Venue: Sparkenhoe Committee Room, County Hall, Glenfield
Contact: Mrs. J. Twomey (0116 305 6462) Email: joanne.twomey@leics.gov.uk
Note: Change to meeting room - this meeting will now be held in the Guthlaxton Committee room at County Hall.
No. | Item |
---|---|
Appointment of Chairman. To
note that Mr L Spence CC was nominated as Chairman elect to the Children and
Families Overview and Scrutiny Committee at the County Council meeting held on
21 May 2014. Minutes: That Mr.
L. Spence CC be appointed Chairman of the Children and Families Overview and
Scrutiny Committee for the period ending with the date of the Annual Meeting of
the County Council in 2015. (Mr. L. Spence CC in the Chair) |
|
Election of Deputy Chairman. Minutes: That
Mr. P. Lewis CC be elected Deputy Chairman of the Children and Families
Overview and Scrutiny Committee for the period ending with the date of the
Annual Meeting of the County Council in 2015. |
|
Minutes: The minutes of the meeting held on 24 March 2014 were taken as read, confirmed and signed. |
|
Question Time. Minutes: The Chief Executive reported that no questions had been received under Standing Order 35. |
|
Questions asked by members under Standing Order 7(3) and 7(5). Minutes: The Chief Executive reported that three questions had been received under Standing Order 7(3) and 7(5) from Mr P. Lewis CC. Mr Lewis CC asked the following questions: “Context: Leicestershire County Council currently
administers all admissions and appeals to schools in the County, including
Academies. While the schools administer
the process, the County Admissions Office inform the schools of the number of
applications following the closing date. Following this, parents either give up or
move to their second or third choice, or they go on a waiting list for their
first choice. If that is not open to
them, or they are too far down the waiting list so as to appear pointless, they
may then decide to proceed with appeals. It should be noted that, when a school is
informed it is full but there are numbers on the waiting list, there is no
certainty those offered a place will arrive.
They have time to consider before accepting such offers. Schools rarely know how many have gone to formal
appeal. Nor does a school know why or on
what evidence decisions have been made to uphold or reject an appeal. They are simply informed that X numbers have
been successful and which children must be admitted. Each appeal - successful or not - is charged
to the school and costs the school £460 on average. The appeal cost has to be paid by Academies
out of their budget, unlike in County run schools where it is a paper
accounting transfer, not an actual charge to the budget. As Academies have no knowledge of the numbers
involved, planned budgeting becomes very difficult. Academies are increasingly concerned over
this charging when they have no control whatsoever over this process prior to
them receiving a bill. Question:
(i)
Is the
above an accurate reflection of the current process and costs? (ii) Would it not be fairer to levy a charge only
if the parents appealing are successful?
(iii) Is it considered fair that the cost of
indeterminate numbers of unsuccessful appeals should fall upon and penalise
individual schools?” Mr Spence CC replied as follows: “(i) In accordance with the national
coordinated scheme, the Authority administers all admissions, but only
administers appeals for those academies that elect to buy into our service
level agreement. Not all academies have
bought in. The process
outlined in paragraph 2 of Mr Lewis’ question is broadly correct, but it will
vary depending on each individual circumstance. It is incorrect that
schools rarely know how many have gone to formal appeal or on what evidence
decisions have been made to either uphold or reject an appeal. Schools are advised of the number of appeals
as part of the appeal preparation process. The Academy as Admission Authority
is entitled to reasons for the decisions of the appeal panel and copies of
decision letters can be provided. In respect of the
cost detailed in paragraph 5 of Mr Lewis’ question the current charge made by
the County Council to schools is the Department for Education’s (DfE)
recommended rate of £180 (plus on costs).
