Agenda and minutes
Venue: Warspite Room, Council House
Contact: Hannah Chandler-Whiting Email: democraticservices@plymouth.gov.uk
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Declarations of Interest Councillors will be asked to make any declarations of interest in respect of items on the agenda. Minutes:
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To confirm the minutes of the previous meeting held on 02 April 2025. Minutes: The minutes of the meeting held on 02 April 2025 were agreed as an accurate record.
During this item Councillor Ricketts expressed his thanks to Councillor Darcy for Chairing the Panel throughout 2025/26. |
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Chair's Urgent Business To receive reports on business which in the opinion of the Chair, should be brought forward for urgent consideration. Minutes: There were no items of Chair’s urgent business. |
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Plan for Homes 4: Year 1 Progress Report Additional documents:
Minutes: Councillor Chris
Penberthy (Cabinet Member for Housing, Co-operative Development and
Communities) introduced the report and highlighted: a) Since its launch in November 2013, more than 1,100 new homes had been built on Council-owned sites, under Plan for Homes;
b) Over 64% of the 1,100 new homes had been affordable;
c) The ambition was to deliver a minimum of 5,000 new homes in Plymouth over 5 years;
d)
Increased housing supply, with a focus on both social and
affordable home ownership;
e)
Improved the private rented sector to ensure homes were
decent, safe, and secure;
f)
Brought empty homes back into use to maximise existing
stock;
g)
Enhanced the condition and energy efficiency of homes
across all tenures, retrofitting and delivering low-carbon new
homes;
h)
Supported estate regeneration and renewal to replace
obsolete housing;
i)
Reduced homelessness and reliance on temporary
accommodation and expanded supported and specialist housing
options;
j)
Maximised inward investment through partnership working,
including with Homes England; k) Maintained flexibility and innovation in response to emerging housing challenges such as people being priced out of the market and housing demands resulting from Section 21 evictions, VAWG (Violence against women and girls) and household break ups;
l)
There were more than
8,000 households in Plymouth awaiting homes for rent at an
affordable price;
m)
Having a place to call home had a
positive effect on people’s health and wellbeing;
n)
Plan for
Homes 4
had:
i.
Developed a pipeline of future housing sites and a new
market recovery plan;
ii.
Worked with investors and developers to establish a
build-to-rent offer in Plymouth, that would
capitalise the long-term investment in the dockyard and for people
coming into Plymouth for dockyard
employment; iii. Prepared for the Renters’ Rights Bill;
o)
The action plan reported
across all 10 of the Plan for Homes 4 initiatives and was
RAG-rated with commentary;
p)
The Housing Taskforce
would continue to meet quarterly; q) Plan for Homes 4 was presented as a live, evolving strategy responsive to challenges.
In response to
questions, supported byPaul
Barnard (Service Director for Strategic Planning and
Infrastructure), Nick Carter (Head of Housing & Regeneration),
Neil Mawson (Housing Delivery Manager), John Green (Net Zero
Delivery Manager) and Matt Garrett (Service Director for Community
Connections), the following was discussed:
r)
Continued lobbying of
government for the resources and powers to tackle the housing
crisis in the city;
s)
Worked with PEC
(Plymouth Energy Community) to support insultating homes;
t)
The Council was supporting not just homeowners to
retrofit homes, but also landlords, which targeted fuel poverty and
damp housing conditions;
i.
£3 million had been secured from Government to
retrofit approximately 206 homes in Plymouth;
ii.
