Items
| No. |
Item |
184. |
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 were received form Cllr
Waddington.
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185. |
Declarations of Interest
Members will be 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.
There were no declarations of interest.
|
186. |
Minutes of the Previous Meeting PDF 143 KB
The minutes of the meeting of the Culture and
Neighbourhoods Scrutiny Commission held on Thursday 22nd
January 2026 have been circulated, and Members will be asked to
confirm them as a correct record.
Minutes:
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187. |
Chair's Announcements
The Chair is invited to make any announcements
as they see fit.
Minutes:
The Chair suggested that reports be taken as
read where possible.
The Chair also made members aware of the first
meeting of the Task Group on Community Asset Transfer would be on
12th March.
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188. |
Questions, Representations and Statements of Case
Any questions, representations and statements
of case submitted in accordance with the Council’s procedures
will be reported.
Minutes:
The Monitoring Officer reported that none had
been received.
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189. |
Petitions
Any petitions received in accordance with
Council procedures will be reported.
Minutes:
The Monitoring Officer reported that none had
been received.
|
190. |
Museums Service Operational Changes Update PDF 139 KB
The Director of Tourism Culture and Economy
submits a report to provide an update on the
delivery of the Museums and Galleries Strategy, focusing upon
operational changes at Abbey Pumping Station and Newarke Houses
Museum.
Minutes:
The Director of Tourism Culture and
Economy submitted a?report to provide an update on the
delivery of the Museums and Galleries Strategy, focusing upon
operational changes at Abbey Pumping Station
and Newarke Houses Museum.
The Assistant City
Mayor for Health, Culture, Libraries and Community
Centres introduced the item noting that continued
investment into the museums was key. Maintenance and upkeep
continued throughout the venues.
The Head of Arts and Museums provided an
overview of the report, key points to note were as
follows:
- The strategy was
implemented nearly a year ago, the vision had
been to develop a cost
effective, accessible service.
- Significant investment had taken
place over the previous decade which included
an investment of £1.9m at Newarke Houses
Museum. A recent Stage 1 grant had been secured from the
National Lottery Heritage Fund for Leicester Museum and Art
Gallery. In total £29m would have been invested in
the service, upon completion of the development.
- Further Arts Council
England National Portfolio Organisation funding had
recently been secured. Since 2018 National
Portfolio Organisation funding of just over
£400K a year has enabled a range of
activities, in addition to those provided by the core
budget. Further funding of £400k was confirmed for this
year and a further application had
been submitted for the following year.
- Offsite activities were
highlighted and engagement had increased
by 12% during the year, it was expected that by the
end of the 2025/26 year 110,000 people would have been
reached.
- Operational Changes at Abbey
Pumping Station and Newarke Houses Museums were made from
1st May 2025. The relocation of the Food and
Craft Fair from Belgrave Hall to the Abbey Pumping Station had
resulted in an 70% increase in visitor
numbers.
- Initiatives to
increase engagement for children and young people
included the Holiday Activity and Food (HAF)
programme at Abbey Pumping Station over the
summer, with 416 participations. Children received a
nutritious meal as part of the visit.
- In total
there had been nearly 16,000 visitors from
1st May,
with additional offsite activity with
volunteers.
-
Newarke Houses Museum had been open for special
events such as the Siege of Leicester event
programme and for Heritage Open Days. School visits had also
continued.
- The museum service was
on track to deliver on the vison
and strategic objectives.
In response to member discussion and
questions, the following was noted:
- The Arts Council National Portfolio
Organisation funding is would be used at multiple sites,
including Newarke Houses Museum and Abbey
Pumping Station.
- The steam train continued
to be in operation at Abbey Pumping Station, including on event
days and railway days. Families had the option to
visit the free museums. A proposal to
open Newarke Houses Museum at Easter would be
considered.
- The team had designed
a portable cabinet of curiosities to engage with the
wider community. A calendar of events would be distributed to
the commission.
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191. |
Selective Licensing Update PDF 2 MB
The Director of Neighbourhoods and
Environmental Services submits a report on progress with selective
licensing schemes in the city.
