Items
No. |
Item |
60. |
APOLOGIES FOR ABSENCE
Minutes:
Apologies for absence were received from Councillor
Dawood.
Apologies for absence were also received form
Councillor Rae Bhatia. Councillor Gopal
substituted.
|
61. |
DECLARATIONS OF INTEREST
Members will be asked to declare any interests
they may have in the business to be discussed on the agenda.
Minutes:
There were no declarations of interest.
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62. |
MINUTES OF THE PREVIOUS MEETING PDF 301 KB
The minutes of the meeting of the Commission
held on 31 January 2024 are attached and Members will be asked to
confirm them as correct record.
Minutes:
AGREED:
That the minutes of the previous meetings held on 31
January 2024 be confirmed as a correct record.
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63. |
PETITIONS
The Monitoring Officer to report on any
petitions received in accordance with Council procedures.
Minutes:
It was noted that none had been received.
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64. |
QUESTIONS, REPRESENTATIONS AND STATEMENTS OF CASE
The Monitoring Officer to report on any
questions, representations and statements of case received in
accordance with Council procedures.
Minutes:
It was noted that none had been received.
|
65. |
20MPH ZONES INFORMAL SCRUTINY - UPDATE
The Chair will give a verbal update
on the informal scrutiny work on 20mph Zones in the City having
presented it to the Executive.
Minutes:
The
Chair gave a verbal update on the
informal scrutiny work on 20mph Zones in the City having presented
it to the Executive.
Key points included:
- Three
meetings had been held on the subject and the report and
recommendations had been approved at the last meeting of the
Commission.
- The
report had been taken to the Executive and a response would be
produced to show that the Executive would be taking the
recommendations on board.
- The
Chair thanked the members and officers involved, particularly
Senior Governance Officer Georgia Humby as the Executive were
impressed by the approach taken and saw it as a model in terms of
procedure for future task groups.
Although it was acknowledged that some groups may require more than
three meetings.
AGREED:
That the verbal update be noted.
|
66. |
ELECTRIC VEHICLE CHARGING INFORMAL SCRUTINY - UPDATE
The Vice-Chair and the City Transport Director
will give a verbal update on the informal scrutiny work on Electric
Vehicle charging points in the city following the first meeting of
the task group.
Minutes:
The Vice-Chair gave a verbal update on
the informal scrutiny work on Electric Vehicle (EV) charging points
in the city following the first meeting of the task
group.
Key points included:
- The
group had completed its first meeting which looked largely at the
current situation regarding charging in the city and the various
funding streams available and what they could be used
for.
- At the
second meeting, groups would be invited who may have opinions and
insights on the issue.
- It had
been interesting to consider what the situation with EV charging
points would look like in an ideal world and what it could look
like given the resources available.
- Members of the Commission were invited to the next
session. The next meetings would take
place on 9th and 29th April and would be held
via Microsoft Teams.
- Members of the Commission were invited to suggest stakeholders
who could contribute.
AGREED:
That the verbal update be noted.
|
67. |
WATERSIDE UPDATE PDF 7 MB
The Director of Planning, Development and
Transport will give a presentation on the Waterside
development. Updates will also be given
on Pioneer Park and the Brownfield Land Development Approach.
Slides to follow.
Minutes:
The Programme Manager and Head of
Development - Planning, Development and Transport gave a
presentation on the Waterside development.
The Director of Planning, Development and
Transport attended the meeting to assist with the
discussion.
Slides were presented
(attached).
Other key points included:
-
A great deal of activity had taken place developing
the Waterside area and Pioneer Park.
-
The Waterside development was around 100 acres in
area.
-
The area had previously become relatively derelict,
largely due to the decline of the textile industry in the
area.
-
The area had been identified as a regeneration
priority in the local plan.
-
A regeneration strategy had been set out around
planning guidance in the area in a very simple and clear way for
developers to understand. This also
included the allocation of public space in the area.
-
As part of the project, the Council took the
opportunity to acquire and restore Friars Mill, which was converted
to managed workspace that was managed by the Chamber of
Commerce. In addition to the restored
historic buildings, further new-build office space was constructed
and been put up for sale. This was a
good scheme in its own right, but was also a statement of intent
about the commitment to regenerate.
-
A compulsory purchase of 17 acres in the middle of
the area was shown on the slide.
-
It was clear that the market could not bring the
site forward on its own as there were too many individual land
interests. Nonetheless, it was
necessary for the site to come forward in order to act as a
catalyst to stimulate investments in the surrounding
sites.
-
This in mind, the Council had set about a Compulsory
Purchase Order (CPO) for a housing and office scheme. This had focussed on houses rather than apartments
as there was an intention to create competition and choice in the
market, alongside surrounding privately owned sites which would be
predominantly apartment schemes. This development included
‘extra care’ affordable housing. It also created office space for between 400-500
jobs. The development of the
compulsorily acquired land was halfway through completion, and it
was thought it would be complete by 2026.
-
A £30m grant had been received from the
Leicester City Council Capital Programme and Local Growth Fund and
Right to Buy receipts to be invested in affordable
housing.
-
The Council held the risk for development which had
allowed delivery to happen at pace. The
full market value of £11m had been received for the
land.
-
Since the start of the developments in 2015, around
£300m of private sector money had been invested in the city
and around 1000 student bed places had been created, as had around
1000 houses and apartments.
Additionally, a great deal of office and leisure space had been
created. This created revenue for the Council worth £2m per
year. This represented a good return on
the initial investment.
-
The Council were in discussions with Homes England
and the relevant landowners to develop more offices and
homes.
