Monday 28 December 2009

Another Fine Mess you got me into - Alan



Just sent a letter to the Bolton News following on from the article that appeared there on 26th December.

Dear Sir

Further to your article 'Open up or face Court' (26th Dec), might I add the following.

The Deputy Information Commissioner, in his twenty five pages long Decision Notice of 17th December, has stated (not claimed) that Bolton Council has breached variously Sections 1, 10 and 17 of the Freedom of Information Act seven times in dealing with Mr Greenwood's request.

Seven individuals were sent on 'Courses' held by the Common Purpose organisation. The name of one person is already in the public domain. The Commissioner has decided that two further individuals are indeed protected by the Act leaving the four which the Council now has to name.

The 'Chatham House Rules', under which these courses are held, require that nothing said or discussed can be revealed by the attendees. Nor can they reveal the names of anybody else attending.

Common Purpose, in it's own words, promotes 'Leadership beyond Authority' which, when encouraged in an employee of a public body, strikes me as a sinister if not Orwellian phrase.

The cost of each three day course can be up to £6,600 per person. The seven individuals sent on these courses by Bolton Council cost Bolton Council Tax payers £28,367.71p.
If I sent my son to University, the tuition fees would be £3,000 for a whole year.

Because of the secrecy, there is no way of confirming that this spending of money is for the Public Benefit as is required.

Many Councils and Public Bodies utilise these courses. Leaving aside the question of 'Why ?', other Councils, when faced with similar FOI requests, are completely open and reveal names, dates, bank details etc straight away. Why then does Bolton Council try to hide the information?

Bizarrely, within the Council, the Monitoring Officer who reviews FOI decisions is the same man who refused the request in the first place.

Bolton Council is aquiring a bit of a track record when it comes to the accuracy of legal advice that it relies on. Perhaps the Leader, Councillor Morris, ought to issue a statement that he has complete confidence in those who provide it before it costs us any more money.

Paul Richardson

Saturday 26 December 2009

Mr Alan Eastwood - again!

It's funny how one thing leads to another.

In my research and investigation into the Change of Governance at Bolton Council it finally came down to a difference of opinion between myself and the Director of the Chief Executives office, Mr Alan Eastwood.

It would appear that he is the top Legal man at the Town Hall - the link between the Statute Book and the Elected Members and Officers of Bolton Council.

I have already wondered what other instances there might be where his interpretation of the requirements of the law could prove to be somewhat 'dodgy'.

It didn't take much trawling of the internet to find something.

Read on!

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The Information Commissioner - the chap who rules on what can or cannot be disclosed under the Freedom of Information Act - has, on 17th December 2009, found Bolton Council guilty of seven breaches of the FOI Act.

This decision has yet to be posted on the ICO website.

The background to this case relates to a FOI request (not from me) asking for the names of Officers of the Council who have been sent on training courses by the Council provided by an organisation known as 'Common Purpose'

This organisation, purporting to be a charity, holds leadership training courses for potential 'leaders' in areas of Government, Local Government and other Publicly Funded Bodies. People who 'pass' these courses are regarded as 'Graduates' of Common Purpose and have access to a network of other graduates.

The problem is that everything that happens on these courses, and who attends them is subject to what are known as 'Chatham House Rules'. Nothing that is said, nor the names of those who attend can be revealed.

Furthermore, one of the purposes of this organisation is to encourage and promote 'Leadership beyond Authority' - a very sinister phrase when applied to those in Public Bodies.

Bolton Council, in the form of Mr Eastwood finally and grudgingly revealed that they had spent £28,367.71 on sending employees on an assortment of these courses.

It turns out from the invoices that we are talking about up to £6,600 for each individual!

I have gleaned from other sources that this is the likely cost for a three day course.

It only costs £3,000 for a year at University!!!!

Mr Eastwood, however, refused to release the names of the individuals or the positions that they held within the Town Hall.

The Information Commissioner, in a lengthy series of communications, has finally got to the bottom line that seven individuals were involved. He has determined that one name is already known ( I'll find out who), two others are protected by the Data Protection Act but the remaining four must be named within 35 calendar days from the 17th December.

....................................................................................................................

Point 1

Why, when Bolton Council is so strapped for cash, are they spending this kind of money on 'training' and particularly with this organisation?

Point 2

Why, as a result of the secrecy, are we not allowed to know the content of this training to determine whether or not it is in the 'Public Benefit' as required by law.?

Point 3

What is Mr Eastwood and the Council trying to hide by erroneous interpretation of the Data protection Act when other Coucils faced with the same question have divulged the names and job titles of attendees.?

......................................................................................................................


I only came across this Decision a couple of hours ago. By sheer coincidence I've just bought todays Bolton News & lo and behold on page 7:-

.....................................................................................................................


Open up — or face court, council told

Town Hall chiefs have been threatened with High Court action amid claims they have breached the Freedom of Information Act.

