Agenda

Council - Tuesday, 8 July 2025 6.30 pm

Venue: De Montfort Suite, Hinckley Hub. View directions

Contact: Rebecca Owen, Democratic Services Manager on 01455255879 or email  rebecca.owen@hinckley-bosworth.gov.uk 

Note: See media below to watch meeting via Youtube 

Media

Items
No. Item

1.

Apologies

2.

Minutes of the previous meetings pdf icon PDF 151 KB

To confirm the minutes of the meeting held on 20 February and 13 May 2025.

Additional documents:

3.

Additional urgent business by reason of special circumstances

To be advised of any additional items of business which the Mayor decides by reason of special circumstances shall be taken as matters of urgency at this meeting. Items will be considered at the end of the agenda.

4.

Declarations of interest

To receive verbally from Members any disclosures which they are required to make in accordance with the Council's code of conduct or in pursuance of Section 106 of the Local Government Finance Act 1992. This is in addition to the need for such disclosure to be also given when the relevant matter is reached on the Agenda.

5.

Mayor's Communications

To receive such communications as the Mayor may decide to lay before the Council.

6.

Questions

To deal with questions under Council Procedure Rule number 14.

6a

Question from Councillor C Allen to the Executive member for Planning

“Can the Executive member provide Council with an update on the former leisure centre site on Coventry Road please?

 

Permission for 66 apartments and 7 houses was granted under application 18/01237/FUL in October 2019, with a section 106 agreement signed in August 2021.

 

As that permission now lapsed? Or has a material start made in redeveloping this key site in Hinckley?”

 

Response from Councillor W Crooks:

 

“The former leisure centre site, located off Coventry Road / Trinity Lane, was granted permission following a resolution to grant by Planning Committee in October 2019 for 66 apartments and seven dwellings to Green4 as the applicant. A material start on the site was made ahead of the three-year cut off for the permission, with initial access works undertaken on the site from Marchant Road to the west of the site. These works keep the permission live and it remains extant.

 

In addition to the above, a planning application was received in April 2025 for a 72 bedroom care home facility on the site. This proposal is for one half of the site only, replacing one of the two permitted apartment buildings, and would be located adjacent to Trinity Lane. This application, reference 25/00354/FUL, is pending consideration and has the opportunity to bring a new high quality development, through this full application, to this key town centre site. This application will be presented to Planning Committee in due course. The remaining half of the site will then require an amendment application to regularise this half following any permission granted for the care home.”

6b

Question from Councillor R Allen to the Executive member for housing

“Can the Executive member provide a breakdown of the numbers of council houses purchased under Right to Buy by ward, for the last ten years please?”

 

Response from Councillor M Mullaney:

 

“Thank you Councillor Allen for your question. I can confirm that the council has sold 272 properties over the last ten years through tenants exercising their right to buy. A breakdown of the number of properties sold each year is set out below.

 

year

no of properties

2014-2015

17

2015-2016

23

2016-2017

43

2017-2018

41

2018-2019

26

2019-2020

32

2020-2021

19

2021-2022

24

2022-2023

28

2023-2024

12

2024-2025

7

 

A breakdown by ward will be provided when available”.

7.

Petitions

To deal with petitions submitted in accordance with Council Procedure Rule 15.

8.

Leader of the Council's Position Statement

Welcome to this July meeting of Council. You will see that tonight’s agenda includes my motion on local government reorganisation and a range of key business items including reports on care experience and supporting those with protected characteristics, plans for acquiring new homes to assist with our housing and homelessness crisis, a community governance review linked to the establishment of a town council for Hinckley, our annual overview & scrutiny report which summarises its key work and achievements over the last year and finally appointments to various charities and of independent persons.

 

I have the following key updates:

 

Supporting our communities

 

At our last meeting of the Executive, we had a packed agenda with reports that charted the positive outcomes from a range of programmes that we have in place to support our communities:

 

Council housing securing decent homes:

I am delighted to report that by the end of the financial year 2024/25 the housing repairs service actioned 100% decent homes compliance, with all council homes meeting quality standards and the service securing out of target jobs (that built up during the COVID-19 pandemic) by 97% since 2022.

 

This is a great credit to our skilled housing repairs workforce who have shown such commitment to their work and our tenants.

 

Tenant involvement:

Following the introduction of the Regulator of Social Housing Tenant Satisfaction margins, I am pleased to report we secured 80.1% satisfaction in 2024/25.

 

Cost of living support:

We acknowledged the extensive work undertaken by our welfare support team in supporting residents of the borough affected by the cost of living crisis. Members will recall the council took the proactive step of declaring a cost of living emergency in 2022. We heard that the service has supported over 3,500 residents since that time, with 1,617 residents supported in 2024/25 who were experiencing financial hardship.

 

Domestic abuse outreach service:

We were updated on the current trends, demand and work undertaken by this service. During 2024/25 the service received 167 referrals and conducted 578 support sessions with survivors and collaborated with partner agencies on 81 complex cases. The council hosted a major domestic abuse event in 2024, bringing together over 60 partners and launched the council’s White Ribbon campaign to raise awareness of this issue and the local support available.

