►
Description
No description was provided for this meeting.
If this is YOUR meeting, an easy way to fix this is to add a description to your video, wherever mtngs.io found it (probably YouTube).
B
Thank
you
good
evening,
everyone
and
welcome
to
the
remote
meeting
of
the
inner
northeast
community
committee.
My
name
is
council
mohammad
shazad
and
I
will
be
chairing
today's
meeting.
The
inner
northeast
community
committee
covers
the
chapel
alton
more
town
and
round
awards
and
is
a
committee
where
award
councils
have
an
opportunity
to
discuss
and
make
decisions
about
services
and
priorities
for
the
local
area
and
also
consider
funding
applications
regarding
local
community
projects
and
youth
activities.
B
As
we
begin,
the
meeting
could
ask
all
attendees
or
ask
all
attendees
to
mute
their
microphone
unless
I
invite
them
to
speak.
This
will
avoid
disruption
from
background
noise.
Members
wishing
to
ask
questions
make
comment
should
do
so
by
using
the
raise
hand
facility
on
the
on
the
zoom
facility
in
order
to
avoid
any
disruption
to
the
meeting.
Should
I
lose
internet
connectivity
council,
jane
dalston,
will
step
in
as
vice
chair
during
my
absence.
B
C
Oops
sorry
chair:
yes,
councillor
dallas
and
chapel,
allison
ward,.
B
Thank
you,
council
dalton
councillor,
jacob
goddard
is
setting
his
apologies
today.
He
won't
be
able
to
make
it
for
today's
meeting.
Councillor
sharon
hamilton.
B
As
counselor
mohammed
rafiq
is
not
on
the
screen
as
yet
so
we'll
move
on
to
councillor
angelo
venom.
B
And
I
think
we've
got
apologies
from
councillor
elena,
turning
cliff
I'll
move
on
to
the
offices.
Oh
sorry,
elaine
apologies
and
also
our
lord
mayor
and
counselor
for
the
councillor
eileen
taylor.
If
you'd
like
to
introduce
yourself,
please
good.
B
Thank
you,
councillor,
taylor
and
now
we'll
move
on
to
the
offices
councillor
I
mean
zaya
lunat.
B
And
I
don't
think
so:
we've
got
liz
jarman
with
us
and
the
clerk
for
the
night
and
natasha
prosser.
B
A
Thank
you
chair,
so
under
agenda
item
number
one.
There
are
no
appeals
against
the
refusal
of
inspection
of
documents
under
agenda
item
number
two.
There
are
no
items
which
require
the
exclusion
of
the
press
in
public
under
agenda
item
number
three,
I'm
not
aware
of
any
alert
items
of
business,
and
but
some
supplementary
information
was
distributed
to
members
in
relation
to
the
update
report
for
gender
item
11.
A
under
a
gender
item
before
police
could
ask
members
to
declare
any
disclosure,
because
in
your
interests,
I'll
take
silence
is
none
and
under
agenda
item
number.
Five
apologies
have
been
received
on
behalf
of
council
goddard
and
toniclet
under
agenda
item
number
six.
This
is
where
we'd
usually
have
the
open
forum
part
of
the
meeting,
but
on
this
occasion
we've
not
received
any
written
submissions
from
members
of
the
public.
B
B
F
Yeah
thanks:
that's
I'm
guy
baker,
I'm
a
gp
at
street
lane,
I'm
the
clinical
director
for
pcn
central
north,
so
population
70
000
approximately
and
come
as
kind
of
old
woodland,
more
town
down,
chapel
alton
and
down
towards
little
london
and
meanwood.
F
So
back
in
december,
we
started
a
vaccination
program
with
little
trepidation,
but
it's
gone
very
well.
Our
hubs
are
all
with
the
medical
center
and
we've
been
running,
principally
a
saturday
clinic,
but
with
some
midweek
clinics
every
week.
Since
then,
in
terms
of
numbers
we've
now
vaccinated
just
over
20
000
patients,
which
is
35
of
our
total
list
of
70
000,
mainly
first
for
a
small
number
of
second
vaccines,
a
mixture
of
the
pfizer
and
the
astrazeneca
oxford
we've
been
working
through
the
priority
cohorts.
F
92
percent
of
this
group
3
17
74
61
of
group,
four,
which
is
a
clinically
extremely
vulnerable,
and
we
know
moving
into
groups.
Five
and
finally
group
six
of
the
first
group.
First,
six
priority
groups
very
well
received
by
patients
and
staff
there's
a
real
goodwill
feeling
at
the
clinics.
F
We've
had
volunteers,
staffing
it
marshalling
it
with
our
volunteers.
Vaccinating
in
the
icy
snow
days,
community
came
together
to
clear
the
ice
and
snow
and
there's
been
a
real
community
feel
from
from
the
whole
exercise.
F
So
so
we're
really
we're
really
enthused
by
by
the
whole
program,
really
we're
going
to
carry
on
moving
down
the
priority
groups
in
due
course
and
we're
hoping
to
have
the
groups
finished
within
the
next
few
weeks.
Certainly
on
the
first
vaccines.
F
F
We've
done
direct
patient
approaches
and
telephone
calls
explaining
the
benefits
of
the
vaccine,
but
we're
interested
in
doing
more.
For
that
group
I'll
start
there,
ken
sushazad.
B
Thank
you,
dr
baker,
for
that
I'd.
I'd
like
to
now
call
on
dr
amal
paul
to
to
to
highlight
what
the
situation
is
with
the
bam
community
regards
the
vaccines
and
what
can
be
done
to
increase
the
uptake
and
what
is
being
done
if
dr
paul,
if
you
can
highlight
that
for
us,
please
thank
you.
H
H
We
we
serve
a
significant
number
of
patients
from
the
ethnic
minority
and
deprived
community,
possibly
our
pcn,
that
primary
care
network
is
one
of
the
most
deprived
part
in
the
uk,
and
that
is
why
we
had
the
priority
and
we
started
vaccination
as
one
of
the
first
web
on
14th
of
december
we
had
the
first
fisa
vaccine
delivered
to
our
pcn.
H
Sorry,
we
anticipated
from
the
beginning
that
that
we
will
have
a
lots
of
problem
from
the
acceptance
of
the
vaccines
by
the
ethnic
ethnic
minority
and
also
people
from
the
deprived
community.
It
was
discussed
in
our
various
sessions
at
the
city,
silver
group
and
the
public
health.
H
England
leads
leaders
and
in
reality
it
happened
as,
for
example,
in
my
own
practice,
we
have
nearly
80
90
people
who
are
from
the
ethnic
minority
community
and
our
uptick
was
only
12
to
15
percent
at
the
beginning,
and
it
was
not
uncommon
for
us.
It
was
also
something
happened
to
other
practices
in
our
pcn,
so
we
took
a
collective
approach
to
our
to
see
why
there
was
so
low
uptick.
H
H
B
G
I
work
with
carl
and
and
zaheer
and
carla.
Thank
you.
B
Thank
you
for
that.
Alison,
really
appreciate
that,
and
now
I
would
like
to
call
on
council
dowsing,
because
she
raised
their
hand
first
for
a
question.
Thank
you.
C
Yeah,
sorry,
sorry
about
that
there's
always
lots
of
questions.
Aren't
that
so
the
first
one
I'd
like
to
put
to
dr
baker
is
with
regard
to
priorities,
I'm
not
sure
how
much
independence
practices
have
around
the
priority
groups,
because
in
certain
practices
there
are
pro
there
are
a
large
number
of
older
patients
in
others,
it's
younger
patients
and
so
on,
but
there
are
groups
that
in
the
past
have
been
left
out,
and
I
was
just
wondering
what
what
priority,
how
you
prioritize.
C
I
know
you've
got
to
use
the
national
priority,
but
what
leeway
have
you
got
with
regard
to
people
say
with
learning
disabilities
or
people
in
key
worker
groups
like
teachers
and
so
on?
Is
there
any
leeway,
or
do
you
very
strictly
stick
to
the
nhs
listings
and
who
actually
sends
out
the
invitations?
Is
it
yourselves
or
do
they
come
out
from
the
nhs
and
then
dr
paul?
Firstly,
congratulations
on
getting
your
figures
up
to
55.
C
That's
obviously
taken
a
a
lot
of
hard
hard
work.
So
well
done
for
that
and
it
it
might
be
one
for
you,
but
I
understand
we
now
have
mobile
units,
and
I'm
just
wondering
if
you
could
tell
us
what
you
think
about
those
mobile
units
being
placed
in
very
stressed
strategic
points
such
as
mosques
and
temples,
to
actually
encourage
people.
C
B
Thank
you,
council
dawson,
if
dr
baker,
if
you
would
like
to
take
that
plea.
F
Yeah,
thank
you.
Counselor
yeah,
there's
a
very
straight
steer
from
nhs
england
to
to
go
with
the
priority
groups
in
order
which
is
largely
age
age,
based
in
terms
of
specific
about
learning
disability.
We
just
had
an
update
stating
that
learning
disability
people
living
with
learning
disability
are
all
now
in
the
top
six
priority
groups.
I
think
one
issue
being
the
severe
learning
disability
patients
were
always
prioritized,
but
we
couldn't
gauge
the
severity.
So
now
there's
been
a
change
in
that
prioritization.
F
Yes,
we
invite
our
patients
through
either
text
or
phone
call
direct
there's
a
slightly
confusing
national
invitation
system
as
well,
and
people
might
well
be
aware
that
we've
got
ellen
road.
We
need
our
factory
museum
at
st
james
on
stream,
and
we've
got
several
community
pharmacy
hubs
also
vaccinating
and
they
have
separate
invite
systems
which
has
caused
a
degree
of
confusion,
but
we
we're
kind
of
working
through
that,
so
we
are
having
people
invited
twice
and
people
changing
their
minds
about
whether
they
want
to
be
vaccinated,
etc.
F
But
it's
it's
a
slight
muddle
through,
but
I
think
we're
getting
there
in
the
end
with
that
system.
I
think
that
answers
all
your
questions
considering.
B
And
can
I
call
up
onto
council
repeat
for
these
questions.
B
H
Thank
you,
council.
Doesn't.
The
mobile
unit
was
used
for
two
reasons:
one
to
improve
the
access
of
the
patients
to
the
vaccinations,
because
some
patients
may
not
be
able
to
travel
to
the
center
and
they
might
not
have
their
transport.
They
might
have
difficulty
to
use
the
public
transport
so
and
so
forth.
So
this
was
a
good
opportunity
for
the
patients
to
go
to
the
nearest
center
for
the
vaccination
now.
H
The
second
thing
was
the
the
mobile
center
was
used
to
encourage
the
people
and
to
give
some
community
reassurance
that
the
community
is
involved
like
in
the
first
thing,
was
done
in
birmingham.
They
used
a
mosque
that
to
accept
the
people
which
really
appreciated
by
the
local
community,
including
the
muslim
community,
although
it
was
a
mosque,
but
it
was
not
only
for
the
muslim
that
everybody
or
anybody
could
walk
in
for
the
vaccination,
and
that
gave
a
tremendous
trust
for
the
community
people,
because
the
community
leaders
are
dead,
they
told
them.
H
Look,
this
vaccine
is
said,
come
and
get
it.
I
have
taken
the
vaccine,
I
have
no
problem
so
that
encourage
the
people
to
to
increase
the
uptake
and
the
same
approach
we
have
taken
in
leads.
H
H
If
it
is
going
ahead
by
the
east
park
team,
they
are
doing
the
hundreds
and
thousands
of
accidents
they
have
done
so
that
experience
they
will
have
all
the
protocols
and
the
safety
measures
in
place
to
make
the
vaccination
process
safe
and
and
the
main
aim
will
be
to
improve
the
access
and
improve
the
uptick
by
the
local
community.
C
H
B
Late,
thank
you
for
that
and
dr
paul.
Just
before
I
call
in
counselor
rafiq
to
ask
his
question:
can
I
introduce
laura
fitzgerald
from
the
public
health
place
laura
if
you
would
introduce
yourself
and
give
us
your
views
on
the
vaccine
and
what's
happening.
G
Hi
councillors
and
colleagues,
thank
you
for
the
invite
tonight.
I
thought
to
be
honest.
Some
of
this
that
I've
got
in
the
presentation
has
actually
already
been
covered,
so
I
can
send
it
out
and
it
might
kind
of
encapsulate
the
full
conversation.
G
But
if
I,
the
the
role
kind
of
to
come
tonight
was
to
talk
about
the
inequalities
plan
that
has
been
developed
on
the
back
of
some
of
the
comments
that
have
been
raised
and
I
can
kind
of
update
on
the
bilal
center
as
well,
because
I've
been
trying
to
kind
of
coordinate
that
coordinate
that
logistically
and
I
can
provide
a
bit
of
an
update
from
the
chapel
town
end
as
well.
G
So
in
terms
of
the
the
approach
around
inequalities
is
very
much
around
trying
to
reduce
and
enhance
access
and
make
sure
that
no
one
is
left
behind
in
terms
of
the
vaccine
and
access
and
that
there
are
three
three
sides
of
a
a
venn
diagram
and
apologies.
I
can
shall
I
try
and
share
my
screen
with
you
all,
and
then
you
can
see
my.
G
Yeah
finally
show
the
slideshow
I'll
zoom
through
this,
but
I
can
send
it
after
for
notes,
but
in
terms
of
kind
of
looking
at
a
proactive
preventative
approach,
and
this
is
a
model
that
we've
used
throughout
covert
so
trying
to
look
at
vulnerability
from
both
the
clinical
and
the
social
vulnerability
side
and
understand
where,
in
this
venn
diagram,
we
can
kind
of
support
people
to
access
support
for
either
testing,
but
also
now
the
vaccinations
and
applying
that,
in
terms
of
the
approach
that
we're
looking
at
is
kind
of
making
sure
that
we
are,
we
are
taking
an
outreach
approach
and
in
terms
of
increasing
access,
we
work
with
trusted
people.
G
So
very
much.
I
think
one
of
the
outcomes
would
be
about.
How
do
we
work
with
the
the
community
committee
as
a
whole
to
kind
of
ensure
that
we
we're
working
with
you
work
on
the
trusted
places
so
again
links
back
to
counselors
down.
So
thousands
comment
about
how
to
work
with
places
that
people
know
and
recognize
and
then
very
much
kind
of
co-designing
messages
to
make
sure
that
they
land
appropriately
and
link
in
to
those
that
to
the
relevant
messages
that
are
needed.
G
G
And
the
aim
of
the
plan
is
to
mitigate
against
inequalities
and
make
sure
that
we've
we've
got
general
access
and
that's
by
making
sure
that
we
are
kind
of
promoting
and
doing
as
much
as
we
can
in
areas
of
deprivation,
but
then
also
within
the
vulnerable
groups,
who
are
at
risk
increased
risk
of
illness
and
mortality
from
the
from
infection.
G
The
principles
on
which
the
plans
developed
is
around
kind
of
co-production
and
is
very
much
linked
back
to
the
outbreak
plan
in
terms
of
the
key
principles
there
as
well,
but
very
much
about
building
confidence
with
with
communities
to
understand
the
needs
and
listening
so
that
we
understand
and
we
can
respond
appropriately,
but
alongside
people
as
well,
and
make
sure
that
the
responses
are
timely
and
appropriate.
G
We'll
ensure
that
interventions
identify
and
support
those
individuals
who
are
considered
vulnerable
and
underserved
be
diligent
in
the
consideration
of
people
with
protected
characteristics
and
follow
equality
guidance
and
reflect
the
needs
of
local
community
social
excluded
and
socio-economically
disadvantaged
and
those
with
protected
characteristics.
