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Venue: Committee Room 1 & 2, The Guildhall, Market Square, Cambridge, CB2 3QJ. View directions
Contact: Glenn Burgess Committee Manager
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Apologies for absence Minutes: No apologies were received. |
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Minutes of previous meeting PDF 68 KB Minutes: The minutes of the meeting held on 17 September 2014 were approved as a correct record and signed by the Chair. |
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Declarations of Interest Members
are asked to declare at this stage any interests that they may have in any of
the following items on the agenda. If any member is unsure whether or not
they should declare an interest on a particular matter, they are requested to
seek advice from the Head of Legal Services before the meeting.
Minutes: No interests were declared. |
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Public Questions Minutes: County Councillor Walsh and Mr Colin Rosenstiel requested to speak prior to consideration of agenda item 5. |
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Re-ordering of the agenda. Under paragraph 4.2.1 of the Council Procedure Rules, the Chair used his
discretion to alter the order of the agenda items to take item 5 last. However,
for ease of the reader, these minutes will follow the order of the agenda. |
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Electoral Review of Cambridgeshire PDF 60 KB Report attached separately. Additional documents:
Minutes: The committee received a report from the Democratic Services Manager regarding the Electoral Review of Cambridgeshire. The Liberal Democrat Group tabled a proposed amendment to the Labour Group’s submission as included in the officer’s report: In response the Labour Group tabled a further composite amendment to their submission: County Councillor Walsh addressed the committee and made the
following points: i. Equality of representation and effective community representation were key factors to be considered. ii. Whilst the location of schools in relation to proposed boundaries was an important factor it should not be the only consideration. iii. Dividing the City Centre would ensure equality of representation. iv. Urged the City Council to submit a response and to convey to the Boundary Commission the updated estimates regarding number of electors in the City. Mr Colin Rosenstiel addressed the committee and made the following
points:
i.
The figures used by the County Council in their
submission failed to take into account new student accommodation projected to
house 2410 students, and therefore understated the number of electors in the
City.
ii.
63 County Council Divisions and 12 City Wards would
mean that the City Council was under represented.
iii.
Based on the correct figures the County Council
would be able to retain their 69 Divisions.
iv.
Never before had an Electoral Review been
undertaken at a time of such growth in the City. After discussion on the proposed amendments the committee
adjourned for 10 minutes for a combined version to be drafted by officers.
Members requested that each point be voted on separately (see below): On a
show of hands the following proposal was agreed unanimously: i) To convey to the County Council and the
Boundary Commission the updated estimates about the numbers of electors in the
City in the paragraphs below: REVISED ESTIMATES
ON CAMBRIDGE ELECTORS The County
Council’s submission to the Boundary Commission was based on numbers taken from
the Electoral Register of February 2014 and the projections for new housing
made in December 2013. These numbers
understate the figures for the City in two principle ways: i) They
overlooked new student accommodation projected to house 2,410 students. As
University records show that approximately 16% of students are not citizens of
the UK, EU or a Commonwealth country, it is reasonable to assume that 84% (ie 2,025) are expected to be eligible to vote in UK
elections. ii) The most recent projections for new housing in
the City, published in December 2014, updates information about housing that
should be considered as part of the review period. Some sites should be
included as they will be brought forward quicker than previously expected eg. in Queen Edith's Division. It
also shows that some new build has been wrongly allocated to the present wards.
Much of the new build on the Darwin Green site will not be in the present
Castle Ward as previously expected, but in Arbury and
the new build on the CB1 site will be in the present Trumpington
Ward rather than Petersfield. These errors of placement have now been accepted
by the Boundary Commission which reissued its data last week. iii) The December
2014 projections for housing, and the consequent calculations for numbers of
electors, are not yet available for the other Districts. The overall numbers
for the County are therefore uncertain. On a
show of hands the following proposal was agreed unanimously: ii) To convey to the Boundary Commission that projected numbers in
the rest of the County are uncertain and these might make the City
under-represented if they retain the proposed 63 Divisions, in that Divisions
in the City could be significantly larger than those in the rest of the County.
