Council and democracy
Home > Council and Democracy > Issue
39 Decisions to Support Community Services Reviews PDF 297 KB
Additional documents:
Minutes:
Matter for
Decision
The Play Pods scheme is a
chargeable service operated by the Council’s Children and Young People’s
Participation service (ChYpPS). It was set up in 2014, in part to raise funds
to support other ChYpPS work. However, a review of the service in February
2019, found that staffing costs in fact outweighed any income benefit, and the
service has a net annual cost to the Council of £26k. The review also found
that, since 2015, only four Play Pods had been delivered to city schools, but
eighteen had been delivered to schools outside of the city.
On 26th February 2019, the
Strategic Director took an operational decision to cease delivery of any more
out-of-city Play Pods, and to implement exit routes for schools to secure
training support and scrap top-ups from other providers. The loss of
anticipated Play Pod income (which offsets some of the net cost) has been
managed in year by the ChYpPS service through a staff vacancy freeze.
The proposal now is for the
Council to cease Associate Membership of the Bristol Scrap Store Play Pods
scheme, and to discontinue the ChYpPS Play Pod service from 31st March 2022.
There is potentially scope for other associate members to provide a Play Pod
service to city schools from 1st April 2022.
The Council helped set up
the Scrap Store scheme in 1988, and it was initially managed by The Castle
Project. In 2000, for viability reasons, the Council agreed to take this on,
and it was delivered as a mobile project from community centres. In 2012, Scrap
Store moved into a commercial unit, The Box on Barnwell Business Park, under
the management of the ChYpPS team. In
addition to providing materials for the Play Pod scheme, city residents could
also pay a membership fee to source arts, crafts and play materials at a low
cost.
Like the Play Pod scheme,
one of the intentions of Scrap Store was to raise income to support other areas
of ChYpPS work. However, the 2019 review found that, like Play Pods, once
staffing costs had been attributed to the Scrap Store, the service has a net
annual cost to the council of £46.5k. Even if footfall to The Box were to
double, the Scrap Store scheme would still not be able to generate sufficient
income to cover staffing costs. The service uses The Box Unit, a council
commercial unit at Barnwell Business Park for £5k per year rent, but the
council could let The Box commercially to generate £18k income per year.
There are currently 9 staff
posts which include an element of delivering either the Play Pod or Scrap Store
schemes, or both. A staffing review is
planned to support the council’s corporate transformation programme, and this
will include community development, community facilities and ChYpPS services.
The review will aim to minimise redundancies and maximise opportunities for
staff development and progression.
Decision
of Executive Councillor for Communities
i.
Agreed to cease delivering the
ChYpPS Play Pod scheme from 31st March 2022.
ii.
Agreed to complete feasibility
work for a revised scrapstore-style scheme, aligned to support anti-poverty
work, and for this new service to be launched as soon as possible in the
2022-23 financial year.
iii.
Noted the staffing implications.
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 Head of Community Services.
Councillors requested a change to the recommendation in the
Officer’s report. Councillor Porrer said the intention was to remove a ‘hard
stop’ to the service.
The Head of Community Services said the following in response to
Members’ questions:
i.
Agenda P96 set out an indicative timetable for when
the Scrap Store service would cease. It was hoped there would be a smooth
transition not a hard deadline to stop activities.
ii.
Staff
and stakeholders would be involved in developing the new model. It was hoped that
the Scrap Store service would be retained in some way during the transition
period.
iii.
Officers
wished to invite councillors to input into the work.
iv.
A progress report could be brought back to
committee in March 2022.
Recommendation No 2 of p95 of the agenda pack (additional text
underlined)
Proposer: Councillor Porrer
Seconder: Cllr Copley
2: To complete feasibility work for a revised scrap store-style scheme,
aligned to support anti-poverty work, and for this new service to be launched
as soon as possible in the 2022/23 financial year, having
been scrutinised by a future ECSC to allow public and member views to be taken
into account, and for the existing scrapstore service to be maintained until a
new scheme is approved and launched.
The amendment was lost by 4 votes to 6.
Opposition Councillors asked what lessons had been learnt if the Council
had lost money over 7 years of the ChYpPS service?
The Head of Community Services said the following in response:
i.
Officers
working in these areas had provided an excellent service.
ii.
The
review had uncovered higher staff costs than originally budgeted when these
ChYpPS services were set up. The trading services now require subsidy rather
than contributing revenue. Both have considerable out of city usage. It was not
feasible to continue.
iii. Action has not been taken earlier due to the focus on supporting the community during the pandemic. There is now an opportunity to evolve the scrapstore project to support other anti-poverty work.
The Chair decided that the recommendations highlighted in the Officer’s
report should be voted on and recorded separately:
The Committee unanimously endorsed recommendation (i).
The Committee endorsed recommendation (ii) by 6 votes to 0 with 4
abstentions.
The Committee unanimously endorsed
recommendation (iii).
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.