Agenda and draft minutes
Venue: by Video Conference
No. | Item |
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APOLOGIES Minutes: Councillor Hugh Evans – Denbighshire County Council. Jo Whitehead – Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board |
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MINUTES OF THE LAST MEETING PDF 318 KB To approve the minutes of the last meeting held on 17 May 2021 (copy enclosed). Minutes: The minutes of the Conwy and Denbighshire Public Services
Board meeting held on 17 May 2021 were submitted. RESOLVED that the minutes
of the meeting held on 17 May 2021 be received and approved as a correct
record. |
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MEETING ACTION TRACKER PDF 393 KB The Chair will lead on this item (copy enclosed). Minutes: Hannah Edwards presented the meeting action
tracker and drew the following open actions to the Board’s attention for
further consideration/action as appropriate – ·
The
first two actions on the tracker were highlighted, ‘apply the rural proofing
tool to the three priority areas’, and ‘when undertaking the impact assessment
review, consider if there are any equality areas the Board needs to be made
aware of’. The board agreed that these actions could not be closed, however
suggested highlighting key point of the actions to assess rather than having
updates at each Public Service Board (PSB) meeting. ·
The
mental health and wellbeing update would be discussed in more detail later at
the meeting. RESOLVED that progress made on the actions arising
from meetings be noted. |
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MATTERS ARISING The Chair will lead on this verbal item. Minutes: No matters arising from the previous minutes were discussed. |
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WELL-BEING ASSESSMENT PROGRESS UPDATE & APPROVE CONSULTATION AND PLAN TIMELINE PDF 253 KB Nicola Kneale (DCC) and Fran Lewis (CCBC) to present the
Well-Being
Assessment Progress Update and seek Approval on the Consultation and Plan the
timeline. 2:05pm – 2:35pm Minutes: Nicola Kneale (DCC)
presented the report (previously circulated) providing an update to the PSB on
the progress of the Well-being Assessment, and to start to draft a timeline for
consultation. A statutory
Well-being Assessment was in production, which would underpin the PSB’s next
Well-being Plan (publication deadline of May 2023) and the well-being plans of
its constituent organisations. It was intended that there would be a draft
ready in November 2021, which would go through a statutory consultation
process. Nicola Kneale clarified in order to enable
understanding of the wealth of complex information that was contained within the
Well-being Assessment, an abridged presentation of key conclusions from the
analysis of the Assessment’s content would form the basis of the consultation
and be present at the next meeting for approval. Nicola Kneale clarified that it was not
intended for the plan’s development to be discussed in detail today, but that a
lead member of the PSB be identified and a proposal for developing the
Well-Being Plan be brought to the next meeting. There was consensus
among board members that one lead would not be adequate, due to work
commitments but also not having a knowledge of other areas within the PSB area.
Bethan Jones (Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board) alongside Sarah
Schofield (Adra) and Tom Barham (Denbighshire Voluntery Services Council)agreed
to lead on the Well-being Plan
matter jointly. Iwan Davies CCBC reiterated what was discussed at the early
stages of the PSB where it was agreed that it would focus in areas which were
not being worked on by other organisations. This was to avoid duplication of
work. The board felt that future work for the PSB should be to
review changes made by Welsh Government on a more local level with CCBC and
DCC, and agreed it would be beneficial to invite local working groups on
specific subjects and ask how the PSB could support them. RESOLVED that (i) The PSB note the progress made with the
well-being assessment and approve the timeline for the constitution. (ii) That the key conclusions from the well-being
assessment be presented at the next meeting and approval sought for the
assessment consultation. (iii) That the PSB note the production of the
timeline for the Well-being Assessment and that Bethan Jones (Betsi Cadwaladr
University Health Board) alongside Sarah Schofield (Adra) and Tom Barham
(Denbighshire Voluntary Services Council) be appointed as joint lead board
members to work with officers to formulate a proposal for producing the next
well-being plan. |
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PRIORITY AREA UPDATES To receive an update on the following priority areas – (a) Mental well-being – Public Health Wales Officer (b) Community Empowerment (including update on digital infrastructure) - Nicola Kneale (c) Environmental Resilience (including agreement of environmental commitments) - Justin Hanson / Helen Millband 2:35pm – 3:05pm Minutes: The board were updated on the priority areas for the PSB – (a) Mental well-being – the PSB were informed
that Louise Woodfine (Consultant for central area) had been appointed as the
new representative from Public Health Wales. However due to prior engagements
she could not attend the meeting.
