Lib Dem councillors object to “gagging” by County Council

Warwickshire county councillors who are also district/borough councillors are being prevented from taking part in a vital vote next week.

A special meeting of the Adult, Social Care & Health Overview & Scrutiny Committee is being held on the 15th July to consider a report on the re-structuring of housing-related support (Supporting People services), but so-called “twin-hatted” councillors have been told that they are barred from voting on the matter.

Cllr Kate Rolfe (Lib Dem, Stratford South) said: “As councillors we are there to represent our electorate, and to prevent us voting on such important issues is undemocratic”.

Lib Dem Group Leader Cllr Jerry Roodhouse (Rugby Eastlands & Hillmorton) has made a formal request for dispensation for twin-hatters to be applied in this case.

 

Link to Committee Report:

https://democratic.warwickshire.gov.uk/Cmis5/Document.ashx?czJKcaeAi5tUFL1DTL2UE4zNRBcoShgo=t7IQzF%2fWsLZoRLuMwI1%2fjCfkmWJbeDu2hp7mS5hFDLVxV0bmNUR2%2bA%3d%3d&rUzwRPf%2bZ3zd4E7Ikn8Lyw%3d%3d=pwRE6AGJFLDNlh225F5QMaQWCtPHwdhUfCZ%2fLUQzgA2uL5jNRG4jdQ%3d%3d&mCTIbCubSFfXsDGW9IXnlg%3d%3d=hFflUdN3100%3d&kCx1AnS9%2fpWZQ40DXFvdEw%3d%3d=hFflUdN3100%3d&uJovDxwdjMPoYv%2bAJvYtyA%3d%3d=ctNJFf55vVA%3d&FgPlIEJYlotS%2bYGoBi5olA%3d%3d=NHdURQburHA%3d&d9Qjj0ag1Pd993jsyOJqFvmyB7X0CSQK=ctNJFf55vVA%3d&WGewmoAfeNR9xqBux0r1Q8Za60lavYmz=ctNJFf55vVA%3d&WGewmoAfeNQ16B2MHuCpMRKZMwaG1PaO=ctNJFf55vVA%3d

Home to School Transport Consultation Starts

johnsons excelbus

Warwickshire County Council has started a major public consultation on the future of Home to School Transport services in the county, as it looks to save £3.7 million out of its current £15 million expenditure on these services. This is against the background of its overall £92 million savings target by 2018.

The link to the consultation is here:-

Home to School Transport Consultation – 2015

Warwickshire Liberal Democrats are keen that public participation in this consultation is as extensive as possible, and will be advertising it widely through local Focus newsletters and other communications media.

The response deadline for the consultation is midnight on 17th September 2015.

Liberal Democrats set the pace at Warwickshire County Council

Liberal Democrat councillors have been given lead roles in the delivery of two major new initiatives agreed by Warwickshire County Council at the end of a marathon twelve hour budget setting meeting on Thursday evening.

jerry

Cllr Jerry Roodhouse (Lib Dem, Rugby Eastlands & Hillmorton) will chair a new Children’s Wellbeing Board, with the Council committing funding of £3.8 million over three years to developing a much needed 0-5 Strategy for Children, focussing on the health and wellbeing of children. The objective is to give each and every child the best start in life, with the key measure being “school readiness” at age 5, where Warwickshire currently lags behind both regional and national averages, particularly for children from deprived backgrounds.

Cllr Whitehouse_05_13

Cllr John Whitehouse (Lib Dem, Kenilworth Abbey) will lead a cross-party member taskforce to improve traffic, road and cycling safety in the vicinity of Warwickshire’s schools, with committed funding of over £3 million to deliver both minor improvements and road safety engineering solutions such as advisory speed limits and school safety zones. The objective is to work with individual schools and local councillors to define and deliver the most appropriate set of safety improvements in each case, not a ‘one size fits all’ approach.

Other major investments approved by the Council include £4 million to accelerate the roll-out of energy-efficient LED street lighting across the county, and £4.17 million towards extending the coverage of superfast broadband to 98% of Warwickshire households by the end of 2018.

Previous plans to cut funding to the voluntary and community sector have been stopped. However, the need for the sector to change and adapt to new challenges has been recognised, and a £500,000 Transformation Fund will be set up to help existing front-line community-based providers to move to new and sustainable ways of delivering services.

Cllr Roodhouse, who leads the nine-strong Liberal Democrat group on the County Council, said:

“For the second year running Liberal Democrats have set the pace in the budget setting process, and had a major influence on the budget agreed by the Council, even though we are the third largest group. The difference this year is that John Whitehouse and I have been given direct responsibilities for making things happen in two major initiatives which are very dear to our hearts. We relish this new challenge.”

