Agenda and draft minutes

Education and Local Economy Scrutiny Commission - Thursday 26 February 2026 7.00 pm

Venue: Ground Floor Meeting Room G02A - 160 Tooley Street, London SE1 2QH. View directions

Contact: Amit Alva  Email: Amit.Alva@southwark.gov.uk

Items
No. Item

1.

APOLOGIES

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    To receive any apologies for absence.

    Minutes:

    Apologies for absence were received from Councillor Irina Von Wiese and Co-opted Member Claire Williams.

     

    Apologies for lateness were received from Councillor Margy Newens.

     

2.

NOTIFICATION OF ANY ITEMS OF BUSINESS WHICH THE CHAIR DEEMS URGENT

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    In special circumstances, an item of business may be added to an agenda within five clear working days of the meeting.

    Minutes:

    There were no items of business which the Chair deemed urgent.

     

3.

DISCLOSURE OF INTERESTS AND DISPENSATIONS

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    Members to declare any interests and dispensations in respect of any item of business to be considered at this meeting.

    Minutes:

    There were no disclosures of interest or dispensations.

     

4.

MINUTES

5.

CABINET MEMBER INTERVIEW - CABINET MEMBER FOR CLIMATE EMERGENCY, JOBS AND BUSINESS

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    To receive a report from Councillor John Batteson on a holistic overview of key strategies and projects under the Cabinet member portfolio for Climate Emergency, Jobs & Business.

     

    Including but not limited to:

     

    ·  Targets for repairs in commercial units

    ·  Council's policy for compensating businesses that lose trade & income due to damage affecting their ability to operate. e.g. leaks from above - often residential properties

     

    Supporting documents:

    Minutes:

    The Chair invited Councillor John Batteson, Cabinet Member for Climate Emergency, Jobs and Transport (change in portfolio title as of 25 February 2026 Council Assembly, prior to agenda summons publication); supported by Danny Edwards (Assistant Director of Economy) and Mark Grant (Assistant Director of Property) to give an overview of the portfolio across the year.

     

    On local economy and routes into employment, the Cabinet Member noted that:

     

    • the Council Delivery Plan is committed to supporting 2,500 residents from priority cohorts into work, 2,900 had gained work, primarily through Southwark Works
    • residents in these priority cohorts faced the highest barriers and achieving progress in this area was therefore extremely important for raising prosperity and addressing inequalities
    • Southwark Works had been active for 21 years, supporting, on average, 400 people into work with a second hub opening 3-4 weeks ago, in Peckham
    • the new hub was made possible through central government funding and was directed at supporting residents with complex health barriers and disabilities via individual, tailored job support
    • the Youth Trailblazer’s support for care leavers trialled new practices to increase employment outcomes for care leavers – initially funded for one year, that had been extended
    • the progress made on Youth Trailblazers had been shared with the Corporate Parenting Committee given their keen interest in care leavers’ employment
    • a new Skills Delivery Plan was being adopted with aims adjusted to reflect where more work was needed and where success had already been made
    • by Q3, the number of new apprenticeships supported was greater than the full year target
    • the nature of apprenticeships had shifted – there were more higher-level apprenticeships then lower level – and in the future it would help to report more closely on the latter so that routes into employment were not cut off for those without higher level qualifications or training
    • regarding paid internships for young people from disadvantaged backgrounds, targets here had also been exceeded

     

    On business development and the Town Centre Action Plans, he noted:

     

    • the aims of the Southwark Pioneers Fund had been met – supporting underrepresented groups to start and develop businesses – and new funding was being sought as previously this had come from the UK Shared Prosperity Fund and no more funding would be provided
    • that funding was not the only issue, however, with local businesses also asking for skills opportunities, something that the Supplier Readiness Programme had helped with, in particular regarding developing their preparedness to bid for contracts in the Council and elsewhere
    • a focus on procurement could also help by redesigning larger contracts, where appropriate, so that smaller businesses could participate in bidding for parts of them
    • the Town Centre Action Plans had been well received as a way of keeping local businesses and residents informed of immediate and longer-term actions in their area

     

    On the Living Wage, he noted that:

     

    • the Council’s ambition to double the number of accredited Living Wage employers from 298 in 2022 had been challenging although over 450 employers had now been accredited
    • the  ...  view the full minutes text for item 5.

6.

DRAFT SCRUTINY RECOMMENDATIONS - EDUCATION AND LOCAL ECONOMY SCRUTINY COMMISSION

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    To discuss the draft recommendations to Cabinet from the commission for the 2025-26 year.

    Supporting documents:

    Minutes:

    The Chair introduced the item by taking the Draft Scrutiny Recommendations report as read and inviting feedback and additional comments.

     

    The Commission drafted and agreed additional recommendations (to be fine-tuned after the meeting). The final report would therefore include recommendations from the draft report and the following recommendations, summarised as follows, that Cabinet:

     

    • review whether the London Living Wage is being paid to contracted employees delivering contracts for the Council
    • promote the activities of Southwark Works and Connect to Work more widely
    • promote the pilot hub for working space in Peckham as well as similar spaces across the borough
    • report on numbers of apprenticeships by level
    • define milestones for organisations supporting work experience so that their objectives align and, more particularly, to encourage businesses’ developing employment opportunities for younger people with SEND

     

7.

WORK PROGRAMME 2025-26