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A
A
In
order
to
avoid
any
disruption
to
the
meeting
should
I
lose
internet
connectivity,
I
propose
we
appoint
a
vice
chair
who
could
step
in
during
my
absence
I
move
councillor
hesselwood
and
invite
another
member
to
second
that
motion.
A
Perfect
any
objectives
or
abstentions,
all
happy
perfect.
Could
I
now
invite
members
and
officers
to
introduce
themselves
and
mute
your
microphone
once
you've
introduced
yourself
I'll
start
with
councillor
jim
mckenna.
A
A
A
C
Liz
german
hi,
I'm
liz
jamin,
I'm
head
of
stronger
communities.
B
H
A
C
Thank
you,
chair
under
agenda
item
one.
There
are
no
appeals
against
refusal
of
inspection
of
documents.
Item
two.
There
are
no
exempt
items
item
three.
There
are
no
formal
late
items.
However,
there
are
supplementary
information
in
relation
to
the
agenda
item
10,
which
is
the
finance
report,
and
all
members
should
have
received
this
via
email.
C
C
A
B
Thanks
chair,
I
just
want
to
ask
a
question
on
the
last
community
rep.
If
you
remember
miss
o'keefe
had
come
along
talking
about
playing
fields
that
wasn't
an
army
was
in
workley
and
made
some
remarks
about
the
lack
of
community
green
space
and
army,
which
wasn't
true.
Actually
she
did
claim
that
the
central
reservation
on
stanley
road
was
regarded
as
green
space.
I
did
question
this.
B
I
knew
it
wasn't
true,
but
I
did
question
that
indeed
it
was
confirmed
by
part
parks
and
countryside
that
it
was
totally
untrue,
but
you
can
see
in
the
final
sentence
where
the
chair
and
the
community
committee
thanked
miss
o'key
for
her
representations
and
offered
to
ask
the
appropriate
scrutiny
board
to
look
into
this
matter.
This
was
in
november
19.
So
I
just
wonder:
what's
the
update
on
that
one?
Please.
A
I
believe
it's
been
passed
to
officers
karen.
Can
you
fill
us
in
on
where
who
it
got
sent
to.
A
I
guess
it
having
been
a
year,
that's
probably
legitimate,
that
we
have
to
check
up
on
that,
and
I
will
therefore
email
all
members,
including
co-op
teams,
to
let
them
know
what
the
outcome
was
and
where
it
is
currently.
B
A
All
right,
then,
thank
you,
in
which
case
we'll
move
to
agenda
item
number
nine.
The
priority
neighborhood
update.
Can
I
ask
stuart
stewart,
vern
and
rachel
marshall
to
present
the
update
on
priority
neighborhoods.
Please.
G
Thanks
chair,
so
this
item
is
to
report
back
on
the
work
around
the
priority
neighborhood
of
new
wertly
and
the
report
and
update
that
we
took
to
the
neighborhood
improvement
board
back
in
january.
This
item
was
supposed
to
come
to
you
your
march
meeting,
but
that
was
the
one.
The
first
meeting
community
committee
meeting
that
was
cancelled
due
to
covered
I'm
going
to
try
and
share
my
screen,
because
I
I've
prepared
a
presentation
which
we
gave
to
the
we
forget
the
neighborhood
improvement
board.
G
That's
that's
great,
so
I
thought
it'd
be
easy
to
do
as
a
presentation,
rather
than
go
through
line
by
line
of
the
general
report
included
in
papers.
So,
first
of
all,
let's
say
I'm
stuart
byrne
locality
program
manager.
I
have
responsibility
for
leading
the
work
around
the
new
worldly
priority.
Neighborhood
I'd
like
to
start
all
of
my
presentations
around
the
new
worldly
neighborhood
with.
C
G
The
the
estates
between
army
gyratory
next
to
the
prison
just
lower
than
harmley
it's
identified
as
one
of
six
priority
neighborhoods
within
the
city
and
is
ranked
ninth
most
deprived
area
in
the
city
being
one
of
twelve
neighborhoods,
which
are
in
one,
which
are
ranked
one
within
the
one
percent
most
deprived
being
about
only
directorate
is
very
close
to
the
city
center.
Yet
it
feels
totally
disconnected
from
from
the
benefits
of
the
city.
G
The
neighborhood
is
primarily
housing
leads
stock,
number
of
high-rise
tower
blocks
with
a
couple
of
council
housing
estates,
the
it's
overshadowed
by
the
prison,
it's
quite
a
harsh
environment,
environment,
there's
a
lot
of
grass,
but
particularly
in
the
whole
first
very
few
trees,
and
has
has
often
been
a
draw
for
antisocial
behavior
fly
tipping,
but
we're
wanting
to
create
create
a
vision
for
new
worldly
to
create
a
clean,
green,
safe
space
to
for
local
residents
to
live
just
to
give
you
a
bit
of
a
snapshot
of
the
actual
neighborhood
within
the
private
neighborhood,
there's
just
short
of
2
000
people
living
there
fairly
equally
split
between
male
and
females.
G
G
G
I
think
this
is
quite
a
stark
statistic
for
the
neighborhood.
If
you
look
at
the
blue
line
at
the
top
of,
if
you
the
left
hand,
column
is
females.
The
right
and
columns
is
male.
The
highest
life
expectancies
for
worlds
within
the
city
are
the
blue
ones,
which
range
up
to
88
years
for
three
females
in
weatherby
and
about
86
for
for
males,
whereas
the
yellow
bars
here
are
the
as
the
life
expectancies
of
our
poor
awards,
the
red
dot
is
where
harmony
world
sits.
G
So
life
expectancy
for
females
is
seven
he's
about
79
years
of
age
and
it's
75
for
for
males.
So
it's
dramatically
lower
by
some
10
years
for
males
and
from
from
the
most
affluent
parts
of
the
city
and
also
around
health
statistics.
G
Rates
of
copd
are
significantly
above
believer
needs
average
in
in
the
area
around
clement
count
the
clement
current
cleveland
county.
This
is
from
october
this
year.
The
new
worldly
area
has
a
clement
count
of
just
over
15,
which
is
more
than
double
the
leads
average.
G
Just
to
give
you
a
bit
of
context
because,
obviously
we're
in
a
slightly
different
position
than
we
than
we
would
have
been.
Last
year,
the
claimant
count
out
today
of
august
2019.
The
leads
average
was
3.1.
G
New
worldly
was
9.2,
so
there's
been
in
the
last
few
months
with
kobe
there's
been
a
quite
dramatic
increase
in
claimant
count
both
in
the
city,
but
particularly
in
this
area.
Crime
around
the
area
is
double
the
leads
average
and
in
pretty
much
all
of
their
all
domains
are
measured.
G
Crime
rates
are
particularly
high
around
asb
and
violence
and
sexual
offences
of
the
neighborhood,
so
that
just
gives
you
a
bit
of
a
snapshot
of
the
current
statistics
for
the
area.
If
we
go
back
to
2016
when
work
around
the
priority,
neighborhood
began,
it
was
chosen
as
a
bit
of
a
pathfinder,
because
there
was,
there
were
a
range
of
issues
that
came
to
before
within
the
neighborhood
and
that
included
arson.
Vandalism
antagonism
towards
services.
G
There
were
particular
issues
around
the
flag,
tipping
environmental
blight,
drugs
and
substance
misuse
so
as
as
as
part
of
our
reviewing
to
locality,
working
new
workload
was
chosen
as
a
as
an
area
that
the
council
chose
to
do
some
particular
focused
work
around,
and
we
came
up
with
a
strategic
framework
of
how
we
approach
that
work.
So
the
idea
was
to
put
new
worldly
at
the
center
of
everything
that
we
did
within
that
neighborhood.
G
We
developed
a
core
team
of
key
partners,
stakeholders
residents
and
we
identified
four
key
working
strands
to
focus
around
children
and
people,
employment,
skills,
welfare,
the
place
agenda
around
safe
for
cleaner,
greener
spaces
and
health
and
well-being.
G
G
It
was
aimed
at
this
framework
would
help
us
realign
resources,
particularly
within
services
around
how
we
tackled
local
issues
and
also
gave
us
permission
to
look
at
how
we
delivered
did
things
differently
to
to
really
look
at
system
change
of
how
we
could
make
to
to
really
get
under
the
skin
of
some
of
those
really
funny
issues.
G
G
G
One
of
the
first
things
we
did
was
to
identify
that
young
people
were
often
involved
with
some
of
the
key
challenges
within
within
the
neighborhood,
and
it
was
like
it
was
decided
to
look
at
a
top
10
key
individuals
list
to
look
at
those
names
that
kept
coming
up
time
and
time
again
and
to
identify
what
activities
being
take
was
taking
place
around
those
individuals
and
what
interventions
when
we
did
that
we
realized
that
there
were
certain
individuals
that
were
totally
missing
off
people's
radars
and
services,
radars,
others
that
were
getting
multiple
interventions,
often
pulling
them
in
multiple
directions.
G
So
we
came
so
from
that
top
10
list.
We
we
coordinated
a
range
of
activity
and
within
12
months
all
of
those
individuals
were
engaged
within
different
positive
activities
through
partners
and
local
community
groups.
G
One
one
of
the
key
issues
around
the
neighborhood
was
centered
around
a
premises
called
wellington
stalls
which
was
a
draw
for
drug
dealing,
asb
and
lots
and
lots
of
challenges.
G
One,
a
very
quick
win
that
we
we
took
that
took
place
was
for
us
to
for
housing
to
develop,
gain
a
closure
order
for
that
site,
which
we
were
able
to
then
take
take
the
site
back
from
alicia.
