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Council minutes, agendas and reports

Agenda and minutes

Venue: Meeting Room 3, County Hall, Northallerton

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

Items
No. Item

105.

Introductions

Minutes:

County Councillor Carl Les welcomed everyone to the meeting.

 

106.

Minutes of the Meetings held on 18 October 2022 and 25 October 2022 pdf icon PDF 446 KB

Additional documents:

Minutes:

Resolved –

 

Thatthe public Minutesof themeetings heldon 18 October 2022 and 25 October 2022,having been printedand circulated,betakenas readand confirmedby theChairmanas acorrect record.

 

107.

Declarations of Interest

Minutes:

There were no declarations of interest.

108.

Exclusion of the public from the meeting during consideration of each of the items of business listed in Column 1 of the following table on the grounds that they each involve the likely disclosure of exempt information as defined in the paragraph(s) specified in column 2 of Part 1 of Schedule 12A to the Local Government Act 1972 as amended by the Local Government (Access to information)(Variation) Order 2006:

Itemnumberon theagenda

ParagraphNumber

15

3

 

Minutes:

Resolved –

 

That on the grounds that it involved the likely disclosure of exempt information as defined in paragraph 3 of Part 1 of Schedule 12A to the Local Government Act 1972 as amended by the Local government (Access to Information) (Variation) Order 2006, the public was excluded from the meeting during consideration of Agenda item 15 – Private Minute from the meeting held on 25 October 2022.

 

109.

Public Questions and Statements

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 3 November 2022, 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 Chairman who will instruct anyone who may be taking a recording to cease while you speak.

 

Minutes:

There were two public statements presented at the meeting.  The first from Mr Andrew Wilson as follows:

 

‘Why did NYCC, according to multiple contacts with the officers, contractors and sub-contractors responsible and the FoI data provided, carry out the recent work to speed the drainage of York Road, Thirsk across the flatts into Cod Beck:

 

- despite the fact that there are no recent records of York Road being closed due to flooding;

- without any consultation with the public, but with repeated conversations with private land managers;

- without any environmental data on the habitats that would be destroyed,

- without awareness of the Protected Species in and around the Beck,

- without consideration of the negative impact of draining rare wet grassland and increasing the rate of flow into the beck;

- without awareness on the part of those carrying out the work of the RoW on the flatts that would be affected;

- in a manner which facilitates damaging development against the public interest;

- with additional uncosted work at the public expense to the satisfaction of the land agent;

- with inappropriate aftercare work;

- at nearly double the original estimated cost;

- and will it undertake to take better care of Cod Beck and its surrounds in the future?’

 

In response, County Councillor Keane Duncan made the following statement:

 

Thank you for your question. In compiling a response to the issues you have raised I have consulted with Stuart Grimston, improvement manager at the Area 2 Highways team, based in Thirsk.

 

The York Road drainage scheme is part of the 2022/23 capital programme, which involves replacing/renewing the existing highway drainage between the A19/A168 interchange and White Mare roundabout, along the A170 in Thirsk, much of which was found to be beyond repair.

 

The requirement for a drainage scheme was first identified in financial year 2016/17, due to ongoing issues with blocked gullies and standing water on York Road causing disruption and road safety issues. Investigations since then, including CCTV surveys, have proved that much of the existing system had failed or was in a very poor state of repair. While standing water eventually dissipates, highways officers expressed concern that some of this water was likely to be undermining the foundation of the carriageway pavement, bringing with it the associated risks of voids/sinkholes and contributing to the poor surface condition. York Road is in need of resurfacing, however, the council is unable to implement such a scheme without first renewing the drainage assets.

 

Under Section 41 of the Highways Act of 1980, North Yorkshire County Council, as the local highway authority, has a statutory duty to maintain the highway. We do not consult the public on maintenance schemes, although we do notify the travelling public of the work, as well as residents and businesses within the site extents.

 

However, in this instance we did consult the owners of the land that we intended to re-lay the drain across. One of the land owners  ...  view the full minutes text for item 109.

110.

Fees and Charges Policy and approach to establishing charges for the new Council, including proposed inflationary uplift(s) for the 23/24 financial year to support budgeting and medium term financial planning. pdf icon PDF 301 KB

Recommendations:

It is recommended that the Executive:

i.    Approve the Fees and Charges Policy set out at Appendix A;

ii.   Approve the proposed inflationary uplift of 6% for 2023/24 on relevant income budgets;

iii.  Delegate the consultation on taxi licensing fees, consideration of the consultation responses and final decision to adopt taxi licensing fees to the S151 Officer in consultation with the Executive Member for Open for Business.

