the outcomes delivered from community benefits.
The council spent approximately £116m annually so there was scope to
make some significant benefits as a result.
The community benefits referred to in this case were not financial
benefits but in-kind benefits such as training and apprenticeships etc. Although S.106 agreements fell outside the
remit of the policy the CB Hub had taken on a ‘clearing house’ role in that
regard to ensure maximum community benefit was derived. The
CB Hub Manager provided some further background reiterating the significant
council spend on third party goods, works and services and the potential to
gain additional benefits in kind from that spend. The current policy stipulated contract spend
above £1m should consider community benefits.
The proposed policy reduced that threshold to works contracts of more
than £100k and goods services contracts of more than £25k in order to open up a
significant proportion of the council spend to attracting community
benefits. However those thresholds would
not apply automatically with a request and support approach to community
benefits and engagement with procurement and commissioning teams in that
regard. Adoption of the policy would
demonstrate the council’s commitment to community benefits, validate the
council’s approach to enable opportunities to secure available benefits and
maximise the value of spend for residents, and embed community benefits into
procurement processes. The policy would
also complement the council’s carbon zero ambition with potential for community
benefits to contribute to carbon mitigation and reduction measures. The
Head of Legal, HR and Democratic Services and the CB Manager responded to
members’ questions as follows – · in terms of apprenticeships there were a number of opportunities the council was pursing through Working Denbighshire but the purpose of the CB policy was to consider the benefits that could be secured through procurement spend. However a number of placements had been secured through the community benefits approach and the CB Hub was working closely with Working Denbighshire to maximise any potential opportunities in that regard · clarified the role of the legal and planning departments with regard to S.106 agreements and explained that the CB Hub had taken on the role of monitoring and tracking the S.106 agreements to ensure they were properly delivered. It was confirmed that details of that work could be shared with members · acknowledged the potential to expand the remit of the CB Hub but confirmed the current priority to ensure community benefits were embedded within the procurement process and considered at an early stage together with effective monitoring of those community benefits to ensure they were delivered · assurances were provided that the CB Hub was working collaboratively with Community Support Teams in terms of wind farm and other community funding both to avoid duplication and ensure they were not working at crossed purposes · provided an illustrative example of community benefits in practice involving small contracts for consultancy services, ... view the full minutes text for item 5. |
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To consider a report by Councillor Julian Thompson-Hill, Lead Member for Finance, Performance and Strategic Assets (copy enclosed) detailing the latest financial position and progress against the agreed budget strategy. Additional documents:
Decision: Vote taken: 8 in favour, 0 against, 0 abstentions RESOLVED that Cabinet – (a) note the budgets set for 2020/21 and
progress against the agreed budget strategy; (b) approve the recommended use of the
Schools Maintenance Grant which has been awarded to the Council by the Welsh Government,
as recommended by the Strategic Investment Group and as detailed in the report
and Appendices 5, 6 and 7 to the report; (c) approve the recommended use of the Welsh
Government indicative grant allocation awarded to the Council for damage to highways
assets as recommended by the Strategic Investment Group and as detailed in the
report and Appendices 8, 9 and 10 to the report, and (d) approve the recommended use of the
Childcare Capital Grant which has been awarded to the Council by the Welsh Government,
as recommended by the Strategic Investment Group and as detailed in the report
and Appendices 11 and 12 to the report. Minutes: Councillor Julian Thompson-Hill presented the
report detailing the latest financial position and progress against the agreed
budget strategy as outlined below – ·
the net
revenue budget for 2020/21 was £208.302m (£198.538m in 2019/20) ·
an
overspend of £2.476m was forecast for service and corporate budgets (the
overspend included £2.7m paid for ‘income loss’ grant for Quarter 2) ·
highlighted
current risks and assumptions relating to individual service areas together
with the financial impact of coronavirus and Leisure ADM budgets ·
detailed
required savings and efficiencies of £4.448m agreed including corporate savings
relating to triennial actuarial review of Clwyd Pension Fund (£2m); 1% schools
savings (£0.692m); service savings (£1.756m) ·
provided a general
update on the Capital Plan, Housing Revenue Account and Housing Capital Plan. Cabinet was also asked to
approve the use of grant allocations as recommended by the Strategic Investment
Group relating to (1) Schools Maintenance Grant, (2) Recovery from February
Floods (Highway Assets), and (3) Childcare Capital Grant and those elements
were further elaborated upon at the meeting. Councillor Thompson-Hill reported upon the latest
financial position in detail, particularly with regard to the financial impact of
Covid-19, including grant funding secured to date and the position on claims
for the council. The £2.475m forecasted
overspend (£5.492m last month) included £2.7m paid in respect of the ‘income
loss’ grant for Quarter 2 (full claim amounted to £3.233m.). Narrative had also been provided around
service variances with movements from the previous month highlighted. Although corporate budgets currently showed a
nil variance it was likely that all discretionary spend and contingencies would
be released in order to help fund the position with risks still remaining
around the Council Tax Yield and the Council Tax Reduction Scheme. Un-earmarked General Balances may also need
to be reviewed as the impact of the pandemic continued to be felt. The Lead Member and Head of Finance responded to
questions as follows – ·
the disallowed column
in respect of claims submitted related to elements of the claim which Welsh
Government (WG) had determined were not eligible and therefore would not be
paid. On the expenditure side claims of
£119,649 had been disallowed which related to elements WG did not consider to
be additional expenditure and in some cases it was difficult for services to
judge eligibility but the guidance provided by WG had become clearer over time
and the council had become more adept at the claims process and practised open
book accounting. Income loss claims
disallowed amounting to £642,922 had mainly been attributed to initial claims
for HRA losses and cross authority charges.
