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B
So,
to
make
attendees
aware,
when
the
meeting
goes,
live
and
being
on
webcast,
you
will
appear
in
the
tough
life
it
appears
in
the
top
left-hand
screen
saying
live
on
youtube,
so
just
be
aware
that
we
are
live
and
that
everybody
can
see
what
everything's
going
on
so
good
evening.
Everyone
and
welcome
to
this
remote
meeting
of
the
inner
east
community
committee,
my
name's
denise
councillor,
denise
reagan
and
I'll
be
chairing
tonight's
meeting.
B
As
we
begin
the
meeting,
could
I
ask
all
attendees,
like
I've,
said
to
mute
the
microphones
unless
I
invite
them
to
speak.
So
if
you're
wanting
to
come
in
to
speak,
can
you
just
show,
on
your
raised
hand,
function
and
then
the
office
was
will
alert
me
to
who
needs
to
speak,
and
this
will
avoid
disruption
and
background
noise.
B
Members
wishing
to
ask
a
question
can
make
comment
should
do
so
by
using
the
raise
hand
facility
like
I've
said,
can
I
take
this
opportunity
to
in
in
the
order
that
I
may
lose
connection?
B
We
need
to
appoint
a
vice
chair,
so
I
I
propose
that
we
appoint
a
vice
chair
who
could
step
in
during
if
this
does
take
place,
and
I
move
that
counsellor
salma
arif
is
vice
chair
and
will
take
over.
If
I,
if
I
lose
connection,
and
can
I
invite
a
member
to
to
second
that
motion,
please
poppy
to
start
country.
B
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
Carmilla.
Could
I
now
invite
members
and
officers
to
introduce
themselves
and
you
mute
your
microphone
once
you
have
introduced
yourself
I'll
start
with
counsellor,
graham.
A
Hi
good
evening,
council
has
got
account
for
birmingham
richmond
in
the
world.
A
Good
evening,
good
evening,
everybody.
B
C
Hi
councillor
david
jenkins,
from
killingbeck
and
seacraft
award.
B
No
right
can
I
introduce
officers
then,
and
take
it
in
turns
ruth.
A
G
Good
evening
everybody,
my
name
is
sunita
jamat
and
I'm
a
domestic
violence
program
officer
and
I
work
for
the
safer
leeds,
safeguarding
and
domestic
violence
team.
Thank.
B
You
everyone
for
that.
Moving
on
to
the
agenda,
could
I
now
ask
natasha
for
you
to
go
through
agenda
items
one
to
six,
please
yeah.
A
Sure,
thank
you.
So,
under
agenda
item
number
one,
there
are
no
appeals
against
refusal
of
inspection
of
documents
under
agenda
item
number
two.
There
are
no
items
which
require
the
exclusion
of
the
press
and
public
under
agenda
item
number
three:
I'm
not
aware
of
any
alert
items
of
business.
However,
some
supplementary
information
was
circulated
to
members
prior
to
the
meeting
in
regards
to
the
domestic
violence
update
report
and
the
finance
report.
Could
I
just
ask
if
members
received
that
via
email?
A
Item
before,
thank
you
can
I
please
ask
members
to
declare
any
disclosure
pecuniary
interests
again.
I'll
take
silence
is
none
and
under
agenda
item
number
five.
I've
not
received
any
apologies
for
absence
and
android
gender
item
number
six.
This
is
where
we'd
usually
have
the
open
forum,
and
on
this
occasion
we've
not
received
any
written
submissions
from
the
public
chat
back
to
you.
B
B
I'm
moving
on
to
agenda
item
eight.
Are
there
any
matters
arising
from
these
minutes
in
in
december
2019
david.
C
Okay,
so
a
minute
minute
item
44
matters
of
rising
minute,
25
pool
estate
development,
just
to
say
that
katie
die
counselor
die
and
I
had
a
meeting
with
strata
and
keep
moat
and
some
residents
recently
to
look
at
whether
we
could
get
do
any
more
green
space
development
within
the
area.
But
it's
more
likely
to
be
that
any
green
space
development
which
is
going
to
benefit
the
the
community
of
pool
estate,
will
be
on
the
secret
hospital
site.
C
B
So
can
we
can
we
take
a
note
of
that
then
natasha
yep,
it's
not
a
chair.
Thank
you,
lovely!
Thank
you.
Anybody
else
got
any
matters
arising
david
can
ask
you
to
thank
you,
that's
loveless
and
we
know
ideally,
then
so
we're
now.
Moving
on
to
agenda
item
nine,
so
jonathan
I'd
like
to
invite
you
to
speak
to
your
update,
please
on
the
wybeck
flood
defences.
F
Yeah
thanks
councillor
reagan.
I
know
you've
invited
me
along
following
an
update.
I've
provided
to
you
an
exact
member
briefing,
so
I've
done
a
few
slides
which
I
was
just
going
to
talk
through
and
then
I'm
happy
to
take
any
questions.
If
that
sounds
all
right,
we'll
see
if
the
technology
allows
I'm
going
to
try
and
share
my
screen.
So
what's
the
arrogance.
F
Can
people
now
see
a
slide,
probably
just
needed,
yeah
brilliant!
Thank
you.
F
F
That's
not
aware
we
have
a
statutory
function
under
the
flood
and
water
management
act
to
to
advise
through
planning
and
approve
plans
for
planning
that,
in
relation
to
flood
risk,
we
build
schemes,
we
maintain
schemes,
we
investigate
flooded
incidents
and
obviously
we
we
support
businesses
and
members
of
the
public
to
try
and
reduce
their
flood
risk
or
to
help
them
deal
with
flood
risk
if
we
can't
try
and
reduce
it.
F
So
what
I
was
going
to
do
is
provide
an
update
on
a
scheme
that
we've
been
doing
in
east
leeds
and
along
the
white.
Beck
valley
covers
a
few
different
sites.
We've
been
planning
this
and
implementing
it
for
a
lot
of
years
now
and
we
were
just
about
finished,
so
it's
just
an
update
on
that
and
a
chance
for
you
to
ask
any.
F
Questions
so
the
the
white
back
valley
itself
runs
from
roundy
roundy
park
lake
on
or
starts
officially
there
and
runs
right
down
through
to
the
river
air
downstream
of
the
city
center
and
along
the
way
we've
been
looking
to
reduce
blood
risk
in
that
area
for
a
lot
of
years,
and
we
we
were
able
to
pull
a
package
of
works
together,
working
with
few
outside
bodies,
but
also
a
number
of
departments
within
the
council.
F
So
the
brownfield
land
program
was
looking
to
develop
land
in
this
catchment
and
bring
that
forward
for
housing
growth
back
some
countryside,
colleagues
were
looking
to
make
improvements
to
existing
local
nature
reserves
and
and
just
and
green
spaces
generally
in
terms
of
accessibility.
Just
as
the
point
that
was
raised
by
council
jenkins,
there,
we've
we've
been
looking
at
that
for
a
long
time
and
this
project
looked
to
try
and
enable
some
of
that,
as
well
as
reduce
flood
risk.
F
So
as
a
flood
risk
team,
we're
very
interested
in
not
just
doing
flood
risk
projects
that
only
do
flood
risk
things.
We're
always
looking
for
opportunities
to
bring
in
multiple
sources
of
funding
to
do
multiple
benefit
projects.
So
this
particular
one
look
to
support
housing
growth,
improve
green
infrastructure
and
biodiversity
and
accessibility
and
obviously
reduced
risk
where
we
could
as
well.
A
F
Be
very
aware,
and
probably
more
more
aware
than
I
am,
of
the
impacts
of
flooding
on
the
communities
in
this
part
of
leeds
and
they've
suffered
on
a
number
of
occasions,
and
although
the
white
beck
is
actually
a
main
river,
so
by
sort
of
statutory
law,
that's
the
remit
of
the
environment
agency.
F
We've
we've
worked
with
the
environment
agency,
but
we
actually
took
a
lead
as
a
local
authority,
because
we
we
felt
we
were
better
placed
to
deliver
a
scheme
that
had
a
few
other
benefits
and
we
were
particularly
focused
on
reducing
the
risk
in
the
dunhills
estate.
They've
been
hit
a
number
of
times
on
the
right-hand
side.
F
There
there's
a
picture
of
what
looks
like
a
world
war
ii,
ariad
siren
up
on
a
massive
pole
and
which
is
pretty
much
what
it
is
and
that
does
sound
when,
when
the
environment,
it's
the
issues
of
flood
warning
in
that
area
that
that
siren
sounds
it's
the
only
one
in
leeds.
F
It's
it's
one
of
only
a
few
in
west
yorkshire,
but
that
signifies
how
I
suppose,
how
much
of
a
priority
of
flood
risk
is
in
this
part
of
the
catchment
and
the
schemes
that
we
were
going
to
bring
forward
was
hoping
to
try
and
reduce
the
chances
of
a
repeat
of
the
pictures
there
that
you
can
see
what
we
settled
on
were
three
different
sites:
arthas
rain,
killing
back
meadows
and
halton,
moore
all
that
those
were
the
names
we
gave
them
they're
in
the
rough
locations
that
you
can
see
on
the
planet
and
each
of
these
schemes
basically
managed
flood
risk,
but
also
improved
habitat
for
planting
access,
improvements,
improvements
to
sort
of
grassland
and
meadows
and
and
also
critically
managed
surface
water
runoff.
F
From
some
of
the
developments
that
were
coming
forward-
and
I
can
put
on
that
in
a
bit.
F
You
may
get
a
little
bit
of
child
noise
in
the
background,
but
that's
par
for
the
course
now.
Isn't
it
so
the
kids,
the
kids,
are
in
the
lab.
So
let's
see
how
we
go,
and
this
is
the
first
of
the
science
this
is
arthur's
reign.
So
you've
mentioned
this
strata
homes,
development
just
before
so
one
of
the
one
of
those
sites
was
looking
to
do.
F
Some
re-culverting
works
at
arthur's
reign,
so
just
after
so
this
was
an
existing
local
nature,
reserve
open
green
space
and
to
allow
the
houses
to
be
built
and
to
manage
the
surface.
Water
went
off
from
that
site
that
would
enter
this
watercourse.
That
then
goes
into
the
white
back.
They
needed
to
make
a
culvert
bigger
and
they
were
going
to
pay
to
do
that
and
we
had
a
better
plan
than
that.
So
what
we've
managed
to
do
is
actually
make
it
a
culvert's,
a
pipe.
Basically
that's
under
the
ground.
F
We
wanted
to
make
that
into
an
open
channel
and
make
it
visible
to
the
public,
make
it
greener,
make
it
more
accessible
and
a
better
quality
green
space.
So
that's
what
we've
managed
to
do
so
shortly
after
the
scheme
had
finished.
It
looked
like
the
top
picture
and
then
the
second
picture
is
just
it's
really
greened
up
and
it's
got
lovely
wildflower
meadows.
We've
done
a
lot
of
planting
there
with
parks
and
countryside
and
it's
reduced
flood
risk
as
well.
So
we
delivered
that
project
on
behalf
of
the
contractor.
F
F
But
by
doing
that,
we
attracted
a
lot
of
other
funding
as
well
and
we
were
able
to
put
together
nearly
five
million
pounds
with
a
package
of
works
to
do
things
like
this,
whereas
the
developers
on
their
own
wouldn't
have
the
incentive
to
do
all
to
do
a
project
in
this
way.
F
F
The
scheme
of
killing
back
meadows
is
the
major
bit
of
the
investment
in
the
in
the
site,
so
probably
the
best
part
of
two
or
three
million
pounds,
depending
on
how
you
look
at
the
infrastructure,
the
planting
and
the
landscaping
still
going
on
over
this
winter,
and
we
did
have
a
big
programme
of
community
engagement
with
schools
and
community
groups
to
help
with
the
the
tree,
planting
and
and
the
vegetation
management
and
that
that's
still
planned
it'll
have
to
come
once
the
pandemic
has
calmed
down,
which
is
a
shame.
F
We
didn't
get
a
chance
to
do
that
last
year,
but
in
the
middle
of
that
site.
Now
we've
got
what
is
a
a
flood
storage
reservoir.
