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Contact: James Goddard Committee Manager
Note: Item 11 Pro-Active Conservation Work Programme is likely to come before item 7 Future of Park Street Car Park
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Apologies To receive any apologies for absence. Minutes: No apologies were received. |
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Declarations of Interest Members are asked
to declare at this stage any interests that they may have in an item shown on
this agenda. If any member of the Committee is unsure whether or not they
should declare an interest on a particular matter, they should seek advice from
the Head of Legal Services before the meeting. Minutes: No declarations of interest were made. |
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To approve the minutes of the meeting held on 8 July 2014 as a correct record. Minutes: The minutes of 8 July 2014 meeting were approved and signed as a correct record. |
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Public Questions Please see information at the end of the agenda Minutes: Members of the public asked questions as set out under individual minute items. |
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Urgency Action taken by the Director of Environment Record
of Urgent Decision taken by the Director of Environment. To
note a decision taken by the Director of Environment since the last
meeting of the Environment Scrutiny Committee. |
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To Rescind the Notice of Redundancy Served on Pest Control Operatives PDF 44 KB Minutes: The decision was noted. |
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Proposed Single Shared Waste Service PDF 272 KB Report to follow Additional documents:
Minutes: Public Question Members of the public asked a number of questions, as set out below. 1. Mr Roberts raised the following points on behalf of
GMB members. Asked for clarification:
i.
If
garage staff were moving or not.
ii.
How/when
vehicle maintenance would be undertaken. iii.
If
Waterbeach would be the location for all vehicles. iv.
How
Councillors could make an informed decision without figures from other council
services.
v.
Details
on financial implications in Appendix 1, specifically costs/savings that would
arise from the shared service proposal. vi.
Stated
shared services could be beneficial if done in a timely manner. An informed
decision should be made on the business operation. The report raised more
questions than answers. Suggested South Cambridgeshire District Council (SCDC)
and the City Council should not tie themselves into a lease until the
costs/benefits are clear. The Director of Environment responded: i. The Mill Road site had been allocated for housing, so the City Council Waste Service would have to move from the site regardless of whether services are shared with SCDC or not. ii. The move to Waterbeach could lead to a change in service such as maintaining trucks. This proposal needed more work, and would be reported back to Environment Scrutiny Committee in future. Staff and trade unions would be consulted on proposals. iii. Not all operational details (eg depot site functions) could be given at present, but would be addressed in future. There is a business case to make this change. iv. Staff would be consulted in future regarding shared service proposals. A key consideration was how staff could travel to the Waterbeach site. v. Truck ‘rounds’ would be reviewed in future for optimum efficiency. The Director of Environment, Head of Refuse & Environment and Executive Councillor for Environment, Waste and Public Health attended a staff meeting and committed to work with staff to develop the best routes. vi. Bad weather needed to be factored into operational plans so crews could access the Waterbeach site. vii. Section 11 of the Officer’s report set out planned savings, including the loss of one head of service. The Head of Refuse & Environment said
Appendix 1 of the Officers report set out income from various sources. City
Council and SCDC income varied for paper waste recycling, but were similar for
other services. The SCDC Director of Health &
Environmental Services said SCDC spent five times more on fuel costs than the
City Council. This would be factored into the budget for shared service
operating costs so the city would not be affected. The Executive Councillor for Environment,
Waste and Public Health responded: i.
Recognised a substantial change
was proposed. ii.
Things had gone well in the past
where staff had fed into consultations to shape services. iii.
Staff had raised issues for
consideration regarding the current proposal for shared services. These would
be considered. iv.
The process to make savings needed
to start now, but not in a way that negatively affected the service. 2. Mr Roberts said the shared service would reduce paper
waste recycling income for the City Council as it worked in a different way to
SCDC. The Executive Councillor for Environment,
Waste and Public Health responded that income was not guaranteed, so future
assumptions could not be based upon historic data. Mr Roberts said that people were not against
the principle of a shared service, but it should be set up in the correct way.
The Council would not want to pull out of a deal later when no savings were
made. 3. Mr Watson raised the following points:
i.
There
were general staff concerns regarding proposed service cost savings.
ii.