Additional documents:
Minutes:
The Director of Neighbourhoods and
Environmental Services submitted a report on progress
with selective licensing schemes in the city.
The Deputy City Mayor for Housing,
Economy and Neighbourhoods introduced the item, noting
that the process had been very thorough and was
delivering on targets. The first five-year cycle
was coming to an end. Implementation of the
Renter’s Rights Act 2025 was imminent and
would impact on the responsibilities for the private
sector teams.
The Head of Regulatory Services gave a
presentation as attached to the agenda, key points to note
were as follows:
- It was estimated that there were
around 8000 licensable properties in the 3
areas. At the end of 2025 around 77% of
the applications expected across the 5 years had been
received, with the majority having been dealt
with.
- For the number of
applications within each designated
area, Westcotes and the Fosse area had the highest
numbers received.
- Most hazards were category
2 and were required to be addressed for
licensing. In many cases formal action did not need
to be taken after issues being highlighted
to the landlord.
- Where necessary work to
rectify was not organised by the landlord, the council may
undertake these works in default and the costs
recharged to the landlord.
- Formal actions included hazard
awareness notices, improvement notices and prohibition orders - an
incremental approach was usually taken.
- There were a number
of investigations in process.
- Landlords were invited to regular
forums.
- Team changes had included new
management.
- A planned piece of
work included reviewing designations,
all three of which were due to end next year.
Consideration would be given as to whether they needed to
continue.
In response to member questions and
discussion, the following was noted:
- The Council was
not permitted to generate a profit on the scheme,
and any income was reinvested back into delivery. A
realistic fee was set to cover programme delivery costs and support
the empowerment, education and signposting of landlords.
Unlike some authorities, the scheme used a combined fee of
£1,290 and included inspections to confirm properties
meet minimum standards before a licence is granted. The
cash flow forecast was under review.
- A different framework of standards
was in place for council properties. A dip sample had
taken place to support the Housing
service which found consistency with the Housing
team. The Decent Homes Standard would be implemented as
part of the Renters Rights Act in the
future, bringing changes to the private letting
sector.
- The timescale to resolve hazards was
dependent on the severity
of the hazard. Landlords were responsible
for arranging any alternative accommodation during
rectification periods.
- The private rented sector
team could investigate housing standards issues such as damp and
mould, overcrowding and fire safety across all rented
properties in the city regardless of licensing.
- There was not a ruling on how often
properties would be inspected but robust checks were
completed.
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192. |
DRAFT PSPO Zone: 2 Implementation Update PDF 729 KB
The Director of Neighbourhood &
Environmental Services and the Head of Safer Communities will give
a presentation providing an update on the development of a Public
Space Protection Order (PSPO) for the outer city areas.
Minutes:
The Director of Neighbourhood &
Environmental Services and the Head of Safer Communities gave a presentation providing an
update on the development of a Public Space Protection Order (PSPO)
for the outer city
areas.
The Deputy City Mayor for Housing, Economy and
Neighbourhoods introduced the report and noted that it needed to be
a data-driven exercise and that expectations would need to be
managed.
Slides were presented as attached to the
agenda pack. Additional key points to
note were as follows:
- This was a work in progress, but the
presentation gave an early insight into the formation of the
proposed second PSPO (PSPO2).
- There had been a limited amount of
responses from Ward Councillors, and there was a need to encourage
the public to take part of the consultation process.
- Anti-Social Behaviour (ASB) had been
recorded in different locations by different teams, so a variety of
data had been collected.
- Types of ASB were sometimes
interconnected.
- E-bikes had been an issue with
regard to vehicle-based ASB.
- The timeline had changed since the
slides had been published and it was currently aimed to push back
the timeline to give a realistic timeframe, the timeline was now
running 2-4 weeks behind. It was
important to ensure that this was done correctly and not rushed
through.
In response to member discussion, the
following was noted:
- In response to a query on the
clarity of boundaries, it was noted that geolocations were mapped
by postcode and the boundaries were exact. It was further noted that it was useful for ward
residents to encourage them to take part in the consultation.
