Venue: Hybrid meeting - Zoom - County Hall. View directions
Contact: Stephen Boyd 01597 826374
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Apologies To receive apologies for absence. Additional documents: |
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To authorise the Chair to sign the minutes of the last meeting held on 22 July 2022 as a correct record. Additional documents: Minutes: The Chair was authorised to sign the minutes of the last meeting held on 22 July 2022 as a correct record. |
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Declarations of Interest To receive any declarations of interest from Members relating to items to be considered on the agenda. Additional documents: Minutes: There were no declarations of interest reported. |
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Chair's Announcements To receive any announcements from the Chair of Council. Additional documents: Minutes: The Chair thanked his Vice-Chair and Assistant Vice-Chair for taking part in proclamation ceremonies for His Majesty King Charles III and the officers who had made the arrangements.
He noted the recent deaths of three former members of the Council, Mick Bates, Ann Morgan and Ivy Lewis and expressed his condolences to their families. |
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Leader's Announcements To receive any announcements from the Leader. Additional documents: Minutes: The Leader noted the unprecedented budget situation facing the Council and he apologised to new Councillors for the heavy responsibility they would face in setting the budget. He warned that there would be difficult decisions to be taken on services. Despite this the Cabinet continued to make investments in services and had approved proposals earlier in the week for a new all-age school building for Ysgol Bro Hyddgen, Machynlleth.
He advised that the mileage rate for staff would be increased to 50p per mile to reflect increased fuel costs. This would not apply to Councillors. |
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Chief Executive's Briefing To receive a briefing from the Chief Executive. Additional documents: Minutes: The Chief Executive advised that since September all of the primary schools, three secondary schools, the special schools and all through schools had started rolling out the new curriculum for Wales. They were being supported by officers from the Mid Wales Education Partnership which had been jointly set up with Ceredigion following the end of Erw. Estyn inspections had resumed with four early years settings, two primary schools and one secondary school being inspected.
The Chief Executive updated Members on changes at Head of Service level. Sharon Powell was interim Head of Children’s Services, Rachel Evans interim Head of Commissioning, Andy Thompson interim Head of Housing, Jenny Ashton interim Head of Community Services and Catherine James interim Head of Transformation and Democratic Services. All of these arrangements would be reviewed in the New Year before permanent arrangements were put in place.
Finally, she congratulated Carrie James, a member of the Wales women’s football team and a former pupil of Ysgol Dafydd Llwyd. |
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Public Questions Additional documents: |
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Question to the Cabinet Member for Finance and Transformation from Patrick Edwards PDF 67 KB Is the council going to refund council tax to council tax payers for the greatly diminished services it provided during the Covid-19 pandemic, especially as the Government paid 80% of many council workers' wages through the furlough scheme? Additional documents: Minutes: Question to the Cabinet Member for Finance and Transformation from Patrick Edwards.
Is the council going to refund council tax to council tax payers for the greatly diminished services it provided during the Covid-19 pandemic, especially as the Government paid 80% of many council workers' wages through the furlough scheme?
Response The amount of Council Tax charged for a financial year is calculated in accordance with the Local Government Finance Act 1992. The annual charge is a contribution to the overall running costs of the Council to delivery both its statutory and non-statutory services. The charge is not linked specifically to the services received or used by an individual taxpayer.
The Council faced significant pressure through the covid period and although some services ceased or were limited for a time, most continued to be delivered, many had to adapt to different ways of working in order to keep employees and service users safe. Schools delivered hubs to support the children of key workers, and delivered online teaching for pupils, Care staff continued to deliver care services to residents in need, social workers continued to support older people and children and Waste collection services were maintained.
Where services did stop, staff were redeployed to undertake other duties such things as welfare calls to our vulnerable residents, track and trace support, enforcement work and other areas where pressure on the council’s services increased.
All Councils in Wales were required to assist Welsh Government taking on additional responsibilities through Covid to support the public and businesses. We distributed £114m of business grants making 17,961 payments and rate relief schemes, 7,952 carers payments were issued, self-isolation and free school meal payments were administered, alongside several other in schemes.