So
we
have
to
manage
that
under
quite
tight
regulations
as
a
proper
reservoir
under
the
reservoirs
act
and
again,
flood
risk
management.
Do
that
bit
and
parks
and
countryside
help
us
by
managing
the
green
space.
F
But
what
that
does
is
hold
flood
water
when
we've
got
heavy
rains
in
the
park
a
bit
and
keeps
that
water
out
of
homes
which
is
critical
to
this,
but
the
rest
of
the
time
when
the
whiteback's
not
flooding,
it's
a
lovely
green
space
and
it's
accessible
to
the
public,
and
we
were
able
to
make
a
lot
of
improvements
both
from
a
biodiversity
point
of
view
and
accessibility.
Point
of
view.
If
I
employ
a
time,
lapse,
video
we
had
a
time
lapse.
F
A
F
F
So
let
this
play
through,
but
in
the
middle
there
we're
building
a
brand
new,
concrete
control
structure
and
then
at
the
bottom.
Here
is
the
old
force
of
the
river,
and
we
moved
that
and
we've
moved
that
through
this
new
structure,
so
we've
moved
the
whole
of
the
white
back
there.
We
had
to
relocate
crayfish
and
we
did
a
massive
crayfish
rescue
at
the
early
part
of
the
project.
F
I
just
want
to
highlight
what
was
really
sad
actually
about
the
project
is
crayfish
are
an
endangered
species
in
this
country
and
when
we
came
to
do
the
main
works
on
the
project,
we
were
all
set
for
about
three
weeks
worth
of
crayfish
rescue
no
crayfish
were
present
at
all,
and
so
there
is
actually
quite
a
big
problem
along
the
white
back
that
that
that
species
is
up
to
migrate.
We
think
that
is
is
down
to
a
crayfish
plague
which
is
carried
by
an
invasive
american
white
cloth,
american
cream,
fish
signal
crayfish.
F
F
To
the
left
of
the
picture,
there's
a
lot
of
ponds
and
scrapes
that
are
there
all
the
time
and
they're
wetted
up
quite
frequently,
but
the
flood
water
only
really
starts
to
fill
up
and
quite
beautifully.
F
This
picture
just
sort
of
shows
you
that
we've
got
throughout
the
site,
there's
a
series
of
smaller
little
ponds
and
sections
of
river
and
they
they
stay
wet
most
of
the
year
and
then
in
the
flood.
The
picture
on
the
right
there
just
shows
you
that
the
whole
of
that
area
and
it's
flooded,
but
a
lot
of
the
new
paths
that
we've
put
through
the
site
are
outside
of
that
area.
So
the
site
is
still
available
to
public,
even.
F
This
is
just
a
quick
picture
of
just
as
we
finished,
so
we
did
do
a
site
visit
with
a
lot
of
the
world
members.
There
are
three
worlds
that
intersect
at
this
location,
so
we
took
out
the
war
members
and
a
couple
of
other
organizations
that
were
interested
in
the
work.
F
I
showed
them
around
the
site,
but
it
has
actually
greened
up
quite
a
lot
now
and
it
looks
even
even
better
than
this
now,
but
it
is
fully
operational
and
we're
closely
monitoring
the
site,
but
it
has
already
operated
a
few
times
and
protected
those
properties.
F
More
was
the
final
site
out
of
the
three,
and
that
largely
was
about
tree
planting
environmental
improvements
in
and
around
the
areas
around
the
schools
and
the
green
space
there
and
and
that
work
is
largely
finished,
and
this
is
just
a
summary
of
some
of
the
other
benefits
that
we've
done
as
part
of
that
project.
So
we've
created
a
number
of
apprenticeships
and
jobs
indirectly,
but
a
small
number
as
well
directly
through
the
work
itself,
8
000
new
trees
will
go
in
at
killing
back
meadows,
which
is
not
not
a
small
amount.
F
In
an
urban
setting,
so
we're
very
proud
of
the
amount
of
trees
that
we've
been
able
to
implement
on
there.
Obviously
we
did.
We
did
remove
a
number
of
larger
willows
and
mature
trees,
so
we're
conscious
that
we've
we've
had
to
mitigate
for
that,
but
we've
we've
certainly
planted
a
huge
amount,
more
trees
than
we
needed
to
just
do
for
mitigation.
F
F
But
obviously
we
want
that
doing
in
a
sympathetic
way,
and
this
is
a
good
way
of,
in
effect,
creating
a
massive
sustainable
drainage
system
in
the
middle
of
the
valley,
rather
than
trying
to
ask
each
developer
to
do
their
own
solution
and
that
that's
my
final
slide.
B
A
Thanks
chair
jonathan,
thank
you
for
the
presentation.
My
question
is
regarding
mentions
who's
gonna
keep
the
main
entrance
of
the
back,
and
also
you
mentioned
about
seating.
As
you
know,
in
the
east
we
do
have
a
high
number
of
antisocial
behavior,
and
do
you
reckon
the
city
will
attract
antisocial
behavior
from
young
people
gathering
in
the
evenings
and
during
night
time.
C
Yes,
it's
similar
in
a
way
I
mean,
I
think
it's
it's
a
groundbreaking
scheme,
if
that's
not
a
pun,
and
I
think
it
looks
amazing.
Well
it's
beginning
to
look
amazing,
because
at
the
time
when
we
visited
there
were
lots
of
stones
and
the
greenery
hadn't
sort
of
surfaced,
but
I
think
there
is.
C
We
have
to
be
be
aware
of
the
issue
of
anti-social
behavior
and
at
one
end
the
arthur's
reign
end.
It's
it's
been
attracting
the
odd
quad
bike
and
motorbikes.
C
So
I
think
we
just
need
to
make
sure
that
we
we
cover
that
and
make
sure
that
the
chicanes
are
in
place
to
to
try
and
discourage
such
anti-social
behavior.
B
Just
before
you
answer,
jonathan
I've
got
some
counselor
salma
arif
to
answer.
Ask
a
question,
and
then
you
can
answer
those
three
questions
together:
salman.
A
F
I
shall
try.
Yes,
thank
you,
so
I
think
roughly
taking
them
in
order
the
the
maintenance
of
the
beck
itself,
because
that
the
white
deck
is
a
main
river
from
about
just
where
the
a58
goes
across
it
down
to
the
river
air.
So
that's
the
overarching
back,
maintenance
is
still
responsible
to
the
environment
agency.
However,
the
new
assets,
the
new
flood
risk
assets
and
the
bits
within
particularly
within
killing
bet
meadows,
but
all
three
sites.
F
The
council
attracted
funding
as
part
of
the
deal
for
the
whole
project
to
do
maintenance
going
forward.
So
with
many
of
these
things,
the
capital
funding
was
there
for
the
whole
amount.
The
the
maintenance
funding
largely
is
going
to
last
say
for
the
next
10
years
for
the
green
space,
but
yeah
we've
taken
on
a
new
responsibility.
Basically
so
they're
all
the
new
flood
risk
assets
that
we've
built
there.
F
The
food
waste
management
team
will
look
after
and
the
parks
and
countryside
we're
already
managing
killing
that
meadows
arthas
raid
and
holland,
more
in
conjunction
with
yorkshire,
wildlife
trust
as
part
of
the
park
sort
of
partnership,
so
that
that
continues
and
we
we
just
we're
just
working
more
closely
now
with
parks
on
the
on
the
assets.
So
I
hope
that
answers
that
question,
I
suppose
seating
and
generally
anti-social,
behavior
and
access
for
quad,
bikes
and
motorbikes.
F
I
that
that's
the
balance
we've
got
to
strike,
isn't
it
that
you
want
to.
You
know
for
some
some
some
people,
the
very
hopefully
the
small
minority-
want
to
abuse
the
site,
and
I
I
think
we
are
already
seeing
that
at
all
three
sites
and
we
we're
certainly
getting
a
lot
of
interest
in
the
new
assets
at
killingbeck
meadows
and
whenever
you
put
a
big
engineering
structure
in
the
middle
of
a
green
space.
F
Everybody
wants
to
come
and
play
and
I
think
particularly
young
people
are
using
it
as
a
as
a
climbing
frame
and
as
a
place
to
ride
motorbikes,
and
I
had
a
at
a
meeting
yesterday,
actually
with
paxton
countryside
colleagues,
about
what
I
would
like
to
see
is
that
we
we've
at
least
assessed
each
of
these
sites
to
make
sure
that
the
measures
that
we
should
have
in
place-
chicanes,
fencing
signage,
are
in
place
and
that's
something
we're
following
up
on
fairly
confident
they
are.
F
But
I
think
we
need
to
keep
a
close
eye
on
that.
I
think
the
structure
itself
at
killing
back
meadows
is
receiving
a
lot
of
attention,
but
not
as
much
now
as
it
did
when
we
first
put
it
in.
So
we
need
to
keep
an
eye
on
that.
It
could
be
that
the
interest
will
win
could
be
just
that.
It's
cold
and
the
kids
are
not
out
as
often
but
I
think,
with
with
the
kids
not
being
at
school
now
for
the
next
few
weeks.
F
We
need
to
keep
a
close
eye
on
their
interest
in
the
structure
and
some
of
the
structures
like
fencing
that
we've
put
in
to
keep
the
public
safe,
that
they've
removed.
So
we've
we've,
probably
three
or
four
times
now.
We've
had
to
put
chains
and
fencing
back
up.
So
that's
something
we're
very
aware
of
it's
a
common
problem.
You
know
working
in
public
space
you
you
guys,
will
know
that
as
well
as
I
will
so.
F
We
need
to
see
see
if
there's
more,
we
can
do
than
fine,
but
it's
a
fine
balance
between
making
it
fully
accessible
for
everybody
that
can
go
and
appreciate
the
green
space
and
making
it
inaccessible
for
people
that
go
and
ruin
it
for
everybody
else.
So
yeah,
no
not
I
haven't,
got
probably
any
more
concrete
answers
than
that,
but
we
are
very
aware
of
the
issues
that
it's
bringing
at
the
moment.
F
Okay,
thank
you
and
then
the
final
final
question
was
about
jobs,
wasn't
it
and
and
apprentice
apprentices
and
whether
they
were
local.
So
they
were.
There
were
four
jobs
and
two
apprentices
that
were
taken
on
as
a
direct
result
of
the
construction
works,
so
they
were.
F
The
works
were
developed
and
delivered
by
coalesce,
our
term
contractor
and
jackson
civils
and
from
my
understanding,
they
part
of
their
contract
is
about
apprentices
that
are
locally
employed,
although
I
think
that's
something
that
we're
strengthening
in
our
future
procurement
contracts,
that
local
labor
needs
to
be
a
preference,
but
the
wider
jobs
are
local,
because
the
the
318
jobs
and
the
apprentices
that
go
with
them
are
about
land
in
the
valley
that
is
better
protected
from
flooding
that
promotes
the
sustainability
of
those
businesses.
F
So
this
is,
I
suppose,
a
benefit.
I
haven't
touched
on
a
lot,
because
the
benefits
slightly,
it's
quite
minor
in
terms
of
flood
risk,
is
about
protecting
the
enterprise
zone.
It's
about
protecting
existing
businesses,
it's
really
difficult
to
attract
funding,
to
protect
existing
businesses,
which
is
really
frustrating.
F
We
can
attract
a
lot
more
funding
if
we
can
create
new
jobs.
So
there
were
some
there,
but
actually
we
probably
need
to
emphasize
more
the
fact
that
by
reducing
the
flood
risk
in
the
valley,
we
have
actually
safeguarded
a
lot
more
jobs
than
we
create,
which
is
obviously
extremely
important
in
itself.
We
just
don't
tend
to
crow
about
it,
because
we
can't
claim
a
lot
of
funding
for
it,
but
yeah
the
jobs.
The
larger
figure
for
the
jobs
is
about
the
jobs
in
the
valley.
B
You've
got
a
raised
hand.
Do
you
want
to
ask
your
question
please
before
we
move
on
to
another
item
on
the
agenda?
Yes,
I
will
thank
you
thanks
jonathan,
when
we
had
a
tour
of
the.
A
F
Yeah
no
problem
yeah.
Actually
I
wonder
if
they
may
have,
they
may
not
have
quite
got
that
right
depends
what
I
can't
answer
for
them,
but
this
site's.
