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12 Anti-Poverty Strategy Annual Progress Report PDF 417 KB
Additional documents:
Minutes:
Matter for
Decision
The Council
produced a revised and updated Anti-Poverty Strategy for the period from April
2017 to March 2020. The Council’s Anti-Poverty Strategy aims to: improve the
standard of living and daily lives of those residents in Cambridge who are
currently experiencing poverty; and to help alleviate issues that can lead
households on low incomes to experience financial pressures.
The revised
Anti-Poverty Strategy sets out 5 key objectives and 57 associated actions to
reduce poverty in Cambridge over the next three years. This report provides an
update on progress in delivering key actions identified for 2017/18, with a
particular focus on new areas of activity introduced in the strategy.
Decision
of Executive Councillor for Communities
i.
Noted the progress in delivering
actions to reduce poverty in Cambridge during 2017/18.
ii.
Approved the inclusion of an
additional action relating to Cambridge Northern Fringe East, set out at 5.2 in
this report, in the Anti-Poverty Strategy action plan for 2017-2020.
Reason for the Decision
As set out in the Officer’s report.
Any Alternative Options Considered and Rejected
Not applicable.
Scrutiny
Considerations
The Committee received a report from the Strategy and Partnerships
Manager.
The Strategy and Partnerships Manager said the following in response to
Members’ questions:
i.
Some projects were targeted using data, some using
officer knowledge. Officers were aware that data could become out of date where
it was based on the 2011 Census and the Indices of Multiple Deprivation (it was
acknowledged that income levels fluctuated in different wards).
ii.
Actions were set out in the Anti-Poverty Strategy
to trial switching existing pre-payment energy meters in Council homes to low
tariff pre-payment meters provided by Robin Hood Energy when tenants vacate
properties and they become void.
iii.
The Council had considered the possibility of
setting up a local energy company, but officers had been advised by Robin Hood
Energy that there were not be sufficient economies of scale in the city to make
a Cambridge energy company economically viable.
The Committee unanimously resolved to endorse the recommendations.
The Executive Councillor
approved the recommendations.
Conflicts of Interest Declared by the Executive Councillor
(and any Dispensations Granted)
No conflicts of interest
were declared by the Executive Councillor.