Services like Waste collection, Homelessness and Social Care had to address front line staff absences through Covid as well as respond to significantly increased demands. For many months the council operated at “business critical” level because the demands to support the public and the Welsh Governments response were so great.
The pandemic impacted significantly on the Councils finances, additional costs and loss of income was set to push the council into a significant deficit even after fully utilising the funding we receive annually from Welsh government and collect through Council Tax. We did draw support from the government furlough scheme for the limited number of staff we were unable to redeploy, but we also drew down £29.743 million from the Welsh Government Covid hardship fund which enabled us to balance the budget. There was no supplementary question.
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Question to the Cabinet Member for a Learning Powys from Catherine Evans PDF 81 KB Schoolchildren have been disproportionately affected by COVID lockdowns and variable provision by schools. Additional PD days to facilitate planning for the new curriculum have further impacted learners.
Will PCC be offering learners their full entitlement to 190 school days per year from now on?
Additional documents: Minutes: Schoolchildren have been disproportionately affected by COVID lockdowns and variable provision by schools. Additional PD days to facilitate planning for the new curriculum have further impacted learners. Will PCC be offering learners their full entitlement to 190 school days per year from now on?
Response Schools are required to be open to pupils for 190 days in an academic year or 380 sessions by the Education (School Day and School Year) (Wales) (Amendment) Regulations 2006. All schools in Wales operate
according to the School Teachers’ Pay and
Conditions (Wales) Document (STPCD(Wales)) which states
that a classroom teacher can be directed by the headteacher to work
for up to a maximum of 1,265 hours over 195 days of the
year.
Additional national INSET days 2022 to 2025 | GOV.WALES) The Welsh Government are currently consulting on: · whether there should be an additional national professional learning INSET day during the 2022 to 2023, 2023 to 2024 and 2024 to 2025 academic years to support the profession with the roll-out of Curriculum for Wales, Additional Learning Needs (ALN) reform and equity in education · whether schools should be given flexibility on the timing of the additional INSET day
Additional national INSET days 2022 to 2025 (smartsurvey.co.uk)
There was no supplementary question.
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Question to the Cabinet Member for Finance and Transformation from Peter Hindley PDF 81 KB Do Powys CC plan to use its discretionary powers to remove the additional council tax liability, that will apply to many farm holiday cottage properties as a result of recent legislation? BACKGROUND: Recent Legislation: Purpose designed Farm Holiday Cottages, typically conversions of redundant farm buildings, have been included under the Welsh Governments recent legislation aimed at combatting second homes. You may be shocked to learn that Welsh Government has the ability to include businesses that by definition are not second homes and not housing. Nonetheless the legislation has now passed. Many of these long-standing and successful family businesses will have their livelihoods destroyed and be forced to re-purpose their properties to alternative commercial uses as a result of this legislation. Impact on Housing: In line with the Local Development Plan these properties are prevented by planning conditions from being used as permanent accommodation. As such, these properties actively protect pressures on local housing by accommodating visitors in non-domestic property. When these properties are re-deployed away from holiday letting all those visitor nights will be displaced to local housing, placing greater demands on house prices and availability of rented accommodation. No Choice: To illustrate the impact of the legislation on a typical business with 5 Farm-Cottage Holiday lets: The business will face 5 new Council Tax bills, in addition to the owner’s current council tax bill on their domestic-use element of the site. This not only places an additional operating cost on the business, impacting viability and the ability to compete, it also places blight on the property. Their home would have a total of 6 council tax bills making it unsaleable or significantly devaluing their property. Clearly owners will need to avoid that outcome. Hence many of these ‘kind to local housing’ holiday lets will be lost. Creating no additional domestic housing and transferring visitor demand to place more pressures on local housing. Removal of the Council Tax Liability: Over 90% of all self-catering properties on the non-domestic rating list in Wales have benefitted from 100% small business rate relief for many years. Therefore removal of council tax liability on farm holiday cottages is not unreasonable. If required, this can be achieved in a revenue neutral manner by adjustments to Premium Council Tax policy. Influencing Make-up of Holiday Accommodation in Powys: Please consider Powys CC’s ability to influence the future make up of holiday accommodation in the county. After the huge growth in AirBnB style accommodation over recent years the new legislation is likely to cause, perhaps a 