Further discussion on priority lead required at a future meeting. (b) Community Empowerment (including update on
digital infrastructure) – Nicola Kneale updated the board on the work which was
carried out. The connectivity schemes which were currently ongoing were
highlighted – ·
The Welsh Government full fibre rollout was
ending in June 2022, ·
Local Full Fibre Networks (LFFN) aimed to
install full fibre broadband to public buildings. Openreach would then connect
premises along the route and in the vicinity of the public buildings. However
there were some concerns with progress as it was ending in September 2021, the
matter was being explored by the North Wales Economic Ambition Board (NWEAB). ·
UK Government’s Gigabit Project, initially announced in the
spring 2020 Budget but held back by delays and revisions. It was based on the
government's pledge to ensure 85% of UK properties have access to gigabit
broadband by 2025, there were up to 234,000 rural Welsh premises in scope. ·
There would be few properties who would not be
able to access superfast broadband, these properties would be designated as
‘white properties’. The NWEAB would also be addressing these properties through
the Last Few Percent project. ·
Community Fibre Partnership, used the Gigabit
Broadband Voucher scheme and was a UK-wide government subsidy scheme to provide
future-proof full fibre connections for homes and businesses. However there
were some challenges as some rural areas would not be able to consolidate these
vouchers to fund the implementation of fibre in some communities. ·
The Installation of fibre was expensive, so
those properties that are especially difficult to reach are unlikely to be
included in Openreach upgrades and the funding available from CFPs will be
insufficient. Without a commitment of external investment in these
hard-to-reach areas, they’re unlikely to be upgraded for some time. The board thanked Nicola for an update on the complex
matter. Graham Boase (DCC) suggested that the PSB could look at connectivity as
a priority, as it impacts all organisations. He realised that the PSB could not
actually implement work, however it could influence organisations who carried
out the aforementioned work, and challenge the organisations on whether the
work was carried out. Doing this could progress work along. Discussed there could be a role for third sector
organisations to help mobilise communities to obtain support and funding to
improve connectivity. Satellite broadband was raised and how the technology had
been developed, and could likely be an only option which was viable for some of
the rural areas in Wales. (c) Environmental
Resilience – Jason Hanson (NRW) presented the PSB with a presentation
highlighting work which had been carried out with regards to the environmental
resilience priority. The sub group reviewed all priorities at the end of last
year, following the PSB’s request to do so. The sub group met twice since the
last PSB meeting. There was a focus mainly on reviewing and amending priority
1, the environmental policy statement. The six priorities were – 1.
Work with our PSB partners to develop an
environmental policy statement , so that we’re all working to the same goals 2.
Work with communities to develop environmental
pledges and green changes that could be made to reduce our impact on the
environment 3. Look at environmental issues affecting the region that cannot be fixed by ourselves, like sea defences ... view the full minutes text for item 6. |
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The Chair will lead on this item (copy enclosed). 3:05pm – 3:10pm Minutes: A copy of the PSB forward work programme was
presented and the following matters were discussed – ·
The
chair advised the committee that the next meeting would comprise of -
Receiving
an overview of the key conclusions from the well-being assessment and approving
the assessment for consultation -
Reviewing
the findings of the sub-group, regarding the development of the next well-being
plan -
Receiving
information on the Freelancer and Public Sector Pledge -
Reviewing
the findings and recommendations of the Community Wealth Building and
Progressive Procurement pilot. -
·
The
board members did not suggest any further items to be discussed. RESOLVED that, subject to the above, the work
programme be approved. |
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INFORMAL - NEXT STEPS FOLLOWING PSB JUNE WORKSHOP The Chair will lead on this verbal item discussing the next steps for the PSB following the June workshop. 3:10pm – 3:40pm Minutes: Meeting concluded at 16:10 |
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FOR INFORMATION - FREELANCER AND PUBLIC SECTOR PLEDGE PDF 321 KB Minutes: The item was for information purposes and was not discussed at the meeting. |
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Minutes: The item was for information purposes and was not discussed
at the meeting. |
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FOR INFORMATION - KICKSTART SCHEME PARTICIPATION INFORMATION PDF 140 KB Minutes: The item was for information purposes and was not discussed
at the meeting. |