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Contact: Claire Tunnicliffe Committee Manager
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Mayors Announcements Minutes: APOLOGIES Apologies were received from Councillor Reid, Sarris and Saunders. Councillor Herbert had given apologies for lateness COUNCIL PROCEDURE
RULES The Mayor reminded Councillors that the changes to the Council Procedure Rules regarding consideration of motions would not apply during the Extraordinary Council meeting but would come into effect for the April Council meeting. MEMBER BRIEFING CITY
DEAL Councillors were reminded about the member briefing on the City Deal on Tuesday 29th March 2016 at 6pm. DECLARATIONS OF
INTEREST
MINUTE
SILENCE FOLLOWING TERRORIST ATTACK IN BRUSSELS AND BOMBINGS IN TURKEY. Councillors observed a minute’s silence for those who were injured and lost their lives as part of the attacks in Brussels and Turkey. |
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Public Questions Time Minutes: Members of the public asked a number of questions as set out below. 1.
Mr Rodgers raised the following points: ii.
When
did the Council become aware that this year’s Midsummer Fair was seriously
threatened? iii.
Why
was it not possible to complete the necessary safety work in the time between
the accident in November and the date of Midsummer Fair? iv. What tasks still
remained to be completed to ensure safety at public events with Fairgrounds in
Cambridge, and how long did the Council expect them to take? The Executive Councillor for Communities responded:
i.
The
Council were notified of the improvement notice served on Cambridge Live on 28
January 2016. A series of meetings between Cambridge Live, senior officers and
safety advisers explored the options for going forward on the basis of the
requirements to meet the improvement notice. The options considered included
running the fair as in previous years, a scaled down version of the funfair
plus the traders fair, just the trader’s fair, and a
fallow year. The strong professional advice was that in the interests of public
safety, the Council should not have the funfair this year.
ii.
Arrangements
for the funfair were complex and involved 80 separate contracts with showman.
The fair came on to the site over several days to set up rides and supporting
vehicles took up considerable space on the common with families living
alongside the funfair. There was no single overall provider of rides.
Reconfiguring the fair to ensure that vehicles were separated from pedestrians
and cyclists over the 10 day period of the event would be challenging,
particularly given that Midsummer Common was a major through route to the City
and it was not feasible to close footpaths for the whole period of the fair. The
future contractual arrangements, the footprint of the funfair, footpath
closures, and the safe movement of vehicles including the very large lorries that brought on rides, all need to be looked at. The
Council will work with the Showman’s Guild and providers of rides on future
arrangements, and also consult with users of the Common and other local
interest groups.
iii.
All
public events, including those with funfairs will be assessed to ensure they
meet safety and other requirements. The Council fully expect major events to
continue to take place in Cambridge including those with funfairs. The range of
events on Council open spaces vary in size, and have different footprints, so
do not all conflict with major through routes in the same way. It was the complexity of Midsummer Fair,
which required a longer lead in time to ensure that it was a safe public
event. The Council conducted its own
internal review of outdoor event health and safety management systems/
processes, following the accident at the Bonfire Night event on 4 November 2015
on Midsummer Common and guidance from the Health and Safety Executive (HSE).
This review resulted in the adoption of a new generic risk assessment for the
use of vehicles on outdoor spaces; and a new event risk management matrix for
the assessment of the levels of risk and associated Council resource
requirements to ensure the events were safely managed. The matrix would also be used as a means to
identify which forthcoming events, due to the assessed levels of associated
risk, required assessment by the Cambridge Safety Advisory Group (SAG). This group is a multi-agency group including
the Council, Police and Fire representatives who will specify and review the
required health and safety plans, including risk assessments and vehicle
management arrangements; and based on their findings provide advice to the
Council on whether or not the plans were satisfactory. Mr Rodgers raised the following supplementary point:
i.
Despite
the accident taking place 33 weeks prior to Midsummer Fair it was disappointing
that Midsummer Fair could not take place.
He asked whether Strawberry Fair would need to go through the same
safety review processes that Midsummer Fair had been through and whether it
would be modified. The Executive Councillor for Communities responded:
i.
He
confirmed that Strawberry Fair would need to go through the same safety review process, however this event was different as it did not have
a fun fair and it was expected that this event would be able to take
place. 2.
Mr Carpen raised the following points: i.
Noted
that Cambridgeshire County Council had rejected the devolution proposal. ii.
