Rob Miller
Council: Waltham Forest
Activity Timeline
Meetings Attended Note this may include planned future meetings.
8 meetings · Page 1 of 2
Executive Decision - Wednesday, 18 March 2026 - 10.30 am
The Executive Decision meeting scheduled for Wednesday, 18 March 2026, was set to consider a contract variation for the construction of a High Needs Centre and Family Resilience Centre. This meeting was not open to the public.
Multi-Trade Measured Term Contract Award, Executive Decision - Thursday, 3rd April, 2025 3.00 pm
This meeting of the Executive Decision of Waltham Forest Council was scheduled to discuss awarding a contract for planned maintenance works to schools and corporate buildings. The agenda included only one item for discussion.
Executive Decision - Wednesday, 21 December 2022 - 1.00 pm
Executive Decision - Thursday, 10 March 2022 - 5.00 pm
Executive Decision - Friday, 5 March 2021 - 10.00 am
Decisions from Meetings
3 decisions
Apologies for absence
From: Multi-Trade Measured Term Contract Award, Executive Decision - Thursday, 3rd April, 2025 3.00 pm - April 03, 2025
...to approve the apologies for absence at the Executive Decision meeting of Waltham Forest Council on April 3, 2025.
Recommendations Approved
Declarations of interest
From: Multi-Trade Measured Term Contract Award, Executive Decision - Thursday, 3rd April, 2025 3.00 pm - April 03, 2025
...to approve the recommendations, despite there being no declarations of interest.
Recommendations Approved
Multi-Trade Measured Term Contract Award
From: Multi-Trade Measured Term Contract Award, Executive Decision - Thursday, 3rd April, 2025 3.00 pm - April 03, 2025
...to award the Multi-Trade Measured Term Contract for planned maintenance works to schools and corporate buildings to Kirkman & Jourdain Ltd for a two-year period, with an option to extend for two one-year periods, for a total contract value not exceeding £4,000,000.
For Determination
Summary
Meetings Attended: 8
Average per Month: 0.1
Decisions Recorded: 3 Not all decisions are recorded, so this may significantly underestimate the number of decisions actually made.