G
G
We
were
always
always
doing
this,
so
in
terms
of
the
the
inner
northeast
community
committee,
the
the
the
main
pcn
that
we
are
working
with
as
chapel
town,
and
so
I
had
the
first
meeting
with
the
clinical
directors
on
friday
to
start
to
discuss
how
we
can
work
with
the
pcn
to
identify
any
key
areas
or
communities
that
we
need
to
support
the
pcn
and
delivering
the
the
vaccination.
G
Alongside
that,
we're
also
hosting
an
lcp
workshop
with
the
central
lcp,
which
will
then
also
cover
the
central
north,
leeds
pcn
as
well,
and
we
have
a
meeting
tomorrow
with
paula,
deering
who's,
the
practice
manager
at
rutland
lodge,
who
have
a
large
practice
population
down
in
little
london
as
well,
to
try
and
look
at
communities
that
have
a
similar,
similar
demographic
as
those
in
chapel
town
as
well,
and
whether
or
not
there's
any
learning
that
we
have
already
that
can
support
the
practice
as
well
in
that
area.
G
If
members
haven't
or
would
like
to
attend
that
lcp,
I
can
get
rachel
in
school
from
the
lcp
team
to
send
on
the
invite.
If
people
would
like
to
attend
that-
and
the
idea
is
that
all
of
the
work
that
we
do
is
wrapping
around
the
pcn
delivery,
so
very
much
going
along
with
the
with
the
practices
and
the
primary
care
networks
to
understand
what
the
issues
are
both
for
patients,
but
then
also
practically
and
operationally
from
a
primary
care
network
perspective,
rather
than
it
coming
at
it
from
a
different
point
of
view.
G
As
dr
paul's
mentioned
around
the
roving
vaccine
program,
there
are
three
three
approaches
that
are
currently
in
development.
We
are
looking
at
a
vaccination
bus,
so
we've
got
actually
a
site
visit
tomorrow
morning
to
look
at.
They
are
library,
buses
that
have
been
kind
of
transport,
trans
transported
into
being
a
vaccination
clinic
with
the
hope
that
we'll
have
two
nurses
or
healthcare
staff
who
will
be
able
to
to
provide
the
vaccination
and
then
the
other.
G
Two
that
we've
got
at
the
moment
will
then
kind
of
provide
a
bit
of
an
an
opportunity
for
people
to
come
down
and
have
a
have
a
discussion
with
someone
and
then,
if
they
would
like
the
vaccination,
they
can
then
go
into
the
other
bus
to
have
that
the
the
approach
is
very
new,
so
I
think
we
kind
of
got
signed
off
last
week
that
we
could
start
doing
it.
G
We
will
be
looking
at
kind
of
supporting
the
pcns
that
identified
that
they
need
additional
support
and
very
much
working
with
the
pc
ends
around
kind
of
the
model
and
how
that
will
work
for
their
population,
but
then
also
working
with
you,
as
well
as
counselors,
to
understand
where
you
think
the
the
location
of
that
is
best
served
for
the
population,
we're
trying
to
kind
of
overlay
a
lot
of
data
to
make
sure
that
we've
got
the
right
kind
of
blend
against
understanding
the
data
and
where
the
the
low
uptake
areas
are,
but
then
also
local
insight.
G
So
it's
quite
a
lot
of
community
engagement
work
also
going
on
around.
How
can
we
make
sure
that
we're
listening
to
what
people
need
and
we
listen
to
the
barriers
and
respond
to
to
those
opportunities
as
well?
The
other
one,
as
dr
paul
has
mentioned,
is
around
the
pop-up
facility
in
a
community
venue.
So
the
bilal
center
is
planned
and
hopefully
will
be
launched
in
on
the
10th
of
march.
G
Is
the
is
the
date
that
we're
working
to
then
that
will
very
much
be
around
kind
of
providing
a
drop-in
service,
but
then
also
bookable
appointments
alongside
that
kind
of
community
leader
being
available
or
community
connectors
available
to
kind
of
talk
to
people
about
any
kind
of
issues
or
concerns
that
they
might
have.
G
The
other
is
about
a
roving
vaccination
team
and
so
that's
delivered
or
will
be
delivered
by
the
leeds
york,
partnership,
trust
and
that
will
be
kind
of
looking
at
how
we
go
into
specific
settings
where
it
might
not
be
appropriate
to
kind
of
try
and
bring
people
out
to
primary
care.
So
we'll
have
some
specialist
teams
able
to
go
into
certain
settings
to
vaccinate
people.
G
We
will
be
kind
of
working
with
communities
of
interest
that
we've
we've
started
to
build
a
network
throughout
covered
and
with
kind
of
key
organizations
who
represent
different
communities
of
interest
and
we've
sent
out
a
letter
to.
I
think,
there's
about
50
commission
services
who
work
with
different
communities
to
understand
the
needs
around
vaccinations.
So
we
can
incorporate
that
into
the
inequalities
plan
as
we
move
forward
and
have
some
really
dedicated
time
to
that.
G
Alongside
all
of
this,
there
is
a
lot
more
of
the
kind
of
wider
communications
work.
That's
going
on,
so
we
got.
G
The
we
leads
was
actually
successful
in
securing
some
mhlg
funding
to
support
75
local
people
to
become
ambassadors,
and
this
is
quite
a
strong
programme
of
that
and
it'll
sit
alongside
the
communities
team,
which
also
might
be
able
to
give
you
a
bit
more,
but
around
kind
of
working
with
local
community
leaders
or
kind
of
people
trusted
in
the
community
to
have
those
conversations
with
people
about
about
the
vaccine.
So
again,
we'll
link
that
in
the
other
side
of
it
was
around
the
lead.
G
Ccg
website
has
provided
a
really
strong
platform
for
a
lot
of
faqs
and
kind
of
different
different
things
that
we've
heard
so
when
we've
been
working
with
the
pcns
we've
been
trying
to
identify
some
of
the
barriers
that
are
coming
up
and
trying
to
work
through
some
solutions
or
understand
how
we
can
learn
from
that
in
terms
of
the
delivery
of
of
the
vaccination,
and
a
lot
of
that
has
then
been
linked
back
through
into
the
faqs
on
the
ccg
website.
G
So
I
would
urge
that
people
kind
of
have
a
look
at
that
and
if
there
are
any,
is
there
anything
else
that
we
are
missing.
We're
also
developing
a
a
training
program
to
kind
of
sit
alongside
so
again
at
the
lcps
we're
providing
some
low
level
training.
But
we've
also
developed
a
want
to
know
more
session.
That's
hosted
on
the
public
health
resource
center
website
for
anyone,
who's
kind
of
working
with
communities
to
understand
a
little
bit
more
about
the
vaccine
and
be
able
to
talk
confidently
about
those
there's.
G
Also,
some
work
that
we're
looking
to
do
potentially
with
primary
care
around
how
we
support
people
to
have
conversations
about
the
vaccine
when,
when
people
do
ring
or
when
they're
ringing
to
book
patients
in
and
trying
to
understand
on
a
scale
around
kind
of
completely
do
not
want
the
vaccine
to
kind
of
on
the
on
the
on
the
cusp
of
saying
yes,
but
may
have
some
hesitancy
and
kind
of
how
do
we
have
a
positive
conversation
building
on
the
better
conversations
approach
that
we've
got?
So
that's
that's
that
bit.
G
So
that's
the
end
of
my
presentation.
I'm
conscious
I've.
I've
gone
through
that
quite
quickly
but
happy
to
take
any
questions,
and
I
can
also
share
that
presentation
after
as
well.
Yes,.
B
H
A
I
You
thank
you
and
thank
you,
dr
baker,
and
dr
paul
and
laura
for
your
for
your
experience,
insights
into
what
you're
doing
obviously
goes
without
saying
all
of
you,
and
particularly
those
who
work
in
in
nhs
or
gp
settings,
have
actually
put
enough
phenomenal
effort
into
where
we
are
not
just
with
the
vaccinations
but
with
the
testing
trace,
but
also
all
the
other
work
we
do
with
your
patient
as
well.
I
On
top
of
this,
so
I
mean
the
more
we
say
the
less
it
is
in
in
terms
of
you
know
the
work
done
by
colleagues
within
within
winning
nhs
setting.
So
going
back
to
some
of
that
point
of
observations,
chair
I'll
just
start
with
the
laura's
presentation-
and
that
is,
I,
I
think,
having
the
vaccinations
in
the
community
setting
does
help
because
people
start
talking
about
it.
I
You
start
having
those
conversations
and
if
one
goes
and
the
other
will
follow-
and
I
mean
one
example-
you
mentioned
about
infinity
center
next-
to
blah
blah
blah.
I
think
we
need
to
have
it
in
different
places
as
well.
So,
for
instance,
we
need
to
have
a
facility
in
in
in
chapel
town,
because
those
living
chapel
town
may
not
regardless
of
their
background.
I
They
may
be
from
the
same
background,
but
they
won't
go
to
all
the
way
to
so
it's
the
more
closer
the
home
is,
I
think,
more
likely
people
are
are
to
engage.
No.
That
takes
me
to
the
next.
My
next
point
about
engaging,
because
there
are
a
lot
of
myths
out
there.
You
know
the
the
conspiracy
theories
are
work
all
the
time
youtubers
and
I
think
with
there's
a
work
collectible.
I
All
of
us
could
do,
and
I
know
a
lot
has
been
done
in
terms
of
comms
social
media
messages,
and
you
know
we
could
use.
You
know
people
within
our
networks.
I
For
instance,
you
know
you
see
sometimes
on
youtube
channels,
group
of
doctors
sitting
down
and
talking
about
you
know,
the
viruses
are
myth
and
you
know
the
vaccinations,
the
side
effects
and
all
that,
and
I
think
we
need
all
the
messages
you
know
whether
you're
a
gp
or
elected
member
or
a
faith
leader
for
put
to
kind
of
get
those
messages
out
because
people,
you
know,
there's
always
people
who
are
more
likely.
For
instance,
you
know
somebody,
a
message
can
be
from
a
gdp.
I
People
are
more
likely
to
listen
if
he's
kind
of
posted
on
facebook
or
or
some
other
social
social
media
channel
than
maybe
you
know,
somebody
like
myself,
but
I
mean
said
that
I
mean
I've
spoken
to
a
lot
of
people
and
eventually
you
don't
make
when
the
argument,
if
you
have
the
obviously
all
the
all
the
answers
there
for
people,
so
the
the
the
issues
which
which
are
circulating
is-
and
this
is
what
we
need
to
put
out-
is
things
like,
particularly
amongst
young
people
and
they
put
off
the
older
their
parents.
I
Or
you
know
the
elders
as
well,
and
that
is
around
one
is
around
fertility.
You
know
in
the
long
term
the
other
is
other
sort
of
side
effects
and
then
there's
actually
some
people
pfizer
versus
astrazeneca.
For
instance,
you
know
some
people.
I
know
I've
actually
refused
to
take
astrologer
because
it's
got
more
side
effects
or
something.
So
I
think
we
need
to
get
those
those
messages
out
and
and
comms
is,
is
really
important.
I
I
mean,
for
instance,
you
know,
there's
so
many
elected
members
on
on
on
this
committee
committee.
I've
not
been
personally
approached
by
somebody
within
even
public
health
or
wouldn't
say
well
what
how
my
services
could
be
utilized.
There's
a
lot
of
the
people,
role,
models
in
the
community,
faith,
leaders
and
others
other
young
people
who
are
influential-
and
I
think
you
know
we
could
we
could
use
all
those
people
as
well.
As
obviously
you
know
the
gps.
G
Yes,
thank
you.
I
do
have
an
update
from
shaq
rafiq
who's
been
leading
on
the
comms
from
the
nhs
ccg
in
terms
of
an
update
of
things
that
have
been
going
on.
I
completely
agree
in
terms
of
kind
of
working
with
partners
who
can
who
have
the
reach
into
different
communities.
So
we
had
a
conversation
at
the
hatch
lcp
about
working
with
bhi,
who
did
a
a
local
webinar
to
kind
of
understand.
What's
going
on
the
other.
G
The
other
kind
of
thing
that
we've
been
doing
is
starting
to
work
on
community
engagement
plans
with
the
communities
team,
so
very
much
working
with
carl
and
allison
around.
How
do
we
start
to
look
at
who?
G
Who
knows
who
in
the
local
area
and
how
do
we
use
the
networks
that
you
all
have
so
certainly
I'm
sure
over
the
next
week,
or
so
we'll
be
coming
to
you
kind
of
asking
for
for
that
exact,
so
yeah,
it
was
lovely
that
you've
been
able
to
provide
that
for
us
really,
because
you
are
kind
of
really
respected
in
the
community
and
have
those
those
local
links.
G
So
it's
definitely
something
that
we'll
be
looking
to
explore
with
you
and
try
and
link
that
up,
and
I
suppose
the
other
comment
about
as
well
kind
of
around
where
we
host
those
community
settings,
whether
or
not
it's
the
bus
or
a
community
venue
we'll
definitely
be
again
we'll
kind
of
come
to
you
to
consult
with
where
that
might
be,
and
the
best
location
for
that
knowing
the
communities
and
where,
where
would
be
more
suitable.
So
definitely
we
agree
with
that.
G
I
think
the
only
caveat
is
that
we'll
be
working
with
the
pc
and
to
identify
any
specific
areas
or
kind
of
cohorts
of
of
patients
and
where
that
might
fit
best,
and
then
look
at
where
we
might
then
approach
just
because
of
the
jc
very
cohort
the
minute
we
can't
go
mass
kind
of
mass
bookings
and
things
like
that.
We
have
to
be
really
stringent
about
who
gets
invited
and
who
are
who
was
able
to
access
the
vaccine.
Hopefully
in
the
summer
that
won't
be
an
issue.
G
But
at
the
moment
we
have
to
be
really
clear
on
the
cohorts
that
we're
engaging
with
so
we'll
very
much
kind
of
be
working
with
the
pcn
and
then
coming
back
out
to
partners
and
and
members
to
engage
you
in
that
process
as
well.
B
I
Yeah,
no
I'm
I'm
I'm
fine
with
that.
I
know
that.
Isn't
a
perfect
answer
for
everything
and
you
know
there's
a
lot
of.
Obviously
you
know
question
marks.
Even
you
know
for
some
of
the
questions
we've
asked
because
there's
not
there
isn't
a
ready-made
answer.
I
think
that's
something
we
need
to.
We
need
to
work
together.
The
only
other
thing
I
was
going
to
say
is
some
of
the.
Maybe
you
know
the
two
doctors
on
on
the
call,
maybe
answer
some
of
the
some
of
the
myths
around
why
people
don't
want
to
have
it?
I
H
H
If
we
step
back
and
we
think
of
when
the
kovit
19
vaccination
was
started,
jcvi,
they
suggested
they
advised
that
the
corona
vaccination
was
contraindicated
in
pregnancy
and
also
you
have
to
wait
three
months
before
you
can
start
that's
as
planning
for
a
baby.
This
was
the
first
message
which
really
impacted
on
the
mind
of
the
young
generation,
young
women
and
women.
H
H
It
is
safe
in
pregnancy
and
you
don't
have
to
wait
three
months
after
vaccination
to
start
family.
So
this
is
the
confusing
message
the
public
got
from
the
jcbi
and
the
image
are
these
people
now
the
truth
is
at
this
moment
data
suggested
such
that
corona
vaccination
available
in
our
country,
that
is
pfizer,
biontech
and
estrogenic
are
safe
in
pregnancy,
safe
in
the
breastfeeding,
and
you
don't
have
to
wait
three
months
after
vaccination
to
start
a
family.