-
The former A50 (Woodgate/Northgate Street)
... view
the full minutes text for item 67.
|
68. |
LABOUR MARKET: WORKER EXPLOITATION PDF 260 KB
The Head of Economic
Regeneration submits a report relating to worker exploitation in
sectors other than the textiles sector.
Minutes:
The Head of Economic Regeneration submitted a report
relating to worker exploitation in sectors other than the textiles
sector.
Dr Nik Hammer, Director of the Future of Work
Cluster at the University of Leicester attended the meeting to
assist with the discussion.
Key points included:
- The
report referred to labour exploitation in the city and what was
known of it.
- Work
had been undertaken to look at the textiles sector and a Labour
Market Partnership had been brought together to address
concerns.
- It was
noted that the Council did not have any powers or resources in
relation to Labour Exploitation and enforcement, all of this lay
with national enforcement agencies.
However, it was established to see what the Council could do to
address issues despite this.
- A
Community Safety Coordinator post was established and was working
on enforcement with national regulators, as well as working with
communities and partners.
- The
post had been appointed to in March 2020. When the Covid-19 pandemic occurred, the Leicester
textile sector was criticised and national regulators devoted
resources to increase enforcement in the city via Operation Tacit
(OpTacit), working with the Labour Market Partnership. This was a significant piece of work nationally as
it was unusual for national regulators to devote resources to a
particular sector prior to this.
- Detailed evaluation by the Director of Labour Market Enforcement
of the work done was to be published in 2023, however, this had not
occurred and as such the information was not yet
available. However, it had been shown
that there was a lot of interest in labour exploitation in the city
and as such work was proposed to look at this area, particularly in
terms of what it meant for economic sectors and
geography.
- University partners had been engaged to support new work to
assess the extent of labour exploitation across all sectors and it
was being considered as to what could be done to move the work
forward.
- The
University of Leicester had a research cluster in the Business
School with a large range of interdisciplinary and different sector
expertise, looking at areas such as the care sector, the gig
economy and precarious labour market issues.
- It was
proposed to expand and broaden the approach to include sectors
outside the textile sector. This would
require research with a range of local labour market partners and
government agencies as well as analysing any available
data.
- This
work could then inform any Council response to these
issues.
The Commission were invited to ask questions and
make comments. Key points included:
- Annual
reports of the work undertaken by the Labour Market Partnership was
available on the Council Website and would be circulated to
members. This work looked at the
enforcement activity by the partnership and community engagement
work undertaken.
- The
Labour Market Partnership Coordinator post had cost
£150k. This role had engaged with
a broad range of community and sector organisations. Additionally, work had been carried out with
regulatory enforcement bodies to help encourage collaborative
working and ...
view the full minutes text for item 68.
|
69. |
LLEP ARRANGEMENTS PDF 464 KB
The Director of
Tourism, Culture and Inward Investment submits a report to
reflect on the impact of Leicester and
Leicester Enterprise Partnership spanning from its inception in
2011 to the present day and to acknowledge the progress on the
transfer of LLEP functions into Leicester City Council under the
direction of the new Leicestershire and Leicestershire Economic
Growth Board.
Minutes:
The Director of Tourism, Culture and Inward
Investment submitted a report to reflect on the impact of Leicester
and Leicester Enterprise Partnership spanning from its inception in
2011 to the present day and to note progress with the transfer of
LLEP functions into Leicester City Council on behalf of the City
and County Councils.
Key points included:
- There
had been a change in government policy which was moving towards a
bigger role for upper-tier authorities and elected
leaders.
- It was
likely that the changes would also enable government to reduce the
sum of money that had previously supported the LLEP.
- The
LLEP Board were resigning, and the legal entity was effectively
being phased out in the new financial year.
- A new
structure to engage businesses and partners and to advise elected
leaders was to be established.
- The
existing, nationally renowned careers hub had developed effective
partnerships between businesses and schools and was a priority to
retain.
- The
LLEP had undertaken an organisational review resulting in the loss
of some posts and the creation of others as services were being
redesigned.
- There
were sufficient LLEP reserves to support retained staff and
services for two years until March 2026.
- A more
detailed report on the LLEP arrangements would be brought at a
later stage.
The Commission were invited to ask questions and
make comments. Key points included:
- Government feedback on the proposed integration plan is still
being awaited but this was likely to be received and resolved in
the next month or so.
- New
arrangements would give the Councils more significance in decisions
on budgets and strategy. Though it was desirable to retain the
voice of businesses advising, elected members would have more
say.
- It was
not known what would replace some of the programmes that had been
managed by the LLEP. Some, like the UK Shared Prosperity Fund, had
already transferred and were now council led.
- The
Council were the accountable body for the Skills Bootcamps, and as
such would have more influence.
- Clearer allocation of resources to local councils across
functional economic areas could help with planning and avoid time
and resource being wasted on competitions.
- Councils having more control was part of an ongoing devolution
process.
- Cllr
Porter queried the rationale for supporting IBM with £1m
grant to locate in Leicester. Agreed further detail about the
decision to be provided.
- Having
functions more clearly council led should make accountability and
elected member scrutiny easier.
- In
terms of administration, the Council were always the contracting
authority.
AGREED:
1)
That the report be noted.
2)
That the comments of the Commission be
noted.
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70. |
WORK PROGRAMME PDF 335 KB
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 noted that the informal scrutiny on 24-hour bus lanes had been
upheld whilst government guidance was being awaited. This guidance was now available and as such it was
requested that it be put on the agenda for the first meeting of the
municipal year.
Further to this, officers were requested to consider the
guidance and the issue of 24-hour bus lanes.
The
work programme was noted.
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71. |
ANY OTHER BUSINESS
Minutes:
There being no further items of urgent business, the meeting
ended at 19:39.
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