►
Description
No description was provided for this meeting.
If this is YOUR meeting, an easy way to fix this is to add a description to your video, wherever mtngs.io found it (probably YouTube).
A
Which
takes
care
of
carvely
and
fastly
farley,
workley
and
pudsey
today
we're
going
to
be
live
streamed
on
youtube,
so
hope.
There's
lots
of
people
watching
welcome
to
you
all
who
are
watching
start
to
introduce
offices
and
members,
starting
from
my
left
mike.
A
K
Chair
so
under
agenda
item
one,
there
are
no
appeals
against
the
refusal
of
inspection
of
documents
under
agenda
item
two.
There
are
no
items
which
require
the
exclusion
of
the
press
or
the
public
agenda
item
three.
There
are
no
late
items
of
business
agenda.
Item
four
could
ask
members
to
declare
any
interests
I'll
take
silence
as
there
are
none
under
gender
item
five.
There
are
no
apologies
under
gender
item
six.
We
do
have
a
gentleman
here
who
wishes
to
speak
that
permissible
check.
A
O
I
have
lived
on
the
sunny
banks
for
55
years
and
have
experienced
personally
mix-ups
by
departments
to
do
with
health
and
other
issues
and
also
aware
of
the
same
affecting
other
residents,
and
this
has
gone
on
for
a
lot
of
years.
O
There
is
a
leeds
street
location
and
the
sunny
banks,
avenue
grove
and
lane
have
all
got
different
postcode
numbers
in
other
parts
of
leeds,
instead
of
being
anywhere
where
we
are,
the
one
is
lase8,
another
leads
10
and
another
one
leads
12
and
that's
just
the
sunny
banks.
O
A
few
years
ago,
the
lease
council
moved
the
leads
boundary
from
the
sign
from
gain
lane
and
put
it
on
the
outside
of
a
factory,
but
it
put
the
sunny
bank
estate
on
the
bradford
side
of
the
boundary
sign,
and
it
was
only
after
complaints
that
the
boundary
sign
was
recited
at
the
present
location.
It's
on
now,
which
is
correct.
O
A
Thank
you,
mr
bully,
for
highlighting
the
problems
and
difficulties
that
you
are
experiencing
on
the
sunny
banks
through
having
a
bradford,
postcode
and
living
in
leeds.
As
you
know,
it's
going
to
be
discussed
a
little
later
on
in
the
agenda.
Thank
you
very
much,
but
can
we
move
on
to
the
next
item,
which
is
the
minutes?
Have
you
all
read
the
minutes,
and
can
we
agree
them?
B
Thank
you
counselor,
so
I
highlighted
to
ian
rodley
at
dazzle
the
request
to
add
more
sessions
in
using
the
surplus
money.
I
haven't
heard
back
from
them
as
of
yet
I
know
they
were
looking
to
see
if
they
could
plan
it
in
for
after
their
initial
ones,
that
they've
already
got
scheduled
fulfilled,
and
I
will
I'll
chase
them
up
later
on
today
and
get
back
to
you
this
week.
A
Any
more
questions:
okay,
moving
on
to
the
next
so
mike
the
update,
please.
B
Thank
you
chair
good
afternoon
councillors
officers,
members
of
the
public.
Our
first
report
today
is
the
outer
west
finance
report,
which
can
be
found
on
page
13
of
the
reports
pack.
B
B
Three
of
these
are
from
the
large
grant
fund
and
one
from
the
yaf
allocation
which
we'll
go
through
in
due
course
so
beginning
with
the
budget
referring
to
paragraph
16
on
page
15.,
it's
asked
the
committee
to
note
that,
since
the
previous
committee
meeting
in
september,
there's
been
one
project
that
was
passed
by
ddn.
B
B
B
The
office
of
theirs
advised
that,
due
to
the
current
team
limitations
and
workloads
they're
not
able
to
run
the
friday
night
project
this
year,
along
with
the
three
across
the
city,
the
recent
restructure
has
left
them
lacking
in
capacity
to
support
this,
but
they
are
looking
to
reassess
for
next
year,
and
that
was
the
amount
of
10
154
pounds.
M
If
I
could
just
comment
on
on
page
15
in
general,
the
members
of
the
committee
we're
pleased
to
know
the
fastest
air
tough
scheme
has
begun
with
the
repainting
of
the
railings
having
been
completed
before
remembering
sunday.
The
rest
of
the
scheme
will
not
be
done
until
january.
We
hope,
because
we
didn't
want
to
have
the
whole
place
turned
upside
down
when
it
was
going
to
be
remember
and
suddenly,
when
and
on
the
fastly
festival.
M
The
I've
had
to
two
contacts
from
the
farci
festival
scheme
and
they're,
hoping
to
combine
the
farci
festival
with
the
platinum
jubilee
of
the
queen
next
year,
and
it
will
be
a
bigger
event.
So
I
think
we
need
to
keep
that
in
mind.
B
So
paragraph
18
to
21,
starting
on
page
15,
ask
the
committee
to
note
that
the
total
available
well-being
budget
for
out
of
west
for
this
financial
year
is
139
614
pounds
28,
and
the
committee
is
asked
to
note
that
today
is
allocated
92,
421,
pound
62
to
project
spring
fences,
which
leaves
the
remaining
balance
of
forty
eight
thousand
two
hundred
and
seventy
seven
pound
twenty
table.
One
on
page
16
provides
a
breakdown
of
this
allocation,
also
for
awareness.
B
B
The
first
project
is
summer:
bands
in
leeds
parks,
2022
organized
by
leeds
international
concert
season.
The
requested
amount
from
well-being
is
3250,
pounds
covering
all
three
wards
now
to
west
start
date
would
be
may
2022,
and
the
funding
is
requested
for
following
the
following
concerts
in
outer
west,
two
in
farley
hall
park,
three
in
punty
park,
two
in
victoria
park,
two
in
western
flats
cliff
park
and
one
in
west
royd
park.
M
It
says
one
in
west
droid
park
in
point
of
fact,
there's
usually
been
a
second
one
which
has
been
paid
for
out
of
the
money
given
to
the
fastly
festival.
They've
they've
had
a
bound
concert
there,
for,
I
think,
all
three
years
it's
been
running,
but
that's
come
out
of
their
grant.
L
Yes,
so
I
followed
up
with
mike
regarding
some
extra
costs
on
that,
and
we
got
confirmation
that
he's
gonna
get
four
more
funded
through
the.
I
can't
remember
arts
planning
team
on
top
of
them.
So
that's
quite
good.
Thank
you.
B
Thank
you
chat.
Second,
application
is
from
the
west
yorkshire,
police,
titled
outer
west,
antisocial
behavior
and
speeding
resources
requesting
from
well-being,
5920
pounds
covering
all
awards
start
would
be
november,
2021,
so
immediate
start
working
through
to
march
2022.
B
Just
a
brief
description.
A
data
analysis
from
police
systems
has
highlighted
issues
in
out
west
over
the
last
12
months.
Compared
to
the
previous
year,
asb
has
increased
nine
percent
to
nearly
fifteen
hundred
calls
for
services
from
the
community
in
the
three
wards
and
secondly,
the
report
includes
473
reports
of
nuisance,
cars,
vans
and
quad
bikes.
B
They
will
deploy
a
specialist
traffic
officer
and
npt
officer
in
a
traffic
car
where
intelligence
indicates
speeding
and
dangerous
driving
and
where
there
are
clusters
of
antisocial
behavior,
this
will
be
served
with
either
a
p
cso
or
a
pcso,
and
an
npt
officer.
The
costings
allow
for
160
hours
of
specialist
road
traffic
officer,
slash
police
constable
time
and
80
hours
of
pcso
officers.
For
the
ward
area
and
the
overtime
deployments
would
run
immediately
and
finish
next
march,.
N
Well,
I
fully
support
this
there's
no
indication
about
local
members
can
feed
into
this,
and
I
think
it's
important
that
we
do
feed
into
this
because
we
get
to
know
things
probably
before
police
do,
and
we
all
know
where
we
have
areas
where
we
have
problems
with
speeding.
N
So
can
we
have
some
indication
through
to
them?
Is
that
I'm
not
holding
up
get
on
with
it?
But
the
fact
is
that
we
need
some.
We
need
some
feedback
out.
We
can.
We
can
involve
ourselves.
A
Yeah,
thank
you
castle,
open.
I
I
I
agree
with
that.
I
think
we've
all
suffered,
particularly
since
lockdown,
from
speeding
in
particular
and
it's
horrendous
picture
on
the
647,
where
they
are
racing
through
the
night.
It's
absolutely
appalling.
That
residents
should
have
to
put
up
with
this.
So
I
think
it's
an
excellent
scheme.
So
can
we
all
agree
that
gear
counselor
siri.
L
So
yeah
I've
been
speaking
with
the
inspector
to
work
this
project
up
for
some
time
now,
africa
february,
we
first
started
the
conversation,
so
you'll
get
initial
you'll,
get
a
breakdown
of
every
single
overtime
that
they've
done
and
what
the
outcome
would
be
for
them
areas
as
well,
so
it's
really
targeted
and
then
the
will
years
with
with
members
to
to
make
sure
that
we're
targeting
the
right
areas.
So
it's
it's
not
just
a
blanket
it's
where
we
want
them
to
work.
B
Thank
you,
chad.
The
third
large
grant
application
is
also
from
the
west.
Yorkshire,
police
and
the
project.
Title
is
cycle
security.
This
is
requesting
1460
pounds
again
covering
all
three
wards,
starting
immediately
ending
in
september
2022,
and
for
note
this
is
a
joint
application
with
the
inner
west
community
committee,
who
are
being
requested
the
same
amount.
So
the
total
cost
is
2920
quick
description.
In
the
past
12
months,
we've
had
148
reported
pedal
cycle
thefts
across
the
ward
area.
B
Our
force
crime
prevention
officer
advises.
The
research
suggests
that
three
times
as
many
are
stolen
and
not
reported
pcso
michael
blocks
up
his
base
at
pudsey
police
station
and
is
a
bike
champion.
B
The
funding
is
requested
for
a
thousand
selector
mark
products
to
be
fitted
to
cycles
at
these
events
and
their
codes
registered
on
the
national
cycle
database,
which
means
if
a
cycle
is
stolen,
it
can
immediately
be
identified
with
an
owner,
and
officers
can
also
scan
a
bike
on
the
spot
and
determine
who
owns
it.
They
believe
that
marking
will
make
bikes
less
desirable
for
thieves
and
marking
them
will
drastically
reduce
offences
of
theft.
E
Yeah,
I
think
it
looks
like
a
good
one,
because
it's
it's
obviously
taking
police
time
up
to
find
where
these
bikes
should
go
and
and
if
it
does
deter
people
from
stealing
them
in
the
first
place.
That
would
be
good.
There's
been
a
couple
of
events
funded
out
of
leeds,
in
fact,
in
the
rodney
area
along
the
canal,
which
is
popular
for
commuters,
and
I
think
they
were
over
subscribed
actually.
So
there
is
a
need
in
the
area,
so
yeah
I'd
support.
It.
N
M
I
think
all
of
us
are
used
to
the
days
when
you
could
perhaps
leave
your
bicycle
in
the
back
garden
and
those
days
are
long
gone
and
there's
more
and
more
people
wandering
about
now.
But
you
won't.
You
have
to
question
what
they're
up
to
there's,
no
doubt
that
people's
property
has
been
invaded
over
and
over
again
and
if
bicycles
are
left,
unguarded
unmarked,
then
I'm
afraid
to
say
somebody's
going
to
nick
them.
A
B
Thank
you,
chair,
yeah,
so
youth
activities
fund.
If
I
can
bring
you
to
page
19
paragraphs
27-29,
this
asks
the
committee
to
note
the
total
available
for
spend
by
the
outwest
committee
in
this
financial
year
is
69
371
pounds
and
2
pence.
So
far
the
committee
has
approved
47
010
pounds
to
ring
fences
and
projects
which
leaves
a
remaining
balance
of
23
460
pounds
and
30
pounds.
B
B
Sorry,
the
project
title
is
beats
on
the
street.
The
name
of
the
organization
is
the
music
box.
Funding
requested
is
four
thousand
nine
hundred
and
fifty
pounds.
This
would
cover
pudsey
ward
with
a
start
date
of
the
26th
of
november
through
to
december
2022,
just
a
quick
overview.
The
project
addresses
a
gap
in
provision
for
young
people
living
in
pudsey
who
are
involved
in
or
at
risk
of
anti-social
behavior.
B
A
N
You
need
to
work,
but
regarding
project
I
I
don't
know
I
mean
I
know,
there's
been
some
discussion
about
it,
but
I
take
no
view
on
that.
The
only
thing
I
would
say
is
is
that
this
year
we've
got,
was
it
60,
how
much
60,
69
000
nintendo
69
000
pound
and
that's
due
to
underspends
last
year,
the
annual
amount
we
get
is
43
000
pounds,
and
let's
put
it
this
way,
hopefully
we'll
get
that
next
year,
but
we
might
not,
we
might
get
less.