PCC (Plymouth City Council) had been very successful
in previous retrofitting programmes and was in a good position to
secure more funding if it became available;
u)
Estate regeneration included projects at North
Prospect and Savage Road; v) Registered providers were encouraged to invest in existing housing stock as well as provision of supported and specialist ... view the full minutes text for item 4. |
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Economic Insight and Intelligence Additional documents: Minutes: David Draffan (Service
Director for Economic Development) and Lauren Paton (Economic
Development Officer) gave a presentation and highlighted the
following points:
a)
The labour market in
Plymouth was tight with high job vacancies and moderate wage
increases;
b)
The UK Modern
Industrial Strategy had recently been published and had included
Plymouth as a case study, highlighting the city’s defence
sector and it’s investment potential;
c)
Plymouth had been
designated the UK’s National Centre for Marine
Autonomy;
d)
Economic activity
stood at 77.5% with a claimant count of 3.5%, indicating near full
employment;
e)
Job postings had
increased to approximately 4,500 in May 2025;
f)
A projected gap between job
demand and workforce availability was identified;
g)
Median weekly pay was below
national and regional averages but had risen by 35% over ten years
to approximately £570;
h)
Lower earners saw a 28.1%
increase in wages compared to 1.8% for higher earners;
i)
Productivity in Plymouth was
81.1% of the UK average;
j)
Growth in productivity lagged
behind national trends despite nominal increases due to labour
constraints and a lack of skills;
k)
Key sectors identified included
defence, clean tech, and advanced manufacturing and marine autonomy
was highlighted as a strategic growth area;
i.
Increasing employment numbers
in these highly productive areas, presented an opportunity to
increase productivity across the city and lower the gap with
relative growth;
l)
Efforts were made to align the
local economic strategy with national priorities; m) Workforce projections emphasised the need for intervention to meet future job demands. The Panel
agreed: 1. To note the report. |
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Productive Growth and High Value Jobs Update (Economic Strategy Pillar 1) Additional documents:
Minutes: Councillor Evans OBE
(Leader of the Council) introduce the report, supported
byJulia Blaschke (Economic Development Manager -
Partners), Richard Davies (Vice Chancellor, University of
Plymouth), David Draffan (Service Director, Economic Development),
Lauren Paton (Economic Development Officer) and Nina Sarlaka
(Inward Investment and Enterprise Manager, Economic
Development):
a)
The intention was to bring each
of the five pillars of the economic strategy, one to each meeting
of the Panel in 2025/26;
b)
This pillar focused on
increasing productivity and wages to enhance prosperity;
c)
Plymouth was well positioned as
a national opportunity with significant investment
potential;
d)
£4.4 billion investment
in the dockyard was expected to create 5,500 jobs;
e)
£3 billion investment in
Derriford Hospital;
f)
The city centre had a £1
billion pipeline of regeneration projects;
g)
A Growth Alliance had been
formed between the Council, Royal Navy, and Babcock which aimed to
support innovation, creation of high value jobs, skills, and
housing development;
h)
Plymouth had been
designated the UK’s National Centre for Marine Autonomy which
showed the excellence of the companies who had already been
attracted into in Plymouth, but opened up even more opportunity for
the future;
i)
Homes England had partnered
with the Council to build 10,000 homes, mostly in the city centre
to create an exemplar of urban living;
j)
The industrial strategy had
recognised Plymouth’s marine and defence
capabilities;
k)
Babcock had announced a defence
dividend for Plymouth which planned to relocate 2,000 workers to
the city centre, an integrated logistics and manufacturing facility
was proposed in the Freeport, and a new centre for engineering
nuclear skills;
l)
The city had a £10
billion investment pipeline, a strong business community, three
universities, a highly skilled workforce, a Freeport and a science
park;
m)
Universities played a key role
in innovation and workforce development;
n)
The University of Plymouth
(UoP) had held meetings with various representatives of governments
from around the world due to interest in Plymouth’s marine
and defence sectors;
o)
UoP had led initiatives in
cybersecurity and marine technology;
p)
Medical research and business
incubation were supported by UoP facilities;
q)
Knowledge partnerships placed
students in businesses to foster innovation;
r)
Skills development targeted
both young and mature learners;
s)
An innovation task force had
been established to coordinate efforts;
t)
16 strategic projects were
identified across investible themes: Defence sector and Devonport,
the waterfront and maritime, the north of the city and the city
centre;
i.
These projects were not
necessarily owned, funded or held by the Council;
ii.
They would all significantly
impact on high value jobs and productive growth;
iii.