 

Additional documents:

Minutes:

Considered:  A report of the Corporate Director for Strategic Resources seeking approval for the proposed Fees and Charges Policy for North Yorkshire Council and the approach to setting fees and charges for 23/24.

 

County Councillor Gareth Dadd introduced the report, and Karen Iveson, Assistant Director for Strategic Resources confirmed the new strategy had been drafted in consultation with the Section 151 Officer Group.  She also drew attention to the two areas of harmonisation i.e. Taxi Licences and Court Fees, and the proposed annual inflationary uplift of 6%.

 

Resolved - That:

         

i.    The Fees and Charges Policy set out in Appendix A of the report be approved;

 

ii.   The proposed inflationary uplift of 6% for 2023/24 on relevant income budgets be approved;

 

iii.    The consultation on taxi licensing fees, consideration of the consultation responses and the final decision to adopt taxi licensing fees, be delegated to the S151 Officer, in consultation with the Executive Member for Open for Business.

 

111.

North Yorkshire Council Branding pdf icon PDF 722 KB

Recommendations: 

That the Executive agree:

i.    The brand design for North Yorkshire Council.

Ii    The approach and costs outlined for the deployment of branding.

Minutes:

Considered – A report of the Chief Executive of North Yorkshire County Council outlining a recommended best value approach to the brand design and brand deployment for the new North Yorkshire Council, based on four main criteria, as detailed in the report.

 

County Councillor Carl Les introduced the report and confirmed the proposed re-branding for the new Council took a minimal approach resulting in good value for money

 

Richard Flinton, Chief Executive confirmed the need to establish a new identity for the new Council and confirmed the recommended approach was proportionate and in line with other similar exercises elsewhere.  He noted the work undertaken to explore the approaches and costs incurred by other unitised councils, and outlined the proposed deployment approach, which would minimise the costs – in the region of £400K.

 

Executive Members welcomed the proposed pragmatic approach, which would see the vast majority of assets that carried branding only being replaced as they wore out, and accepted it would result in many public-facing assets carrying retired brands for many years.

 

They noted that the vast majority of the costs associated with rebranding and system output changes were legal requirements, with a much smaller proportion of the costs being for signage and staff I.D.  They were also pleased to note that all the councils had been involved in the discussions. 

 

In regard to the colour of the proposed branding, it was noted the original officer recommendation had proposed all blue.  However, following a proposal put forward by a non-Executive member, the images within the report had subsequently been amended to blue and green branding, in line with that proposal.

 

The Executive thanked the officer work group for their work, and it was

 

Resolved That in line with the original officer recommendation, the following be approved:

 

i.    The all blue brand design for North Yorkshire Council;

 

Ii    The approach and costs outlined for the deployment of branding.

112.

Electric Vehicle Rollout Strategy pdf icon PDF 1 MB

Recommendations:  The Executive are asked to approve:

i.     The proposed public consultation draft of the Electric Vehicle (EV) Public Charging infrastructure Rollout Strategy for North Yorkshire.

ii.    The launch of a public consultation on the priority actions and measures contained in the strategy.

 

Minutes:

Considered: A report of the Corporate Director – Business and Environmental Services providing an update on the development of an Electric Vehicle (EV) Public Charging Infrastructure Rollout Strategy for North Yorkshire, and seeking approval to launch a public consultation regarding the proposed Strategy.

 

County Councillor Keane Duncan introduced the report and drew attention to the key issues affecting North Yorkshire, as outlined in paragraph 4.1 of the report.   He noted North Yorkshire had received more funding than other areas as 3000 charging points were required, with over half to be delivered by the public sector.

 

County Councillor Paul Haslam welcomed the report and drew attention to the critical success factor of prioritising site selection where EVCPs should be delivered.  He suggested that gender was an important issue that had not been factored in, and  expressed some concern over the questionnaire suggesting it would be hard to analyse.

 

Barrie Mason, Assistant Director for Highways & Transportation confirmed the questionnaire had not been piloted but was only the start of an ongoing consultation process.  He also confirmed that where locations were particularly problematic, other charging solutions would be considered e.g. hydro-electric power.

 

County Councillor Gareth Dadd urged people to recognise the full costs involved in providing the right level of coverage for a county as large and rural as North Yorkshire.  In response, County Councillor Keane Duncan reassured Members that the cost would be covered by central government funding.  He also reiterated the LEP was seeking to achieve carbon negativity by 2040, and accepted that whilst the Council could not do everything, it still had a significant a part to play.