N
If
you
look
at
what
we've
put
out
already-
and
you
include
the
two
council
projects,
for
instance,
we
know
and
we
suppose
the
fadley
festival
will
take
place
in
2022
and
we'll
expect
that
to
come
up
and
that
will
take
the
and
and
if
you
assume
the
projects
that
the
dunny
and
fasslee
and
cavley
are
done
next
year,
that'll
take
that
back
up
to
11
699.,
just
about
two
and
a
half
thousand
less
than
what
a
third
of
the
money
we
get
is
if
the
breeze
friday
night.
N
N
I'm
not
saying
we
shouldn't
do
this,
but
what
we've
got
to
be
remembered
is
is
well,
I
suppose
you
could
say
we're
lucky
or
unlucky
to
have
this
extra
money
this
year,
because
because
of
cancellations
we
get
like
last
year
we
ain't
going
to
get
it
next
year
and
basically,
we've
got
to
be
very
careful
where
we're
spending
this
money.
B
B
I
believe,
on
the
basis
that
it
was
quite
spread
out
and
also
the
committee
advised
that
it
wasn't
quite
targeting
the
individuals
that
you
would
hope
it
would
at
this
time
considering
some
of
the
anti-social
issues
in
the
area,
and
that
was
what
was
fed
back
to
the
music
box,
also
with
a
view
for
them
to
readdress
what
they
were
offering
and
come
back
to
the
committee,
if
they,
if
they
wanted
to
and
put
another
proposition
forward,.
M
M
I
think
that
we
need
to
be
absolutely
aware
of
that
and
I'm
not
at
all
happy.
L
Oh
well,
sorry,
so
I
appreciate
it
the
the
comeback
and
just
concentrated
on
one
word.
I
think
the
issue
was
they
didn't
know
our
areas
and
and
that's
where
the
issue
between
the
councillors
came.
You
know
they
were
suggesting
family
cricket
club,
which
you
know
want
the
right
area.
If
you
what
you
were
saying,
I
think,
because
we've
lost
the
friday
night
project.
L
I
think
we
need
to
do
something
in
the
center
of
hudson
on
a
friday,
and
I
think
hopefully
this
will
it'll
fill
that
gap
and
then
we'll
just
you
know,
we'll
keep
monitoring
it
and
ask
for
more
information
from
them
as
the
projects
go
through.
I
think
I
would
like
to
support
that.
D
D
Wasn't
the
right
place,
you
know,
but
we
could
have
sort
of
directed
them
to
a
better
place.
I'm
sure
I
just
got
the
impression
last
time
that
they
weren't
really
able
to
cover
all
three
worlds
anyway,
so
they
went
back
to
pudsey,
but
five
thousand
pound
just
for
one
more
there
and
bearing
in
mind,
as
is
being
said,
we
don't
know
what
monies
we're
going
to
be
getting
next
year.
It
does
concern
me,
so
I
can't
see
how
many
people
of
it.
Thank
you.
C
So
this
is
directly
related
really
to
what
we're
talking
about.
Do
you
have
any
idea
mike
how
they
will
find
and
invite
the
particular
individuals
to
take
part
in
this,
because
I
think,
that's
quite
crucial
to
make
sure
it's
actually
going
to
be
direct
directed
at
the
ones
that
is
aimed
to
be
directed.
B
So
the
information
they
provided
is
that
they
would
work
closely
with
the
leeds
youth
service
and
cooperate
with
the
andes
youth
project,
which
would
be
running
in
the
area
to
try
and
identify
the
right
people
that
could
take
part
on
a
weekly
basis.
They
have
advised
that
the
attendance
can
vary
each
week,
though
they
would
anticipate
that
it
would
be
a
similar
attendance
that
are
coming
to
them
each
week
during
the
term
time,
but
yeah.
A
E
I
think
looking
at
it,
I
hadn't
actually
got
simon's
point
there
that
actually
it's
for
13
months,
that
this
is
covering,
which
is
a
sizable
amount
of
time.
So
if
they
are
coming
back
to
us
next
year,
then
it's
at
least
going
to
be,
which
at
least
can
be
january
23
before
they
come
back
again.
If
this
is
the
pilot
and
then
I
think
we'd
want
to
review
it,
so
it's
probably
that
there's
no
extra
spend
going
to
be
next
year,
it'd
be
the
following
year.
That
would
be
seen
whether
the
pilot
worked.
E
If
this
does
have
a
success
and
they're
working
with
the
youth
service
to
try
and
target
those
people,
then
I
think
it's
probably
value
for
money
and
some
of
the
issues
that
have
been
faced
around
the
pudsey
area.
So
I'm
I'm
reasonably
happy
to
support
it.
If
there's
very
strict
monitoring
involved,
we
know
which
young
people
are
in
there
and
we
can
have
conversations
with
agencies
such
as
the
police
and
the
youth
service,
to
ensure
that
it
is
targeting
groups
that
that
we
think
would
have
caused
difficulties
around
the
area.
A
Now,
if
it's,
if
it's
for
a
different
group
of
kids,
well,
so
be
it.
But
I
think
we
do
have
a
particular
problem
in
pudsing,
we've
had
three
knifings
there
and
I
think
there's
been
another
another
incident
since
then,
and
we
we
really
do
need
to
try
and
attract
that.
My
idea
would
be
to
go
to
the
violence
reduction
team
and
say
to
them
which
music
organizations
are
you
using
and
how?
A
M
Councillor
diamond
it's
over
13
months,
which
gives
us
an
ample
opportunity,
let's
say
in
the
balance
of
this
financial
year,
to
monitor
if
they
were
prepared
to
undertake
it
for
half
the
period
of
time,
they're
asking
for
where
for
us
to
monitor
it,
and
if
it's
working
renew
it
and
if
it's
not
scrap
it.
N
Then
I
think
it
would
allow
us
to
see
if
the
friday
night
project's
going
to
be
redone,
because
I
mean
that's
my
my
main
concern
is
is
that
we
don't
find
ourselves
in
february
with
with
too
many
things
chatting
to
a
little
too
little
money
and
my
own
thing
when
we
set
stuff
up
for
young
people
and
I've
seen
this
happen
quite
often
is
you'll
set
something
up
and
then
second
year
you
don't
get
money
and
what
you're
doing
you're
letting
them
down
and
I'd
rather
not
start
somewhere,
and
I
don't
think
we
can
carry
through.
N
But
I
think
that's
a
good
idea.
What
counselor.
A
B
Thank
you,
chair
I'll.
Take
that
to
them.
Okay,
so
moving
on
the
next
section
is
the
small
ransom
skips
which
is
table
three
on
page
22,
which
provides
the
committee
with
a
breakdown
of
the
small
grants
and
skips
budget.
B
B
Finally,
in
wertly
with
8
291,
pound
26
puts
you
with
ten
thousand
three
hundred
ninety
two
pound:
thirty,
eight,
an
area
total
of
twenty
three
thousand
two
hundred
and
thirty
nine
pounds
and
then,
in
similar
fashion,
the
sill
budget,
which
is
table
five
on
page
twenty,
four
farsley
with
8512
61.
B
M
On
our
sil
on
carving
fastly
cell
money,
I
recall
that
we
agreed
to
put
a
sid
and
some
fixings
for
sids,
so
we
can
move
them
around
on
the
spring
bank
estate
in
fastly
and
there
is
no
sign
of
anything-
and
I
think
this
was
months
and
months
and
months
ago,
can
we
find
out?
What's
happened.
L
Yeah
yeah,
it's
just
about
the
you
know
the
skip
budget.
We
seem
to
obviously
there's
a
charge
at
152
pound
for
a
skip,
but
we
seem
to
always
go
overweight
on
these
skips
and
it
comes
back
a
lot
more.
You
know
nearly
double
the
price
and
they're
sending
a
big
skip
out
so
they're
expecting
the
groups
to
fill
it.
Would
you
recommend
that
we
send
them
a
smaller
skip,
so
they
can't
overfill
it
and
then
they're
not
charged
the
extra
excess.
Sorry.
B
Thank
you
councillor.
The
the
standard
skip
that
we
approve
is
the
eight
yard
skip,
which
is
the
smallest
one
that
we
can
offer
and
and
that's
been
agreed
to,
try
and
limit
that
happening
in
terms
of
an
overweight
charge.
But
I
appreciate
what
you're
saying
we
have
had
a
few
instances
where
they've
come
back.
B
The
tonnage
has
been
over
the
one-ton
threshold
that
we
pay
for,
and
I
know
it's
being
locked
into
by
the
team
to
try
and
improve
some
of
our
processes
around
skips
to
see
how
we
can
avoid
that,
because
I
guess
the
issue
is,
how
do
you
know
once
you've
gone
over
a
ton?
It's
something
we're
aware
of
and
I'll
keep
you
updated.
If
we,
if
we
can
find
a
resolution
to
that,
to
stop
it
happening
in
the
future.
D
I've
spoke
to
mike
about
that,
and
they
suggested
that
to
get
it
moving
that
I
mentioned
it
today,
obviously
with
the
approval
of
my
two
colleagues,
and
so
if
we
could
do
that,
we
bought
one
at
the
bottom
of
wink,
overdrive
and
sorry.
Butterball
bought
a
bow
tie
and
one
at
the
bottom
of
lower
worthy
road
near
branch
road,
and
we
want
that
out
of
the
cell
place
ourselves.
B
Thank
you
councillor,
blackburn
yeah,
I
I
confirmed
the
cost
was
3500
per
unit,
so
that
would
be
7
000
coming
off.
Finally
in
worthless,
total,
if
yeah,
if
the
water
council
is
happy
I'll
I'll,
take
that
forward
with
highways
and
liaise
with
yourself
about
the
specific
locations
when
they
come
to
install.
N
B
Okay,
lovely.
Thank
you.
I
believe
we
were
up
to
just
a
quick
update
on
the
covid
funds
as
well
table
six,
just
that
kavli
and
farsely
ward
have
got
three
thousand
one
hundred
and
twenty
five
pounds
remaining.
Finally
and
workly
with
two
and
a
half
thousand
pounds
remaining
and
putty,
with
nothing
remaining
they're
all
spent
up
so
total
of
five
thousand
six
hundred
and
twenty
five
pounds.
M
Can
I
ask
you
if
you'd,
if
you'd
contact
the
rotary
club
about
the
christmas
meals
for
isolated
elderly
people
this
year,
I
can't
see
they
can
have
raised
many
funds
towards
the
provision,
so
I
think
they
may
well
need
some
money
to
help
them
through
the
biggest
distribution.
I
think
them
for
many
years
last
christmas
and
I
suspect,
it'll,
be
the
same
again
this
year.
B
Thank
you,
council
carter.
Would
you
like
me
just
to
speak
to
them
about
yeah
how
much
yeah
potentially
help
yeah?
I
would
yeah.
N
Just
done
on,
I
call
the
two
and
a
half
thousand
that
we
have.
We
are
discussing
council
council
of
phil,
says
leading
on
it,
we're
discussing
possible
way
of
spending
it
if
we
can
spend
it
that
way,
but
we've
got
a
little
bit
of
spade.
Work
is
still
to
do
so
so
we'll
be
in
contact.
B
A
B
Thank
you
chair,
so
the
item.
Nine,
is
the
update
report
for
the
area
and
brings
to
members
attention
a
summary
of
work
from
a
variety
of
services
and
departments
affecting
the
what
the
three-ward
areas
and
provides
an
opportunity
to
request
a
more
detailed
report
on
particular
issues
included
in
the
report.
For
this
meeting,
we've
got
contributions
from
cleaner
neighborhoods,
gully
cleansing,
public
health,
the
housing
team,
the
housing
advisory
panel,
cctv,
the
auto
west
community
hubs,
leeds
libraries,
community
centres
and
the
community
engagement
social
media
report.
B
In
keeping
with
previous
approaches
and
due
to
the
length
of
the
document
the
committee
has
agreed
to
take,
the
update
report
has
read
with
just
a
few
highlights
which
I'll
very
quickly
mention
now.
B
The
first
thing
I
wanted
to
highlight
was
a
contribution
from
public
health,
which
is
paragraph
31
on
page
32.,
and
this
is
just
regarding
a
covid19
vaccine.
Pop-Up
center
that's
been
planned
for
finally
in
wartley
for
two
dates.
B
When
the
report
was
published,
those
dates
hadn't
been
finalized,
one
has
passed,
it
was
last
friday,
but
the
second
date
is
friday,
the
19th
of
november
at
the
old
fondly
and
district
community
association,
and
it's
open
from
11am
to
2pm
for
anyone
over
the
age
of
16
eligible
for
their
first
or
second
jobs.
B
So
this
has
been
advertised
on
the
committee's
facebook
page
and
also
on
the
kobit
19
support
pages,
but
any
any
help
sharing
information
is
appreciated.
I
know
public
health
have
distributed
printed
posters
and
I
can
also
provide
digital
flyers
or
anything
digitally
that
needs
to
be
shared.
B
Secondly,
just
referring
to
paragraph
24,
which
is
on
page
42,
I've
included
a
new
contributor
in
the
update
report
for
this
edition,
which
is
a
section
on
the
community
centers
in
the
area
and
in
this
report
we've
had
a
contribution
from
yvonne
allman
at
swino.
Community
centre
who's
highlighted
the
success
of
a
recent
weekend
at
the
seaside
event,
which
ran
for
a
week
in
early
september.
