Leona Menville

Activity Timeline

Meetings Attended Note this may include planned future meetings.

48 meetings · Page 1 of 10

Full Council Officer

Full Council - Wednesday, 22 July 2026 7:00 pm

July 22, 2026, 7:00 pm
Cabinet Officer

Cabinet - Tuesday, 14 July 2026 7:00 pm

July 14, 2026, 7:00 pm
Cabinet Officer

Cabinet - Tuesday, 16 June 2026 7:00 pm

June 16, 2026, 7:00 pm
Full Council Officer

Annual Meeting, Full Council - Friday, 22 May 2026 7:00 pm

May 22, 2026, 7:00 pm
Cabinet Officer

Cabinet - Monday, 16 February 2026 7:00 pm

The Cabinet of Barking and Dagenham Council met on Monday 16 February 2026 to discuss and approve a range of significant financial and strategic matters. Key decisions included the adoption of the Budget Framework for 2026/27 and the Medium-Term Financial Strategy for 2026/27 to 2030/31, which involves a 4.99% Council Tax increase. The Cabinet also approved the Barking and Dagenham Housing Strategy for 2026-2031 and the business plans for Be First (Regeneration) Ltd, B&D Energy Ltd, and B&D Reside Group.

February 16, 2026, 7:00 pm

Decisions from Meetings

75 decisions · Page 1 of 15

Council-Owned Companies - 2025/26 Quarter 1 Update

From: Cabinet - Tuesday, 14 October 2025 7:00 pm - October 14, 2025

...to note the key highlights and issues relating to Council-owned companies in the first quarter of 2025/26 and the ongoing scrutiny provided by the Shareholder Panel.

Approved

Neighbourhoods Programme Outline Business Case

From: Cabinet - Tuesday, 14 October 2025 7:00 pm - October 14, 2025

... to proceed with developing a Full Business Case for the Neighbourhoods Programme, endorsing a phased approach that broadens transformation beyond statutory services, supporting a hybrid model for resourcing the Full Business Case, approving investment for its development subject to funding confirmation, and delegating funding decisions to the Director of Strategy.

Approved

Summary

Meetings Attended: 48

Average per Month: 1.0

Decisions Recorded: 75 Not all decisions are recorded, so this may significantly underestimate the number of decisions actually made.