This cost covers the costs of the appeal presenting officer and legal
support for the clerking of the appeal. Panel members are all volunteers and
there is no charge for their time. It is correct that the above charges have to be paid by Academies out of their budget and academies are free to choose who to engage to run their appeals. Academy business managers can always contact the Authority’s admissions service to assess how many appeals were lodged, heard, etc., in the preceding year in order ... view the full minutes text for item 5. |
|
Urgent Items. Minutes: There were no urgent items for consideration. |
|
Declarations of interest in respect of items on the agenda. Minutes: The Chairman invited members who wished to do so to declare any interest in respect of items on the agenda for the meeting. Mr D. Snartt CC, Mr L. Spence CC and Mr G. Welsh CC declared
personal interests in matters relating to schools as they had family members
who taught in Leicestershire. Mr L. Spence CC indicated that, whilst this did not amount
to an interest to be declared at this meeting, he felt it relevant to report
that he sometimes worked for an academy within the County. |
|
Declarations of the Party Whip in accordance with Overview and Scrutiny Procedure Rule 16. Minutes: There were no declarations of the party whip. |
|
A petition signed by 192 residents is to be presented by Cllr Simon Sansom, a member of Charnwood Borough Council, in the following terms: “We the undersigned
call upon Leicestershire County Council to build a primary school in the Birstall
area of Hallam Fields. Currently
children have to walk to Riverside Primary School crossing a busy dual
carriageway twice a day placing children at risk.” Minutes: A petition submitted and signed by 192 local residents was
presented to the Committee by Mr Simon Sansome, a
District Councillor for Charnwood Borough Council. The petition requested that the County
Council build a primary school in the Birstall area
of Hallam Fields, as currently children had to walk to Riverside Primary School
crossing a busy dual carriageway twice a day, placing children at risk. With the consent of the Chairman, Cllr. Sansome
addressed the Committee and advised of the concerns raised by local families
who had signed the petition. In
particular, residents were concerned that Riverside Primary School was becoming
overpopulated due to the development at Hallam Fields where in the region of
550 homes had now been completed. Cllr Sansome highlighted that the County Council had entered
into a S106 planning agreement for a new school to be constructed at Hallam
Fields as part of the development and suggested that this was now needed to
support future primary school places in the area. Cllr. Sansome raised a query
regarding the number of residents that had signed the petition, as he had
calculated this to be in excess of 250, and not 192 as stated on the
agenda. The Chief Executive undertook to
confirm the number of signatories listed on the petition received from Cllr Sansome after the meeting. With the consent of the Chairman, Mr I. Bentley CC, the
local member for Birstall, addressed the Committee
and confirmed that work had been undertaken to address the concerns raised
locally and to plan for future school places in the area. He confirmed that a report would be considered
by the Cabinet at its next meeting which related to this issue. Arising from the discussion, the following points arose: (i)
Concerns had been raised by local residents that as part of the
Hallam Fields development, a new community centre had been constructed in line
with the S106 agreement, but that priority should have been given to the
construction of the new school, which could also have served any community
needs. Members agreed there was a
general need to ensure any request made by the County Council for S106
developer contributions and the terms agreed for payment were robust. It was suggested that the terms of future
agreements may need to be tightened to ensure appropriate emphasis was given to
priority infrastructure requirements; (ii)
Members supported the Lead Member on the need for all District
Council’s to support requests made by the County Council to ensure any
infrastructure required to facilitate a development was provided. Developers were increasingly challenging such
agreements on the grounds of viability and this was beginning to have a
significant impact on the County Council and on local residents; In response to questions raised,
the Director and Lead Member confirmed the following: (iii)
The need for school places had fluctuated since the commencement
of the development at Hallam Fields.
Under the previous government, the availability of surplus places had to
be taken into account when considering developer contributions. This had now changed; (iv)
Recent projections had identified that there would be a need for
further primary school places in the Birstall area
from 2015 and work had been undertaken to identify a way forward; (v) The Cabinet would be considering a report in private session at its meeting on 17 June regarding the revision of the developer contribution agreement for Birstall to meet the requirement ... view the full minutes text for item 9. |
|
Additional documents:
Minutes: The Committee considered a report of the Director of Children and Family Services, the purpose of which was to present the Local Safeguarding Children Board/Safeguarding Adult Board (LSCB/SAB) Business Plan for 2014/15 and the LSCB/SAB Performance Management Framework, as requested by the Committee at its meeting on 11 November. A copy of the report is filed with these minutes. The Chairman welcomed Mr Paul Burnett, the independent Chair of the LSCB/SAB, to the meeting. Arising from discussion, the following points were noted: (i)
The Performance Framework had been used to
identify key priority areas that formulated the Business Plan for 2014/15; (ii)
Several organisations, including the County
Council, had rated themselves as ‘partially compliant’ in the 2013-14 section
11 audit (i.e. a self-assessment audit required under the Children Act 2004 to
check an organisations functions are discharged having regard to the need to
safeguard and promote the welfare of children and young people). This had been due to the 2013 Working