B
It
was
attended
by
over
220
people
on
a
daily
basis
and
had
a
wide
variety
of
children's
activities,
and
the
intention
here
is
just
to
provide
an
opportunity
for
community
centres
in
the
area
to
showcase
some
of
their
work,
that
they've
done
and
just
help
publicize
their
offering
and
influence
in
the
local
community.
B
So
that's
something
that
I'll
be
continuing
and
then,
thirdly,
and
finally,
just
a
very
a
very
brief
update
to
mention
to
farming
and
workly
ward,
you
now
have
a
new
housing
manager,
which
I
believe
you're
aware
of
andrew
schieder
following
the
departure
of
joanne
taylor
to
another
office.
So
this
contribution
comes
from
andrew
and
is
his
first
and
taking
over
the
area.
B
Sophie
roberts
continues
to
be
the
point
of
contact
for
pudsey
and
for
carving
farsely.
Thank
you,
chair.
There's,
no
questions.
That's
the
end
of
the
update
report.
A
M
Of
the
gullies
in
our
ward
were
either
not
inspected
or
were
found
not
to
be
running,
and
I
have
asked
on
two
or
three
occasions
now
for
one
particular
area.
Actually,
it's
bd3.
A
A
Now
we're
on
to
the
next
item
on
the
agenda,
which
is
the
sony
bank
bd
postcode,
request
report
earlier
in
the
meeting
we
heard
mr
brian
wally
one
of
the
local
residents
speaking
to
the
item,
so
can
I
hand
over
to
who's
the
officer.
E
Hello
good
afternoon,
I'm
paul
bingham,
I'm
the
team
leader
in
planning
sustainable
development
for
the
team
that
includes
the
street
naming
numbering
function.
E
E
E
The
final
decision
with
regards
to
postcode
changes
is
made
by
the
royal
mail
and
not
city
council,
so
we're
not
asking
members
to
make
a
decision
on
the
postcode
itself
I'll
just
hand
over
now
to
rachel
and
cliff
who's.
The
principal
street
name
in
a
numbering
officer
who
manages
the
street
naming
a
numbering
function
to
just
go
through
the
details
of
the
main
report
in
the
appendix.
Thank
you.
F
Thank
you
paul
so
offices
in
planning
and
sustainable
development
were
contacted
separately
by
the
sunni
bank
recreation
group
and
also
stuart
andrew
mp
to
request
our
assistance.
F
Stuart
andrew
mp
has
had
a
number
of
previous
engagements
with
raw
mail
to
discuss
issues
that
his
constituents
experience
who
lives,
particularly
in
bd3,
bd4
and
bd10
areas
of
the
bradford
postal
term,
as
determined
by
royal
mail,
but
are
within
with
city
council
officers
within
the
council,
agreed
to
undertake
a
smaller
consultation
of
residents
in
the
three
streets
covered
by
the
sunni
bank
recreation
group
as
a
test
exercise
to
further
understand
the
nature
and
cause
of
issues
being
experienced,
and
this
is
covered
in
sections
one
and
two
of
the
final
report.
F
The
consultation
took
place
between
september
and
december
2020
and
combined
with
historical
feedback.
From
previous
consultations
undertaken
by
stuart
andrew
mp.
It
was
able
to
demonstrate
the
residents,
experience,
confusion
and
issues
with
health
referrals
being
made
to
the
wrong
health
area
or
local
authority,
or
been
incorrectly
rejected
by
the
correct
area.
F
F
The
final
report
includes
responses
from
a
number
of
organizations
started
by
residents.
This
includes
raw
mail,
which
is
covered
in
appendix
seven,
the
emergency
services,
which
is
covered
in
appendix
appendices,
one
three
and
four,
and
the
nhs
ccg,
which
is
covered
in
dependencies
five
and
six.
F
F
M
Thank
you
chair.
I
think
I
think
what
I'm
going
to
say.
M
I
should
make
it
very
clear
that
the
member
of
parliament
had
hoped
this
would
be
if
you
like,
and
I
agree
with
him-
the
stepping
stone
to
move
all
these
bd
postcodes
out
of
the
way
and
get
leeds
postcodes
and-
and
it
was
right
to
start
with
sunny
bank,
because
the
residents
there
had
done
so
much
work
of
their
own
and
continue
to
do
so
to
to
prove
the
case
and-
and
whilst
I
have
to
say,
I'm
extremely
thankful
to
rachel
and
cliff
and
other
officers
for
the
work
they've
done.
M
Recently,
at
a
hearing,
I'll
put
it
no
stronger
than
that,
a
local
resident
was
challenged
as
to
how
he
could
possibly
live
in
leeds
with
a
postcode
of
bd3,
when
his
dustbins
must
be
collected
by
the
city
of
bradford,
which
the
person
questioning
was
told.
I'm
sorry
the
dustbins
are
collected
by
the
city
of
leeds
I
live
in
leeds.
M
I
pay
my
council
tax
to
leads
and
the
services
I
receive
come
from
leads,
and
there
are
all
sorts
of
connotations
to
this
particular
thing
which
I'm
not
going
to
go
into
a
lot
here
anyway,
because
there
you
have
a
classic
example
of
somebody
in
some
authority,
actually
believing
the
dustbins
in
all
the
vd
areas
because
went
on
to
say
that
only
in
driglington
were
the
dustbins
collected
by
leads,
and
they
have
a
postcode
that
was
different,
completely
untrue,
and
after
all
these
years,
people
in
authority
still
don't
recognize.
M
So
we
had
all
hope
that
this
would
be
the
beginning
of
everybody
else
who
also
suffers
service
confusion
of
an
alarming
rate.
M
Finally,
getting
relief
from
it
starting
with
bd3,
because
those
are
the
people
who've
done
the
most
work
in
the
in
their
own
commute
small
community
to
get
the
argument
across,
and
it
just
seems
to
me
that
here
I
asked
for
this
to
go
before
the
executive
board
of
the
council,
which
they
have
refused.
M
Instead,
they
agreed
to
come
here
which
is,
which
is
a
start,
but
we
can't
make
any
decisions.
We
can
make
recommendations
how
things
could
be
improved,
but
we
can't
take
a
decision
and
I
appreciate
the
exact
board.
Mate
might
find
it
very
difficult
to,
but
I
think
nevertheless
it
should
go
back
there,
but
I
also
think
that
we
need
to
come
forward
with
some
real
progress
here.
It's
gone
on
for
40
odd
years.
M
I
should
think,
and
we've
come
to
the
stage
where,
unless
the
council
can
guarantee-
and
I
must
put
one
point
in
here-
quite
rightly-
I
I
received
comments
last
week
from
from
residents
who
were
somewhat
put
out
about
the
press
coverage
that
been
well.
Breast
coverage
is
inevitable
when
documents
become
public
like
this,
and
and
these
did,
but
it
seemed
to
them
and
to
me
it
was
almost.
The
whole
argument
was
painted
as
a
question
of
putting
house
prices
up.
M
It's
got
nothing
of
the
sort,
it's
about
providing
essential
counsel
services
that
people
pay
for
efficiently
when
they
wanted
on
a
regular
basis,
and
it
too
often
isn't
happening
and
I'm
not
sure
what
what
we
recommend.
M
What
can
we
say
to
the
different
departments
of
the
council?
You
have
to
educate
all
members
of
staffers
to
the
geography
of
the
city
of
leeds.
Is
that
what
you've
got
to
do?
I
mean
quite
frankly,
they
ought
to
know
anyway,
but
but
I
I
think
that
the
residents
will
be
disappointed,
and
rightly
so,
and
I
would
like
to
have
seen
another
step.
E
Thanks,
chad,
I
think
I
just
wanted
to
bring
up
counselor
carter
brings
up
an
important
example
there,
because
we've
got
the
residents
of
the
bd3
area
here
and
what
seems
to
be
the
problem
for
them
is
areas
like
driglington.
People
are
well
aware
that
it's
in
a
bd
postcode,
but
in
leeds,
but
what
we've
got
here
is
a
number
of
residents
who
live
in
thornbury,
as
per
as
per
the
the
royal
mail
and
obviously
thornbury
everyone
knows
is
an
area
of
bradford.
Therefore,
these
streets
are
wrongly
classified
above
others.
E
We
have
got
the
area
of
title,
but
I
think
there's
there's
knowledge,
at
least
in
many,
that
tiresomely
split
across
different
areas,
and
that's
why
this
area
faces
some
of
the
wider
problems,
because
it's
immediate
assumption,
not
least
because
obviously,
we've
got
a
street
where
one
side
of
the
road
is
in
leeds
and
the
other
side
of
the
road
is
in
bradford.
Yet
they
both
share
the
same
postcode,
and
that
can
be
an
incredibly
difficult
matter.
E
So
I
think
it's
useful
that
the
report
notes
that
for
these
residents
to
to
show
the
hard
work
they've
done,
but
also
the
report
does
quite
clearly
say
that
changing
the
postcode
would
solve
some
of
the
issues.
So
it
is
a
shame.
I
agree
with
councillor
carter
on
this
one
that
here
we
are
discussing
what
the
other
solutions
could
be,
that
the
council
or
other
bodies
could
put
in
place
when
actually
at
the
top
of
the
chain.
Royal
mail
could
solve
this
issue
with.
E
M
We
agree
with
each
other,
the
granges
and
indeed
tyson,
if
you
put
them
all
together,
you're,
not
talking
about
a
massive
disruption
or
dislocation
of
the
royal
males
business,
but
the
reason
that
sonny
bank
was
was
sick
was
picked
really
because
because
of
all
the
work
the
residents
had
done
in
on
their
smaller
stage,
and
it
seemed
to
both
the
member
of
parliament
and
myself
that
it
was
an
excellent
place
to
start,
because
if
we
could
make
that
step,
then
the
following
other
steps
would
inevitably
follow,
indeed
might
follow
immediately,
but
that
but
peter's
right
I
mean
everyone
knows
driglington
is
in
leeds
the
very
fact
it's
thornbury
to
the
to
someone
not
from
pudsey
thinks
bradford
and
it's
not
bradford,
and
I
think
mr
woolley
will
remember
standing
underneath
the
sign
that
said
leeds
pudsey,
when
it
was
in
the
wrong
place
to
highlight
the
fact
that
we
were
actually
standing
well
inside
leeds
and
not
on
the
boundary
with
bradford
and
that
finally
got
changed.
M
M
M
M
N
Security,
my
early
working
life-
I
just
worked
up
the
road,
english
electric
and
I
I'm
quite
aware
of
where
the
old
pudsey
boundary
went
and
where
the
bd
proposed
goals
were
and
the
trouble
it
used
to
cost
to
some
of
my
work
mates,
even
even
in
them
days-
and
you
know
I
mean
I
think
when
we
have
the
proper
when
when
we
have
the
bd
and
ls's-
and
you
know
the
the
number
and
then
the
two
letters
on
them-
it
was
about
1968
1969
when
they
did
that,
which
is
only
what
six
years
five
six
years
before
we
reorganised
local
government
and
you
would
have
fought
on
that.
N
I
mean
all
right.
I
know
ill
clearly
got
an
ls
postcard.
I'm
not
I'm
not
saying
going
as
far
as
that,
but
on
these
little
bits,
where
there's
a
few
streets,
that's
in
one
authority
with
a
postcard
for
a
different
authority,
we
should
be
able
to
do
something
about
it.
N
You
talk,
you
can't
get
the
same
things
there,
so
I
I
just
I
just
find
it
stupid
that
we've
been
on
40
odd
years
about
this,
and
I
remember
my
my
old
friend
frank
when
he
was
a
councillor,
the
calvary
councillor
going
on
and
on
and
on
about
this
at
various
meetings,
and
you
know
I
I
think
I
think
it's
an
easy
thing
to
solve
and
you
should
be
able
to
do
it.
A
A
I've
had
a
number
of
people
come
to
me
that
can't
get
into
the
local
gp
they've
been
sent
to
bradford
been
refused
to
go
to
a
leeds.
Gp
emergency
services
have
been
confused
on
occasions.
The
police
included
deep,
deeply
saddening
that
they
won't
even
recognize
it.
It
would
mean
nothing
to
them
to
change
the
postcode.
It
wouldn't
mean
that
they
would
change
the
operation.
They
just
changed
the
name
of
the
postcode.
That's
all
they
needed
to
do
it's
it's
a
great
pity.
A
M
And
that's
really
what
what
it's
concerning,
that
that
and
no
way
it
is
because
you,
some
of
the
offices
across
nowhere
at
all,
I
think,
they've
gone
as
far
as
as
they
possibly
could,
but
but
they
aren't
your
departments
you're
talking
about
here
and
if
they
haven't
known
understood
for
40
years,
where
they're
supposed
to
be
going.
What
hope
is
there
now,
but
we
need
to
see
something:
that's
that
that's
more
positive
for
the
residents.
A
H
All
right,
I
was
just
saying:
should
we
maybe
swap
around
the
agenda
items
whilst
we
deal
with
the
technical
difficulties,
because.
A
We'll
do
that.
Thank
you
so,
on
to
the
next
item
on
the
agenda,
we'll
come
back
to
item
11.,
it's
item,
12
highways,
the
winter
services
update
we've
already
had
technical
difficulties
with
that.
Hopefully,
we've
overcome
them
now.