Projects included building
Oceansgate Innovative Barns, Growing Smart Sound Plymouth and
strengthening supply chains for University Hospitals Plymouth NHS
Trust; u) Scrutiny Panel members were encouraged to visit www.investplymouth.co.uk to learn more. In response to
questions, the following was discussed: v) £50 million was needed to reopen a railway line to Tavistock and open a train station in Plympton, which The Leader was lobbying for in connection with ... view the full minutes text for item 6. |
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Freeport Annual Update Additional documents:
Minutes: Councillor Evans OBE
(Leader of the Council) introduce the report, David
Draffan (Service Director, Economic Development), Ian Cooper
(Operations Director, PASD Freeport) and Jan Ward CBE (Chair of the
PASD Freeport Board), and highlighted:
a)
Freeports would transition into
a industrial strategy zones under new government plans;
b)
The Plymouth and South Devon
Freeport (PASDF) had contributed £1.3 million seed funding
into the Council’s £23 million investment partnership
with Associated British Ports (ABP) to transform Millbay docks,
providing new facilities to support export growth;
c)
PASDF had also supported the
widening of Cattewater Harbour to attract larger, and greener,
vessels;
d)
Planning permission had been
secured for Oceansgate Innovation Barns and work on site was due to
begin shortly;
e)
PASDF had provided funding to
enable Princess Yachts to expand their South Yard
operation;
f)
Direct development of Freeport
in Beaumont Way was nearing completion;
g)
Sherford employment land had
been secured by PASDF funding;
h)
Recent announcements on
investment in defence in Plymouth, could lead to more opportunities
for PASDF;
i)
The industrial strategy had
identified eight key growth sectors which aligned with Freeport
gateway sectors of defence, clean tech, advanced manufacturing,
marine and space;
j)
PASDF worked with GAP partners,
led by PCC, on the Government ask for a 10-year investment
programme to develop new technologies and capabilities focused on
marine autonomy;
k)
PASDF had also commissioned a
marine autonomy research project in collaboration with PCC
following the Government’s designation of Plymouth as the
UK’s National Centre for Marine Autonomy;
l)
This supportive, mission-led
approach was geographically focused on the three tax sites
established at South Yard, Langage, and Sherford, plus the ports of
Plymouth;
m)
£25 million in seed
funding was matched by £47 million locally;
n)
Twelve seed capital projects
were all initiated, with three completed and two nearing
completion;
o)
Langage developments included
spine roads to unlock employment land;
p)
PCC’s direct development
at Beaumont Way construction had made swift progress;
q)
Social value and engagement
targets had been met and in some cases exceeded;
r)
Carlton Power had signed a
contract for green hydrogen production at Langage;
s)
A demand study had identified
the fast-moving consumer goods sector as the likely early adopter
of green hydrogen, but also forecast demand from the marine and
defence sectors from the mid 2030’s;
t)
Sherford land had been secured
for defence use with infrastructure improvements planned;
u)
Babcock had announced
intentions to invest further in PASDF by establishing an integrated
logistics hub and advanced manufacturing facility;
v)
Floating offshore wind
opportunities were being explored in alignment with clean tech
goals;
w)
In driving local growth, PASDF
would provide advice and support, and had already supported talks
between Freeport land owners to agree a joint venture that would
create a development structure for Langage;
x)
PASDF was fairly unique in that
its gateways aligned so well with Government priorities; y) Growth Alliance Plymouth (GAP) was important to ensure work was focused and didn’t duplicate. In response to ... view the full minutes text for item 7. |
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Minutes: The Panel discussed
its work programme highlighting the following:
a)
Site visits were confirmed with
logistical details to follow;
b)
Concerns over having time to
effectively scrutinise each item on the agenda; c) It would be suggested that in future the papers were taken as read and time was used for questions. The Panel noted the work programme.
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Minutes: Hannah Chandler-Whiting (Democratic Advisor)
advised that since publication: a) Three recommendations from an earlier meeting had been completed and had gone to a recent Cabinet meeting and received an official response which was available online, but would be shared with Panel members. The Panel noted the action log.
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