Sarah Ashmead
Activity Timeline
Meetings Attended Note this may include planned future meetings.
22 meetings · Page 1 of 5
Health and Wellbeing Board - Thursday, 3 September 2026 - 2.00 pm
Buckinghamshire Shareholder and Trust Committee - Thursday, 2 July 2026 - 2.30 pm
Children’s & Education Select Committee - Wednesday, 20 May 2026 - 4.00 pm
The Children's & Education Select Committee of Buckinghamshire Council was scheduled to meet on Wednesday 20 May 2026. The agenda for the meeting indicated that the committee would elect a chairman and address apologies for absence. The available documentation consists of the public reports pack and the agenda frontsheet, and does not provide information on any discussions or decisions made during the meeting.
Health and Wellbeing Board - Thursday, 14 May 2026 - 2.00 pm
The Buckinghamshire Health and Wellbeing Board met on Thursday 14 May 2026 to discuss progress on the Live Well
strategy, work and health programmes, and the Neighbourhood Health Framework. Key decisions included noting progress on the Live Well
strategy and endorsing its continued direction, as well as noting updates on various work and health programmes and the Neighbourhood Health Framework.
Buckinghamshire Shareholder and Trust Committee - Wednesday, 18th March, 2026 2.00 pm
The Buckinghamshire Shareholder and Trust Committee met on Wednesday 18 March 2026 to review the council's annual report, discuss best practice in company governance, and approve business plans for key council-owned entities. Decisions made included the approval of the draft annual report for 2025-26, noting outstanding actions from a best practice self-assessment, and approving business plans for Aylesbury Vale Estates and Buckinghamshire Advantage.
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
- 22
- Average per month
- 0.7
- Decisions recorded Not all decisions are recorded, so this may significantly underestimate the number of decisions actually made.
- 0