J
Hello,
yes,
I
think
I
think
we
have
we've
got
a
workaround,
so
mike
has
I
I
don't
have
access
to
zoom
on
on
my
desktop,
so
mike's
kindly
agreed
to
present
the
presentation
on
my
behalf,
so
it
could
have
been
a
little
bit
tricky
and
because
used
to
clicking
it
on
yourself
as
you
go
along,
but
hopefully
between
us
we'll
be
able
to
make
it
work
I'll,
try
and
keep
it
as
brief
as
possible,
because
I'm
aware
of
the
pack,
gender
and
the
time,
skills
that
we've
got,
but
I'm
from
highways
and
transportation,
and
I
work
for
the
the
department
that
deals
with
the
the
winter
service
relatively
new
to
the
service.
J
But
I've
been
working
with
my
colleagues
to
see
if
we
can
be
a
bit
more
informative
about
the
services
that
we
do
both
to
the
public
and
to
the
elected
members.
So
hence
I'm
here
today
just
to
give
a
quick
overview
of
our
winter
service.
It's
quite
timely
sort
of
the
weather's
getting
a
bit
colder.
Now,
on
a
positive
note,
it's
only
another
seven
weeks
before
it
starts
getting
lighter
again,
but
I'll
crack
on
with
it,
and
hopefully
it
goes
well
okay.
J
So
if
you
can
click
on
to
the
next
slide,
please
please
mike
right
the
winter
service
plan
and
we've
got
a
set
of
duties
to
do.
That's
how
outlined
in
the
highways
act
of
1918..
J
It's
three
principal
points,
really:
the
gritting
of
roads,
the
refilling
of
salt,
bins
and
snow
plow
and
snow
clearing
a
few
headline
facts,
and
did
you
know
that
our
gritters
drive
driving
average
fifty
one
thousand
two
hundred
miles
per
year
during
the
winter
period,
which
equates
to
around
two
circumferences
of
the
the
earth
and
between
we
each
year
we
use
between
twelve
thousand
eight
hundred
and
sixteen
thousand
tonnes
of
salt
each
year,
because
in
our
services,
obviously
it
does
depend
on
the
severity
of
of
the
winter.
J
How
do
we
decide
where
we
great?
We
we've?
You
know,
there's
quite
a
lot
of
science
that
goes
behind
this,
but
we
we,
we
can't
go
every
road
if
we
were
to
get
every
road
in
leeds.
We'd
have
to
be
greeting
right
throughout
the
year,
including
june
july,
through
all
the
summer
months,
and
that
would
just
be
ridiculous
because
it's
obviously
not
gritty
there,
so
we've
got
to
have
some
form
of
categorization
and
this
the
next
slide.
J
If
you
just
pop
that
on
mike
for
me,
if
you
could
sorry
the
next
one
on
this,
this
this
slide
here
shows
basically
what
categories
that
we
do.
J
We've
got
a
category
1a,
which
is
the
resilient
salting
network,
and
that
includes
emergency
routes
leading
to
hospitals
and
major
infrastructure,
category
1,
the
primary
salty
network
psn,
which
includes
bus
route
routes
and
school
links,
category
crew,
the
second
consulting
network,
it's
medium
business
areas,
shopping
areas,
doctor
surgeries,
medical
centers
and
the
such
and
then
we've
got
category
three,
which
is
any
other
road
that
we
can
get
around
to
doing
when
we've
done
the
the
other
three
category
roads.
J
So
it's
it's
quite
a
difficult
one,
really
when,
when
trying
to
prioritize
these
and
and
people
a
lot
of
people
under
this
interpretation
that
we
do
great
every
every
road
but
as
I've
just
alluded
to
now-
that
that
would
be
sort
of
an
impossibility
due
to
the
amount
of
road
civilian
road
network
that
we've
got
in
lee's
at
the
moment.
J
One
of
the
main
contacts
that
we
get
and-
and
I'm
sure
many
of
you
members-
get
that
as
as
well
as
during
inclement
weather
and
so
on,
the
snowy
period
and
what
you
probably
get
a
lot
of
calls
to
say
that
why
my
road
being
gritted
and
so
on-
and
we
certainly
do
get
a
lot
of
contacts
through
the
call
center
to
that
effect.
J
So
if,
if
you
can
just
click
onto
the
next
slide
mic,
we've
we've
done
a
little
infographic
there,
which
we
hope
to
get
publicized
and
we
can
circuit
circle
it
out
to
to
all
members
and
so
on,
which
sort
of
breaks
down
sort
of
the
rationale
of
what
roads
are
done
and
what
roles
aren't
done.
And
it
gives
a
good
sort
of
like
indication
to
members
of
the
public
as
to
to
why
we've
come
to
that
decision
of
what
roads
are
going
to
be
known
and
what
roads
aren't
we
going
to
do
that?
J
We
don't
do
I'm
not
going
to
go
through
it
for
the
for
the
sheer
fact
that
we
don't
really
have
the
time
it
takes
me
quite
a
while
to
go
through,
but
it's
quite
a
simple
information
documented
to
read
through
and
understand,
and
we
hope
to
get
this
publicized
on
our
website
in
the
new
early
in
the
next
few
months,
when
we've
managed
to
update
the
site.
J
If
you
can
go
on
to
the
next
slide,
please
mike
when
we
decide
to
grit
road,
it's
not
just
sort
of
a
sort
of
a
finger
in
the
air.
I
think
it's
going
to
be
cold
tonight.
We
do
have
quite
a
few
mechanisms
to
detect
the
road
temperature
and
so
on.
We've
got
two
monitoring
stations,
one
over
in
the
eden
area
and
one
in
the
windmill
area
and
they
detect
the
ambient
road
temperature
and
air
temperature,
and
that
dictates
to
us
whether
we
go
out
to
grit
our
roads.
J
We
also
work
with
a
a
weather
forecasting
company
who
gives
us
long-range
weather
forecasts
and
also
could
give
us
a
good
heads
up
as
to
what
nice
we
will
have
the
gritters
out
on
the
roads.
As
you
can
see
there,
if
we're
on
the
right
slide,
we've
introduced,
you
might
have
seen
them.
J
We've
got
smaller
quad
bikes
now
to
do
some
to
clear
snow
in
some
of
the
harder
to
get
areas
where
the
larger
trucks
can't
get
historically,
and
that's
mainly
around
sort
of
like
town
centres
and
city
centres
and
so
on,
and
that's
been
proven
very
effective.
If
you
could
go
over
to
the
next
slide.
Please
mike,
as
I
alluded
to
earlier,
we
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
people,
do
contact
our
our
couple.
Accountants
contact
senator
to
say
you
know
what
is
my
road
being
gritted?
J
So
we
can
look
at
gritters
where
they
are
in
leeds
where
they've
been
and
where
they're
going,
and
if
I
can
just
give
you
a
quick
demonstration
mike
if
you
just
click
on
that
live
button
there.
That
takes
you
into
the
portal
it'll
be
slightly
different
to
this
in
the
real
world.
But
this
is
just
for
demonstration
purposes
at
the
moment
just
do
for
today.
I
don't
need
to
give
it
another
click
mike.
J
Well,
it's
a
shame
if
we
can't
get
it
up,
but
I
could
probably
give
a
little
bit
of
a
talk
on
it
around
it
and,
let's
see
if
it
comes
up
well,
I'm
speaking
if
it
does
great,
if
not
like,
I
say
I'll
see
if
I
can
cover
most
of
it,
I
don't
know
if
you
can
see
on
that
map.
There
there's
a
map,
it's
a
an
area
of
leads
working
at
roundy
area
there.
J
What
you
do
you
you,
click
on
that
live,
link
and
you'll
be
presented
with
a
screen
just
like
that
with
a
map
there
and
there's
a
facility
on
there,
where
you
can
type
in
your
postcode
and
if
you
type
in
your
postcode
it
will
zoom
into
your
area
and
it'll.
Show
you,
the
the
local
network
around
you
and
there's
several
layers
that
you
can
click
on.
There's
like
a
menu
to
one
side
and
it'll
click
on
salting
roots,
so
click
on
the
saltine
root
and
it'll
show.
J
So
if
you're,
looking
at
a
gritter
on
a
road,
say
roundy
road
in
leeds
within
a
couple
of
minutes,
it'll
update
and
that
gritty
will
be
further
down
the
road
and
it
will
be
leaving
a
marker
where
it
has
gritted
so
you'll,
be
able
to
think
well,
I'm
okay
to
go
down
roundy
road,
because
that
road's
been
gritted
at
the
moment
which
is
useful
because
that'll
make
it
give
people
leave.
J
You
know
some
some
good
information,
whether
to
make
an
informed
decision,
whether
to
travel
during
inclement
weather
and
there's
also
other
layers
that
you
can
add
on
to
that
things
like
there's
a
tab
for
grip
bins,
so
you
can
see
where
your
nearest
grip
being
is,
as,
amongst
other
things,
I
won't
go
into
them.
Obviously,
because
of
time
it
doesn't
look
like
it's
going
to
come
on.
Does
it
make
and
we're
going
to
ask
somebody
for
a
postcode,
so
we
could
have
a
little
go
on
it
escape.
J
You
know
we
tried
for
the
interactive
bit,
but
I
do
apologize
about
that.
I
will
say
it
does
it.
It
may
sound
a
great
solution
at
the
moment,
and
a
great
thing
to
have
you
know
it
is
early
stages
is
the
first
year
that
we've
launched
it
and
there
are
going
to
be
some
quick
tweaks
and
things
that
we
make
along.
We
are
going
to
get
some
recommendations
and
we
still
have
a
few
little
quirks
to
iron
out,
and
what
have
you
saw?
J
It's
not
a
perfect
scenario
at
the
moment
and
we
will
be
putting
a
few
disclaimers
on
the
website
just
to
say
that,
because
it
is
new
technology
and
that
we've
had
quite
a
bit
of
difficulty
in
interacting
the
different
platforms.
J
It's
not
my
sort
of
my
expertise
really
so
we've
been
working
with
rit
to
see
if
we
can
hand
those
out
and
we're
sort
of
looking
to
move
with
the
times
a
little
bit
more
now
we're
promoting
a
lot
of
the
work
that
we
do
on
the
social
media
platforms
such
as
facebook,
twitter
and
so
on.
Our
cancer
council's
insight
we've
got
connecting
leads
links
now
website,
where
connecting
leads
can
do
feeds
directly
into
people's
facebook
and
twitter
accounts.
J
That
can
say
right,
there's
a
blocked
road
or
inclement
weather
difficult
to
pass
in
this
area.
These
roadworks
in
this
area
and
so
on.
So
we
are
sort
of
like
up
in
our
game
in
terms
of
contact
with
the
with
with
with
the
public,
but
we
do
maintain
the
traditional
routes.
As
you
know,
people
can
call
in
for
information
and
our
contact
center
at
any
time.
So
that's
that's
it
in
a
nutshell.
So,
if
there's
any
questions,
anybody
would
like
to
ask
I'm
happy
to
take
them.
A
Thank
you
very
much.
Councillor
blackburn.
N
First
thing
for
the
thrills:
somewhat
it
challenged,
could
you
send
us
something
out
how
to
get
onto
onto
this
screen
thing?
I'm
probably
not
the
only
one
that'll
be
thinking
and
the
other
thing
is
you
see
it
picks
up
grit
bins.
Does
it
pick
up
blue
ones
as
well?
I
knew.
J
You're
going
to
ask
me
that
I
really
did
and-
and
I
I
was
going
to
mention
in
the
presentation-
but
at
the
moment
no,
it
doesn't
pick
up
the
blue
buttons,
which
I
know
supported
by
the
community
committees
and
so
on.
It's
we've
just
got
the
yellow
ones
at
the
moment,
because
we
do
have
that
exact
information,
because
that's
on
our
database,
so
it
was
sort
of
easy
to
load
at
the
time.
The
blue
bins
are
a
little
bit
of
an
anomaly.
J
We
we
are
picking
that
intelligence
up
and
it's
something
that
we
do
intend
to
do
in
the
future.
It's
not
being
overlooked.
I
can
assure
you
that,
but,
as
I
said,
it
is
work
in
progress
and
we
will
keep
you
updated
on
that.
N
The
reason
they
ask
is
is
for
for
just
for
the
information.
I
have
a
blue
bin
that
they
put
in
the
wrong
place
and
I
had
trouble
getting
it
moved
and
I
got
the
local
residence.
One
of
them
has
a
little
thought
truck
and
he
picked
it
up
and
moved
it
to
where
it
should
be,
and
I
just
wanted
to
make
sure
it
went
down
where
it
where
we
moved
it.
J
I'm
hopeful
that
that
you
will
be
able
to
see
that
in
you
know
in
on
on
your
screen
anytime
soon,
and
there
will
be-
I
mean
the
yellow
beans
on
the
system
are
yellow
on
the
system
and
the
blue
bins
will
be
blue
bins
when
we
manage
to
get
them
loaded
up
and
that
information
loaded,
and
I
can
certainly
send
you
the
link
to
the
to
the
website
where
it'll
take
you
straight
to
the
tracking
system.
L
Yeah,
thank
you,
chair
britain
and
great
bins,
and
winter
is
very
one
of
my
passions
really
because
we
live
in
putzy
top
of
the
hill
one
of
the
highest
places
in
leeds
last
four
years,
we've
bought
70
grit
bins
to
help
our
residents.