On a
show of hands the following proposal was agreed by 4 votes to 2: iii) Recognising that this data may not affect the Boundary Commission’s
proposals for City Ward numbers, to support the County Labour Group’s
submission in case Cambridge District will be allocated twelve County
Councillors, while continuing to investigate the accuracy of the elector
numbers and the potential impact on the number of County Councillors allocated
to each District and the City’s total share of overall County Councillors. On a
show of hands the following proposal was agreed unanimously: iv) To agree that co-terminosity between
County Council Divisions and City Council Wards is very desirable for good
governance and any period when this is not the case should be as short as
possible. On a
show of hands the following proposal was lost by 3 votes to 3 (and on the
Chair’s casting vote): v) To note the position of the Liberal Democrat Group below: As the Labour
submission was based on numbers now shown to be flawed, it should not go
forward. Also the Labour
submission pays little regard to the principle set out by the Commission that
schemes need to reflect the identities and interests of local communities; a) As primary
schools tend to be the focus of their community, keeping boundaries some way
from them is good practice. In the Labour scheme, Mayfield School, Park Street
School and St Philip's School are all divided from a sizeable section of their
immediate catchment area. b) Dividing the dense community in the Park
Street area into two Wards does not respect that local community c) Taking the northern part of Romsey to put it with Barnwell (Abbey) was suggested by
Labour at the last review and provoked an unusually large negative response
from the residents as people in that area consider that they live in Romsey which has a very clear community identity. d) Taking account of long standing boundaries is
also considered to be good practice. There is a very
long established boundary between the North and West of the city and the South
and East, along the river and the line of Elizabeth Way, East Road, Gonville Place, Lensfield Road
and Fen Causeway to the river again. This, with minor flexibility around, for
example, Lensfield Road, is very well established for
nearly 50 years and separates the city into two equal halves. The Labour submission ignores this boundary. On a
show of hands the following proposal was agreed unanimously: vi) To agree to respond to the next phase of the
Boundary Commission’s consultation after consideration by the Civic Affairs
Committee.
vii) To forward the minutes
of the Civic Affairs Committee to the Boundary Commission as part of the City
Council’s submission. Resolved: i) To convey to the County Council and
the Boundary Commission the updated estimates about the numbers of electors in
the City in the paragraphs below: REVISED
ESTIMATES ON CAMBRIDGE ELECTORS The
County Council’s submission to the Boundary Commission was based on numbers
taken from the Electoral Register of February 2014 and the projections for new
housing made in December 2013. These
numbers understate the figures for the City in two principle ways: i) They overlooked new student accommodation
projected to house 2,410 students. As University records show that
approximately 16% of students are not citizens of the UK, EU or a Commonwealth
country, it is reasonable to assume that 84% (ie
2,025) are expected to be eligible to vote in UK elections. ii)
The most recent projections for new housing in the City, published in December
2014, updates information about housing that should be considered as part of
the review period. Some sites should be included as they will be brought
forward quicker than previously expected eg. in Queen Edith's division. It also shows that some new build
has been wrongly allocated to the present wards. Much of the new build on the
Darwin Green site will not be in the present Castle ward as previously
expected, but in Arbury and the new build on the CB1
site will be in the present Trumpington Ward rather
than Petersfield. These errors of placement have now been accepted by the
Boundary Commission which reissued its data last week. iii)
The December 2014 projections for housing, and the consequent calculations for
numbers of electors, are not yet available for the other Districts. The overall
numbers for the County are therefore uncertain. ii) To convey to the Boundary Commission that projected numbers in
the rest of the County are uncertain and these might make the City
under-represented if they retain the proposed 63 Divisions, in that Divisions
in the City could be significantly larger than those in the rest of the County.
iii) Recognising that this data may not affect the Boundary Commission’s
proposals for city ward numbers, to support the County Labour Group’s
submission in case Cambridge District will be allocated twelve County
Councillors, while continuing to investigate the accuracy of the elector
numbers and the potential impact on the number of County Councillors allocated
to each District and the city’s total share of overall county councillors. iv) To agree that co-terminosity between
County Council Divisions and City Council Wards is very desirable for good
governance and any period when this is not the case should be as short as
possible. v) To agree to respond to the next phase of the Boundary Commission’s
consultation after consideration by the Civic Affairs Committee.
