Agenda and minutes
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Contact: Sarah Claridge, Committee Services Officer
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Apologies for absence Minutes: Apologies for absence were received from Councillors Azad and Simmons and Wilkinson.
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Declarations of interest Minutes: There were no declarations of interest made.
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Minutes from 27 March 2017
Recommendation: That the minutes of the meeting held on 27 March 2017 be APPROVED as a true and accurate record. Minutes: The Committee resolved to APPROVE the minutes of the meeting held on 27 March 2017 as a true and accurate record.
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Report back on recommendations PDF 125 KB
Minutes: The Chair presented the report on recommendations. He said that Cllr Hollingsworth, Board member for Planning and Regulatory would provide a more detailed response to the University Housing Needs recommendations once the draft local plan document is out for consultation in July 2017. He will respond either offline or via the Scrutiny housing panel.
All recommendations from the last meeting were agreed.
The Committee noted the report.
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Work Plan and Forward Plan PDF 138 KB
Additional documents: Minutes: The Chair presented the report.
Work Plan The Committee reviewed and noted that the City Centre and Grant Monitoring reports for CEB have slipped to July.
Cllr Chapman suggested that the NHS Sustainability and Transformation Plan briefing be arranged soon because the draft document is already available.
Forward Plan The Committee agreed a reserve list of items from the Forward Plan, to pre-scrutinise if there is room on their June agenda.
1. Community leases. 2. Sustainable City Strategy 3. Proposals for an Oxford Lottery to raise money for good causes |
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Additional documents:
Minutes: The Head of Community Services presented the report. He highlighted the positive progress made in leisure participation since Fusion Lifestyles took over the running of the leisure centres in 2009. He explained that the targets remain ambitious; they are challenging but not impossible.
Cllr Smith, Board Member for Leisure, Parks & Sport outlined the key focus areas for the forthcoming year these include: · Increasing participation · Reducing carbon emissions at centres in particular Hinksey Outdoor Pool where they hoped to use a Pool cover to reduce loss of heating. The logistics for how this would work would be a challenge for Fusion – (size and shape of the pool). · The Free U17 swimming classes needed more promotion at the individual pools · Keen to see progress of a crèche facility at Ferry.
The Head of Community Services said the Scrutiny Committee could offer changes to the report – to an extent.
The Committee made the following comments:
They would like to know the number of individuals using the facilities rather than the number of visits. The Committee were concerned the same people were visiting the facilities and skewing the results. The Head of Community Services said that visits were the benchmark used but we could review the usage. Moving people onto reward cards to capture this data would be paramount.
They would like to see added to the key areas how Fusion plans to improve disability facilities at the centres. The Head of Community Services said encouraging inclusiveness was a fundamental objective of the Fusion contract.
They enquired what the geographic spread of the users at each facility was. Fusion’s Sports and Partnership Group Manager said that people were using multiple facilities across the city. Which facilities are the former users of Temple Cowley Leisure Centre going to?
Increased usage is great but there is a trade-off between usage and cleanliness.
The Committee suggested including some of the feedback from user groups regarding performance in the report next year.
Queried whether it would be more meaningful to consider the Annual Service Plan alongside the performance monitoring document.
Asked what strategies are used to encourage usage in the off-peak periods. Cllr Smith said that the usage data is constantly being reviewed and that she reviews performance data every month.
In terms of GP referrals; are GPs working with Fusion actively. Fusion’s Sport and Partnership Group Manager said GP referrals vary across the city. His new role is responsible for improving this. Fusion also works closely with Sport England and various mental health services.
Asked if it was feasible for city residents to get cheaper membership than people outside of the city? Cllr Smith said it was worth considering; the U17 free swimming classes are for residents only.
The Scrutiny Committee made the following recommendations to the City Executive Board:
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South Oxford Science Village Planning Application PDF 101 KB
Additional documents: Minutes: Cllr Alex Hollingsworth, Board Member for Planning and Regulatory Services presented the report. He provided some background to the decision and highlighted the progress that had been made in working constructively with neighbouring district councils on the issue of Oxford’s unmet housing need. The Council’s preferred approach was to agree sites and numbers with the districts and for these to be taken forward through their local planning processes.
The Head of Planning, Sustainable Development and Regulatory Services said that even though agreements were now in place with some of the districts, no new homes would be built specifically to meet Oxford’s unmet housing need before 2020/21.
The Head of Planning, Sustainable Development and Regulatory Services said that the Council was looking to develop South Oxford Science Village through a three-way partnership arrangement with Thames Water and Magdalen College. The site was being promoted as a mixed use development and all costs would be split three ways between the three land-owning partners, including the costs of hiring planning consultants to act on their behalf. The Council’s budget allocation of £560k had also contributed to a lot of detailed technical work which had taken the partnership up to the point of submitting an application. As the land was outside the city boundary the Council was not the planning authority but the additional costs arising from this factor were relatively small.
Cllr Hollingsworth said that South Oxfordshire District Council (SODC), had voiced support for an alternative site at Chalgrove Airfield, which was being proactively pursued. However, the Council’s view was that the location of that particular site was too remote, being some 12 miles from the city. The site’s location meant that the associated infrastructure costs would be very high and good public transport links were unlikely to be viable, so a big increase in car journeys would be expected. In addition to distance the expected time-lag to completion made the site unsuitable in terms meeting Oxford’s unmet housing need.
Cllr Hollingsworth believed an urban extension on land south of Grenoble Road would be more sustainable as it would be connected with existing bus routes, cycle infrastructure and potentially the Cowley branch line. The increase in car journey numbers would therefore be lower than for an equivalent development at Chalgrove.
Cllr Hollingsworth said that in his view it was likely that the South Oxford Science Village planning application would be refused by the planning authority. It was difficult to quantify the risk to the Council of pursuing an application but the Council believed that an urban extension at this location was a major priority and that it had a robust case to put forward in a planning appeal or call-in inquiry. The Head of Service said that the proposal was deliverable, given that the Council was a landowner, and the Council was taking all the right steps but there were no guarantees. Sites at Wick Farm and Elsfield to the North East of the city were also in contention for development, ... view the full minutes text for item 117. |
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Reports for approval PDF 118 KB The Committee is asked to approve the following reports for submission to the City Executive Board on 11 May 2017: · The Council’s use of PSPO powers · The local financial impacts of Brexit Additional documents: Minutes: The Council’s use of PSPO powers
The Scrutiny Committee resolved to approve the report for submission to the City Executive Board:
The local financial impacts of Brexit
The Scrutiny Committee resolved to approve the report for submission to the City Executive Board:
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Dates of future meetings Meetings are scheduled as followed:
Scrutiny Committee
All meetings start at 6.00 pm.
Standing Panels Housing Standing Panel: 10 July 2017 - Provisional Finance Standing Panel: 6 July 2017 - Provisional Scrutiny Shareholder Panel: TBC
Minutes: The next meeting is scheduled for 12 June 2017 – Special for Local Plan.
The Scrutiny Shareholder Panel is meeting in July – date TBD
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