30% reduction in self-catering accommodation (that is the aim after all). Powys CC has the ability to influence whether Farm Holiday Cottage accommodation is part of the 30% reduction or whether it is saved. Common sense would suggest these types of property should be advantaged by legislation, due to their community benefit, rather than impacted. If you would like a better understanding of why many of these businesses will not meet the new criteria, information is available here: https://www.responsiblecottages.co.uk/protect-welsh-farm-cottages-white-paper Note a similar ... view the full agenda text for item 7.3 Additional documents: Minutes: Do Powys CC plan to use its discretionary powers to remove the additional council tax liability, that will apply to many farm holiday cottage properties as a result of recent legislation? BACKGROUND: Recent Legislation: Purpose designed Farm Holiday Cottages, typically conversions of redundant farm buildings, have been included under the Welsh Governments recent legislation aimed at combatting second homes. You may be shocked to learn that Welsh Government has the ability to include businesses that by definition are not second homes and not housing. Nonetheless the legislation has now passed. Many of these long-standing and successful family businesses will have their livelihoods destroyed and be forced to re-purpose their properties to alternative commercial uses as a result of this legislation. Impact on Housing: In line with the Local Development Plan these properties are prevented by planning conditions from being used as permanent accommodation. As such, these properties actively protect pressures on local housing by accommodating visitors in non-domestic property. When these properties are re-deployed away from holiday letting all those visitor nights will be displaced to local housing, placing greater demands on house prices and availability of rented accommodation. No Choice: To illustrate the impact of the legislation on a typical business with 5 Farm-Cottage Holiday lets: The business will face 5 new Council Tax bills, in addition to the owner’s current council tax bill on their domestic-use element of the site. This not only places an additional operating cost on the business, impacting viability and the ability to compete, it also places blight on the property. Their home would have a total of 6 council tax bills making it unsaleable or significantly devaluing their property. Clearly owners will need to avoid that outcome. Hence many of these ‘kind to local housing’ holiday lets will be lost. Creating no additional domestic housing and transferring visitor demand to place more pressures on local housing. Removal of the Council Tax Liability: Over 90% of all self-catering properties on the non-domestic rating list in Wales have benefitted from 100% small business rate relief for many years. Therefore removal of council tax liability on farm holiday cottages is not unreasonable. If required, this can be achieved in a revenue neutral manner by adjustments to Premium Council Tax policy. Influencing Make-up of Holiday Accommodation in Powys: Please consider Powys CC’s ability to influence the future make up of holiday accommodation in the county. After the huge growth in AirBnB style accommodation over recent years the new legislation is likely to cause, perhaps a 30% reduction in self-catering accommodation (that is the aim after all). Powys CC has the ability to influence whether Farm Holiday Cottage accommodation is part of the 30% reduction or whether it is saved. Common sense would suggest these types of property should be advantaged by legislation, due to their community benefit, rather than impacted. If you would like a better understanding of why many of these businesses will not meet the new criteria, information is available here: https://www.responsiblecottages.co.uk/protect-welsh-farm-cottages-white-paper Note a similar ... view the full minutes text for item 7.3 |
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Director of Social Services Annual Report PDF 3 MB To receive and consider the Director of Social Services Annual Report. Additional documents: Minutes: Council received the annual report of the Director of Social Services for 2021/22. The report covered a period when the impact of Covid was being felt and the service was in business-critical mode. There had been a sustained increase in demand for services at a time when there were pressures on staff due to sickness absence and challenges in recruiting and retaining staff. The Chief Executive and Cabinet Members thanked staff and external providers who had delivered the service through this challenging period. Since the report had been drafted Care Inspectorate Wales had carried out a monitoring visit which had further endorsed the work of the service.
It was moved by County Councillor S McNicholas and seconded by County Councillor M Williams and unanimously
RESOLVED to receive the report. |
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Constitution - Section 4 - Speaking on Motions PDF 85 KB To consider the report of the Head of Legal and Monitoring Officer. Additional documents: Minutes: Council considered the recommendations of the Democratic Services Committee on speaking times on motions at Council meetings. For some time the Council had trialled five minutes for proposers and everyone else two minutes and the Democratic Services Committee had recommended that this become a permanent change.