Questioned
if another Mayor was required as Cambridge City already had a Mayor. Also
questioned where the devolution proposals came from and if they had been
through a due process. iii.
Noted
the public protest against the devolution proposals prior to the Council
meeting. iv.
Referred
Councillors to the precedent set in 2004 when voters in the North East had
rejected plans for a regional assembly. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/3984387.stm v.
It
was noted that in the Devolution document that the Greater Cambridge Greater
Peterborough Local Enterprise Partnership had also not signed up to the plan,
although its sister Local Enterprise Partnership for Norfolk and Suffolk had. vi.
Asked
if the City Council were aware of any arrangements for a referendum on the
Government's plans for a regional assembly and also asked if the Government had
responded to criticisms from the Greater Cambridge Greater Peterborough Local
Enterprise Partnership? The Executive Councillor for Housing responded:
i.
Thanked
Mr Carpen for his question and expressed his surprise for both the scale of the
devolution proposal and the timescale presented by government for such an
important issue. When he attended the first meeting with the Secretary of State
for Communities and Local Government, Greg Clarke, and Lord Heseltine, he
reminded them of the words of their colleague, Eric Pickles, in 2010 when he
said: “We do not believe the arbitrary government regions to be
a tier of administration that is efficient, effective or popular. Citizens
across England identify with their county, their city, their town, their
borough and their neighbourhood. We should recognise that the case for elected regional government was overwhelmingly rejected
by the people in the 2004 North East Referendum. Unelected regional government
equally lacks democratic legitimacy, and its
continuing existence has created a democratic deficit.”
ii.
Questioned
why Central Government wanted to reintroduce regional government which had less
accountability to residents. The Government had not
explained why they thought East Anglia was the right footprint for devolution
and confirmed that he had not seen any formal response from them regarding the
issues raised by the Greater Cambridge Greater Peterborough Local Enterprise
Partnership. iii.
Referendums
on elected Mayors have been held in other areas and the Council would want to
be involved in any
discussions that impacted on either Greater Cambridge
and/or Cambridgeshire and Peterborough. Mr Carpen raised the following supplementary points:
i.
Urged
Councillors to have a debate about what the Council thought any further
devolution deal should include. ii.
Raised
the issue about the secrecy of public documents. iii.
Took
on board the comments made by Councillor Price. 3.
Mr Osbourn raised the following points:
i.
Did
not approve of regional government. ii.
Took
issue with the lack of affordable housing and the unaffordability of housing. The Executive Councillor for Housing responded: i.
The Council agreed that any devolution deal had to
include the control of housing policy. ii.
The Council was only too aware of the housing
affordability crisis that faced the City’s residents and was determined to do
all that it could to tackle it. Housing was a key element of the City’s
requests in response to the Government devolution talks. The decision was taken
to take housing requests through the March Housing Scrutiny Committee to gain a
consensus with all parties on the Council, as well as with the Council’s tenant
representatives. iii. The requests the Council made were included in the Housing Market
Statement on the Housing Scrutiny Committee agenda. The requests would have given the Council the freedom and funding needed to build new council
homes in Cambridge and to protect those new council homes from national
policies like Right to Buy and the Compulsory Sales Levy for 30 years, and also
would have ensured that other councils in the Deal could have provided new
council homes. The requests were moderate ones because the most the Council
would have achieved, over time, would have been to replace the hundreds of
council homes that would be lost to the Council and those
in need of housing in Cambridge and South Cambridgeshire over the next
five years through this Government's national policies. iv. The Council would continue to insist that any deal on devolution, regardless of geography, recognised
that social housing was vital for this area and the deal would need to assist
the Council to build them. Mr Osbourn raised the following supplementary point: i.
He
thanked Councillor Price for his answer and commented that Cambridge was the
key in the Deal and that it had a strong bargaining position. 4.
Mr Bridge raised the following points: i.
His
comments were made on behalf of business partners and on behalf of the Greater
Cambridge Greater Peterborough Local Enterprise Partnership. ii.
Expressed
concern regarding the short time during which the deal was discussed and
developed. iii.
The
devolution deal was meant to use a bottom up approach however Central
Government appeared to promote a top down approach. iv.
Did
not believe that the devolution deal covered the correct geographical area
(e.g. to include Norfolk and Suffolk). v.
An
elected Mayor would create an additional layer of bureaucracy and seemed
contrary to what devolution meant. vi.
