Venue: Conference Room 1 - Herefordshire Council, Plough Lane Offices, Hereford, HR4 0LE. View directions
Contact: Henry Merricks-Murgatroyd, Democratic Services Officer
Link: Watch this meeting on the Herefordshire Council YouTube Channel
Items
No. |
Item |
21. |
Apologies for absence
To receive apologies for absence.
Minutes:
No apologies were
received.
|
22. |
Named substitutes
To receive details of
any councillor nominated to attend the meeting in place of a member
of the committee.
Minutes:
There were no named substitutes.
|
23. |
Declarations of interest
To receive
declarations of interest in respect of items on the
agenda.
Minutes:
The Chairperson confirmed that Ross Enterprise
Park is located in his ward. However, it was confirmed that there
was no need for the Chairperson to leave the meeting for the
Enterprise Zones item.
|
24. |
Minutes PDF 309 KB
To receive the minutes of the meeting held on
Tuesday 15 October 2024.
Minutes:
The minutes of the previous meeting were
received.
Resolved: That the
minutes of the meeting held on 15 October 2024 be confirmed as a
correct record and be signed by the Chairperson.
|
25. |
Questions from members of the public
To
receive any written questions from members of the
public.
Minutes:
No questions had been
received from members of the public.
|
26. |
Questions from members of the council
To receive any written questions from members
of the council.
Minutes:
No questions had been received from
councillors.
|
27. |
Enterprise Zones PDF 314 KB
To provide an overview of the development and
key achievements of the Hereford Enterprise Zone as a basis to
identify lessons learnt as the council now seeks to establish
additional employment land across the wider county, such as the
proposed development of Ross Enterprise Park.
Additional documents:
Minutes:
The committee considered a report on
Enterprise Zone. The Chairperson introduced the officers to present
the council’s report.
The principal points of the discussion are
summarised below:
- The Service Director, Economy &
Growth noted that the main focus of the
work was to address the lessons learned from the successful
development out of Hereford Enterprise Zone, rebranded as Skylon
Park, from around the last ten years.
- The Managing Director Skylon Park
reiterated the intention of the report to set out the background
and history to the Enterprise Zone and the approach that has been
taken to for Rotherwas and Hereford
Enterprise Zone.
- The choice that was made was to set
up an independent, strategic, non-trading and non-asset owning
limited company, chaired by the private sector to oversee the
marketing promotion and advocation for the enterprise zone.
Therefore, a company was set up, arms-length from the council, to
take forward the support and approach to raise the profile and
identify potential sales.
- A Local Development Order was
created which then gives presumption in favour of planning
permission for certain classes of development.
- There is a board and small support
team with a connection back through the economic development team
into the various parts of the council including legal and finance.
The enterprise zone company makes a recommendation and formal decisions are taken by the
council. The support teams’ budgets remained with the council
and the council held the decision-making processes that sat behind
land sales and budgets that support the enterprise zone.
- In the case of Rotherwas, there is a need to invest in the land to
make it investable.
- In relation to lessons learnt,
a number of areas were touched upon as
areas that could be learned from including the consideration of
each location is important and therefore business interest and the
type of business interested in locating in that particular location
is highly relevant. Ross is more accessible to the motorway network
than Rotherwas. Additionally, the establishment of local
governance is important in terms of private sector and local
stakeholder involvement and thus it is important to establish clear
terms of reference for any board or partnership.
- The Service Director, Economy &
Growth clarified on the ownership structure that it is council
owned land but the council will sell the
freehold of sites to interested businesses which is the preference
of business to own and invest in the develop and then own the land.
The council will then be responsible for the wider management of
the estate and will be for the foreseeable future.
- In response to a question on what is
happening to the saving of business rates and what happens to that
money, the Service Director, Economy & Growth noted that there
is a time lag between investing in the process before receiving
significant amounts of income generated. The government requirement
is that any of the retained business rate above the 50% that funds
council services has to be spent on
economic development activities that can be across ...
view
the full minutes text for item 27.
|
28. |
Local Authority Housing Delivery Models PDF 212 KB
To receive a report on commissioned research
into housing delivery models in other local authorities.
