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Appointment of Chair for 2023/24 Minutes: Resolved That Councillor
Nigel Knapton be appointed Chair of the ACC until the first meeting of the
Committee following the Council AGM in 2024. |
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Minutes of the Meeting held on 31st March 2023 Minutes: Resolved - That
the Minutes of the meeting held on 31 March 2023, having been printed and
circulated, be taken as read and confirmed and signed by the Chairman as a
correct record. |
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Appointment of Vice-Chair 2023/24 Minutes: Resolved That Councillor
Caroline Goodrick be appointed Vice-Chair of the ACC until the first meeting of
the Committee following the Council AGM in 2024. |
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Declarations of Interest Minutes: Members made the following declarations: Councillor Donohue-Moncrief – In respect of the petition
item in respect of the provision of public toilets in Filey – She was a former
Cabinet Member of Scarborough Borough Council which had undertaken a review of
public conveniences, including those in Filey. She had also been the Chair of
Scrutiny following the Cabinet review and had voted for the recommendations.
Recently she had been lobbied by the petitioner and others in relation to the
provision of the public toilets in Filey. She emphasised that she had not
pre-determined the issues raised and would approach the item without prejudice. Councillor Cross - In respect of the petition item in
respect of the provision of public toilets in Filey – He stated that he had
similar interests to those outlined by Councillor Donohue-Moncrief having being a Member at Scarborough Borough Council and had
considered, and voted on, the review. He was also a resident of Filey, so was
affected by the proposals, and also knew the petitioner. He was also a Member
of the Town Council which had been fully briefed on the proposals and had
recognised these as a major issue for the town. He also stated that he had not
pre-determined the issues raised and would approach the item without prejudice. Councillors Goodrick, Knapton, Andrews, Taylor, Burr,
Jabbour and Baker - In respect of the petition item in respect of the provision
of public toilets in Filey – The Members stated that they had all served on the
ACCs Planning Committee at which the petitioner had appeared as a public
speaker in relation to the demolition and provision of temporary toilets of the
public toilets. The decision on this matter, however, was not for that
Committee to make. Councillor Jabbour – In respect of the item related to the
provision of Post Office services in Helmsley – He stated that he was a
resident of Helmsley affected by the current situation and had been involved in
correspondence with the Post Office in respect of the current situation. |
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Public Questions or Statements Members of the public may ask questions or
make statements at this meeting if they have given notice and provided the text
to Steve Loach of Democratic Services (contact
details below) no later than midday on Tuesday 13th June 2023. 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. Minutes: The Chair noted that
there were a number of public questions relating to items on the agenda, which
would be taken when those items were considered. The following question
did not relate to any agenda item: Sharron Sumner – Local Resident Given the purpose of
this committee is to consult with the community in each Constituency, why are
these meeting held during working hours? A number of people wanted to attend
today’s meeting about the lack of Post Office Services in Helmsley but were unable
to do so due to work commitments. Many Principal and Unitary Councils have
moved to holding meetings during the evening to better enable resident
participation, it is also a benefit to working Members. Evening meetings is one
way of encouraging people from a more diverse background to stand for public
office. Members discussed the
issues raised by the questioner and outlined the following: ·
Some
Members agreed that many working people were disenfranchised by meetings taking
place within working hours, making it difficult for them to attend, and noted
that Town and Parish Councils usually held their meetings in the evening to
encourage public participation. ·
A
Member stated that she also worked during the day and would find it helpful for
a mixture of day and evening meetings to be provided to assist with her
attendance. ·
It
was noted that many Parish Councils and Parish Forums had now moved to meet in
the evening. ·
Members
suggested that a mixture of day and evening meetings would be beneficial for
all involved. ·
A
Member considered this to be an important issue and suggested that there was an
opportunity for technology to be utilised to give greater access to meetings
for everyone. ·
It
was noted that not everyone worked during the day and moving meetings to the
evening would disenfranchise those who worked at that time. It was also
emphasised that Councillors were not full time, with many having jobs, and
meetings were set up to take account of their availability. The questioner stated
that she too had been a Councillor and understood the need for a balanced
approach. She emphasised, however, that the diversity of attendance for
meetings such as this depended upon everyone having the opportunity to attend. Members stated that they
would pass on the issues raised by the questioner to the Constitution Working
Group to determine how these could be developed. |