H
However,
this
vaccination
is
very
new.
We
don't
know
a
long
term
effect
and
we
on
that
basis
they
suggested
that
the
vaccination
should
not
be
given
every
pregnant
woman
only
to
be
given
a
the
people
who
are
at
increased
risk
of
dying
from
this
infection.
Like
members
of
the
bma
community,
healthcare
workers,
including
the
doctors,
nurses
and
other
frontline
people,
they
should
take
the
vaccine
and
also
the
people
who
will
take
the
vaccination
knowingly
that
there
is
some
uncertainties
inside
the
vaccination
program.
H
H
There
is
some
myth
that
if
you
take
the
vaccine
you
it
will
go
to
your
jain,
it
will
impair
your
cement,
so
you
can
have
abnormal
babies
and
so
and
so
forth.
So
far
that
it
is
a
study
we
have
got.
That
does
not
support
that
one.
B
H
B
I
really
appreciate
that,
dr
paul,
I'm
really
sorry.
I've
had
to
cut
you
short
slightly
there
I'll
take
the
last
two
questions
on
this,
because
we
are
slightly
running
over
our
time
and
I'm
sure
we
could
probably
spend
the
whole
community
committee
meeting
discussing
this
and
it's
a
very
important
issue,
but
can
I
get
in
counselor
angela
wenham
before
I
go
to
council
hamilton
for
for
her
question?
Please.
A
Thanks
shazad,
I
will
make
it
very
brief.
Thanks
for
the
presentation
and
what
I
would
say,
my
question
really
starts
at
the
presentation.
A
When
the
presentation
were
given
out,
it
was
saying
the
blame
community
and
to
me
it
wasn't
clear,
was
it
emphasis
on
because
brim
covers
a
diverse,
a
wide
diversity
of
different
communities?
To
me,
it
sounds
like
it's
only
covering
one
part
of
the
vein
community
number.
Two
you.
They
were
saying
that
the
band
commune
belt,
the
black
and
beam
community
is
not
the
take
up
on.
It
is
very
low,
but
whoever
I'm
in
contact
with
they
have
all
had
the
vaccine,
especially
my
mother-in-law,
who
is
90.
A
B
Dr
baker,
would
you
like
to
answer
that
question?
Please.
F
I
think
my
only
comment
will
be
that
I
think
the
b
a
m
e
community
is
overrepresented
in
the
in
the
non-vaccine
groups,
but
even
so,
as
almost
as
pointed
out,
the
rates
are
significant
if
they're
increasing
and
they're
relatively
high
they're,
just
not
quite
at
the
94
rates
in
in
the
in
the
remaining
community
I'll
stop
there
counselors
up.
B
G
I
don't
have
the
statistics
to
hand,
I'm
sorry
counselor,
but
the
the
only
other
thing
is.
I
I
agree
with
councillor
awareness
in
terms
of
the
bim
as
a
group,
rather
than
kind
of
breaking
it
down
to
different
communities,
and
that's
certainly
something
that
we've
we've
identified.
G
G
So,
yes,
the
the
presentation
does
kind
of
create
a
one
group
when
actually
there
are
different
communities,
experience
and
different
barriers
and
kind
of
and
different
things
going
on
in
terms
of
access.
So
I'm
completely
agreeing
we'll
I'll
try
and
maybe
rephrase
some
of
that
the
presentation
going
forward
as
well.
So
thank
you
for
that.
B
Thank
you
for
that,
and
can
I
ask
counselor
hamilton
to
ask
her
question
now?
Please.
A
H
Thank
you.
I
what
I
can
say
that,
as
far
as
we
are
aware,
everybody
who
had
the
first
dose
will
get
the
second
dose
the
initially.
It
was
a
plan
that
the
second
dose
will
be
given
in
between
three
to
four
weeks
now
go
according
to
the
government
policy.
It
should
be
given
in
between
10
to
12
weeks,
possibly
11,
to
12
weeks,
but
it
may
be
a
bit
earlier,
but
so
far
we
have
been
told
and-
and
I
believe
it
is
that
everybody
will
have
the
second
dose,
but
they
have
to
wait.
H
They
will
get
a
letter
from
the
gp
saturday
for
that
second
dose.
B
D
Thanks
my
my
question
is
regarding
and
there's
a
lot
of
focus
on
the
bain
community.
Lots
of
input
is
being
put
in
areas
for
the
bain
community.
My
question
is:
is
it
only
the
bain
community
that
is
not
taking
up
the
vaccine?
D
You
know
the
we
talk
about
conspiracy
theories,
lots
of
myths
out
there
is
that
only
via
the
bain
community-
and
you
know-
and
obviously
angela
has
asked
my
question
and
there's
other
communities,
and
I
would
like
to
see
the
figures
of
the
k-cup
because
there's
a
lot
of
concentration
on
the
community
mobile
and
the
demystifying
the
myths,
but
is
what
about
the
other
community
there's?
No.
D
Is
there
no
conspiracy
theorists
there,
you
know
from
the
beginning
of
this
pandemic
the
focus
has
been
on
the
bain
community
and
to
me
it's.
I
feel
that
there's
some
sort
of
divide.
Yes,
we
need
to
encourage
them
to
take
it
if
they
want
it.
My
opinion,
is
you
take
it
if
you
want
it
as
long
as
you
get
all
the
full
information
that
clarification
with
all
your
questions,
but
can
I
just
get
that
information
with
regards
to
that
and
and
also
the
ambassadors
are
going
to
be
trained
in
media
and
what
else?
D
What
is
their
full
role?
You
know,
what
are
they
going
to
do?
How
are
they
going
to
encourage
other
people
I
mean?
Are
they
going
to
also
be
giving
vaccine,
and
then
you
said
about
the
the
mobile
buses,
how
many
mobile
buses
are
there
going
to
be
and
now
how
many
staff
are
going
to
stuff
those?
So
those
are
my
questions,
but
but
I
I
really
would
like
to
know
what
take
up
from
the
other
communities
apart
from
just
the
bain
and
and
don't
they
have
any
worries
and
concerns.
G
That's
fine,
I
suppose
council
hamilton
just
to
reassure
you.
I
suppose
it's
working
with
trying
to
look
at
the
levels
of
vulnerability
and
trying
to
kind
of
look
at
it
from
a
clinical
and
social
vulnerability
lens.
So
while
it
might
look
like
we're
focusing
on
them,
it's
it's
not
kind
of
just
specific
to
that
to
to
beam
communities.
It
is
across
the
full
population.
G
So
there
is
a
lot
of
work
kind
of
going
on
generally
across
the
city,
around
kind
of
key
messages
and
information,
and
especially
kind
of
the
the
issue
around
fertility
doesn't
just
rest
in
one
particular
community.
So
there
are,
there
are
kind
of
city-wide
comms
plans
that
we're
doing
in
terms
of
the
approach
with
the
pcn.
G
Again,
it's
very
much
based
on
the
data
that
is
being
identified
within
each
of
those
pcns
that
we're
working
with
and
trying
to
make
sure
that
they
are
localized
and
then
not
just
kind
of
focusing
on
specific
things
that
we
think
are
there
and
so
very
much
working
with
yourselves
and
local
care
partnerships
to
identify
particular
issues
for
different
communities,
as
opposed
to
just
working
with
as
a
topic
of
babe,
and
that's
not
the
intention
at
all
and
then
the
other,
the
other
kind
of
linking
around
the
the
mobile
buses.
G
There
is
a
potential
of
four
and
we're
currently
working
on
the
basis
of
having
two
live
initially,
because,
obviously,
in
terms
of
logistics
and
being
able
to
potentially
go
back
out
and
redo
the
the
second
vaccination,
we
just
need
to
be
clear
on
the
logistics
and
again
working
with
the
pcns
to
identify
where
they
go
and
whether
there
is
additional
need.
I
suppose
the
other
thing
is
just
making
sure
that
people
are
aware
and
have
all
of
the
information.
G
As
you
rightly
say,
in
terms
of
knowing
the
access
that
they
have
in
some
of
the
inner
city
areas.
We're
aware
that
not
everyone
is
registered
with
it
with
primary
care
and
again,
because
that
is
like
the
main,
the
main
method
of
of
accessing
the
vaccine.
G
We
don't
want
to
miss
anyone
out,
and
so
I
suppose,
working
in
those
inner
city
areas
is
as
a
as
a
general
piece
of
work
is
around
primary
care
access
and
increasing
registration
with
it,
with
primary
care,
as
well
as
accessing
the
vaccination
not
only
for
kind
of
the
the
immediate
coverage
response,
but
also
longer
term
support
around
their
health
and
well-being.
B
Yeah,
I
think
that's
fine,
thank
you,
councillor
hamilton
and
have
we
got
council
eileen
taylor
there
at
the
moment.
B
I
would
like
to
thank
dr
paul
alison,
dr
baker
and
laura
from
public
health
for
coming
and
discussing
the
coveted
vaccine
rollout,
and
I
would
also
like
to
thank
the
fellow
counselors
for
their
good
questions
that
they've
asked
and
I
hope
some
of
these
questions
that
have
not
been
answered.
You
can
email
us
back
to
our
localities
of
the
officers
I
lunate,
and
so
we
can
actually
get
those
answers
and
I'm
hoping
before
you
leave.
You
might
get
counselor
eileen
taylor
back
councillor.
Taylor.
B
Are
you
back
I'm
here?
Sorry?
Yes,
thank
you
just
before
the
people
from
public
health
leave,
can
you
as
a
as
a
pain
person?
Can
you
and
as
the
lord
mayor
as
a
very
important
citizen
of
the
city,
can
you
tell
us
about
your
experience
of
the
vaccine
before
everybody
leaves
and
the
community
committee
what
it's
like
to
actually
have
the
vaccine.
A
Yeah
my
experience
of
the
vaccine
first,
can
I
say
I
would
like
to
thank
the
scientists
at
really
bring
this
vaccine
forwards.
As
you
know,
the
past
few
months
has
been
challenged
for
us
all
and
we
was
in
a
dark
zone
and
this
vac
thing
has
brought
us
back
to
light
and
hope
in
the
future,
and
also
all
the
doctors
and
the
medical
teams
behind
the
scene.
I
am
I'm
volunteering
at
the
woodhouse
medical
center,
weekly,
basic
and
now
counselor
prior
join
me
at
the
woodhouse
medical
center.
A
But
what
I
would
like
to
say
myself,
my
husband
and
another
colleague
have
had
the
vaccine.
I
personally
have
had
a
reaction
to
the
vaccine.
I
was
fine,
it
says
I
didn't
have
a
vaccine,
however,
my
husband
and
my
colleague
they
had
the
requirement
what
they
said
to
expect
a
headache,
nausea
and
just
a
cramp.
It
didn't
last
for
long
it
lasted
a
few
hours
and
they
were
fined,
and
I've
listened
to
all
the
comments
today
around
the
bam
and
the
other
ethnicity
group.
A
First
I
can
say
I
do
understand
why
beim
a
reluctant
to
go
for
it.
You
all
know
in
the
past
beings,
black
people,
including
myself,
did
use
as
a
guinea
pig,
and
I
think
that
is
the
meds
from
history,
but
on
the
other
and
fake
news
is
terrible,
it
spreads
and
it
go
viral
and
it
lasts
our
controlled
when
this
virus
started.
As
the
lord
may,
I
had
so
many
calls,
so
many
texts
telling
me
the
reason
for
the
virus.
This
is
what
happened.
A
I've
had
the
cure
for
the
virus
and
then
it's
escalated,
so
we
just
have
to
bear
with
each
other,
and
I
urge
everyone,
as
you
know,
I
do
a
lot
of
promotion.
I
need
for
nhs
to
go
through.
I've
witnessed,
is
one
container,
not
four
containers,
one
and
the
medication.
What's
in
that,
one
container
is
goes
for
white,
black
asian
and
whatever
groups,
and
so,
if
you
don't
get
pregnant,
I
wouldn't
say
it's:
not.
The
vaccine
and
all
medication
come
with
some
side
effect.
A
B
Thank
you
very
much,
lord
mayor
eileen
taylor,
for
telling
us
about
your
experience
of
the
vaccine,
and
I
would
again
like
to
thank
the
health
professionals
that
have
come
today
and
thank
you
for
your
time
and
thank
you
for
spending
such
an
extended
time
with
us,
even
though
we
were
supposed
to
be
there
for
30
minutes.
B
G
J
B
And
now
I
would
like
to
move
on
to
to
the
next
item
which,
before
I
move
on
to
agenda
item
nine,
I
would
like
to
bring
forward
an
element
of
the
update
report,
but
unfortunately,
the
updated
report
on
the
unemployment
was
on
the
employment
and
skills
were
as
requested
by
ourselves
in
the
last
meeting
and
our
lead
for
that.
Council.
Goddard
is
not
able
to
make
it
today
for
personal
reasons.
B
So,
therefore,
I
would
like
to
call
up
on
our
executive
board,
member
for
learning
skills
and
employment,
counselor
jonathan
pryor,
to
actually
give
us
an
update
on
on
the
figures
that
we
have
got
for
our
area,
which
are
found
on
page
46
on
our
community
committee
report
and
over
to
council
prize.
You
could
introduce
yourself
and
then
let
us
know
what
regards
the
report
on
the
employment
and
skills.
J
J
So
maybe
those
people
who
have
an
element
of
disability
or
perhaps
being
out
of
work
for
a
long
time
but
obviously
with
covid
the
employment
landscape,
is
changing
quite
rapidly,
with
a
lot
of
people
finding
themselves
a
lot
more
people
finding
themselves
out
of
work.
So
I
was
just
going
to
speak
very
briefly
around
the
report.
You've
all
received,
and
just
very
briefly
around
some
of
the
changes
we're
making
to
the
employment
service
at
the
council
and
then
more
than
happy
to
answer
any
questions
you
all
have.
J
So
you
will
have
kind
of
this
this.
The
report
in
front
of
you,
which
goes
through
the
universal
credit
figures
which
obviously
have
have
gone
up
in
every
ward,
and
this
is
true
across
the
city,
regardless
of
wealth,
demographics,
anything.
J
You
know
we
are
seeing
a
massive
increase
in
people
claiming
universal
credit,
our
own
employment
and
skill
services,
which
which
has
a
kind
of
several
different
tracks
of
work,
about
helping
people,
improve
their
skills,
getting
people
back
into
work,
helping
people
just
kind
of
marrying
them
up
with
services,
and
so
last
year,
between
april
and
december,
across
the
inner
northeast
area,
we
got
an
additional
216
people
into
work.
And
now
this
is
quite
a
decrease.
J
I
think
there's
a
30-something
percent,
a
decrease
of
37
based
on
the
same
period
in
2019,
but
we
are
still
kind
of
pushing
to
get
people
into
work
that
decreases
from
there
just
being
fewer
jobs
out
there.
At
the
moment,
a
lot
of
companies
were
putting
people
on
furlough,
rather
than
kind
of
putting
more
and
more
adverts
out,
but
we
are
still
working
on
that
and
actually
what
we're
looking
to
do
in
the
future
is
obviously
kind
of
rejig
some
of
our
employment
services.
J
J
You
know
they're
ready
to
just
step
right
into
the
next
job
and
so
we're
looking
about
kind
of
seeing
what
we
can
do
with
kind
of
the
big
employees
in
the
city,
using
our
kind
of
networks
with
all
the
anchor
institutions
to
make
sure
we
can
basically
turn
people
around,
get
them
straight
back
into
a
job
and
then
that's
what
will
help
our
city
recover
in
terms
of
kind
of
the
high
street
in
the
city
center.