You
mentioned
that
you've
got
a
weather
station
in
needham,
but
I
remember
probably
two
years
ago
where
there
were
no
snow
anywhere
else
apart
from
pudsey
and
we
didn't
get
a
single
grip
and
we
challenged
highways
and
they
went
well.
You
don't
need
them,
but
it
was.
L
It
was
solid
in
the
center
of
plunder,
yeah,
so
yeah
can
we
have
puts
it
picked
up
separately.
Please,
because,
obviously,
the
weather
comes
over
from
a
different
side.
Another
one
as
well.
You
showed
a
little
quad
bike
going
through
shopping
center.
We've
never
seen
one
in
town
center
yeah.
We
do
have
a
you
know,
a
busy
town
centre,
so
I'd
appreciate
if
we
could
get
our
towns
done
as
well
and
then
also,
we've
spent
like
five
hundred
thousand
pounds
on
walking
and
cycling
routes
through
our
ward.
L
K
Thank
you
chair,
so
I
was
going
to
pick
up
the
monitoring
station
element
as
well,
because
it's
got
its
own
micro
climate
as
we
know.
So,
that's
one
thing.
The
other
thing
is
the
accuracy
of
your
yellow
bins.
We've
just
had
an
exercise
with
our
street
bins
and
found
out
that
most
of
them
are
missing.
K
So
how
accurate
are
your
yellow
bins?
Has
anybody
actually
checked
them?
Another
thing
was:
when
you
fill
your
grip
bins,
do
you
check
them
empty
them
for
rubbish
check
them
for
splits,
put
new
lids
on
things
like
that,
because
some
of
them
aren't
in
the
best
state
of
repair
and
then
going
back
to
the
gritting
quad?
K
Are
they
used
to
grip
the
retirement
life
complexes
because
year
on
year,
we
tend
to
have
to
get
residents
out
and
ourselves
and
grip
them
ourselves,
and
if
we
have
that
as
a
an
option,
then
we'd
like
it
to
be
utilized.
Please
thank
you.
A
M
Yes,
we
have,
we
have
an
interesting
situation
in
carving
and
fasting
world.
The
a647
which
has
been
mentioned
before
today
is
the
main
leeds
bradford
road
and
since
the
cycleway
was
erected
or
constructed,
we
have
also
have
a
little
contraption
that
comes
toddling
along
and
clears
the
snow
from
the
cycleway.
M
Unfortunately,
it
dumps
it
all
onto
the
footpath,
so
nobody
can
then
walk
down
the
full
pass
on
the
a647,
because
all
the
snow
has
been
moved
from
the
cycleway
and
shoved
onto
the
footwear.
It's
also
a
school
walking
route.
It's
the
route,
a
lot
of
children,
thankfully
young
people,
I
should
say
thankfully,
used
to
walk
to
pre-stop
school
as
opposed
to
coming
in
a
taxi
or
a
car
which
far
too
many
of
them
do.
M
M
And
the
other
point
is
we
like
pudgy,
we
have
a
number
of
our
own
bins.
We
have
31
bins
that
you
don't
feel
that
members
have
just
coughed
up
to
fill
again.
M
J
Unfortunately,
I
don't
fix
the
prices,
but
I
can
I'll
certainly
take
your
comments
back
and
they
are
welcome.
A
I
think
there's
a
couple
of
questions.
Some
of
the
wanted
answering.
J
J
Okay,
of
course,
council
blackburn.
I
will
send
you
the
link
out.
Obviously
I
can't
do
that
at
that
moment,
you've
mentioned
about
counseling
about
a
having
a
bit
of
a
microclimate.
I
I
agree
with
you
in
that
sense,
because
there
are
some
other
areas,
I'm
living.
Quite
I'm
just
the
way
out
towards
harry
getting
leads
and
where
I
live,
we
have
got
a
sort
of
a
microclimate.
J
Yes,
in
an
ideal
world,
it
would
be
good
to
have-
and
we
are
looking
into
this,
but
it
is
down
to
a
lot
of
it's
down
to
research,
sources,
research
and
and
and
and
the
technology
be
able
to
do
that
I
mean,
of
course
it
is
there,
but
because
we've
been
looking
at
some
newer
types
of
technology
that
can
fit
onto
lampposts
that
can
detect
road
temperature
and
so
on.
So
we
can
sort
of
like
work
in
a
smart
way
and
just
do
the
roads.
Actually
that
need
doing.
J
Well,
at
the
moment
it
is
sort
of
it
is
city-wide,
but
we
we
are.
We
are
looking
to
refine
that
a
little
bit
more
and
make
it
more
fit
for
purpose
in
terms
of
sort
of
tailor-made
for
individual
areas,
because
you
rightly
say
that
that
some
areas
don't
have
any
any
issues
whatsoever
and
all
that
has
have
their
own
sort
of
microclimate
and
quite
severe
weather.
J
When
other
areas
they
haven't
even
got
any
frost,
but
we
we
are
looking
into
better
mechanisms
of
dealing
with
this,
and
but
I'll
certainly
take
your
comments
back
to
our
head
of
service
and
and
and
see
if
we
can
find
a
more
comprehensive
answer
for
you.
As
I
said,
I'm
sort
of
limited
with
information
that
I've
got
with
me
quite
now,
but
I
can
certainly
go
back
and
look
into
that
for
you.
J
But
any
rules,
as
you
alluded
to
earlier,
that
that
that
were
frozen,
should
have
been
picked
up
and
should
have
been
gritted
at
that
time.
I
can
only
imagine
that
there
was
a
problem
on
that
particular
day
and
the
the
greatest
couldn't
get
there,
for
whatever
reason,
it's
not
a
perfect
system.
It
should
be,
but
they
do
sometimes
miss
it
could
be
down
to
some
mechanical
failure,
driver
availability
and
so
on,
but
that
is
very
rare.
J
We
do
you
know
we
usually
get
round
to
greeting
them
all
I'm
sure
it
was
an
isolated
service,
but
I
certainly
will
mention
that.
Okay
about
the
retirement
life
you
mentioned
about
the
the
quad
bikes,
clearing
out
the
cycle
routes
and
so
on,
but
being
open
and
honest.
We
do.
J
We
only
have
a
few
of
the
quad
bikes
in
the
city
and
we
we
can't
get
we're
looking
at
about
the
last
count
that
we
had,
I
believe,
was
four
but
they're
all
about
procuring
some
more
and
I
will
find
out
if
that,
if
that
is
in
in
process
of
being
done
at
the
moment
and
double
check,
the
numbers
and
I'll
have
to
get
right.
Get
back
to
you
on
that
one
counsellor,
but,
as
you
can
imagine,
we've
got
hundreds
and
hundreds
of
cycle
routes.
J
Now
we
are,
we
are
looking
as
lee's
rolling
out
more
cycle
routes.
It's
one
of
our
priorities
to
do
that.
We're
gonna
have
to
up
as
a
game
in
terms
of
gritting
the
cycle
routes,
but
that
cycle
routes
are
are
treated
with
this
airline
solution.
It's
a
different
method
of
doing
it
as
we
do
with
the
roads
and
cycle
routes
should
be,
should
be
treated
what's
practically
possible.
I
know
that's
quite
I'm
not
trying
to
evade
the
point
now,
but
it's
all
about
practicalities
and
the
the
ability
to
be
able
to
do
it.
J
We're
increasing
the
cycle
network
quite
a
speed.
We
just
need
to
up
our
gaming
being
able
to
grit
and
keep
those
roads,
those
those
networks
free
as
we're
going
along
and
we
are
playing
catch
up
to
in
all
honesty-
and
hopefully
we
will
be
up
in
our
game
and
and
trying
to
get
all
the
cycle
rules
included
in
it
in
our
network.
But
at
the
moment
it's
impossible
to
do
so,
but
it's
on
our
radar-
and
you
rightly
do
bring
that
up.
M
J
K
Thank
you,
chair
yeah,
I'm
just
a
little
bit
concerned
why
we
would
take
so
much
time,
trouble
and
effort
to
clear
cycle
paths
when
there's
unlikely
to
be
many
cyclists
on
there
in
this
extreme
weather.
Yet
we
don't
seem
to
want
to
clear
the
retirement
life
complexes
where
there's
elderly
people
that
need
to
get
out
and
about
and
get
the
shopping
and
things
like
that.
So
that's
just
a
little
bit
of
a
concern.
J
Yeah
I
it
is
a
good
concern
and-
and
that's
and
I'll
take
your
points
on
view
there
and
that's
something
we
can
take
back
and
review
and
hopefully
we'll
be
able
to
give
you
an
update
on
that
one.
At
the
moment,
retirement
life
complexes
have
not
been
done,
but
if
that's
something
that
you're
asking
for,
we
will
look
into
doing
that
and
see.
J
If
we
see
what
we
can
do
as
again
in
a
perfect
world,
we
would
grit
everywhere
that
that
needs
gritting,
but
we
don't
have
the
resources
and
the
funds
to
be
able
to
do
that
and
without
trying
to
dodge
the
question
we
will
see
if
we
can
bring
those
on
board,
but
we
will
I'll
try
and
get
a
more
comprehensive
answer
to
you
as
soon
as
possible.
K
Sorry,
just
to
clarify
is
other
plans.
We've
spent
thousands
of
thousands
of
pounds
linking
the
bus
station
down
to
the
train
station
and
similar
things
across
the
city.
Are
there
any
plans
for
the
these
pathways
to
be
gritted
alongside
the
cycle
is
as
that
being
planned
in
that
scheme,
or
is
it
something
that
will
be
additional.
J
That's
something
that'll
be
additional
at
the
moment,
but
again
it's
it's
something
that
I
can
take
back
to
our
service
department,
heads
and
and
mention
that
to
them
and
see
if
we
can
get
some
information
on
you
on
that,
one.
A
Thank
you
just
just
to
add
to
what
council
andrew
carter
was
saying
that
and
councillor
trish
smith.
We
do
regard
our
elderly
people's
complexes
as
a
priority,
because
if
the
elderly
people
do
get
out
and
slip
it,
it
can
be
extremely
serious
for
them,
and
it
then,
in
turn
monetary
terms,
it
puts
pressure
on
the
nhs
and
other
services
as
well
council
services.
So
we
we
do
in
particular
find
that
a
priority.
A
H
Thank
you
chair
good
afternoon
everybody.
So
I've
got
a
slide
deck
that
hopefully
showcases
the
work
that
we've
been
doing
in
response
to
the
climate
emergency,
conscious
that
I've
got
10
minutes
and
22
slides,
I'm
not
quite
sure
how
the
mass
of
that
is
going
to
work
out,
but
I'll
get
through
it
as
quickly
and
as
efficiently
as
I
can
so
just
starting
off.
H
With
a
little
bit
of
background
back
in
2019,
the
city
council
declared
a
climate
emergency
and
as
part
of
our
response
to
the
climate
emergency,
we
initiated
the
big
leagues
climate
conversation
where
we
went
out
to
consultation
and
city-wide
to
get
people's
views
and
opinions
on
on
what
we
should
be
doing
to
respond
to
response.
So
it's
the
challenge
that
we
face.
97
of
respondents
thought
that
businesses
and
public
sector
organizations
have
a
responsibility
to
reduce
their
carbon
emissions
and
and
that
feedback
really
set
the
scene
for
us
going
forwards.
H
The
next
slide
that
you
can
see
is
a
slide
that
was
developed
by
the
leeds
climate
commission
and
what
this
slide
does
is
it
sets
out
what
needs
to
be
done
locally
and
the
cost
of
doing
so
to
actually
get
us
to
net
zero
by
2030,
and
so,
as
you
can
see,
sort
of
halfway
along
the
slide.
H
We've
got
some
what
have
been
some
cost-effective
options
to
pursue
around
better
housing
and
transport,
and
then
the
slide
moves
on
to
more
ambitious
options
and
the
innovations
that
are
needed
to
actually
get
us
to
net
zero.
So
it's
fair
to
say:
we've
we've
got
quite
a
challenge
ahead
of
us
in
respect
of
air
quality.
H
Leeds
air
quality
is
now
significantly
below
legal
limits
and
we
actually
discontinued
the
clean
air
zone
proposals
back
in
october
2020
the
clean
air
zone
proposals
were
discontinued
because
leeds
actually
achieved
its
air
quality
ambitions
ahead
of
going
live
with
the
clean
air
zone,
and
so
following
a
joint
review
between
us
and
central
government,
we
actually
discontinued,
like
so
back
in
october,
2020.,
what's
replaced.
The
clean
air
zone
proposals
is
a
new
air
quality
strategy
that
air
quality
strategy
was
approved
by
the
executive
board
earlier
on
this
year.
H
I
believe
it
was
july
that
air
quality
strategy
sets
out
additional
actions
that
we've
taken
to
improve
air
quality
and
from
transport,
but
it
also
brings
in
a
scope,
domestic
emissions,
industrial
emissions
and
agricultural
emissions.
So
there's
quite
a
lot
of
activity
going
on
across
the
council
in
respects
of
that
agenda.
H
Coming
onto
our
buildings,
47
of
the
city's
cabin
footprint
comes
from
heating
and
power
in
our
homes.
