Councillor Ajith Menon
Activity Timeline
Meetings Attended Note this may include planned future meetings.
4 meetings
Finance and Growth Overview and Scrutiny Sub-Committee - Monday, 20 July 2026 - 7.00 pm
Children and Education Overview and Scrutiny Sub-Committee - Monday, 22 June 2026 - 7.00 pm
The Children and Education Overview and Scrutiny Sub-Committee is scheduled to meet on Monday 22 June 2026 to review a range of reports concerning children's services and education in Barnet. Key discussions are expected to cover youth participation initiatives, financial performance of children and families services, and updates on various service areas. The committee will also review its work programme and the Cabinet Forward Plan.
Governance, Audit, Risk Management and Standards Committee (GARMS) - Thursday, 11 June 2026 - 7.00 pm
The Governance, Audit, Risk Management and Standards Committee (GARMS) of Barnet Council met on Thursday 11 June 2026 to review the Council's risk management, financial governance, and audit arrangements. Key discussions included the quarterly risk report, the Corporate Anti-Fraud Team's annual report and strategy, and the external auditors' planning report for 2025/26. The committee also reviewed the Council's Annual Governance Statement and Code of Corporate Governance for the upcoming year, alongside the internal audit's annual conclusion and plan.
Annual Council - Tuesday 19th May, 2026 7.15 pm
The Annual Council meeting of Barnet Council saw the election of Councillor Barry Rawlings as the new Leader of the Council following a closely contested vote. The meeting also addressed constitutional amendments and the appointment of various civic representatives and committee members.
Decisions from Meetings
0 decisions
No decisions found for the selected date range. Not all decisions are recorded, so this may significantly underestimate the number of decisions actually made.
Summary
- Meetings attended
- 4
- Average per month
- 1.3
- Decisions recorded Not all decisions are recorded, so this may significantly underestimate the number of decisions actually made.
- 0