Actually,
it
is
designed
in
a
way
that
we
don't
have
to
come
out
and
operate
it,
which
I
suppose,
from
my
point
of
view.
I
I'm
always
keen
that
we
don't
have
active
defenses
in
the
city
centers.
F
Many
of
you
be
aware:
we've
got
these
really
fancy
movable
wheels
and,
as
a
result,
I
have
a
team
on
call
24
7
to
be
ready
to
operate
those
ways
or
fix
them
if
they
fail,
and
we
have
to
do
that
in
the
city
center.
But
our
preference
would
always
be
that
the
flood
scheme
just
looks
after
itself,
and
that's
that
is
exactly
what
it
does
in
the
white
banks.
F
So
the
new
structure
at
killing
back
meadows
is
designed
that
this,
the
steel
gear,
what
we
call
a
pen
stock
in
the
middle,
can
move
up
and
down,
but
it's
set
at
a
level
that
lets
an
amount
of
water
through
that
we're
happy
with.
So
the
flood
waters
will
just
come
and
fill
the
vase
in
and
go
away
again,
and
we
will
have
to
touch
that
pen
stock
in
a
flood,
but
for
maintenance
and
things
like
that.
We
can.
We
do
come
and
move
it
up
and
down
and
make
sure
that
it
works.
B
Thank
you.
Thank
you
jonathan.
I
can't
see
any
more
indications
for
questions
so
thank
you,
jonathan,
for
your
very
comprehensive
presentation
and
answering
the
questions
of
the
world
members
and
thank
you
for
attending
tonight.
F
B
A
I
don't
know
what's
wrong
with
that
from
the
beginning
of
this
meeting,
and
I
also
just
just
let
you
know
I
will.
I
am
in
the
meeting.
B
Good
evening,
thank
you
thanks
moving
on
then
to
agenda
item
10
and
we've
now
got
another
presentation
with
regards
to
a
domestic
violence
update,
and
I
asked
for
this
to
be
brought
to
this
committee,
because
we,
I
don't
know
if
anybody
else
has
been
on
the
on
the
on
the
briefings
of
those
domestic
violence,
and
it
was.
B
It
was
brought
to
our
attention
that
the
the
amount
of
domestic
violence
carls
were
up
during
corvid
and
it
was
very
high
in
birmingham
richmond
hill
and
in
gibson
and
harold's,
and
so
we
thought
that
it
might
be
an
idea
to
to
have
this
presentation
here
at
the
community
committee
to
let
members
know
what's
actually
ongoing
and
what
the
department
are
in
connection
with
other
partners
are
doing
about
it.
So
I'd
like
to
welcome
sunita
jamat
to
to
deliver
this
presentation.
Thank
you.
G
Good
evening
councillors
and
thank
you
to
councillor
reagan
for
inviting
me
to
this
to
this
meeting
so
as
councillor
reagan's
mentioned,
I'm
here
to
talk
about
domestic
violence,
in
particular
in
the
inner
east
community
committee,
and
this
is
a
conversation
that
first
started
back
in
january
2020
with
the
community
committees
and
due
to
covid.
G
Obviously
you
know,
we've
had
to
put
that
on
hold
and
we've
kind
of
now
rested
re-establishing
those
connections
with
all
the
community
committees,
and
we
have
recently
done
a
presentation
for
the
inner
south
and
we
will
be
going
on
to
do
further
presentations
for
inner
inner
west
as
well,
but
in
terms
of
sort
of
inner
east.
So
what
I'm
hoping
to
do
is,
could
we
have
the
next
slide?
G
Please
provide
you
with
a
bit
of
an
overview
of
the
reported
domestic
violence
and
abuse
in
the
in
the
east
area
and
the
rest
of
the
city
as
well.
How
that
compares
with
some
key
data
as
well
about
the
impact
that
kovid
19
has
had
in
relation
to
domestic
violence
and
abuse
and
we're
hoping
I'm
hoping
to
provide
a
snapshot
of
the
current
activity.
G
That's
currently
happening
in
the
inner
east
area
and
in
particular,
and
the
really
good
work
that's
been
happening
in
in
the
seacroft
area
of
the
city
and
what
they're
doing
as
a
partnership
to
address
domestic
violence
and
abuse,
and
I
believe
councillor
jenkins,
has
been
involved
in
that
I'm
hoping
to
provide
a
summary
of
the
sorry.
Can
we
just
go
back
a
slide
yet
a
summary
of
the
implications
of
the
new
domestic
abuse
bill
and
that's
currently
going
through
the
house
of
lords,
and
it
just
had
its
second
reading
last
tuesday.
G
But
it
is
progressing
and
we're
hoping
that
it
becomes
an
act
in
april
of
this
year
and
what
that
means
in
terms
of
what
the
governance
arrangements
will
look
like
in
leeds
and
and
then
finally,
look
at
an
opportunity
to
try
and
explore
the
role
of
the
community
committee
in
addressing
domestic
violence
and
abuse
sort
of
in
the
in
the
areas
of
high
prevalence.
G
But
before
I
begin,
can
I
just
something
that
we
always
start
our
sessions
by
is
to
acknowledge
that
people
who
are
sort
of
currently
listening
in
may
be
sort
of
directly
or
indirectly
affected
by
domestic
violence
and
abuse,
and
they
may
have
been
exposed
to
it
themselves
or
they
may
have
actually
witnessed
it
in
their
own
families.
G
So
when
it
comes
to
any
questions
or
or
discussions,
if
we
could
just
ask
that
you,
you
approach
it
with
sensitivity,
it
is
a
very
emotive
subject
and
I
will
be
sort
of
giving
you
some
data
on
the
domestic
homicides
that
have
occurred
in
the
city
since
2011..
G
G
So
currently,
the
data
that
we
have
in
leeds
is
that
there
has
been
18
180
police
incidents
that
have
been
reported
from
the
beginning
of
lockdown
through
to
sort
of
the
first
week
in
january,
and
now
we
think
that
the
projected
figure
was
is
going
to
be
more
likely
to
be
around
22
000
and
that's
quite
common
with
previous
years,
where
people
that
the
police
have
reported
around
60
incidents
per
day.
G
And
we
don't
actually
see
that
as
a
negative.
We
actually
encourage
more
people
to
feel
confident
about
reporting
to
the
police,
and
we
do
see
those
numbers
going
up
year
on
year
and
we
do
take
a
little
bit
of
comfort
that
the
victim
survivors
do
feel
confident
in
calling
their
situations
into
the
police
and
that
the
police
are
actively
doing
something
about
it
and
but
that's
just
sort
of
the
tip
of
the
iceberg.
G
We
know
that
what
only
one
in
five
victim
survivors
will
report
to
the
police,
so
those
numbers
should
really
be
times
by
five
to
get
a
really
true
reflection
of
the
the
sort
of
the
the
true
figures
of
what's
happening
in
leeds.
G
Now
that
could
be
a
combination
of
you
know,
people
coming
out
of
lockdown
and
also
that
the
warmer
weather
happened
and
people
were
very
therefore
able
to
be
freely
out
and
about
and
make
more
people
tend
to
drink
when
it's
a
lot
warmer
as
well,
and
unfortunately,
we
are
seeing
that
the
highest
volume
wards
are
berman,
thompson,
richmond,
hill,
gipton
and
hair
hills
and
the
inner
south
middle
middleton
park
as
well.
G
Now,
what
we
don't
want
to
see
is
the
incidence
of
repeat
calls
and
what
we
mean
by
repeat
calls
is
where
there's
been
a
further
incident
between
the
same
couple
within
a
12-month
period
and
sadly
those
numbers
have
gone
up
since
quite
recently,
and
certainly
throughout
the
pandemic.
G
Even
though
interventions
may
have
been
put
in
place,
we've
seen
a
bit
of
a
rise.
It's
risen
by
about
eight
percent
in
terms
of
repeat
calls
and
that's
where
there's
been
further.
Incidents
of
violence
around
27
have
had
a
child
present
so
that
child
has
been
in
that
home
and
they
are
witnessing
domestic
abuse
and
any
child
that
witnesses.
G
Domestic
abuse
is
classed
as
a
victim
of
child
abuse
as
well
and
I'll
go
on
to
talk
a
little
bit
more
about
children
when
we
come
to
the
the
changes
in
the
domestic
abuse
bill
and
there's
been
a
rise
in
high-risk
incidents
of
violence,
so
that's
gone
up
by
one
percent
currently
from
our
previous
incidents.
G
Now
we
know
that
those
figures
are
just
the
tip
of
the
iceberg,
but
we
know
that
there
are
also
sort
of
barriers
for
people
to
report
incident
of
abuse,
and
so
we
know
that
because
of
fear,
shame
and
many
other
issues.
G
People
might
be
reluctant
to
report
and
seek
help
from
the
police
as
well
just
to
say
that
those
wards,
in
particular
they
have
they
they
sort
of
year
on
years,
seem
to
be
the
same
wards
that
are
seeing
the
highest
number
of
cases
in
in
the
city
could
have
the
next
slide,
please.
G
So
here's
a
snapshot
of
the
police
report
in
the
city
as
a
whole,
but
also
in
the
three
ward
areas
for
inner
east
and,
as
you
can
see,
that
sort
of
year
at
the
moment
we
don't
have
the
full
figures
for
the
current
year,
but
they
are.
These
are
the
the
numbers
that
we're
seeing
currently
in
birmingham's
richmond,
hill,
gibson
and
hair
hulls
and
killing
beck
and
c
croft.
G
So
the
inner
east
comparisons
have
shown
that,
on
average,
the
numbers
have
moved
over
the
course
of
the
year
so,
and
this
has
obviously
had
an
impact
due
to
the
pandemic
and
coronavirus
on
the
city.
But
just
want
to
note
that
there
are
slightly
different
trends
in
terms
of
increase
within
three
separate,
the
three
different
wards
where
some
have
decreased
and
some
have
actually
increased
within
within
those
throughout
the
year.
G
Next
slide,
please-
and
these
are
the
types
of
incidents
that
we've
we've
seen
in
the
city
as
a
whole,
and
also
in
the
three
wards
that
we're
talking
about.
So,
as
you
can
see
in
there,
the
the
the
figures
are
quite
similar
to
the
average
number
of
cases
of
violence
across
the
whole
of
the
city
and
inc
in
terms
of
verbal
disputes.
G
Abuse
so
the
current
arrangements
that
we've
got
in
the
city
are
what's
called
the
marac.
If
people
are
not
familiar,
it's
a
multi-agency
risk
assessment
conference
and
for
the
year
1920
we
are
looking
at
sort
of
trying
to
have
the
updated
data
for
the
current
year,
but
there
were
3725
new
cases
that
were
heard
at
marac.
G
That's
that
was
associated
to
that
and
we
do
see
those
numbers
go
up
each
year
and
we
do
see
that
again
as
a
positive,
because
it
means
that
organizations
and
victim
survivors
feel
confident
about
reporting
that
abuse
to
either
their
support
agency
or
to
the
police
and
around
80
percent
of
referrals
do
come
from
west
yorkshire
police
from
the
communities.
G
G
It
is
an
investigation
where
we
scope
agencies
across
the
city
that
may
have
been
working
with
the
victim,
the
children
of
that
household,
if
there
were
any
and
also
the
perpetrator,
and
we
collate
all
the
positive
responses
and
set
up,
what's
called
a
review
panel
from
that,
we
then
sort
of
try
to
identify
what
were
the
events
that
led
up
to
that
the
murder
or
the
or
the
death
of
that
victim.
And
what
were
they
more
commonly?
G
G
G
Four
were
domestic
homicide
suicides,
so
that's
where
the
perpetrator
has
killed
their
partner
or
family
member
and
then
gone
on
to
into
their
own
life,
and
sadly,
five
children
have
also
been
killed
alongside
their
mother.
G
What
we
do,
after
the
after
we've
carried
out,
the
review,
is
sent
to
the
home
office
for
approval,
and
then
we
that
that
on
our
website
for
for
people
with
their
names
redacted,
but
what
we?
What
we
do
then,
as
a
team,
is
to
share
that
learning
across
agencies
to
for
age,
for
organizations
to
implement
recommendations
in
their
own
organizations
to
change
policies
or
to
change
their
own
in
internal
procedures,
to
learn
from
those
missed
opportunities
that
to
prevent
that
happening
to
any
other
person.