That
was
potential
but
running
a
business
at
the
time,
and
then
we
were
able
to
demolish
that
that
site,
which
immediately
took
away
that
draw
for
that
that
site.
G
G
So
what
we
actually
saw
within
a
12-month
period
was
a
significant
drop
within
asb
rates
which
fell
by
about
68.
G
However,
as
previously
noted,
asb
rates
are
still
high
compared
to
the
city,
and
there
is
still
a
particular
issue
where
I
still
particular
issues
around
violence
and
sexual
offences.
So
but
this
by
no
means
completed
the
work
here,
but
we
certainly
felt
that
those
interventions
made
a
significant
initial
difference.
H
Next
slide,
please
not
yet
thank
you,
okay.
So
it's
strange
looking
back
at
this.
To
be
honest
because
I
I
was,
I
was
talking
about
this
particular
slide
and
some
of
the
stuff
coming
coming
that
we're
gonna
come
on
to
back
in
january,
and
I
guess
the
world
was
very
different
then,
and
our
plans
around
what
we
would
do
with
the
community
in
terms
of
engagement
is
a
lot
different
from
the
the
reality
that
we've
had
this
year.
H
So
a
lot
of
the
plans
that
we
had
around
around
doing
that
was
have
been
and
gone,
and
we've
had
to
look
at
new
ways
that
which
we
can
do
some
of
that
engagement.
Some
of
the
things
I
guess
I'd
like
to
highlight.
I
don't
know
if
you
can
get
rid
of
that
stuart
we've
got
a
conversation
on
there.
I'm
not.
H
So,
just
a
couple
of
things
to
highlight,
I
guess
on
the
engage
in
the
community,
so
it's
never
a
perfect
process
and
we
always
have
to
look
at
various
ways
in
which
we
can
engage
different
demographics
in
different
ways:
the
children,
young
people's
board-
that's
that's
been
started
up
at
new
worldly
community
center
is
a
fantastic
way
of
which
we
have
been
able
to
engage
with
with
children
and
young
people
in
the
new
workly
area.
H
It's
very
new
and
we've
got
about
nine
ten
members
at
the
moment,
but
what
they
have
is
regular
engagement
with
those
young
people,
I
think
they're
all
at
high
school
and
they
all
have
really
strong
views
about
what
they'd
like
to
see
and
how
they'd
like
to
make
a
difference
in
their
community,
and
I
think,
where
you,
you
know,
you
start
small
and
you
build
on
that.
H
H
We've
talked
about
how
we
can
use,
perhaps
some
of
the
youth
activity
fund,
how
they
can
influence
some
of
that
spend
and
come
up
with
projects
and
ideas
of
their
own,
that
they
can
be
a
part
of
implementing
and
work
with
young
people
to
engage
their
community
and
their
peers
around
getting
involved
and
being
more
active.
H
So
it's
a
start.
We're
working
to
support
new
workly
around
the
board
and
how
we
can
sort
of
take
that
on
they've
recently
got
some
funding
to
do
to
take
over
two
planters
in
jail
fields
that
they're
going
to
plant
up
with
flowers
and
vegetables
and
things
I
think,
and
with
the
idea
that
it's
the
young
people
again
we'll
take
care
of
that
and
give
them
a
guess,
some
ownership
of
something
within
daily
phils
itself.
H
I
won't
go
through
each
of
these
because
there's
this
the
well-being
weekend,
I
think
was
was
particularly
interesting.
Stuart
had
mentioned
the
health
inequalities
that
we
look
at
when
we
talk
about
the
priority
neighborhood
and
how
outcomes
for
for
people
living
in
that
area
are
so
much
worse
than
for
people,
for
example,
living
in
weatherby
about
the
well-being
weekend
was
recognizing
that
and
and
using
that
to
actually
have
a
conversation
with
the
community
about
healthy
options
about
food,
about
getting
more
active,
etc.
H
So
we
work
with
partners
around
what
their
opportunities
were
locally
and
how
we
could
better
engage
and
find
out
what
people
would
be
interested
in
doing
so
that
new
worldly
could
take
on
some
of
those
ideas
and
potentially
look
at
what
else
can
what
else
they
can?
I
guess
implement
so
there's
the
obviously
the
men's,
walking
group
at
the
moment,
but
was
there
something
around
trying
to
get
a
cycling
group
together
or
other
ideas
that
we've
had
again?
H
This
was
something
wasn't
able
to
be
progressed
in
the
way
that
we
would
have
liked,
but
it
is
a
kind
of
work
in
progress.
I
guess
and
then
a
couple
of
other
things
were
we
used
housing
to
to
have
a
conversation
really
with
council
tenants,
so
housing
as
a
matter
of
course,
do
an
annual
home
survey
for
each
of
their
properties,
which
finds
out
basically
who's
living
there.
H
What
issues
they
have
is
there
any
repairs
need
doing
a
bit
about
family
history
about
what's
going
on
and
things
that
they're
interested
in
etc,
and
we
used
that
as
a
starting
point
to
come
up
with
some
additional
questions
that
we
were
interested
in
in
sort
of
speaking
to
people.
H
What
we
had
was
a
lot
of
anecdotal
information
about
it,
but
what
we
wanted
to
kind
of
do
was
actually
speak
to
the
community
and
find
out
how
they
felt
about
where
they
lived,
what
they
felt,
how
safe
they
felt
did
they
like
living
where
they
were?
What
were
the
big
pluses,
what
were
the
negatives,
and
we
pulled
about
200
surveys
back
from
that
and
part
of
those
results
were
again
going
to
go
to
the
subgroups
for
further
conversations
about
how
we
could
implement
some
of
that.
H
Take
some
of
that
learning
to
have
those
conversations
with
partners
about
what
else
we
can
do
driven
really
by
the
community,
and
then
the
local
services
handbook
was
really
trying
to
signpost
and
direct
people
to
some
of
the
services
that
we
have
within
the
west
area,
not
just
in
in
new
worldly,
but
also
army
and
wider,
still
with
the
idea
that
those
would
be
given
out
at
the
point
of
a
new
tenancy
for
a
step,
for
example,
handed
out
in
the
community
centre
and
as
a
way
to
try
and
encourage
people
to
engage
with
the
services
that
were
there,
but
also,
I
guess
the
next
stage
is,
is
trying
to
understand
what
else
is
missing.
H
H
When
we
talk
about
new
work
lee,
I
don't
think
any
of
us
can
ignore
what
they've
done
as
one
of
the
volunteer
hubs
of
the
city,
and
they
have
been
phenomenal
in
terms
of
the
work
that
they've
done
their
attitude
to
taking
it
on,
and
the
success
they've
made
of
that.
So,
as
the
first
point
says,
they
were
the
fifth
busiest
hub
city-wide
and
it
mentions
a
thousand
formal
referrals,
but
that
doesn't
take
into
account
all
the
ones
that
came
in
from
other
from
other
sources.
H
So
it
has
been
a
really
busy
hub
over
the
past
seven
eight
months.
Now
that
we're
talking
about.
I
don't
think
we
ever
thought
back
in
march,
when
I
had
that
first
conversation
with
them
that
we
would
still
be
in
that
role
and
still
working
in
the
way
that
we
are,
but
they
have
embraced
it
and
are
continuing
to
do
that
through
the
second
lockdown,
which
seems
a
little
bit
different.
So
the
numbers
are
lower
at
the
moment.
H
But
what
we're
hearing
is
still
that
ongoing
holistic
approach
that
needs
to
be
taken
to
the
referrals
that
are
coming
in,
and
certainly
mental
health
is
an
increasing
issue
for
the
hub
and
how
they
can
support
people
who
are
struggling
with
the
isolation
and
the
ongoing
situation.
H
I
think
all
around
covert
what's
been
a
really
interesting
point
and
I
had
a
chat
with
andrea
before
I
I
put
this
slide
together,
because
I
really
wanted
her
views
and
and
her
to
be
represented
at
this
meeting
in
terms
of
the
new
weekly
community
center
and
what
she
was
keenly
keen
to
sort
of
stress
was
that
there's
been
an
organic
change
in
strategy,
so,
whereas
before
staff
would
fill
out,
forms
would
do
a
little
bit
of
sign
posting
and
have
a
sort
of
generic
knowledge
of
what
what
was
going
on
and
how
to
support
people
coming
into
the
center.
H
That's
now
been
replaced
with
specific
themes,
workers,
so
we've
now
got
a
mental
health
support
worker,
a
communities
of
interest
worker
and
a
children
and
young
people
support
worker
so
recognizing
these
are
three
key
things
that
have
come
out
of
cobit
about
how
we
support
people
to
have
improved
mental
health,
and
these
are
workers
that
will
be
out
there
in
the
community
having
those
conversations
and
finding
out
what
opportunities
there
are
and
again
what
opportunities
there
are
for
new
worldly
to
work
with
those
people
around
creating
activities,
etc.
H
H
Sometimes
people
who
aren't
quite
as
engaged
with
the
community
center
as
as
perhaps
other
people
are,
and
that
was
something
andrea
had
recognized
and
as
as
secured
funding
to
actually
employ
a
worker
who
will
go
out
there
again
and
have
those
conversations
and
then
linking
back
to
to
the
whole
kind
of
presentation
around
the
neighborhood
improvement
work
and
and
what
a
an
issue
we've
had
a
round
engagement
with
children
and
young
people
and
the
ongoing
youth
asp
that,
although
we've
seen
massively
improve
it,
is
still
an
ongoing
situation
and
how
we
can
better
support
young
people
to
give
them
those
key
role,
models
and
those
aspirations
that
we
want
for
all
young
people.