Referred
to a paper he circulated setting out estimated costs for him to travel to the
Waterbeach site instead of the Mill Road one. He stated his transport costs
would greatly increase when travelling to the new site, which would leave him
financially worse off. iii.
Queried
if increased staff travel costs had been factored into an equalities impact
assessment. iv.
Queried
how the proposed reduction in waste collection vehicles would lead to cost
savings as this would cause longer rounds and working hours.
v.
Queried
if SCDC would save more costs that the City Council. The Head of Refuse & Environment
responded: i.
Financial impacts would be
considered as part of organisational change policy. Individual 1-2-1 meetings
would be held with staff to understand their circumstances. ii.
Route optimisation would occur
through using vehicles more effectively, rather than having artificial
boundaries between SCDC and city service areas. iii.
Any system introduction would lead
to questions and concerns. SCDC and the City Council were talking to staff on
how to introduce the shared service. This would lead to a lot of change. The SCDC Director of Health & Environmental Services said: i.
It was important for manager’s to
be aware of employee’s personal details such as transport costs. Managers
needed to be creative in finding solutions to reduce costs by working with
frontline staff. ii.
Overtime was paid to SCDC staff to
compensate for long hours when services were redesigned in September 2014.
These hours were reducing. iii.
SCDC spent £3.9m per year on waste
services, the City Council spent £2.6m. Each would put this amount of funding
into the shared service budget and share savings. The Director of Environment said £13,000 of premises costs would be saved
through the move to Waterbeach through enhanced facilities, as the City Council
would not have to maintain the Mill Road depot (proposal dependent on releasing
the land for housing). The Executive Councillor for Environment,
Waste and Public Health made the following points: i.
Thanked staff for their comments. ii.
Travel was an important future
consideration. The Executive Councillor, Director of Environment plus Head of
Refuse & Environment were discussing options to address concerns. iii.
SCDC and City Waste service
workers would be offered a good deal and could expect similar terms and
conditions (these differed currently). 4. Mr Stevens queried if the garage and taxi certificate
of compliance service would move to Waterbeach, or perhaps be outsourced. The Head of Refuse & Environment
responded: i.
A business case on services would
be presented to Councillors in future. This would include costs/savings for
outsourcing all garage services. ii.
Officers were looking at what the
garage does now as part of a review of services that would/not be provided in
future. iii.
It was important to undertake the
service review. The Executive Councillor for Environment,
Waste and Public Health reiterated the above points and said the issue would
return in future for consideration by Environment Scrutiny Committee in more
detail. 5. Mr Bannister raised the following points. Queried: i.
Why report details
were late. ii.
Fuel operation
details. iii.
How routes could be
optimised when in-cab technology did not work. iv.
A number of SCDC
loaders were agency staff, how would this be addressed through shared services. v.
Details about travel
allowance. It would cease after 1 year, which was effectively a pay cut. The SCDC Director
of Health & Environmental Services said: i. All fleet vehicles would refuel at the same place in South Cambs. ii. In-cab technology would be reviewed in future. iii. Agency staff were used to cover service changes, most drivers/loaders were SCDC staff. iv.
Operational details eg travel allowance would be
addressed in future. The Head of Refuse & Environment
responded: i.
Officer reports were issued 1 week
pre-committee. ii.
Staff could expect a standard 37
hour working week. Over time etc would be reviewed through consultation. The Executive Councillor for Environment,
Waste and Public Health reiterated it was important that staff fed into the
shared service process, this would shape how it operated. This could be done
through trade unions, Leading Hands or the Head of Refuse & Environment.
The Executive Councillor for Environment, Waste and Public Health undertook to
liaise with Mr Roberts in future. Mr Bannister said that staff did not want a
pay cut, and suggested existing staff be paid all monies, whereas new staff could
be put on new conditions (if downgraded). The Executive Councillor for Environment,
Waste and Public Health said staff and pay issues would be explored through
trade unions and the Joint Staff Employer Forum. The Director of Environment said this was a crucial issue and a report on
operational details would be brought to Environment Scrutiny Committee in
future. Environment Scrutiny Committee members thanked public speakers for
attending and talking to the Committee. Matter for
Decision The Officer’s report set out the work that had been done to
assess the potential for a single shared waste service for South Cambridgeshire
District Council and Cambridge City Council. The report concluded that there
were significant savings that can be achieved by creating a shared service with
a Governance Board representing both Councils. The report recommended the
creation of a single shared waste service at Waterbeach and that
arrangements be made to consult with staff and unions on detailed
proposals. A further report was requested on a range of matters including
options for the appropriate long term delivery model for the single shared
waste service, and business cases for a shared trade waste service and also the
possible re-location of the Cambridge City garage facility. Decision
of Executive Councillor for Environment, Waste and Public Health Agreed: i.