 

County Councillor Greg White acknowledged the proposed initiatives were not scalable at the price currently being charged.  He also drew attention to another key Government target - to increase bus travel, which he did not believe was workable in North Yorkshire.

 

Resolved – That:

 

i.     The proposed public consultation draft of the Electric Vehicle (EV) Public Charging Infrastructure Rollout Strategy for North Yorkshire, be approved.

 

ii.    A public consultation on the priority actions and measures contained in the strategy be launched.

 

 

113.

Double Devolution - process for the consideration of identifying pilot town/parish Councils pdf icon PDF 317 KB

Recommendations:

The Executive are asked to:

i.       To agree a pilot inviting town and parish councils to submit expressions of interest in managing services and assets on behalf of North Yorkshire Council.

ii.      To agree the process, criteria and outline timetable as set out in the report.

 

Additional documents:

Minutes:

Considered: A report of the Assistant Director for Policy, Partnerships & Communities seeking agreement for a pilo,t inviting town and parish councils to submit expressions of interest in managing services and assets on behalf of North Yorkshire Council, commonly known as double devolution.

 

County Councillor Greg White introduced the report and highlighted the key points detailed in the report.  He noted that for the proposed pilot the intention was to keep the number of participants selected to a maximum of six, noting there would be opportunities for others to participate later.  He also drew attention to the proposed timetable detailed in the report and encouraged possible participants to talk to the Council before formally submitting an expression of interest.

 

Executive Members were supportive of the principle and noted expressions of interest could be for a wide range of services and assets.  County Councillor Gareth Dadd drew attention to Thirsk Town Council’s eagerness to take on the running of Thirsk Market and questioned whether there was any way it could be expedited.  In response, County Councillor Greg White confirmed it could be considered if it could be guaranteed that it would be done correctly.   He stressed the importance of ensuring that any transferred services did not subsequently have to be returned due to previously unidentified difficulties.

 

County Councillor Michael Harrison recalled the early concern from some Parish and Town Council that the Council was seeking to off-load the delivery of some services, and was pleased to note the report gave reassurance that this was not the case.

 

Neil Irving Assistant Director for Policy, Partnerships & Communities, confirmed the likely process for the selection of suitable bids would be officer selection based on set criteria, followed by Executive approval. He also confirmed the intention that current budget would be ring-fenced and transferred to maintain the same level of service delivery.  Any enhancements to the service would require a precept by the relevant Parish/Town Council.

 

County Councillor Carl Les welcomed the report and proposal, and it was

 

Resolved – That:

i.       A pilot inviting town and parish councils to submit expressions of interest in managing services and assets on behalf of North Yorkshire Council be agreed.

ii.      The process, criteria and outline timetable as set out in the report be agreed.

 

114.

Report on progress since the publication of the report of the North Yorkshire Rural Commission in July 2021 pdf icon PDF 489 KB

Recommendations:

The Executive are asked to:

i.    Receive and consider the report on progress since publication of the report of the North Yorkshire Rural Commission in July 2021.

ii.   Integrate the challenges set out by the Rural Commission and the work undertaken by the Rural Task Force into the strategy and delivery of North Yorkshire Council.

iii.  Lobby the Government again on the need for it to recognise the distinctive challenges experienced by rural communities and place the rural dimension and rural problems at the heart of the national policy framework.  In particular by the provision of fairer funding for super-sparse schools, more support for electric vehicle charging infrastructure, more support for the farming sector and additional resources to achieve digital inclusion in rural communities.

 

Minutes:

Considered: A report of the Assistant Director for Policy, Partnerships & Communities providing an update on progress since the launch of the Rural Commission report in July 2021.

 

Richard Flinton - Chef Executive,  introduced the report outlining the background to the Commission and highlighting the work of the Task Force and the 47 actions arising, as detailed in the Appendix to the report.  He drew attention to:

·         The work to date and ongoing, to deliver the 47 actions;

·         The key achievements in some areas;

·         The consultation on the double devolution deal, and;

·         Some of the challenges faced by rural communities

 

County Councillor Gareth Dadd admitted his early scepticism of the Rural Commission but acknowledged it had brought forward the key issues affecting rural communities.  He also noted the move to unitary would help with supporting rural communities.

