The report of the Head of Policy provided the
Outer North East Community Committee with an update on the Best
City Ambition refresh and sought to gather input from Elected
Members and residents.
The Head of Policy outlined the following
information:
- The Best City Ambition had been
presented to the Outer North East Community Committee two years ago
when the ambition was originally being developed.
- The previous feedback provided by
Members had been reflected on and reviewed to be incorporated into
the ambition, particularly focused on the comments regarding the
importance of monitoring progress.
- 2021 census data had contributed to
the refreshed plans and further comments were sought from Members
to develop the first update of the document.
- The Best City Ambition was the
overall vision for the future of Leeds and was built upon the three
pillars (health and wellbeing, inclusive growth and net zero)
alongside promotion of the Team Leeds values.
- Tackling poverty and inequality was
a key strategic element of the ambition and despite the financial
context, plans remained ambitious and optimistic.
- The Best City Ambition had been
adopted in February 2022 and had replaced the Best Council Plan.
Since its adoption peer reviews had been conducted which had
contributed to wide ownership of the ambition across Council
Departments, partners and stakeholders.
- Key focuses for the evolution of the
ambition were to fill gaps in the current version, refine the three
ambition statements, underpin the fifteen priorities and to develop
the Team Leeds approach. The updated version was scheduled to be
submitted to Full Council in February 2024.
- Reflections on the Outer North East
Census 2021 data, compared with 2011 data, noted that the
population had grown by 4.9% which was below the 8.1% average for
Leeds. This was expected given the outer areas having less
population density. Housing tenure for the area remained stable.
Transport and work model data outlined that 43% of people worked
from home and 44% of people regularly drove to work. Bus patronage
had fallen by around 50%.
- The Outer North East area level 4
qualification education rate was around 10% higher than the Leeds
average and reported health rates remained consistent with the
Leeds average.
- The religious landscape data
outlined that nearly 30% of the Outer North East population were
non-religious, there had been around 6,000 less people who
identified as Christian than in 2011, people identifying with
Judaism had fallen by around 1,000 and people identifying with
Islam had rose by around 1,000 people.
- Models for assessing progress were
outlined to be conducted through key performance indicators
contained in the Health and Wellbeing Strategy, Inclusive Growth
Strategy and Climate Action Plan.
- Long term analysis will be provided
via the Leeds social progress index and periodic deeper city
analysis will be provided every three years by the Joint Strategic
Assessment.
- As part of the social progress
index, an online tool was shown to Members which allowed breakdown
of data to a ward level, identifying a range of indicators. It was
noted that this data will change over time and more will be added
before Christmas 2023.
The Committee discussed the
following:
- The breakdown of data
to a Ward specific level was noted to be useful, however, this may
lead to a disparity in funding and amenity and service provision
for smaller areas of deprivation within a Ward, that overall scored
well in the social progress index.
- In response it was
outlined that data for lower super output areas, where a selection
of streets comprising of around a thousand people, was in
development and the ambition will aim to address poverty in all
locations across the district, on an evidence based
approach.
- It was noted that
once the Joint Strategic Assessment data becomes available the data
points will be vast, but where possible, will be broken down to
Ward and super output area levels. Deprivation data was readily
available at that level already.
- As one of the
presentation slides had contained education data relating to Inner
East areas, Outer North East data was to be provided to
Members.
- Although the data was
available at a Ward level, it would require additional work to
provide data at a Community Committee level due to the complexity
of indexing data for the online tool.
- Although overall
Outer North East areas may be considered to be more affluent,
headline figures can mask deprivation and it can be difficult to be
poor in these Wards due to lacking service provision when compared
to inner city areas.
- The success of the
ambitions of the approach will be demonstrated by a reduction in
inequality across all Wards and by benchmarking data, through the
Joint Strategic Assessment, against other core cities.
- If the Census data
from 2021 outlining that 43% of people work from home, which was at
the height of Covid-19 Pandemic, was to influence travel plans,
this may further reduce public transport provision.
- The context of when
data was gathered needs to be given significant weight and the
Census 2021 data had been utilised due its scale and was useful to
compare different areas across Leeds.
- The stakeholders
involved in the ambition’s consultation process were Council
Departments, citizen and community groups.
- Consultation had also
been conducted through the Big Leeds Chat 2021, where a roadshow
model had visited important community institutions, such as village
halls, to directly engage with the public regarding their views on
how to improve service provision and life quality in Leeds. It was
noted this process was to be repeated to keep figures and views
updated.
- Members noted public
consultation models often have a limited scope and people with less
heard voices may not have engaged with The Big Leeds
Chat.
- The level of analysis
and scrutiny of data was queried as influence on, for example,
poverty or crime reduction initiatives, should not exclude
individuals based on averages for the area.
- Data showing high
numbers of people working from home aligned with reduced broadband
speed figures. Campaigning for better provision in the Outer areas
was ongoing but clearly essential. Members requested an item be
brought to the Committee for consideration in order to improve the
situation.
- Early years service
provision was noted to be low in the Outer North East areas and
would need improving in order to provide equality of care across
all Wards in Leeds and support present and future
families.
- As broadband and
childcare provision were primarily provided by private
institutions, the amount of Council influence was queried for these
key services. Officers outlined providers can be lobbied and thus
hold some influence on where further provision is
required.
- It was confirmed that
the health and quality of rivers was not included as part of the
water and sanitation data. In response, Members recommended that
this should be incorporated to enrich the data and online
tool.
- In order to monitor
progress over time, percentages tracked in each Ward can assist
with allocating resources where most needed and any decrease in a
key indicator can be targeted.
- Working from home
data should be broken down further to assist with understanding
full time or part time working from home models and associated
commutes in order to improve transport provision. It was noted that
more recent data may be acquired from the Office of National
Statistics and labour market surveys.
- Caution was expressed
in regard to using and relying on Census data from 2021 as this was
an unprecedented, fundamentally different time. The notion of
building plans for the city and influencing a suite of services on
this data was deemed inappropriate. It was outlined that the
working from home data was not going to be part of the Joint
Strategic Assessment or social progress index.
RESOLVED
– That to the contents of the report and
presentation, be noted, along with the comments and recommendations
as made by Members as part of the discussion.
(Councillor D Cohen joined the meeting during consideration of
this item)