J
Obviously,
we've
seen
a
lot
of
closures
of
shops
and
bars
and
seeing
kind
of
which
age
groups
are
hit.
The
hardest-
and
you
know
that's
the
sort
of
thing
which
we
hope
will
recover
fairly
fast.
You
know
once
the
world
gradually
gets
back
to
normal,
more
things
will
can
reopen
more
people
can
get
back
to
work.
J
I
was
looking
at
some
data
over
the
weekend
that
actually,
because
usually
it's
the
18-24
bracket,
which
is
the
hardest
hit,
but
actually
increasingly
it's
that
25
to
35
bracket,
and
there
are
a
huge
number
of
programs
about
getting
kind
of
young
people
getting
those
neat
figures
down
and
actually
now
it's
that
slightly
older
group,
who
still
don't
have
the
most
secure
jobs
in
the
world.
J
The
most
heavily
there's
a
high
correlation
between
people
who
have
that
part-time
work,
as
well
as
the
the
specific
sectors
that
have
been
hit
the
hardest
with
women
so
kind
of
a
lot
more
women
have
found
themselves
out
of
work
than
men,
and
we
know
that
the
pandemic,
you
know,
hasn't
hit
the
country
in
an
equal
way,
and
so
we
are
looking
at
kind
of
how
we
can
kind
of
resolve
that
the
most
in
terms
of
apprenticeships.
We,
we
still
ran
the
apprenticeship
festival.
J
We
moved
online
this
year
and
so
we're
able
to
kind
of
match
people
up
we're
working
on
the
apprenticeship
levy
to
make
sure
that's
still
happening.
And
I
was
really
pleased
that
the
budget
council
last
week
that
councillor
lewis,
the
leader,
made
the
commitment
that,
if
anyone
is
finds
themselves
unable
to
finish
their
apprenticeship
because
they're
because
of
coved
because
of
what's
happening
with
the
company
they're
working
for
we
as
lead
city
council,
will
help
them
finish.
That
apprenticeship-
and
I
think
that
is
such
an
important
guarantee.
J
It
means
we
can
either
kind
of
help
that
company
to
with
the
funding,
to
help
them
finish
it
or
we
can
match
them
up
with
with
a
new
company.
So
they
can
finish
that
qualification
there
I'll
leave
it
there
for
now,
it's
just
a
quick
run
through,
but
more
than
happy
to
to
kind
of
go
where
any
members
want
to
ask
any
questions.
B
Thank
you
for
that
counselor
prayer.
I
really
appreciate
that.
Have
any
of
the
council's
got
any
questions,
I'm
not
really
seeing
any
raised
hands.
D
I
don't
have
any
questions,
but
just
to
say
that
I
mean
obviously
we're
in
a
pandemic
we're
in
lockdown.
So
we
do
understand,
but
you
know
once
things
start
get
it
changing
and
we
going
back
to
some
sort
of
normality.
D
Obviously
we'll
be
looking
for
changes
and
you
know
improvement,
and
we
normally
have
once
a
year
at
the
arena
dope.
We
wear
all
the
jobs
and
everything,
so
you
know
for
young
people.
I
think
it
was.
Was
it
done
online
this
year,
but
it
won't
be
the
same
thing.
Will
it
so
yeah
we
do
understand
and
then
probably
that's
why
we
don't
have
any
question,
because
we
can't
do
much
about
it
at
this
moment.
Thanks
to
jonathan,
I
mean.
J
You're
absolutely
right
kind
of
we're
still
in
quite
a
difficult
time
now,
so
really
what
the
work
we're
doing
now
is
almost
preparing
for
when
the
world
comes
back
to
normal,
so
kind
of
when
it
does,
we
can
hit
the
ground
running
and
get
people
straight
back
out
there
we're
looking
into
doing
kind
of
things
like
big
job
fairs
and
and
the
apprenticeship
fair
was
online
this
year,
but
we'll
be
working
all
year
round
to
try
and
kind
of
get
more
people
into
them
as
well,
but
you're,
absolutely
right.
J
I
mean
still
in
lockdown
now.
So
it's
not
the
easiest
thing
in
the
world.
I
If
I
could
just
try,
you
know,
I
mean
it
goes
without
saying
that
you
know
the
the
work
of
them.
You
know
those
working
employment
skills
team
has
probably
doubled
over
the
last
12
months
that
and
that's
sadly,
due
to
many
people,
obviously
being
one
of
the
victims
of
dependent
losing
apart
from.
I
Obviously,
you
know
suffering
health
wise,
but
also
losing
you
know,
jobs
or
businesses
as
well,
and
hence
you
know
claiming
benefits
and,
like
council
hamilton
said
it's
never
easy
kind
of
when
you
you
know,
rewriting
your
cv
or
help
with
job
search.
It's
not
as
easy
as
as,
if
you
need
to.
If
you
see
somebody
in
person,
so
you
know,
you've
got
to
diversify
and
all
I
can
say
is
jonathan.
B
Thank
you,
council
rafiq
for
your
kind
words,
just
a
quick
question
for
council
prior
for
myself
since
there's
no
one
else
raising
their
house.
B
A
Mine
is
to
jonathan
pryor
he's
counsel.
Johnson
pratt
is
doing
an
excellent
job.
I
know
it's
difficult
at
this
moment,
but
one
of
my
main
concerts
and
one
of
my
concerns
for
ages
is
zero
hour
contracts.
Can
we
try
to
work
together
to
sort
some
sort
of
problem
with
zero
hour
contract?
We
should
try
hard
to
try
get
rid
of
zero
other
contracts,
because
mainly
it's
the
younger
ones,
that's
under
zero,
our
contracts
and
mainly
women,
who
is
having
to
do
two
and
three
jobs
when
they're
on
the
zero
of
a
contract.
J
Councillor
you're
you're,
absolutely
right.
They
are
a
huge
problem,
there's
something
that
were
created
for
kind
of
a
very
specific
circumstance.
J
There
are
our
contracts,
you
know
as
a
student,
I
had
a
zero-hour
contract
and
it
was
when
kind
of
I
was
doing
exams-
and
I
didn't
want
to
do
that,
but
they've
essentially
been
abused
now
and
kind
of
they're
given
to
people
where
it's
really
inappropriate
to
have.
You
know
if
you're
working
in
a
shop,
why
on
earth
does
a
shop
need
to
give
out
xero?
I
can't
you
know,
I'm
sure,
you've
read
them
in
the
news.
J
They
know
exactly
how
many
people
they
need
every
day
and
and
it
it
is
a
real
issue.
It
affects
kind
of
certain
demographics,
more
than
others,
people
who
did
have
zero
eye
contracts.
Are
the
people
who've
been
hit
hardest
by
the
pandemic
as
well?
We've
been
doing
a
lot
of
work
with
our
anchor
institutions,
as
well
as
our
trade
unions,
on
something
called
the
great
jobs
agenda.
I
don't
know
if
you
you've
seen
this
and
it's
about
making
sure
that
people
don't
just
have
a
job.
J
They
have
a
job
where
they're
paid,
you
know
a
fair
pays
wage
for
a
fair
day's
work.
They've
got
prospects
in
the
future.
They've
got
training
opportunities.
You
know,
you
know
it's
a
career
path,
it's
something
that
gives
them
that
security
and
so
across
the
I
think.
J
We've
got
11
anchor
institutions
to
the
point
where
it's
one
in
seven
jobs
in
leeds
some
is
working
for
these
anchor
institutions
and
across
these
we've
done
things
like
making
sure
that
people
are
being
paid,
the
living
wage
foundation,
real
living,
wage,
reducing
and
getting
rid
of
zero
hour
contracts,
and
the
hope
is,
you
know
if
we
get
kind
of
these
big
employers
on
board,
if
we
get
them
kind
of
treating
their
employees.
Well,
I
mean
to
be
honest,
a
lot
of
them
that
we're
pushing
an
open
door.
J
They
are
kind
of
good
employers,
but
what
it
does
it
then
kind
of
encourages
the
other
companies
to
do
the
same.
You
know
you're
kind
of
leading
by
example.
You're.
You
know
it's
a
competitive
market
out
there
for
jobs.
So
if
we
kind
of
improve
those
jobs
across
the
piste,
then
others
will
follow,
to
get
rid
of
them
completely
would
be
difficult
that
it
would.
J
You
know,
to
be
a
bit
political,
it
would
require
a
change
of
government,
which
I
would
be
delighted
for,
but
I
think
might
be
a
few
years
off,
but
we're
doing
everything
we
can
in
leeds
to
kind
of
reduce
our
dependence
on
them
absolutely
but
yeah.
No,
you
raise
a
really
important
point.
B
And
since
there's
no
one
else
to
ask
a
question
council
prior,
I
would
like
to
ask
you,
as
you
can
see,
from
the
figures,
the
rates
and
I'm
sure
it's
the
same
in
all
the
worlds
throughout
the
city,
but
more
or
less
in
every
ward
in
in
our
patch
in
the
inner
northeast,
the
universal
credit
clearance
has
doubled.
I
mean
going
forward
as
we're
coming
out
this
pandemic.
B
Would
would
you
be
looking
at
maybe
holding
a
skills,
fair
or
a
jobs
fair
up
in
our
ward,
so
maybe
people
who
might
not
actually
come
to
the
arena,
but
I
will
not
wait
for
the
next
year
and
maybe
consider
something
to
take
them
out
to
the
actual
community
committees
or
areas
specifically,
so
certain
jobs
can
be
targeted
towards
them,
or
people
can
be
aware
of
those
employment
opportunities.
J
I'd
be
more
than
happy
to
kind
of
to
work
with
the
community
commit
community
committee
to
do
that,
we
obviously
do
have
kind
of
the
big
jobs
fairs,
but
we've
done
lots
of
kind
of
smaller
versions
around
the
city
in
the
past.
You
know
we're
targeting
kind
of
different
communities,
different
areas
of
the
workforce,
and
so
I'd
be
more
than
happy
to
look
at
that.
I
have
a
feeling
that
commute.
J
I
can't
remember
which
one,
but
I
think
one
community
committee
has
done
one
themselves
in
the
past
and
I'm
more
than
happy
to
assist
with
that,
and
it's
really
interesting.
You
talk
about
the
kind
of
the
rising
universal
credit,
and,
what's
really
interesting,
is
how
a
lot
of
the
country
have
realized
that
it's
barely
enough
to
get
by
on
at
all,
obviously
nationally
we're
campaigning
for
the
20
pound
increase
to
become
a
permanent
one.
J
But
when
you
look
at
polling
on
people
across
the
country
and
whether
they
think
that
the
benefits
in
the
uk
are
too
high
about
right,
too
low
before
the
pandemic,
I
think
it
was
something
like
40
45
of
the
country
thought
that
benefits
were
too
high
in
this
country
that
has
halved
it's
now
kind
of
less
than
20
of
the
country.
Think
that
and
the
number
of
people
that
think
the
welfare
system
isn't
good
enough,
has
massively
risen
and
it's
because
loads
of
people
have
been
forced
now
to
live
off.
J
It
and
they've
really
seen
that
it's
not
enough,
and
that's
exactly
why
it
is
so
important.
We
do
things
like
run
more
job
fairs,
get
people
back
into
work,
get
people
back
on
their
feet
and
I
think
you're
right
kind
of
doing
them
locally
would
be
a
huge
benefit.
There
are
a
huge
number
of
people
in
the
city
who
don't
drive.
I
don't
drive,
so
you
know.
J
If
I
live
slightly
further
out
I'd,
be
you
know,
it
won't
be
able,
it
would
be
difficult
to
come
into
the
center
to
come
to
a
sort
of
job
fair
and
when
you
look
at
people
kind
of
aged
kind
of
18
to
30,
increasing
numbers,
just
don't
have
a
car
at
all,
and
so
kind
of
providing
things
on
people's
doorsteps
will
become
even
more
important.
So
yeah
more
than
happy
to
look
at
that.
B
I
would
like
to
thank
you
council
priority
for
your
answer
and
b
for
waiting
patiently,
because
we
were
running
late
and
I
know
you're
really
busy
as
an
executive
board
member.
We
really
appreciate
you
attending
our
community
committee
today
and
apologies
that
counselor
goddard,
who
is
our
lead
member
for
this,
was
not
able
to
make
it
today,
but
once
again,
thank
you
for
myself
and
the
all
of
the
community
committee
for
attending
our
meeting
today.
Thank
you
very
much
council
brian.
Thank
you
very
much
I'll
see
you
all.
J
B
Thank
you
thanks
and
now
we
will
move
on
to
gender
item
number
nine,
which
is
connecting
leads
transport
strategy.
Could
could
I
invite
finn
campbell
team
leader,
city
development
and
paul
foster
when
they
do
come
on?
If
you
could
both
introduce
yourself,
as
you
give
us
the
update
and
the
presentation
on
connecting
leads
transport
strategy,
so
I
will
turn
to
finn
campbell
first
place.
K
Yeah
hi
councillor,
thank
you,
yeah!
I'm
paul
foster,
I'm
transport
strategy
manager
at
the
city
council,
so
between
finn,
myself
and
and
others
in
the
team,
we've
been
pulling
this
strategy
together
over
the
last
year
or
so
it's
out
to
consultation
at
the
moment,
and
it
was
went
through
executive
board
in
december.
As
a
draft
for
for
that
consultation-
and
I
believe
a
number
of
you
may
have
seen
so
presentations-
we've
done
at
labor
group
or
through
executive
board
as
well.
K
B
I
think
if
you
could
run
through
it
quickly
and
then
the
councils
cannot
actually
ask
you
the
questions
I
think
most
of
us
are
aware
of
the
labour
group.
We've
had
this
and
then
also
if
you
could
send
the
link
to
our
localities
officer,
you
could
then
share
it
on
our
facebook
page
any
presentation
or
or
to
all
the
link
to
the
consultation.
Thank
you.
I
Chair,
can
I
just
suggest
that
you
know?
Yes,
you
know
it'd
be
good
to
kind
of
have
a
quick
run
through,
but,
most
importantly,
I
think
it
would
be
helpful.
The
the
knocking
effect
you
know
of
all
the
strategy
will
have
within
the
you
know
our
northeast
area,
the
wards.
You
know
the
the
transport
changes
and
all
that
so
the
road
networks
and
everything
I
think
that's
more
relevant
to
us
and
obviously
our
residents.
So
I
know
I
think,
between
as
we
know.
I
B
K
Okay,
I'll
do
my
best
okay,
so
finland
will
just
get
the
presentation
up
for
you.
Okay,
so
as
I
say
so
briefly,
the
vision
for
the
to
the
strategy
is
about
a
city
where
you
don't
need
a
car
and
that's
about
giving,
and
you
know
I
thought
councillor
prior.
There
almost
gave
me
a
segue
into
this,
didn't
he
with
his
his
last
comments
and
on
that.
K
This
is
about
making
sure
that
everyone
in
the
city
has
an
affordable,
zero
carbon,
healthy
choice
on
how
they
do
every
journey,
and
I
really,
when
I've
been
presenting
this,
I
stress
the
everyone
and
the
every
journey
bit.
So
what
the
strategy
is
looking
at
is
a
whole
broad
range
of
solutions.
There's
not
one
thing
we're
going
to
do.
We
have
to
address
a
number
of
things
and
give
people
a
range
of
options
to
do
all
the
journeys
to
participate
in
the
city
as
they
need
to.
K
So
it's
based
on
the
sort
of
the
three
pillars
of,
if
you
like,
of
our
strategies
as
a
council
in
terms
of
tackling
climate
change,
delivering
inclusive
growth
and
improving
health
and
well-being
and
the
strategy
and
the
transport
effects
have
been
built
in
and
they're,
almost
a
check
against.