 

Executive Members expressed gratitude for the work of the Commission and agreed the campaigning and lobbying of central government would need to continue, if the issues affecting rural residents were to be addressed.

 

Resolved – That:

i.       The report on progress since publication of the report of the North Yorkshire Rural Commission in July 2021 be noted.

ii.      The challenges set out by the Rural Commission and the work undertaken by the Rural Task Force be integrated into the strategy and delivery of North Yorkshire Council.

iii.     The Government be lobbied again on the need for it to recognise the distinctive challenges experienced by rural communities and place the rural dimension and rural problems at the heart of the national policy framework.  In particular, by the provision of fairer funding for super-sparse schools, more support for electric vehicle charging infrastructure, more support for the farming sector and additional resources to achieve digital inclusion in rural communities.

 

 

115.

Review of Special Educational Needs and Disabilities Provision pdf icon PDF 296 KB

Recommendations: That the Executive, having undertaken the required preliminary checks, resolve that:

i.     The four key issues listed above in paragraph 7.3 of the report have been satisfied and therefore there can be a determination of the proposals.

ii.    The following proposals be determined:

·           To remove residential (boarding) provision at Brompton Hall School from 1 September 2024, with no new residential placements made from September 2023.

·           To change from single-sex (boys) to co-educational provision at Brompton Hall School from 1 September 2023.

·           To introduce a phased increase in the number of day places at Brompton Hall School from 67 to up to 85 from 1 September 2023

 

Additional documents:

Minutes:

Considered - A report of the Corporate Director for Children & Young People’s Services seeking a decision on proposals published by North Yorkshire County Council to cease residential provision at Brompton Hall School, extend the designation of the school to co-educational, and increase the number of day places at the school.

 

County Councillor Annabel Wilkinson introduced the report confirming the proposals came as a result of the reduced demand for residential provision and   She also drew attention to the proposed changes detailed in paragraph 4.1 of the report, and the findings from the statutory consultation.

 

Executive Members expressed support for the proposed changes, and it was

 

Resolved – That:

i.     The four key issues listed in paragraph 7.3 of the report had been satisfied and therefore the proposals could be determined;

ii.    The following proposals be approved:

·           To remove residential (boarding) provision at Brompton Hall School from 1 September 2024, with no new residential placements made from September 2023.

·           To change from single-sex (boys) to co-educational provision at Brompton Hall School from 1 September 2023.

·           To introduce a phased increase in the number of day places at Brompton Hall School from 67 to up to 85 from 1 September 2023

 

116.

Area Constituency Committee Feedback Report pdf icon PDF 409 KB

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

Minutes:

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

 

Executive Members noted the feedback on urban growth and the request from 20’s Plenty made at the recent Harrogate & Knaresborough Area Constituency Committee (ACC) meeting.  They recognised the 20’s Plenty request represented a radical departure from the Council’s existing Policy and therefore agreed an assessment of the implementation of the existing policy and implications rising from it would be helpful. The Leader therefore proposed that the Executive Member for Highways & Transportation progress that suggestion, in order to develop an informed response to the ACC proposal. 

 

Members also noted the feedback from the Harrogate & Knaresborough Area Constituency Committee on the Cultural Strategy.

 

Resolved- That the report be noted.

 

 

117.

Appointments To Outside Bodies pdf icon PDF 245 KB

Minutes:

Considered – A report of the Assistant Chief Executive (Legal and Democratic Services) seeking approval for an appointment to the Harrogate and District NHS Foundation Trust Council of Governors

 

At the meeting, County Councillor Carl Les proposed the following:

·         Councillor Nick Brown to replace Councillor John Mann on the Harrogate and District NHS Foundation Trust Council of Governors;

·         Councillor Heather Moorhouse to replace Councillor Angus Thompson on the Tees Esk & Wear Valley NHS Foundation Trust;

·         Councillors Carl Les & Gareth Dadd to be appointed to the Joint Devolution Committee, with Councillors George Jabbour and Tim Grogan as substitutes;

 

Resolved: That the proposed changes to appointments as detailed above, be approved

118.

Forward Plan pdf icon PDF 558 KB

Minutes:

Considered –

 

The Forward Plan for the period 31 October 2022 to 31 October 2023 was presented.

 

Resolved -   That the Forward Plan be noted.

 

119.

Confidential Minute of the Meeting held on 25 October 2022

Minutes:

Resolved – That the confidential Minute from the meeting held on 25 October 2022 having been printedand circulated,betakenas readand confirmedby theChairmanas acorrect record.