The creation of a single shared
waste service, wholly owned and run by the local authorities, with a single management
structure and workforce, located at the Waterbeach Depot using a single pool of
vehicles for Cambridge City & South Cambridgeshire DC. ii.
The relocation of the Cambridge
City Waste Service to share the Waterbeach Depot; and the creation of a shared
Head of Service for Waste and a single management team to deliver the single
shared waste service, and to undertake full consultation with the staff and
unions to deliver these changes; iii.
The creation of a Shared Waste
Board to oversee the delivery of the Single Shared Waste Service, to oversee
performance within the budget and policy framework set by both Councils, and to
provide advice and recommendations on waste policy matters to both Councils,
and to deliver the Councils’ objectives. iv.
To delegate the implementation of
the proposals set out in (i), (ii) and (iii) above to the Cambridge City
Director of Environment and South Cambridgeshire DC Director of Health &
Environmental Services, in consultation with the South Cambridgeshire DC
Cabinet Member, and the Cambridge City Executive Member, Chair of Executive
Scrutiny and Opposition Spokespersons. v.
To develop further single shared
waste service efficiency and cost-saving proposals as set out in the Officer’s
report. vi.
To develop options and proposals
for alternative joint delivery models (beyond the Lead Authority model) to
operate the single shared waste service and to report back to Councillors in
July 2015. vii.
To instruct officers to prepare a
detailed implementation plan with financial implications to be agreed with the
Shared Waste Board to inform the future budget setting work of the two
Councils. 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 Director of Environment and
SCDC Director of Health & Environmental
Services. The Committee made the following comments in response to the report:
i.
Were reassured that operational matters would be
pre-scrutinised before implementation.
ii.
City Council and SCDC staff should be on the same
terms and conditions for the same job.
iii.
It was essential to find savings, these not costs
should be shared equally with SCDC.
iv.
The City Council did not want staff annualised
hours terms and conditions like SCDC. In response to Members’ questions the Director of Environment and SCDC Director of Health & Environmental Services said the
following:
i.
Staff transport arrangements would be addressed
though the Joint Staff Employer Forum. The Executive Councillor for Environment,
Waste and Public Health said this exercise was not a privatisation of the waste
service. Reiterated staff travel issues would be reviewed in future.
ii.
No impact was expected on staff pensions. This
would be confirmed with the Head of Human Resources.
iii.
Risks concerning the paper waste recycling service
would be checked with SCDC in future. Details were set out in the SCDC Medium
Term Strategy.
iv.
SCDC and City Council terms and conditions would be
harmonised in future. Details would be reported back to Environment Scrutiny
Committee in July 2015. Timetable details were set out in Appendix 3 of the
Officer’s report. The Executive Councillor for Environment,
Waste and Public Health said the intention was to harmonise terms and
conditions upwards ie the highest pay band in the relevant range.
v.
SCDC had a higher demand for waste services in
summer rather than winter. This was when green bin waste crews were needed in
rural areas, so staff worked longer hours in summer than winter, but costs
equalled out over the year ie salary was unaffected. SCDC used annualised
hours, but the City Council did not. Each could operate differently using the
shared service.
vi.
A single head of service would be empowered to
deliver it. vii.
The contract exit strategy would be set out in a
Memorandum of Understanding. viii.
Consultation mechanisms were in place for Garage
and Waste Service staff. 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. |
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Agenda and Meeting Report Packs Minutes: Committee members asked for reports to be published in one pack in future; not several. Members noted multiple packs were published as reports became available. |
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Future of Park Street Car Park PDF 106 KB Report to follow Additional documents:
Minutes: Public Question A member of the public asked a question as set out below. Mr Lucas-Smith raised the
following points:
i.
