Councillor Ian Blair-Pilling, Cabinet Member
for Public Health, Communities, Leisure, and Libraries, alongside
David Redfern, Director – Leisure, Culture, and Communities,
delivered a presentation regarding leisure services.
A series of slides were presented which
detailed the income and expenditure for all sites for the year
2023-24, alongside the core membership and swim school membership
growth as at January 2025. Latent demand
was then raised with Members being shown a table setting out the
current membership position for each site, 2015 and 2022 latent
demand targets, and membership as a percentage of latent demand,
with all figures being correct as at 3
February 2025. It was highlighted that a number
of sites were over 100%, with others on a trajectory to
surpass the latent demand figure, and officers detailed the impacts
on membership growth following investments in developing,
upgrading, and improving facilities across the County, such as the
recent fitness suite launched in Devizes.
Reference was then made to ‘Moving
Communities’, which was explained as a national initiative
that provided a real-time view of delivery across programmes,
facilities, and places, with benchmarking and filtering
functionalities alongside mapping tools to allow for actionable
insights on quantifiable data. A table was then presented which
detailed the results of a recent survey and showed that Wiltshire
was above the average national score on factors such as helpful and
friendly staff, cleanliness, and value for money.
The public holiday opening project was then
briefly discussed, with officers reminding Members that the project
was due to last over a period of 4-5 years and that as working Bank
Holidays was not a contractual requirement, each relevant site
relied on the goodwill of staff volunteering to work on those
dates. It was highlighted that since the trial was launched, the
Council had not failed to open a facility across the four areas
thanks to those dedicated members of staff.
Finally, it was noted that officers were
looking to focus on outreach work in order
to improve the overall social benefits of the leisure
service and to further understand and address health inequalities
in different community areas across the County.
During the discussion, points included:
- The insourcing of 10 leisure centres
since October 2021, with Wiltshire Council directly running all 20
leisure centres across the County was highlighted, and Members
discussed the importance of keeping leisure centres financially
sustainable alongside the importance of their social value and
raising the levels of the health and wellbeing of residents.
- Members commended the different
mindset and approach taken to the leisure service over the past 4
years and the ambitions for the future, and it was emphasised that
leisure as an industry was connected to a
number of different areas within the Council. Therefore,
taking ownership of all of the leisure
centres allowed for greater flexibility and agility across those
linked services.
- It was noted that for those leisure
centres that were not achieving a level of income above their
expenditure, officers were working with site managers to developing
action plans to help support those sites. Furthermore, it was
explained that at present there was a higher demand for swim
schools than could be supplied, with there being challenges in the
recruitment of swimming teachers. As such, officers had developed
an in-house Swim Teacher Academy and further updates would be
brought to future meetings.
- Outreach work and understanding why
residents were or were not using leisure centres was raised and
Members were informed that officers were continuing to invest in
sites and build new facilities bearing in mind distances to areas
of deprivation in each community area. Furthermore, officers were
in the process of looking at Playing Pitch Strategies in tandem
with built facilities and the installation of Multi-Use Game Areas
(MUGAs) to bring leisure infrastructure into the heart of
communities and working closely with other partners such as
Spurgeons with the Family Hubs located
in different leisure centres, Council hubs, and libraries across
the County. Members were reassured that although it was difficult
to measure the social benefits of the work being undertaken in the
service, further updates would be provided to future meetings and
that officers were working hard to understand how best to evaluate
the service’s social value.
- It was further explained that
officers were undertaking a review on built facilities which when
combined with the latent demand figures would contribute to
understanding further investment opportunities and what scale of
investment may be justified.
- Members were reassured that there
was a 5-year warranty on all fitness equipment with any technical
issues or faults being escalated to leisure centre management who
would then contact the suppliers to address any concerns.
- Reference was made to the first
slide of the presentation relating to the income and expenditure of
all sites, and queries were raised as to energy costs. In response,
officers noted that the review on built facilities would provide
further data as to full income and costs and it was noted that
leisure centre managers were engaging with Council Environment
Officers to further understand energy costs and how to work at
reducing them. Furthermore, the Council had made the decision to
close all saunas approximately 18 months ago due to their high
energy costs, but officers were now conducting a trial to reopen
one sauna as a test case to determine its impact and to consider
the benefit of the offering against its operational costs.
- It was explained that there were
other Local Authorities who had insourced their leisure services,
but that there were others which were managed by external
operators, however it was emphasised that this was dependent on the
contracts in place and the financial position of each Local
Authority. Despite this, it was highlighted that although officers
felt confident in the service being provided in Wiltshire, there
was always room for further improvements and lessons to be learnt
from other Authorities across the country.
- Finally, officers highlighted the
new Trowbridge Leisure Centre project and emphasised that the site
was due to be one of the most sustainable in the country, and that
it was a priority for the Council to have full ownership of the
project to prevent partnership complications, dependencies or
unexpected delays.
At the conclusion of the discussion, it was
then:
Resolved:
The Committee:
a)
Noted the contents of the update.
b)
Requested that the next Select Committee asks for a further
update including financial information, leisure membership,
satisfaction levels, bank holiday opening, outreach, and emerging
social benefits.