Concern was expressed that two minutes was not long enough to allow for debate and it was proposed that the Democratic Services Committee should look at this again. The Chair of the Committee accepted the point and said that he would be happy for the Committee to look at this again. It was proposed by County Councillor Aled Davies and seconded by County Councillor Elwyn Vaughan and unanimously
RESOLVED to refer this back to the Democratic Services Committee for further consideration. |
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Broadcasting Council Meetings PDF 76 KB To consider the report of the Head of Legal and Monitoring Officer. Additional documents: Minutes: Council considered the recommendation of the Democratic Services Committee for a return to live broadcasting of all Council meetings within 60 days of the Council meeting on 13th October 2022. Council was advised that there was a mechanism to do this within budget. The Head of Democratic Services and IT staff were thanked for their work in finding a solution. It was moved by County Councillor Jonathan Wilkinson and seconded by County Councillor Pete Roberts and unanimously
RESOLVED that officers continue to test and implement the use of Zoom webinars / events to live broadcast planning, scrutiny, employment, democratic services and all any other meetings which previously were accessible within 60 days of the from the date of this resolution.
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Notice of Motion - Air Ambulance The air ambulance has provided an essential and valuable service to Mid Wales for a number of years.
The proposed transfer of the base from Welshpool is therefore a retrograde step and one of great concern to our residents.
It is imperative that an equally efficient service that takes into consideration the rurality of the area, the difficulty of getting an ordinary ambulance and fewer health options is kept
We therefore call on the air ambulance base to be kept at Welshpool and to look into the option of extending the hours of service.
Proposed by County Councillor Elwyn Vaughan Seconded by County Councillor Gary Mitchell.
Finance Comment
There will not be any financial consequence from the proposed motion as it only requires correspondence with Wales Air Ambulance. There are no further actions nor costs expected. Additional documents: Minutes: Council debated the following motion proposed by County Councillor Elwyn Vaughan and seconded by County Councillor Gary Mitchell
“The air ambulance has provided an essential and valuable service to Mid Wales for a number of years.
The proposed transfer of the base from Welshpool is therefore a retrograde step and one of great concern to our residents.
It is imperative that an equally efficient service that takes into consideration the rurality of the area, the difficulty of getting an ordinary ambulance and fewer health options is kept
We therefore call on the air ambulance base to be kept at Welshpool and to look into the option of extending the hours of service.”
Members expressed their concern at the potential loss of this important service from Welshpool leading to delays in response times. Members were also concerned that the data used had not been made publicly available. By 41 votes to 0 with 17 abstentions it was
RESOLVED to call on the air ambulance base to be kept at Welshpool and to look into the option of extending the hours of service.
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Notice of Motion - School Transport In recent months there have been a number of appeals made to the School Transport Team with regard to access to free home to school transport. Residents have been in touch with their County Councillors and Senedd representatives asking for support. The appeals have most frequently arisen from changes to catchment allocations, historical precedents and reduced flexibility but include:
· Younger siblings only provided free transport to a school which is different to the one their older sibling attends because the catchments have been changed.
The effect of this has been to create unnecessary stress for pupils and their parents and will in some cases, where parents have the time and financial resource, result in parents following the bus into school, unnecessarily increasing carbon footprints.
The Council calls on the School Transport and Education Services to ensure that the current review of the Home to School Transport Policy not only delivers greater clarity for pupils/student’s entitlement to free transport but also supports greater parental choice of school, where this can be done without increasing the total school transport budget.
Proposed by County Councillor Lucy Roberts Seconded by County Councillor Adrian Jones
Finance Comment The Service has confirmed, as part of the review of the home to school transport policy, it will provide clarity for parents to allow them to make an informed choice about the school in which the Council will provide transport for from the learners normal place of residence.
Additional documents: Minutes:
“In recent months there have been a number of appeals made to the School Transport Team with regard to access to free home to school transport. Residents have been in touch with their County Councillors and Senedd representatives asking for support. The appeals have most frequently arisen from changes to catchment allocations, historical precedents and reduced flexibility but include:
· Younger siblings only provided free transport to a school which is different to the one their older sibling attends because the catchments have been changed.