The
issue of housing had not been dealt with adequately. vii.
The
devolution document itself had not been drafted particularly well. viii.
Requested
that the Council rejected the current proposal and worked with the business
community to get the right solution. The Executive Councillor for Housing responded:
i.
Thanked
Mr Bridge for outlining his response on the devolution deal.
ii.
Agreed
that the approach from Central Government appeared to be a top down deal and
stated that he had been told that the devolution deal would not be forced on
the Councils, despite the enormous pressure to support the deal. He welcomed the business community’s support.
iii.
Despite
22 signatures from Council leaders to the devolution deal, there was one
notable absence being Cambridge City Council.
Mr Bridge raised the following supplementary points:
i.
The
business community were appreciative of the work being done by Cambridge City
Council and the Leader of the Council.
ii.
No
devolution deal could proceed without the support of the business community and
the Local Enterprise Partnership.
iii.
The
devolution deal had raised a difficult conversation regarding the future
purpose of the Local Enterprise Partnership. |
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To consider the recommendations of the Executive for Adoption |
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Cambridge Local Plan - Proposed Modifications - Report on Consultation March 2016 PDF 361 KB Appendices separate to this agenda are as follows: Appendix A: Proposed Modifications - Report on Consultation March 2016 Supplement to Appendix Ai Appendix B: Cambridge Local Plan Proposed Modifications (March 2016) Appendix C: South Cambridgeshire Local Plan Proposed Modifications (March 2016) Appendix D: Summaries of Representations to the Consultation on Proposed Modifications - December 2015, Online Only Supplement to Appendix Di Online Only Appendix E: Supplement to the Sustainability Appraisal Addendum - November 2015 (March 2016) Appendix F: Supplement to Objectively Assessed Housing Need: Further Evidence - November 2015 (March 2016) Online Only Appendix G: Supplement to Cambridge Inner Green Belt Boundary Study - November 2015 (March 2016) Online Only. Appendix H: City Deal and the Cambridge and South Cambridgeshire Local Plans (RD/MC/110) Online Only Appendix I: A428 Constraints Report (March 2016) (RD/MC/073), Online Only Appendix J: A10(N) Corridor Constraints Study (March 2016) (RD/MC/074) Online Only
Additional documents:
Minutes: Resolved Unanimously
to:
i.
Approve the Report on Consultation (Appendix A and the Supplement to Appendix A (i)),
the Proposed Modifications (Appendix B), and the Supplement to the
Sustainability Appraisal Addendum (Appendix E) for submission to the Inspectors
examining the Local Plan.
ii.
Note the documents attached to the Officer’s report
as Appendices F to J and submit these as part of the evidence base for the
Local Plan.
iii.
Delegate authority to the Director of Environment
to make any subsequent minor amendments and editing changes, in consultation
with the Executive Councillor for Planning Policy and Transport, the Chair and
Spokesperson of the Development Plan Scrutiny Sub-Committee. |
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Additional documents:
Minutes: The following recommendation was put forward by the Leader of the
Council, Councillor Herbert: That the Council:
i.
Endorses the response by the Leader and confirms
that the Council does not agree to the proposed Three County Devolution Deal in
the Government Offer Document;
ii.
Confirms it is committed to continuing discussions
on devolution with Cambridgeshire and Peterborough councils, our two city MPs,
the Government, and others including Cambridge businesses to seek devolution
that meets the needs of Cambridge, the Greater Cambridge economy, and
Cambridgeshire and Peterborough;
iii.
Undertakes a formal consultation with residents,
employees, employers, community and business organisations in Cambridge, as
well as with the Greater Cambridge Greater Peterborough Enterprise Partnership,
to put forward the Council’s view on the Government proposals for a Combined
Authority and Mayor covering Cambridgeshire, Norfolk and Suffolk and to enable
responses to inform the Council’s decisions; iv.
Continues to press Government for the funding and
flexibilities set out in the Housing Statement report unanimously endorsed by
Housing Scrutiny Committee on 8 March, to enable the City Council to replace
the estimated 850 social homes lost in the City (1350 in the Greater Cambridge
area) through Right to Buy and High Value Sales over the next five years, to at
least maintain the number of council and other social rent properties in
Cambridge until 2020 and beyond;
v.