- It was also important for residents
to report ASB. The Love Clean Streets
app could be used for this, there were also QR codes that could be
scanned. Additionally, a new tool and
web portal was being launched. People
could also report via computers in libraries, where staff could
help. If people did not report, data
was not available.
- With regard to fly-tipping this was
dealt with by City Wardens. This used a
similar data set and dashboards. This
work could increase as more data was received.
- This work would have a team of 11
officers to look after PSPO1 and to do targeted work in PSPO2.
- Data could be analysed to see where
problems were likely to occur and when.
Some issues, such as fireworks, were seasonal.
- This scheme was about project-based
intervention work. The team could
support and intervene where necessary and work could be done and
measured to see if had a positive impact.
- As the project was data-led, if
there was a specific issue then hotspots and trends could be
identified, and the team could look to be deployed, highlighting
the importance of reports.
- The scheme would go live in the
Autumn, and staff would be appointed from April. These staff could be deployed in Wards for
targeted intervention work.
- Councillors were encouraged to bear
in mind the key facts (as set out on the slide) when talking to
constituents.
- It ...
view the full minutes text for item 192.
|
193. |
Pride in Place Programme PDF 120 KB
The Director of
Corporate Services submits a report setting out the
details of the Government’s Pride in Place Programme (PiPP),
including information on compliance, mobilisation, governance, and
early groundwork actions required for this long-term
initiative.
Minutes:
The Director of Corporate Services submitted a
report setting out the details of the
Government’s Pride in Place Programme (PiPP), including
information on compliance, mobilisation, governance, and early
groundwork actions required for this long-term initiative.
Key points to note were as follows:
- The Pride in Place Programme (PiPP)
was distinct from the Pride in Place Impact Fund.
- A government initiative had been
launched at the end of 2025, and an understanding of what was
required had been developed.
- The programme looked to focus on
creating thriving places, stronger communities and community
democracy (giving residents a say over what was needed in the
area).
- Up to £20m over 10 years had
been identified by the government. This
would be split into 63% Capital (i.e. buildings) and 37% Revenue
(i.e. services).
- Deprivation data was used to
identify areas that needed investment.
The government also used a Community Needs Index, although the
Council did not have access to this.
- Three areas were considered in the
report, these were Middle Layer Super Output Areas (MSOA).
- The money would not be received in
one go, it would be received over three periods. The first would be received between now and the
2029/2030 financial year, the second between 2030 and 2031/32, and
the last between 2033/34 and 2035/36.
- The Council had a responsibility to
an outside body to ensure spending was consistent with financial
spend rules. Procurement was taken into
account. Transparency on spending was
needed. It was necessary to ensure that
each area was spending within government guidelines.
- It was necessary to support
programme delivery. Part of this was
recruiting an independent Chair with the local MP. A job profile had been identified for this and it
was now out to expressions of interest.
There were specific rules on who qualified around local connections
and the skills and capabilities to fulfil the role.
- It was necessary to create a plan
for each area on how to spend the money over a ten year
period.
- Neighbourhood Boards would be
resident-led with between eight and fifteen people on each
board. The bards would contain at least
one Ward Councillor, and MP, as police officer and representatives
from anchor institutions, but the majority would be residents.
- It was necessary to collect
information as the accountable body and then it would be necessary
to go through the process of engagement and to go through designs
for areas and spending plans. Each plan
needed to be submitted by the end of November.
In response to member discussion, the
following was noted:
- It was clarified that areas were
based on MSOAs rather than Wards.
- It was acknowledged that there could
be logistical problems for MPs and it was being asked as to whether
MPs could send representatives. The
programme needed to be community-led, but the MP would have a role
in the recruitment of the Chair.
- With regard to questions about how
this differed from historical schemes, it was noted that there had
been lots of investment in buildings and spaces ...
view the full minutes text for item 193.
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194. |
Work Programme PDF 84 KB
Members of the Commission will be asked to
consider the work programme and make suggestions for additional
items as it considers necessary.
Minutes:
The work programme was noted.
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195. |
Any Other Urgent Business
Minutes:
There being no further items of urgent
business, the meeting finished at 8:12pm
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