Referred
to the Cambridge Cycling Campaign representation.
ii.
Said that
Park Street Cycle Park could be a success, this was an opportunity to install
secure parking facilities and more space for bikes. iii.
Took
issue with the consultation process. iv.
The
cost of congestion should be considered. The Executive Councillor for Planning Policy and Transport said bike and
car parking would be included in the improvement work. Matter for
Decision A report examining viable options for the
future of Park Street multi-storey car park was presented to members in June
2012. It considered the outline business case for refurbishing the car park and
examined the potential and implications of alternative redevelopment of the
site. The report found that due to the
deteriorating structural condition of the car park, it could not be left in its
current state. The Executive Councillor’s recommendations
included an agreement to the principle of consulting the public and
stakeholders about the options to refurbish, or to redevelop the Park Street
car park. Authority was delegated to the Director of Environment in
consultation with the Executive Councillor to carry out a public consultation
exercise to determine the best option and report the results to the Council in
due course. A public consultation exercise was conducted
between 18 August and 19 September 2014.
In light of the consultation feedback, a
detailed appraisal of the alternative options should now be carried out. The
appraisal should recommend an option to members that is consistent with the
council’s economic, financial environmental and planning objectives, so that
the project can be incorporated into the council’s future budget. Decision
of Executive Councillor for Planning Policy and Transport
i.
Noted and considered the feedback and analysis from
the public and business consultation exercise.
ii.
Instructed officers to work up detailed financial
evaluation of the options and taking account of the consultation feedback
against the objectives set out in this report.
iii.
Instructed officers to report back to a future
meeting of the Environment Scrutiny Committee to enable a decision to be made
on the preferred option for inclusion in the Council’s budget. 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 Specialist Services. The Committee made the following comments in response to the report: i. The car park should be redeveloped. ii. Suggested that Stagecoach could be asked to re-instate Madingley Road bus stops. iii. Requested Park&Ride services be temporarily changed to operate late at night during refurbishment work to the car park so people could commute to the theatre etc was the car park was unavailable. In response to Members’ questions the Head of Specialist Services said the following: i. There was no firm commitment regarding the design at present, only that cycle parking facilities would be provided. ii. Consultation responses had been received from the Cambridge Cycling Campaign plus individual cyclists and businesses. The Executive Councillor for Planning Policy
and Transport said the consultation was open to all, it was up to people to
respond.
iii.
Several options were set out in the Officer’s report for
Councillor consideration as it was prudent to make
Councillors aware of all options.
iv.
Changes to bus services were a key consideration
for discussion with the County Council. Other providers may be able to make
alternative parking spaces available if Park Street was not.
v.
The City Council worked with Cambridge BID to
interact with businesses. The Committee unanimously resolved to endorse the recommendations. The Executive Councillor approved the recommendations.
He said the logistics for options needed to be looked at (eg traffic flow to
the site) to ensure they were practicable. Conflicts of Interest Declared by the Executive Councillor (and any
Dispensations Granted) No conflicts of interest
were declared by the Executive Councillor. |
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Re-Ordering Agenda Minutes: Under paragraph 4.2.1 of the Council Procedure Rules, the Chair used his
discretion to alter the order of the agenda items. However, for ease of the
reader, these minutes will follow the order of the agenda. |
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Keep Cambridge Moving Fund PDF 73 KB Report to follow Additional documents: Minutes: Public Question A member of the public asked a question as set out below. Mr Lucas-Smith raised
the following points:
i.
The
A14 is dangerous and unsuitable for cycling. He asked for a parallel
non-motorised route.
ii.
The
Prime Minister committed funding to cycle-proofing roads. iii.
Referred
to the Highways Agency letter and said there were no details about
non-motorised users. Asked if the City Council could request this be a
condition of Department of Transport funding. iv.
Strongly
support a fund for work. The County Council Director of Strategy and Development responded that a
parallel non-motorised route was part of the scheme. The County Council
informed the Highways Agency the scheme should include greater clarity on this.