H
We
want
them
for
our
own
children.
We
want
them
for
their
children
in
the
priority
neighborhood
to
basically
get
more
and
and
expect
more.
So
that's
going
to
be
a
really
key
worker
going
forward.
That's
a
new
post!
Again,
that's
come
into
place,
and
then
I
think
really
just
stressing
the
partnership
working.
H
That's
come
about
through
cove
vid
working,
so
there's
been
a
really
strong
relationship
with
leeds
rhinos,
an
army
helping
hands
who,
although
a
volunteer
hub
themselves
for
barnley
and
workly,
have
also
supported
andrea
in
terms
of
the
older
people
within
the
army,
ward,
to
make
sure
that
they've
had
the
correct
support
and
information
etc
to
to
to
cope
through
this
time.
H
And
then,
when
really
interesting,
development
has
been
that
relationship
with
schools
so
from
before,
really
struggling
to
kind
of
engage
with
schools.
H
That's
that's
really
come
through
very
strongly
now
through
the
work
they've
done
and
which
has
led
to
a
better
support
for
the
healthy
holidays,
activities
that
have
taken
place
over
the
summer
and
over
half
term,
with
really
good
engagement
from
schools
and
actually
recognizing
that
new
wertly
community
center
are
a
really
key
factor
in
how
to
support
not
only
children
through
the
healthy
holidays,
but
families
in
a
wider
sense
of
the
word,
and
that's
certainly
an
ambition
for
the
center,
and
so
really
the
hub
model
has
kind
of
redesigned
the
whole
centre's
focus
in
a
way
that
wasn't
expected
back
in
march,
but
has
led
to
a
greater
knowledge
and
a
greater
kind
of
engagement
with
the
community
and
a
lot
more
learning
about
the
community.
H
They
live
in
as
well,
not
just
for
new
workload,
but
for
ramly
as
a
whole.
Next
slide,
please
do
some
new
weekly
successes
going
back
to
the
priority
neighbourhood
work
as
a
whole
and
so
new.
Well,
it
was
the
first
as
we
talked
about
it
was
the
pathfinder
and
certainly
the
other
priority
neighborhoods.
H
The
other
five
one
of
which
I
I
work
in
in
seacroft,
has
really
taken
the
learning
from
new
wertly
and
the
work
that
we
put
in
some
years
ago
and
has
definitely
mirrored
how
they
have
set
up
their
governance
structures
and
and
and
to
be
fair,
a
lot
of
the
outcomes
and
and
priorities
within
the
wards
that
we
we
have
the
priority
neighborhoods
in
face
the
same
challenges
around
employment
and
deprivation.
H
H
That
are
the
priorities
for
those
areas
and
the
real
kind
of
benefit
has
been
those
partner
agencies
sharing
the
issues
that
they
find
and
that
they
can
work
better
together
and
create
better
outcomes
for
the
residents,
and
that
generally,
we
can
make
a
difference
to
their
key
performance
indicators
that
they
want
to
work
on
so
areas
of
work
that
matter
to
them
that
they're,
measured
on
by
working
collectively
together.
We
can
usually
make
improvements
on
that
better
engagement
with
the
community.
I
think
we
have
made.
We
have
made
inroads
in.
H
I
think
it's
still
a
work
in
progress.
I
think
we
can
always
do
more.
As
I
say,
the
box
pops,
I
think,
was
really
popular.
We
had
ideas
about
sharing
that
with
the
community.
H
We've
not
been
able
to
do
a
lot
of
the
work
that
we
wanted
to
do
this
year
and
you
were
the
opportunities
around
new
earthly
festivals
and,
and
things
like
that,
are
the
opportunities
I
guess
we've
missed
through
that
sort
of
lack
of
face-to-face
engagement
and
then,
as
I
said,
around
the
sort
of
increased
trust,
not
only
between
those
in
the
community
that
I'd
like
to
think
and
that
we've
delivered
on
on
things
that
were
key
projects
that
we
said
we
would
do,
but
also
amongst
partners
working
together
in
in
new
worldly
next
slide.
H
So
the
ongoing
challenges,
which
is,
is,
I
suppose,
more
of
the
the
negative
stuff,
and
I
don't
like
to
kind
of
end
so
much
on
that.
H
But
I've
talked
a
lot
about
new
work,
the
community
centre,
and
inevitably
we
do
whenever
we
talk
about
the
priority
neighborhood
work,
because
they
are
our
main
third
sector
partner
that
we
work
with
that
and
we
do
place
a
lot
of,
I
suppose
yeah
a
lot
of
a
lot
of
challenge
to
them
to
kind
of
deliver
really
and
they
do
over
and
over
again,
and
whenever
we
come
up
with
a
project
we
want
to
work
on
in
the
area.
H
They
they
always
put
their
hands
up
and
say
yes,
we'll
take
that
on,
but
they
have
been
under
significant
pressure
this
year
and
will
continue
to
be
and
they've
lost
a
lot
of
revenue
and
although
they've
made
some
we've,
obviously
supported
them
through
funding,
as
have
the
board
members
for
for
only
in
terms
of
supporting
that
center.
H
H
So,
whilst
they've
they've
continued
to
run
some
of
their
support
groups
that
revenue
from
hiring
out
the
centre
has
been
lost,
obviously,
we've
got
a
high
concentration
of
vulnerable
groups.
Again.
Newer
leo
has
looked
to
to
rectify
some
of
that
work
within
creating
that
communities
of
interest
worker,
which
we
hope
will
address
some
of
that
need
and
try
and
understand
and
get
into
that
those
communities
to
find
out
what
we
can
do
better
to
support
them
going
forward.
H
We
haven't
seen
the
the
big
investment
of
funds
being
made
available
for
new
workly
that
we
have
in
perhaps
other
areas
of
the
city.
There
hasn't
been
the
big
housing
developments,
for
example,
that
we've
seen
perhaps
in
in
parts
of
east
leeds,
which
has
created
opportunities
around
the
section
106
money.
H
So
we've
had
to
do
what
we
can
with
less
money.
I
guess-
and
that
means
that
we
haven't
been
able
to
do
the
big
showy
investment
projects
etc,
but
we
are
making
inroads.
We
are
looking
at
what
we
can
do
with
the
money
that
we've
got
working
together
with
our
ward
councillors
around
the
youth
activity
fund
and
the
well-being
pots
of
money
that
we
can
do
little
projects.
H
Obviously
we
had
the
leads.
Let's
get
to
active
funding,
so
we've
we've
used
what
we
can
as
creatively
as
we
can
to
to
basically
do
the
best
that
we
can
for
the
community
and
there's
always
going
to
be
competing
priorities
for
services,
and
I
think,
obviously,
councillors
you're
you're,
aware
of
the
challenges
we've
got
at
the
moment.
We've
we've
lost
a
significant
number
of
quite
senior
staff
within
the
council.
H
There
may
be
other
members
of
staff
going
in
the
future
under
the
early
leaders
programme
and
how
we
continue
to
work
with
services
and
partners
is
key.
If
we're
going
to
make
those
changes
for
the
better
postcode
challenges,
we
don't
know,
what's
next
we're,
obviously
in
the
middle
of
this
second
lockdown
at
the
moment,
we
don't
know
what
will
happen
at
beginning
of
december
and
we've
put
an
awful
lot
of
pressure
on
the
hub
over
the
past
seven
months.
People
are
tired.
H
People
are
exhausted
to
be
honest
in
trying
to
cope
and
deliver
over
the
past
eight
months.
We're
asking
them
to
continue
that
at
the
moment
we
don't
know
how
much
longer
we'll
be
doing
that
for
and
obviously
that
the
challenges
are
coming
up
in
terms
of
finances
etc,
and
we
will
continue
to
work
to
support
new
workly,
but
it
is
very
difficult
to
sort
of
say
where
we
will
go
in
the
future,
and
that's
me
on
that
slide.
Thank
you.
C
C
G
A
That
was
really
interesting
and
a
really
useful,
update
or
stuart.
Are
you
coming
back
in.
G
Just
very
briefly,
you're
welcome
yeah,
just
just
to
mention
that
when
we
went
to
the
neighborhood
improvement
board
in
january,
there
were
some
specific
big
asks
that
we
took
to
the
neighborhood
improvement
board,
which
we
thought
could
really
make
a
difference.
Obviously,
things
have
stopped,
but
there
has
been
some
progress
around
those.
The
the
big
ass
briefly
were
around
connectivity.
G
New
well
he's
very
much
cut
off
from
the
neighborhood
from
the
city
centre
by
stanley,
road
railway
canal
river.
So,
given
the
fact
that
there's
going
to
be
remodeling
of
army
gyratory
we're
trying
to
put
it
on
the
agenda
that
that
has
to
come
any
proposals,
there
has
to
consider
how
that
links
in
with
the
city
center,
for
football,
public
transport,
etc
and
and
and
flow.
G
We
can't
aspire
to
we're
not
going
to
get
the
investment
that
little
london
got,
but
I
do
think
there
are
opportunities,
particularly
with
redevelopment
such
as
the
british
gas
style,
which
could
bring
in
additional
funding
which
might
help
us
to
provide
and
to
improve
local
environmental
space
of
the
states
and
we're
trying
to
push
forward
arguments
that
we
need
to
lever
in
that
type
of
investment,
to
really
make
a
difference
to
the
neighborhood.
G
There
isn't
any
young
play
area
within
the
new
world
area,
but
it's
a
mugger
but
actually
a
playground
for
you,
but
for
younger
children.
There
is
within
in
the
space.
So
we
before
that
actually
has
coming
from
engagement
and
feedback
from
the
community.
