Swansea's Labour administration said it would get a list of things done within 100 days of forming a new cabinet earlier this summer, but has it? Labour had recently won its third council election in a row, with Cllr Rob Stewart continuing to serve as leader after eight years at the helm.
There were a raft of manifesto pledges, and 63 delivery commitments Labour sought to achieve within the first 100 days. Clearly the party wasn't short of ideas.
Some of these 100-day commitments related to ongoing programmes of work, such as new council house building and a project to transform Castle Square, in the city centre. There were other pretty safe bets, such continuing to make cost of living payments on behalf of the Welsh Government.
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Other commitments, such as progressing work on a new corporate joint committee structure and reviewing the goals of the achieving better together, tranformation strategy and programme were, while not unimportant, unlikely to have people leaping about with anticipation.
There were several more tangible pledges, so the Local Democracy Reporting Service has picked seven of them and asked Cllr Stewart for an update now that the 100 days have passed.
Pledge: We will secure a major new tenant for the Debenhams unit in the Quadrant Shopping Centre, securing the use of this unit for the future.
Update: Confidential negotiations are under way. This is still commercially confidential at this stage, but progress is being made.
Pledge: We shall begin delivery of new special school facilities.
Update: We have identified a potential site and council officers are working on the business case for a new £30 million facility.
Pledge: Swansea Council will begin the phased demolition of Llys Dewi Sant and the old multi-storey car park (in the city centre).
Update: Llys Dewi Sant is already demolished and the St David's car park will be demolished in the new year, once the new arena north car park (opposite the road from the arena and nearing completion) is operational.
Pledge: Swansea Council will deliver new promenade improvements and developments, as well as new lighting around Swansea Bay.
Update: Promenade upgrade works in Mumbles are approved, and work will commence shortly. A commitment of £400,000 for new bay lighting from Mumbles to the Slip Bridge is agreed as part of the council's economic recovery fund. It will be fully delivered in the next 18 months.
Pledge: Swansea Council will commence the upgrade works at Cefn Hengoed Community School, Bonymaen, progressing our £7 million investment in a new Community Sports Barn.
Update: Contractors are on site and the build is under way. Part of the original school corridors have already been upgraded.
Pledge: The council will announce progress on the Blue Eden project (a private £1.7 billion technology, energy and residential scheme on land at Swansea docks).
Update: Announcements are due shortly in terms of land acquisition and strategic partners to deliver the project.
Pledge: Swansea Council will agree a new Swansea Bay Strategy (a framework which could lead to new developments at certain seafront locations).
Update: Work is under way and the strategy will be presented to cabinet / council in the new year.
Progress has been made, then, but Swansea Labour has not been able to fulfil all its commitments. Whether its wider manifesto pledges can be delivered will be influenced by how much funding it receives from central Government in the coming years. All eyes, then, on the all-important spending plans to be announced by Chancellor Jeremy Hunt on November 17.
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