There was an intention to provide a path, its use was to be confirmed. Matter for
Decision The City Council is in discussion with the Highways Agency about the
impact of proposed improvements to the A14 on traffic flows, noise, air quality
and vibration within Cambridge. When
this information has been received, and analysed, options would be prepared to
mitigate the impact of the scheme on residents within the city. In the meantime
it was recommended to agree the principle of an investment by the City Council
of £1.5 million over 25 years to mitigate these impacts. Decision
of Executive Councillor for Planning Policy and Transport Agreed the principle of an
investment within the next 25 years by Cambridge City Council of £1.5 million
into measures that mitigate the impact of trunk road improvements on the A14 in
accordance with the approach set out in the Officer’s report and that the Head
of Finance was requested to consider the financial implications of this
commitment in the forthcoming Budget Setting Report of the City Council. 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 Director of Environment. In response to Members’ questions the Director of Environment said the following: i. If recommendations were agreed in principle by Environment Scrutiny Committee and the Executive Councillor, a Budget Setting Report could then be put to Full Council. ii. Funding could be invested in and outside the city boundaries if it benefitted the city. For example, Park&Ride services. The Committee unanimously resolved to endorse the recommendation. The Executive Councillor
approved the recommendation. Conflicts of Interest Declared by the Executive Councillor (and any
Dispensations Granted) No conflicts of interest
were declared by the Executive Councillor. |
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Greater Cambridge City Deal Outline Transport Programme Phase 1 PDF 104 KB Minutes: Public Question A member of the public asked a question as set out below. Mr Lucas-Smith raised
the following points:
i.
Welcomed
the Officer’s report and expected City Deal funding.
ii.
This
was an opportunity for the city, which needed democratic input. iii.
Cost efficient
schemes were set out in the Officer’s report. iv.
The
inner ring road and radial roads needed separate lanes for cars, bikes and
pedestrians.
v.
Expressed
concern that there was no space for separate cycle lanes in some proposals. vi.
Asked
for details about city centre cycle capacity improvements. vii.
Bike
links to villages around the city should be included in priorities to reduce
congestion. The County Council Director of Strategy and Development responded: i. The scheme came from the Joint Transport Strategy for the city and South Cambridgeshire. ii. Consultation would be undertaken in future on the high level priorities set out in the Officer’s report. Wherever bus priority measures were proposed, there was an intention to put in cycle facilities too. iii. Work had not yet been undertaken on developing designs. Matter for
Decision The Officer’s paper updated the Committee on the current position
regarding the infrastructure programme to be delivered through the Greater
Cambridge City Deal, work undertaken to date, and next steps. The paper sought the Committee’s views on the options before a final
decision is made on the programme to be delivered from 2015-20 by the new
Greater Cambridge Joint Committee. Decision
of Executive Councillor for Planning Policy and Transport Listened to the views of committee members
on the projects in the outline City Deal infrastructure programme. The Committee noted the work carried out to date and currently ongoing,
and commented on the programme of transport schemes that could form the first
five years’ City Deal programme and future work around the City Deal programme. 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 Corporate Strategy. The Leader of the Council made the following points:
i.
The City Deal had a 2 part governance arrangement.
ii.
The Shadow Board would be in place from November
2014, and the Assembly in January 2015.
iii.
Central Government was delaying governance
arrangements. A report would be taken to Strategy & Resources Scrutiny
Committee 20 October 2014.
iv.
The process needed to start now.
v.
There was a program to engage with cyclists,
businesses and residents in future.
vi.
Priorities were set out in P39 of the Officer’s
report. The Committee made the following comments in response to the report: i. Asked for trees to be considered whilst work was being undertaken, particularly in Milton Road. ii. Public transport and cycle facilities needed to be improved to reduce car usage. iii. Multi-modal transport needs should be addressed. iv. Suggested joint work between the City Deal and possible extended Park&Ride services during Park Street Car Park refurbishment. v. The City Deal should lead to transformative change. Preparatory work could be undertaken during tranche 1, so big projects could begin in tranche 2. vi. Congestion should be factored into transport modelling. There was no point having road etc access into the city if people could not travel around it. In response to Members’ questions the County Council Director of Strategy and Development said the
following: i. Shared pavements were not ideal in the city due to the high use by pedestrians and bikes. This was acceptable in rural areas where there was lower use. ii. Providing real improvements for pedestrians, cyclists and buses, would only be achieved by restricting private car access, as had been done with the rising bollards in the city centre. Setting this would be a policy decision for councillors, not officers. This would then allow the space for street redevelopment work. The Director of Environment said that air
quality figures were available if desired. The city growth strategy was based
on 60% non-car trips. The City Deal would feed into this programme. The Leader of the Council made the following points:
i.