G
We're
finding
that.
Sadly,
there
has
been
a
recent
homicide
in
the
hair
hills
area
just
sort
of
last
year
and
we
are
sort
of
recently
just
started
the
procedure
for
because
it
has
hit
the
criteria
for
a
domestic
homicide
review.
So
we
are
in
the
process
of
collating
any
positive
responses
from
organizations
and
and
that,
wouldn't
that
that
includes
schools
as
well.
G
G
Some
of
the
lessons
that
we've
learned
from
previous
domestic
homicides
has
been
around
not
recognizing
the
emotional
and
psychological
abuse
of
coercive
and
controlling
behavior.
So
we
are
trying
to
get
that
across
in
all
our
training
and
trying
to
raise
more
awareness
around
the
insidious
nature
of
coercive
and
controlling
behavior,
and
not
just
looking
at
physical
abuse
as
the
main
type
of
abuse
that
that
victims
can
can
become.
G
So
when
I'm
delivering
training,
I
always
do
mention
that
I
would
rather
stand
up
in
court
and
say
I
breached
confidentiality,
but
it
meant
that
I
saved
somebody
from
serious
harm
or
potential
death,
and
so
we
we
then
share
all
that
key
learning
and,
as
I
said,
then
organizations
are
there
to
to
try
and
implement
those
changes.
G
So,
as
we
know
overall
numbers
that
actually
sought
help
fell
during
march
and
april
in
leeds
as
such,
but
we
know
that
they
rose
to
a
peak
in
july
and,
as
I
said,
that
could
have
been
due
to
the
fact
that
people
were
not
in
lockdown
and
also
that
sorry
could
we
go
back
a
slide.
Please
thank
you,
so
they
they
weren't
in
under
lockdown
and
that
the
warmer
weather
could
have
contributed
to
people
having
that
more
culture
of
drinking
and
it
went
up
again
towards
the
end
of
november.
G
G
G
Now
it
was
really
difficult
for
the
the
the
refuge
service
in
leeds,
because
people
had
to
remain
in
their
their
accommodation
for
for
for
covered
restrictions,
so
move
on
from
refuge
was
very
limited
and
people
were
unable
to
move
into
accommodation,
so
those
that
were
on
the
social
housing
register
were
prevented
from
obviously
bidding
for
the
council
properties.
G
However,
one
thing
that
we
did
do
was
introduce
what
was
called
the
emergency
lettings
panel,
and
that
was
a
a
really
innovative
meeting
whereby
members
of
the
housing
department
and
came
together,
and
I
think
there
were
twice
a
week-
they
used
to
put
an
emergency
lettings
panel
together
and
they
would
then
offer
a
property
to
people
at
the
highest
risk,
and
that
meant
that
that
there
was
more
move
on
from
refuge
and
the
alternatives
that
we
found
were
the
government
incentive
to
put
people
into
hotels,
empty
hotels
during
the
pandemic.
G
Support
to
perpetrators
was
also
limited
due
to
social
distancing.
So
the
programs
that
were
in
place
such
as
caring,
dads
and
ended
up
having
to
be
done
via
online,
which
isn't
ideal,
because
it's
a
group
exercise
where
perpetrators
who
do
want
to
modify
their
behavior
rely
on
having
group
work
or
one-to-one
work,
and
we
also
found
that
hidden
harm
was
more
likely
to
be
significant
and
some
of
the
triggers
for
that
was
that
more
people
were
furloughed.
G
Some
people
had
lost
their
jobs,
so
the
triggers
to
people
being
in
a
confined
space
for
longer
people
being
further
isolated
or
but
victims
being
further
isolated
and
the
pandemic.
G
Curtailing
people's
access
to
support
was
really
key,
whereby
people,
when
victims
weren't
able
to
speak
to
organizations
or
leave
the
property
to
talk
to
family
and
friends
about
the
the
abuse
that
they're
experiencing
the
fear
that
the
the
perpetrator
was
in
the
same
property
and
listening
in
to
all
telephone
conversations
of
the
next
slide.
Please.
G
So.
This
is
just
a
snapshot
in
the
months
before
the
pandemic,
where
we
had
around
400
reports
made
to
west
yorkshire
police.
But
this
chart
shows
the
trend
over
the
period
since
the
restrictions
were
first
introduced.
G
So,
as
we
know,
sort
of
the
highest
number
of
calls
were
weak
commencing
the
27th
of
july
and
again
they
started
to
hit
a
peak
in
november,
where,
on
average,
we
received
the
police
received
60
calls
per
day
where,
in
that
time,
they
received
around
74
calls
per
day
whereby
the
domestic
violence
and
abuse
was
the
biggest
police
call
out
in
terms
of
all
types
of
crime
could
have
the
next
slide
please.
G
So
this
gives
a
breakdown
of
the
current
partnership
that
we
have,
so
we
we
have
a
which
I'll
come
to
talk
about
a
little
bit
more
later
on
about
what
we've
done
since
the
pandemic.
G
But
this
just
gives
a
bit
of
a
flavor
of
the
number
of
calls
to
west
yorkshire
police,
the
calls
to
leeds
domestic
violence
service
and
how
many
marac
referrals
were
made
during
april
to
september
of
this
year.
How
many
people
approached
leeds
housing
options
where
and
where
they
cited
domestic
violence
and
abuse,
as
their
main
reason
for
approach
and
the
number
of
refuge
spaces
that
were
available
throughout
that
time?
And
finally,
the
children's
social
work
services,
where
domestic
violence
and
abuse
was
the
primary
contact
for
social
workers.
G
One
thing
that
we
did
managed
to
ensure
that
continued
throughout
the
pandemic
was
operation
encompass.
If
people
haven't
haven't
heard
about
that.
It's
an
initiative
whereby,
for
every
high-risk
case,
for
every
that
involved,
a
child,
the
school
was
informed
and
a
notification
went
to
the
child's
school
just
to
alert
the
teachers
and
head
teachers
and
their
pastoral
care
to
keep
an
eye
out
on
the
child
and
make
sure
that
the
child
also
had
some
form
of
support
as
well.
G
I
could
have
the
next
slide,
please,
okay,
so
that
moves
on
to
the
current
activity
that
we've
got
in
sort
of
the
inner
east
area.
So,
as
a
team
we
have
we
promote,
what's
called
the
domestic
violence
and
abuse
quality
mark
and
that's
a
lack,
an
accreditation
that
organizations
across
the
city
can
apply
for
and
it's
a
self-assessment
and
which
includes
training,
that's
delivered
by
our
team,
and
we
encourage
all
organizations
to
to
apply
for
the
quality
mark
and
they
self-assess
themselves
on
standards
such
as.
G
How
do
they
work
with
victims?
How
do
they
work
with
perpetrators
and
how
do
they
work
with
children?
How
do
they
work
with
vulnerable,
vulnerable
members
of
society
and
so
on?
And
it's
a
three-year
accreditation
and
currently
the
organizations
in
this
in
inner
east
that
are
working
towards
or
have
achieved,
the
quality
mark,
so
housing
I've
worked
towards
it
leads
onto
social
behavior
team
have
worked,
are
currently
working
towards
the
quality
mark
and
the
refugee
council,
which
is
a
migrant
and
refugee
organization
that
supports
refugees.
G
Paphras
is
a
positive
action
for
asylum
seekers
is
another
organization
path,
yorkshire.
They
also
are
working
through
this,
the
refugee
forum,
ritas
gipsil
and
care
and
repair
and
the
elite
city
council.
Community
hubs
are
all
working
towards
this
accreditation
and
there
are
two
organizations
that
have
had
the
quality
mark,
but
are
now
due
for
review.
So
they've
had
the
quality
mark
for
three
years
and
we
we
just
refresh
the
review
and
that's
shantona
and
space
2,
which
is
in
the
ls14
area.
G
So
in
addition
to
that,
we've
also
provided
a
lot
of
training
for
gp
practices
in
in
and
around
the
area.
The
whole
of
the
city
and
currently
around
39
gp
practices
across
the
city
have
been
trained
on
what's
called
routine
inquiry,
so
routine
inquiries,
whereby
we
ask
every
female
patient
over
the
age
of
16
who
presents
on
their
own
whether
they're
experiencing
domestic
violence
and
abuse,
and
it's
in
the
with
the
intention
that
then
the
gp
signposts
them
to
the
commissioned
service.
G
So
the
gps
that
I've
currently
been
trained
are
park,
edge,
practice,
windmill
health
center
round
a
road
surgery,
the
garden
surgery,
lincoln
green
medical
center
bell.
G
Brook
surgery
and
dr
taylor
and
partners,
which
was
formerly
shaft
spree
surgery,
there
are
some
organ,
some
gp
practices
that
we
have
tried
to
encourage,
but
we're
just
finding
it
a
little
bit
difficult
and
naturally
you
know
all
health
sector
workers
are
gonna,
be
we
understand
and
completely
you
know
accept
that
they
they're
got
their
hands
full
with
with
the
pandemic
and
and
certainly
now
with
the
covid
vaccine.
But
we
are
still
looking
to
work
with
the
grange
medical
center,
foundry
lane,
surgery,
shakespeare,
shakespeare,
medical
practice
and
ashfield
as
well.
G
We've
also
got
some
early
help
hubs
that
have
been
established
by
elite
city
council's
children's
services,
and
we
have
a
domestic
violence
coordinator
that
are
based
in
each
of
those
hubs.
So
there
is
one
for
inner
east
and
one
for
inner
inner
western
inner
south
as
well.
G
So
they
work
really
closely
with
our
team
and
have
done
a
lot
of
work
around
and
supporting
the
seacroft
local
care
partnership
with
all
the
amazing
work.
They've
done
so,
I
have
to
say
a
big
shout
out
to
anna
who
works
in
the
seacroft
local
care
partnership,
and
you
know
a
huge
thank
you
to
councillor
jenkins
as
well,
who
supported
all
that
work.
That's
happened
in
seacroft,
so
it's
a
joined
up
team
that
that's
working
to
approach.
G
It's
mainly
like
local
support
for
local
people
and
it's
in
conjunction
with
all
the
local
communities
in
the
area,
and
that
includes
third
sector
organizations,
housing,
primary
care
and
the
nhs
health
care
services,
and
also
children's
and
adult
social
care
as
well
and
within
that
structure.
They've
developed,
what's
called
the
seacroft
design
group
and
that's
a
multi-disciplinary
team,
and
I'm
told
that
takes
that's,
been
taking
a
really
proactive
approach
to
enable
and
influence
the
light.
The
sort
of
the
wider
local
care
partnership
as
well.
G
So
some
of
the
work
that
they've
done
is
to
to
deliver
lots
of
training
sessions
and
workshops,
particularly
around
the
16
days
of
action.
That
starts
on
the
26th
25th
of
november
right
through
to
the
10th
of
december.
G
So
there
was
workshops
and
training
on
on
marax,
on
stalking,
on
coercive
control
and
just
as
a
basic
introduction
to
domestic
violence
and
abuse
as
well,
and
the
the
partnership
is
looking
at
four
themes.
So
they
started
off
looking
at
sort
of
the
mental
health
of
the
of
the
community
and
what
they
recognize
that
there's
a
lot
of
correlation
between
mental
health
and
domestic
violence
and
abuse.
G
So
they
chose
domestic
abuse
as
their
sort
of
area
of
work
to
focus
on,
and
so
the
four
themes
that
they're
working
on
is
currently
training
and
workshops,
community
engagement,
local
organizations
and
business
engagement,
and
also
communications
as
well.
But
they
recognize
there's
lots
of
work
still
to
do
and
we
kind
of
very
hot
off
the
press.
G
This
morning,
anna
and
I
have
had
a
meeting
where
we
are
looking
towards
creating
a
group
of
community
ambassadors
and
we'd
like
to
pilot
that
at
this
early
stage,
because
it's
literally
hot
off
the
press
and
that's
where
by
local
businesses
and
local
people,
have
have
expressed
an
interest
in
becoming
an
ambassador
in
their
own
community.