K
As
we
put
in
schemes,
are
they
contributing
to
these
three
things
in
different
ways,
and,
and
essentially
the
best
way
to
do
all
of
these
is
to
get
a
transfer
from
the
private
car
to
public
transport
to
walking
and
cycling
and
to
almost
travel,
less
or
less
distance
as
part
of
that,
and
and
so
that,
essentially
it
contributes
to
all
those
things,
particularly
in
terms
of
reducing
the
cost
impact
on
people,
and
you
know,
I'm
sure
you
know
the
residents
of
this
area
are
particularly
aware
of
the
cost
of
transport
in
terms
of
their
the
amount
of
their
income
that
that
takes
up
and
so
providing
more
efficient
services
or
encouraging
that
active
travel.
K
You
know
it
can
reduce
that
overall
cost
for
people
and
make
it
better
so
that
they're
the
the
key
objectives
skip
forward.
We've
set
ourselves
some
some
targets
within
that
in
terms
of
mo
chair.
We've
also
got
a
real
focus
on
the
casualty
reduction
as
well
and
and
talking
about
a
vision,
zero,
which
is
where
no
one
would
be
killed
or
seriously
injured
on
leeds
road
by
2040,
so
really
reducing
that
impact
that
the
transport
has
on
our
health,
as
well
with
with
air
quality
and
casualties.
K
So
the
next
one.
What
we've
the
particular
focus
on,
I
think,
what's
changed
in
the
last
few
years,
as
we've
been
developing
transport
policies
and
strategies
is
the
climate
emergency
and
that
need
to
go
zero.
Emission
transport
is
about
a
third
of
all
emissions
in
the
city
and
therefore
you
know
it's
going
to
take
a
huge
monumental
effort
to
get
that
down
to
zero
by
2030
and
we've
set
out
a
number
of
things
in
this
strategy
that
we
feel
you
would
you
could
do
that
would
get
us.
So
far.
K
The
blue
line
gets
to
about
43
reduction.
We've
done
a
bit
of
a
sensitivity
test
around
the
effects
of
curvid
and
whether
people
work
at
home
more
in
the
future
and
that
probably
gets
down
to
50.
But
you
can
still
say
that's
only
halfway
there
with
what
we've
sort
of
set
out
in
the
in
the
strategy
is
the
sort
of
things
we
really
want
to
do.
So,
we've
suggested
a
series
of
other
measures
as
well.
K
That
might
go
on
top
of
that,
which
I
think
we've
got
highlighted
on
the
next
slide,
which
is
around
things
that
that
really
try
to
change
behaviors.
If
you
like
the
sticks
rather
than
just
the
carrots,
so
things
like
workplace
parking
levy,
a
low
carbon
zone
and
how
then,
if
we
got
that
income
as
a
as
a
council
or
an
authority?
How
could
we
reinvest
that
in
making
public
transport
cheaper,
building
better
cycle
infrastructure
walking
infrastructure?
K
How
do
we
would
reinvest
that
and
we
haven't
set
out
exactly
how
we
want
to
what
we're
going
to
do
with
that
funding
if
we
were
to
get
it?
But
we're
asking
the
question
through
this
consultation,
about
how
supportive
people
are
of
those
measures
and
what
we
should
do
with
the
funding.
If
we,
when
that,
when
that
comes
through
from
that,
so
I
think
that's
that's
one
of
the
key
questions
to
ask,
and
maybe
when
counsellors
are
giving
my
questions
just
some
comments
on
that.
How
far?
K
How
much
further
should
we
go
and
which
of
these
measures
do
you
feel
are
are
appropriate
and
obviously
how
they
would
affect?
You
know
the
the
in
the
northeast
area,
particularly
okay.
If
I
move
on
to
the
next
slide,
so
the
bulk
of
the
strategy
is
in
what
we
call
in
these
six
big
moves.
K
So
these
are
the
areas
of
focus
that
we're
that
we're
looking
at
I've
talked
a
little
bit
in
the
past
one
about
decarbonizing
transport,
there's
also
work
in
terms
of
electrifying
or
hydrogen,
even
fuel
types
for
vehicles,
whether
that's
private
vehicles,
all
those
essential
vehicles.
You
know
freight
deliveries,
you
know
the
council's
already
leaning
by
example,
and
we've
got
one
of
the
biggest
electric
vehicle
fleets
of
all
councils
in
the
country,
and
you
know
it's
about
again.
K
You
know
that
same
example
that
council
pride
gave
about
you
know,
get
the
anchor
institutions
and
the
council
to
lead
by
example
in
others.
Take
that
up.
So
that's
what
we're
trying
to
work
on
with
that:
the
creating
healthiest
streets,
spaces
and
communities.
Now,
that's
really
a
focus
on
that
local
level
intervention.
So
an
example
of
that.
K
Well,
two,
two
very
good
examples
that
I
know
of
in
the
chapel,
alton
ward
in
terms
of
the
meth
leaves
where
we
put
in
a
home
zone
probably
15
years
ago,
maybe
maybe
more,
which
is
sort
of
about
you
know.
How
do
we
create
that
street
environment
that
really
works
for
people
that
encourages
that
the
ease
of
walking
out
your
door
and
continuing
continuing
on
those
journeys
making
that
local
community
work
in
terms
of
the
street
design?
K
And
then
I
guess
the
other
example
is
where
we've
done
it
with
the
temporary
measures
in
in
chapel
town
and
again,
you
know:
how
do
we
take
that
forward?
How
do
you
do
that
sort
of
scheme
with
a
bit
more
money,
a
bit
more
investment
a
bit
more
time,
a
bit
more
consultation
and
a
bit
more
buy-in
from
the
community?
How
would
you
build
that
up
and
make
the
street
environment
within
our
communities
conducive
to?
K
You
know
to
walk
in
cycling
around
and
make
make
them
pleasant,
places
to
be
and
then
associated
with
that?
Then
you
move
on
to
the
the
main
routes
in
and
out
of
the
city,
and
how
do
we?
How
do
we
use
those?
How
do
you
link
into
the
district
centers
that
are
the
the
heartbeat
of
the
local
communities
as
well,
so
again,
thinking
about
how
we
link
them
to
the
residential
areas
that
surround
them
and
how
we
connect
those
key
places
into
the
other
destinations
where
people
might
work
or
go
for
education,
etc?
K
There's
a
there's
a
whole
chapter
on
transforming
the
city
center
and
again,
that's
similar
principles
in
terms
of
how
how
how
do
we
make
the
trans
the
city
centre
work
for
us?
How
is
it
easy
to
get
about
there?
How
is
it
easy
to
get
to
there
for
the
employment
opportunities
and
and
also
its
function
as
a
if
you
like,
a
hub?
K
If
you
think
of
leeds
train
station
and
the
places
you
can
access
from
that,
you
know
we
want
that
to
be
an
easy
journey
for
people
to
get
to
from
surrounding
communities
and
then
interchange
and
go
on
to
other
opportunities.
So
the
people
of
inner
northeast,
for
instance,
could
be
looking
at
taking
up
job
opportunities
in
north
in
in
you
know,
huddersfield
or
wakefield,
rather
than
just
being
limited
to
sort
of
more
more
local
areas.
So
that's
that's
where
that
that
that
feeds
in
enhancing
public
transport.
K
I've
never
been
to
a
community
committee
where
the
bus
network
hasn't
come
up
and
the
key
role
it
plays,
the
the
real
need
that
people
have
for
improvements
in
that
field.
So
I
think
that's
that's
something
again
and
I'm
sure
you'll.
You
can
all
give
me
specific
examples
there
where
we
have
to
make
this
better
and
the
strategy
sets
out
how
we
want
to
work
with
the
combined
authority
and
the
bus
operators
to
get
a
virtuous
circle
for
public
transport.
K
We
need
to
get
more
people
using
it
which
brings
in
in
the
income
for
the
bus
operators,
which
then
needs
to
be
reinvested.
So
we
need
more
buses
to
make
sure
that
they're
not
full
when
they
go
through
chapel,
town
and
meanwood.
We
need
to
make
sure
that
they
no
don't
just
serve
those
routes.
The
city
centre,
that
there
are
options
for
you
to
go
orbitally
round
to
other
places
that
you
need
to
go
in
the
city
so
making
those
those.
Those
changes
are
necessary.
K
K
So
that's
where
we're
doing
that
new
mobility
solutions
is
very
much
looking
at
how
if
you
like
the,
I
sometimes
think
about
this
as
a
sort
of
the
the
netflix
or
the
spotify
of
transport.
How
do
we
get
that
shared
ownership?
Working
or
you
know
you
just
use
the
service
for
the
times.
You
need
to
use
it
so
things
like.
K
But
how
else
can
we
do
that
in
terms
of
shared
bike
schemes,
car
clubs
and
even
demand
responsive
transport,
which
is
like
minibuses,
public
transport
run,
but
they
go
to
where
you
know
a
number
of
people
need
to
go
and
they
set
their
route
a
bit
like
a
shared
uber
type
of
system
and
then
finally,
mass
transit,
so
the
probably
less
relevant
northeast,
but
the
combined
authority
have
put
in
there
and
have
put
out
their
vision
for
that
recently,
that's
out
for
consultation
as
well
at
the
moment,
that's
looking
at
the
places
it
needs
to
serve,
but
again
that's
about
creating
better
opportunities
to
connect
areas
around
and
through
west
yorkshire.
K
So
you
know
it
takes
some
time,
but
really
it's
about
adding
that
into
the
mix
where
rail,
where
bus
doesn't
quite
do
the
job
where
there
isn't
strategic
rail
there's
a
gap
in
between
where
a
tram
type
system
could
work
for
that.
K
So
that's
the
work,
we're
doing
we're
doing
a
lot
of
detail
below
that.
What
we,
what
we've
dug
out
just
to
sort
of
remind
councillors,
is
when
we
came
and
did
the
transport
conversation
in
2016.
These
were
the
key
issues
that
the
inner
northeast
talked
about.
So,
as
I
said,
public
transport
is
slow
and
expensive
and
expensive.
You
know
that
clearly
is
the
message
we
get
a
number
of
times
again
that
orbital
journeys
point
that
I
made.
K
I
think
this
is
probably
a
very
in
terms
of
the
the
cars
coming
through
the
area.
You
know
the
the
car
ownership
within
the
wards
that
you
represent
is
probably
well
below
the
the
city
average,
but
yet
the
effects
of
transport
in
terms
of
the
emissions
and
the
road
safety
issues
that
you
have
are
are
very
prevalent
in
the
area.
So
how
can
we?
How
can
we
reduce
that
cheap
scar,
interchange,
barriers?
Again,
that's
about
how
you
know
we're
talking
about
those
those
connections
from
communities
to
the
city
centre
and
we've.
You
know.
K
Obviously,
the
city
connect
cycle
scheme
has
been
on
site
at
the
moment,
nearly
completed
but
yeah.
I
appreciate
that
sheepskar
is
it's
a
huge
area
that
needs
he's
looking
at
how
we
can
address
that
over
time
an
outer
ring
road
cycle
provision
well,
which
we
started,
and
I
think
you
know
hopefully
you
can
see
there
is
a
there-
is
a
a
network
beginning
to
emerge
of
safe
cycle
routes
on
the
on
in
the
city,
but
we
know
we
have
got
a
lot
more
to
do
on
that.
K
K
But
if
you
google,
connecting
leads
transport
strategy,
you'd
usually
get
to
the
right
place,
there's
an
email
address.
If
people
want
to
write
to
us-
and
we
will
do
some
paper
copies,
if
people
do
really
need
them,
but
obviously
with
the
pandemic-
it's
a
lot.
You
know
we're
sort
of
restricted
to
these
online
types
of
communication.
K
Aren't
we
we're
we're
looking
at
putting
some
posters
up
to
try
and
again
engage
more
people,
try
who
maybe
haven't
come
across
it
in
their
whatever
their
social
media
feeds
or
or
the
engagement
they
have
online
and
again
conscious
that
in
some
of
the
areas
there
isn't
that
internet
and
availability
for
everyone,
so
gonna
put
some
posts
up,
and
we
need
to
we'll
probably
talk
to
the
community
team
around
where
those
best
locations
are
live
till
the
26th
of
march.
K
I
think-
and
oh
and
the
next
thing
is
we
are
doing
a
series
of
webinars.
I
don't
know
if
anyone's
seen
any
of
these
or
been
able
to
tune
in
on
these
various
topics
that
I
talked
about,
tomorrow's
one
which
councillor
carlill
is
is
at
as
well
as
members
from
sustrans
and
and
other
experts
that
we've
got
coming
to,
that
is
on
the
healthiest
street
space
and
communities.
K
So
it
might
be
of
interest
to
to
members,
and
the
mass
transit
is
next
is
on
thursday
yeah,
so
so,
and
public
transport
next
week,
so
they're
the
sorry.
What
was
I
gonna
say:
yeah,
the
ones
that
we
have
already
done
are
available
on
youtube
for
people
to
look
back
so
again,
it's
all
linked
on
that
on
that
page
on
the
on
the
website.
K
So
you
can
you
can
look
at
some
of
the
others
if
you,
if
you've
got
some
time
to
kill
okay,
so
I
think
my
request
really
from
memphis
is
I'm
I'm
happy
to
take
questions
about
what's
in
there
what
we're
doing,
but
I
would
like,
maybe
in
your
intro,
whether
you
feel
that
we've
got
it
right.
What
have
we
admitted
and
then
that
point
around
this
is
an
old
slide
fin
around
what
applies
to.
We
are
doing
every
community
committee.
What
what
are
the
priorities
for
your
area?
B
Thank
you
for
that
paul,
a
very
detailed
presentation.
I
would
like
to
put
it
out
to
the
floor
councils.
If
you
have
any
questions,
I
think
council
dalton
has
written
a
few
in
the
chat,
so
councillor
dalton
I'll
go
first.
C
B
C
Paul
knows
all
my
concerns
and,
and
the
problem
is,
you've,
got
to
deal
with
the
reality
and
and
then
work
to
the
to
the
expectation
that
things
are
actually
going
to
get
better.
The
reality
is
in
an
inner
city
area.
Whilst
you've
said
it,
whilst
car
ownership
might
be
quite
low,
the
number
of
cars
coming
through
that
area
is
absolutely
phenomenal
and
I
bang
on
all
the
time
about
the
amount
of
rat
running.
C
The
number
of
people
who
actually
cut
through
the
area
to
come
out
of
the
potter
newton
roundabout
is
actually
stopping
traffic
on
scott
hall
road
because
the
priority
is
from
there,
and
I
see
it
because
I
actually
use
that
route
when
I
come
into
leeds,
so
I
can
see
what's
happening
and
because
it's
backed
up
down
scott
hall
road,
they
then
cut
down
wensley
drive
through
the
hen
connors
through
the
saint
martins.
C
Well,
they
used
to
do
till
you
put
those
barriers
in,
but
through
the
scent
markings
and
and
popped
out
on
chapel
town,
road
or
scott
howell
road
at
the
bottom.
People
will
actually
find
a
way
around
these.
These
areas
we
do
need
to
work
on
the
worst
rat
runs,
especially
the
ones
that
actually
will
stop
you
achieving
your
ambition,
which
is
actually
speeding
up
the
bus
routes
to
get
more
people
on
the
bus,
and
particularly
the
one
through
the
miles,
hills
and
and
and
more
town
is
a
phenomenal
one.
C
If
you
could
actually
stop
some
of
the
traffic
using
that
and
keep
it
on
scott
hall.