That
would
be
a
real
benefit
locally,
but
one
of
the
things,
the
main
challenges
that
the
community
keep
coming
back
to
to
us
about
is
drugs.
G
Drugs
is
the
probably
the
one
thing
whether
it's
people
taking
drugs,
whether
it's
the
dealing
of
drugs
and
the
the
myriad
of
effects
that
come
from
those
two
aspects
need
to
be
tackled
to
really
make
a
difference
and
paul
money.
Chief
officer
for
seven
leads
did
take
conversation
to
exact
bald
regarding
how
we
look
at
a
more
holistic
approach
around
drugs
within
the
city
that
was
just
prior
to
lockdown.
G
So
that's
certainly
something
that
we
would
be
from
a
local
perspective,
be
pushing
on
again
and
finally,
the
biggest
opportunity,
as
I
say,
not
just
a
connectivity
to
the
city
center,
but
opportunities,
the
the
wealth
of
skills,
jobs
and
we've
been
starting
to
build
some
work
around
the
big
anchor
organizations
such
as
the
hospitals,
universities,
colleges,
big
employers
within
the
city
and
andrew
from
new
work.
G
They
attended
the
last
leeds
anchors
board
to
to
really
put
forward
a
plea
for
those
anchor
organizations
to
consider
how
they
can
better
impact
the
most
deprived
neighborhoods
in
the
city,
and
particularly
so
that
gives
a
flavor
of
where
we
are
now.
Some
of
it
has
stalled
a
little
bit
due
to
gold,
but
it
does
feel
like
we
are
making
moves
forward.
I
don't
know
if
mem
harmony,
members
have
any
particular
comments.
On
top
of
that.
A
Thank
you
stuart.
I'm
sorry
for
trying
to
cut
you
off
earlier.
It
was
absolutely
right
to
finish
that
extra
bit.
So
thank
you
for
the
extra
information
I've
got
councillor
mckenna
and
I've
got
councillor
gruen
to
speak.
If
anyone
else
wants
to
indicate,
if
you
just
raise
your
hand
in
the
participants
section,
if
you
click
on
participants,
it
will
give
you
a
raise
hand
option.
B
Thank
you
chair.
Can
I
thank
stuart
and
rachel
for
the
excellent
reports.
My
report
on
the
agenda
item.
Nine
is
slightly
different,
so,
firstly,
could
I
request
that
I
could
have
those
sent
to
me
that
you
displayed
tonight
there's
a
bit
more
information
than
I've
got
in
the
report
in
front
of
me,
and
although
I
recognize
I
recognize
it
from
the
report,
you've
written
between
you
just
a
few
things,
perhaps
a
slight
criticism
steward,
it
doesn't
mention
equal
inequalities
as
much
as
assured,
particularly
educational
inequalities.
B
We
know
very
well
that
young
children
and
young
people
and
you
really
do
very
poorly
in
education,
and
I
think
that
needs
to
be
highlighted
if
we
have
to
make
a
case
for
more
spending
on
in
this
area.
I
think
that's
really
important
and
it
should
be
part
of
the
report.
B
The
other
thing
is
when
rachel's
action
plan
at
the
end,
which
talked
about
an
over-reliance
on
new
worldly
community
center,
and
of
course
they
can't
do
it
on
their
own
and
they
talked
about
the
lack
of
forward
investment
plan
for
the
area,
such
as
capital
program
or
106
investment.
Well,
actually,
that's
all
issues
that
belong
to
the
city
council,
that
we
can
do
something
about.
B
We
control
the
capital
program
and
whereas
there
hasn't
been
a
lot
of
building
going
on
for
section
106,
there
is
still,
and
85
of
sil
goes
to
the
center
for
spending.
So
you
know
the
resources
are
there
to
actually
do
something
about
it
again?
The
lack
of
third
sector
partners,
I
mean,
surely
that's
within
our
our
gift
as
well.
You
know
we're
talking
about
the
most
deprived
area,
one
of
the
most
in
the
country,
the
bottom
one
percent.
I
don't
think
it's
often
realized
the
bottom.
B
One
percent
nationally
live
in
that
area,
and
we've
been
talking
like
this,
for
I
guess,
since
we
took
over
as
councillors
there
in
2004
we've
been
talking
the
same
arguments
about
life
expectancy.
When
I
was
on
the
health
authority,
we
used
to
have
a
saying
that
the
baby
boy
born
this
was
in
2005..
B
B
I
think
that
we
just
need
more
resources
put
in
oh
by
the
way,
when
I
pointed
that
out
to
new
worldly
community
center
about
longevity,
one
of
them,
one
of
the
people
there
said
well,
you
know
what
we
should
do,
then
we
should
all
move
to
if
only
we
could,
but
the
resources
are
there
steward.
I
know
we've
lost
a
year
with
colby.
B
I
know
that
I'm
very
conscious
of
it,
but
at
the
end
of
the
day,
I
think
we
have
to
recognize
in
the
west
community
committee
that
this
area
is
an
absolute
priority
and
we
really
really
should
be
doing
more
than
we're
doing,
and
I
I
leave
her
there
and
I'll
listen
to
what
my
fellow
councillors
have
to
say.
Thank
you,
stuart
and
again,
rachel
and
stewart.
Thank
you.
An
excellent
report.
A
Thank
you
councillor
mckenna.
Can
we
go
to
councillor
gruen
next,
please
thank.
F
You
chair,
I,
I
also
want
to
say
what
a
positive
report
it
was
and
what
a
pleasure
it
was
to
read
and
what
innovative
practice
and
activity
was
described
in
that
report
really
really
impressive
and
naturally,
I'm
interested
to
learn
from
the
bramley
our
place
point
of
view,
and
we
have
kept
hearing
about
about
this
project
at
ramayana,
and
we
have
indeed
used
some
of
the
emerging
ideas.
F
But
you
would
expect
as
one
of
the
children's
champions
for
the
inner
west
that
I'm
interested,
particularly
in
the
parts
of
that
work,
that
can
involve
young
people
so
on
the
top
10
key
young
people
list.
F
I'm
just
interested
to
understand
better
what
the,
how
those
people,
how
those
young
people
were
identified
and
put
together
and
what
the
hard
outcomes
were
from
from
that
act
from
that
identification
of
that
list
of
people.
What
you
said
was
they're
involved
in
in
community
projects
and
things
currently.
Can
you
give
me
a
flavor
of
what
kind
of
things
they're
involved
in
and
is
that
a
long-term
involvement,
or
is
it
something
that
they're
going
to
do
and
then
and
then
come
back
from
that's
the
first
question?
F
The
second
question
is
about
the
the
closure
of
the
store
and
the
disabling
of
the
asb.
That's
around
that
area,
and
then
you,
you
acknowledge
that
levels
of
asb
are
still
high.
I
mean
that
is
something
that
interests
us
a
great
deal
in
bradley,
because
we
do
have
a
lot
of
persistent
asb
and
a
lot
of
it
is
generated.
Sadly
through
young
people.
F
To
what
degree
do
you
think
that
activity
simply
displaced
it
from
that
area
and
and
it
continues
in
either
in
different
groups
or
different
areas
elsewhere
and
the
children
of
young
people's
board,
I
think,
is
brilliant
and
again,
how
is
it
put
together
and
and
how
is
that
operating
and
who
shares
it
and
and
how?
How
permanent
is
it?
F
So
really,
it's
just
a
bit
more
around
those
three
things.
G
I'll
pick
up
the
I'll
make
a
start
and
then
I'll
pass
over
to
rachel,
as
rachel
tends
to
lead
on
most
of
our
children.
People's
work
strand
activities,
but
the
top
10
list
was
one
of
the
very
early
meetings.
G
At
the
time
we
had
andrea
had
andrea
richardson,
who
was
one
of
the
heads
of
service
within
children's
services
around
the
table
and
and
she
took
a
lead
on
this
piece
of
work,
given
the
fact
that
one
of
the
first
questions
was
around
data
sharing,
particularly
around
individuals,
but
her
remit
involved
a
number
of
the
key
pieces
of
interventions
that
we
usually
look
at,
whether
it's
youth
service,
whether
it's
signposts,
the
service
signpost,
where
it's
offending
service,
so
partners
shared
individual
names
and
then
children
services
looked
at
those
key
individuals.
G
I
think
we
know
that
most
communities
generally
will
know
that
the
ring
leaders
within
their
community
within
a
group
of
younger
people
and
the
ones
that
probably
hold
the
most
sway
and
influence
over
a
broader
group.
G
So
children
services
took
on
the
role
of
looking
at
those
individuals
and
then
talking
to
a
range
of
different
partners
which
also
included
barker
included
new
world
community
center
because
of
the
activities
that
they
also
deliver
around
young
people,
just
to
identify
where,
where
those
young
people
were
engaging,
whether
they
were
engaging
positively,
whether
there
were
particular
outcomes
that
those
young
people
could
be
signposted
in
addition
to
what
they
were
already
engaged
with.
G
I
say
wonderful
when
that
that
initial
activity
took
place,
it
was
identified
that
there
were
a
number
of
young
people
on
that
list
who
have
had
no
engagement
or
intervention
anywhere,
and
that
wasn't
necessarily
due
to
them
being
unwilling
on
a
lack
of
engagement
on
their
power,
but
an
assumption
between
partners
that
somebody
else
was
picking
them
up.
So
one
of
the
key
positives
from
from
the
from
this
action
was
that
different
services
engaging
with
young
people,
actually
improve
their
communication
around
individuals
and
what
activities
and
interventions
they
were
taking.