G
So,
for
example,
hairdressers
in
the
community
in
the
area
have
said
that
they
would
like
to
become
trained
to
recognize
those
signs
and
indicators
in
their
clients
that
they
see
to
be
able
to
then
sign
post
them.
So
we
will
look
at
a
kind
of
a
model
that
we
will
pilot
in
the
seacroft
area
to
start
with,
and
if
once
we
evaluate
that,
then
we'll
look
to
roll
that
out
in
other
areas
as
well.
G
Some
of
the
other
things
that
we've
got
in
the
inner
east
area
that
we
there
is
a
honour-based
abuse
and
forced
marriage
steering
group
which
I
sit
on,
and
there
are
strategic
partners
across
the
city
that
are
involved
in
that
there
was
a
city-wide
pledge
that
was
signed
on
behalf
of
lee
city
council
by
councillor
cooper
and
we've.
G
We've
got
a
strategic
city-wide
action
plan
that
we
are
currently
working
towards
and
one
of
the
actions
within
that
was
that
we
had
a
a
campaign
during
the
month
of
december,
which
was
a
a
campaign
on
fever
fm,
which
is
a
local
radio
station.
G
That
advertise
well
gave
information
updates
every
every
day
about
eight
times
a
day.
In
both
english
and
urdu
around
seeking
support,
if
anybody
was
experiencing
honor
based
abuse
and
or
forced
marriage
as
well.
G
Could
have
the
next
slide?
Please.
B
G
Okay,
yeah
I'll,
be
as
quick
as
as
quick
as
I
can
so
really
just
really
quickly
in
terms
of
covered
responses.
So
soon,
as
covid
lockdown
first
started,
we
created
in
is
part
of
safer
leads.
We
created
a
tactical
group
which
had
was
a
street
strategic
way
of
monitoring
activity
and
and
the
trends
over
the
sort
of
lockdown
period,
and
that
includes
of
campaign
messages,
are
that
were
tweeted.
On
the
safer
leads
platform,
I'm
trying
to
think
of
things
that
I
can
keep
out.
G
The
maraca
is
obviously
ongoing,
so
that's
a
daily
meeting
that
addresses
all
high
risk
and
the
strategic
developments
in
terms
of
this.
The
front
door
is
the
only
operational
arm
for
our
team
because
we
work
more
strategically
rather
than
operational,
but
we've
got
a
few
members
of
our
team
that
chair
those
marac
meetings
as
well.
G
So,
in
terms
of
governance
arrangements,
people
may
have
heard
about
the
the
new
domestic
abuse
bill.
That's
currently
through
the
house
of
lords
at
the
moment,
and
that
has
been
a
huge
opportunity
for
for
for
lots
of
organizations
and
and
it's
a
bit
of
a
landmark
piece
of
legislation-
that's
going
to
be
introduced
for
the
first
time
and
it's
going
to
introduce
a
statutory
definition
of
domestic
violence
and
abuse
and
as
part
of
that,
each
tier
one
local
authorities
have
to
have
what's
called
a
local
partnership
board.
G
That
will
be
focusing
on
a
needs
assessment
and
that's
looking
across
the
city
around
accommodation
provision
for
victims
and
both
children
as
well.
But
it
places
a
new
statutory
duty
on
local
authorities
to
do
that.
So
in
leeds
we
are
a
bit
ahead
of
the
trend.
We're
not
expected
to
do
that
before
the
bill
comes
into
force,
but
we
have
created
that
local
partnership
board
and
it
replaces
the
previous
domestic
violence
programme
board
that
we
used
to
have
next
slide
please.
G
So
some
of
the
other
key
changes,
as
I
mentioned,
is
the
statutory
definition
of
domestic
violence
and
abuse
councillor
reagan.
Would
it
be
easier
if
I
just
forwarded
you
some
fact
sheets
about
the
build
so
that
I
don't.
G
B
Yeah,
if
you
can
forward
them
to
ruth
and
then
ruth
will,
will
pass
them
on
to
all
the
the
members
that
are
present.
G
Next
slide,
please
so
yeah.
This
just
brings
me
sort
of
to
an
end
to
be
able
to
then
just
sort
of
steer
this
conversation.
So
you
know,
if
anybody's
got
any
questions
at
this
stage,
I'm
just
hoping
that
you
know
these
questions
that
we've
put
up.
There
is
just
to
stimulate
some
conversation
about
how
best
we
can
support
you
to
sort
of
raise
awareness
in
in
your
respective
areas
around
domestic
violence
and
abuse,
or
replicate
some
of
the
really
good
work.
That's
happening
in
seacroft
at
the
moment,
lovely.
B
Thank
you
for
any
questions.
Thank
you
senator
for
that
very,
very
detailed
report,
and
it
really
is
an
insight.
Can
I
ask
people
to
raise
their
hand?
I've
got
one
question
prior
to
opening
it
up
to
members,
and
it's
if
that
work
within
the
c
croft
lcp
is
doing
really
good
work
and
he's
getting
us
down
of
demand,
violence
cases,
and
it's
supported
in
that.
How
can
we,
as
a
community
committee,
might
happen
in
our
other
lcp
areas
as
in
gibson
and
harold's,
and
birmingham
richmond.
G
Yeah
and
I
kind
of
anticipated
that
question
councillor
reagan,
so
thank
you
for
that.
So
the
reason
why
that's
what
that
works
happening
in
zcroft
at
the
moment
is
because
the
the
local
care
partnership
chose
to
chose
domestic
abuse
as
their
kind
of
theme
to
work
on,
because
recognizing
the
correlation
it
had
with
mental
ill
health
as
well.
G
So
I'm
not
sure
what
the
other
areas
have
chosen
in
terms
in
terms
of
their
local
care
partnerships
of
what
theme
that
they're
working
with
and
but
it's
more
you
know
I
can
work
very
really
closely
with
anna
and
because
some
of
the
work
has
already
been
set
up.
It's
looking
at
replicating
it
and
working
with
the
her
equivalent
in
each
of
the
areas
to
try
and
duplicate
some
of
that
really
good
practice.
B
I
mean
it's
just
that
we,
you
know
burma,
social
richmond,
hill
and
gibson,
and
hurdles
have
got
the
highest
amount
of
domestic
violence
cases.
So
therefore
it
needs
it
needs
some
strategic
action
to
to
to
get
those
down.
Doesn't
it
to
support
the
people?
I've
now
got
to
salma
arif
and
then
I've
got
councillor
osgood
cam.
A
Chair,
thank
you
for
that
presentation.
I've
got
two
questions
for
you.
Since
2011
and
the
slides
said
there
have
been
26
homicides.
What
I'd
like
to
know
if
it's
possible,
you
may
not
have
this
information
in
front
of
you-
is
how
many
of
those
were
sort
of
in
our
three
walls
in
the
east.
It's
just
backing
what
the
chair
has
said.
You
know.
If
the
homicides
are
also
higher
in
our
neck
of
the
woods,
then
you
know
we
need
to
do
it.
A
We
need
to
have
the
strategic
caption
anywhere,
but
we
can
back
that
up
to
say.
Homicides
are
also
happening
in
our
ward
and
the
second
question.
I've
got
first
of
all
comment
about
the
campaign
you
did
on
fever
fm
and
reaching
communities
who
perhaps
thought
have
english
as
their
first
language.
Fibre
fm
is
great
and
it
really
does
get
to
the
south
asian
community
quite
well.
A
I
am
worried,
though,
about
the
gypsy
roma
communities
that
we've
got
and
the
the
recent
numbers
that
we've
had
in
our
communities
a
lot
of
the
women,
don't
speak
english
and
perhaps
don't
necessarily
know,
or
have
the
connections
to
to
get
the
support
that
they
need.
Are
we
doing
any
work
with
them?
Just
just
wanted
to
make
sure
that
they
also
know
where
to
get
the
support.
Yeah.
B
G
A
Yeah
thanks
chair
and
thanks
anita
for
your
excellent
report
as
well
presentation
I
just
following
from
the
chair.
A
I
represent
bumped
us
richmond
hill
with
the
chair
and
the
castle
claim,
and
I'm
surprised
and
shocked
actually
to
see
those
numbers
are
the
really
really
high
numbers
and
then,
when
you
said
in
other,
such
as
hair
hills
and
killing
bacteria,
those
organizations
already
working
on
dva
how
come
we've
got
highest
number
in
our
world
and
there's
no
organization
working
on
this.
A
B
A
The
thing
is,
with
all
this
information
that's
been
delivered
tonight,
I'm
absolutely
gobsmacked,
as
regarding,
what's
being
told
there
and
informing
us
there
tonight
and
not
knowing
about
half
of
it,
you
know
what
I
mean.
I
don't
know
why
we
haven't
been
informed
about
this
mod
at
the
tasking
meetings
that
we
attend
and
more
by
the
people
in
the
housing
department
that
actually
have
a
responsibility
to
the
people.
There
look
after
it
on
the
estates
and
what
have
you
I'm
really
concerned
about
what
I've
heard
tonight.
I'm
telling
you
now.
B
G
Yeah,
so
in
in
response
to
council
arab,
unfortunately,
I
don't
know
the
full
number
of
the
domestic
homicides
that
have
occurred
within
the
inner
east
other
than
the
two
that
I
am
aware
of
recently.
G
So
there
was
one,
as
I
mentioned,
quite
so
towards
the
end
of
last
year,
and
we
are
currently
scoping
that,
and
I
I
personally
am
leading
that
domestic
homicide
review
as
as
the
officer
from
our
our
office,
and
there
was
a
another
one
in
in
hills
area
which
we
have
progressed
a
little
bit
further,
but
I
can
certainly
get
back
to
you
on
the
numbers
by
by
literally
going
through
them
and
if
that's,
okay,
counselor
or,
if
and
in
terms
of
gypsy
roma
traveler
communities
I
towards
shir.
G
I
have
spoken
directly
to
georgina
bright,
who
at
that
time,
was
the
manager
of
the
gypsy
roma
traveler
team
in
the
area,
and
we
know
that
there
is
high
prevalence
in
sort
of
like
they
get
to
know.
Sorry,
the
cliftons
and
knolls
areas
and
hair
houses
as
a
whole,
and
so
they
were
working.
They
were
going
to
be
working
towards
the
the
quality
mark.
G
So
some
of
the
staff
have
already
received
training
on
how
to
identify
signs
and
indicators
of
domestic
abuse,
and
some
of
their
staff
are
people
from
that
from
that
community
themselves.
So
you
know
it's
it's
beneficial
that
they
can
speak
the
language
as
well,
but
due
to
covid
that
that
obviously
fell
kind
of
by
the
wayside
and
there
has
been
some
changes
in
staff
management
as
well.
So
georgina
has
gone
back
to
the
youth
service
and
is
that
that's
now
been
taken
over
by
a
different
staff
member.
So
I
will
do.
G
I
will
endeavor
to
get
in
touch
with
them
again
and
look
at
working
towards
the
quality
mark
and
but
if
you've
got
any
recommendations
of
anybody
else
that
I
could
speak
to
I'm
more
than
happy
to
have
the
conversation
lovely.
B
We'll
we'll
get
that
to
you
through
through
liz
jam
and
I
think
from
our
head
of
stronger
communities
and
we'll
look
at
it.
That
way,
can
you
answer
the
question
or
comment
on
the
the
issue
that
counselor
graham's
put
forward.
G
Unfortunately,
I'm
I'm
not
part
of
the
tasking
group,
so
I
can't.
I
can't
really
answer
that
question
as
to
why
you
haven't
been
informed
about
this
already.
G
G
It
might
be
something
that
you
ask
for
on
a
regular
basis
as
part
of
your
tasking
meetings,
but
if
there's
anything,
we
can
do
to
try
and
support
that,
and
I'm
happy
to
have
conversations
again
with
with
our
intel
team
and
obviously
data
like
this
is
very
sensitive
and
I've
been
able
to
share
this.
But
on
the
whole,
we
don't
share
this
kind
of
data
that
widely
as
such
in
terms
of
council.
B
Sorry
I
thought
you'd
answered
the
council
of
cairns
questions.
G
No
not
yet
right
now,
council
asks
guys,
asked
whether
organizations
in
birmingham's
or
richmond
hill,
so
councillor
asgard.
