Zara Bishop

Council: Merton

Activity Timeline

Meetings Attended Note this may include planned future meetings.

13 meetings · Page 1 of 3

Cabinet

Cabinet - Tuesday 22 April 2025 7.15 pm

April 22, 2025
Cabinet Officer

Cabinet - Tuesday 17 September 2024 7.15 pm

The Cabinet of Merton Council met on Tuesday 17 September 2024, approving a new strategy to support those seeking sanctuary in the borough and a pilot job brokerage service. The meeting also addressed the council's financial position, noting a significant adverse variance and approving budget adjustments.

September 17, 2024, 7:15 pm
Cabinet

Cabinet - Monday 18 March 2024 7.15 pm

March 18, 2024
Cabinet

Cabinet - Monday 19 February 2024 7.15 pm

February 19, 2024
Cabinet Officer

Cabinet - Thursday 16 November 2023 7.15 pm

November 16, 2023, 7:15 pm

Decisions from Meetings

9 decisions · Page 1 of 2

Procurement of the London Sexual & Reproductive Health E-service SHL.UK

From: Cabinet - Tuesday 22 April 2025 7.15 pm - April 22, 2025

...to participate in the City of London's procurement of a new contract for the London Sexual & Reproductive Health E-service SHL.UK, Merton approved delegated authority to award the contract and committed financially to the service for its residents.

Recommendations Approved

Financial Monitoring Report Period 4

From: Cabinet - Tuesday 17 September 2024 7.15 pm - September 17, 2024

To review the financial position of the authority and adjust financial information as appropriate

Recommendations Approved

Proposal to pilot Employ Merton: a job brokerage and finding service for the borough

From: Cabinet - Tuesday 17 September 2024 7.15 pm - September 17, 2024

A report seeking approval to progress a pilot Job Brokerage and Finding service and to allocate up to £500,000 of funding from the Strategic Priorities Reserve to enable delivery of the pilot.

Recommendations Approved

Summary

Meetings Attended: 13

Average per Month: 0.2

Decisions Recorded: 9 Not all decisions are recorded, so this may significantly underestimate the number of decisions actually made.