Giving Every Child A Chance

Lib Dems propose to invest £3.8 million to help secure the best possible start in life for Warwickshire’s children.

Warwickshire County Council is due to meet on Thursday 5th February to decide its budget and set the level of council tax for 2015/2016. No one political party has control in the County.

The centrepiece of the Liberal Democrats budget proposals is a major investment of £3.8 million over three years in a new 0-5 year olds health and well-being fund under the direction of the Warwickshire Health & Well-Being Board. This is to address clear evidence from national data that the county is performing well below regional and national averages in terms of key “school readiness” indicators for all children, and particularly for those from deprived backgrounds. By getting the right Early Years support in place, we can give every child the chance of the best possible start in life, unlocking opportunities and helping to reduce crime and improve mental health for all.

Other headlines in the Lib Dem budget proposals are:-

  • Significant new funding, worth £2.65 million over three years, for road safety improvements in the vicinities of schools, including a moratorium on the removal of any further school crossing patrol supervisors, and schemes such as advisory part-time 20 mph speed limits.
  • New investment of £4.0 million to accelerate the programme of street light replacement with energy efficient LED lighting, offering the opportunity to reduce energy costs and maximise the flexibility on the part-night lighting policy in keeping with community needs.
  • Sustaining, developing and helping the Voluntary and Community Sector to adapt to changing ways of working.
  • Giving greater access to our customers by using the latest technology.
  • Growing the Warwickshire tourist offer, and developing the skills base in this vital sector of the local economy.

Cllr Jerry Roodhouse, Lib Dem Group Leader, said:

“We have produced a budget that builds on our priorities and seeks to invest for the future. Our proposals are realistic and fit within a tight financial framework. We hope that the other political groups will sit down and discuss the proposals we have put forward.”

Safeguarding Warwickshire children

Warwickshire Liberal Democrats are continuing to seek assurances that Children’s Safeguarding is working effectively in the County.

 

This comes in light of the recent reports from Rotherham and elsewhere, and today’s report published by Ofsted entitled “The sexual exploitation of children: it couldn’t happen here, could it?”

 

Jerry Roodhouse Leader of the Liberal Democrat Group on Warwickshire County Council said: “We need clear assurances from the Warwickshire Safeguarding Board and senior officers, that we in Warwickshire are doing all we can to ensure we have the correct safeguarding systems in place. It is the duty of elected members to ensure that this is the case.”

 

The Lib Dem group put forward a motion on Child Sexual Exploitation at the last Full Council meeting on 28th October, which received the unanimous support of all elected members. Subsequently the Children & Young People Overview & Scrutiny Committee has agreed to set up a special meeting to scrutinise in detail the Annual Report of the Safeguarding Board. It will also establish a small group of councillors to work with officers on the implementation of new multi-agency working group arrangements early in 2015.

 

Liberal Democrat councillors will continue to play a full and active role in ensuring that elected members get the assurances they need, that everything possible is being done to ensure that children are safe in Warwickshire.

 

The Liberal Democrat motion approved by Full Council on 28th October was as follows: “This Council notes the tragic and systemic failures exposed by Professor Alexis Jay’s Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Exploitation in Rotherham (1997- 2013),that whilst the report focusses only on the failures of the agencies in Rotherham, previous cases show that these problems are not exclusive to one area, that Professor Jay identified a lack of scrutiny and of political leadership on the issue as key factors in the circumstances that led to so many children being exploited in Rotherham. The Council therefore: 1) resolves to ensure that Warwickshire’s own local safeguarding board and  members have all the means necessary to monitor and challenge the practices within the council. 2) calls on all other local agencies working with vulnerable children to ensure similar co-operation with the political and professional scrutiny necessary to guarantee Warwickshire’s protection of every one of its children from the experiences detailed in Professor Jay’s report.

Will the Warwickshire Police record on rape allegations stand scrutiny?

Just six per cent of all rape allegations reported to Warwickshire Police result in conviction or caution. This places Warwickshire well below the national average of 18 per cent.

nicola davies

Lib Dem councillor Nicola Davies (Leamington North), a member of the Warwickshire Police and Crime Panel, said:

“I was comparing the figures with neighbouring authorities and these stuck out like a sore thumb.

“They are shocking. The job of the police and crime panel is to look at the priorities of the police and crime commissioner.

“This needs to be a priority and needs to be on the PCC’s radar.”

In response Ron Ball, Warwickshire Police and Crime Commissioner, will present a detailed report to the next meeting of the Panel on 21st November. Importantly the Report will explore factors behind the figures and outline how officers are trained to deal with rape incidents and what support is provided to victims as they progress towards prosecution.