We
kind
of
rely
on
organizations
wanting
to
to
be
accredited
and
go
for
these
quality
marks
and
to
receive
the
training.
And
if
we
approach
certain
organizations
we
will
obviously
try
so
so
hard
so
much.
But
then,
if
people,
if
those
organizations
don't
want
to
engage
or
don't
want
to
be
or
don't
have
the
capacity
to
go
through
the
quality
mark,
then
we
can't
we
can't
literally
force
them.
G
B
I
think
the
issue
is
sanitary,
isn't
it
that
I
think
board
members
are
very,
very
frustrated
in
the
sense
of
if
birmingham
is
in
richmond
hill
and
killing.
Sorry
and
gibson
and
hurdles
have
got
high
mem
high
numbers
of
this
domestic
violence
taking
place
and
we
have
got
within
those
two
worlds.
We've
got
a
high
percentage
of
being
residents
in
there
that
possibly
are
quick
in
coming
forward
in
reporting
that
and
if
we've
got
a.
B
If
we've
got
schemes
actually
working
with
the
local
care
partnerships
in
killing
beck
and
sierra,
then
I
think
that's
the
way
forward
for
our
other
towards
then.
I
think
we
need
to
echo
some
of
that
work.
That's
going
on
in
that
that
seacroft
partnership,
if
we
can
bring
that
down-
and
I
think
it's
ideally
for
councillor
khan
as
the
representative
for
for
the
other,
the
other
local
care
partnerships
to
try
and
take
that
work
on.
B
A
Yeah,
I
did.
I
just
wanted
to
just
alert
the
the
committee
that
these
issues
have
not
gone
unnoticed.
We
have
in
our
programmes
of
work
and
and
already
agreed
with
colleagues.
A
Who
we
can
work
with
around
the
quality
mark?
So
we
can
certainly
pick
that
up
with
with
sunita,
and
we
have
already
identified
work
that
we
want
to
do
with
young
people
and
children
that
may
have
been
affected
by
domestic
violence
across
the
committee
area
and
also
looking
at
how
we
can
work
more
closely
with
and
the
local
care
partnerships
to
make
sure
that
the
excellent
work
that's
taking
place
in
seacroft
and
killing
back
is
replicated
elsewhere.
So
so
so,
please
don't
think
that
that's
going
to
notice
it.
B
A
Yeah,
can
I
just
come
back
on
your
last
comment?
Yes,
I
do
attend
the
lcp
partnership
meetings,
but
I
wanted
to
do
about
three
meetings.
I
think
you
was
the
chat.
Are
you
used
to.
A
Opportunity
yeah
I'm
happy
to
take
it
away
and
hopefully,
with
the
ltps.
I
will
echo
and
make
sure
we
put
on
our
gender
special
rewards
and
make
sure
how
we
can
help
them
as
well.
B
Yeah,
definitely
thank
you
for
that
yeah
lovely
moving
on
then
anything.
B
B
Now
good
evening,
yeah
moving
on
then
now
with
to
agenda
item
11
finance
report.
Ruth.
Can
I
ask
you
to
present
the
finance
report.
D
First,
we're
just
going
to
look
at
area
update
report,
so
it
starts
on
page
17
of
your
agenda
pack
and
the
chairs.
Ask
that
I
take
the
majority
of
the
area.
D
Update
report
is
read
and
we'd
have
a
couple
of
offices
here
to
touch
some
specific
areas
of
the
report,
so
the
first
one
is
susan,
hardy
who's
service
manager
from
ecuador,
neighborhoods
team
and
in
terms
of
the
report
itself,
that's
paragraphs
11
to
15
on
pages
19
to
20,
which
provide
a
summary
of
the
recent
figures
and
work
undertaken
by
the
clean
and
earbuds
team
and
susan's
just
going
to
give
us
a
quick
sort
of
verbal
update.
D
E
Thank
you
chair,
obviously,
there's
a
table
in
the
report
at
point:
11.,
that's
quite
old
data
now,
unfortunately,
because
that
was
presented
to
the
meeting
back
in
december,
but
the
the
figures.
I've
looked
at
the
figures
today.
The
trends
are
still
the
same,
so
comparing
sort
of
like
september
to
november
the
three
months
in
2019
to
the
same
three
months
in
2020
you'll
see
that,
unfortunately,
the
lines
don't
marry
up
for
some
reason.
I'm
not
sure
why?
E
In
relation
to
bulky
collections,
they've
gone
up
slightly,
so
I've
had
quite
a
few
referrals
on
bulky
collections,
as
you
would
expect
through
you
know,
following
the
lockdown
and
the
suspension
of
bulky
waste
wasting
gardens
did
go
up,
but
we
do
have
all
our
enforcement
officers
back
working.
So
you
know
they've
been
doing
some
sterling
work.
E
They
have
been
going
out
with
the
you
know,
with
the
right
risk
assessments
in
place
and
safe
working
instructions,
and
we
we've
been
working
particularly
in
hair
hills
on
a
lot
of
wasting
gardens
and
members
have
been
getting
regular
updates
about
what
work
we've
been
doing
in
there.
The
courts
are
back
up
and
running.
The
courts
were
closed
for
quite
some
considerable
time,
so
we
had
lots
of
prosecutions,
sat
in
the
courts.
Waiting
for
deliberations,
they've
now
started
to
churn
through
the
machinery
and
we're
getting
some
really
really
good
results.
E
We've
had
a
recent
press
release
and
gibson
and
hair
hills
on
some
of
the
the
fines
for
bins
on
streets
and
prosecutions
for
western
gardens,
etc
and
fly
tipping
and
we're
getting
some
really
really
good
results
on
those,
as
others
start
to
come
through.
In
other
words,
obviously
we'll.
Let
members
know
what
what
what
they
are
and
what
sort
of
fines
people
are
getting.
E
We've
did
some
cleanup
events
in
gibson
and
hails,
and
burmese
and
richmond
hill
towards
the
end
of
last
year.
We
did
a
full
month
of
cleanup.
Events
worked
really
closely
with
the
members
in
those
wards
and
the
cleanup
events
were
giant
ones
between
referees
and
the
gully
teams.
We
have
been
doing
some
really
close
work
with
refuse
recently,
especially
you
know,
through
the
pandemic,
because
waste
has
gone
up
quite
considerably
because
obviously
more
people
are
at
home
and
we've
had
quite
a
lot
of
side
waste
as
well
so
tonnage.
E
We
are
running
services
quite
slightly
differently
again,
because
some
of
the
safe
working
instructions
we
need
to
work
to
to
make
sure
people
are
safe
through
the
covered
pandemic
have
kicked
in
again.
So
things
like
simple
things
like
we're
only
allowed
to
members
of
staff
in
a
vehicle,
they
have
a
screen
between
them,
so
it
does.
It
does
play
out
in
in
operational
service,
where
we're
limited,
sometimes
to
what
we
can
do.
E
We
are
still
delivering
the
the
majority
of
services,
which
are
priority
flight
tipping
bulky
waste
collections
are
still
operating,
the
household
sites
are
still
open
and,
as
I
said,
working
really
closely
with
refuse
as
well.
So
you
know
if,
if,
if
priorities
do
change,
obviously
john
and
jason
will
let
us
know,
but
in
your
areas
everything's
still
business
as
usual
at
the
moment
and
bins?
Obviously
we're
emptying
bins
on
streets
as
well.
E
No,
I
mean
we
did
have
stuff
out
early
dolls,
but
obviously
the
snow
just
scuppered
that
we
have
diversified
today,
so
we've
been
working
really
closely
with
the
highways
on
gritting,
so
we've
deployed
some
staff
to
help
on
that.
We
were
out
this
morning.
First
thing
we'd
already
planned
this
anyway.
This
week
we've
been
working
on
the
the
greeting
at
the
corvid
centers
and
the
vaccination
centers,
and
obviously
all
the
sheltered
housing
and
staff
continued
to
work
there
until
the
point.
E
Obviously
it
became
too
dangerous
to
be
able
to
do
that
and
obviously
covered
centers
were
saying
and
vaccination
centers
were
saying
to
older
residents,
especially
please
don't
come
today
and
just
re.
You
know
book
your
appointments,
so
we've
got
the
same
out
tomorrow.
Staff
will
come
in
as
as
normal
tomorrow
and
they
will
go
out
greeting
with
highways.
So
we've
got
that
really
close
working
relationship
with
them
as
well.
E
B
Councillor
jenkins
and
drinkwater,
is
it
on
this
particular
aspect
with
so
susan.
B
C
All
right
so
very
quickly
just
say:
we
had
a
very
good
session
that
the
rams
heads
cleaning
up
just
before
they
must
might
have
perpetrated
the
covert
situation.
So
we
that
went
really
well.
So
one
quick
just
thing
is
that
that
chart
is
quite
difficult
to
to
look
at.
I
wonder
if
it
could,
but
it
is
really
good
in
terms
of
the
information
if
it
could
be
put
together
in
a
better
way
and
updated.
E
C
Sorry
and
and
just
to
say
that
the
the
you've
we
had
a
session
about
the
your
voice
today,
which
is
like
the
intense
tenants
communication
website,
and
I
think
it
might
be
good
to
be
able
to
put
that
onto
there,
yeah,
okay,
that
was
through
the
housing
advisory
panels.
Thank
you.
Yeah.
I
I
I'm
finding
it
impossible
to
get
waste
collected
from.
A
I
Soon,
as
it's
in
one
of
these
pockets
of
woodland.
A
It
gets
seems
to
get
passed
between
yourselves
parks,
countryside,
housing,
community
payback,
and
you
know
at
one
point.
I
was
waiting
18
months
for
seven
mattresses
and
a
load
of
large
items
to
be
collected
from
low
wood,
and
I
just
went
out
myself
and
dragged
them
to
the
side
of
the
road.
So
I
just
wondered:
if
you
could
comment
on
that
and
the
disjoint
between
see
it
feels
like
there's
a
disjoint
between
the
departments
really.
E
Yeah
I
mean
we
obviously
had
some
dialogue
about
that
at
the
time.
Council
drink
water-
and
you
know
some
of
the
things
I
was
raising
around
the
safe
working
instructions
and
the
risk
assessments
that
staff
have
in
place
and
the
accessibility
to
some
of
those
areas,
and
I
know
we
had
the
dialogue
around
you.
You
did
go
into
those
areas
and
pull
those
out,
but
obviously
we've
got
really
strict
guidelines
that
we
need
to
follow.
So
it's
not
always
easy.
E
We
did
meet
as
well
previously
when
helen
freeman
was
here
around
some
of
that
disjoint
with
with
the
service
areas
and
other
departments.
If
there's
particular
areas
that
you're
you
you're
struggling
to
get,
you
know
somebody
to
actually
attend
whether
the
parks
are
batting
it
to
us
or
we're
batting
it
to
housing.
Let
me
know
and
I'll
I'll
get
those
sorted
for
you.
So
just
let
me
know
the
particular
areas
but,
as
I
say,
we
are
still
in
a
global
pandemic.
E
We've
still
got
staff
numbers
that
are
low
and
we
are
prioritizing
particular
services
and
you
know
we're
still
trying
to
run
the
bulky
way
service,
because
we
know
that
if
we
run
that
it'll,
you
know
alleviate
some
of
the
fighting
issues.
But
if
there's
particular
areas,
you
want
me
to
look
at
just
send
me
the
details
and
I'll
look
at
it
with
you.
B
E
No,
no
remix!
No,
it's
not!
No.
I
mean
the
grip.
Bins
fall
in
different
areas,
but
we
don't
actually
put
the
great
bins
out
and
we
don't
fill
them
so
highways
put
certain
grit
bins
out.
Obviously,
world-based
monies
pay
for
certain
group
bins,
so
they're
done
through
the
community
committees,
but
then
the
the
housing
puts
them
out
as
well.
So
we
we
don't
get
involved
in
the
great
bins.
B
B
D
Thank
you
thank
you,
and
so
just
carrying
on
in
terms
of
the
area
update
report
and
the
second
area
of
the
report
that
we're
just
going
to
highlight
is
paragraph
37
to
40,
which
relates
to
the
touchstone
love's
food
project.
