Children’s centres latest

We are frequently asked for latest news on children’s centres. Here’s the latest County Council briefing.

This briefing updates you on the latest position with the council’s proposals for children’s services and its work with communities to identify local solutions for the delivery of open access services for children.

Children’s Centres & Early Intervention Hub Contract Extension

In February 2016 Cabinet approved the proposals for new arrangements for an integrated children’s social care and early intervention service to support children and families in Oxfordshire. It was recently announced that county council contracts for Oxfordshire’s children’s centres and early intervention hubs have been extended until 31 March 2017. This extension provides time for Cabinet to consider how to allocate an additional £2m that the council agreed not to cut from the early intervention services, when the budget was set in February.

A decision on how the additional £2m will be spent will be taken by Cabinet on 24 May. Information about the proposals is available on our website here, and we will be sending further updates after this decision is taken by Cabinet.

Community Engagement

The extension of contracts will give us more time to continue working with communities to develop the best possible local solutions for the continuation of open access services. We are now planning to host a community engagement event in November 2016, and any new community initiatives will likely be in place in March 2017.

We will shortly be updating our website, draft community framework and FAQs to reflect our new timeline. In the meantime we continue to welcome any enquiries from community groups who would be interested in continuing open access non-statutory services in their area.

Next Ward Focus meeting

All welcome!

Date: Tuesday 31st May

Time: 6:00 – 7:30 pm

Place: Headington Baptist Church Hall, Old High Street

Guest speaker: Kirsten Johnson on Staying In: the Euro Referendum

An Open Session for your comments too! Free of charge. All welcome! Bring your councillors to account!

Ward Focus meetings are run on a drop in and out basis and are free of charge. There is an open session where residents can raise issues of concern. There’s no need to book.

If you would like to contact your Lib Dem city councillors for advice on any issue please contact

Don’t forget the energy pipe drop-in tomorrow 18th May

Invitation to Community Drop-In Exhibition on the Oxford University Hospital Energy Link Project

The Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and Vital Energi are preparing a planning application for The Oxford University Hospital Energy Link project.

Before we submit a planning application to Oxford City Council, we would like hear your views on the proposed route of the Energy Link and how we intend to minimise disruption during construction activities. 

To find out more about the benefits of the scheme and to comment on the project, you are invited to visit a community drop-in exhibition on Wednesday, 18th May, 2016 at:  

                League of Friends Café, Churchill Hospital, Old Road from 8.30am – 11.00am

                League of Friends Café, John Radcliffe Hospital, Headley Way from 3.00pm – 6.00pm

We hope to welcome you at the exhibition. Members of the project team will be on hand to listen to feedback and answer any questions.

If you are unable to attend, the exhibition material will be uploaded from 18th May, 2016 online at www.ouh.nhs.uk/about/developments/energy.  

In the meantime, if you have any questions, please do not hesitate to contact Jo Lennon, Community & Stakeholder Liaison by phone on 07342 086843 or by email at hospitalenergyproject@ouh.nhs.uk.

For and on behalf of Vital Energi and The Oxford University NHS Foundation Trust

 

Our ward councillor Altaf-Khan is now Lord Mayor of Oxford

Ruth congratulates Altaf on becoming Lord Mayor of Oxford on 16th May

Ruth congratulates Altaf on becoming Lord Mayor of Oxford on 16th May

Headington Ward councillor Altaf-Khan was elevated to the position of Lord Mayor of Oxford yesterday at Oxford Town Hall.

He was proposed by ward colleague Cllr Ruth Wilkinson and seconded by Leader of the Council Bob Price.

The Headington Lib Dem team is proud that he has been accorded this honour.

At the speech-making ceremony, Altaf thanked the people of Headington and Marston for the support they had shown him in the ten years he has represented them at city and county level.

He said:

I stand here after 10 years of my services as a city councillor. I deeply humbled and honoured for giving me this opportunity to be the lord mayor of our great city, Oxford.

In line with our golden traditions, I will serve my position, my people, my city above all prejudices.

Lets build our city, one nation, one Great Britain.