HRA losses had been disallowed for regulatory reasons as they had to be
treated the same as Registered Social Landlords and claims for income from
other local authorities were no longer eligible following a regional agreement
that those contract payments between authorities would be met. Consequently the total amount disallowed did
not represent income lost that would not be regained but reflected a refining
of the process for particular services · the holding column in respect of the claims submitted related to those elements of the claim for which WG had requested additional information and evidence before determining whether or not the claim would be paid, and further information on the methodology used for calculating loss of income for car parking was used as an illustrative example. Work was ongoing with WG in that regard and there was confidence that most of the holding figure for Quarter 2 would be paid by year end. There was some concern regarding claims submitted in respect of elements such as planning fees where WG considered there to be a delay ... view the full minutes text for item 6. |
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CABINET FORWARD WORK PROGRAMME PDF 290 KB To receive the enclosed Cabinet Forward Work Programme and note the contents.
Decision: Vote taken: 8 in favour, 0 against, 0 abstentions RESOLVED that Cabinet’s
forward work programme be noted. Minutes: The Cabinet forward work programme was
presented for consideration and members noted that DCC’s Climate and Ecological
Change Strategy (2021/22 – 2029/30) had been rescheduled from January to
February. RESOLVED that Cabinet’s
forward work programme be noted. |
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EXCLUSION OF PRESS RESOLVED that under Section 100A of the Local Government Act
1972, the Press be excluded from the meeting for the following item of business
on the grounds that it would involve the likely disclosure of exempt
information as defined in Paragraph 14 of Part 4 of Schedule 12A of the Act. |
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ASBESTOS REMOVAL CONTRACT AWARD To consider a confidential report by Councillor Julian Thompson-Hill, Lead Member for Finance, Performance and Strategic Assets (copy enclosed) seeking Cabinet approval to award a works contract to a licensed Asbestos Removal Contractor with immediate effect. Additional documents:
Decision: Vote taken: 8 in favour, 0 against, 0 abstentions RESOLVED that Cabinet – (a) agree to award the works
contract to the recommended named contractor as detailed in the report who are
a licensed Asbestos Removal Contractor and who submitted the highest scoring submission
as shown detailed in Appendix 1 to the report, and (b) confirm that the decision
be implemented immediately to prevent any delay in awarding the contract to
ensure no gap in emergency cover when the current framework ends on 20 December
2020. Minutes: Councillor Julian Thompson-Hill presented the
confidential report seeking Cabinet approval to award a works contract to a
licensed Asbestos Removal Contractor with immediate effect. The current arrangements to facilitate asbestos
removal in council properties via a collaborative framework was due to expire
in December 2020 and Cabinet had agreed the detail and commencement of the
procurement process for a works contract in October 2020. Details of the evaluation process of the
tender submissions together with the scoring mechanisms had been included
within the report together with the recommended contract award. It was also recommended that the decision to
award the contract be implemented immediately to ensure there was no gap in
emergency cover given that the current framework ended on 20 December 2020. Cabinet considered the outcome of the
procurement process together with the report recommendations and it was – RESOLVED that Cabinet – (a) agree to award the works
contract to the recommended named contractor as detailed in the report who are
a licensed Asbestos Removal Contractor and who submitted the highest scoring
submission as shown detailed in Appendix 1 to the report, and (b) confirm
that the decision be implemented immediately to prevent any delay in awarding
the contract to ensure no gap in emergency cover when the current framework
ends on 20 December 2020. The
meeting concluded at 11.25 hrs. |