The Council would have to demonstrate the impact of
£100m City Deal funding before it could get more from Central Government.
ii.
The focus was on getting people out of cars. Work
on some radial routes may help access to the city.
iii.
Reshaping transport access would raise challenges.
There would be feasibility studies and public consultation. The Committee unanimously resolved to endorse the recommendation. The Executive Councillor
approved the recommendation. Conflicts of Interest Declared by the Executive Councillor (and any
Dispensations Granted) No conflicts of interest
were declared by the Executive Councillor. |
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Joint Capital Cycleways Programme Review PDF 994 KB Appendix attached, report to follow Additional documents: Minutes: Public Question A member of the public asked a question as set out below. Mr Lucas-Smith raised
the following points:
i.
Welcomed
continuation of the programme.
ii.
Referred
to environmental and equality benefits. iii.
Requested
proper protected space for cyclists, not shared use. iv.
Asked
where £394,000 was spent on Newmarket Road. The Project Manager responded that the funding was spent on various improvements to Newmarket Road, such as the
pedestrian crossing. Matter for
Decision The Officer’s report advised Environment Scrutiny Committee of the
principal achievements of the Joint Cycleways Capital Programme since its
inception in 2002, its extension to 2014-15 in 2011, and consideration of
further extending the programme beyond 2014-15. Decision
of Executive Councillor for Planning Policy and Transport i. Noted the progress and achievements to date of the Cycleways Capital Programme (PR007). ii. Agreed to consider an annual funding allocation to match that currently provided by the County Council each year, to be considered in the Budget Setting Report to extend the programme. iii. Subject to the outcome of the capital bid recommendation (ii above), a report would be brought back to Environment Scrutiny Committee setting out how the extended Cycleways Joint Capital Programme is proposed to be managed. 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 Project Manager. In response to Members’ questions the Project Manager said the following: i. The County Council was the statutory authority responsible for highway maintenance, but the City Council could add value by adding funding to the shared programme. There were no guarantees that the County Council would fund the joint cycleways programme in future, but cycle facilities were viewed favourably as part of the programme. ii. The County Council funded highway and open space work. Highways Agency priorities were periodically reviewed, but some areas were not current priorities, such as Park Street. The Committee felt the joint cycleways
programme enabled the City Council to influence the County Council agenda. The Executive Councillor said funding had
reduced from £250k to £50k. Park Street could be included in recommendation
(iii) after other options had been reviewed as other areas need work done
sooner. 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. |
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Pro-Active Conservation Work Programme 2014-15 PDF 118 KB Minutes: Public Question Members of the public asked a number of questions, as set out below. 1. Professor Bullock raised the following
points:
i.
Asked
for Barrow Road to be designated as a Conservation Area.
ii.
English
Heritage viewed Barrow Road properties as worthy of conservation. iii.
The
architectural qualities/values of houses in Barrow Road were coming under
threat as people changed house appearances, demolished or replaced them. iv.
Much
of the city was already protected by Conservation Areas.
v.
A
Conservation Area was the only way to defend the qualities of the
neighbourhood. vi.
Barrow
Road residents wanted to contribute to the costs of becoming a Conservation
Area by providing: a. Money b. Expertise. c. Research material. vii.
Residents
had subscribed a sum of money for a consultant to undertake a Conservation Area
assessment. 2. Mrs Bullock raised the following points: i.
Asked for Barrow
Road to be designated as a Conservation Area. 85% of residents expressed this
view. ii.
Copies of resident’s
application had been provided to Officers. iii.
Took issue with the
amount of time taken by Officers to consider the application. iv.