 

 

What is reasonable? Taking children out of school for holidays.

The latest news on this has caused much debate, and we expect more at our Ward Focus meeting on the 31st.

Here are Professor John Howson’s thoughts on this. John is a Lib Dem County Councillor in North Oxford, as well as an expert on education.

Until we see the full judgement in the recent case we won’t know what the judges in the High Court were thinking when they seemed to deemed it ‘reasonable’ for a parent to be able to take a child on holiday for a week during school term-time.

It is worth recalling that the overarching responsibility of parents is to see that their children receive an education when they are of compulsory school-age (there is a grey area for young people between the ages of 16-18 that will need clarification at some point.)

For young people between 5-16 the law says:

Duty of parents to secure education of children of compulsory school age.

The parent of every child of compulsory school age shall cause him to receive efficient full-time education suitable—

(a)to his age, ability and aptitude, and

(b)to any special educational needs he may have,

either by regular attendance at school or otherwise

The issue turns on the definition of ‘regular attendance.’ If the parent, as most do, hands over the responsibility to the State, what is the nature of the contract between the parent and the State?  The State agrees to provide the child with 190 days of schooling per year. It is accepted that children may be off sick and there may be other reasons for a child not to be present, but these will require ‘leave’ to be absent.

In the 1990s two things happened, Ofsted started reporting regularly on attendance levels at schools and the State wanted to drive up standards of education that were thought to be falling. As a result, the law was tightened to ensure regular attendance, with two defences; ‘sickness or unavoidable cause’ or ’with leave’. Historically, schools could grant up to 10 days leave, but that right was removed over time.

The government explained the basis for this change in relation to family holidays in the background to the secondary legislation making the change.

 The 2006 Regulations refer to parents applying for family holiday in “special circumstances” and to schools having discretion to grant up to ten school days of holiday per year. Many parents and some schools have interpreted this law as an automatic entitlement to an annual two-week term time holiday. The Education (Pupil Registration) (England) (Amendment) Regulations 2013 amend the 2006 Regulations to clarify that leave of absence during term time shall not be granted unless there are “exceptional circumstances”.

They further explained that;

For pupils to benefit from education and achieve their full potential they must attend school regularly. School attendance data from 2010/11 showed that 90 per cent of pupils with an absence rate of less than 4 per cent achieved 5 or more A*- C grades at GCSE or equivalent. In primary schools, 4 out of 5 pupils with an absence rate of less than 4 per cent achieved level 4 or above in both English and mathematics.

As Oxfordshire County Council’s document on the subject for parents notes;

90% attendance means that your child is absent from lessons for the equivalent of one half day per week.

So how draconian should the State be? Personally, I think in the first year of schooling  when routines are being set and key topics may be being learnt for the first time every effort should be made to attend and taking time out may not be helpful either for the child or their classmates if it disrupts the teaching. As a rule of thumb after that I think where pupils are rarely or never off sick, the guidelines in the old 10-day rule probably provided a sensible rule of thumb for head teachers. After all, some parents cannot take holidays during school holiday period because of the nature of their jobs. However, if a child has missed a lot of time through sickness, taking time off turning term-time that year for a holiday isn’t a good idea and I would expect a head teacher to refuse ‘leave’.

Essentially, the legislation should encourage parents to make the most of the education on offer for their children without seriously affecting either their education or that of their classmates.

My parents only ever took me out of school for one week at the start of my third year in junior school and I never really understood the work on fractions that was introduced during that week. Had it been the last week of the summer term it might have been a different matter.

However, what is clear is that major changes to legislation really ought to be part of primary legislation and not created by secondary legislation and Ministerial fiat. Had that been the case here, Parliament could have discussed in committee what it meant by the phrase ‘attend school regularly’ and the acceptable reasons not to do so.

Perhaps, as a result of this parent’s action it will now have a chance to do so. They might also ask whether if the State isn’t able to fulfil its part of the contract it should make up the missing days? Lord Denning did discuss this in Meade v Haringey in 1979 at the end of the Winter of Discontent, but it never came to trial and a decision.