Together to Safeguard Children guidance that introduced several changes which
were still being adopted at the time of the audit. The independent Chair of the LSCB confirmed
that such ratings were not a concern to the Board at this stage; (iii)
There had been a significant increase in the
number of referrals into the First Response, Central Duty team. This was a trend being seen nationally. The Board would monitor progress, but it was
hoped that over the next 18 months figures would decline, as the introduction
of Early Help Services fully bedded in; (iv)
The timeliness of carrying out initial
assessments for childrens social care had been highlighted as an issue. An action plan had been put in place to
respond. However, the delays shown in
the data resulted from a technical problem with the current electronic system,
Framework-i. This had automatically
logged a number of children as requiring an assessment when one was not needed. The Director reported that a manual assessment
had confirmed that 97% of initial assessments required were conducted within
the required 10 working day timescale, but acknowledged that it was important
for this data was captured correctly; (v)
Leicestershire County Council had a low number
of private fostering arrangements notified to it when compared to its
statistical neighbours. The reasoning
for this was being looked at by the Board and there were future proposal to
hold a publicity campaign to raise awareness and encourage people to come forward
with such information. It was likely
that some families feared contact with social services and providing
information on the help and support that could be provided by the service would
form a key part of this campaign to break down such barriers; (vi)
Further work would take place with partners
(e.g. GP’s and schools) to ensure information regarding private fostering
arrangements was being shared with the Authority. Close joint working on this issue had proved
successful in other authority areas; (vii)
In response to questions raised regarding the
private fostering publicity campaign, the Committee noted that this would be
funded out of contributions made by the statutory agencies (resources had
already been allocated as this had been identified as a priority within the
Business Plan) and all age groups would be targeted as well as schools and
other agencies that would have contact with children under 5 and young people
over 16 years. (viii) The LSCB now had a responsibility to monitor children placed out of county to ensure they were being regularly seen and reviewed. This would be an area assessed by Ofsted under the new inspection framework. Often children were based out of ... view the full minutes text for item 10. |
|
The Leicester-Shire Music Education Hub - Further Developments in Music Education. Additional documents:
Minutes: The Committee considered a report of the Director of Children and Family Services, the purpose of which was to update the Committee on national developments in music education, plans to reshape and refocus the Leicester-Shire Music Service (the Service) and music opportunities offered in response to the Nation Plan for Music Education. A copy of the report is filed with these minutes. The Chairman reported that Diane Rivaud, Service Manager for
Music Services, had been unable to attend the meeting but thanked her on behalf
of the Committee for the detailed report provided. Arising from discussion, the following points were noted: (i)
The Committee welcomed the good work being
achieved by the Service and acknowledged the significant progress it had made
in the development of a number of broad music activities for children and young
people across the County and the City; (ii)
Many teachers teaching music across the County
were not permanently employed by the Leicester-Shire Music Education Hub (the
Music Hub) but were commissioned as necessary.
Each teacher was assessed and quality assured in advance; (iii)
The Pupil Premium received by schools could be
used as it thought appropriate to help children in care achieve their
potential. This was currently used to
support the free hire of instruments for approximately 70 such children; (iv)
Although 22% of county primary schools were not
engaged in Whole Class Ensemble Teaching this did not mean they were missing
out. Such children still received good music
education but accessed this through a different programme. It was a national programme that required all
schools to be engaged in music education, but it was up to each individual
school to determine how to take this forward.
For parents interested in their child taking part in some form of music
education, they would need to contact their local school;; (v)
It was noted that Ofsted would assess each
schools music education provisions as part of an inspection; (vi)
Music played an important role in a child’s
education. The Committee noted that the
Children in Care choir had gone from strength to strength and would be
performing at the Curve Theatre shortly; (vii)
The Music Hub provided a county wide service and
it was questioned to what extent transport difficulties acted as a barrier in
some areas. The Director of Children and
Family Services undertook to obtain such information from the Music Service and
provide this to members after the meeting. RESOLVED: That the contents of the report and the good work undertaken
by the Leicester-Shire Music Education Hub be noted. |
|
Quarter 4 2013/14 Performance Report. Additional documents:
Minutes: The Committee considered a joint report of the Director of Children and Family Services and the Chief Executive, the purpose of which was to present the Children and Family Services performance data as at the end of quarter four of 2013/14. A copy of the report is filed with these minutes. Arising from discussion, the following points were noted: (i)
The format of future reports would change as
Supporting Leicestershire Families and Safer Communities performance data was
incorporated; (ii)
It was questioned what would be done with the
information obtained from the wellbeing survey conducted by the Children’s
Society. It was suggested that this did
not provide any meaningful data as responses to the three questions raised
could change on a day to day basis.