Road
you'd
do
a
huge
service
to
everybody,
but
sometimes
when
you're
talking
about
rat
running,
you
feel
like
you're,
banging
your
head
against
a
brick
wall,
because
we've
been
talking
about
this
since
I
became
a
councillor
15
years
ago
and
and
we're
still
not
closing
those
rat
runs
off.
K
I
think
that's
probably
you've
almost
answered
your
own
question
in
terms
of
that
counselor
doesn't,
but
I
think
as
well.
We
have.
This
is
going
to
be
an
increasing
area
of
focus
that
we
can.
We
can
do
and
we
have
been
successful
in
getting
some
funding
to
to
implement
schemes
this
year
in
in
in
this
area
as
well.
So
we've
we've
got
an
opportunity
now
and
I
know
dave
donahue
and
the
team
are
going
to
come
and
talk
to
to
members
about
the
detail
of
what
we
can
do
there.
K
So
some
of
these
key
rat
runs
are
really
what
we
want
to
focus
on
with
that
with
that
scheme.
So
I
think
it's
quite
opportune,
really
that
you
know
I'm
sorry
it's
taken
this
long,
but
I
do
think
we
have
an
opportunity
now
to
to
start
tackling
that
and
but
what
it
does
need.
K
Doesn't
it
and
we've
seen
with
with
with
the
closures
that
we
have
put
in
is
we
do
need
that
groundswell
of
support
to
tackle
the
problem
and
and
to
implement
it,
and
to
do
it,
and-
and
you
know
the
confidence
that
that
is
the
right
solution
and
that
traffic
isn't
need,
isn't
isn't
wanted
in
those
areas,
but
to
get
that
closure
in
some
of
the
residents
that
live
there
are
going
to
be
slightly
inconvenienced
and
they
have
to.
They
have
to
take
that
balance
between
the
two.
Don't
we
that's
the
balance.
K
C
K
C
The
government
funding
comes
in
as
it
did
in
this
case,
a
very,
very
short
notice.
We've
had
it
time
and
time
again,
you
know
the
town
center
programme
and
so
on.
All
of
it
comes
in
a
very
short
notice
and
the
schemes
that
get
the
go-ahead
are
the
ones
that
are
almost
ready
to
run
or
the
sort
of
the
ones
that
you
you
perceive
are
actually
going
to
be
easiest
to
implement
because
there's
a
ground
swell
behind
them.
K
K
We've
got
to
do
with
that
funding,
with
the
resources
available
that
that
that
we
haven't
got
that
plan
for
the
whole
city
in
those
areas
developed
up
in
advance,
but
we
are
trying
to
work
on
that
and
make
that
you
know
that
has
to
be
the
way
we've
got
to
move,
move
it
forward
and
and
getting
a
better
place
with
that.
So
we've
with
the
online
tools
that
we've
got
now,
I
think
there
it
is
easier
to
do
that
that
level
of
engagement.
K
K
You
know
it
is
a
lot
easier
to
do
now,
so
we're
starting
to
build
up
that
picture
of
where
the
support
is
for
these
measures
and
the
ones
that
we
we've
highlighted
for
this
particular
scheme
have
have
come
from
that.
So
I
think
that's
that's
a
positive
aspect,
but
I
have
to
say
that
this
is
an
area
in
terms
of
those
local
focused
schemes
where
we
do
need
to
make
the
case
for
much
more
funding
in
that
area.
K
There's
a
lot
of
funding
comes
from
national
government
that
is
earmarked
for
if
you
like
schemes
that
are
of
the
sort
of
five
to
ten
million
pounds
mark
you
know
and
and
they
take
a
while
to
develop
their
significant
schemes,
but
there's
so
many
small
individual
things
that
can
be
done
in
local
localities
and
neighborhoods
that
don't
get
the
similar
level
of
attention.
So
we
are
trying
to
keep
pushing
that
message,
but
it
is
it
is.
It
is
more
challenging.
B
Thank
you
for
your
answer.
Paul
and
can
I
go
to
council
rafiq
he's
got
his
andreas
for
a
question.
Thank
you.
Thank
you.
I
Thank
you
chair
and
thank
you
paul
for
the
for
the
presentation
and
I
think
I
think
you're
quite
right.
You
know,
we've
got,
we've
got
a
lot
of
challenges
in
terms
of
getting
more
people
onto
buses,
more
people
walking
more
scientifically.
I
But
the
question
is:
how
do
you
do
that
by
just
having
the
infrastructures
doesn't
always
help?
One
of
the
biggest
problem
we
have
is
is
actually
more
people.
You
can't
write
more
people
in
the
only
way
you
could
reduce
car
usage
is
to
more
people
jumping
onto
public
transport.
Yes,
you
will
get
people
cycling,
but
that
percentage
is
very,
very
small
at
the
moment
and
and
it's
not
going
to
increase
in
the
near
future,
not
the
rate
we
want
to
see
it.
You
know
I'm
afraid.
I
I
Yes,
I
think,
as
a
result
of
the
pandemic,
there's
there's
more
people,
maybe
walking
as
well,
and
I
think
I
think
it's
it's
something
we
need
to
encourage
more,
but
the
real
problem
is
is
actually-
and
I've
said
this
before
in
a
scrutiny.
It's
actually
the
cost
of
a
you
know:
reliable
public
transport,
because
until
that
becomes
as
long
as
it's
in
in
private
ownership
run
by
private
companies,
it's
not
going
to
be
cheap.
I
You
know
until
those
buses
are
deeply
regulated.
Alright,
with
the
certain
mis,
I
don't
think
we'll
have
the
level
of
you
know.
The
soft
transfer
want
to
see
here
which
is
cheap,
efficient
and,
and
you
know,
on
time,
quick,
like
you
see
in
some
of
the
other
european,
you
know
other
sort
of
world-class
cities,
and
until
that
happens,
people
are
not
going
to
start.
So
that
is,
that
is
a
big
thing,
and
it's
not
something
we
could
just
do
that's
something.
I
I
think
governments
are
a
level
we
need
to
have
those
powers
to
kind
of
make
that
happen,
but
also
funding
to
go
over
there
as
well.
So
you
know
just
to
give
an
example.
If
you,
if
you
jump
onto
a
bus,
let's
say
from
all
woodley
or
even
beyond,
from
harrogate
it's
much
much
cheaper
to
than
somebody
who
actually
hops
onto
the
bus
from
chapel
town
road
to
go
into
now.
It
costs
you
like
two
three
quid
to
go
for
each
way.
I
You
know
you,
I
r
you
rather
get
somebody
a
member
of
your
family
to
do
that.
Extra
journey
drop
you
off
or
use.
If
you
can
park
in
somewhere
too.
So
you
know
it's
not
rocky
science,
no
brainer,
why
people
want
to
use
when
you
can't
a
the
bosses
are
full
when
one
that
wants
to
get
because
there's
not
many
and
b
or
they
come
all
together
and
b,
they're
too
expensive.
I
So
you
know
that's
the
problem
with
words
like
you
know
our
world
chaplain
and
even
more
town
as
well
and
and
around
it,
and
then
you
know
the
other
side,
so
inner
city
walls
is
it's
a
big
issue
so
and
then,
and
the
other
is
how
we
actually
use
the
money
as
well.
I
So
council,
dalson
and
taylor
will
tell
you
that
we've
had
a
lot
of
discussions
around
a
small
stretch
of
bus
lane
on
how
to
get
road
before
you
get
to
port
newton
lane,
where
we
wanted
to
kind
of
close
and
make
a
bus
lane
and
close
turning
right
onto
party
newton.
Well,
if
we
do
that,
then
people
will
be
if
you
can't
turn
right
and
reportedly
new
to
length
from
that
the
money
spent
on
that,
then
you
know
people
will
be
using
rat
running
they'll
use
every
other
sort
of
way
to
get
kind
of.
I
I
Whichever
ward
you
represent
it's
not
about,
and
I
do
agree,
there's
there's
a
degree
of
rap
running
and
you
know
councilman
dalton
said
it's
not
about
running
it's
not
about
you
know:
traffic
jams,
the
biggest
problem
we
get
day
in
day
out
is
actually
traffic
calming
and
speeding.
I
So
when
I
say
about
that
example
about
how
to
get
what
that
money
could
have
been
well
spent
on
on
actually
traffic
economy,
I've
just
got
the
email.
Well,
we've
got
this
email,
you
know
I'm
talking
about
chaplains
and
what
counsellors
council
doubts
and
telling
myself
you
get
emails
on
almost
daily
basis.
I
I've
just
got
something
today
where
which
is
about
you
know:
speeding
on
glendale
valley,
road
and
they've
raised
it
before
we
fall
down
to
you
know
college
within
traffic
engineering
nothing's
come
back;
all
they
want
is
science
at
the
beginning
middle
and
we
haven't
got
so.
I
think
we
need
to
you
know,
although
listen
to
what
public
want
as
well
as
well,
obviously
address
some
of
those
other.
You
know
integral
issues
as
well
paul.
Thank
you.
K
I
think
I
agree
with
most
of
what
you've
said,
especially
around
the
public
transport,
and
I
think
that's
where,
where
we
talk,
if
you
like
in
the
strategy,
it's
very
much
about
how
do
we
move
ourselves
to
that,
the
combined
authority
are
looking
at
a
a
part.
You
know
a
partnership
approach
which
is,
you
know,
contracted
with
the
bus
operators
to
try
and
try
and
change
that.
K
I
guess
the
point
is:
if
that
doesn't
work,
do
you
go
down
the
same
route
with
manchester,
where
you
do
franchising
and
again,
but
there
is
a
point
where
the
buses
cost
money
to
buy.
They
cost
money
to
put
the
fuel
in
and
you
have
to
pay
the
drivers,
don't
you
so
so,
there's
a
cost
associated
with
with
running
the
buses
and
and
and
we
we
put
already
quite
you
know
the
public
put
in
quite
a
lot
to
keep
those
services
running
outside
the
peak
times,
evenings
sunday,
services
etc.
K
But
should
we
be
putting
more
in
you
know,
because
most
of
those
european
examples
that
you
will
have
seen
and
thought
this
is
wonderful.
It's
hugely
subsidized
by
by
the
public,
so
it's
public
transport,
but
it's
you
know
it
is
funded
in
that
way,
and
we
don't
have
that
here.
So
it
probably
does
need
something
at
national
level.
K
There's
probably
some
things
that
we
can
do
as
a
mayoral
authority
that
that
you
know
which
is
coming
up
which,
which
you
couldn't
which
couldn't
do
before
so,
but
where
does
that
funding
come
from
to
make
it
cheaper
for
people
to
make
it
better
for
people?
You
know
there
is
only
one
you
know
you've
got
to
find
that
funding
somewhere
to
do
to
do
it
and
to
run
it
better.
So
it's
a
key
challenge
but
think
more
people
on
it
and
then
being
able
to
repurpose
other
transport
income
that
you
get
for.
K
That
is
the
way
to
way
to
improve
that.
I
think
your
traffic
calming
versus
rat
running,
I
think,
number
of
places
across
the
city
where
we've
looked
at
traffic
carmen
you
put
traffic
coming
in
it
does
slow
speeds.
It
doesn't
necessarily
reduce
the
numbers,
particularly
so
you're
still
going
to
get
the
numbers
of
people
going
through,
but
is
that
acceptable
at
slow
speed?
So
again,
that's
the
conversation
you
need
to
have
with
the
residents
on
those
streets
who
who
who
are?
Is
it
the
speed?
K
B
B
I
You
know,
speeding
and
then
the
residential
speeds
and
people
going
at
a
very
high
speed,
then
that
what
is
that
a
lot
of
people-
and
you
see
this
in
just
about
every
street-
you
know
in
in
different
neighborhoods-
you
know-
no,
no,
no
area
is
probably
immune
from
that.
You
always
get
some
idiots.
I
You
know
I'm
quite
happy
to
use
that
word,
because
when
he's
at
20
miles
per
hour-
and
you
you
you're
doing
40
50.,
it's
not
you
know,
how
are
you
gonna
have
like
families
or
young
kids,
you
know
having
you
talked
about
home
zones
and
all
that
when
people
do
that,
so
I
think
it's
a
serious.
It's
a
serious
issue
that
one
they
are.
Obviously
I
think
they
are
into
they
are
they
are
they
are
linked.
I
You
know
right
running
and
speeding,
but
you
you
find
that
you
know
speeding
doesn't
happen
at
three
times.
It
happens
actually
more
at
quite
a
times
when
there's
actually
less
traffic
on
the
roads
when
the
roads
are
quieter
and
less
cars
are
packed
as
well.
That's
why
you
know-
and
I
think
residents
are
more
worried.
You
know
when
they
can't
guess
you
know,
and
if
you
you,
you
get
out
your
house
or
your
kids
and
it's
supporting
you
to
the
back
of
the
people's
mind.
Yeah.
B
Yeah,
thank
you
for
that
counselor.
I
think
we'll
take
the
final
question.
Unless
there's
anybody
else
other
than
counselor
hamilton
indicating
to
sp
to
ask
a
question
for
council
hamilton.
B
Well,
council,
venom
as
well
so
final,
two
questions
on
this
agenda
item.
I
think.
D
Well,
I
don't
know
if
mine
is
so
much
a
question.
I
just
we're
going
to
say
that
with
regards
to
public
transport
and
how
to
get
people
out
out
of
the
cars,
it
won't
happen
until
we
have
a
reliable
public
transport
and
bus
lanes
only
where,
obviously,
if
we
want
people
out
the
cars
and
we've
got
bus
lanes
only
and
we're
doing
forever,
you
know
to
get
somewhere
and
seeing
the
bus
going
past.
D
That
would
get
get
us
out
of
out
of
our
cars,
but
until
that
is
until
we
have
reliable
good
public
transport,
we
will
always
be
in
our
cars
and
and
if
we
do
get
that
reliable,
good
public
transport
and
bus
lanes
only-
and
we
only
have
one
lanes
for
cars
on
certain
roads,
we
will
soon
come
out
of
our
car
because
we'll
be
thinking
of
if
I'd
walked.
I
would
have
got
a
bit
further
than
being
there.
D
So
that's
what
I'm
gonna
say
and
that's
my
my
problem
and
until
that
come
I
will
continue
using
my
car
with
regards
to
to
speeding
it
doesn't
matter
how
much
traffic
calming
we
put
in.
There's
always
be
that
idiot.
That
will
speed,
I
mean
where
I
live.
There's
cars
parked
on
both
sides
and
there's
still
speed.
We've
got
20
miles
an
hour.
I
don't
want
no
traffic
in
in
the
road
up
here,
because
it's
narrow
enough
with
cars
apart
on
both
sides,
my
neighbor
me
etc.
D
So
and
the
only
other
thing
it's
great
to
see
all
those
cycling
at
this
moment
in
time,
they're
empty.
But
hopefully,
when
once
we
back
out
of
this
pandemic,
I
would
like
to
see
them
being
used,
which
I
hope
that
will
be
because
I've
got
a
couple
of
emails
saying
what
a
waste
you
know,
but
people
need
to
remember
that
we're
still
in
lockdown
and
there's
not
a
much
activity
out
there.
D
So
I
I'm
really
pleased
with
a
lot
of
the
cycling
that
I've
seen
because
it's
nice
for
me
to
walk
in
them
as
well,
especially
when
there's
terrible
pavement.
D
So
mine
is
not
a
question.
Man
is
just
saying
until
there's
good
public
transport,
we
won't
be
coming
out
of
our
car.
