Items
| No. |
Item |
140. |
Apologies for absence
To receive apologies for absence.
Minutes:
Apologies had been
received from Cllr Dave Davies and Cllr Liz Harvey.
|
141. |
Named substitutes
To receive details of
members nominated to attend the meeting in place of a member of the
board.
Minutes:
There had been no named substitutes.
|
142. |
Declarations of interest
To receive declarations of interests from members of
the board in respect of items on the agenda.
Minutes:
There were no declarations of interest.
|
143. |
Minutes PDF 145 KB
To receive the minutes of the meeting held on
1 July 2025.
Minutes:
The minutes of the previous meeting were
received.
Resolved: That the
minutes of the meeting held on 1 July 2025 be confirmed as a
correct record and be signed by the Chairperson.
|
144. |
Questions from members of the public
To
receive any written questions from members of the
public.
Minutes:
There had been no
questions received from members of the public.
|
145. |
Questions from councillors
To receive any written questions from
councillors.
Minutes:
There had been no questions received from
councillors.
|
146. |
Q2 Performance Report PDF 475 KB
To review performance for Quarter 2 (Q2)
2025/26 and to report the performance position across all
Directorates for this period.
Additional documents:
Minutes:
The Chair took the report as read and invited
discussion on the item. The key points of the debate are detailed
below:
- Members questioned the
activity-focused red, amber, green, (RAG) approach; officers
acknowledged outcomes were mainly assessed at year end and would
welcome recommendations to strengthen outcomes-based
reporting.
- Inconsistencies were identified
regarding publication and delays of the Nutrient Management Plan;
officers agreed to clarify the position after the meeting.
- Concerns were raised about slippage
and cost control across property assets; officers explained that a
full audit of the Council’s property portfolio had been
commissioned, with briefings to Cabinet planned.
- The committee heard from officers
that the current property review was limited to Council-owned
assets, though the potential use of partner-owned buildings was
acknowledged as a future consideration.
- Members requested clearer,
cumulative visual presentation of quarterly RAG data; officers
agreed to explore improved reporting formats.
- Delays in capital delivery were
confirmed to impact revenue budgets; alternative provision remained
a high-risk priority linked to the DSG deficit and was under close
monitoring.
- Increased rough sleeping was
attributed to seasonal fluctuation, individuals from outside the
county and those without recourse to public funds; the Council
continued to support accommodation options while respecting
personal choice.
- Members highlighted disconnects
between delivery milestones and capital re-profiling; officers
acknowledged limitations in current reporting and welcomed
recommendations for improvement.
|
147. |
Q2 2025/26 Budget Report PDF 461 KB
To report the forecast position for 2025/26 at
Quarter 2 (September 2025), including explanation and analysis of
the drivers for the material budget variances, and to outline
current and planned recovery activity to reduce the forecast
overspend.
Additional documents:
Minutes:
The Chair took the report as read and opened the
item for debate. The key points of the discussion included:
Community Wellbeing –
Adult Social Care
- Members questioned
the drivers of increased Adult Social Care cost pressures. Officers
explained that pressures arose from: sustained hospital discharge
demand, post-COVID loss of independence, increased numbers of
self-funders falling below the financial threshold, longer
residential care stays and changes to continuing healthcare (CHC)
eligibility, with mitigations including strengthened front-door
controls, prevention, commissioning improvements and closer
monitoring of high-cost packages.
- The committee asked
how hospital activity had contributed to pressures. Officers
advised that consistently high hospital occupancy had generated
exceptional discharge demand during the year, with post-COVID
impacts resulting in higher support needs on discharge, creating
pressures that exceeded reasonable forecasting
assumptions.
- Members queried the
impact of increased longevity without improved health. Officers
confirmed that people were living longer with complex needs,
leading to longer care packages and extended residential stays,
significantly increasing cumulative costs.
- The committee
enquired about the financial impact of self-funders falling below
the threshold. Officers advised that rising living costs had
increased the number of people requiring Council support, creating
unplanned and difficult-to-predict budget pressures.
- Members sought
clarification on changes to continuing healthcare eligibility.
Officers confirmed that a local ICB policy change now limited
continuing healthcare funding to health elements only, transferring
greater financial responsibility to the Council.
- Members asked how the
Council was challenging continuing healthcare decisions. Officers
explained that continuing healthcare case management had been
centralised to improve consistency and challenge, with cases
progressing through formal dispute processes and escalation through
regional adult social care networks.
- Members asked about
political engagement with the Integrated Care Board. The Leader
confirmed that senior-level discussions were ongoing, with the
issue being raised through the Health and Wellbeing Board and
further input from council members was welcomed.
Managing Demand, Prevention,
and Commissioning
- The committee
enquired about what actions were being taken to manage demand at
first contact. Officers described enhanced front-door arrangements
focused on understanding need, preventing escalation into long-term
care and increasing use of alternative community-based
support.
- Members queried how
the Council was working with the voluntary and community sector.
Officers advised that alternative commissioning models were being
explored to support preventative and community-led provision and
reduce reliance on traditional care models.
- Members asked why
domiciliary care costs remained relatively stable. Officers advised
that framework-based purchasing with fixed rates had limited
inflationary impact, resulting in modest cost growth despite
increased activity.
- The committee queried
why residential care costs continued to rise. Officers confirmed
that longer lengths of stay and increased provider prices were
driving the pressure, making residential care the largest cost
driver.
- Members asked how
reliance on spot purchasing was being addressed. Officers confirmed
that work was underway to develop more strategic commissioning
arrangements, including block contracts and longer-term provider
relationships.
- A member asked about
the role of ‘CareCubed’.
Officers advised that the tool provided fair-cost benchmarking
based on local conditions and would support evidence-based
negotiations with providers. ...
view the full minutes text for item 147.
|
148. |
Work Programme
Minutes:
- The committee reviewed scrutiny work programmes
across all committees to identify emerging priorities, gaps and
opportunities for coordination. Members emphasised the importance
of aligning scrutiny activity to areas of highest risk, financial
pressure and strategic importance, while avoiding
duplication.
- Key pressures
identified included home-to-school transport, alternative
provision, and the forthcoming Ofsted inspection, which was
expected to significantly shape the Children and Young People
Scrutiny work programme. Alternative provision was highlighted as
an urgent priority requiring further scrutiny.
- The individual
committee Chair’s outlined major planned work, including
scrutiny of tourism and destination management, broadband
connectivity, and a structured review of the capital programme
during the “year of delivery”, with planned midpoint
and end-year scrutiny. Emerging areas included potential task and
finish work on flood risk, resilience and recovery, and continued
scrutiny of land use and land management, given their wide-ranging
environmental and infrastructure impacts.
- Progress updates were
provided on task and finish groups, including the establishment of
adult social care scrutiny, ongoing work on commercialisation, and
the Inequality task and finish group, which had narrowed its focus
to economic inequality and the lived experience of
residents.
- Members highlighted
the importance of effective community engagement, particularly in
relation to future housing growth and the Local Plan, and noted potential future work on
strengthening partnership working with the voluntary sector and
social value in procurement.
- The committee
discussed future scrutiny of health system pressures, including the
Integrated Care Board, and noted the potential need for a briefing
or scrutiny following the government funding settlement once its
implications were understood.
- The committee noted
the significant volume of scrutiny activity underway and agreed
that continued coordination between committees would be essential
to ensure focus on priority issues and effective use of scrutiny
capacity.
|
149. |
Date of the next meeting
Friday 23 January 2026, 10pm
Minutes:
Friday 23 January 2026, 10am
|