The
Director of Delivery, Communications and Political Governance
submitted a report that introduced the emerging Active Leicester
Strategy action plan, following the launch of the strategy in July
2023.
Councillor Bonham as Vice-Chair of Health Scrutiny, the Director
of Delivery, Communications and Political Governance, the Head of
Sports and the Sport & Active Recreation Development Manager
attended the meeting to assist with the discussion.
Key
points included:
- The strategy was set
against a backdrop of dwindling resources, but it was thought that
small changes in the way organisations and internal colleagues
operated could make a big difference without needing new
resources.
- The strategy approach
aimed to galvanise support and encourage collaborative
working.
- It was aimed to
utilise internal communications networks within areas such as
housing, education, and neighbourhoods to better reach people
within the city.
- There was a role for
the corporate marketing team, such as in Parks with walking trails,
maps, and the environmental scheme. It
was aimed to spread this further within some of the communication
networks.
- Colleagues in public
health had developed a one off non-recurrent grant for community
groups and others to initiate sport and physical activity projects
in line with the strategy.
- There was an emerging
opportunity with Sport England to initiate change in the locality
and get systems working better.
- A Health and
Wellbeing hub was being piloted at Aylestone Leisure Centre which
would make use of existing resources, for example, training staff
to be more empathetic with service users, making the centre more
welcoming and encouraging citizens to make use of it.
- Also being looked at
were products, programmes and marketing,
it was hoped to pilot a six-month free offer for a small cohort of
20-30 people, colleagues in Housing would be worked with so that
the right people were engaged with.
- A seminar was being
developed with a keynote speaker to encourage collaborative working
internally across services. It was
hoped to link this in with the place-based project coming up with
Sport England.
- Once internal support
was galvanised, external partners would be engaged.
The
Committee were invited to ask questions and make comments. Key
points included:
- The reasons behind
the lower levels of inactivity in Western Ward and Knighton Ward
were not known at this point although it was later clarified in the
discussion that these wards were comparably better than
others. It was noted that the
definition of physical activity was wider than participation in
organised sport, and as such it was possible that other forms of
physical activity were being undertaken in these wards. Organisations were being encouraged to target
less-active areas and various forms of physical activity were being
encouraged as well as organised sport, such as active travel like
cycling.
- The one off,
non-recurrent funding would be an opportunity for existing sports
groups to extend their activities into some of the priority groups
that that were listed in the strategy or start something new for
some of the priority groups. These
opportunities would be publicly advertised and solicited through
the Council network and levels of funding would be between
£1.5k and £10k.
- Responding to a
question about the sample size of the inactivity data in the city,
it was clarified that it was taken from the Health and Wellbeing
survey which was taken from around 2000 residents across the
city. Later it was also brought to the
attention of the Commission that there was also the annual
‘Active Lives’ survey from Sport England, which meant
that up-to-date data was available each year.
- In response to a
query about how to get people to be active when there was a deficit
of local facilities, it was explained that there was an emphasis on
encouraging behavioural change and promoting what was available. It
was suggested that people could be pointed towards YouTube
tutorials and encouraged to partake in other forms of physical
activity such as walking. It was
further suggested that work with Sport England was aimed to look at
how to find local solutions with local groups and
volunteers. It was understood that
sustained behavioural change would take a long time, as it would
take a long time to build confidence and trust. As such some of the
work with Sport England was a longer-term commitment than had been
seen previously.
- There was a
ball-court improvement programme and ball-courts would be invested
in across the city.
- It was acknowledged
that other agencies in the city such as Leicester Riders were
looking to extend their reach and were looking for ways that they
could take responsibility for their assets in
order for them to be useful for activity. This would be encouraged; however, it was
acknowledged that the voluntary sports sector that provided
opportunities throughout the city should not be forgotten
about.
- In response to a
comment about the lack of resources that grassroots sports clubs
had in comparison to large professional clubs, the scheme would
look to encourage clubs to work together, and dialogue and
collaboration would be encouraged.
- The hub at Aylestone
Leisure Centre would be expanded to other hubs across the city if
the pilot was successful. What worked
in the pilot would be taken on board.
- Levels of inactivity
in Leicester had not changed much in recent years. There were signs of improvement prior to the
Covid-19 pandemic, however the pandemic had led to increased
inactivity. Leicester was worse than
the regional and national averages.
- In terms of
definitions of inactivity, ‘inactive’ meant less than
30 minutes of physical activity per day and ‘moderately
active’ meant 30-60 minutes of physical activity per
day. ‘very active’ was 150 minutes a week.
This in mind, a 35% rate of inactivity
was high.
- A person who could
get resources and creative thinking out of departments would be
desirable as the keynote speaker at the seminar.
- Walking and jogging
trails were available on the Council website (Fitness
on parks (leicester.gov.uk)),
people could do these at their own speed. Additionally, there were information boards in
parks showing routes.
- The Chair
made the recommendation that should
Sport England funding become available, grassroots/community sports
clubs to be considered for priority over larger professional clubs
with their own funding streams.
- The Chair made a
further recommendation that the Active Leicester strategy action
plan be brought back to the Commission following the findings of
the seminar.
AGREED:
1)
That the report be NOTED.
2)
That the Active Leicester strategy action plan be
brought back to the Commission following the findings of the
seminar.
3)
That should Sport England funding become available,
grassroots/community sports clubs to be considered for priority
over larger professional clubs with their own funding
streams.