Venue: Meeting Room G.01, Ground Floor, City Hall, 115 Charles Street, Leicester, LE1 1FZ
Contact: Ed Brown, Senior Governance Officer Email: Edmund.Brown@leicester.gov.uk
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WELCOME AND APOLOGIES FOR ABSENCE To issue a welcome to those present, and to confirm if there are any apologies for absence. Minutes: The Chair welcomed those present to the meeting.
Apologies for absence were received from Councillor Mahesh and Councillor March.
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DECLARATIONS OF INTEREST Members are asked to declare any interests they may have in the business to be discussed. Minutes: Members were asked to declare any interests they may have had in the business to be discussed.
Councillor Dr Moore declared that she was chair of the advisory board at Millgate School. Councillor Karavadra declared that she worked in a nursery. |
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MINUTES OF THE PREVIOUS MEETING PDF 228 KB The minutes of the meeting of the Children, Young People, and Education Scrutiny Commission held on 19 June 2024 have been circulated, and Members are asked to confirm them as a correct record. Minutes: A typographical error was noticed with regards to Councillor Gregg’s declaration. It should have read: “He would be careful to keep his comments non-political.”
AGREED: That the minutes of the meeting of the Children, Young People and Education Scrutiny Commission held on 19 June 2024 be confirmed as a correct record. |
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CHAIR'S ANNOUNCEMENTS The Chair is invited to make any announcements as they see fit. Minutes: None. |
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QUESTIONS, REPRESENTATIONS, AND STATEMENTS OF CASE The Monitoring Officer to report on any questions, representations, or statements of case received.
The Monitoring Officer to report on the receipt of any questions, representations or statements of case received in accordance with Council procedures.
A question and a statement has been received by Mr Simon Thorpe.
Simon Thorpe to ask: “Can the City Council commit to immediate, constructive dialogue in order to give the City's nine adventure playgrounds the best possible chance of moving towards sustainability?” Mr Simon Thorpe submitted the below statement:
The Adventure Playgrounds, for Scrutiny Committee The City’s adventure playgrounds have a long and proud history of serving generations of Leicester’s children and young people. They operate in nine of the most disadvantaged areas and have served communities for over 50 years. Their value as effective grass roots provisions is unquestionable and have been a building block of Leicester social cohesion. The longevity of these projects and the high number of children and young people using them over the decades, results in the overwhelming support we have within the wider community and amongst our professional partners. Another significant feature of the projects is our extensive age range which, coupled with staff offering support and a sympathetic ear throughout their young lives and often beyond, means that many ex users come back to offer help and support Amongst our users past and present there is a real sense of pride and passion for respective playgrounds, leading to huge support amongst the city’s population. Anyone who works with communities and particularly with young people will testify that to be effective, you need to build up relationships based on trust and mutual respect. It took many years for our playgrounds to earn the trust and respect that we have. If the playgrounds do close so much community work will be lost, anything that comes after will effectively be starting from scratch. We cannot believe that the City council want this outcome. Our projects are more needed now than ever. There is a genuine urgency at present as Committees have already issued redundancy notices for staff. We understand the financial predicament that the council are in and the playgrounds have had over two decades of standstill budgets so we know all about cutbacks. We have effectively been looking in three different directions since notification of withdrawal of funding at the end of this financial year – maintaining our service during the busiest time of year; looking to safeguard committee members over possible liabilities and looking for funding and alternative income streams. In order for the playgrounds to transition away from council funding we require more time and better tenure of the buildings. We have made a lot of progress in a short amount of time. We have a lot of expertise amongst our staff teams, and we have a team of the best bid writers working for us. What we need is the time for bids to turn around. We are ever hopeful that the present impasse can be ... view the full agenda text for item 89. Minutes: Mr Stephen Ashley asked: “Can the City Council commit to immediate, constructive dialogue in order to give the City's nine adventure playgrounds the best possible chance of moving towards sustainability?”
The Director of Childrens Social Work and Early Help gave the following response:
“Dialogue between the City Council and the nine adventure playgrounds has been ongoing since January 2024, with a clear focus on the expectations communicated to all nine adventure playgrounds that they work towards business and sustainability plans to become financially self-sufficient. The report before today’s meeting clearly evidences the extensive support that the adventure playgrounds have been provided with since January 2024, and also clearly communicates the council’s position regarding grant funding ceasing in April 2025 due to the extensive funding pressures it continues to face.”
In responding to the question, officers kept in mind the statement that Mr Ashley had submitted as shown on the agenda. |
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PETITIONS Any petitions received in accordance with Council procedures will be reported. Minutes: The Monitoring Officer reported that none had been received.