The effect of this has been to create unnecessary stress for pupils and their parents and will in some cases, where parents have the time and financial resource, result in parents following the bus into school, unnecessarily increasing carbon footprints.
The Council calls on the School Transport and Education Services to ensure that the current review of the Home to School Transport Policy not only delivers greater clarity for pupils/student’s entitlement to free transport but also supports greater parental choice of school, where this can be done without increasing the total school transport budget.”
In moving the motion Councillor Roberts called for the review of the Home to School Transport Policy to provide greater fairness and consistency. She noted that the current online survey only applied to those eligible for transport. There was a call to look at education transport rather than school transport so that apprentices could also benefit. It was also suggested that service buses should be utilised. The Cabinet Member for a Learning Powys advised that a working group would be looking at school catchments, transport and any anomalies.
By 59 votes to 0 it was
RESOLVED to call on the School Transport and Education Services to ensure that the current review of the Home to School Transport Policy not only delivers greater clarity for pupils/student’s entitlement to free transport but also supports greater parental choice of school, where this can be done without increasing the total school transport budget.
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Notice of Motion - Drainage and Flooding Having seen increased adverse weather and flooding in recent years, it is apparent that the current conditions of our drains and gullies are not able to cope when we have increased and or severe rainfall. This is exacerbated by the lack of routine drain clearance due to the limited resources in Powys. Feedback from our residents, other councillors and community councils indicates that people feel that our other road maintenance problems are made worse by the increased amount of water running down the roads which should be going into the drains and gullies.
Earlier this year we saw severe flooding across Powys. Whilst flood risk cannot be eliminated when such extreme rainfall occurs, and flooding was also caused by rivers overflowing, in some areas properties were flooded potentially due to the lack of regular drain clearance. These are homes which are not adjacent to rivers or streams but flooded from road surface water which had no where else to go.
The Powys Conservative Group believe that there needs to be an annual routine drains maintenance schedule for county roads. However, we appreciate that this needs to be supported with sufficient resources. That is why we have already urged Powys Council to make use of the UK Government Shared Prosperity Levelling up Funds to bid for funding for at least two more drain jetters in Powys. Whilst that SPF process is still underway, there needs to be urgent action put in place, before the Winter sets in, in order to identify and clear those drains and gullies which are in the most high risk places that are likely to cause localised flooding of properties.
This Council calls on the Powys Council administration to:
1. Direct managers of the highways teams, at the earliest opportunity before Winter months, to work with Local Members to identify drains and gullies which need to be cleared in order to help prevent localised flooding. 2. Direct resources accordingly to ensure that those drains identified are cleared and unblocked urgently before the Winter months.
Proposed by County Councillor Amanda Jenner Seconded by County Councillor Jonathan Wilkinson
Financial/Service Assessment 1. Depot meetings are being scheduled between October and December 2022 to meet with all members to discuss all highway matters including drain and gully emptying. The Council has 4 machines throughout the County to support county and trunk roads. We will take on board members concerns as part of this engagement and ensure the 4 machines are prioritised accordingly to ensure the critical gullies are cleared. This will still leave other gullies that have historically be cleaned when the service was operating with 8 Gully machines.
2. Whilst every effort will be made to cover the critical gullies throughout the County based on the 4 machines, in order to cover all gullies we would need to revert back to 8 machines across the County, which would be an additional revenue cost of £400k per year.
Additional documents: Minutes:
Having seen increased adverse weather and flooding in recent years, it is apparent that the current conditions of our drains and gullies are not able to cope when we have increased and or severe rainfall. This is exacerbated by the lack of routine drain clearance due to the limited resources in Powys. Feedback from our residents, other councillors and community councils indicates that people feel that our other road maintenance problems are made worse by the increased amount of water running down the roads which should be going into the drains and gullies.
Earlier this year we saw severe flooding across Powys. Whilst flood risk cannot be eliminated when such extreme rainfall occurs, and flooding was also caused by rivers overflowing, in some areas properties were flooded potentially due to the lack of regular drain clearance. These are homes which are not adjacent to rivers or streams but flooded from road surface water which had no where else to go.
