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27 Environmental Improvement Programme - 2022/23 Project Applications PDF 786 KB
Councillors will review the projects received noting that the decisions will be taken by the Executive Councillor for Open Spaces in January 2023.
Minutes:
The Committee received a report from the Public Realm Engineering & Project Delivery Team Leader.
The report provided information on eligibility, funding criteria and funding
budgets for the Environmental Improvement Programme (EIP).
The Public Realm Engineering & Project Delivery
Team Leader said paragraphs 3.1 and 3.3 appeared to contradict each other. When
the
EIP was reviewed in 2019 funding would be available from both a central pot and
local area pots devolved and divided between the four Area Committees.
The Committee made the following comments in response to the report:
i.
Supported projects for:
a.
Hanging baskets.
b.
The Royal British Legion.
c.
War memorials.
d.
Drinking fountains.
e.
Nightingale Park Pavilion.
ii.
Councillors sometimes used their own time and
finances to support projects. It was hard to be re-imbursed.
iii.
Funding could be allocated to individual wards
and/or councillors so they did not have to compete with each other and filter
out viable projects at an early stage of the process.
iv.
Ward events to engage residents in EIP did not
always fit into program deadlines. Queried how to feed in project ideas if
people missed corporate deadlines?
The Public Realm Engineering & Project Delivery
Team Leader said the following in response to Members’ questions:
i.
Details about progress of previous EIP projects
were listed in the Officer’s report and on the EIP webpage. Officers were happy
to give further details if Councillors contacted them directly.
ii.
EIP was a capital not a revenue scheme. Projects
that applied for grants, but did not meet criteria, would not receive funding.
Officers were unable to allocated grants to more hanging basket schemes.
Likewise projects who provided insufficient details would not receive funding,
this could be rectified if they submitted more information.
iii.
As EIP was a capital scheme there were limited
officer resources to process applications hence one bidding round per year.
Revenue schemes may have a different approach. Officers signposted people to
alternative funding streams if they did not get EIP grants. For example
Nightingale Pavilion was more suitable for s106 funding.
iv.
The Executive Councillor for Planning Policy and
Infrastructure was keen to install drinking fountains near City Council
buildings to get infrastructure economies of scale when installing in different
wards.
v.
The Executive Councillor for Open Spaces, Food
Justice and Community Development would listen to Area Committees’ comments about
their priorities than make an out of cycle decision on how to allocate funding.
Councillors could also contact her direct to support schemes. There would be no
other public meetings to hear councillor’s views. The purpose of tonight’s
meeting (as with other Area Committees in November/December) was for
Councillors to discuss the merit of schemes and support ones that Councillors
wished to take forward.
vi.
Other Area Committees had more projects than
funding, so chose to support ‘green’ Cost Deliverability Eligible Rated
projects, then some ‘yellow’ ones if unallocated funding became available. Only
South Area had unallocated EIP funding, so overall the EIP was engaging
residents well.
vii.
Unallocated funding could not be rolled forward as
the EIP scheme was coming to an end. Councillors could suggest unallocated
funding be returned to the central pot if South Area were unable to identify
any reserve schemes where to allocate funding if ‘green’ ones did not come
forward.