Jack Beddoe

Council: Southwark

Activity Timeline

Meetings Attended Note this may include planned future meetings.

9 meetings ยท Page 1 of 2

Cabinet Council Staff

Cabinet - Wednesday 6 March 2024 11.00 am

The Cabinet of Southwark Council met on Wednesday 6 March 2024, approving the closure of Ann Bernadt Nursery School and a new framework for allocating strategic Community Infrastructure Levy (CIL) funding. The meeting also saw the approval of a draft homelessness and rough sleeping strategy for consultation, and the refreshed Digital and Technology Strategy 2024-2026.

March 06, 2024, 11:00 am
Cabinet Council Staff

Cabinet - Tuesday 6 February 2024 11.00 am

The Cabinet of Southwark Council met on Tuesday 6 February 2024 to discuss and approve the council's budget for the upcoming financial year, alongside key decisions regarding school admissions and property acquisition. The meeting also saw the approval of a new Climate Resilience and Adaptation Strategy.

February 06, 2024, 11:00 am
Cabinet Council Staff

Cabinet - Wednesday 17 January 2024 1.00 pm

The Cabinet of Southwark Council met on Wednesday 17 January 2024 to discuss revisions to the temporary accommodation placement policy and the creation of a new senior management post. The Cabinet approved revisions to the existing temporary accommodation placement policy.

January 17, 2024, 1:00 pm
Cabinet Council Staff

Cabinet - Tuesday 5 December 2023 11.00 am

December 05, 2023, 11:00 am
Cabinet CANCELLED Council Staff

Cabinet - Tuesday 14 November 2023 11.00 am

November 14, 2023, 11:00 am

Decisions from Meetings

1 decision

Placement Policy for Temporary Accommodation and Private Rented Sector Offers

From: Cabinet - Wednesday 17 January 2024 1.00 pm - January 17, 2024

...approved revisions to the temporary accommodation placement policy, including moving to a single offer of accommodation and an annual review process.

For Determination

Summary

Meetings Attended: 9

Average per Month: 0.9

Decisions Recorded: 1 Not all decisions are recorded, so this may significantly underestimate the number of decisions actually made.