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Provision of Post Office Services in Helmsley - to discuss with representatives of the Post Office Minutes: The Chair introduced this item welcoming all those who had attended the meeting in respect of this issue. He explained how Members of the ACC had agreed to discuss this matter at their previous meeting and had enabled the meeting to take place in Helmsley, allowing local residents to attend and express their views. The procedure for this section of the meeting was outlined. Initially the public questions related to this issue were provided as follows: Carolyn Frank As a Helmsley resident I am disgusted that an award winning and vibrant market town is left without an essential service for residents for both posting and banking. However, I am here today to represent small businesses in my role as development manager for the Federation of Small Businesses covering York & North Yorkshire. Businesses in the town, over 100 independent businesses, in order to stay open, need both postal services and access to banking services. It is that simple, it is not an inconvenience or a service that would be nice to have, it is an outright risk to businesses being here by Christmas 2023 or Helmsley having empty units where viable businesses once stood. The Post Office has to take responsibility – businesses told them downgrading the service here to an in shop not standalone post office was a risk, and were ignored, and are now being fobbed off with apologies which mean nothing. Online banking is not a solution for cash based businesses such as our brilliant cafes and takeaways, and with the demographic of an aging population in Helmsley, and the majority of businesses being microbusinesses, access to cash is paramount, and therefore a banking service for cash is needed in the town. Postal services for online retail is part of retail today – a small shop in Helmsley cannot survive with footfall alone, they must trade online, and in order to compete with the likes of Amazon, they have to offer rapid delivery services, it is no good taking orders from a customer and saying I can post whenever I have to leave town next to go to a Post Office. With a microbusiness or sole trader, shops are losing many hours a week trading time, travelling out of town to post multiple deliveries in order to service their customers. Not all can access self service solutions. There is also an impact on footfall – with no banks, and no Post Office which was promised as an alternative, what reason for local residents to come into town – the impact on our route-map to net zero of car usage instead of having accessible local services in walking distance is huge, not to mention the hollowing out of the service centre here in Helmsley. It is not surprising that businesses are not queuing up to take on the post office – they are too small in both facilities and staff capacity, and the reputation of the post office is as an untrustworthy business partner given recent scandals. The Post ... view the full minutes text for item 6. |
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North Yorkshire Council's Petition Scheme - Filey Public Toilets Should a petition contain 500 signatures or more it will be scheduled for debate at the next meeting of the appropriate Area Constituency Committee. The following petition has exceeded 500 signatures, to date 1490, and, as such, will be considered at today’s meeting:- “Free access to toilets in Filey, pending a full review and consultation for the administrative district” At the meeting the petition organiser will be given five minutes to present the petition and an officer of the Council will provide a response. The petition will then be discussed by councillors for a maximum of 15 minutes. A decision on how to respond to the petition will be agreed at the meeting. Councillors may decide: • to take the action the petition requests • not to take the action requested for reasons put forward in the debate • to commission further investigation into the matter. The petition organiser will receive written confirmation of the decision and the decision will be recorded in the minutes of the meeting, published on our website. Minutes: Should a petition contain 500 signatures or more a debate
would be scheduled at the next meeting of the appropriate Area Constituency
Committee. The following petition had exceeded 500 signatures, and, as
such, was considered at today’s meeting: “Free access to toilets in Filey, pending a full review and
consultation for the administrative district” At the meeting the petition organiser, Jonathan Cairns, was
given five minutes to present the petition and Harry Briggs, an officer of the
Council, provided a written response read out by the Clerk. The petition was
then discussed by councillors for a maximum of 15 minutes. A decision on how to respond to the petition would be agreed
at the meeting. Councillors may decide: •
to take the action the petition requests ·
• not to take the action requested for reasons put
forward in the debate •
to commission further investigation into the
matter. The petition organiser would receive written confirmation of
the decision and the decision would be recorded in the minutes of the meeting, published
on the Council’s website. Mr Cairns outlined
the following: “As of 13th June
2023, the petition has 1531 supporters. These have been gathered informally and
without mass collecting. As an example one person on Coble Landing in late May collected 40
signatures in less than 35 minutes. There has been 99.9%
support for the Petition. All traders along the front have supported this. It is not just about Coble Landing,
it is for Barry Robson who was left to fend for himself when the previous year
work overran by 3 months. It is also for
Steve Newton and his employees at Royal Parade, who wonder if their business
will be decimated when Royal Parade toilets are dealt with. The harsh lesson is
much better planning and organisation is needed. Builders need to have supplies before
committing to work. Planning permission can’t be left to work out in January or
February. Filey Town Council should be given more than 8 hours to look at
plans. Local disability groups should be consulted on new design, and access. All these actions
affect people’s businesses and livelihoods. They affect hundreds and thousands
of visitors. Filey deserves better service.