Sam Dimmer, Crime Correspondent at the Coventry Telegraph, has reported on the issue and spoken with a range of organisations working with victims of rape and sexual assault who share similar concerns:

 

Tory Cabinet rejects greater priority for siblings at the same school

siblings going to school 2

At today’s meeting of the County Council’s all-Conservative Cabinet, its members voted unanimously to reject the recommendations of an all-party working group which had been reviewing school admission criteria for primary age children.

The working group had been led by Cllr Clive Rickhards (Liberal Democrat, Studley), with membership from the three main political groups on the Council plus a senior member of the Warwickshire Governors Association. It had reviewed in detail a proposal for changing admission criteria in Warwick, which had been the subject of public consultation earlier in the year, and had concluded that the proposed “Super Priority Area” approach was the wrong way to address the challenge of giving families a greater chance of their primary-age children being able to attend the same school.

Instead, the working group had made the unanimous recommendation that Warwickshire should move to giving siblings greater priority within admissions criteria while retaining existing priority areas for individual schools, and had recommended that the new approach be piloted in the Warwick & Leamington area for an initial two years.

Cllr John Whitehouse (Liberal Democrat, Kenilworth Abbey), a member of the working group and Lib Dem spokesperson for Education & Learning, said after the Cabinet meeting:

“For over a year the Conservatives have been dangling the prospect of changed admissions criteria to parents badly affected by the current rules, and groups like Siblings at the Same School which have done heroic work in bringing the issues involved to the attention of elected members. Now, today it has come to the crunch, and despite a set of unanimous recommendations from an all-party working group they have decided to do nothing. Warwickshire parents will continue to face the possibility that their primary age children cannot attend the same school, with all the problems that can bring for family life and the well-documented adverse impacts on the children themselves.

“A decision by Labour members of the Children’s scrutiny committee, to abstain en-bloc on the working party recommendations, provided the Conservatives additional cover to justify their “no change” decision today. Both major parties have decided to sit on their hands and leave parents to cope with the consequences as best as they can. Both Conservatives and Labour have let down Warwickshire parents very badly.”

Bus fares in Warwickshire to be scrutinised

The Lib Dem Group was successful at today’s meeting of Warwickshire County Council in amending a motion on Bus Fares originally put forward by Green councillors. The amendment will refer the subject to the Communities Overview & Scrutiny Committee for detailed review. While sympathetic to some of the objectives of the Green motion, Liberal Democrat members believed there were wider issues to address, which were best dealt with in committee rather than asking Full Council to make a snap judgement.

Curiously, the whole of the Conservative Group abstained on the amended motion, despite a number of Tory members making it clear in the debate that they thought nothing could be done about bus fares, and that it was all down to way a “free market” operates. However, the amended motion was passed with the unanimous support of all other members.

We look forward to a thorough Scrutiny review of this important subject later in the year.

Tory-only Cabinet To Remain

The Lib Dem motion at today’s Annual Meeting of Warwickshire County Council, to reduce the size of the Cabinet and make it balanced politically, gained the support of the Green and Independent Groups but was defeated by the Conservatives. The Labour Group abstained.

Voting figures were:  FOR 14, AGAINST 25, ABSTAIN 19.

Voters should be quite clear that it is Labour that is allowing the Conservatives to continue to run Warwickshire as a minority administration. Their reasons for doing so remain unclear, because none of their members spoke in the debate on the motion. Perhaps the fact that Labour members now chair the Council together with all its major committees might have something to do with it?

Lib Dems call for streamlined, balanced Cabinet

At tomorrow’s annual meeting of Warwickshire County Council, the Liberal Democrat group will be tabling the following resolution:-

“This Council believes that the current size of Cabinet should be reduced in line with the savings being made across all council services, and that it being constituted of members from a single political group does not serve the best interests of Warwickshire residents.

The Council calls on the Leader to review whether it is appropriate to establish a Cabinet consisting of seven members which reflects the political make-up of the County Council in accordance with the proportionality rules, and to report back at the next meeting of the Full County Council.”

Cllr Jerry Roodhouse, Lib Dem Group Leader, said:-

“We have consistently called for a streamlined County Council Cabinet structure over recent years, most recently in the budget debate in February, and we do so again.

“A Cabinet of nine members is too large when we have reduced the number of senior directors from nine to five in recent years, and are seeking to further rationalise management structures. Elected members should lead from the front on this.

“We believe that a politically-balanced Cabinet would command greater support from elected members, and from the electorate in general, to help push through the Council’s very difficult agenda of change over the next four years (the One Organisational Plan).”