Venue: Council Chamber, County Hall, Dorchester, DT1 1XJ. View directions
Contact: John Miles Email: john.miles@dorsetcouncil.gov.uk
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Apologies To receive any apologies for absence. Minutes: An Apology for absence was received from Cllr Robin Legg. |
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To confirm the minutes of the meeting held on 25th September 2023. Minutes: The minutes of the meeting held on 25th September 2023 were confirmed and signed. |
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Declarations of Interest To disclose any pecuniary, other registrable or non-registrable interest as set out in the adopted Code of Conduct. In making their decision councillors are asked to state the agenda item, the nature of the interest and any action they propose to take as part of their declaration. If required, further advice should be sought from the Monitoring Officer in advance of the meeting. Minutes: No declarations of disclosable pecuniary interests were made at the meeting. |
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Public Participation Representatives of town or parish councils and members of the public who live, work, or represent an organisation within the Dorset Council area are welcome to submit either 1 question or 1 statement for each meeting. You are welcome to attend the meeting in person or via MS Teams to read out your question and to receive the response. If you submit a statement for the committee this will be circulated to all members of the committee in advance of the meeting as a supplement to the agenda and appended to the minutes for the formal record but will not be read out at the meeting. The first 8 questions and the first 8 statements received from members of the public or organisations for each meeting will be accepted on a first come first served basis in accordance with the deadline set out below. All submissions must be emailed in full to john.miles@dorsetcouncil.gov.uk by 8.30 am on 8th November 2023. When submitting your question or statement please note that: · You can submit 1 question or 1 statement. · A question may include a short pre-amble to set the context. · It must be a single question and any sub-divided questions will not be permitted. · Each question will consist of no more than 450 words, and you will be given up to 3 minutes to present your question. · When submitting a question please indicate who the question is for (e.g., the name of the committee or Portfolio Holder) · Include your name, address, and contact details. Only your name will be published but we may need your other details to contact you about your question or statement in advance of the meeting. · Questions and statements received in line with the council’s rules for public participation will be published as a supplement to the agenda. · All questions, statements and responses will be published in full within the minutes of the meeting. Minutes: There was no public participation. |
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Minutes of the Audit & Governance Sub-committee To note the minutes of the Audit & Governance Hearing Sub-committee (if any meetings have been held). Minutes: There was no meetings held. |
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Treasury Management Mid-Year Update PDF 216 KB To receive a report by David Wilkes, Service Manager for Treasury and Investments. Minutes: The Service
Manager for Treasury and Investment introduced the report. He informed the
committee of the headlines such as, the total external borrowing, the total interest
paid and £40 million of borrowing matured in the first 6 months of the year.
The total interest paid servicing debt for the year was forecast He covered
the main external factors influencing the treasury management activity which
was high inflation and subsequent interest rate rises. Interest rates were
expected to now plateau and then start falling back gradually during summer and
autumn next year. Net borrowing was predicted to increase for the second part
of the year because of the profile of the Council’s cashflows – for example car
parking revenue was higher in the summer months and the government grants were
usually received in advance of spend. The Executive
Director for Corporate Development responded to Cllr Grey’s question regarding
what needed to be changed to achieve the Capital Programme. He told the
committee that Dorset Council had struggled with its Capital Programme
over the past few years which led to a review last March which removed a number
of items. Overambition and the inability to deliver given the current economic
crisis in terms of construction and resources available. There had been
increased monitoring of each scheme during the last 6 months and an update
would be provided in the next Quarterly Finance Report. Noted |
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Quarter 2 Financial Management Report 2023/24 PDF 534 KB To receive a report by Sean Creamer, Corporate Director
Finance and Commercial. Minutes: The Corporate
Director of Finance and Commercial introduced the Report. He went through the
headlines of the paper and the service specifics such as, the council’s overall
revenue forecast was for a £12 million overspend which had worsened since
quarter 1 and 2. The current overspend would result in the use of reserves,
subject to any further mitigation identified throughout the year. In terms of
capital, there had been a reprofiling exercise to look at the capital budget
and profile spend. The Corporate
Director for Economic Growth and Infrastructure informed that the SEND reform
in 2014-15 meant that transport costs had increased by 8% year by year and
Place budget had only increased by 3% year by year. Other challenges involved
shortage of drivers due to COVID, higher fuel costs and inflation, which were
also national issues. SWAP had carried out an Audit of home to school transport
to reassure people that place was robust in contracts, markets, and placements.
A transformation program had started and additional resource to help review
individual cases. There needed to be better forecasting and modelling for
parking. As income for car parks were over forecasted. The new fees and charges
for planning would increase revenue by 30%. The Executive
Director for Corporate Development added that spend was being contained where
possible for this financial year by vacancy management, reducing the number of
consultants, agency workers and non-essential spend. The Interim
Corporate Director for Commissioning informed that the strategy over the past
couple of years had been to work on suppressing or delaying demand and
increased or decreased expenditure was heavily scrutinised. The budget strategy
for adults was underpinned by the transformation plan which focused on demand
management and commission care costs, which helped to balance pressures. There
was a slight overspend on the adult care purchasing budget at 0.9% and tighter
recruitment controls had been implemented. The Corporate
Director for Housing made the committee aware of the triple pressure of demand
rising by around 20% from people coming to the service as homeless or
potentially homeless. He highlighted some of the pressures such as, rents were
rising above inflation, local costs were increasing, availability of housing
were decreasing. He added that prevention was the key in reducing homelessness
and the types of prevention which range from preventing a landlord evicting
someone, working with families to re-unite individuals with their parents if
they had been thrown out, finding the right temporary accommodation and making
the best of the social housing stock. The main burden on finances was the
expensive temporary accommodation. The Corporate Director for Care and Protection identified the three key areas of pressure were children in care placement budget, spend on unaccompanied asylum-seeking children and spend on children with a disability. The biggest area of spend was the children in care placement budget and children in care population continued to be reduced. There had been more early support work carried out with families, less children in need status and children subject to child ... view the full minutes text for item 42. |
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Review of Timing of Committee Meetings PDF 210 KB To receive a report by Susan Dallison, Team Leader for Democratic Services. Minutes: A Task and Finish
Group was established to review the time of committee meetings at Dorset
Council and to consider whether holding some of the council’s committee
meetings in the evenings would enable more councillors to attend meetings,
attract more people to stand for election and whether it would enable more
members of the public to participate at committees. Cllr Biggs
informed that the proposal was to stand by the A, B, C, D and E
recommendations. As it provided the opportunity for working members to attend
at least one committee in the evenings. It would also make it easier for
members to travel around the county especially during the winter. Recommendation
to Full Council That council
approves the recommendations of the Task & Finish Group, taking into
account the results of the members survey, in respect of the following timings
in preparation for the Calendar of Meetings 2024/25:
Reason for
Decision To respond to a request to review the timing
of meetings prior to the Dorset Council elections in May 2024 and to put into
place proper arrangements for council committee meetings. |
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Flexibility to Hold Virtual Licensing Sub-Committees PDF 159 KB To receive a report by Elaine Tibble, Senior Democratic Services Officer. Minutes: The Service
Manager for Democratic and Electoral Services introduced the report. Unlike the
local government act 1972 which required members to be in a physical place, the
licensing regulations 2003 allowed virtual licensing sub-committees for many
matters which make up the majority of the 30 licensing sub-committees each
year. The report sought for a recommendation to Full Council to provide the
sub-committee with the flexibility to hold meetings virtually where
appropriate. Cllr Cocking
informed that she had attended many licensing sub-committees and fully
supported the application as members were often called in at short notice,
there were many meetings and that it would be a good use of councillor and
officer time. However, there were some big cases where it would be favourable
to hold meetings in person. Cllr Biggs raised
concerns regarding if virtual licensing sub-committees’ would work for the
public and enquired about cost savings. There would be
about £30 in cost savings for travel. Cllr Trite
informed that communication was more than disembodied voices and that there was
a limiting factor with virtual meetings in regards, to the quality of
decisions. He highlighted that communication could suffer as a result of
meetings being held virtually. Cllr Biggs noted
the concerns and raised that this needed to be kept under review and if there
was evidence for decision making hindered by virtual meetings then the matter
would be revisited. Recommendation
to Full Council
Reason for
Decision There are numerous benefits of
holding meetings virtually, including savings on officer, member and attendees
travelling time, staff resources for running committee meetings and travel
costs. |
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Honorary Alderman of the Dorset Council Area PDF 136 KB To receive a report by Jacqui Andrews, Service Manager for Democratic and Electoral Services. Minutes: The Service
Manager for Democratic and Electoral Services introduced the report. To
recognise and celebrate the contributions made by former councillors and to
raise the profile of the important work that members do in their communities.
Any councillor would have ordinarily been in office for 16 years. The proposed
criteria were that the retired member must have made an outstanding
contribution in their role as an elected member. Cllr Batstone
supported the principle of recognition and raised concern about the cost of the
badges supplied. Cllr Trite
informed that the council should have the power and right to make this kind of
recognition when they see fit and supported that there should be a high bar. Proposed by Cllr
Trite, seconded by Cllr Batstone. On being put to
the vote the amendment was CARRIED. Recommendation
to Full Council To recommend that
Full Council agrees to amend the Constitution to include the criteria and
process for awarding the title of Honorary Alderman of the Dorset Council area
to former members of Dorset Council. Reason for
Decision Being
able to confer an honorary title on a former member of the Council is an
important step. It will enable the Council to recognise and celebrate the
contribution made by those former councillors whose successors believe them to
have made an outstanding contribution. |
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Constitutional Update To receive a constitutional update from Jonathan Mair, Director Legal and Democratic. Minutes: The Director for
Legal and Democratic gave an update on 4 consequential changes to the
constitution. The first change
related to petition scheme: The Council had recently its first 5000 signature
petition (relating to car parking in Weymouth). There had been some
consequential changes coming out of our practical experience of operating the
procedure but there were no changes to the substance and the threshold number
of signatures to get a petition in front of Full Council. The Second related
to the terms of reference of the Strategic and Technical Planning Committee. At
the to the terms of reference of the committee include proposals for energy
production of 5 MW or greater. This excludes energy storage which is becoming increasingly
significant in Dorset and so with the support of the portfolio holder and the
chair of the Strategic and Technical Planning Committee a small change has been
made to the terms of reference of the Committee to include energy storage as
well as production. The Third change
related to the Health and Wellbeing Board, to reflect the role that the Board
had taken on as the Strategic Board for the Place Based Partnership as part of
the Integrated Care System. There was also a consequential change to membership
to reflect the abolition of the Clinical Commissioning Group and its
replacement with the Integrated Care Board. The Fourth related
to the terms of reference of the Joint Achieve Board with BCP Council where the
Terms of Reference Board had been changed to reflect a new archive service
agreement between the two councils. Noted |
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To consider the work programme for the Committee. Minutes: There were no comments. |
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Urgent items To consider any items of business which the Chairman has had prior notification and considers to be urgent pursuant to section 100B (4) b) of the Local Government Act 1972. The reason for the urgency shall be recorded in the minutes. Minutes: There were no urgent items. |
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Exempt Business To move the exclusion of the press and the public for the following item in view of the likely disclosure of exempt information within the meaning of paragraph 3 of schedule 12 A to the Local Government Act 1972 (as amended). The public and the press will be asked to leave the meeting whilst the item of business is considered. There are no exempt items scheduled for this meeting. Minutes: Decision That the press and the public be excluded
for the following item(s) in view of the likely disclosure of exempt
information within the meaning of paragraph 3 of schedule 12 A to the Local Government Act
1972 (as amended). There was no exempt business. |