G
We
like,
like
any
neighborhood
those
young
people
and
we're
talking
2016
when
they
started,
and
those
young
people
have
grown
up.
The
young
people
involved
locally.
G
Have
changed
so
what
the
children
young
people
subgroup
have
tried
to
do
year
on
year
is
refresh
that
list
and
ensure
that
that
same
sort
of
review
process
takes
place
around
the
new
cohort
of
young
people
of
concern,
and
it
was
very
much
focused
around
trying
to
catch
those
young
people
that
were
ring
leaders,
but
maybe
weren't
so
involved
that
they
were
inextricably
linked
to
crime
and
and
that
it
would
be
very
that
those
individuals
that
would
be
potentially
too
difficult
to
to
bring
back
and
engage
as
to
the
wellington
stars
activity
it
linked
to
that
list
of
key
individuals,
because
the
actual
site
was
being
used
by
a
group
of
youth
and
criminals
to
go.
G
Take
drugs
to
deal
drink
alcohol
that
then
increased
asb
around
that
site
within
the
estate
by
by
closing
that
that
site
and
demolishing
that
then
addressed
the
immediate
draw
within
the
community
and
the
people
that
were
at
accessing
that
site
were
by
enlarge
local
residents
and
young
people
from
the
the
immediate
local
state.
So
it
actually
it
it
got
rid
of
that.
That
particular
draw
so
that
in
itself
probably
would
have
displaced.
But
hopefully
the
additional
activities
that
we
we
the
partners,
also
took
around
other
diversion
room
are
positive
outcomes.
G
H
Yeah,
I
mean,
I
just
say
it
a
little
bit
in
terms
of
the
children
and
young
people's
board.
That
council
grew
and
particularly
mentioned
it.
It's
it.
It's
not
had
the
easiest
start.
Obviously
it's
just
been
going
around
about
since
the
beginning
of
the
year
about
that
sort
of
time
now,
so
they
had
a
period
of
meeting
virtually
as
a
a
lot
of
groups
did,
but
they
are
meeting
in
person
now
socially
distant
when
they
can,
and
it's
been
about
understanding
really
what
the
young
people
wanted
to
get
involved
in.
H
So,
for
example,
they
they
there's
an
interest,
I
think
kind
of
comes
through
around
food.
I
think
we
always
say
if
we're
going
to
do
a
community
event,
if
we
can
put
food
on
them
where
people
will
come-
and
I
don't
think
that's
any
different
for
particularly
young
people,
I've
got
four
boys
of
my
own.
I
know
how
much
they
ate.
So
if
you
can
do
things
around
food,
it's
quite
often
a
positive,
so
they
have
created
a
young
people's
kind
of
cafe.
H
Drop-In
cafe
on
a
saturday
that
they,
the
young
people
of
the
children's
board,
have
been
studying
their
hygiene
certificate,
for
example,
so
that
they
can
be
involved
in
in
preparing
food
and
creating
food
for
other
young
people
to
eat
if
you
like,
and
the
idea
is
to
expand
that
into
homework.
H
Clubs,
for
example,
which
links
very
much
with
what
counselor
mckenna
had
said
about
the
education
side
and
basically
that
peer
support
that
we
could
put
in
alongside
the
roles
of,
for
example,
rebecca
and
the
building
block
staff,
to
support
those
young
people
to
to
look
at
how
they
can
do
the
peer
support
themselves.
So
it's
a
learning
process.
For
example,
as
I
mentioned,
the
the
planters
were
something
they
wanted
to
get
involved
in.
We
tend
to
find
you
know.
Young
people
when
we
have
those
conversations
environment
is
really
important
to
them.
H
They
recognize
the
problems
that
we've
got
in
the
environment
today
and
they
want
to
make
a
difference
themselves.
So
this
was
something
they
wanted
to
be
involved
in.
Something
else
was
about
getting
people
more
active,
so
we
worked
with
leads.
H
Let's
get
active
to
come
up
with
an
explorer
project
which
was
a
whole
family
activity
to
get
out
into
jail
fields,
and
it's
a
bit
like
a
treasure
hunt
kind
of
thing,
so
you
create
the
treasure
hunt
and
then
you
set
it
up
for
other
people
to
go
and
and
experience
that
and
enjoy
that
and
the
we
were
keen
to
really
work
with
the
children
young
people's
board
around
how
that
could
work.
So
that
board
has
now
been
trained.
H
How
to
do
that
and
they
are
the
ones
who
will
set
up
the
explorer
project
and
run
it
for
future
events.
So
it's
really
empowering
young
people
to
be
able
to
do
more
for
themselves
and
recognize,
I
guess
they're
the
best
people
to
engage
with
other
young
people.
So
it's
you
know
that
they're
more
likely
to
speak
to
each
other
than
they
are.
H
Somebody
in
you
know
our
age,
unfortunately,
but
if
they
can
be
that
role
model,
if
they
can
show
that
we
listen
to
what
they're
saying
we
take
on
board
with
what
they're
saying
and
and
if
they
want
to
do
a
particular
project
that
we
do
our
best
to
be.
You
know
to
enable
them
to
do
that.
So
it's
it's
a
work
in
progress.
As
I
say,
I
think
it's
got
see
the
two
years
or
three
was
the
year's
worth
of
funding
to
continue
the
board.
H
I
would
hope
it
will
continue
past
there.
I
think
it's
got
the
legs
to
do
that
and
I
think
it's
got
the
support
within
the
infrastructure
of
new
workley
staff
to
support
them.
It
runs
alongside
the
traditional
youth
service
work,
that's
ongoing,
so
that
the
the
youth
clubs
etc
that
run
in
the
center.
This
is
additional
to
that
and
the
youth
board
is
chaired
by
a
young
person,
so
it
used
to
be,
I
believe
they
head
from
dixon's
academy,
the
young
lady
who
was
it
was
the
head
girl
there.
H
I
believe,
although
I
think
she's
now
left
so
that's
been
taken
over
by
someone
else,
but
I've
I've
seen
some
really
sort
of
just
positive
video
of
them
cooking
together,
talking
together
and
meeting
up
and
just
particularly
now
for
for
our
young
people,
this
year
has
been
really
difficult
for
them.
H
I
think
they've
been
isolated
from
each
other
a
lot,
and
I
think
projects
like
this,
where
they've
had
opportunities
to
come
together
in
a
positive
way,
have
been
vital
to
them
and
their
emotional
well-being,
and
I
think
it's
how
we
support
them
to
progress.
The
group-
and
I
know
that's
something
that
new
earthly
staff
are
keen
to
do
and
I'm
sure
we'll
continue
to
do.
H
I
hope
that's
that's
kind
of
answered
some
of
it.
Council
growing.
F
Yes,
thank
you.
It
has.
It
has
put
me
in
the
picture
a
little
bit
more
council
of
bittel
and
councillor
cunningham.
Would
you
think
it's
a
good
idea
if
we
ask
somebody
to
come
and
brief
us
on
the
children
aspect
of
this
at
the
children,
young
people's
subgroup.
D
Hi
there,
yes,
I
was
going
to
ask
about
the
traffic
situation
and
the
fact
that
it's
a
an
area
that
has
to
contend
with
lots
of
other
people's
cars
and
other
people's
trucks
and
heavy
goods
vehicles
that
are
going
around
the
army's
eye,
rotary,
pretty
terrifying
place
on
a
bicycle.
I
can
tell
you,
but
I
go
there
quite
often,
and
also
the
huge
tractor
development
land
along
the
river
in
the
canal,
stretching
from
west
well
yorkshire,
post
building
up
to
the
coastal
viaduct,
which
isn't
generating
much
in
qibla
moment.
D
But
plainly
is
a
right
for
waiting
to
be
picked
in
terms
of
section
106
money
or
the
still
money
that
will
come
from
that
huge
area
of
land.
Is
the
process
being
planned
in
an
efficient
way?
Are
people
thinking
about
how
this
is
good?
How
are
we
going
to
to
siphon
off
some
of
the
the
cash
that
will
flow
in
that
area?
Make
sure
it
flows
to
the
people
who
are
most
in
need.
G
Thanks
council,
so
on
the
you're
right,
the
one
of
the
biggest
challenges
for
new
worklet
is
the
gyratory
scanning
the
road,
whether
it's
the
air
pollution
being
adjacent
to
that
area,
whether
it's
the
traffic,
whether
it's
walking
and
cycling
routes
there.
There
is
large
challenges
with
that.
That's
why
connectivity
was
the
first
of
the
big
asks
to
the
neighborhood
improvement
board.
G
Another
improvement
board,
as
you
know,
is
chaired
by
deputy
leader
and
executive
member
for
communities
deborah
cooper
and
is
attended
by
all
the
directors
and
a
number
of
chief
officers
and
key
partners.
So
it's
it's
a
good.
G
It's
a
good
stage
to
voice
the
the
big
concerns
around
the
area,
so
we're
certainly
trying
to
influence
the
discussions
and
the
engagement
around
the
the
proposed
improvements
around
the
gyratory,
not
least
because
that's
a
project,
that's
probably
going
to
take
18
months,
two
three
years
to
absolutely
deliver,
and
actually
this
will
be
the
community
that
suffers
the
most
from
all
of
that
gridlock,
while
that
was
taking
place
as
well.
G
So
it
is
very
much
on
our
agenda
and
we
are
definitely
agitating
within
different
sections
of
highways
development
and
the
broader
council
around
and
trying
to
ensure
that
new
world
is
consid.
The
local
impact
is
also
considered
alongside
the
city-wide
benefits
as
to
development
issues.
Yes,
I
believe
at
the
moment.