Consultation: pedestrianisation of Queen Street

There is a County Council consultation setting out proposals for pedestrianizing Queen Street. Here is their information below.

Summary

  • Oxfordshire County Council proposes to improve Queen Street in central Oxford by prohibiting buses, taxis and private hire vehicles from using it. This would in effect make the street largely ‘pedestrianised’ – similar to Cornmarket.  
  • No changes are proposed to access for cyclists and delivery vehicles, which would continue to be permitted between 6pm and 10am.    
  • Between New Road and New Inn Hall Street (i.e. through Bonn Square), cycling will continue to be permitted 24 hours a day, as now.

Why pedestrianise Queen Street

Queen Street forms part of one of the main east-west routes across the city centre, and pedestrian and cycle numbers are expected to increase significantly in future as a result of development in the city’s West End and elsewhere across Oxford

It is vital that strong pedestrian and cycle links are maintained and encouraged, and improvements to the pedestrian experience are made, to ensure a well-connected and joined up city centre that will continue to thrive

The pedestrianisation of Queen Street is part of the county council’s Local Transport Plan and Oxford City Council’s development plan for the West End, the West End Area Action Plan. It is an important element of wider improvements to the public realm in the city centre, such as the recent transformation of Frideswide Square

It is proposed that the changes required to pedestrianise Queen Street are made by the time the new Westgate centre opens in autumn 2017

This is because major changes to bus routes and stops will be required when the new Westgate centre opens in any event. Co-ordinating these changes with the Queen Street proposals will minimise disruption and will also mean Queen Street will be better able to cope with the increased numbers of pedestrians and cyclists going to and from the enlarged Westgate centre once it opens

This proposal is not part of the Westgate development, but Oxfordshire County Council is working closely with the Westgate Oxford Alliance (the owners of the Westgate centre) to plan this project

Proposed changes

The project includes a package of measures to provide alternative arrangements for buses, taxis, and private hire including:

  • New bus routes around the city centre to allow buses to avoid Queen Street and serve the expanded Westgate centre
  • A new bus turnaround at the Worcester Street/New Road junction, including new zebra crossing facilities on New Road, Worcester Street and Park End Street
  • Changes to bus stop locations, including removal of the bus stop in Bonn Square
  • Changes to the pick and set down points for many bus services
  • Relocation of loading bays on certain streets
  • Relocation of disabled parking bays on certain streets
  • Relocation of taxi rank at Carfax

Project costs and funding

It is estimated that the infrastructure required to close Queen Street will cost around £965,000. This includes some major works to create the turnaround at the Worcester Street/New Road junction, provision of new bus stops and shelters, and changes to pavements

At this stage the project is not fully funded; funding sources are to be confirmed following further design work to finalise the proposals, including consideration of the feedback from this consultation.

This consultation

This consultation will run from 9th May to 6th June. Your views are invited on all aspects of the proposals.

Future consultation on Traffic Regulation Orders

Some of the proposals require amendments to existing Traffic Regulation Orders. These will be advertised separately later in the summer, as part of the formal consultation on the scheme

Responses to this consultation will be used to further refine the scheme in advance of that formal consultation

Project timetable (subject to consultation and funding)

Initial consultation                                     May/June 2016

Consultation on TRO amendments          Summer 2016

Detailed design commences                    Autumn 2016

Construction period                                  April – Sept 2017

Westgate opens and changes come into effect   October 2017

Details of all of the proposals are available at https://consultations.oxfordshire.gov.uk/consult.ti/Queen_Street_Pedestrianisation/consultationHome.

Paper copies are available on request.

contact details are below.