So
with
that
in
mind,
we're
going
through
quite
a
lot
of
retrofit
activity
and
improving
insulation,
improving
methods
of
heating,
installing
solar
panels
and
led
lighting,
we're
looking
at
lots
and
lots
of
different
ways
to
leverage
funding
to
deliver
these
improvements,
not
just
in
our
own
buildings,
but
also
in
the
city's
housing
stock
as
well.
Improving
the
energy
efficiency
of
buildings
has
lots
of
benefits.
H
H
Some
of
the
funding
that
we've
leveraged
is
targeted
at
improving
the
cabin
footprint
of
our
own
corporate
stock,
and
recently
we
scared
just
over
25
million
pounds
to
decarbonize
around
40
of
our
public
sector
buildings,
specifically
in
outer
west.
This
means
that
we're
installing
air
source,
heat
pumps
and
solar
panels
at
adult
primary
school
and
spring
gardens
homes
for
all
the
people,
we're
also
doing
an
air
source
heat
pump
at
aero
leisure
centre
and
also
suffolk
court,
which
I
believe
is
now
called
the
northwest
recovery
hub.
H
Coming
onto
the
energy
efficiency
of
housing,
we
plan
to
invest
100
million
pounds
on
improving
the
energy
efficiency
of
our
housing
stock
over
the
next
five
years.
Primarily,
this
is
going
to
be
fed
through
connections
to
the
district's
heating
network,
but
we're
also
looking
at
broadening
out
our
approach
to
energy
efficiency
works
at
homes
across
leeds
looking
at
external
wall,
insulation,
structural
improvements
and
central
heating,
specifically
and
out
of
west
we're.
H
Looking
at
a
scheme
for
homeowners
on
low
incomes
around
eligibility
for
solar
panels,
that's
a
scheme
that
we're
currently
rolling
out
landlords
can
also
tap
into
that
scheme
as
well.
H
H
Coming
onto
transport
again,
transport
has
got
quite
a
large
carbon
footprint
in
the
city.
Currently,
38
of
the
city's
carbon
footprint
comes
from
traveling
through
work
and
leisure,
primarily
from
cars
and
in
the
city.
We've
got
quite
an
ambitious
transport
strategy,
we're
looking
to
improve
active
travel
and
public
transport
infrastructure
we've
also
given
free
parking,
free
electric
vehicle
trials
and
we're
currently
installing
public
charge
points
to
accelerate
transition
to
electric
vehicles
and
within
our
own
fleet,
we've
got
more
lower
mission
vehicles
than
any
other
authority
in
the
uk.
H
I
believe
we've
currently
got
about
330
electric
vans
and
we're
about
to
procure
a
number
of
electric
refuse
collection
vehicles
as
well,
so
we're
really
trying
to
lead
by
example.
H
The
next
slide
is
just
a
bit
more
data
about
the
electric
vehicle
trials.
We've
given
out
lots
and
lots
of
vehicles
for
lots
of
businesses
across
leeds
and
businesses
in
the
outwest
area
have
participated
and
we're
also
in
the
process
of
installing
a
number
of
rapid
electric
vehicle
charge
points
within
the
board
areas.
A
Can
you
just
stop
a
minute
catholic
theory.
L
H
H
Can
we
all
see
the
slides
right?
Okay
here
we
go.
Is
that
better
fastly
yep,
sorry
about
that?
Okay!
So
just
a
really
really
quick
recap,
then,
on
the
public
sector
decarbonization
scheme,
we're
installing
src
pumps
and
solar
panels
at
fastly,
far
field
and
unfortunately,.
H
Yeah,
it's
been
dropped
from
scope.
The
problem
at
pudsey
leisure
center
is
related
to
the
structural
condition
of
the
building,
we're
not
able
to
put
solar
panels
on
the
roofs,
and
there
is
not
enough
space
in
the
plant
room
to
put
the
airsoft
heat
pump
in
so
we're
currently
exploring.
If
there's
any
other
options
at
ponzi,
leisure
center
to
decarbonise
energy
efficiency
of
housing
yep.
I
think
that
update
is
applicable,
yeah,
that's
the
same
update
transport,
nothing
specific
on
there.
H
H
Sorry
about
that
right,
that's
where
I
was
wildlife
and
biodiversity,
so
lots
of
coverage
in
the
media
at
the
minute
about
and
the
threat
to
the
uk's
biodiversity
and
and
what
we
really
need
to
do
in
the
city
around
there
protecting
biodiversity.
H
We
are
also
delivering
the
white
rose
forest
strategy,
so
the
white
rose
forest
is
a
community
forest
for
north
and
west
yorkshire.
We
aim
to
increase
increase
our
tree
canopy
cover
from
17
33
by
2050,
and
we're
doing
this
by
working
in
partnership
with
landowners
institutions,
businesses,
communities
as
well
as
volunteers
from
the
white
rose
partnership.
H
H
And
how
tree
planting
can
be
supported
through
a
mixture
of
donations,
land
identification
and
through
time
volunteering
to
participate
in
tree
planting
schemes
just
a
bit
of
an
ass
to
members?
If
you
are
aware
of
any
land
that
could
be
utilized
for
tree
planting,
our
email
address
is
woodland
creation
at
leeds.gov
uk
and,
if
you
could
just
send
us
through
to
our
team,
that
would
be
gratefully
received.
H
The
next
slide
is
just
an
image
of
a
sign
that
we've
developed
with
parts
and
countryside,
so
we
can
let
people
know
why
we're
doing
wildflower
planting.
So
it's
just
to
indicate
it's
a
pollinate,
pollinator
friendly
area.
Similarly,
we've
also
developed
a
sign
for
relaxed
mowing.
H
We
have
a
climate
newsletter,
we've
got
over
5000
subscribers
and
we
would
like
more
people
to
sign
up
to
our
newsletter.
So
please
sign
up
if
you
haven't
already
done
so,
and
I
think
that
takes
us
through
to
the
end
of
the
slides,
sorry
that
got
a
bit
confusing
in
the
middle
that
happy
to
take
any
questions.
H
A
You
questions
castle
david.
N
I've
just
got
a
couple
to
start
with
on
tree
planting:
what's
the
survival
rate
of
the
all
these
whips
that
we've
planted?
I
know
council
of
forsyth
before
lockdown
and
I
went
and
planted
loads,
but
I
can't
see
no
evidence.
I
mean
it's
a
few
fields
away
from
from
front
road.
N
I
can't
see
a
lot
of
evidence
of
of
authority
growing
there,
since,
since
we've
done
that-
and
we
and
I
understand
with
we're
planting
more
whips
in
my
world
because
it
feels
all
these
fields
we've
got
and
they
have
done
any
any
any
other
ward
in
in
city.
N
But
I'm
just
concerned
about
the
survival
rate,
the
other
thing
on
solar
panels
and
more
quite
a
bit
about
this
from
scheme.
We
did
on
council
houses
that
I
worked
with
council
of
dobson
on
and
one
of
the
things
we
found
there
was
the
great
problem
with
all
the
panels
was
was
how
you
were
connected
system
and
you
get
say,
for
instance,
on
a
council
estate.
You
get
one
side
of
road,
it's
connected
in
parallel,
but
other
side
is
connected
in
series.
N
N
You
probably
didn't
realize
that
that
caused
a
problem,
because
I
didn't
think
about
solar
panels
on
on
the
other
side
it
worked
out,
and
the
other
thing
was
was
the
substations
and
some
areas
weren't
sufficient
to
set
the
electric
electricity
in
that
we're
all
right
at
distributing
it,
but
not
taking
it
back.
Have
we
talked
with
electrical
supply
companies
about
change?
N
I
mean
I've
got
to
say
it's
a
major
job
to
do
this,
but
over
time
changing
this
changing
the
system,
so
that
more
and
more
people
can
have
solar
panels
if
they
want
on
the
I'll.
Just
final
point
as
well
on
your
on
your
things
about
round.
Here,
though,
it
might
be
my
eyesight,
I
don't
know,
but
you
didn't
seem
to
mention
the
the
the
scheme
that
we
had
on
knights
eastern
west
multi-story
flats,
where
we
put
in
ground
sauce.
A
K
Thanks
chair,
so
I
recently
raised
with
polly
the
possibility
of
electric
ice
cream
vans
being
subsidized
in
some
way
we
have
them
driving
around
the
city
constantly.
We
have
them
standing
in
parks
for
hours
on
end
at
times
with
no
electric
charging
points
in
most
parks
and
seemingly
no
way
forward
other
than
the
diesel
generator,
so
that
I
think
I'd
like
to
see
move
forward.
Please
we've
been
offered
some
charging
points
in
our
award.
K
I
don't
know
how
other
awards
fare,
but
they're,
not
rapid,
on
street
charging
points
and
the
residents
are
laughing
at
us.
Basically,
so
that's
one
thing
that
I'd
like
to
pick
up
a
tree
management
policy.
Please
we're
planting
all
these
trees
and
the
ones
that
survive
will
need
managing,
and
so
we
need
to
think
about
that
and
to
david's
point
about
the
ground
source
heat
pumps,
we've
well.
K
C
Right,
thank
you
very
much
emma.
I
think
that
that
the
council
has
done
some
pretty
amazing
things
already
straight
away.
I'm
really
pleased
about
doing
the
ev
trials
for
delivery
vehicles
and
cargo
bikes
and
that
sort
of
thing
in
terms
of
the
tree,
planting
and
especially
connected
with
what
council
blackburn
has
just
said.
C
Inevitably
some
of
the
whips
that
have
been
planted
are
not
going
to
survive,
but
the
fact
of
the
matter
is
that
the
tree
planting
is
about
mitigation,
we're
talking
about
that
being
helpful
decades
down
the
line,
that's
not
about
carbon
reduction
right
now.
That's
the
it's
really
important
that
we're
doing
it.
Don't
get
me
wrong,
I'm
completely
in
favor
of
that,
but
we
just
need
to
make
sure
that
the
message
is
not
oh,
we'll
plant,
some
trees
that'll
be
fine
because
it
won't.
C
So
that's
one
point:
okay,
has
there
been
any
any
work
done
about
identifying
areas
that
can
just
rewild,
because
there's
actually
lots
and
lots
of
little
pockets
of
land
and
we
know
where
all
of
them
are
that
can
just
be
left
and
possibly
even
more,
and
even
I
don't
know
some
signage
or
even
the
people
will
know
that
that's
those
areas
are
just
literally
being
left
to
rewire
or
rather
to
wild
and
finally-
and
I
keep
talking
about
this
verges
and
hedges-
and
I
realize
this
is
more
highways
and
the
planting
of
hedges
might
that
they
grow
pretty
rapidly
as
well.
C
And
so
I
know
the
concentration
has
been
on
thinking
about
the
tree
planting,
but
that
will
be
another
one,
especially
to
help
with
the
air
quality
as
well
along
roadway
routes
and
things
thanks.
D
Yes,
chad,
I
agree
with
the
council
force
that
there
just
seemed
to
be
a
lot
of
feeling
in
the
council
that
if
they
go
out
and
plant
loads
of
trees
that
somehow
this
is
going
to
sort
of
check
or
or
should
I
say,
improve
the
climate
change
problem.
Well,
a
tree
takes
you
used
to
to
grow
and
in
any
case,
but
it's
just
to
me
a
fair
small
thing
that
can
be
done.
It
certainly
isn't
it
isn't
a
thing.
That's
going
to
make
such
a
major
difference
that
everybody
can
be
saying.
D
Oh,
you
can
go
out,
yes,
which
I
know
and
there's
been
said
in
council.
You
know
there's
a
lot
of
feeling,
I
think,
with
with
certain
counselors
after
we
do
that,
that's
gonna
that's
going
to
make
a
big
difference,
and
so
you
know
that'll
cause
that
will
start
out
half
the
problem.
D
Well,
it
won't
I'm
nothing
against
people
planting
trees.
I
know
what
they're
doing
is
the
planting
more
trees
and
the
need
to
do
when
the
plant
out,
because
they
know
a
lot
of
them
won't
take,
and
this
is
what
I've
been
told
when
I've
asked
by
this,
because
I
have
had
residents
concerned
about
the
fact
that
the
trees
are
just
planted.
D
Nobody
bothers
watering
them
and
they
just
said.
Oh,
yes,
well,
someone
will
take
and
some
won't-
and
you
know
so
so
that's
what
they're
doing
I
think
as
well.
As
has
been
said,
there's
got
to
be
some
management
and
this
is
half
the
problem
winding
back
to
when
I
first
got
elected
in
that
some
trees
were
put
in
place
by
housing.
D
They
didn't
really
think
what
trees
they
were
putting
in
place
and
they
had
berries
on
and
then
then,
when
the
bullies
came
off,
they
went
on
people's
cars
or
people
could
slip
on
them
and
all
this
by
the
end
of
the
day,
who
maintains
those
trees,
houses
say:
yes,
it
costs
a
lot
of
money
to
maintain
them.
Invariably
they
don't
get
maintained.
D
So,
whilst
I
have
no
problem
with
people
planting
trees
at
all,
there
is
a
management
plan
put
in
place
for
this
particular
scheme,
but
it's
just
for
so
many
few
years
now
you
know:
okay,
when
these
trees
grow
open.
