20 Telford & Wrekin Council Plan PDF 297 KB
To receive an update on the Telford & Wrekin Council Plan.
Additional documents:
Minutes:
The Leader of the Council presented the report of the Director: Policy & Governance.
The report presented the updated Council Plan which sought to drive delivery of the Council’s vision to “protect, care and invest to create a better borough” during the period 2024/25 to 2026/27.
In order to deliver the Council’s vision, the Council Plan identified four priorities:
· Every child, young person and adult lives well in their community
· Everyone benefits from a thriving economy
· All neighbourhoods are a great place to live
· Our natural environment is protected, and the Council has a leading role in addressing the climate emergency
Significant progress had been made on delivering against these priorities which included being the first Council in the West Midlands to be judged outstanding in successive inspections by Ofsted for Children’s Social Care Services. A reduction in the number of referrals for safeguarding and statutory services by 30%. There had been an increase in the number of offenders referred for treatment from criminal justice of 44.2% in the 12 months ending May 2024 compared to 2023/24 and continued to deliver one of the best alcohol treatment rates in the country. Some 340 units of extra care housing had been delivered in 2024/25 to support specialised living accommodation. The Council had provided over 37,500 people with over £7m in support including £100 given to 6,000 pensioners, together with financial support through a variety of welfare support schemes including household support fund, discretionary housing payments, emergency welfare assistance and council tax hardship fund during 23/24 and 24/25. A sum of £1.17m had been invested in environmental improvements and enhancements into local parks, nature reserves and green guarantee sites with some 11,664 trees being planted and the creation of 32 new wildflower areas.
Investment had taken place to expand schools and education centres making these more accessible to everyone. Regeneration had taken place on the high street, new factories had been built, together with start-up units and the regionally significant Agri-tech Park enabling the private sector to create job opportunities for residents.
The key priority remained that that the communities were the best place to live and work with a thriving economy, improved high streets, factories and business units come, stay and extend bringing job opportunities, expanding the school and education offer to the centre of town, protecting the local natural environment in Telford.
The final commitment was that the Council be efficient, effective and innovative in order to maintain the lowest council tax in the Midlands, make wise investments with the surplus supporting front line services in order to protect, care and invest in the Borough.
Cabinet Members expressed that the plan was linked to the vision document which had been created following significant resident input. The four priorities provided services to match the Council’s high expectations and to be on the side of residents. Protecting, caring and investing was at its heart, enabling everyone to live well and ensuring neighbourhoods were a great place to live. The Council is a community ... view the full minutes text for item 20