So
darren
deceased
is
very
patiently
stayed
stayed
with
us
through
the
meeting
just
to
give
a
quick
update
on
the
project
and
and
the
work
that
touchdown
are
doing
across
inner
east,
particularly
in
relation
to
food
supplies
and
sort
of
food
distribution
and
stuff
for
crossing
areas.
I
Okay,
how
long
do
you
want
me
to
speak
for
because
I
can
edit.
I
B
I
So,
just
to
introduce
myself,
I
I
do
work
for
touchstone,
I'm
the
community
health
development
manager
for
touchdown
and
that
that
basically
means
I
look
after
a
lot
of
our
public
health
contracts,
so
that
includes
many
healthy
leads
better
together,
easily
tell
for
all
and
your
space,
and
I
notice,
there's
an
update
in
your
papers
today
on
on
those
projects.
I
I
So
as
soon
as
we
were
aware
of
the
issue
in
the
first
national
lockdown
started,
we
delivered
some
food
out
to
people
and
we
set
up
overnight
what
eventually
became
touchdown
loves
food
as
when
we
started
we
first
of
all
started
by
getting
referrals
from
touchstone
services
across
leeds,
but
then,
as
the
community
care
hubs
were
set
up,
we
became
partners
as
part
of
the
chapel
alton
hub
and
the
berman
tops
and
richmond
dill
hub
and
leads
mencap
as
you,
you
probably
are
aware,
with
the
lead
partner
for
berman
thompson,
richmond
hill.
I
Recently,
in
fact,
from
the
1st
of
january,
we
are
the
lead
partner.
Well,
we
are
the
partner
delivering
the
chapel
allison
hub,
but
we
are
still
working
city
wide
and
we're
still
very
much
working
across
the
in
the
east
area,
including
gipton,
hair
hills
and
killing
beck
and
seacroft.
I
I
When
we
pull
this
data
together,
we
delivered
around
about
166,
803
meals
to
people
across
leeds
and
just
to
break
that
down.
Fifty
thousand
fifty
thousand
of
that
was
to
berman
officer,
richmond
hill
residents
and
twenty
one
thousand
six
hundred
to
residents
in
gipton
and
hair
hills
and
for
killing
beck
and
seacroft.
I
It
was
2
800.,
so
that
for
us
represents
around
about
36
of
all
our
work
in
touchstone
loves
food
has
been
in
the
inner
east
area,
of
least
of
leeds,
and
just
to
give
you
an
indication
29
of
the
work
we've
done
in
birmingham
richmond
hill
has
come
from
the
hub,
so
so
two-thirds
of
the
work
have
actually
come
from
other
referrals
that
we've
had
so
not
from
the
hub
itself,
and
I
think
what
we're
what
I
take
from
that
is
that,
because
of
our
local
connections,
because
the
work
we
do,
people
have
come
to
ask
for
help
and
support.
I
They
haven't
necessarily
gone
through
the
council
welfare
system
to
get
to
to
the
support,
and
I
I
say
that
it's
not
just
us
in
touchdown,
there
are
lots
of
organizations
supporting
people
who
haven't
necessarily
gone
through
the
council
welfare
system.
I
don't
know
what
else
to
say.
Apart
from,
I
don't
think
this
is
about
food.
It's
been
about
mental
health
support.
I
Food
has
been
the
vehicle
for
getting
to
people
and
supporting
them,
but
actually
the
the
vast
majority
of
what
we've
done
is
around
mental
health
support
and
just
to
give
you
an
indication
for
the
first
12
weeks,
we
delivered
200
hours
of
intensive
telephone
support
to
people
alongside
delivering
food.
So
it's
been
very
much
about
that,
showing
people
that
we
care
that
someone's
there
for
them
someone's
there
to
listen
and
sign
posting
them
to
appropriate
services
within
touchstone
and
beyond.
I
So
unless
you've
got
any
questions,
that's
my
update.
B
Well,
I'd
just
like
to
to
thank
you,
darren
and
you're
on
your
particular
organization
and
your
team
that
you've
done
some
excellent
work
in
in
in
the
three
worlds,
and
you
know
you
you've,
you've
been
instrumental
in
in
getting
that
food
and
getting
that
mental
health
support
to
to
the
people
that
need
it's
a
a
huge
thank
you
to
to
you
and
your
staff,
and
you
can
pass
that
on.
Has
anybody
got
any
questions
that
they
would
like
to
raise
with
darren.
A
What
what
can
you
hear
me
darren?
I
can
dad
and
what
I'm
concerned
about
when
you
say
that
they
came
far
through
the
telephone
system
and
the
council's
welfare
support.
Wasn't
there
right,
you
know
what
I
mean
and
you
use
the
mental
health
as
a
discussion.
As
regarding
how
you'll
come
to
help
them,
can
you
tell
me
why
what
the
council's
welfare
department
in
responding.
A
I
Yeah,
I'm
not
saying
that
welfare
support.
Wasn't
there,
it's
just
that
because
of
our
local
connections
with
people
at
the
work
that
we've
done
pre
before
kovid.
They
came
to
us
for
support
before
going
to
the
council,
because
they've
got
a
relationship
with
us.
They've
got
the
trust
with
us,
and
that
was
only
magnified
really
through
through
the
pandemic,
and
we
still
have
people
knocking
on
our
door
when
we
are
open
at
cromwell
mount
that
yesterday
there
was
a
lady
coming.
I
She
she
couldn't
actually
ring
the
council
because
she
didn't
have
any
credit
on
the
phone,
so
she
knocked
on
our
door
for
help.
So
there's
lots
of
reasons
why
people
don't
call
the
welfare
support
line,
but
I
know
when
people
have
gone
through
that
they
have
got
some
really
good
support.
So
I
don't
want
to
infer
that
they
didn't
get
support
through
them.
B
A
Yeah,
thank
you,
donald
donald.
Can
I
also
thank
you
and
your
team
for
doing
a
fantastic
work
past
10
months
now,
and
my
question
is
where
which
part
I
know
you're
based
in
birmingham's
richmond
daily,
I'm
really
fortunate
to
have
trip
stone
in
birmingham's,
richmond,
hill
and
you're,
one
of
the
great
organizations.
A
My
question
is:
where
was
your
most
focused
area?
Was
it
across
three
walls
or
were
it
just
in
richmond
hill
area
or.
I
I
I
would
say
it's
around
the
berman,
soft
lincoln
green
area
really,
but
it's
been,
it's
been
quite
spread
spread
out,
so
I
mean,
if
I
think,
about
where
we've
delivered.
To
I
mean
we've
been
to
all
parts
of
leeds
and
certainly
all
parts
of
all
three
areas
within
the
inner
east
area,
but
birmingham
is
is
probably
where
I
would
say
we
do
most
of
our
our
deliveries.
I
But
I
guess
that
indicates
just
in
terms
of
the
where
people
live
the
tower
blocks.
There
we
go
out
to
ebola
gardens,
we
go
to
the
torres
torrey
gardens
all
over
really
and
of
course,
it
still
fluctuates.
We're
still
supporting
250
odd
people
each
week
and
it
was
450
people
per
week
in
this
last
summer.
So
there's
still
an
extensive
number
of
people
that
we
are
supporting
on
a
weekly
basis.
I
I
should
say
before
I
I'm
asked
to
leave
to
say
thank
you
for
all
your
support
because
we
have
had.
We
did
start
this
with
no
money
at
all.
No
budget
touchdown
were
very
good
at
kind
of
putting
money
into
this,
but
we
did
get
some
support
very
early
on
from
council
council.
I
You
guys
councillors
and
from
the
committee
funds
and
we've
subsequently
been
able
to
apply
for
funding
from
the
big
lottery
and
from
barclays,
and
so
we've
brought
in
180
000
pounds
to
have
a
dedicated
team
to
run
touchdowns
food
and
we're
now,
with
with
one
of
the
community
care
hub
hubs
as
well,
albeit
for
chapel
alton.
We're
able
to
continue
that
work
really
until
probably
around
about
november
next
year.
So
I'd
just
like
to
say
thank
you
for
trusting
us
and
supporting
us
to
get
this
started.
D
Thank
you
darren.
So,
in
terms
of
the
area
update
report,
we've
just
got
one
final
section
to
highlight,
which
I
suppose
is
broadly
sort
of
paragraph
57-105,
which
is
the
priority.
Neighborhoods
target
board
update,
but
more
specifically,
it's
just
that
each
award
within
that
update
provided
an
update
on
the
covered
19
response
and
the
the
covered
19
hubs.
D
But
since
the
report's
been
written,
has
been
an
update
on
the
funding
for
those
hubs,
particularly
sir
ian
kenny
from
the
parity
networks
teams
here
this
this
evening,
just
to
kind
of
quickly
update
members
on
some
of
the
new
sort
of
funding
streams
that
have
come
coming
to
the
hub.
Since,
since
the
report
was
written,.
B
Lovely
ian:
do
you
just
want
to
keep
it
short
and
sweet,
because
members
have
had
this
copy
for
over
a
week
now,
I'm
the
sort
of
they've
been
able
to
read
up
on
all
this.
If
you
can
just
keep
to
the
the
bits
that
haven't
been
in
this
I've
been
in
this
report.
H
Okay,
but
I'll
keep
it
really
brief
cancer
reagan,
and
I
know
that
members
are
fully
up
to
speed
with
the
community
care
volunteering
hubs.
It
was
just
to
give
an
update
on
a
new
funding
package.
H
That's
gonna
sustain
the
hubs
in
all
three
wards
from
january
the
1st
up
until
the
30th
of
june,
so
the
first
six
months
of
this
year,
funding
has
come
in
through
central
government
when
leeds
went
into
tier
three,
and
some
of
that
has
been
distributed
in
partnership
with
voluntary
action
leads
to
sustain
the
hubs
across
all
the
wards
in
the
city.
H
The
freeboards
in
inner
east
are
all
in
the
sort
of
top
tier
in
terms
of
demand,
so
they're
getting
the
largest
trench
of
funding,
which
is
basically
30
000,
each
plus
10k,
which
is
ring
fence
for
food
plus
another
just
about
a
couple
of
grand
also
for
food,
but
that
that
sort
of
two
grand
varies
slightly
between
wards
and
it's
dependent
on
how
many
people
in
the
shielding
cohort
you
have
and
yeah.
H
I
suppose
the
other
change
going
forward
is
that
volunteer
action
leads
are
well
they've,
always
been
supporting
the
hubs,
but
they
want
to
do
some
work
with
the
hubs
around
just
getting
them
to
work
a
bit
while
exploring
opportunities
for
partnership
work
and
let's
say
that,
just
to
see
how
the
hubs
can
better
support
one
another.
So
in
a
very
practical
sense
you
know
some
of
the
logistics
of
moving
food
around
or
perhaps
offering
respite
care.
When
you
know,
staff
and
volunteers
need
a
break
that
kind
of
thing.
H
So
I
I
think
it's
a
good
news
story
for
inner
east,
because
we
know
that
we've
got
coverage
across
the
whole
patch
and,
although
there's
like
lead
organizations
like
leeds
mancup,
ls14
catch,
I
know
the
reality
in
all
three
wars.
H
B
Thank
you
william,
for
that.
That's
really
good
news
for
for
our
communities.
Does
anybody
have
any
any
questions
relating
to
that
particular
item.
D
D
So
2020
to
21.,
paragraph
17
to
19,
which
are
on
page
53,
provide
a
summary
of
the
revenue
allocations
today
and
then
on
table
1,
which
is
on
page
54,
and
you
can
see
that
a
total
of
215
393
pounds
93
has
been
allocated
towards
well-being
projects
during
this
financial
year
and
that
leaves
a
balance
of
43
251
pounds.
69
remaining
for
the
rest
of
this
financial
year.
D
There's
six
well-being
projects
for
members
to
consider
and
they're,
starting
on
page
55,
which
is
paragraph
21-26
and
there's
one.
Also
one
supplementary
item
as
well.
That's
been
circulated
prior
to
the
meeting
which
tasha
mentioned
earlier
under
well-being,
so
members
are
asked
to
consider
the
projects
indicate
whether
or
not
they
support
them
or
not.
So
we'll
start
with
lincoln
green
planters.
So
that's
housing
leads
project,
total
culture,
project,
cost,
2780
pounds,
19
pence
and
the
financial
request,
or
the
funding
request
from
the
well-being.