You
know
some
of
us
will
probably
be
underneath
the
trees
by
then,
but
it's
just
making
a
problem
for
other
people
like
we
inherited
problems
with,
as
I
said,
monies
to
maintain
trees
properly.
D
So
well,
so
will
future
councillors,
because
we're
only
thinking
about
a
certain
amount
of
money
to
do
it
for
x
amount
of
years
a
tree
can
live
for
100
years
I
mean
yeah.
It
depends
what
sort
of
tree
it
is
and
that,
but
generally
that's
when,
when
they
do
the
most
for
the
tech
cabin
out
the
atmosphere
when
you've
got
a
fuel
fully
mature
tree,
but
I
think
we've
just
got
to
think
right
where
we're
going
to
plant
these
trees
and
what
money
do
we
have
going
forward
to
maintain
them?
D
A
Thank
you,
council
lockland.
I've
got
councillor
for
safe
and
councillor
david.
C
N
Yeah
I
I've
I've
got
this
question
in
an
afterthought.
It
was
something
council
of
foster
mentioned
and
and
then
I
thought
I'll
ask
this.
N
A
number
of
years
ago
I
went
to
west
cliff
on
sea,
which
was
in
the
late
david
armistice
constituency
south
end
south
and
east,
except
yeah,
southern
westerly,
and
there
are
some
streets
there
where
they
don't
have.
Privet
edges,
I
mean
sorry,
they
don't
have
them,
they
don't
have
grass
verges,
they
actually
have
edges
where,
where
to
gas
verges,
and
they
are
superb-
you
don't
get
people
packing
on
on
the
grass
because
they
can't
do,
and
I
thought
it
was
really
good
a
number
of
times.
N
Stop
you
breathing
them
in
so
so
that
they're
very,
very
good
and
the
other
thing
is
they
look
really
nice
I
mean
and
that's
one
of
the
things
I've
got
to
say
when
you
look
at
our
grass
verges
they
don't
look
very
nice
at
all
effort
time
so
can
can
somebody
tell
me
if
we've
looked
at
it.
A
There
seems
to
be
no
plan
has
been
mentioned
earlier
by
other
members
for
planting
trees
and
hedges.
Cars
are
allowed
to
idle
outside
schools
and
other
authorities
they're
stopped
from
doing
that.
Why
are
planners
not
being
asking
developers
to
install
sona
panels
at
the
planning
stage?
Why
is
that
not
happening?
A
And
my
final
point
this
year
the
grass
cutting
has
been
absolutely
appalling
and
I've
had
a
string
of
excuses
as
why
one
of
the
excuses
was
that
ragwort
is
the
feeding
home
of
one
of
the
butterflies.
Well,
let
me
tell
you
that
butterfly
only
exists
in
devon
and
cornwall.
It
can't
live
up
here
and,
as
councillor
david
blackburn
has
said,
why
don't
we
plant
hedges
along
some
of
the
main
roads
so
that
we
can?
A
It
can
mitigate
pollution
because
the
ragwort,
because
it's
not
being
cut
till
july
or
august,
is
then
flowering
and
the
flowers
are
going
into
other
fields.
Council
fields
actually
and
the
council
is
liable
to
prosecution
for
this,
then
that
farm
is
being
contracted
out
for
hay.
A
H
Yeah,
okay,
so
just
picking
up
on
the
tree
planting
plan
and
the
survival
of
saplings,
so
when
trees
are
planted,
essentially,
the
maintenance
of
trees
involves
trying
to
maintain
the
area
around
them
and
keeping
that
free
from
weeds.
So
once
I've
been
planted
by
our
parks
and
countryside
department,
they
have
been
maintained
by
parks
and
countryside
where
we're
taking
donations
or
people
are
planting
on
their
own
private
land,
businesses,
land
holders,
etc.
H
What
we're
aiming
to
do
through
the
white
rose
forest
strategy
actually
educate
people
that
are
planting
trees
around
what
they
need
to
do
to
maintain
them
into
the
long
term.
So
that's
part
of
the
the
support
and
the
strategy
around
the
the
planting,
but
definitely
taking
on
board
some
of
the
comments
that
have
been
made
about.
You
know
the
types
of
trees
and
whether
we're
going
to
be
considering
hedges
for
verges
and
such
like.
I
can
definitely
feed
back
that
back
into
the
team.
H
Moving
on
to
the
question
about
pv
and
connectivity
and
when
it's
on
different
sides
of
the
street,
if
I
understood
the
question
correctly,
that
is
something
I
would
need
to
take
away,
and
I
don't
know
the
answer
to
that
question.
What
I
can
advise
around
substation
upgrades
and
electricity
infrastructure
upgrades,
certainly
on
the
corporate
side
of
things.
H
That
is
something
that
we've
run
into
on
delivery
of
that
project,
just
by
way
of
example,
we're
having
to
construct
five
new
electricity
substations
across
the
city
to
handle
the
new
installations
that
are
going
in
so
essentially,
when
you
put
an
air
source
heat
pump
into
a
building.
What
you're
doing
is
you're
displacing
the
use
of
gas,
so
you're
using
much
less
gas,
but
a
lot
more
electricity
and
then
you're
putting
solar
panels
on
to
offset
that
additional
electricity
consumption,
but
obviously
those
new
solar
panels
still
need
to
be
supported
by
the
infrastructure.
H
So
certainly
that
is
something
that
we've
come
across
and
we
are
handling
that
on
a
case-by-case
basis
as
we
work
through
our
program
of
delivery
and
it's
not
just
around
upgrading
new
substations,
though
there's
just
certain
electrical
infrastructure
upgrades
that
need
to
happen.
Some
of
these
are
pretty
small-scale
stuff.
Others
are
much
more
major.
So
again,
that's
something
that's
happening
across
the
certainly
the
corporate
side
of
the
delivery
of
decarbonisation
works
and
also
picks
upon
the
comments
about
certain
issues
that
were
missing
from
the
sides.
I
must
apologize.
H
I
was
provided
with
slides
by
our
comms
team
and
they
inadvertently
updated
the
wrong
slide
deck
and
sent
me
from
the
side
deck.
So
I'm
very
sorry,
but
I
will
get
an
updated
version
issued
to
everybody
that
sits
on
the
meeting.
So
I
am
really
sorry
about
that
ice
cream,
vans,
yeah
that
that
is
the
query.
That's
come
across
my
desk.
H
My
understanding
is
that
there's
not
a
great
deal
by
way
of
solutions
available
for
electric
ice
cream
vans
or
where
there
are
solutions,
they
are
very,
very
expensive
and
because
they
are
expensive,
it's
obviously
quite
difficult
to
get
ice
cream.
Vendors
2010
considering
upgrading
to
them,
and
there
isn't
a
great
deal
of
funding
available
at
the
minute
to
support
that.
That
being
said,
we're
aware
that
it's
an
issue.
We
know
it's
an
issue.
H
It
is
something
in
our
team,
but
we
would
like
to
try
and
address
and
do
something
about
and
so
again,
if
we
do
come
across
any
opportunities
out
in
that
regard,
we
will
pursue
it
just
trying
to
see
if
it
was
anything
else.
I
think
I've
covered
all
the
questions
rewilding
of
areas.
Yes,
that
is
something
that
we
were
happy
to
take
suggestions
on,
but
I
think
everything
else
was
was
around
trees,
primarily
planning
as
well
around
the
development
for
solar
panels
at
the
planning
stage.
H
We
do
mandate
the
installation
of
electric
vehicle
charging
points,
but
I
will
take
away
a
query
about
solar
panels.
A
Thank
you
quickly,
councillor
trishmas,
because
we
need
to
move
on.
K
Sorry,
it
was
just
the
the
point
about
the
on-street
charges
not
being
rapid
charges.
Please
thank
you.
H
Yep,
sorry,
I
mean
I
can
take
it
that
way.
As
a
query,
my
suspicion
is
around
the
electrical
infrastructure
being
able
to
support
a
rapid
and
the
associated
costs.
It
costs
roughly
about
40
50
000
pounds
to
install
a
rapid
charger.
So
I'm
assuming
it's
something-
that's
been
cost
prohibitive,
but
I
can
certainly
take
that
away.
If
you
could
give
me
the
precise
locations
I'll
look
into
it.
H
L
Just
quick
one
ev
chargers,
car
parking
spaces:
why
are
there
one
and
a
half
sizes
compared
to
a
normal
car?
So
when
you
go
to
planning
and
and
they're
asking
for
vv
charges,
obviously
it
means
reducing
the
parking
spaces
or
plumbing
has
got
to
be
changed.
I
just
wondered
why
they're
oversized,
because
the
vehicles
are
not
oversized.
Thank
you.
A
G
Okay,
thank
you
so
for
those
that
weren't
here
at
the
beginning
of
the
meeting
on
youtube,
I'm
scott
lobster-
and
he
leads
that
well
one
of
the
leads
on
social
media
supervisors
and
covering
the
west
of
leeds.
So
just
like
everybody
else,
I'm
been
asked
to
try
and
cover
everything
in
in
10
minutes,
which
is
quite
a
short
time,
probably
talk
to
you
for
hours,
about
procedures
and
things
about
the
social
behavior.
G
So
I'll
run
over
this
very
briefly,
and
if
there's
any
questions
queries
at
the
end,
hopefully
I
have
time
to
answer
those.
So
the
first
point
asked
to
just
give
a
verbal
report
in
his
inter
internal
process
and
procedure
of
laws
back
so
very
quickly.
From
start
to
finish,
we
will
receive
a
complaint
about
social
behavior,
which
could
be
a
wide
variety
of
of
issues,
and
that
will
then
go
through
to
from
our
contact
center
to
our
triage
team,
which
has
only
recently
been
set
up,
and
it's
about
two
years
old.
Now.
G
The
trailers
team
will
correctly
allocate
that
case
whether
it's
to
be
ourselves
or,
if
it's,
for
example,
a
highways
issue,
that's
onto
the
highways
team
or
the
police,
etc.
G
That
case
will
then
go
into
our
q1
case
works
which
I'll
come
on
to
shortly
and
we'll
be
allocated
to
a
case
office
which
I'll
also
go
on
to
shortly.
G
So
each
case
is
different.
Of
course,
it
depends
on
the
priorities
and
vulnerabilities
are
on
a
case,
but,
generally
speaking,
general
process
of
the
case
would
be
our
case
officer
would
interview
the
complainant
and
witnesses
and
do
the
vulnerability
assessments
with
those
making
unnecessary
referrals.
G
It
would
then
be
the
same
process
for
an
accused,
so
we'd
approach
the
accused
speak
to
the
put
forward
delegations
and
do
vulnerability
assessments
with
an
accused
party
as
well.
It
would
then
be
a
point
of
case
building
and
evidence
building,
so
it
lays
we
have
our
partners,
our
relevant
agencies,
clear,
any
evidence
such
as
diaries,
nuisance,
diaries
and
sorry.
I
should
have
said
as
I
keep
referring
to
last,
but
that
stands
for
leads
on
the
social
behavior
team.
G
So
we
would
collect
diaries,
nuisance,
knowledge,
news
and
start
not
sorry,
not
new
stars
asb
and
noise
news,
diaries
photograph
statements,
anything
like
that
that
could
you
know
be
used
in
evidence
if
that,
if
that
evidence
obtained
tips,
the
balance
of
probability,
then
we
can
take
necessary
action.
I
mentioned
bonds,
probably
because
people
made
more
familiar
with
the
police
in
that
for
the
police
in
order
to
get
a
conviction,
charge
or
conviction.
G
There
has
been
no
reasonable
doubt,
so
it
has
to
be
absolutely
proven,
no
doubt
whatsoever
with
the
answers
to
everything
because
we're
civil,
it's
it's
slightly
different
in
that.
If
we
can
balance
it's
a
probability
if
we
can
tip
the
balance
problem,
something
has
happened
rather
than
not
happened.
G
We
can
then
take
necessary
action
on
that
and
if
it
does
go
as
far
as
league
action,
it
will
of
course
be
up
to
a
car
at
the
end
of
the
day
and
on
what
what
is
decided
so
really
quickly-
and
this
is
one
of
the
points
I
could
probably
talk
for
hours
on
is-
is
the
actions
we
can
look
at
so
we'd
start.
We
can
look
at
tenancy
side
of
things,
but
that
is,
of
course
only
if
they're
elicited
council
tenants.
G
We
also
deal
with
private
residents
as
well,
so
we
can
look
at
tenancy
warnings
which
can
then
lead
on
to
legal
action
such
as
possessions
or
closures
of
a
property
other
enforcements
and
things
we
can
look
at.
Are
accessibility
contracts,
injunction
warnings,
but
they
again
they
can
then
lead
on
to
legal
actions
such
as
injunctions.
G
Communication
with
our
partners
will
continue
throughout
the
case
being
active
and
so
that
that's
kind
of
a
really
quick
overview
on
that
point.
I
do
have
two
more
points
to
go
through
just
to
make
it
easier.
I
don't
know
if
anybody's
got
any
questions
or
queries
I
wanted
to
raise
on
on
that
point.
Anybody
get
any
questions.
G
Yeah,
thank
you
so
to
moving
on
quickly
to
the
next
point,
provide
information
on
how
caseworks
is
logged
or
how
case
work
is
load,
sorry
and
how
office
a
resource
is
allocated
to
jobs
within
last,
but
so
the
system
we
actually
use
is
called
caseworks,
and
that
is
where
we
do
have
a
number
of
systems,
but
that's
where
primarily,
our
cases
are
kept
and
everything
is
logged
on
there.