Issues such as, ‘what was a healthy diet’, were also very
subjective. It was acknowledged that
this was a difficult topic to assess and the Committee suggested that further
in depth questions now needed to be raised to obtain a better understanding of
the responses provided; (iii)
The Committee discussed age range changes made
by schools and agreed that securing the best outcomes for children should form
the basis of any decision by a school to make such changes. It would be important to see which schools
were getting better outcomes and whether age range changes had affected
educational performance over the last 12 months. The Committee noted that it would be
receiving at its meeting in November a report on Key Stage 3 and 4
performance. The Committee noted that
there was no longer an obligation on academies to consult the Authority on any
proposal to make age range changes; (iv)
To support Children in Care professionals had
acknowledged the need to ensure help was provided early and that it was
understood that trauma could manifest itself in a young person’s behaviour at
any time. It was noted that broadening
the understanding of issues affecting children in care more widely was
important. (v)
In response to questions regarding the role of
members as corporate parents, it was noted that the involvement of members
through the Virtual School to observe, listen and engage with young people
would be helpful. In addition, members
as school governors could work to ensure that the pupil premium for each child
in care was being utilised to its full potential. Members were also invited to attend meetings
of the Corporate Parenting Board where young people were present and were able
to voice their concerns on a range of issues. RESOLVED: That the contents of the report be noted. |
|
Children Missing Education and Pupils Missing Out on Education. Minutes: The Committee considered a report of the Director of Children and Family Services, the purpose of which was to inform the Committee about the new statutory guidance issues by the Department for Education (DfE) on ‘Children Missing Education’ and the Ofsted report on ‘Pupils Missing Out on Education’. A copy of the report is filed with these minutes. Arising from discussion, the following points were raised: (i)
Children and Family Services had taken action to
tighten its systems for dealing with children missing education and a project
had been developed for managing pupils missing out on education. The Authority was working collectively with
partners, particularly schools, and good progress had been made. However, information sharing and ensuring a
quick response would be critical going forward; (ii)
Notification of when a pupil was excluded from
school, including private schools, should be given to the Authority. It was the statutory responsibility of the
Authority to ensure that every child received 25 hours a week of
education. For children permanently
excluded from school the Authority would work with a child’s family to ensure
alternative schooling arrangements were established; (iii)
A key area of concern related to those children
who were not on a school roll and the whereabouts of the child were not known
to the Authority. This was an area of
particular focus for the Department and the Lead Member who received fortnightly
reports on young people recorded as being absent or missing out on education; (iv)
In response to questions raised, the Director
confirmed the following: a. If a child was removed from school to be home educated, the Department worked closely with parents to ensure an education plan was in place and regular visits and inspections were undertaken; b. Information sharing with schools in bordering county schools was a priority issue and regional meetings with peers were being held to ensure a common framework was in place to support information sharing both with and by the County Council; c.
There was no statutory requirement for an
authority to be informed of when a child was born. Links were established, however, through
Children Centres, health visitors, GP’s, schools and school nurses to ensure
the County Council was made aware, as far as possible, of children and young
people living in the area and those moving to and from it; (v)
It was questioned if and how links with families
in the armed forces were made to ensure their children accessed school and education
services and what the Authority’s role was, if any, in monitoring the movement
of armed forces children in and out of the area. The Committee further requested information
on the number of CME/PME cases that involved armed forces children who were in
mainstream schools. The Director
undertook to confirm what arrangements were in place and to report back to
members after the meeting; (vi) The Authority monitored and held discussions with Head Teachers where concerns over reports of forced marriage had been raised, particularly when a child was taken out of school as a result. RESOLVED: (a) That the contents of the report be noted; (b) That the Director of Children and Family Services be requested to clarify to members the role of the County Council in ensuring that children from families in the armed forces that move to the area do not miss out on education.
|
|
Date of next meeting. The next meeting of the Commission is scheduled to take place on Monday, 1 September 2014 at 2.00pm. Minutes: RESOLVED: It was noted that the next meeting of the Committee would be held on Monday 1 September 2014 at 2.00pm. |