In
fact,
it
was
only
contacted
last
week
by
somebody
in
development
who
is
starting
to
look
at
the
proposals
around
master
planning
for
the
development
of
the
coastal
valley
side
from
out
from
the
old
yorkshire
building
out.
G
One
of
my
concerns
is
that
we
we
developed
that
that
about
half
of
the
lsoa
and
build
nice
new
flats
and
raise
the
economy
and
actually
on
paper,
it
looks
like
it's
no
longer
a
one
percent,
most
deprived
neighborhood,
and
that
raises
the
profile
of
that
area
too.
G
Out
of
that
most,
but
actually
very
little
positive
impact
on
you.
Working
so
I've
already,
we've
already
started
to
put
markers
down
around
the
fact
that
any
improvements
within
that
area,
whether
that
is
section
106
cell
monies,
that
come
in
from
that
area.
This
is
the
local
community
that
we
should
be
agitating
that
gets
the
benefits
from
that
investment,
so
it
is
very
much
on
our.
Both
of
those
points
are
very
much
on
our
agenda.
D
Yes,
thank
you,
I
mean
absolutely.
I
think
it
wouldn't
tell
me
I
want
to
flag
up
before
I
give
way
to
jim
is
that
in
kirksville
recently
we're
very
disappointed
by
the
success
of
a
four
of
viability.
Arguments
and
I
fear
the
same
thing
may
be
repeated
in
the
regeneration
of
the
riverside
area.
We
were
expecting
to
see
significant
cash,
but
in
fact
the
applicant
successfully
pleaded
the
scheme
was
non-viable
if
he
made
his
full
contributions
and
didn't
in
fact
walked
away
from
some
of
them.
D
That's
going
to
be
a
problem,
I
think
in
other
areas
of
the
city,
and
we
can
do
everything
we
can
to
protect
ourselves
against
being
ripped
off
twice.
Basically,.
A
Thank
you,
council
rillingworth
councillor,
mckenna.
If
we
can
come
to
you
as
a
final
comment.
B
Thank
you,
chair,
trying
to
mute
myself
yeah,
I'm
grateful
to
john's
comments
and
steward's
answers.
John.
I
can
tell
you
that
a
lot
of
that
large
tract
of
land
you're
talking
about
has
already
got
planning
permission
for
houses,
private
sector,
housing
for
rent
and
high-rise
apartments,
but
it
is,
as
you
say,
stuart
said
not
in
army
we're
the
wrong
side
of
the
river,
it's
the
city
and
holbeck
one,
but
the
sil
does
go
to
the
center.
B
I
mean
that
this
is
the
point
I'm
making
still
is
always
payable.
There's
you
they
can
argue
viability
on
housing
and
reduce,
affordable
housing
or
come
up
with
all
types
of
reasons
why
they
don't
want
to
pay
it
and,
in
fact,
sometimes
that
a
lot
of
times
they're,
backed
by
national
government
on
this
but
still
is
payable
on
commencement,
not
on
the
finish
of
of
the
scheme
and
whereas
15
goes
to
the
local
ward
or
the
local
community
committee
85
goes
to
the
center.
B
It's
a
significant
amount
of
money
that
the
center
should
be
using
to
improve
areas
like
that.
So
you
know
I
I
think
it's
there.
I
think
we
need
to
raise
the
profile
a
bit.
We've
all
been
obviously
concerned
with
culvert,
and
rightly
so,
but
it
doesn't
change
that.
I
I
told
you
that,
since
we
took
over
in
2004,
the
same
type
of
statistics
were
being
quoted
then,
and
nothing
has
greatly
improved.
That
is
no
reflection
on
stuart
or
rachel
they're
excellent
people.
B
I've
been
with
them
in
many
meetings
and
I
I
totally
admire
the
work.
They've
been
doing
and
their
dedication,
but
it
is
the
duty
of
the
city
council
to
actually
look
at
it.
We
are
in
the
bottom
one
percent
nationally,
the
bottom
one
percent-
and
you
know
things-
aren't
getting
better
for
the
people
there
they
really
aren't
getting.
B
Life
is
getting
tougher,
and
maybe
what
we
need
to
do
is
to
have
another
meeting
with
deborah
cooper
and
put
these
statistics
before
her
and
ask
her
how
the
city
council
are
going
to
deal
with
these
issues,
because
it's
going
to
be
at
that
level,
it's
not
going
to
be
at
my
level
or
lose
level
or
alice's
level
or
steward
or
rachel's
level.
We're
going
to
need
the
city
behind
this
and
I'd.
B
Ask
chair
that
we
make
this
a
number
one
priority
that
we're
going
to
do
something
about
it:
we're
going
to
take
a
serious
we're
going
to
take
steps
that
is
going
to
improve
it.
It's
not
a
lot
to
ask.
I
don't
think
we
can
sit
here
and
ignore
it.
So
I
request
that
for
my
fellow
counselors
that
we
do
something
like
this,
we
up
the
ante.
We
do
something
about
it.
The
resources
are
there.
We
just
need
to
channel
them
into
new
worldly.
Thank
you,
chair.
A
Thank
you,
council
mckenna,
I'm
really
sure.
As
ward
councillor
as
one
of
the
ward
councillors,
that's
really
something
you'll
be
able
to
get
your
teeth
into,
and
I'm
really
happy
as
chair
to
assist
and
we
can
absolutely
set
up
a
meeting.
Of
course
we
do
have
to
do
it
within
the.
A
A
No,
in
which
case
karen,
can
I
ask
you
to
move
on
to
item,
not
item
10.
Sorry,
sorry,
the
finance
report.
E
Yeah,
a
gender
item
10,
so
it's
on
page
25..
Just
let
me
know
if
I
go
too
fast
or
stop
me
if
you've
got
any
comments
or
questions
as
I
go
through
the
report.
E
If
we
can,
please
start
at
paragraph
18,
this
will
show
a
remaining
balance
for
the
inner
west
well-being,
budget
of
33
029
pound
and
one
pence
and
below
that
is
table,
one
which
provides
a
breakdown
of
all
the
projects
that
have
been
funded
and
from
the
well-being
budget.
This
financial
year
and
and
the
remaining
balances
per
ward
are
at
the
bottom
of
the
table.
So
only
has
nineteen
thousand
four
hundred
and
eighteen
pound
and
fifty
eight
pence
remaining
bramlin
stan
only
has
three
thousand
six
hundred
and
fifty
four
pound.
E
So
then,
moving
on
to
paragraph
21,
this
is
the
start
of
the
funding
applications
for
consideration.
Tonight.
I've
sent
out
the
project
summaries
previously,
so
hopefully
you've
all
managed
to
have
a
look
at
those.
E
So
the
first
application
is
from
scentmatt's
leads
for
the
kirk's
award
and
they're
seeking
1604
pound
towards
the
cost
of
setting
up
the
burley
food
bank
and
the
funding
will
be
used
to
pay
for
chairs
and
some
shelving
units.
E
E
Okay,
so
the
second
application
is
from
the
project
developer,
worker
team
for
elite
city
council
who
are
teaming
up
with
creative
communities
to
run
a
crafting
corner
project,
and
this
will
be
in
women
living
in
the
army.
Ward,
so
they're,
seeking
the
funding
and
from
family
and
and
the
women
would
be
it's
women
who
are
suffering
with
anxiety,
sort
of
depression,
social
isolation,
they're
seeking
1
110
pound,
and
that
would
pay
for
activity
packs
which
would
be
sent
out
to
the
women
before
the
sessions
and
a
craft
instructor.
A
E
Thank
you.
So
the
next
one
is
from
bramley
elderly
action
who
are
seeking
1
350
pound
from
the
bramley
ward,
and
to
host
the
bramley
christmas
comedy
and
variety
show
which
will
take
place
via
zoom
and
to
enable
families
and
loan
householders
to
participate
in
an
enjoyable
event
online.
That
is
free
to
attend
and
they're,
aiming
to
have
a
minimum
of
170
participants
and
the
funding
will
appear
for
an
event
producer,
a
performer
props
and
materials.
E
F
A
Thank
you,
catherine
bramley
councillor
as
much
as
I'm
devastated.
They've,
not
invited
me
to
do
any
stand-up.
Yet.
Are
we
happy
with
the
funding
any
comments.
E
Thank
you,
and
so,
if
I
can
now
and
ask
you
to
look
at
the
the
supplement,
supplementary
information
papers
that
were
sent
out
so
the
first
application
on
there
is
a
small
grant
application
from
leeds
city
council's
youth
service
and
they're,
requesting
290
pound
per
ward.
So
it's
817
total
and
to
pay
for
the
cost
of
holding
an
inner
west
youth
community
committee.
E
F
To
break,
I
totally
support
it.
I
think
it's
a
fab
initiative.
Is
it
always
going
to
be
in
a
kirkstall
venue?
That
would
be
my
question:
if
it's
involving
young
people
from
all
three
wards,
I
I
would,
I
think
I
would
like
an
opportunity
to
hold
it
round
the
three
different
wards
and
the
second
thing
is
I'd,
love
some
feedback
about
it
to
know
how
it's
going
before
it's
finished.
A
Yeah,
that's
really
reasonable
and
the
reason
that,
because
I've
been
involved
in
setting
it
up,
is
that
we've
picked
unit
11,
because
it's
just
so
central
of
the
three
wards
and
but
I
see
absolutely
no
reason
why
we
can't
do
it
similar
to
how
we
do
community
committees
where
we
move
it
round
when
we're
not
on
zoom
in
future,
probably
at
the
latter
stages,
so
that
we
can
build
up
the
momentum
with
it
so
that
they
know
where
they're
coming
to
each
time
to
begin
with,
because
obviously
young
people
prefer
that
to
begin
with,
but
yeah.