G
G
So
I'm
sorry
I'll
just
come
on
to
that
as
well.
A
little
bit
more
in
detail.
Second,
so
in
terms
of
what
we
keep
in
our
cases,
all
involved
parties,
including
your
complainancy
witnesses,
parents
guardians
accused,
are
all
kept
on
a
case.
All
their
information
is
kept
on
our
cases
all
notes,
vulnerability,
assessments,
conversations
we've
had
with
partners,
interview
notes,
any
evidence
we
obtain
are
all
kept
on
caseworks,
also
and
such
as
enforcement
actions
as
well.
G
So
if
we
serve
a
housing
caution
that
will
be
on
on
there
and
then
if
the
case
is
closed
and
reopened
within
12
months,
it
will
be
there
for
the
next
case
of
to
see
that
that's,
of
course,
still
in
place.
So
key
performance
indicators
are
also
managed
through
our
casework
system
and
our
key
performance
indicators
are
basically
there
to
ensure
that
we're
meeting
we're
contacting
customers
in
a
timely
manner
and
keeping
up
to
date
with
customers
and
finally,
just
from
from
caseworks
the
letters
we
produce
any
warnings.
G
G
However,
we've
we've
lost
one
to
eli
earlier
this
year,
so
we
have
13k
services
across
the
west
of
leeds
now
cases,
particularly
over
this
last
18
months,
probably
a
little
bit
more
than
18
months
now
have,
as
you
probably
imagined,
gone
through
the
roof
we've
covered,
and
obviously
we've
had
some
some
staffing
issues
things
so
particularly
over
the
the
last
eight
months
or
so.
There
has
been
a
there's
been
a
lot
of
situations.
G
Where
cases
you
know
less
height,
lower
risk
cases
have
have
not
been
forgotten
about,
but
kind
of
obviously
dealt
with
not
as
quickly
as
there
would
be.
Usually
so,
of
course,
we've
got
to
prioritize
our
cases
through
risk
risk
urgency,
which
is
which
is
what's
done
through
the
thrive
assessment
by
the
triage
team.
G
So
the
13
case
officers
we've
got
in
in
our
team
in
west
team.
They
are
divided
up
into
the
to
the
areas
into
certain
areas.
So,
for
example,
put
c
we
put
scene
whether
we
have
two
cases
manage
on
that
area.
We've
got
brand
new
starter.
One
of
the
cases
that
you,
you
may
know
has
just
left,
so
they
will
be
in
contact
with
you
shortly
if
they
haven't
been
already.
So
we
have
two
case
offices
and
the
reason
we
have
that
is
so
we
can.
G
We
can
have
our
case
offices
building
their
relationships,
those
connections
in
their
area,
and
so
they
know
their
area
and
cases
usually
allocated.
So,
for
example,
if
we
get
a
case
in
puts
it
we'll
usually
be
allocated
to
one
of
those
two
case
officers,
of
course,
sometimes
with
capacity
issues,
it
might
not
be
possible,
which
is
when
it
may
be
passed
on
to
another
another
case
officer
and
just
in
terms
of
how
we
allocate
our
offer
officer
resource.
G
That's
that's
a
little
bit
there
for
you,
but
also
it's
managed
through
risk
and
we'll
do
monthly
supervisor.
Reviews
once
wants
to
go
through
cases
and
make
sure
everything's
being
done.
That
needs
to
be
done
and
any
instructions
obviously
need
to
be
given
from
there.
So
again,
that's
that's
just
that
point
quickly
covered.
If
there's
any
questions
on
that,
one.
D
K
Thank
you
chair,
just
a
quick
when
you
said
that
currently
the
letters
on
your
system
are
out
of
date
and
therefore
it's
costing
you
time
every
time
you're
going
in.
Would
it
not
be
more
efficient
to
update
the
system
just
once
and
then
the
letters
are
ready
to
go
or
is
that
not
practical.
G
Probably
such
a
subject
to
be
honest
cancer
at
the
moment,
the
system
case
works,
we've
got
is,
is
not
the
best
and
as
we
have
we
are,
there
has
been
talks
of
it
being
replaced
for
a
while,
and
I
think
that
is
still
currently
in
motion
updating
the
letters
because
of
the
way
this
is
all
in
integrating
into
the
system.
It
wouldn't
be
as
simple
as
as
it's
kind
of
just
updating
them
through
the
system.
G
We
don't
have
those
permissions,
we
would
have
to
go
to
the
provider
caseworks
themselves
to
do
that
and
sorry
just
to
be
clear
up
the
maybe
I
over
exaggerate
when
I
say
it's
not
with
the
letters
they
do
require
a
little
bit
of
editing
anyway,
because
obviously
the
personalized
per
case,
and
so,
for
example,
if
we're
doing
an
outcome
letter,
we'll
have
to
say
the
reasons
why
a
case
is
being
closed.
There
are
some
things
on
there.
Just
some
wording
that
does
need
to
slightly
change,
but
it's
wording
that
we
have
saved.
G
N
If
you've
got
a
case,
if
you
close
the
case,
obviously
be
careful
saying
it
because
it's
not
either
because
it
deals
actually
deals
with
a
proper
case.
But
if
you've
closed
the
case,
because
the
said
person
in
the
case
is
in
secured
accommodation
outside
of
leads
but
may
come
back
to
live
in
the
council
house
that
they
lived
in.
G
No,
we
would
reopen
that
case,
so
what
we
generally
do,
because
the
majority
of
actions
we
take
on
a
case
last
12
months
for
housing
caution,
for
example.
So
if
a
case
is
closed,
we
can
reopen
a
case
11
months
later
and
that
housing
caution
would
still
be
in
place.
K
L
G
To
give
you
a
detailed
answer
on
that,
I'm
not
the
best
person,
but
what
I
can
say
is,
as
I've
said,
particularly
since
curvied
I
mean
we'll
see
since
the
church
team's
coming
it
has.
There
has
been
a
kind
of
a
bit
of
a
teething
process,
as
could
be
expected,
particularly
with
we've
covered
and,
most
recently,
the
caps
system.
G
That's
used
now
to
raise
inquiries,
it's
actually
open
to
members
of
the
public,
so
naturally
there
has
been
a
huge
influx
of
inquiries
going
through
to
the
triage
team,
so
just
to
give
an
example,
speaking
to
kevin
brighton
who
who
was
the
head
of
the
triage
team,
I
think
they
were
dealing
with
around
two
and
a
half
thousand
inquiries
at
a
peak
time
last
month.
I
have
got
that
down
now,
but
generally
you
should
be
hearing
back
if
it's
a
priority
case
high
risk
case.
G
You
should
be
hearing
back
within
one
working
day
and
I
believe
it's
it's
two
working
days
for
other
cases.
L
Because
with
many
services,
you
get
an
email
back
to
say
that
it's
been
logged,
but
I
will
wait
in
weeks
and
you
can
imagine
what
our
residents
are
feeling,
because,
obviously
that's
why
they've
come
to
you
for
raising
it,
and
I
had
to
escalate
it
to
to
try
and
get
even
reported,
and
that
was
one
of
my
concerns
and
there's
another
one
as
well.
It's
obviously
these
are
referrals
that
come
back
to
yourselves,
but
we've
got
a
massive
issue
with
with
fireworks
yeah.
L
But
how
do
we
report
that
individual
ones
as
a
councilor
we're
not
responsible
to
take
that
forward
and
and
to
tackle
that?
I
believe
council
have
got.
You
know,
policies,
and
you
know
they
could
stand
and
do
what
they
need
to
do
to
tackle
fireworks
and
and
the
social
behavior
that
we're
getting
before
bonfire
night.
Is
that
not
something
we
can
do.
G
So
yes,
there
has
been,
there
has
been
a
number
of
of
kind
of
bully
agency
meetings
and
discussions
around
fireworks
and
around
bomb
fight
night,
particularly
in
this
ward.
I'm
not
exactly
sure
on
what
what
means
those
have
taken
place
from
kind
of
a
more
local
point
of
view,
but
I
know
it's
particularly
high
on
the
police
agenda.
What
what
makes
it
difficult
with
ourselves
with
fireworks?
Because
we
do
we
can
we
can
take
action
on
those
particularly
council
tenant.
G
What
makes
it
difficult
with
fireworks,
and
probably
with
anything
really
it
comes
down
to
social
behavior-
is
identifying
those
that
are
involved.
G
If
we
have
the
the
identities
of
those
that
are
involved,
we
can
look
at
taking
those
actions,
but
if
we,
if
we
don't
have
those,
it
does
make
it
a
lot
more
difficult
for
us
as
the
social
behavior
team.
A
I
Good
afternoon,
chair
good
afternoon
councillors
and
just
an
update
on
the
environmental
protection
team,
so
the
environment
protection
team
is
part
of
the
environmental
health
service,
so
the
service
there's
kind
of
three
arms
to
it.
So
we've
got
the
food
safety
team,
then
we've
got
pest
control
and
then
environmental
protection,
so
the
environmental
protection
team
we
deal
with
environmental
nuisance.
I
We
deal
with
health
and
safety,
local
air
pollution
control,
dog
wardens,
you
name
it
throw
it
in
it's
all
in
there,
nuisance
in
the
city
is
split
between
different
teams,
so
the
environmental
protection
team
deal
with
commercial
nuisance
from
commercial
premises
last,
but
we'll
deal
with
noise
nuisance
from
domestic
premises.
Cleaner
neighborhoods
team
will
deal
with
waste
and
waste
issues
from
all
premises.
I
So
it's
not
just
it's
not
just
as
straight
cut
as
one
team
deals
with
all,
so
it
is
split
across
those
teams.
So
from
the
environmental
protection
team's
perspective,
we
deal
with
commercial
nuisance,
so
that
can
be
commercial
noise,
dust
odor,
whatever
it
is
really
and
and
basically
the
the
requests
can
come
into
us
a
number
of
ways.
So
direct
by
email
to
the
ep
team
at
least.gov,
dot
uk
by
telephone
direct
to
our
own
business
support.
Colleagues.
I
Residents
can
report
online,
which
has
caused
some
issues
when
the
forms
were
redone,
because
there
was
no
split
between
commercial
and
domestic
so
last,
but
we're
getting
a
lot
of
them.
Hopefully
now
that's
resolved
touchwood
and
they
are
being
allocated
to
the
right
teams.
As
of
so
that's
when
residents
go
online,
but
we
are
also
relying
on
residents
choosing
the
right
category
so
that
it
goes
to
the
correct
team
or
it
can
go
through
the
contact
center.
I
So
there's
a
number
of
ways
that
we
get
referrals
when
we
do
get
referrals
they're
allocated
to
an
officer,
and
it
may
be
depending
on
whether
it
is
if
it's
the
first
time,
we'll
probably
send
out
a
questionnaire
and
asking.
Is
it
a
one-off?
Is
it
an
ongoing
problem
just
to
gather
some
further
information?
I
And
if
it's
a
returning
one,
it's
allocated
to
an
officer
for
further
investigation,
so
following
counselor
serious
inquiries
from
councillor
theory.
A
few
weeks
ago,
I've
now
asked
that
when
ward
members
are
making
referrals
that
the
email
confirmation
that
goes
back
to
ward
members
includes
the
job
reference
number
and
the
officer
that
it's
been
allocated
to.
So
that's
that
should
now
be
in
place
of
us
business
support
police.
To
do
that
so
yeah,
it's!
What
action
can
we
take?
I
Well,
we
approach
each
job
where
we'll
approach
both
sides
and
just
to
get
a
picture
of
what's
going
on
and
we're
there
to
support
business
as
well
as
investigate.
So
it
is
a
fine
line.
But
if
we
do
determine
that
that
noise
or
nuisance
is
statutory
nuisance,
then
we
will
serve
a
formal
notice
once
that
notice
is
served.
Should
there
be
any
reach
to
that
notice,
then
that's
when
it
becomes
a
criminal
offence
and
should
be
a
breach
of
the
notice.
Then
it
would
then
go
and
we
would
look
at
prosecuting
a
business.
I
A
Thank
you
very
much
so
now,
on
to
date
and
time
of
next
meeting,
we've
got
a
meeting
planned
in
february
mike.
A
Okay,
that's
that's
good.
Can
I
suggest
that
we
have
a
meeting
in
january
even
if
it's
just
by
zoom,
to
get
through
some
business
and
we
have
to
confirm
whatever
we
do
at
the
next
meeting.
I
don't
mind
if,
because
we
can't
make
decisions
in
the
zoom
meeting,
we've
got
to
have
a
meeting
face
to
face
to
make
decisions,
but
I
think
we're
going
to
have
so
much
business
to
get
through.
I
don't
want
another
meeting
like
this,
because
it's
been
very
long
today.
Is
that
possible?
Somebody
help
you
with
that.
A
A
A
Council
carter
was
going
to
to
bring
that
up.
Wasn't
he
yeah,
or
can
we
defer
that
to
the
next
meeting,
then
the
consultative
one
lovely.
Thank
you
very
much.
Thank
you
for
your
attention
and
thank
you
for
everybody.
Who's
watching
thanks.