As 2024 gets underway, new challenges and new opportunities sit on the horizon for the Isle of Wight Council – and top Alliance councillors have now revealed their New Year Resolutions. In the corridors of County Hall, where tinsel and decorations may still festoon the walls, work continues to keep the Island ticking along — from bin collections to school places and from food hygiene inspections to yellow line proposals — but what next? The authority will face crucial decisions in 2024 including what to do with the excess number of places in Island primary schools and whether that leads to closing schools; whether to adopt the planning strategy which has been years in the making; and how to manage the financial pressures in adult and children’s social care. With more to be done than ever before, and a shrinking cash pot, just what are those in charge looking to do in the year ahead? See what each cabinet member said their New Year’s resolutions were for their portfolios below … Councillor Phil Jordan – Leader and Cabinet member for infrastructure, transport and the Highways PFI
- Reduce the number of families in temporary accommodation as early as Spring and ensure families and children are not disadvantaged because of their circumstances, working toward providing more permanent homes.
- Provide affordable homes on the Island which are truly affordable to residents by working with a range of opportunities and providers.
- Resolve the Floating Bridge.
Cllr Jordan said:
“I want to be able to announce in 2024 a new approach to delivering, sustaining and improving the Floating Bridge service which should include a new vessel. “I am seeking support from industry professionals and engineering experts to bring forward outline suggestions for the service and vessel, which would need to be electrically powered.”
Councillor Ian Stephens – Deputy Leader and cabinet member for housing and finance
- Continue to lobby central government for fair funding for the Isle of Wight Council in support of essential services.
- Pursue the Brownfield Land Release Fund which enables the clearance of council-owned land for housing development for Island affordable social housing.
- Bring forward a structured, legally balanced budget which will assist in the future stability of services provided by the authority.
Councillor Debbie Andre – Cabinet member for adult social care and public health
- Develop further and improve the way we communicate the range of adult social care services available to residents. By applying the principle ‘no wrong door’ residents can easily find and get access to the right services for them at the right time through a variety of means.
- Strengthen, promote and extend Early Help and Living Well services, which are already making a significant impact in maintaining independence, through targeted support delivered by community partners working with the council.
- Launch and develop an anti-smoking strategy to support the cessation of smoking among Islanders, especially during pregnancy, through a range of interventions and prevent the unnecessary use of disposable vapes by non-smokers, especially young people.
Councillor Jonathan Bacon – Cabinet member for children’s services, education and corporate functions
- Enhance opportunities for children in care and support for care leavers.
- Create a sustainable school estate enabling Island schools to deliver the best possible quality of education.
- Work to improve standards of literacy and attendance at schools.
Councillor Paul Fuller – Cabinet member for planning, coastal protection and flooding
- Progressing the Draft Island Planning Strategy.
- Ensuring all residents feel secure and safe in their homes.
- Ensure residents feel their council listens to them.
Councillor Julie Jones-Evans – Cabinet member for economy, regeneration, culture and leisure
- Continue the great work by 1Lesiure, supporting our community’s health goals. “They are so professional and dedicated, they are a credit to the Isle of Wight Council,” she said.
- Support the delivery of elements of the Cultural Strategy and continue to work with partners in the South West area. A new Solent-wide strategy is launching in 2024.
- Look forward to seeing the new Bay Area Place Plan and bring projects forward the see the aspirations realised, especially for young people who have already helped bring forward the restoration of Sandown Town Hall.
Councillor Karen Lucioni – Cabinet member for regulatory services, community protection and ICT
- Get CCTV manned again
- Lobby for a police front desk in the Bay Area
- Lead on a plan to make Ryde Monktonmead resilient to future flooding
Councillor Lora Peacey-Wilcox – Cabinet member for climate change, biosphere and waste
- Continue to work to achieve power sustainability for the Island, both in terms of our electricity infrastructures and encouraging and developing Island-based sources of renewable energy
- Maintain and work to increase our waste recycling rates — Reduce, recycle, repurpose.
- Develop council-wide adaptation plans to manage a changing climate that supports the wellbeing of our community with increasing extreme weather events and that our economy can sustainably grow and decision-making shows regard to the UN Sustainable Development Goals to achieve this.


























































































No one ever sticks to New Year’s resolutions. All talk. No substance.
They will all be saying this again for 2025
I have a New Years Resolution
Decrease Council Tax in 2024
And how are you going to achieve that?
To not be discovered for the idiot I am, remain in the role for as long as posssible and take as much money as possible from the local taxpayers, make decisions that I can deny I ever made, that will do for a start off.
Who the hell cares!!! This lot will just continue to do the exact opposite of what us, the residents want.
All Councillors are a waste of money.
Complete waste of time. No one ever sticks to New Year resolutions. This lot won’t be any different.
A shrinking cash pot? Don’t they mean a poorly managed cash pot, squandered on pointless white elephant waste of tax payers money projects, like so called road improvements that are worse than they were before, and heap of crap floating bridges that have spent more time out of service than it has giving one? Ryde bus station, that has caused tail backs along Lind Street and up Union Street since it was completed?
Hot air !!!!!!!
Blah blah blah blah blah…..
Save money ????
That’s another big joke !!!!!
This is another shot across the bow before you numptys put up our council tax!!!!!!!
And cut more services to within an inch ……
Listen to us the cash cow’s?????
Another joke ……
But the biggest joke is all the numptys that pretend to care !!!!
Thanks for the laughs.. from the going downhill fast club .
What about realising that that they work for the electorate,not the other way round
And smirking bacon will do everything in his power to keep his nose in the trough and will jump to any party he thinks will give him his meal ticket in the next election
Has anyone noticed bacon sarnie keeps very quiet re the floating turd ???,?,
Oh yes many remember your involvement, …..
And please I E don’t keep showing the smirking pillocks pics, to much makes you feel sick pass the bucket !!!!! Oops please…
The saddest thing about these resolutions is no one is wanting to create jobs??? We need a Council that wants to create opportunity and wants to help create wealth.
I had to pay £6.20 to park so we could take our family to watch a pantomime at medina theater. This is an IOW school / leisure centre car park not a city centre car park on the main land. Some of which are cheaper.
Talk about paying twice to use council facilities. 3 times if you include council tax.
In a couple of years the same councillors will be scratching there heads why no one is using there facilities.