Owen Jenkins
Council: Surrey
Activity Timeline
Meetings Attended Note this may include planned future meetings.
4 meetings
Health and Wellbeing Board and Surrey Heartlands Integrated Care Partnership Combined Meeting - Wednesday, 17 June 2026 10.00 am
Communities, Environment and Highways Select Committee - Friday, 20 March 2026 10.00 am
The Communities, Environment and Highways Select Committee met on Friday 20 March 2026 to discuss performance assurance for the second quarter of 2025/26, progress on local government reorganisation, and strategic recommendations for climate action. Key discussions included the challenges and progress in highway maintenance, the transition of services to new unitary authorities, and the council's climate change strategy.
Health and Wellbeing Board and Surrey Heartlands Integrated Care Partnership Combined Meeting - Wednesday, 18 March 2026 10.00 am
The Combined Health and Wellbeing Board and Surrey-Hartland Integrated Care Partnership meeting, held on Wednesday, 18 March 2026, focused on the refresh of the Health and Wellbeing Strategy, a new strategy for addressing gambling-related harms, and updates on local government reorganisation and Integrated Care Board (ICB) integration. Key decisions included the endorsement of the refreshed Health and Wellbeing Strategy and the approach to tackling gambling-related harms.
Communities, Environment and Highways Select Committee - Thursday, 10 April 2025 10.00 am
The Communities, Environment and Highways Select Committee met on 10 April 2025 to discuss a utilities engagement programme, highways term maintenance contract performance and a forward work programme. The committee was also scheduled to discuss questions submitted by the councillors.
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: 0.3
Decisions Recorded: 0 Not all decisions are recorded, so this may significantly underestimate the number of decisions actually made.