 

Safeguarding support:

The Executive acknowledged and endorsed the work of all the council’s designated safeguarding officers from across the organisation, with the support they provide to ensure action is taken to safeguard children and adults in the borough. Over the period between April 2024 and March 2025 the authority received a total of 503 people referred.

 

Civil penalty policy for private sector housing offences:

The Executive agreed to introduce a ‘justice for tenants’ policy to enable the council the issue civil financial penalties of up to £40,000 to landlords to address failings in maintaining and complying with improvement notices to address safety issues in private rented properties.

 

Hinckley town centre vision:

A new town centre vision document was endorsed by the Executive,  ...  view the full agenda text for item 8.

9.

Minutes of the Scrutiny Commission pdf icon PDF 135 KB

To receive for information only the minutes of the Scrutiny Commission meeting held on 13 March 2025.

10.

Care experience - protected characteristics pdf icon PDF 383 KB

To consider adoption of care experience as a protected characteristic.

Additional documents:

11.

Business case to purchase 20 units of accommodation for temporary accommodation requirements pdf icon PDF 484 KB

To outline a business case and rationale to purchase 20 units of accommodation to meet homelessness demand.

12.

Disposal of two HRA land assets - Beckett Avenue, Market Bosworth and Thornfield Avenue, Stoke Golding pdf icon PDF 384 KB

To seek approval for the disposal of two HRA land assets in the borough.

13.

Business rates write offs pdf icon PDF 371 KB

To seek approval to write off business rates of £178,373.75.

14.

Community governance review pdf icon PDF 373 KB

To seek approval of the terms of reference for the community governance review.

Additional documents:

15.

Overview & Scrutiny annual report 2024/25 pdf icon PDF 227 KB

To seek approval of the overview & scrutiny annual report 2024/25.

Additional documents:

16.

Appointments to charitable bodies

16a

Poors Platt Charity

To appoint one representative for a period of four years with immediate effect.

 

It will be moved by Councillor Bray and seconded by Councillor Bools that Pat Gelhar be appointed as Council’s representative.

16b

JCC Foundation Trust Hinckley

To appoint one representative for a period of three years from July 2025.

 

It will be moved by Councillor Bray and seconded by Councillor Bools that Ian Daniels be re-appointed as Council’s representative.

17.

Appointment of independent Persons pdf icon PDF 401 KB

To appoint a pool of independent persons.

 

Please note, the appendix to this report contains personal information about candidates so is not available to the public. Should members wish to discuss the detail of the appendix, they will need to do so in private session.

Additional documents:

18.

Motions received in accordance with Council Procedure Rule 17

Motion to be proposed by Councillor MT Mullaney and seconded by Councillor P Stead-Davis

 

“This Council notes that many people rely on good 5G mobile signal for access to services, work and leisure. However we note concern expressed by residents in a number of areas across the Borough including Burbage, Hinckley and elsewhere about the recent installations of new masts on County Council highway land within the Borough.

 

The Council further notes that the last Conservative Government changed the rules that mean that these masts are now deemed permitted development and no longer require full planning consent. 

 

This Council resolves to:

 

1.         Ask the Chief Executive to write to the Deputy Prime Minister to request that these be once again subject to planning consent to allow local authorities to properly assess the proposals and consider if the sites are the most appropriate to balance the need for good 5G coverage and other material planning considerations such as impact on the streetscene. 

 

2.         Ask the Lead Member for Highways at Leicestershire County Council to consult the community and local councillors before undertaking any financial agreements with mobile operators for installing such masts on their land.”

 

 

Urgent motion to be proposed by Councillor Bray and seconded by Councillor M Mullaney:

 

This Council notes the Government's u-turn last week on welfare reforms, which follows a number of other u-turns including winter fuel payments.

 

This Council notes that Labour did not reference abolishing two-tier local government in its manifesto and therefore has no mandate to proceed with this fundamental change.

 

This Council believes that local district and borough councils provide essential discretionary services including economic development, community safety, welfare support and town centre events amongst others.  These will be at risk, should districts be scrapped and merged with upper-tier councils, whose budgets face ever increasing pressures because of the failure of successive Conservative and Labour Governments to properly address social services and SEND funding shortfalls. 

 

The economic case for moving to unitary councils is not proven, with estimated costs of transitions running into many £millions and no clear evidence from areas, where councils have moved to unitary status, that substantial savings are being made.

 

It is also clear that across Leicester, Leicestershire and Rutland, there is no consensus on how local government reform should proceed with competing bids, and disagreement over city expansion, with this Council's Leadership expressing deep concerns about areas being moved into the city without the consent of the communities affected.

 

Proceeding with local government reform will be divisive, will cause huge disruption and will mean Councils are focused on managing transitions rather than delivering services. Therefore this Council calls on Sir Keir Starmer and the Labour Government to perform a u-turn on Local Government Reform and drop its plans.

 

The Council instructs its Chief Executive to write to the Prime Minister to set out the Council's position and to communicate this with other local authorities in Leicester, Leicestershire and Rutland.”

19.

Matters from which the public may be excluded

To consider the passing of a resolution under Section 100A(4) of the Local Government Act 1972 excluding the public from the undermentioned item of business on the grounds that it involves the likely disclosure of exempt information as defined in paragraphs 1, 3 and 10 of Schedule 12A of the 1972 Act.

20.

Senior management capacity review

To seek approval of a senior management review.