Oxfordshire County Council

Speedwell Street

OX1 1NE

Or e-mail them at:

The deadline for comments is: Monday 6th June 2016

Telephone: 01865 792422

LTS.Team@oxfordshire.gov.uk

 

Planning application withdrawn

The following planning application has been withdrawn

73 And 75 London Road Headington

Change of use of first and second floors from office (Use Class B1(a)) to residential (Use Class C3) to 2 x 1-bed and 2 x 2-bed apartments. This application is for determination as to whether prior approval of the Council is required and, if required, whether it should be granted. This application is assessed solely in respect of transport and highway impacts and contamination and flooding risks

16/00695/B56 Headington Ward WITHDRAWN

 

Up and coming events in the City

  • Sunday 15 May, OxHoli Festival, Cowley Marsh, 12 to 4 pmThis free Holi celebration hosted by Oxford University Hindu Society includes a water fight using non-toxic, biodegradable coloured powder. There will be music and several food and arts & crafts stalls. www.oxfordhumsoc.com
  • Sunday 15 May, Town & Gown, City Centre, 8 am to 12 pm. 10k Road Race through various routes in the city centre including Broad Street, finishing at University Parks.www.townandgown10k.com
  • Saturday 21 May, Mela Festival, Rose Hill Community Centre, 11 am to 5 pm.Community event involving song, dance, food, fashion and activities. There will be Bollywood, Fusion & Bhangra Dances, a mixture of live music & performances, games for children, sports activities, Indian food and community stalls. www.oxfordhindutemple.org
  • Saturday 21 May, Riverside Stomp 2016, Thames Path, 7.30 am to 8 pm. Walk from Wallingford to Oxford via the Towpath, finishing at the Prince of Wales Pub in Iffley.www.helenanddouglas.co.uk
  • Saturday 21 – Sunday 22 May, British Heart Foundation London to Oxford Trek, Oxpens Meadow as finish, 6 am to 6 pm. 100km Walk from London to Oxford passing through, Windsor, Cookham, Henley, Benson, Clifton Hampden and Abingdon areas, finishing at Oxpens Meadow in Oxford. www.bhf.org.uk/LondontoOxfordtrek
  • Sunday 22 May, St Andrew’s School Fun Run, Bury Knowle Park, 1.30 to 2.30 pm. This is a small annual school fun run event attracting approx. 50-70 primary school children from St Andrews School, London Road. www.st-andrews-pri.oxon.sch.uk
  • Monday 23 May, Sri Chinmoy Races, Cutteslowe Park, 7 to 7.30 pm. The course is a 1 mile loop around the edge of the park. http://uk.srichinmoyraces.org/races/oxford
  • Thursday 26 May, Jewish Cultural Fair, Broad Street, 2 to 6 pm. Event celebrating Jewish culture including music, art, food, history display and crafts.www.oxfordchabad.org
  • Friday 27 – Saturday 28 May, Stand for Freedom, Bonn Square, 1 to 9 pm (Fri) & 9 am to 1 pm (Sat). Aware raising demonstration with the goal of increasing public understanding of the extent of modern day slavery. www.justloveuk.com  & www.ijmuk.org
  • Saturday 28 May, Girlguiding West Oxford District – Hunt Oxford’s Owl Trail, Broad Street, 10 am to 4 pm. Charity stall to raise the profile of the Owl trail.www.girlguiding.org.uk & www.facebook.com/Hunt-Oxfords-Owl-Trail-168998486799825
  • Saturday 28 – Sunday 29 May, Common People Festival, South Park, 10 am to 11 pm. The Common People event in Oxford is being designed to provide an opportunity for full integration with the Oxford music, arts and food community. www.oxford.commonpeople.net
  • Saturday 28 May – Monday 30 May, Hebborn’s Fun Fair, Blackbird Leys Park, 1 to 10 pm. Family Fun Fair including games, rides & entertainment. www.hebbornamusements.co.uk
  • Monday 30 May, The Oxford Singers busk for Katherine House Hospice, Bonn Square, 10 am to 5 pm. Acapella singing and charity collection. www.oxfordsingers.org

Planning application called in

Ruth has called in the following planning application for determination by Committee.

Reference 16/00976/FUL
Alternative Reference PP-05040121
Application Received Mon 11 Apr 2016
Application Validated Fri 15 Apr 2016
Address Land Rear Of 3 Staunton Road Oxford Oxfordshire OX3 7TJ
Proposal Erection of 1 x 1-bed dwelling (Use Class C3).
Status Registered
Appeal Status Unknown

You can see more details of this application here