B
A
Yes,
I'll
make
it
very
brief
in
the
presentation
he
mentioned
about
presentation
about
locality,
you
know
when
we're
thinking
about
locality,
have
you
ever
thought
about
approaching
the
local
community,
the
local
community
in
the
area
I
mean,
for
instance,
like
round
here
we
do
get
a
lot.
You'll
get
a
lot
of
emails
about
speeding
parking,
double
parking
where
it
shouldn't
that's
something
we
should
try
work
on,
especially
in
the
speeding.
A
I
would
like
you
to
actually
when
you
do
get
around
to
working
with
local
people.
I
would
like
you
to,
for
instance,
have
a
approach,
the
local
community
people
to
find
out
where
the
problem
is
because
there
is
a
lot
of
rat
run
to
as
well
go
on
in
round
here.
That's
all
I
have
to
say
thank
you.
B
K
No,
I
think
I
think
we
are
looking
at
ways
we
can
continually
map
and
understand
the
issues
in
various
areas
so
that
we
can
get
a
fuller
picture
of
where
we
should
be
developing
schemes
and
prioritizing
them.
And
obviously
you
know
when
we
do
have
schemes
we.
You
know
we're
absolutely
looking
at
consultation
with
with
with
communities
to
make
sure
they
are
right
for
the
for
the
problems
that
have
been
identified.
B
Thank
you
for
your
answer,
paul
what
it
is
paul.
I
have
raised
this
question
with
yourself
previously
and
it
has
been
raised
to
the
executive
board
member
at
the
time,
which
was
council,
lisa
mulherin
regards
people
with
their
disabilities,
trying
to
make
sure
the
transport
that
and
the
consultation
to
make
sure
there's
something
there
for
the
people
that
have
disabilities.
B
B
So
if
you
can
see
what
is
available
and
how
we
can
make
transport,
even
whether
it's
people
on
their
electric
scooters
to
be
able
to
get
get
about
or
people
being
pushed
on
their
wheelchairs
to
actually
get
across
the
city,
it
is
a
situation
where,
where
where
it
is
very
difficult,
mainly
either
due
to
the
payments
or
the
space
being
taken
up
by
either
parked
vehicles
or
on
pavements
and
so
on
so
forth.
So
that's
something
that
I
found
missing
from
the
consultation.
B
I
would
like
to
thank
yourself
and
mr
fink
campbell
for
attending
today.
If
you
could
just
finally
tell
us
when
the
consultation
is
closing,
and
then
we
do,
I
would
like
to
thank
you
for
coming
and
to
our
community
community
meeting
and
presenting
the
transport
strategy
to
us.
B
Thank
you
very
much
and
thank
you
for
attending
our
community
community
meeting
and
that's
the
thanks
for
myself
and
my
fellow
counselors
as
well,
and
hopefully
people
will
be
engaged
with
your
consultation
and
I
hope
you
get
many
responses
regards
it.
Thank
you
very
much.
Thank
you.
B
E
Good
evening,
everyone-
sorry
about
that-
I
was
on
youtube
if
members
could
refer
to
the
finance
report-
page
31
on
the
pack
of
the
email
that
I've
sent
with
the
attachments
today
and
I'll
happily
go
through
to
the
finance
report.
E
As
you
all
know,
the
total
available
balance
for
your
well-being
budget
for
the
financial
year
april,
2020
to
march
2021,
was
136
177
pounds
81
pence,
taking
into
consideration
all
your
influence.
Budgets
includes
your
world
parts
and
skips
your
call
with
19,
more
allocations,
community
engagement,
festive
lights
and
your
cctv.
E
That
equates
to
97
978
pounds,
67
pence
and
looking
at
all
the
projects
that
went
ahead
during
this
financial
year,
they
equated
to
13
312
pounds,
ten
pence,
which
leaves
you
an
available
balance
of
twenty
four
thousand
eight
hundred
and
eighty
seven
pounds
four
pence
and
that
balance
could
be
carried
forward
to
the
next
financial
year.
Has
members
got
any
questions
regarding
that?
E
I
take
silence
as
a
no
I'll
now
move
on
to
the
new
projects
that
was
agreed
at
the
last
in
an
office
finance
subgroup.
The
first
one
is
violence
on
your
doorstep.
E
The
total
project
costs
thirty,
four
thousand
seven
hundred
and
ninety
five
pounds.
Seventy
two
pence
and
the
ask
was
seven
thousand
three
hundred
and
fifty,
which
was
agreed
by
the
finance
subgroup
and
the
second
project
is
summer
bands
in
leeds
bank
2021
and
the
total
project
cost
is
1950
and
that's
again
for
coming
out
of
the
well-being
budget
for
2021-22.
E
The
total
project
cost
is
6315
and
council
has
agreed
to
present
to
fund
50
of
the
cost
which
equated
to
3158
pounds
counselors
in
agreement
with
the
projects
that
were
agreed
at
the
financial
group
coming
out
of
the
area.
Why
budget.
B
E
B
E
In
addition
to
those
projects
being
agreed,
the
financial
group
agreed
to
allocate
world
pots
of
10
thousand
pounds
per
ward
for
the
new
financial
year
2021-22.
E
E
Okay,
so
thank
you
very
much
now
the
delegate
decision
notice
this
is
where
projects
have
been
agreed
by
emailing
world
councillors
in
between
meetings
where
there's
not
an
community
committee
meeting
taking
place
and
the
members
agree,
and
I
get
it
signed
off
by
my
header
service.
E
So
looking
at
those
projects
from
the
well-being
fund,
we've
had
healthy
holidays
christmas
provision
from
the
regional
center
for
450
pounds,
a
capital
project,
greater
valley,
road
sid.
I
know
one
of
the
members
alluded
to
speeding
traffic
in
that
area
and
work
is
ongoing
with
highways
to
solve
that
problem
by
installing
a
seed
in
the
area
for
3500
pounds.
I
E
Yeah
nobody's
yeah
I
can.
I
can
get
an
update,
I'm
sure
it's
been
ordered.
I
ain't
gonna
insulation
date
yet,
but
I
will
come
back
to
you
as
regards
you
know
where
we
are
with
that
particular
project
and
the
same
with
the
hair
hills.
Lane
said
agreed
by
the
chapel
editing
world
councillors
when
we
still
budget
3500
pounds
and
the
rest
are
all
wall.
Parts
agreed
by
the
individual
world
council
is
chapel
art
in
spaces.
E
Let
me
know
one
calendar
731
pounds,
meanwhile,
valley
urban
farm,
defibrillator
project,
639
pounds,
steam
back
defibrillator
project,
794.50
from
chapel,
atherton,
ward
and
79450
from
morton
world.
Any
questions
on
the
delegate
decision
notice.
Members.
Yes,.
D
It's
not
a
question,
it's
just
to
say
that
you've,
the
steinbeck
defib
you've
put
chaplainton
and
motown.
Well,
the
same
should
go
for
the
sid
at
valley,
hello,
valley,
road.
E
E
Right,
okay
and
the
the
community
infrastructure
levy
is
world
based,
so
that
hair,
his
lane
said
for
3500
will
be
coming
out.
E
E
It's
okay,
yeah,
lovely,
great
stuff
right.
Moving
on
to
the
youth
activities
fund.
At
the
beginning
of
the
financial
year
we
had
forty
four
thousand
nine
hundred
and
twenty
eight
pounds
allocated
for
projects.
E
I'm
really
happy
to
say
that
during
cove,
with
a
lot
of
organizations
worked
with
us
to
retweet
their
program
delivery
and
as
a
result,
a
lot
of
projects
undertook
in
our
area
compared
to
other
community
committee
areas
and
the
total
spend
was
twenty
nine
thousand
two
hundred
and
sixty
seven
pounds,
leaving
a
balance
remaining
of
fifteen
thousand
six
hundred
and
sixty
one
pounds
any
questions
on
that.
One!
E
D
We
move
on,
I
don't
know
if
it's
here
to
to
and
say
well,
yes,
it
does
come
on
the
youth
activity
and
just
an
email
from
sinclair
brown
and
just
to
say
that
I'd
like
to
to
say
he
was
grateful
for
the.
D
Let
me
read
it
couple
if
I
read
it
properly,
instead
of
trying
ad-lib
he's
saying,
I
would
be
grateful
if
you
could
feed
into
the
meeting
how
grateful
the
place
schemes
are
to
yourself
from
well
he's
saying
to
me
and
counselor
rafiq
for
coming
out
to
hand
out
the
boxes
to
the
children
of
the
goodies,
and
it
was
well
received
by
both
parents
and
children
and
I'm
going
to
see
if
we
can
do
it
again
for
the
easter
holiday.
D
So
this
was
about
the
after
on
holiday,
where
and
that
he
provided
boxes
with
with
things
for
pancake
day
coloring
and
other
things
and
interacting
with
them
on
zoom
and
including
the
parents
as
well.
So
he's
saying
thank
you
to
all
of
us
for
that
and
to
me
and
mohammed
for
going
out
and
giving
out
the
boxes.
B
E
Okay,
moving
on
to
the
world
pods
budget,
if
I
can
refer
members
onto
table
four,
obviously
the
word
budgets
are
incorporating
the
skips
and
they
are
individually
split
per
award.
Obviously
start
the
financial
year
chaperone
had
fourteen
seven
six
hundred
and
eleven
twenty
five
more
town,
fifteen
thousand
four
hundred
and
seven
pounds,
forty
eight
and
around
here,
thirteen
thousand
six
hundred
and
thirty
three.
Ninety
four
take
into
consideration
all
the
projects
and
skip
spend
the
remaining
balance
for
chapala.
E
Ten
is
ten
thousand
eight
hundred
and
sixty
five
five
for
more
town,
ten
thousand
five
hundred
twenty
one
seventeen,
and
for
around
here
eleven
thousand
one
hundred
and
nineteen
pounds,
eighty
four
pence
and
that
balance
could
be
carried
forward
to
the
next
financial
year.
Any
questions
on
the
world
parts
members.
E
There
was
a
2019
2020
project,
which
was
heroes
warriors
and
leaders
at
the
moria
movement.
That
project
was
to
do
with
gang
crime
and
youth
crime
and
they
were
going
to
do
a
really
big
seminar
working
with
west
yorkshire,
police
youth
agencies
across
the
in
the
northeast
areas,
and
do
a
really
big
seminar
to
fill
a
hall
up
with
about
200
people.
Unfortunately,
during
the
pandemic,
that
project
didn't
take
place.
They
have
got
speakers
coming
from
london
and
they
want
to
do
it
sometime
in
september.
E
Government
rules
allowing
that's
that
project
there
and
the
rest
of
the
yaf
projects
which
you
can
see
on
the
second
table,
have
all
been
cancelled
because
of
government
regulations
and
then
around
here
little
bins.
There's
been
a
delay
with
the
order
for
around
here
members.
It
came
out
their
community
infrastructure
levy,
and
that
is
on
track
now
to
be
completed
by
the
end
of
march.
Any
questions
on
those.
E
Okay,
moving
on
to
the
capital
budget,
paragraph
33
and
the
table
six
at
below.
Looking
at
that
budget,
obviously
the
available
balance
at
the
start
of
the
year
was
46
348
pounds.
We've
got
expenditure
for
saint
martin
sterling
2500,
becker's
playground,
20,
000,
more
town
park,
fencing
11
270
and
the
sid
device
3500
the
available
balance
on
the
area-wide
capital.
Criss
funding
remaining
is
9078
pounds
and
again
that
can
be
carried
forward
to
the
next
year.
Any
questions
on
the
capital
funding.
E
Great
stuff,
moving
on
to
paragraph
34,
community
infrastructure
levy,
I'll
just
move
on
to
table
seven
on
that
particular
one
and
obviously
the
start
of
the
year.
The
balance
was
124,
980
147
and
it's
split
into
three
ward
areas.
So
the
breakdown
for
chaperone
was
61
995
pounds
50
with
their
spend.
The
balance
remaining
is,
let
me
just
get
this
right.
Total
spend
was
seventy
four
thousand
and
sixty
pounds.
Ninety
six
pence,
so
the
balance
remaining
is
seventy
thousand
five
hundred
and
sixty
pounds.
E
Ninety
six
pence,
the
total
spend
for
more
time,
was
eighteen
thousand
and
fifty
three
pounds.
Thirty
two
pence
and
the
balance
remaining
is
eight
thousand
and
fifty
three
pounds.
Thirty
two
pence
and
round
here
hasn't
had
much
spend
apart
from
the
pins
and
their
balance.
Remaining
remaining
is
forty
five
thousand
three
hundred
and
six
pounds.
Ninety
pence,
any
question
on
them.
E
There
are
two
tables
here
if
you
could
refer
to
paragraph
35
and
that's
in
relation
to
the
spend
to
do
with
the
goldman
funding,
which
has
to
be
spent
by
31st
of
march
2021
and
wheels
are
in
motion
to
get
most
of
the
money
spent.
E
Let's
get
myself
properly
right,
chapel
allerton
world
has
spent
eight
thousand
four
hundred
and
fifty
of
their
10k
spend.
E
There
is
some
projects
outstanding
to
do
with
full
bank
and
fair
share
membership,
which
will
get
them
near
the
10
000
mark,
more
town
have
spent
8006,
but
they've
got
a
chromebook
project
throughout
their
ward
area
and
that'll
get
it
spent
up
to
ten
thousand
and
round
here
have
spent
four
thousand
three
hundred
and
eighty
one
and
they've
got
another
project
to
do
with.
You
know
I
t
equipment
for
the
digitally
excluded,
which
will
get
them
nearly
ten
thousand
pound
mark
all
being
well.
E
E
Okay,
in
addition
to
that,
at
the
beginning
of
the
financial
year
april,
2020
from
your
area
wide
funds
through
the
chess
forum
and
council
debra
cooper,
10k
was
split
between
each
ward
and,
as
you
can
see
on
the
table
below,
it's
got
the
spend
figures
there.
So
from
the
ten
thousand
pounds,
jeopardin
spent
four
thousand
and
forty
pounds,
which
gives
them
a
remaining
of
5960
more
towns
spent
2092
pounds
which
gives
them
a
remaining
of
7908.
E
B
Thank
you
zach
for
your
finance
report.
I
would
like
to
move
on
to
agenda
item
11,
which
is
the
updated
report.
Zach.
Can
you
present
the
update
report
to
us?
Please.
Thank
you.
Yes,
certainly.
E
Just
let
me
go
back
okay.
Can
I
have
members
going
on
to
the
update
report?
Is
page
43
of
the
pack
of
the
additional
document
that
I
emailed
you
today?
E
Can
I
kindly
ask
councillor
suzanne
to
give
us
an
update
on
the
children's
and
families
update
part?
Please.
B
E
B
You
for
that
zach,
the
update.
All
from
myself
is
it's
great
to
see
as
you've
already
mentioned
in
the
report.
B
We
have
had
a
big
issue
with
people:
well,
not
people
with
children
being
excluded
from
school,
not
excluded
in
that
way,
but
excluded
in
the
fact
that
they
couldn't
actually
carry
on
the
work
doing
the
pandemic
at
home,
because
many
many
children
had
an
issue
with
either
broadband
or
internet,
but
the
main
issue
was
actually
having
the
items
to
use.
I
whether
it
was
laptops
or
ipads.
B
I
know
the
government
did
try
to
provide
some,
but
I
think
because
of
funding
being
cut
and
so
and
so
forth,
that
was
very
limited
in
supply.
So
all
three
awards,
I'm
pleased
to
say,
have
picked
up
on
this
issue
and,
like
you
have
mentioned,
we've
had
chapel
alton
ward
they've
already
run
a
project
which
they've
already
provided
30
refurbished
laptops.