D
Part
is
1,
930
pounds
and
nine
pence
and
it's
to
birmingham
richmond
hill
members,
I'll
rather
birmingham
from
richmond
hill
ward
and
the
funding
will
be
used
for
environmental
scheme,
which
is
basically
planters
around
lincoln
green
beckett,
street
and
cherry
road
area.
So
if
members
can
just
indicate
if
they're
happy
to
approve
that
one.
B
D
Yeah
yeah
perfect
the
next
one's
two-way
street,
which
is
from
learning
partnerships,
total
project
cost
2,
23,
93
pounds.
The
request
to
the
well-being
fund
is
1,
528,
pounds
67
and
again.
This
is
a
birmingham,
richmond
hill
project
and
it's
for
learning
partnerships.
I
work
with
primary
schools
across
the
world
and
give
them
an
opportunity
to
learn
outdoors
and
be
active
and
grow
flowers
and
fruit
and
vegetables
and
various
other
kind
of
outdoor
activities.
D
So
we're
okay
with
that
one
and
the
next
one's
demby
trees.
This
is
trees
at
the
denby
flats
in
gibson
and
harehill.
So
it's
a
community
team
request,
total
project
costs,
2068
pounds
and
the
request
of
the
well-being
fund
is
1034
pounds
and
funding
will
be
used
to
plant
new
trees
and
planters
in
the
communal
green
spaces
at
the
denby
flats
in
gibson,
hair
hills.
D
So
we're
okay
with
that
one
and
the
next
one's
virtual
hubs,
which
is
east
leeds
community
sports
club
total
project
cost
is
four
thousand
one
hundred
pounds
and
the
request
of
the
well-being
fund
is
two
thousand
eight
hundred,
and
this
is
birmingham
richmond
hill
as
well,
and
it's
basically
using
equipment
and
sort
of
support
to
for
virtual
meetings
for
local
residents,
particularly
all
the
residents
to
be
able
to
meet
up
and
sort
of
link
up
virtually
during
the
coronavirus
crisis
and
the
next
one's
temporary
cctv
for
hazelwood
drives.
D
This
is
a
safer
leads.
Project
needs
to
cancel
project,
so
the
total
project
cost
is
148
pounds
and
the
total
request
of
them.
Some
richmond
hill
ward
is
1
488
pounds,
and
this
is
to
install
temporary
cctv
at
hazelwood,
drive
to
tackle
anti-social,
behavior
and
criminality
in
the
local
area,
so
that
one's
okay
and
then
the
final
one
on
wellbeing
is
premier
league
kicks,
which
is
from
legionite
foundation.
D
The
total
cost
for
that
project
is
46
000
pounds
and
the
request
to
the
well-being
fund
is
10,
000
pounds
and
again
that's
birmingham,
richmond
hill,
ward
and
funding
will
be
used
to
support
the
premier
league's
kicks,
which
uses
sort
of
football
and
sort
of
coaching
skills
throughout
the
year
to
kind
of
guide
and
mentor
and
young
children
to
build
sort
of
social
skills
and
confidence
and
sort
of
improvements
in
school,
and
things
like
that.
D
We're
okay
with
that
one
and
then
we've
just
got
one
in
terms
of
well-being.
We've
just
got
one
final,
one
which
was
in
the
supplementary
pack,
and
so
that
was
a
a
supplementary
item
further
to
the
original
the
original
agenda,
and
that
one
is
for
the
project
development
worker,
which
is
elite
city
council,
internal
community
team
request.
D
The
reason
that
this
one's
come
as
a
supplementary
item
is
is
the
fact
that
it's
a
a
paid
role.
So
it's
a
rule
that
would
begin
in
the
new
financial
year.
So
it
needs
to
be
approved
now
in
order
for
the
recruitment
process
to
start
for
the
role
and
it's
pre-approval
from
next
year's
budget.
D
So
it
would
be
funny
that's
pre-approved
from
the
2021-22
financial
year
so
from
the
financial
coming
up,
so
the
total
project
cost
of
that's
55
and
736
pounds
and
the
request
from
the
2021-22
well-being
budgets
are
from
next
year's
well-being.
Budget
to
be
approved
in
principle
is
30
000
pounds
and
the
grant
will
contribute
towards
total
amount
needed
to
fund
a
project.
D
Development
worker
dedicated
to
the
killing,
beck
and
seacroft
ward,
and
the
rule
will
bring
about
health
improvements
and
tackle
health
inequalities
and
work
towards
occur
with
19
recovery
in
the
killing,
beck
and
seacroft
ward.
A
D
D
Can
you
hear
me
yes,
yeah
perfect,
so
just
going
back
to
the
main
body
of
the
finance
report,
so
just
back
to
to
ddns,
so
projects
approved
outside
of
the
committee
by
ddn
are
highly
highlighted
on
page
57
and
paragraph
27.
D
So
that's
community
food
share
that
sent
was
for
saint
aiden's
church
that
was
1937
pounds,
no
amount
hub
furniture
and
equipment,
five
thousand
pounds,
life
connection
after
school
club
bridge
street
church,
that's
three
thousand
pounds
and
then
zooms
for
fun
packages
for
one
seacroft
community
on
top,
and
that
was
ten
thousand
eight
hundred
and
thirty
three
pounds.
Seventy
five,
so
those
were
projects
approved
outside
of
committee
and
because
they
were
urgent
and
then
paragraph
twenty
nine,
fifty
I'll
I'll
run
through
this
one
quickly
checks.
D
I
know
we're
we're
short
on
time,
but
that
was
just
a
an
update
on
one
of
the
projects
that
has
been
approved
by
the
committee,
which
is
bermuda's
men's
well-being
and
social
group,
and
what
they've
been
doing
is
delivering
weekly
and
social
social
sort
of
well-being,
groups
for
men
in
lincoln,
green
and
berman
thompson.
D
The
project
it
start
itself
was
funded
pre-curved,
so
they
initially
started
sort
of
meeting
up
face-to-face
kind
of
going
bowling
and
doing
sort
of
different
sort
of
face-to-face
activities,
which
you
can
see
on
the
on
the
report
and
unfortunately
kind
of
as
sort
of
time
passed
throughout
throughout
last
year,
and
they
they
weren't
able
to
do
that
obviously
anymore.
D
But
the
group
sort
of
successfully
con
continued
to
sort
of
meet
me
virtually
and
via
sort
of
zoom
and
skype
and
stuff
like
that
and
it's
I
think,
it's
a
good
example
of
how
groups
themselves
have
been
able
to
adapt
to
to
the
sort
of
landscape
about
how
they
meet
up.
Lots
of
groups
have
been
really
really
creative
in
how
they've
sort
of
continued
the
delivery
through
through
the
coronavirus
pandemic,
and
also
how
committee
funding
can
be
used
to
continue
to
support.
D
You
know
those
activities
virtually
as
well,
so
so
that's
a
positive
and
then
I'm
just
gonna
move
on
to
youth
activity
funds.
So
that's
table
two
paragraph
six
and
there's
a
total
of
fifty
seven
thousand
one
hundred
and
thirty
five
pounds.
Eighty
seven
left
in
the
yaf
budget.
For
this
financial
year,
with
a
remaining
sorry,
that
was
the
spence
there's
57
135
pounds.
D
87
has
been
committed
and
there
is
9
911
pounds
and
9
pence
remaining
in
the
aft
budget
and
there's
no
new
yaf
applications
at
this
committee
meeting
and
then
small
grants
and
skips
are
detailed
on
table
three
and
that's
on
page
61
and
there's
10
projects
that
have
been
approved
by
the
community
committee
over
the
last
financial
year
and
there's
still
a
budget
remaining
of
ten
thousand
seven
hundred
and
twenty
six
pounds
95
and
then
on
the
covered.
19
world
allocations,
they're
detailed
in
table
four
and
that's
page
61
and
62..
D
So
the
enemies
community
committee
have
funded
29
projects
to
date
from
their
cup
they're
from
their
ward
allocation
of
the
kobe
19
funding
and
they're
still
13
270
pounds
and
11
pence
left.
B
D
You
beat
me
to
it
so
so
yeah
there's
been
additional
ten
ten
thousand
pounds
per
award
that
members
will
be
aware
of.
That's
been
allocated
from
central
government,
so
it's
central
government
funding,
ten
thousand
pound
per
world
thirty
thousand
pound
across
the
committee,
and
I
think
all
walls
now
have
had
our
request
and
we're
continuing
to
get
requests
to
that
pot.
D
And
so
that's
essentially
an
injection,
as
council
reagan
says,
of
30
000
pounds
from
central
government
towards
those
coronavirus
related
projects,
and
they
will
be
reported
on
fully
at
the
march
committee
meeting.
So
the
next
committee
meeting
will
report
them
fully
and
then
table
five,
which
is
page
62
details
the
capital
position.
So
there
has
been
a
capital
injection
since
the
last
committee
meeting
of
2100
pounds
and
that's
been
split
across
all
three
wards.
D
So
that
means
that
there
is
now
a
total
balance
of
94
322
pounds
remaining
for
new
schemes
against
capital
and
at
this
committee
meeting
there
are
two
capital
projects
to
be
considered
and
they're,
starting
on
page
63
and
it's
paragraph
43-44.
D
So
the
first
one
of
those
for
members
to
consider
this
evening
is
the
seacroft
gardens
playground
capital
projects.
It's
a
parks
and
countryside
request.
D
The
total
project
cost
is
105
000
pounds
and
the
amount
proposed
to
capital
is
six
thousand
pounds
and
it
covers
the
kilimbik
and
c
croft
ward
and
funny
will
be
used
to
move
the
play
area
at
seacroft
gardens
back
to
its
original
setting,
which
means
that
there'll
be
a
more
level
and
open
area
and
provide
more
easy
access
to
the
public
to
access
the
games
area
at
seacroft
gardens.
D
So
we're
okay
with
that
one
and
then
just
finally
table
seven
on
page
64
outlines
the
community
infrastructure
level,
so
the
civil
funding
just
so
that
members
can
know,
there's
a
balance
of
seventy
one
thousand.
Six
hundred
and
nine
sorry.
Seventy
one
thousand
nine
hundred
and
sixty
one
pounds,
nineteen
available
for
new
schemes
and
there's
no
new
sill
applications
for
members
to
consider
at
this
meeting
and
table
seven
and
table
eight
on
the
par
on
pages.
D
64
and
65
are
just
for
information
and
they
outline
the
well-being
and
yaf
projects
that
have
not
yet
been
able
to
start
as
a
result
of
the
curve
in
19
pandemic.
A
B
I
can't
see
any
indications
in
raising
hands
to
ask
for
for
any
any
questions
on
it,
so
just
to
echo
what
councilor
graham's
just
said
that,
yes,
it
is
a
good
report
and
I
think
it
highlights
that.
There's
some
really
good
projects
that
the
the
three
wards
have
managed
to
support
and
make
happen
in
their
particular
three
areas,
and
it's
it's
it's
a
good
news
for
for
the
residents
and
communities
of
inner
race
that
we
we're
getting
this
money
spent
and
activities
and
organizations
are
benefiting
from
that.
B
C
It's
just
very,
very
quick.
The
housing
advisory
panels,
I
think,
are
hopefully
going
to
set
up
projects
around
vulnerable
gardens.
So
it's
just
really
to
tell
people
that
through
groundworks
there's
a
scheme,
that's
I
think,
started
in
the
north
west,
horstworth
or
somewhere,
and
it's
really
to
fund
doing
our
peoples
who
are
vulnerable,
doing
up
their
gardens.
Doing
hedge
cutting
and
all
sorts
of
things
like
that,
so
just
to
alert
people
that
that
might
be
a
good
project
to
support.
B
And
that
is
that
in
the
in
your
particular
app
it's
not
in
the.
C
B
B
No
I'd
just
like
to
say,
then
thank
you
for
your
attendance
and
the
next
date
of
the
next
community
committee
will
be
the
17th
of
march
at
6,
00
p.m,
and-
and
thank
you
all
for
for
being
here
and
thank
you
to
any
anybody,
that's
tuned
in
by
youtube,
and
I
hope
you
found
it
very,
very
useful
and
and
good
evening.