Agrees to commission detailed independent analysis,
building on the Housing Statement approved by Housing Scrutiny Committee on 8
March, on the current and projected housing affordability crisis experienced by
Cambridge households on median and lower incomes in the social, intermediate
and private rented sectors, and on the housing measures, policies and
investment needed to address their needs and prevent damage to the Cambridge
economy and its national contribution. Councillor Bick proposed and Councillor Pitt seconded the following
amendment to the motion (additional text underlined): That the Council:
i.
Endorses the response by the Leader and confirms
that the Council does not agree to the proposed Three County Devolution Deal in
the Government Offer Document;
ii.
Confirms it
is committed to continuing discussions on devolution with Cambridgeshire
and Peterborough councils, our two city MPs, the Government, and others
including Cambridge businesses to seek devolution that meets the needs of
Cambridge, the Greater Cambridge economy, and Cambridgeshire and Peterborough;
iii.
Undertakes a formal consultation with residents,
employees, employers, community and business organisations in Cambridge, as
well as with the Greater Cambridge Greater Peterborough Enterprise Partnership,
to put forward the Council’s view on the Government proposals for a Combined
Authority and Mayor covering Cambridgeshire, Norfolk and Suffolk and to enable
responses to inform the Council’s decisions; iv.
Continues to press Government for the funding and
flexibilities set out in the Housing Statement report unanimously endorsed by
Housing Scrutiny Committee on 8 March, to enable the City Council to replace
the estimated 850 social homes lost in the City (1350 in the Greater Cambridge
area) through Right to Buy and High Value Sales over the next five years, to at
least maintain the number of council and other social rent properties in
Cambridge until 2020 and beyond;
v.
Agrees to commission detailed independent analysis,
building on the Housing Statement approved by Housing Scrutiny Committee on 8
March, on the current and projected housing affordability crisis experienced by
Cambridge households on median and lower incomes in the social, intermediate
and private rented sectors, and on the housing measures, policies and
investment needed to address their needs and prevent damage to the Cambridge
economy and its national contribution. vi.
Continues to press Government to honour its
existing commitment under the City Deal to strengthen the governance of Greater
Cambridge over strategic planning and transport in our area by enabling its
progression into a Greater Cambridge Combined Authority, noting that under
current legislation this would be precluded by the creation of a combined
authority at a regional level. Councillor Herbert proposed the following change to the amended
recommendation regarding paragraph vi (deleted text struck through and
additional text underlined): vii.
Continue to press Government to honour its existing
commitment under the City Deal to strengthen the governance of Greater
Cambridge over strategic planning and transport in our area by On a show of hands this was agreed unanimously. Resolved
Unanimously to:
i.
Endorse the response by the Leader and confirms
that the Council does not agree to the proposed Three County Devolution Deal in
the Government Offer Document;
ii.
Confirm the Council was committed to continuing
discussions on devolution with Cambridgeshire and Peterborough councils, our
two city MPs, the Government, and others including Cambridge businesses to seek
devolution that meets the needs of Cambridge, the Greater Cambridge economy,
and Cambridgeshire and Peterborough; iii.
Undertake a formal consultation with residents,
employees, employers, community and business organisations in Cambridge, as
well as with the Greater Cambridge Greater Peterborough Enterprise Partnership,
to put forward the Council’s view on the Government proposals for a Combined
Authority and Mayor covering Cambridgeshire, Norfolk and Suffolk and to enable
responses to inform the Council’s decisions; iv.
Continue to press Government for the funding and
flexibilities set out in the Housing Statement report unanimously endorsed by
Housing Scrutiny Committee on 8 March, to enable the City Council to replace
the estimated 850 social homes lost in the City (1350 in the Greater Cambridge
area) through Right to Buy and High Value Sales over the next five years, to at
least maintain the number of council and other social rent properties in
Cambridge until 2020 and beyond;
v.
Agree to commission detailed independent analysis,
building on the Housing Statement approved by Housing Scrutiny Committee on 8
March, on the current and projected housing affordability crisis experienced by
Cambridge households on median and lower incomes in the social, intermediate
and private rented sectors, and on the housing measures, policies and
investment needed to address their needs and prevent damage to the Cambridge
economy and its national contribution. vi.
Continue to press Government to honour its existing
commitment under the City Deal to strengthen the governance of Greater Cambridge
over strategic planning and transport in our area by not precluding its
progression into a Greater Cambridge Combined Authority, noting that under
current legislation this would be precluded by the creation of a combined
authority at a regional level. |