E
Yeah,
so
the
next
application
is
another
small
grant
request
and
for
500
pound
from
front
room
productions
for
their
a
midsummer
night's
showcase
in
bramley
park.
You
might
remember
that
this
was
being
was
approved
for
earlier
this
year,
but
the
event
was
cancelled
due
to
coveid
and
they're.
Now
looking
to
rearrange
for
july
2021,
which
I
appreciate
is
early
for
them
coming
to
for
the
funding.
But
they've
said
that
if
they
can,
they
want
to
have
all
the
funding
kind
of
approved.
E
So
they
can
plan
ahead
and
they're
looking
at
fun,
using
the
funding
to
pay
for
flyers,
banners
and
and
to
pay
a
producer.
E
Yeah,
thank
you,
so
the
next
one,
the
last
application
is
from
the
breeze
team
and
this
one's
for
the
armley
ward
and
they're.
Looking
for
some
funding
to
send
out
some
christmas
activity
boxes
and
to
the
young
people
who
would
usually
be
attending
the
bramley
bramley.
E
Sorry,
the
breeze
saturday
night
project,
obviously
that
project
hasn't
gone
ahead
as
yet
due
to
curvid
it's
on
hold,
obviously,
due
to
the
guidelines
and
bubbles
they're
still
looking
into
ways
for
that
to
go
ahead
so
as
an
alternative
they're
hoping
to
be
able
to
send
out
some
boxes
to
490
young
people
and
they're,
looking
at
sort
of
the
highest
kind
of
the
most
most
regular
attendees
from
years
five
and
six
from
four
local
schools
but
they've,
given
us
three
different
options
for
the
cost,
so
I'll
just
go
through
those
now,
because
it
would
depend
on
obviously
how
much
you
wanted
to
go
in
the
box
so
option.
E
One
is
one
hundred
and
twenty
pound
option.
Two
is
four
thousand
three
hundred
and
eighty
five
and
option
three
is
three
thousand
one
hundred
and
sixty
I
mean
if
you've
not
had
a
chance
to
look
at
the
project
summary
that
I
sent
out.
I
can
quickly
try
and
go
through
what's
in
the
boxes,
if
you
would
like
or
it's
up
to
you
if
anyone
needs
me
to
do
that.
E
Yeah
yeah
I've
had
this
conversation
with
her
counselor
and
she's
she's
gone
to
this
because
of
gdpr.
She
said
once
she's
kind
of
done.
Her
reporting
she
has
to
sort
of
get
rid
of
the
the
postcards
so
she's
go
she's
gone
to
the
schools
to
try
we're
trying
to
establish
whether
the
kids
actually
live
in
the
army
ward.
But
at
the
moment
she
hasn't
been
able
to
give
me
that
information,
and
all
we
know
is
that
they
do
attend
the
saturday
night
project.
B
Okay,
I
hear
you
what
you
say
on
that,
but
it
to
me
it's
an
absolute.
No,
why
only
deal
with
primary
schools
a
lot
of
deciding
nightclub
14
15
16
year
olds.
Indeed
it
goes
up
to
24
25..
You
know
this
is
kids
under
11
and
two
of
them
are
not
an
army.
Half
of
them
are
not
an
army
postcodes.
Don't
necessarily
tell
you
which
ward
they're
in
yeah.
B
Bram,
some
of
army
shares
an
ls13
as
well
yeah.
C
B
Think
it's
a
poorly
devised
thing
and
I
certainly
against
it.
I
mean
what
why
should
army
so
subsidized,
240,
kids
from
farley
wartley?
Why
is.
E
B
A
Than
through
the
schools
now,
perhaps
the
best
course
of
action
is:
if
karen,
can
you
find
out
that
information
and
then
can
you
send
it
in
an
email
to
the
relevant
counselors?
Please
yeah,
of
course,
and
then
it
might
be
that
we
either
deny
it
completely
or
whether
we
then
aim
it
out
to
a
different
community
committee.
If
that
is
what
it
is,
yes,
council
cunningham,
would
you
like
to
come
in.
C
Only
to
say
that
I
was
just
going
to
agree
with
councilman
mckenna
and
agree
with
you,
so
that's
it.
Thank
you.
A
D
Just
a
quick
question
and
looking
at
the
things
I
think
option
one
and
option
three
get
muddled
up
in
the
application
form,
so
sometimes
one's
the
top
figure,
sometimes
the
other
one's,
the
top
figure.
He
just
needs
sorting
out.
I
I
can
follow
what's
going
on,
but
it
is
in
the
middle
at
the
moment.
I
think.
E
A
That's
okay,
because
if
it's
coming
back
via
email
yeah,
all
that
can
be
sorted
beforehand,
yeah,
so
that
won't
be
a
problem.
Thank
you
very
much
for
those.
I
guess
we're
putting
that
down.
As
a
holding
off
on
the
decision.
Yeah,
okay,
there
doesn't
seem
to
be
any
further
hands
up.
So
could
you
skip
on
to
agenda
item
11?
Please
the
update
report.
E
Well,
I've
not
finished
going
through
the
finance
report,
yet
sorry,
so
moving
on
on
the
finance
report,
so
paragraph
24,
just
to
let
you
know,
table
two-
is
a
list
of
all
the
projects
that
have
been
funded
and
by
the
committee
from
the
10
000
per
ward
covered
budget
that
you
set
aside
earlier
in
the
year
and
twenty
paragraph.
E
Twenty
five
shows
the
remaining
balances
that
each
world
left
army
currently
has
ten
thousand
left
because
they
spent
the
first
ten
thousand
and
then
topped
up
by
a
further
ten
thousand
bramley
and
stan
only
have
six
thousand
nine
hundred
and
fifteen
pound
and
a
penny
left
and
kirk
still
has
four
thousand
one
hundred
and
fifty
five
pounds.
Thirty
nine
paragraph
26
shows
table
three,
which
is
a
list
of
all
the
projects
that
have
been
funded
but
hadn't
started
by
the
first
of
october.
E
Okay,
no
paragraph
29
to
31
shows
some
recent
project
monitoring
that
I've
received
and
from
a
project
in
bramley
run
by
barker
again
I'll
assume
that
it's
red.
But
let
me
know
if
you've
got
any
comments
or
questions.
E
B
Thank
you
chair.
Just
the
projects
that's
on
hold,
I
mean
it's
reasonable
to
assume
now
that
they
aren't
going
to
take
place
in
this
financial
year.
So
maybe
we
ought
to
look
at
it
more
closely.
I
mean
army
breeze
saturday
night
breeze
is
fairly
straightforward.
B
We
could
just
transfer
the
8
000
from
this
year
to
next
year
and
if
it
does
start
up
early,
then
we
could
make
an
adjustment
for
that,
but
it
seems
to
me
there's
an
awful
lot
of
money
tied
up
here.
That's
just
not
gonna
happen
and
I
think
we
need
to
look
at
this
a
lot
more
closely
when
you
go
through
it
all,
and
you
know
I
mean
it's
not
good,
leaving
figures
in
that's
not
going
to
happen.
E
Yeah
I
mean
we,
we
are
obviously
in
you
know,
contact
with
all
the
all
the
organizations
brief
saturday
night,
for
example,
they
are
still
hoping
you
know
to
do
something
before
the
end
of
the
financial
year,
which
obviously
could
will
probably
potentially
reduce
the
amount
they
need.
It's
just
waiting
for
them
to
make
kind
of
those
final
decisions,
but
yeah
they
are
looking
whether
it's
having
a
certain
amount
of
kids
having
a
book
onto
one
room
and
stay
in
that
room
all
night.
A
Yeah
there
was
discussion
about
whether
we
wanted
to
do
some
sort
of
commemorative
event
at
the
end
for
covid,
so
whether
that
would
be
something
we
can
then
utilize,
but
we'd
have
to
fill
in
all
the
necessary
forms
and
things
in
order
to
do
that.
A
Shall
I
move
on
yes.
E
F
E
No
matter
where
we
put
it,
it's
still
held,
it's
still
not
going
to
put
any
money
back
into
the
budget.
I
mean
I
can
change
the
name
of
the
project,
so
that
I
mean
you
know
it
makes,
I
guess
more
sense,
we're
seeing
as
those
have
gone
by
and
but
where
no
matter
where
we
put
it
that
1500
pound
would
still
not
be
back
in
the
budget.
Until
you
know
you
make
a
decision
not
to
spend
it.
That's.
F
E
Okay,
so
paragraph
yep,
sorry,
paragraph
34
shows
the
total
remaining
youth
activity
fund
budget
as
19
132
pound
35,
with
table
2,
providing
a
breakdown
of
all
the
yaf
projects
that
have
been
funded
this
year
again
with
a
balance
remaining
per
ward
at
the
bottom.
So
only
has
three
thousand
seven
hundred
and
thirty
one
pound
and
forty
three
bramley
and
stanley
have
five
thousand
five
hundred
and
forty
eight
pound.
E
Eighty
seven
and
kirk
still
has
nine
thousand
eight
hundred
and
fifty
two
pound
and
six
pens,
kirk
stills
balance
has
gone
back
up
again
due
to
the
fact
that
the
breeze
summer
event
didn't
take
place
in
kirksville
this
year
due
to
covered
19.
So
there
was
no
cost
for
kirkstall.
For
that
event,
paragraph
35
shows
a
remaining
budget
of
2548
pound
31
in
the
small
grand
and
skip
budget,
but
yeah
small
grant
and
skip
budget
sorry.
