Eythan Soysa
Council: Bromley
Activity Timeline
Meetings Attended Note this may include planned future meetings.
13 meetings · Page 1 of 3
Environment and Community Services Policy Development and Scrutiny Committee - Wednesday 17 June 2026 7.00 pm
Environment and Community Services Policy Development and Scrutiny Committee - Tuesday 17 March 2026 7.00 pm
The Environment and Community Services Policy Development and Scrutiny Committee meeting was scheduled to review performance across various council services, consider budget monitoring, and scrutinise upcoming contract awards and policy updates. Key discussions were expected to focus on highway maintenance, parking policies, and the management of parks and green spaces.
Environment and Community Services Policy Development and Scrutiny Committee - Wednesday 8 October 2025 7.00 pm
The Environment and Community Services Policy Development and Scrutiny Committee were scheduled to meet to discuss Veolia contract performance, highway maintenance and a Local Implementation Plan (LIP) funded traffic and road safety programme, amongst other items. The committee was also expected to discuss updates from the Environment Portfolio Holder and the Portfolio Holder for Transport, Highways and Road Safety.
Public Protection and Enforcement Policy Development & Scrutiny Committee - Thursday 20 March 2025 7.00 pm
Environment and Community Services Policy Development and Scrutiny Committee - Thursday 13 March 2025 7.00 pm
Decisions from Meetings
1 decision
BUSINESS CONTINUITY AND RESILIENCE UPDATE
From: Public Protection and Enforcement Policy Development & Scrutiny Committee - Thursday 20 March 2025 7.00 pm - March 20, 2025
...the Committee approved the recommendations to note the annual update on the Emergency Planning and Corporate Resilience Service, including key resilience works undertaken in 2024-25 and assurance of the Council’s Civil Contingency activities for 2025-26.
Recommendations Approved
Summary
Meetings Attended: 13
Average per Month: 0.5
Decisions Recorded: 1 Not all decisions are recorded, so this may significantly underestimate the number of decisions actually made.