A written apology should be made to Mr Robson, and all those on Coble
Landing for the delay and impact on their businesses. This delay was avoidable. There is no excuse
for lack of signage, and websites still saying toilets are open. No excuse for
poor directions, giving incorrect street address. Correct signage was promised to the planning
committee on 20th April 2023. 1.
Temporary
toilets were rejected by Mr Battersby, I could not persuade this committee to
meet as a group of 3 ahead of 16th June 2023. 2.
A head
height shower has been promised (email from Mr Battersby). Maintenance report
for last year showed 4 blockages due to sand.
Is there a sand trap in this design? 3. The petition has identified some very important compliance issues with building regulations for disability ... view the full minutes text for item 7. |
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Discussion with the Constituency MP, Kevin Hollinrake Minutes: Kevin Hollinrake, MP, had hoped to join the meeting remotely, but unfortunately, due to a technical failure, he had been unable to do so. Resolved That this item be deferred to a subsequent meeting. |
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Additional documents: Minutes: The Manager of
Democratic Services, Daniel Harry, presented a report on the Area Constituency
Committees in the new North Yorkshire Council allowing Members to discuss a
guide on Area Constituency Committees' ways of working for this next iteration
of the committees. He highlighted the
following from the report: ·
The
report was developed alongside the Executive Member for Corporate Services and
the Chairs and Vice-Chairs of ACCs. ·
Arrangements
for Meetings – including ordinary meetings, special meetings, additional
meetings and hybrid meetings. ·
The
introduction of Mid-Cycle briefings for Chair, Vice-Chair and Group
Spokespersons – to be utilised for Work Programme and agenda setting but avoid
using as an opportunity for an additional meeting. ·
A
Corporate Director has been assigned to each Committee to assist with any
issues in relation to the provision of reports or the attendance of Officers –
Richard Webb has been assigned to Thirsk and Malton ACC. ·
An
essential part of the local agenda will be liaison with Parish and Town
Councils, and the newly developed Community Partner Networks will assist in the
development of that co-ordination. ·
Liaison
with Overview and Scrutiny would be an intrinsic part of the work of ACCs. ·
Funding
of £50k, held by the Corporate Director of Community Development, would be
available to each ACC, with an appropriate framework for obtaining this being
developed. The funding would be assigned to local projects following
recommendations from the ACC. ·
Details
of potential areas of work for the ACCs were detailed in the report. This
included identifying meaningful liaison with Community Safety organisations to
ensure that there was a focus to the issues being considered, through the
analysis of relevant data. Members discussed the report and the following issues were
highlighted: ·
It was clarified that issues raised through the
Public Questions/Statements section would not usually be debated at that stage
by Members, but the issues raised could be discussed during consideration of
the Work Programme to determine whether these could be the subject of future
agenda items. ·
Issues relating to the consideration of Policing
matters were discussed. A Member asked that, in future, just the recounting of
Police data be avoided, with information as to how they are addressing issues
being provided. A Member considered that attendance at ACC meetings was also
important for the Police as they gained details on local matters, and from
Council provided services. ·
It was suggested that there was a need to
continue to monitor Council services, with some details contained in the
existing work plan being carried forward and to maintain the updates from the
Constituency MP. · The timing of meetings and the location of venues required careful consideration, as indicated in the earlier public question. There was also a need to consider how meetings were made easier access with appropriate infrastructure in place to enable remote access and to provide live streamed meetings. It was noted that where there was ICT equipment currently available the practice of broadcasting meetings would continue. The feasibility of obtaining equipment to allow access to all ... view the full minutes text for item 9. |
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Appointments to Outside Bodies Additional documents:
Minutes: Members noted that a review of the various Category 2 and 3
outside bodies was about to take place and suggested that appointments to these
bodies be carried out when that review had been completed. Resolved That the appointments to Category 2 and 3 outside bodies be
deferred until a review of the representation on those bodies has been
completed. |
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Additional documents: Minutes: Considered The report of the Assistant Chief Executive (Legal and Democratic Services) providing a Work Programme for Members to consider, develop and adapt. As discussed in item 9, above, planning of the work programme would be undertaken at the mid-cycle briefings for the ACC and informal meetings of the ACC to ensure that the programme reflected the issues pertinent to local communities and to the Council, going forward. A revised work programme would be developed in line with the issues raised in the earlier report alongside the local matters. Resolved That the Work Programme be developed accordingly and presented to subsequent meetings of the ACC for further consideration and development. |
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Next Meeting Minutes: Resolved That the next scheduled ordinary meeting of the Area
Constituency Committee would take place on Friday 29 September 2023 at 10am at
a venue to be confirmed. The meeting concluded at 4.25pm. |