Additional documents:
Minutes:
The committee considered a report on
commissioned research into housing delivery models in other local
authorities by Three Dragons.
The Chairperson introduced the officers and
representatives from Three Dragons to present.
The principal points of the discussion are
summarised below:
- The Service Director, Economy &
Growth noted that there was an item on delivery models around
delivery of affordable housing around the county at October’s
meeting. It was noted that a final report be brought back to the
committee to review the key findings before final recommendations
are made to Cabinet.
- The Chairperson asked the
representatives from Three Dragons what the possible sources of
funding are that the council should be looking at to deliver the
suggested pilot site for housing.
- In response, Lin Cousins (Three
Dragons) noted that with development companies, the other local
authorities have used their own funding to start with on the basis
that over time there will be a return.
- In response to a question about how
registered providers (RPs) can be helped who are under financial
pressure and why are registered providers cautious about
involvement in section 106 schemes, Lin Cousins noted that RPs are
cautious about s106 schemes because they sometimes have issues
around the types of units they are asked to pick up from the
developers and because they are usually not eligible for any grant
funding from Homes England. When they develop their own sites (100%
affordable housing), they are then eligible for Homes England
funding.
- In response to a question about the
impact of the Budget on Homes England spending plans, Lin Cousins
noted that the direction of travel looks like there will be a
priority given to social rent units rather than affordable rent
units and there is more money for the tail-end of the current
programme and an allowance for the next programme.
- Laura Easton (Three Dragons) added
that if the council were to go down the s106 route on one of those
sites, talking to the RP early on would be useful to ensure that
the council would be developing the type of units that they would
want to take.
- The Interim Head of Housing
Development noted that in terms of RPs being interested in s106
agreements, there are certain rural locations where they do not
have resource and therefore struggle to manage and maintain those
properties. In terms of type, they are reluctant to take on
one-bedroom properties of which there is a demand for those types
of properties in Herefordshire.
- The Chairperson asked whether the
council has come across any ways to encourage developers to build
one-bedroom units.
- In response, the Interim Head of
Housing Development commented that one-bedroom units are
problematic for developers and in terms of innovative solutions,
the council is going for affordable market rent in locations where
there is a planning application that has come in with an affordable
housing requirement. However, the council is unable to get a RP to
take those plots and therefore is letting the developer to rent
...
view the full minutes text for item 28.
|
29. |
Work programme PDF 217 KB
To consider the draft work programme for
Herefordshire Council’s scrutiny committees for the municipal
year 2024/25.
Additional documents:
Minutes:
The Statutory Scrutiny Officer presented the
draft work programme for scrutiny committees for the municipal year
2024/25.
The Chairperson noted that he had met with
officers to look at the Local Transport Plan that is scheduled to
come to the meeting in January 2025.
The Statutory Scrutiny Officer confirmed that
the committee will be looking at the draft delivery plan rather
than the objectives in relation to the Local Transport Plan.
The Chairperson added that there had been a
discussion with officers about the proposed Market Towns Investment
Plans item. In relation to the Hereford City plan, there was a
feeling that the Hereford City plan would be too big to be included
with the Market Towns Investment Plan and it therefore should be
included separately in a future meeting. It was noted that the
clerks of each market town should be invited to attend the
Connected Communities Scrutiny Committee in January to report on
their views on the Market Towns Investment Plan. It was added that
the Hereford City plan would be moved to the March 2025
meeting.
In relation to the Cultural Strategy
2019-2029, the Chairperson added that he would like to hear from
external voices including, for example, rural media.
In response to a question about an update on
the transport hub, it was noted that this would come under the city
masterplan in March 2025.
|
30. |
Date of the next meeting
The date of the next meeting is Wednesday 15
January 2025, 10:00 am.
Minutes:
The next scheduled meeting in public was
confirmed as Wednesday 15 January 2025, 10:00 am.
|