Decision:
The
report was noted.
Minutes:
Jonathan Burnes gave
members an overview of the Evaluation Framework as per the report.
Members were advised
that this was about bringing everything that was happening previously all
together and encapsulating it into a document that is readable by everyone and
then a plan to look at what, how, when and who will be evaluating.
Officers advised that
the frameworks first question answers why they are evaluating and explained
that it is crucial for demonstrating the impact of the city deal over its
lifetime and that officers have had lots of feedback through scrutiny, both
this committee and through gateway assurance reviews and audit, all looking at
emphasising how benefits are now being evidenced and start being reported
through the City deal.
Jonathan Burnes advised
that he chaired an evaluation task and finish group that oversaw the
development of the framework.
The Task and finish
Group consisted of project programme leads and PMO team members who met monthly
and shaped the framework into the one in the report. They looked at making sure
that it was practical and workable in in what they were trying to present.
Members were advised that the point of the framework is looking at the
rationale, the principles, roles and responsibilities and its methodology.
How are you calculating
these things? How, how was it presented and being open and transparent about
that approach.
Officers explained that
they want to look at two midterm evaluations and a final evaluation for the
portfolio. Basing it on years 1 to 7 for midterm evaluation and then the second
midterm would be between 25/26 up to 2029/30. The final evaluation will be in
2032/33, which is when the 15 years of the portfolio ends.
Members were advised
that in the document every project and programme is listed with a schedule of
what will be evaluated and when.
Officers have worked
with all the projects and programmes, and they put them into a draught, and
these are all collated in the portfolio office into an evaluation profile. The
Profile will summarise every evaluation that projects will do, what that will entail
and who will conduct it. Officers stated that they don't want to start
evaluating things for evaluation’s sake and want to do it at the right time.
The framework will form
part of a large document called the monitoring evaluation plan. Officers will
do the monitoring reports, this will be the evaluations which help support that
reporting.
Members felt that the
framework was good but on item 7, in relation to the governance and oversight
it should have wording in there about scrutiny so that people are aware that
there is a scrutiny function to carry out especially as the document is one of
the more important documents the committee scrutinises on a regular basis.
Officers agreed and
noted that there is only one reference to scrutiny and that is more about the
input as opposed to the process so they will feed that back through the
governance process and add some words.
Jonathan Burnes advised
that he can write wording or he can receive any
narrative of people would like to see in it and then review it with the
committee members if that would help put it in the next iteration of the
framework.1:09:38
Members asked if GVA
features in the document.
Officers confirmed that
GVA features in it twice and that GVA can still be used and it's in the
business cases as an economic appraisal part of the process. Officers advised
that they are not requiring the projects and programmes to report GVA because
you can't attribute GVA to a building, however if somebody can then they will
accept it.
Members stated that if
officers do use things like GVA on websites and documents then they will hold
officers to GVA standards.
Members noted in a
previous meeting that they requested a letter to the Chair of the Corporate
Joint Committee relating to the use of GVA and asked if a reply had been
received. The democratic services officer confirmed that a reply was received
and was on the last meetings agenda.
Officers advised that
they are happy to incorporate GVA into it if they can evidence it. But they
want to make sure they can evidence the economic impact indicators that they
utilise. Currently they can’t do that with GVA.
The
report was noted.
Supporting documents: