Agenda and minutes

Executive - Tuesday, 17th October, 2023 11.00 am

Venue: Meeting Room 3, County Hall, Northallerton, DL7 8AD

Contact: Melanie Carr  Email: Melanie.carr1@northyorks.gov.uk

Items
No. Item

319.

Apologies for Absence

320.

Minutes of the Meeting held on 19 September 2023 pdf icon PDF 520 KB

Minutes:

Resolved – Thatthe public Minutesof themeeting heldon 19 September 2023,having been printedand circulated,betakenas readand confirmedby theChairmanas acorrect record.

 

321.

Declarations of Interest

Minutes:

There were no declarations of interest.

322.

Public Participation

Members of the public may ask questions or make statements at this meeting if they have given notice to Melanie Carr of Democratic and Scrutiny Services and supplied the text (contact details below) by midday on Thursday 12 October 2023, three working days before the day of the meeting.  Each speaker should limit themselves to 3 minutes on any item.  Members of the public who have given notice will be invited to speak:

·            at this point in the meeting if their questions/statements relate to matters which are not otherwise on the Agenda (subject to an overall time limit of 30 minutes);

·            when the relevant Agenda item is being considered if they wish to speak on a matter which is on the Agenda for this meeting.

If you are exercising your right to speak at this meeting, but do not wish to be recorded, please inform the Leader who will instruct anyone who may be taking a recording to cease while you speak.

 

Minutes:

There was one public statement received relating to Agenda item 7 – Hackney Carriage Zones, and the Chair agreed to consider the submission as part of that agenda item.

323.

Economic Growth Strategy 2024-2029 pdf icon PDF 6 MB

Recommendations:

That the Executive proposes to Council that it:

i)   adopts the Economic Growth Strategy

ii)  agrees that the strategy and action plan that flow from it will be reviewed annually to reflect the prevailing economic conditions and wider opportunities that may arise.

 

Minutes:

Considered – A report of the Corporate Director for Community Development presenting the Economic Growth Strategy 2024-2029 for the Executive’s consideration and recommendation to Full Council.

 

Councillor Derek Bastiman introduced the report and draft Strategy recognising the hard work undertaken by officers to develop the Strategy in such a short time since the formation of the new Council. He drew specific attention to the three pillars on which the Strategy was built – Enterprise, Infrastructure & People and provided a brief overview of those pillars and their associated priorities.

 

Members notes the Strategy had evolved over a period of time and provided a clear pathway forward for the Council but recognised the Authority would need future financial support to enable the Strategy to be delivered in full.

 

Councillor Paul Haslam acknowledged the Strategy showed merit and ambition but suggested it would benefit from the inclusion of information on:

·          retrospective growth to understand how the economy has grown in key areas in the last five years;

·          what the 5-year expected growth figure was if a) the authority did nothing or b) it carried out the investments it wanted to do; and

·          what the value added would mean for urban centres, market towns, rural areas and coastal communities in order to understand where investment would achieve the most

 

David Caulfield - AD Economic Development, Regeneration, Tourism & Skills, welcomed the feedback and in response confirmed the Strategy was underpinned by a substantial evidence base that would provide the facts and figures to demonstrate where the Authority had come from and where it wanted to go to.

 

Members thanked officers for their work on the Strategy and it was

 

Resolved – That:

i)       The Economic Growth Strategy 2024-2029 be approved

ii)    The Strategy and action plan that flowed from it be agreed and reviewed annually, to ensure it reflected the prevailing economic conditions and wider opportunities that may arise.

 

324.

Double Devolution pdf icon PDF 378 KB

Recommendations:

That the Executive:

i.       Note the progress of the double devolution project and the outcome of the invitation to bid by town and parish councils.

ii.      Agree the recommendations set out in section 3 of the report as to the outcome of the double devolution evaluation panel:

a.   That Settle Town Council, Little Ouseburn Parish Council and Stokesley Town Council are not invited to full business case.

b.   That Malton Town Council, Northallerton and Thirsk Town Councils, Richmond Town Council, Filey Town Council and Knaresborough Town Councils are invited to move forward to full business case.

c.   That Skipton Town Council and Whitby Town Council are recommended to move forward to full business case but with amendments to their Expression of Interest proposals.

d.   That separate project teams are established to work with Ripon Town Council and Selby Town Council to bring forward their double devolution proposals in acknowledgement of the ambition and complexity of the expressions of interest.

iii.     Agree the next steps as set out in section 4.

iv.     Agree that the approach to further invitations to submit expressions of interest will be agreed as part of a further report to the Executive in January 2024 as set out in section 5.

 

Additional documents:

Minutes:

Considered – A report of the Assistant Chief Executive Local Engagement advising on the outcome of the invitation that was sent to all town and parish councils seeking expressions of interest for double devolution pilots and seeking approval for those expressions of interest recommended to be jointly developed to full business case, and for other further work to be undertaken.

 

Councillor David Chance introduced the report and provided an overview of the expressions of interest received, as listed in paragraph 3.1 of the report, and the process undertaken to evaluate them.  Finally he provided a breakdown on the outcome of Evaluation Board and the next steps.

 

It was noted that all full business cases would be evaluated by the Council using a similar process as that used for the evaluation of the expressions of interest, and that the decision on which would be implemented would be taken by the Executive following consultation with the relevant Area Committee.

 

Recognising that Ripon City Council and Selby Town Council might require more support, Members welcomed the proposal to create two project teams, to work with them to bring forward their double devolution proposals for the Executive’s future consideration.

 

Specifically in regard to the Ripon City Council submission, Councillor Andrew Williams was pleased to note the proposal of that future support, given the previous fractured relationship with Harrogate Borough Council.

 

Overall, Members agreed that Double Devolution was the right thing to do, with the aim of having more decisions being taken locally, and it was

 

Resolved – That:

i.       The progress of the double devolution project and the outcome of the invitation to bid by town and parish councils be noted.

ii.      The recommendations set out in section 3 of the report as to the outcome of the double devolution evaluation panel be agreed as follows:

a.      That Settle Town Council, Little Ouseburn Parish Council and Stokesley Town Council not be invited to full business case.

b.      That Malton Town Council, Northallerton and Thirsk Town Councils, Richmond Town Council, Filey Town Council and Knaresborough Town Councils be invited to move forward to full business case.

c.      That Skipton Town Council and Whitby Town Council be recommended to move forward to full business case but with amendments to their Expression of Interest proposals.

d.      That separate project teams be established to work with Ripon Town Council and Selby Town Council to bring forward their double devolution proposals in acknowledgement of the ambition and complexity of their expressions of interest.

iii.     The next steps as set out in section 4 of the report be approved.

iv.     The proposed approach to further invitations to submit expressions of interest be agreed as part of a further report to the Executive in January 2024. as set out in section 5 of the reprot.

 

 

 

 

 

325.

Hackney Carriage Zones pdf icon PDF 518 KB

Recommendations:

To confirm the abolition of the seven predecessor district/borough hackney carriage zones for Craven, Hambleton, Harrogate, Richmondshire, Ryedale, Scarborough and Selby and to confirm that all provisions of the hackney carriage licensing regime be applied across the whole of the administrative area of North Yorkshire Council pursuant to paragraph 25, Schedule 14 to the Local Government Act 1972 with effect from 30 November 2023.

 

Minutes:

Considered – a report of the Corporate Director for Environment seeking confirmation of the Council’s position on abolishing the seven predecessor authority hackney carriage zones and operating a single hackney carriage zone for North Yorkshire.

 

Mr Richard Fieldman read out his public participation submission as follows:

 

I speak on behalf of 70 members of the hackney carriage trade from across North Yorkshire.  Although we are opposed to the Council abolishing the seven legacy hackney carriage zones, if that were the Council’s intention, there is a straightforward statutory process a council must follow.

 

North Yorkshire Council failed to follow that process. Astonishingly, it appears not a single licensing officer or lawyer from any of the eight former local authorities were aware of the statutory requirements.

 

The Council now dances on a pinhead in an attempt to avoid openly admitting its mistake.  Rather than honestly and openly accept it did not abolish the hackney carriage zones, it attempts to rely on the legal maxim of ‘presumptive regularity’.  That simply means that, if the Council passed a resolution to abolish hackney carriage zones, it is to be accepted it did so, unless overturned by the courts, even though it did not comply with the statutory requirements and admits it did not do so.

 

But no such resolution was ever passed. There is no resolution to rely on. There is no basis on which the Council can rely on presumptive regularity.  As a result, despite officer assertions to the contrary, the seven legacy hackney carriage zones legally remain to this day.

 

Officers ask you to pass a resolution today to regularise the position, to correct their procedural mistakes, but can you do so?  In a word, “no”, because passing a resolution to abolish hackney carriage zones is a function reserved to the Full Council or, more precisely, it is not a function that is an executive function or one that can be exercised by the Executive.

 

In the circumstances, on behalf of myself and those on whose behalf I speak, I ask you not to compound an already bad position by passing an illegal resolution, but to instead refer this matter to the Full Council for a full and proper consideration of the proposal to abolish the hackney carriage zones.

 

If a council passes a resolution to abolish hackney carriage zones it cannot be reversed –

this is a one-way street, down which you can only go once. If you refer this matter to Full Council, and the Council then follows the statutory process, and Full Council passes the appropriate resolution, we trust the Council will then recognise all hackney carriages as North Yorkshire hackney carriages by removing the zonal markings; and applying the same rules to all hackney carriages and their drivers, irrespective of which former district council by which they were previously licensed.

 

So, in all the circumstances, I ask you not to pass the resolution officers ask you to pass, and to instead refer this matter to Full Council. If  ...  view the full minutes text for item 325.

326.

Application for Homes England Investment Partner Status and Associated Affordable Housing Programme 2021-26 Bid pdf icon PDF 250 KB

Recommendations:

That the Executive

i)       Authorise the Assistant Director for Housing to complete and submit the application and the associated capital bid on behalf of NYC for Homes England Investment Partner status.

ii)      Delegated authority to the Assistant Director Resources (Community Development) to transfer Harrogate’s RCGF credits 2022/23 to North Yorkshire Council, to sign the registered transfer approval letter, and to accept the grant as set out in the report if successful.

Minutes:

Considered – A report of the Corporate Director Community Development seeking the Executive’s permission to apply to Homes England for Investment Partner status, to submit an associated bid to Homes England for grant funding under the Affordable Housing Programme (AHP) 2021-26, to accept the transfer of Harrogate Borough Council’s Recycled Capital Grant Fund (RCGF) credits from 2022/23, and to use those credits towards HRA capital budget development costs.

 

In the absence of the Executive Member for Culture, Arts and Housing, Nic Harne – Corporate Director for Community Development introduced the report and provided an overview of the proposal detailed therin.

 

The Executive voted in favour of the recommendations within the report, and it was

 

Resolved – That:

i)       The Assistant Director for Housing be authorised to complete and submit the application and the associated capital bid on behalf of NYC for Homes England Investment Partner status.

ii)      Authority be delegated to the Assistant Director Resources (Community Development) to transfer Harrogate’s RCGF credits 2022/23 to North Yorkshire Council, to sign the registered transfer approval letter, and to accept the grant as set out in the report if successful.

 

327.

Amendments to the Council’s Constitution pdf icon PDF 445 KB

Recommendations:

That, subject to any comments Members may have:

(a)    Members note the amendments to the Constitution set out in Appendix 1 to this report, made by the Assistant Chief Executive Legal and Democratic Services under his delegated powers, for reporting back to full Council

(b)    the proposed amendments to the Council Procedure Rules as set out in paragraphs 4.2, 4.5, 4.10, 4.11 and 4.15 of the report be recommended to full Council for approval;

(c)    the proposed amendments to the Specific Delegations to the Assistant Chief Executive Legal and Democratic Services in the Officers’ Delegation Scheme as set out in paragraph 5.4 of the report be recommended to full Council for approval;

(d)    the proposed changes to the Procurement and Contract Procedure Rules set out in Appendix 2 be recommended to full Council for approval;

(e)    the proposed changes to the Financial Procedure Rules set out in Appendix 3 be recommended to full Council for approval;

(f)     the proposed changes to the Specific Delegations to the Corporate Director of Environment in the Officers’ Delegation Scheme as set out by way of tracked changes on the extracts attached at Appendix 4 be recommended to full Council for approval;

(g)    the proposed changes to the Area Constituency Planning Committee Terms of Reference as set out in Appendix 4 be recommended to full Council for approval;

(h)    the proposed amendments to the Specific Delegations to the Corporate Director of Community Development and the Corporate Director of Resources in the Officers’ Delegation Scheme as set out at Appendix 5 are recommended to full Council for approval;

(i)     the approach to Member engagement and decision-making throughout the preparation of Development Plan Documents and Neighbourhood Plans as set out in section 4 of this report, including the establishment of a Development Plan Committee, and the consequential amendments to the Constitution as set out in paragraph 10.3 of the report, be recommended to full Council for approval;

(j)     the approach to the review of Outside Bodies as set out in paragraph 11.4 of the report be recommended to full Council for approval.

 

Additional documents:

Minutes:

Considered – A report of the Assistant Chief Executive Legal and Democratic Services presenting proposed changes to the Constitution for the Executive’s consideration and recommendation to full Council for approval.

 

Councillor David Chance introduced the report and provided an overview of the proposed changes to the Constitution, as detailed in the report and its appendices.

 

Barry Khan Assistant Chief Executive Legal and Democratic Services drew specific attention to the proposed changes to the contract procedural rules as set out in Appendix 2 of the report.  In particular he noted the proposal to add into Rule 8.5 that where three quotes are being obtained, at least one quote should be from a local supplier based within North Yorkshire and at least one SME. This would require reasonable endeavours to seek those specific quotes.

 

Councillor Paul Haslam welcomed the proposed changes to the procurement and contract procedure rules at section 6 of the report and suggested the opportunity should not be missed to include something around environmental impact and sustainability.

 

Having considered the proposals, the Executive voted in favour of the recommendations, and it was

 

Resolved – That the following be noted and recommended to full Council for approval:

(a)    The amendments to the Constitution as set out in Appendix 1 of the report, made by the Assistant Chief Executive Legal and Democratic Services under his delegated powers;

(b)    the proposed amendments to the Council Procedure Rules as set out in paragraphs 4.2, 4.5, 4.10, 4.11 and 4.15 of the report;

(c)    the proposed amendments to the Specific Delegations to the Assistant Chief Executive Legal and Democratic Services in the Officers’ Delegation Scheme as set out in paragraph 5.4 of the report;

(d)    the proposed changes to the Procurement and Contract Procedure Rules as set out in Appendix 2 of the report;

(e)    the proposed changes to the Financial Procedure Rules as set out in Appendix 3 of the report;

(f)     the proposed changes to the Specific Delegations to the Corporate Director of Environment in the Officers’ Delegation Scheme as set out by way of tracked changes on the extracts attached at Appendix 4;

(g)    the proposed changes to the Area Constituency Planning Committee Terms of Reference as set out in Appendix 4 of the report;

(h)    the proposed amendments to the Specific Delegations to the Corporate Director of Community Development and the Corporate Director of Resources in the Officers’ Delegation Scheme as set out at Appendix 5 of the report;

(i)     the approach to Member engagement and decision-making throughout the preparation of Development Plan Documents and Neighbourhood Plans as set out in section 4 of the report, including the establishment of a Development Plan Committee, and the consequential amendments to the Constitution as set out in paragraph 10.3 of the report;

(j)     the approach to the review of Outside Bodies as set out in paragraph 11.4 of the report.

328.

Area Constituency Committee Feedback Report pdf icon PDF 385 KB

Recommendation: 

Thatthe Executive notesthe reportand considersanymatters arisingfrom the workof theArea Constituency Committees,that meritsfurther scrutiny,review orinvestigationat acounty-level.

Minutes:

Considered– A report of the Assistant Chief Executive (Legal & Democratic Services) providing an overview of the key issues considered at recent meetings of the Area Constituency Committees.

 

Councillor David Chance introduced the report and drew attention to a number of specific recommendations made by the Harrogate and Knaresborough ACC at its meeting on 14 September 2023 in relation to the installation of EV charging points in Knaresborough, as listed in paragraphs 3.5 & 3.6 of the report.

 

Councillor George Jabbour raised the issue of the future changes to parliamentary boundaries and the alignment of ACC boundaries to them.  The Chair confirmed the issue was to be considered by the Council in due course and therefore it was not appropriate to discuss that at this stage.

 

Recent examples of cross-over between the remit of the ACCs and Planning ACCs at recent meetings were also raised as a matter of concern, together with the time being allowed for public participation at ACC meetings

 

Having considered the report in full, the Executive

 

Resolved– That:

i)       The report be noted.

ii)       The specific recommendations made by the Harrogate and Knaresborough ACC at their meeting on 14 September 2023 as listed in paragraphs 3.5 & 3.6 of the report, be delegated to the Executive Members for Highways & Transportation for his consideration and approval.

 

 

 

329.

Appointments Report pdf icon PDF 148 KB

Minutes:

Considered – A report of the Assistant Chief Executive (Legal and Democratic Services) proposing the appointment of Councillor David Hugill to the North Yorkshire Moors National Park Authority.

 

Councillor Carl Les introduced the report.  Noting that the NYMNPA had a number of forthcoming decisions that needed to be made, it was proposed that the Executive recommend to the Chief Executive that he make the appointment, using his emergency powers for the period through the next Full Council meeting on 15 November 2023, to enable Councillor David Hugill to participate in that decision making. 

 

Resolved: That the Executive recommend to the Chief Executive that using his emergency powers, he appoint Councillor David Hugill to the North York Moors National Park Authority, to fill the existing Conservative vacancy, for the period through to the next meeting of Full Council on 15 November 2023.

330.

Forward Plan pdf icon PDF 543 KB

Minutes:

Considered –

 

The Forward Plan for the period 9 October 2023 to 31 October 2024 was presented.

 

Resolved -   That the Forward Plan be noted.

 

331.

Date of Next Meeting - 7 November 2023