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Ernst & Young Report on Audit of Grant Claims PDF 82 KB Additional documents: Minutes: The committee received a report from the Head of Finance and the Director of Ernst and Young regarding audit of grant claims. In response to members’ questions the Benefits Manager and the Director of Ernst and Young said the following: i.
The Department of Works and
Pensions (DWP) look at a small sample in order to devise the correct
methodology. ii.
A net increase in subsidy
to the Local Authority of £14,017 was expected. iii.
The small error identified
did not point to a fundamental flaw in the system. Resolved (unanimously) to: i. Note the contents of the Ernst and Young report, attached at appendix 1 to the officer’s covering report. ii. Note the impact of information received after the submission of the Ernst and Young report. |
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2013/14 Audit Scale Fee Variation PDF 182 KB Minutes: The committee received a report from the Head of Finance regarding the 2013/14 Audit Scale Fee Variation. Resolved (unanimously) to: i.
Note the report |
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Council Tax Base and Business Rates Calculations PDF 56 KB Minutes: The committee received a report from Head of Finance regarding Council Tax Base and Business Rates Calculations. Resolved (unanimously) to:
i.
Recommend
Council to formally confirm the delegation to the Chief Financial Officer (Head
of Finance) of approval of the Council Tax Base and submission of the National
Non-Domestic Rates Forecast Form (NNDR1) for each financial year. |
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Planning Code of Good Practice PDF 126 KB Minutes: The committee received a report from the Head of Planning Services regarding the Planning Code of Good Practice. In response to members’ questions the Head of Planning Services said the following: i.
Changes made to the Code
under Section 4 enabled Councillors to take a more active role in applications
in their Wards without the fear of bias or predetermination. However there was
a need to approach all planning applications with an open mind and be able to
weigh up all arguments up until the point a decision is made. The committee thanked for
the officer for a detailed report. The Deputy Independent
Person proposed, and the committee supported, the following additional
recommendations: i. That the Code be circulated to all Councillors, not just those on the Planning Committee. ii. That the Code be reviewed every 3 years. Resolved (unanimously) to:
i.
Endorse the approval of the updated Planning
Code of Good Practice.
ii.
Recommend circulation of the final Code to all Councillors,
not just those on the Planning Committee.
iii.
Recommend
that the Code be reviewed every 3 years. |
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Pay Policy Statement 2015/16 PDF 137 KB Report attached separately. Minutes: The committee received a report from the Head of Human Resources regarding the Pay Policy Statement 2015/16. Resolved (unanimously) to:
i.
Recommend to Council the draft Pay Policy Statement
2015/16 attached at Appendix 1 of the officer’s report.
ii.
Delegate authority to the Head of Human Resources
to amend the draft Pay Policy Statement 2015/16 should there be agreement on a
pay offer for Chief Executives and/or Chief Officers. [NB. Subsequent to the committee meeting an agreement on chief officer pay
was reached on 2 February. The Pay
Policy Statement in the Council Agenda has been amended to reflect this, with
the changes in italic text.] |
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Calendar of Meetings 2015/16 PDF 53 KB Additional documents: Minutes: The committee received a report from the Democratic Services Manager regarding the Calendar of Meetings 2015/16. In response to members’ questions the Democratic Services Manager said the following: i.
Planning Committee had been
scheduled for 4 May 2016 (prior to the elections on 5 May 2016) to ensure that
the committee would be quorate. Agreed to discuss this further with the Head of
Planning Services. ii.
Agreed that the Joint Staff
Employer Forum (JSEF) would be moved from 28 July 2015 to the 21 July 2015 to
avoid the school holidays. Resolved (unanimously) to: i.
Agree the 2015/16 meetings calendar
subject to: -
Joint Staff Employer Forum
(JSEF) being moved from 28 July 2015 to the 21 July 2015. -
Further discussions taking
place with the Head of Planning Services regarding the Planning Committee on 4
May 2016. |
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Membership of Chief Officer Performance Review To change the membership of the Chief Officer Performance Review Working Group: Cllr Price to replace Cllr O’Reilly Minutes: Resolved (unanimously) to: i.
Amend membership of the
Chief Officer Performance Review Working Group as follows: Councillor Price to replace Councillor O’Reilly |