Stated urgent action
was required to preserve Barrow Road as an architectural asset for the city. v.
Circulated speaker
notes which included copies of correspondence to date. The Urban Design and Conservation Manager responded: i. Commended Professor and Mrs Bullock’s care and wanting to protect their neighbourhood. ii. Agreed with the sentiment of what they were saying. iii. Was familiar with the funding and English Heritage consultation methods mentioned in the representations. iv. The Pro-Active Conservation Work Programme consultation was at a key stage for review by Environment Scrutiny Committee and Council. In order to include Barrow Road, Councillors would have to make a decision to change their current commitments, plus accept associated costs to reprioritise the programme. This was possible, but would incur costs. 3. The Committee Manager read out a statement on behalf
of Mrs Hargreaves: “Could Bentley Road be made a conservation area as it is a
line of arts and craft houses. If they are not kept it will become a hotch
pot”. Matter for
Decision The Officer’s report reviewed the work that had been completed as part
of the Council’s pro-active conservation work programme since the last report
to committee in March 2014. The purpose of the report was to update members on
the work that had been completed, what was outstanding, and what was proposed. The report also noted the spend to date on the
programme as well as sought a steer from the Executive Councillor for Planning
Policy on a request to designate Barrow Road a conservation area. Decision
of Executive Councillor for Planning Policy and Transport i. Agreed the pro-active conservation programme as set out in Appendix 1 of the Officer’s report. ii. Agreed that existing commitments in the Council's Pro-Active Work Programme as set out in the Officer’s report should have priority at this time. iii. Noted the request for the designation of Barrow Road as a conservation area, and to agree that such designation is not prioritised for the reasons set out in the Officer’s report. 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 Urban Design and Conservation Manager. He stated the
report contained a typographical error listing the last report to committee in
March 2013, it should read 2014. The Committee made the following comments in response to the report: i. Wanted to protect Barrow Road. ii. The Council needed to balance cost savings with protecting its heritage as the Council received very limited funding from Central Government. iii. Pro-active work priorities for the Conservation Team at this time are to complete the update of the Historic Core Area Appraisal and to review the most vulnerable Buildings of Local Interest outside of conservation areas for potential Article 4 Directions. In response to Members’ questions the Urban Design and Conservation
Manager and Principal Conservation and Design Officer said the following: i. If the Pro-Active Conservation Work Programme was prioritised, the review of the most vulnerable Buildings of Local Interest outside of conservation areas for potential Article 4 Directions would be put on hold. ii. An initial review of Pro-Active Conservation Work was undertaken, the former Executive Councillor for Planning and Climate Change gave permission to proceed. Officers were following this process. Reconsideration of the matter as to whether or not to designate could be undertaken in 12 months once other work has progressed if the Executive Councillor for Planning Policy and Transport agreed. iii. Resources, rather than staffing numbers were the principal issue that affected timescales for work. Preparing a conservation area appraisal document/process correctly was a 4-6 month process. The Director of Environment added that he
would not advocate Neighbourhood Plans as a solution for Barrow Road
protection. He reiterated a review of the situation of whether to proceed with
designation could be undertaken in 1 year. If the Pro-Active Conservation Work
Programme was re-prioritised now, the previous commitment would have to be
taken out.
iv.
The Council could accept private funding and expertise
from residents to undertake conservation work. The Urban Design and
Conservation Manager re-iterated that reprioritising the conservation programme
would impact on pre-existing commitments made in the past year with respect to
pro-active conservation work.
v.
A Home Alteration Design Guide was a topic of
interest to householders. A lot of insulation work etc was covered under
permitted development even in Conservation Areas, unless Article 4 Directions
already applied. Officers advised that English Heritage already provided such
information but would review if details could be put on Conservation Team
webpages in future. 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 unanimously endorsed
recommendation (ii). The Committee endorsed recommendation (iii) by 5
votes to 2 with 1 abstention. The Executive Councillor approved the recommendations.
He said that conservation and preservation work were separate issues. The
Conservation Team were facing challenging priorities, which should remain
unchanged. Conflicts of Interest Declared by the Executive Councillor (and any
Dispensations Granted) No conflicts of interest
were declared by the Executive Councillor. |