Well,
they've
provided
up
to
30
refurbished
laptops
to
the
bracken
edge
primary
school
and
in
the
more
town,
ward,
we're
looking
at
providing
up
to
27
chromebooks
and
in
the
roundabout.
B
They
have
already
provided
15
brand
new
laptops,
specifically
for
those
children
who
are
deprived
from
from
deprived
backgrounds
and
have
no
access
to
digital
equipment.
So
I'm
really
pleased
for
that
and
also
the
youth
service.
I've
done
their
best
to
engage
children
during
during
obviously
government
19,
which
is
still
running,
and,
as
you
alluded
to
earlier,
we
have
been
very
lucky
as
a
community
committee
that
most
of
our
youth
activity
fund
projects
were
actually
funded
and
they
actually
did
take
place.
So
we
have
been
quite
lucky
in
that
sense.
E
Thank
you,
chair.
Moving
on
to
the
report,
we've
already
had
the
update
from
employment
skills
from
councillor
jonathan
pryor
earlier.
E
D
Okay
and
just
to
say,
I'm
not
going
to
go
through
the
full
report
and
just
to
say,
with
regards
to
the
lockdown
measures,
the
cleaner
neighborhoods
team
were
able
to
update
our
risk
assessment
and
safe
working
instruction
for
officers
and
staff
on
the
front
line
and
bring
more
services
back,
and
this
is
following
the
first
lockdown
and
they
tried
to
go
back
to
a
more
area
based
and
zone.
D
Now.
Work
in
in
the
wards
as
they
did
prior
to
covid
staff,
were
dealing
with
a
lot
of
garden
bonfires
due
to
resident
being
forced
to
stay
at
home
and
the
bulky
waste
collection
were
taking
place
and
the
thingy
were
all
open
where
they
had
to
make
appointments
to
deliver
that
okay
and
due
to
the
the
other
national
lock
down
the
community.
The
cleaner
neighborhoods
team
and
keep
saying
community.
D
The
cleaner
neighborhood
teams
have
managed
to
keep
more
services
running
due
to
safe
measure
safety
measures
and
that
that
they
have
to
put
in
place.
They
are
still
running
at
approximately
15
to
20
percent
down
on
staff
due
to
call
with
related
issues
and
staffs
who
are
clinically
extreme
and
vulnerable
are
shielding
and
other
stuff
are
off
with
covid
or
self-isolating.
D
However,
this
fluctuates
in
numbers,
and
so
the
services
still
running
but
with
low
number
of
stuff,
and
then
you
can
see
the
the
list.
There's
the
list
of
the
enforcement
activities
within
the
inner
northeast
area
with
regards
to
flight
tipping
bulky
ways,
litter
enforcement
vegetation
and
that
and
then
few
of
them
down
as
well.
So
I
don't
need
to
go
through
much
more.
D
It's
all
there
and
just
to
say
thanks
to
all
the
stuff
for
and
continuing
to
do
their
best
at
this
most
difficult
time
and
with,
and
so
many
of
them
having
to
to
shield
and
isolate
and
take
covered
precautions.
D
E
I
Thank
you
thank
you,
zachary
and
thank
you,
sir
yeah,
with
obviously
with
with
the
virus
and
people
more
and
more
people
working
with
homeschools
clothes
as
well.
Hence,
more
families,
young
people,
spending
more
time
at
home
that
has
actually
resulted
in
more
cases
of
anti-social,
behavior
or
rise
in
those
cases,
and
our
anti-social
behavior
team
have
actually
continued
to
work.
I
Given
the
the
challenges
and
and
coverage
restrictions
in
terms
of
how
you
could
actually
see
people
and
in
terms
of
the
cases
in
october,
out
of
the
three
worlds,
chaplain
17
after
cases,
four
were
closed,
more
town,
seven,
rounded
nine
november.
I
think
it's
a
very
much
similar
pattern
with
with
maybe
a
very
slight
radiate
variation
and
the
slight
increase
in
around
the
and
chapel
alton
in
december.
I
Although
I
think
more
town
was
around
about
state
stable.
Actually,
the
slight
decrease
five
up
two
cases
in
in
in
more
time,
whereas
around
there
was
nine
in
december
sorry
randy
was
14
at
more
time
six
and
chaplain
for
22..
So
that's
it
really.
You
know
share
in
terms
of
community
safety,
anti-social
behavior,.
E
Thank
you
very
much.
Council
repeat:
can
I
move
on
to
the
I'm
a
health
champion
council
of
wynnum?
I
understand
that
the
public
health
colleagues
have
given
quite
a
lot
of
update
on
the
vaccination
program,
and
I
understand
that
counselor
when
I
will
just
go
through
a
few
of
the
debates.
A
Yes,
I
will
I'm
not
gonna
go
through
it
all.
Thank
you.
It's
just
to
say
that
vaccine
roll
out
has
been
very
successful
and
all
I
would
say
about
the
vaccine.
Some
myths
are
going
around
saying
that
the
vaccine
have
egg
into
an
animal
products
into
it,
and
definitely
it
doesn't-
and
all
I
would
say,
is
if
you
get
a
a
call
or
something
from
saying
that
the
vaccine,
you
can
pay
for
the
vaccine,
please
do
not
accept
it.
Do
contact
the
police
or
call
on
101
and.
A
A
They
should
remember
to
keep
the
distance
wash
their
hands
where
face
masks
when
on
transport
in
shop
or
in
health
settings,
and
if
you
have
any
symptoms,
please
stay
at
home
and
call
119
or
if
you
have
the
symptoms
and
you
have
no
family
or
support
or
friends.
There's
a
telephone
number
which
you
can
ring,
which
is
zero
one
one,
three,
three,
seven,
eight
one,
eight
seven
seven
and
that's
all
I
have
to
say
on
it.
Thank
you.
E
Thank
you,
councillor.
Venom.
That
concludes
the
champions
bay.
I'll
just
quickly
go
through
the
the
envy
of
the
report.
I
am
conscious
of
time.
So
obviously
I
won't
going
through
everything
in
detail.
So
if
I
can
ask
members
to
refer
to
paragraph
52
about
housing
advisory
panels,
just
to
make
members
aware,
the
inner
office
housing
advising
panel
started
the
year
with
a
budget
of
39
109
pounds,
79
pence,
which
included
a
carry
forward
of
6063
pounds,
53
pence.
E
So
so
far,
this
financial
year,
12
projects
have
been
approved
with
an
accumulated
spend
of
twenty
nine
thousand
nine
hundred
and
seventeen
pounds.
Seventeen
pence
and
basically
they've
just
given
a
breakdown
that
the
projects
that
they've
spent
the
money
on
environmental
and
housing
equates
to
two
point:
two:
three
percent
health
and
wellbeing.
E
Moving
on
to
paragraph
55,
the
regional
center,
basically
they've
been
doing
a
lot
of
face-to-face
work
with
their
clients
and
they've,
been
offering
a
range
of
service,
obviously
being
limited
due
to
call
with
19
pandemic,
and
they
are
getting
some
services
back
in.
As
the
easing
of
government
regulations,
job
shop
staff
are
currently
working
remotely
with
customers
via
email
telephone,
offering
the
full
range
of
service,
including
assisting
your
job,
searching,
creating
or
updating
a
cv,
completing
job
applications
and
preparing
for
interviews.
E
That's
the
battery
in
terms
of
the
update
report.
Chair.
Do
you
want
me
to
go
through
the
social
media
update
report.
A
It's
like
to
remind
the
public
that
at
the
moment,
we
are
focusing
and
talking
about
coronavirus
and
seems,
like
every
other
lt
shoe
stop,
but
I'll
also
urge
the
public.
What
there's
any
issues
the
woman
issue,
men
issue
whatever
is
the
doctors
are
still
available
to
contact
and
go
forward
for
any
other
health
issue,
because
right
through
this,
is
all
pandemic.
But
there's
other
health
issues
going
on
in
others
lives,
so
don't
be
afraid
of
consult
your
doctors.
B
E
E
I've
got
the
african
republic
we're
looking
at
the
pdf
document.
It's
on
the
word
document
here
right:
okay,
the
in
an
office.
Facebook
report
includes
the
community
committee,
facebook
page
and
the
individual
public
facebook
pages
to
do
with
the
individuals
awards.
E
So
since
the
16th
of
november
2020,
the
inner
office
community
committee,
facebook
page
has
gained
12
new
page
likes
and
currently
has
1013
followers
in
terms
of
ranking
from
the
10
community
committees.
It's
the
sixth
most
popular
facebook
page
and
the
most
popular
item
on
our
facebook
page
since
the
16th
of
november
to
date
has
been
the
article
about
kovite
19
rates
that
arising
imparts
leads
it's
a
public
health.
E
E
The
second
most
popular
item
was
the
stay
home
stay
home,
save
lives,
message
from
the
government
and
640
is
42.
People
had
this
post
delivered
with
four
reactions
and
the
third
place
was
the
inner
northeast
community
committee
post.
Obviously,
regarding
the
community
committee
meeting
455
people
had
this
post
delivered
to
them.
There
were
five
post
clicks
and
three
reactions
terms
of
the
individual
facebook
pages
coronavirus
pages.
We've
got
some
data
at
the
bottom.
E
Looking
at
chapala
10,
there
were
34
posts,
three
comments
and
seven
reactions
and
there's
a
graph
there
explaining
the
traffic
and
everything
more
town,
39
posts,
no
comments
and
16
reactions
between
the
16th
from
november
2020
to
10th
of
february,
and
unfortunately,
we've
got
an
issue
with
round
here
in
terms
of
getting
the
data
downloaded
from
the
facebook
pages,
and
that's
due
to
the
number
of
people
that
are
on
that
group.
It
needs
to
reach
a
sufficient
number
for
us
to
then
go
into
inside
and
get
this
data
downloaded.
E
B
No
question
zach
and
nobody's
raising
their
hands
and
I'll
finally
like
to
move
on
to
gender
item
12,
which
can
we
get
natasha
to
give
us
the
dates
and
times
and
when
use
of
the
meetings
to
come
in
the
next
physical
in
the
next
year.
A
Thank
you
chair.
I
promise
I'll
take
any
much
more
of
your
time
but
yeah
agenda
item
12
sets
out
the
report
of
the
city
slitter
seeking
members
consideration
of
agreeing
the
full
community
committee
business
meetings
for
the
2021
2010
yeah.
A
Thank
you
sorry.
So
the
proposed
dates
and
times
can
be
found
at
paragraph
a
on
page
62,
and
just
to
note
that
efforts
have
been
made
to
avoid
having
more
than
one
community
committee
on
the
same
day.
This
just
allows
for
officers
to
attend
and
for
webcast
webcasting
purposes.
Whilst
we
continue
to
hold
meetings
remotely
police
can
ask
members
to
consider
whether
they're
agreeable
of
the
following
dates.
A
B
Can
I
just
come
in
there?
I
think
council
delton
is
raising
her.
J
C
Yeah,
it's
really
difficult.
Obviously,
while
we
still
have
the
pandemic
and
even
despite
the
government's
sort
of
rules,
a
lot
of
them
are
it'll
happen
depending
on
these
different
things,
so
we're
still
not
not
quite
sure
whether
we'll
be
able
to
physically
meet
or
not
at
this
precise
moment.
But
what
we
were
discussing
is
actually
having
a
business
meeting,
which
is
what
we
do
now,
but
having
it
a
little
earlier,
but
then
having
more
community
engagement
events,
I
mean
we're
supposed
to
have
four
a
year.
C
Anyway,
we
were
going
to
have
one
in
each
ward
that
would
be
weekend
or
evening
so
that
residents
could
come
along
and
and
discuss
different
themes,
because
I
mean
I
don't
know
how
many
members
of
the
public
have
actually
joined
us
today.
But
business
meetings
tend
to
be
quite
dry.
C
We
could
have
had
the
transport
as
a
separate
residence
meeting
where
people
could
come
and
talk
about
that
as
well
potentially
could
have
had
the
the
covert
or
health
as
an
issue.
I
mean
it
just
it's
very
formulaic
having
six
o'clock
on
a
set
evening.
It's
very
difficult
I'll
point
it
out
for
next
year,
because
I
don't
think
there's
a
lot.
C
We
can
do
about
it
this
year,
but
I
would
like
to
see
more
participation
by
members
of
the
public
and
we're
not
going
to
do
that
by
mixing
this
kind
of
agenda
with
a
themed
agenda
that
people
will
want
to
come
and
talk
about.
That's
just
a
point
I
wanted
to
make.
I
know
there's
not
a
lot
we
can
do
about
it
this
year.
B
Thanks
councillor
dalton,
you
raised
an
interesting
point.
I
think
council
hamilton's
got
a
hand
raised,
counts,
hamilton.
D
Yeah
I
was
just
agreeing
with
with
jane
with
regards
to
scene
meetings
such
as,
obviously
the
elf
one
and
the
transport.
I
definitely
agree
that
we
said
that's
what
we're
going
to
do,
but
obviously
things
changed
due
to
the
pandemic
last
year
and
this
year
and
obviously
going
forward,
but
we
still
have
to
set
these
dates.
Don't
we
so
we
don't
really
have
a
choice
we
can.
If
we,
if
we're
out
of
lockdown,
we
we
can
do
this,
can't
we
and
other
business
meetings
at
another
time.
D
B
Thank
you,
council
dancer
and
council
hamilton
yeah.
I
think
when
I
did
become
chair.
That
was
one
of
the
things
that
we
were
looking
at
doing
and
I'll
chair.
B
I
don't
know
if
I
will
still
be
chair
next
year,
but
if
I
am
the
actual
theme
meetings
are
something
that
we
will
definitely
look
into
and
obviously
the
business
meetings
we
will
obviously
carry
on
as
they
are
and
agree
with
the
dates
as
are
set
because,
as
council
hamilton
has
pointed
out
for
governance
spaces
and
for
officers
time
and
everything,
these
things
have
to
be
sorted
out
in
advance,
so
obviously
moving
the
time
earlier
in
the
in
the
following
year.
B
That
could
be
a
possibility,
but
I
think,
unless
anybody
disagrees,
are
we
all
in
agreement
with
these
dates
and
times
at
the
moment,
I'll
take
silence
as
a
yes
yeah
silence
from
everyone
and
agreement,
so
we're
all?
Okay
with
that
and
natasha.
B
B
And
I
think
that
brings
us
to
the
end
of
the
meeting
unless
anybody's
got
any
other
business
to
bring
up.
B
B
Yeah-
and
I
would
just
like
to
say
to
you
all
thank
you
very
much-
today's
meeting
was
extended
and
I
knew
because
of
the
call
with
vaccine
roll
out.
It
would
get
extended.
That's
why
I
asked
for
the
extra
half
an
hour
and
really
appreciate
everybody
participating
fully
and
thank
you
to
the
public
who
have
been
watching
us
for
two
and
a
half
hours
as
well.
I
have
had
a
few
messages
we
have.
B
We
have
had
quite
a
few
people
actually
watching
us,
so
I
don't
know
what
the
exact
figures
are,
but
I
have
had
some
messages
already,
so
I
think
councilor
dalton
has
got
one
final
point.
No.
C
H
B
Thank
you
very
much,
and
I
would
like
to
thank
all
my
fellow
counselors
and
all
the
officers
throughout
the
throughout
the
year.
Obviously,
with
the
pandemic
has
been
a
difficult
time,
but
to
actually
get
the
meetings
back
online,
so
the
public
can
actually
view
them
and
and
the
fact
that
we
have
been
able
to
have
such
interesting
meetings
online
and
get
through
agendas
which
have
been
quite
complex.