E
It
felt
like
I
said
the
wrong
word
then,
from
the
original
six
thousand
pound
that
would
set
aside
and
then
table
four
and
five
provide
a
breakdown
of
what
has
been
funded
from
that
budget.
E
So
far
this
year,
paragraph
36
shows
a
remaining
capital
budget
of
8928,
pound
and
84
and
again
table
six
shows
a
breakdown
of
all
the
capital
projects
funded
so
far
for
this
financial
year
and
then
again,
paragraph
37
shows
a
remaining
sill
budget
of
87
723,
pound
and
84
and
table
seven
just
showing
the
latest
injection
figures,
because
there's
been
no
obviously
no
projects
funded
from
the
sale
this
financial
year
and
that's
the
end
of
the
finance
report.
A
Thank
you
karen.
If
we
can
move
on
to
the
update
report,
please.
E
Yeah,
so
with
the
update
report,
I
will
assume
it
as
red
and
but
if
I
can
just
highlight
the
links
in
paragraphs
35
to
37,
these
links
have
come
from
public
health
and
the
links
to
some
online
training
for
suicide
prevention
and
obviously
you
know
feel
free
to
to
use
those
links.
If
you
need
to
just
any
comments
or
questions,
because
I'll
assume
the
report
is
ready.
If
not
thank
you.
E
B
You
remember
that
we
did
allocate
fifteen
thousand
pound
to
residents
in
victoria
park
avenue
for
some
road
safety
works
myself.
Lou
and
alice
are
being
lobbied
heavily
on
this
group
wanting
to
know
when
the
scheme
is
going
to
start-
and
I
just
wonder
karen.
If
you
can
give
us
a
report
on
us,
so
we
can
send
an
email
and
put
them
in
the
picture.
E
In
our
honesty,
counselor
mckenna,
I
would
need
to
get
back
to
you.
I
I
need
to
perhaps
I'm
not
getting.
Anything
back
is
the
answer
I
have
asked
several
times
and
it's
something
I'll
raise
with
either
wished
you
up.
Maybe
tomorrow
and
steve
stewart
can
get
any
further.
I'm
not
getting
any
information
back
at
the
moment.
F
Is
this
highways
you're
not
hearing
anything
back
from
yes?
Well,
we,
I
think
you
should
play
our
little
game
of
asking
a
councillor
to
put
their
name
on
the
email.
A
Yeah
just
yeah,
I
said
copy
me
in
that's,
probably
because
I
have
to
say.
F
That
paul,
because
he
happens
to
know
me
from
the
governing
body
of
holly
bush,
is
it
asks
me
at
every
touch
and
turn
when
it's
going
to
happen
as
well.
E
A
Just
on
the
update
report,
one
of
the
things
that
we
spoke
about
last
time
is
putting
together
because
of
the
pulling
of
the
laptop
funding
and
schools.
Therefore
not
having
as
many
laptops
I
agreed
to
go
away
and
set
up
a
project
that
meant
that
our
residents
could
donate
laptops
and
just
to
let
you
all
know
that
this
has
now
been
set
up.
There
are
it's
all
on
social
media,
so
if
any
of
you
want
to
share
it,
that
would
be
really
valuable.
A
We've
gone
into
partnership
with
digital
access,
west,
yorkshire
and
donations
are
coming
in
the
donation.
Drop-Offs
are
either
the
hyde
park,
booker
shop,
the
kvdt
unit,
11
the
army
hub
and
bramley
community
center.
A
So
there's
one
in
each
ward
and
if
anyone's
particularly
struggling,
then
I
can
always
organize
a
pickup
as
well,
but
the
more
we
can
get
and
the
more
we
can
engage
businesses
to
drop
their
stuff
off
as
well
the
more
laptops
we
can
get
to
go
into
our
schools
to
those
people
that
need
it,
those
young
people
that
need
it
for
remote
learning.
A
They're
available
now,
obviously,
you
have
to
social
distance.
When
you
drop
stuff
off
armley,
I
think
army
hub,
which
is,
I
guess,
the
one
that
you're
most
interested
in,
I
believe
in
putting
a
box
out
that
people
can
drop
stuff
off
in
for
us
to
then
pick
it
up
great
thanks,
okay,
in
which
case,
if
nobody's
got
any
further
comments
on
the
update
report.
A
No
hands
are
going
up.
Are
there
any
other
items
of
business
from
anyone.
C
Councillor
hasselwood
again
just
sorry,
just
a
quick
plug
again
for
our
westleads
unwrapped
facebook
page,
which
we've
set
up
sorry
unashamed
plug
there.
Sorry.
C
Whilst
we're
in
lockdown
and
obviously
coming
up
to
christmas
to
to
help
people
who
run
small
businesses
or
independent
businesses-
and
you
know
maybe
from
home
as
well
in
in
west
leeds
to
add
their
details
of
what
they
do,
what
they
sell
and
a
picture
onto
the
facebook
page,
and
then
we
want
as
many
people
obviously
to
shop
on
there
as
we
can
to
support
those
small
independent
businesses
in
west
leeds.
And
so,
if
you
do
know
any
businesses
like
that
who
want
to
add
their
details
to
that
page.
C
Please
tell
them
to
do
that
I'll.
Ask
them
to
do
that,
and
and
also
if
you
can
spread
the
word
about
liking.
That
page,
because
there's
some
absolutely
brilliant.
You
know
things
online
that
you
buy
for
presents
and
that
kind
of
thing.
So
there
is
loads
of
people
adding
their
details
on
there
for
christmas
shopping.
So
please
spread
the
word
far
and
wide
to
help
our
small
businesses
in
wesley.
A
Yeah,
if
I
can
just
say
thank
you
to
you,
councillor
hasselwood
for
all
the
work
you
and
the
folk
in
the
community
have
done
on
that.
It's
so
valuable
to
shop
local
at
the
moment,
and
it's
a
really
impressive
piece
of
work.
Thank
you.
Councillor,
mckenna.
B
Thank
you
chair
just
for
some
advice
and
to
bring
an
issue
to
other
councillors.
You
remember
some
time
ago.
We
got
these,
what
it
called
figurines
of
young
people
to
stay
out
of
school
outside
school,
to
put
them
up
and
stop
parking
in
and
around
schools.
B
I've
got
them
in
my
garage
and
I've
had
them
there
all
that
time
and
they've
never
been
used
and,
to
be
quite
frank,
I'm
getting
fed
up
with
seeing
them
in
my
garage.
Can
we
have
some
advice,
how
we
might
move
on
with
this?
I
know
it's
not
possible
at
the
moment
for
us
to
liaise
with
schools
and
put
them
out
to
achieve
what
we
were
hoping
they
would
achieve.
A
I
wouldn't
like,
as
you
say,
to
put
any
extra
pressure
on
schools
currently
as
a
teacher.
It's
it's
hard
in
schools
at
the
moment,
but
I'm
sure
there
are
a
school
that
would
be
willing
to
take
them
at
least
for
storage
purposes,
if
not
to
put
them
in
and
out
all
the
time.
I've
got
a
couple
of
councillors
coming
in
on
this.
So
councillor,
richie.
D
Yeah
well,
I
took
mine
to
the.
I
was
sorry
to
the
bramley
schools
and
before
lockdown
there
was
certainly
rotating
them
round.
I
think
did
we
get
six
each,
so
I
think
it
went
for
one
school
had
four
one
had
two
and
they'd
set
up
a
router
between
them,
the
heads
and
it
was
all
working
well,
I
suspect,
they're
not
using
them
now
during
lockdown,
so
yeah.
I
think
so.
Search
working
in
bramley.
A
Kirkstall's
also,
I
think,
delivered
them
already.
Councillor
illinois
did
that.
C
Yeah
they're
in
we've
certainly
had
the
outside
coastal
since
stephen's
round
governor
they're
really
they're
really
successful.
I
think
because
they
look
like
children
and
their
children's
size.
They
do
seem
to
have
an
impact.
So
this
yeah
there's
castles.
It
seems
to
really
trust
with
them.
A
F
I
was
only
going
to
say
exactly
the
same
as
councillor
richie's
just
said,
but
perhaps
in
addition
at
the
school,
where
I'm
the
governor
at
hollybush,
they
were
talking
about
them
and
saying
they
knew
exactly
which
school
they
were
at
and
when
their
turn
was
coming
up.
So
clearly
it's
working
and
I'm
guessing
they're
they're
resting
in
a
school
at
the
moment
until
kobit,
is
over.
C
Sorry,
yeah
just
to
to
back
up
council,
richie
and
councilwoman's
points
when
I
was
taking.
You
know
myself
and
council
bissell
were
delivering
the
green
bins
for
the
school,
uniform
collection
schools
and
I
certainly
saw
them
at
summerfield
primary
in
bramley
and
another
one.
I
can
remember
seeing
them
out.
I
can't
think
of
the
name
of
school
now,
but
I
definitely
saw
him
at
a
couple
of
schools
as
we
were
delivering
the
green
bins
in
bramley,
so
yeah
they're
definitely
being
used
even
if
they
might
be
away
at
the
moment.
C
A
C
Yes,
sorry,
I
think
it's
it's
my
fault.
We
did
have
some
discussion
on
this
yeah
because
we
were,
we
were
discussing
the
well-being
funding
round
as
well
weren't.
We
sorry
I
got
confused
so.
A
It's
the
tuesday,
the
16th
of
march,
but
obviously
a
diary
entry
will
follow
and
papers
and
notification
of
dates
will
go
out
in
the
usual
way.
Thank
you
so
much
everyone
for
coming
and
thank
you
for
all
of
your
comments
and
have
a
lovely
evening.