A petition was submitted at the meeting. This would be verified to ascertain whether it would go to Full Council. |
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ADVENTURE PLAYGROUNDS UPDATE PDF 174 KB The Strategic Director of Social Care and Education has submitted a report to update the commission on position for each of the nine Play Associations that manage the adventure playgrounds across the city.
Members to note that this report is for information only.
Minutes: The Strategic Director of Social Care and Education submitted a report to update the commission on the position for each of the nine Play Associations that manage the adventure playgrounds across the city.
The Deputy City Mayor for Social Care, Health and Community Safety introduced the report and noted that:
The Commission was invited to ask questions and make comments and the officers and the Deputy City Mayor for Social Care, Health and Community Safety to respond. Key points included:
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FAMILY HUBS AND CHILDREN'S CENTRES PDF 144 KB Additional documents: Minutes: The Strategic Director of Social Care and Education and the Strategic Director of Childrens Social Work and Early Help submitted a report on the ongoing work within Family Hubs and Children’s Centres.
The Deputy City Mayor for Social Care, Health and Community Safety introduced the report and noted that:
The Commission was invited to ask questions and make comments and the officers and the Deputy City Mayor for Social Care, Health and Community Safety to respond. Key points included:
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USE OF CAPITAL PROGRAMME IN SCHOOLS PDF 124 KB Additional documents: Minutes: The Director of Estates and Buildings submitted a report to update the commission on Childrens and Education projects and programmes of work completed relatively recently by the Capital Projects and Minor Works teams within Estates & Building Services. The Deputy City Mayor for Social Care, Health and Community Safety introduced the report and highlighted that the work often goes unseen, but there is lots of amazing work ongoing and it had been particularly beneficial having Estates & Building Services work hand in hand with Children’s services to streamline the process which has made the difference to the children involved. The Head of Capital, Estates and Building Services presented the report. It was noted that:
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LEICESTER CITY YOUTH JUSTICE PLAN 2024-25 PDF 2 MB The Director of Childrens Social Work and Early Help submits a report providing a summary of the annual Youth Justice Plan refresh highlighting progress to date and new emerging priorities. The commission is recommended to consider, note and comment on the recommendations to the Executive set out in Paragraph 6.
Additional documents: Minutes: The Director of Childrens Social Care and Education submitted a report providing a summary of the annual Youth Justice Plan refresh, highlighting progress to date and new emerging priorities. The Head of Prevention and Safer Communities and the Service Manager for Children and Young Peoples Justice Service and Youth Service presented the plan, and it was noted that:
The Deputy City Mayor for Social Care, Health and Community Safety introduced the item and noted that the team involved was fantastic and that they were passionate to get it right. Page 143 of the report summed up the plan and the work of partners behind the scenes and demonstrated how it was also relevant and meaningful to the young people who were vulnerable in the city and helped to support them to make changes.
Head of Service Prevention Services and the Service Manager for Children and Young Peoples Justice Service and Youth Service presented the report.
It was noted that:
· The team was proud of what had been achieved and were now working on next year’s plan. The Service Manager for Children and Young Peoples Justice Service and Youth Service had been instrumental in the development of the plan. · The last inspection had been in 2019. The inspectorate had put together a new package and as such an inspection was anticipated soon and priorities have changed due to Covid and the challenges that brought. · The Youth Justice Board created a new monitoring framework – Leicester were rated in quadrant 2 and aimed to be in quadrant 1. · The aim of this plan was to be collaborative all the way through from children to leadership team. · One of the key priorities is first time entrants into the system. There were 200 young people in the service at one time and 40% were first time entrants. The service would like intervention in place before they become first time entrants. · The reoffending rate was excellent with those who were being engaged with and the service wanted to continue to mainstream intervention with the budget available. · A key challenge was that youth offending has increased. A requirement was knowing the population, and it was known who and where reoffending was and it was being addressed. · Another key challenge was the smaller number of young people who offended with high frequency. This has required trauma informed approaches to help them as it had been notable that there were increased complexities. · Education was raised as a big issue for ages 16-19 as fewer had gone into employment or placements post-covid. · Serious youth violence was a very small concentration of young people, contrary to what had been suggested in the media. There was a multi-agency collective to address this working with the police and community safety. · A collective partnership offer to victims through court and pre-court processes which allows the victims voices to be heard whilst supporting them. · The focus is very much on a child first approach - focused on them being children first and an offender ... view the full minutes text for item 94. |
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Members of the Commission will be asked to consider the work programme and make suggestions for additional items as it considers necessary. Minutes: It was requested that the situation with Adventure Playgrounds be revisited after September. It was further clarified that this could only be based on what the Council knew of the situation as they could not talk on behalf of independent organisations.
The possibility of involving the play associations in the scrutiny would be discussed outside the meeting.
The work programme was noted. |
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ANY OTHER BUSINESS Minutes: There being no other items of urgent business, the meeting closed at 19:29. |