The Powys Conservative Group believe that there needs to be an annual routine drains maintenance schedule for county roads. However, we appreciate that this needs to be supported with sufficient resources. That is why we have already urged Powys Council to make use of the UK Government Shared Prosperity Levelling up Funds to bid for funding for at least two more drain jetters in Powys. Whilst that SPF process is still underway, there needs to be urgent action put in place, before the Winter sets in, in order to identify and clear those drains and gullies which are in the most high risk places that are likely to cause localised flooding of properties.
This Council calls on the Powys Council administration to:
1. Direct managers of the highways teams, at the earliest opportunity before Winter months, to work with Local Members to identify drains and gullies which need to be cleared in order to help prevent localised flooding. 2. Direct resources accordingly to ensure that those drains identified are cleared and unblocked urgently before the Winter months.
Councillor Jenner explained that she was not looking for additional money for new machines, but for officers to take account of members concerns and local knowledge. She asked for future depot meetings to take place well before the late autumn. The Cabinet Member for a Greener Powys indicated that she was fully supportive of the motion and that the service would look to work with members.
By 58 votes to 0 it was
RESOLVED to call on the Powys Council administration to:
1. Direct managers of the highways teams, at the earliest opportunity before Winter months, to work with Local Members to identify drains and gullies which need to be cleared in order to help prevent localised flooding. 2. Direct resources accordingly to ensure that those drains identified are cleared and unblocked urgently before the Winter months.
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Notice of Motion - Nature Emergency Preamble For the purposes of this motion ‘nature’ shall mean all living organisms and the ecological complexes (including non-living elements (such as air, water, soil) and processes) of which they are part. It includes diversity within species, between species and of ecosystems; the resilience of ecosystems; the services they provide to society and the way in which humans interact with nature.
Professor Sir Partha Dasgupta’s review into The Economics of Biodiversity, commissioned by Her Majesty’s Treasury in 2019 and updated just last year, highlighted that humanity does not exist in isolation from nature but sits within it. Nature is an asset on which all aspects of our society depend and with biodiversity declining faster than at any time in human history, we are undermining the productivity, resilience and adaptability that nature lends our society. In a county like Powys our nature loss is undermining the productivity, resilience and adaptability of our agricultural and forestry sectors alongside the inter-dependent tourism industry. Put simply, Powys depends on nature. We are in the middle of a nature crisis. Almost half of all UK wildlife is in long term decline and 15% of species are at risk of extinction. The climate emergency is only hastening this destruction of the natural environment, damaging habitats and disrupting ecosystems. Yet it is these very habitats that have the potential to lock up carbon and fight back against rising global temperatures. It is essential that we not only protect these spaces but let them thrive – for the benefit of people, planet and nature. As we recover from the COVID-19 crisis, the need for nature-rich green spaces where we live and work is clearer than ever and will help health, education and the economy build back stronger.
We recognise that action must be taken now to remedy this and to put nature into recovery at a local level, in support of regional, national and international work to do the same.
Section 6 under Part 1 of the Environment (Wales) Act introduced an enhanced duty (the S6 duty) for public authorities. The S6 duty requires that public authorities must seek to maintain and enhance biodiversity so far as consistent with the proper exercise of their functions and in so doing promote the resilience of ecosystems.
Powys County Council has already done much including appointing a Biodiversity Officer under the Local Places for Nature funding from Welsh Government and whose principal duty is to distribute grants in support of nature to groups in Powys. Within its own services the Council is undertaking projects such as managing roadside verges for nature by changing their management regimes to cut and collect.
The Biodiversity Officer post – externally funded – lends some support to the current Local Nature Partnership in Powys, a forum that brings together a number of organisations interested in nature recovery and has recently published a Nature Recovery Action Plan for Powys. The Council has already submitted a proposal to the Shared Prosperity Fund to seek external funding for ... view the full agenda text for item 14. Additional documents: Minutes: Council debated the following motion proposed by County Councillor Adam Kennerley and seconded by County Councillor Angela Davies:
Preamble For the purposes of this motion ‘nature’ shall mean all living organisms and the ecological complexes (including non-living elements (such as air, water, soil) and processes) of which they are part. It includes diversity within species, between species and of ecosystems; the resilience of ecosystems; the services they provide to society and the way in which humans interact with nature. Professor Sir Partha Dasgupta’s review into The Economics of Biodiversity, commissioned by Her Majesty’s Treasury in 2019 and updated just last year, highlighted that humanity does not exist in isolation from nature but sits within it. Nature is an asset on which all aspects of our society depend and with biodiversity declining faster than at any time in human history, we are undermining the productivity, resilience and adaptability that nature lends our society. In a county like Powys our nature loss is undermining the productivity, resilience and adaptability of our agricultural and forestry sectors alongside the inter-dependent tourism industry. Put simply, Powys depends on nature.
We are in the middle of a nature crisis. Almost half of all UK wildlife is in long term decline and 15% of species are at risk of extinction. The climate emergency is only hastening this destruction of the natural environment, damaging habitats and disrupting ecosystems. Yet it is these very habitats that have the potential to lock up carbon and fight back against rising global temperatures. It is essential that we not only protect these spaces but let them thrive – for the benefit of people, planet and nature. As we recover from the COVID-19 crisis, the need for nature-rich green spaces where we live and work is clearer than ever and will help health, education and the economy build back stronger.
We recognise that action must be taken now to remedy this and to put nature into recovery at a local level, in support of regional, national and international work to do the same. Section 6 under Part 1 of the Environment (Wales) Act introduced an enhanced duty (the S6 duty) for public authorities. The S6 duty requires that public authorities must seek to maintain and enhance biodiversity so far as consistent with the proper exercise of their functions and in so doing promote the resilience of ecosystems.
Powys County Council has already done much including appointing a Biodiversity Officer under the Local Places for Nature funding from Welsh Government and whose principal duty is to distribute grants in support of nature to groups in Powys. Within its own services the Council is undertaking projects such as managing roadside verges for nature by changing their management regimes to cut and collect.
The Biodiversity Officer post – externally funded – lends some support to the current Local Nature Partnership in Powys, a forum that brings together a number of organisations interested in nature recovery and has recently published a Nature Recovery Action Plan for ... view the full minutes text for item 14. |
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Questions in Accordance with the Constitution Additional documents: |
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Question to the Cabinet Member for a Learning Powys from County Councillor Elwyn Vaughan PDF 57 KB How many Powys pupils from outside the Swansea valley area, travel to Ysgol Ystalyfera for their education?
Additional documents: Minutes: How many Powys pupils from outside the Swansea valley area, travel to Ysgol Ystalyfera for their education?
Response
We transport 44 learners from outside the Swansea valley area who travel to Ysgol Ystalyfera.
There was no supplementary question.
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Question to the Cabinet Member for a Connected Powys from County Councillor Elwyn Vaughan PDF 66 KB In view of the impending energy crisis and the increased costs for all, can I draw your attention to the German proposals –
· Public buildings heated to max. 19º C · No heating in communal spaces of public buildings (e.g. corridors) · Monuments and public buildings won’t be illuminated. · Shop doors can’t be kept permanently open · No lighting in shop windows or on billboards from 10 pm · Private pools can’t be heated with energy from the grid.
Can we as an authority implement the relevant elements of these proposals thus not only cutting down on energy waste but also making a positive environmental contribution?
Additional documents: Minutes: In view of the impending energy crisis and the increased costs for all, can I draw your attention to the German proposals – · Public buildings heated to max. 19º C · No heating in communal spaces of public buildings (e.g. corridors) · Monuments and public buildings won’t be illuminated. · Shop doors can’t be kept permanently open · No lighting in shop windows or on billboards from 10 pm · Private pools can’t be heated with energy from the grid.
Can we as an authority implement the relevant elements of these proposals thus not only cutting down on energy waste but also making a positive environmental contribution?
Response The Corporate Property team are currently reviewing how it can seek to reduce its energy usage across all of our estate. It is aiming to reduce the heating schedules for buildings and reducing the temperature set points. Additionally, the team is reviewing reducing the operational use of office accommodation in order to minimise energy usage.
There was no supplementary question.
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