Bolton Council is refusing to divulge the names of officers who attended a training course which cost taxpayers almost £30,000.

Now Deputy Information Commissioner David Smith has issued a decision notice against the authority telling it to open up — or face being held in contempt of court.
He has given the council 35 days to disclose the names of the four employees who attended leadership development courses run by training company Common Purpose.

If it does not, Information Commissioner Christopher Graham could make representations to the High Court that the council has breached the act.

Any breach of the Freedom of Information Act can result in a charge of contempt of court. The Act was introduced to encourage openness and transparency from public bodies and give people access to official information.

Breightmet resident John Greenwood submitted a Freedom of Information request in April asking for details of how much the council had spent with Common Purpose, copies of invoices and the names of officers who had received training from the not-for-profit organisation.

The council sent details of the cost of the courses, copies of the invoices it had on record but redacted — blanked out — the name and job title of staff who had attended the various courses.

Mr Greenwood said: “The council has spent more than £28,000 of taxpayers’ money on sending senior officers on these courses and I felt that it was of public interest to find out who exactly these people were.”

Common Purpose meetings have attracted controversy in the past for being held under Chatham House Rule, which essentially keeps the identity of speakers or other participants secret.

Mr Greenwood added: “I do not think this is good for democracy that key decision makers, who are beyond public scrutiny, are attending these kind of courses in secret.”

In his report, Mr Smith said the council had been correct in withholding information such as invoice numbers and bank accounts but had incorrectly withheld the names of four officers, prompting his decision notice.

A council spokesman said: “We have received the request from the Information Commissioner and we are considering our response in light of this request.”


...................................................................................................

Enough for now - but, believe me, there will be more!!

Paul

Saturday 19 December 2009

To Block or not to Block -That is the Question




One of the consequences of my round robin e-mail to the 60 Councillors was that one of my own ward Councillors was disturbed by Alan Eastwood's refusal to allow Claire Atkinson to circulate the e-mail by pushing the button that would have done this.

This Councillor raised his concern with Mr Eastwood as follows:-

Alan,

I was made aware of the email from Mr Richardson of my ward two days ago and the email being blocked by yourself. Whilst I understand that your views are different than Mr Richardson’s views surely he had the right to allow his email to be circulated to elected members.

In recent weeks we have received many emails from residents on many subjects in particular Cutacre and planning applications and in many cases the comments within them are incorrect. These emails have not been blocked.

As you are aware residents are entitled to their views, could I ask you to inform me of the reasoning behind this when other issues are sent without being blocked.

Regards,


Alan Eastwood replied as follows:-

Dear Councillor

In no way did I block Mr Richardson from sending the email to members. We received a request to Members services to circulate the email. As you will see from my email I drew Mr Richardson’s attention of my concern to using the Councils resources for distribution because of the inaccuracies contained within the email.

Mr Richardson had sometime ago received a full response via his MP on the same subject matter with the same information.

In the event Mr Richardson did distribute the email and I therefore responded to all members with the response that I had sent to him.

I hope this helps.


Does this man understand the English language at all??

'In no way did I block Mr Richardson from sending the email to members''

The 'way' in which he blocked my e-mail was by telling Claire not to distribute it.

That means he blocked my e-mail.

He didn't ultimately prevent me from painfully copying and pasting the thing sixty times in order to send it one by one to the Councillors, but his hope could only have been that I wouldn't go to that trouble. If he had known that I was the determined type of guy that I am, he would have accepted that he might as well let it through.
.................................................................................

He doesn't answer my Councillors question as to why other e-mails with 'inaccuracies' in them have successfully been distributed in this way.

In any event, why should he, an unelected employee of the Council, albeit of a 'high' status,have any right of censorship or veto in communications between Electors & Elected.
...........................................................................

In reference to the 'full response' via my MP with the 'same information', - the 'information' is exactly what I was questioning in my e-mail to the Councillors.

The document, which was the consequence of a query from another Elector and which Brian Iddon freely forwarded to me, did not satisfy my doubts and queries.

I did not and do not accept that his reading of the Act was correct and I was drawing the Councillors attention to that for them to make their own judgement.

Is he too 'great' to have his opinion challenged or for the Councillors to re-examine the advice he had given them.

For the Director of Legal Services of a major organisation such as Bolton Council to have such a casual approach to the meaning of words causes me to wonder how sound and legalistically accurate other advice to our Elected representatives might have been.

This might sound like it is becoming personal. It isn't.

It is to do with :-

1) We are Electors

2) We elect Councillors

3) Councillors proceed, on our behalf, according to the various statues and Acts of Parliament to implement their policies.

4) Legal Officers of the Council advise them in a scrupulously accurate, impartial and detached manner as to that which the law requires.

5) The Electors have to be confident that this happens in all matters.

In this case, I am not sure that 4) & 5) are happening.

Paul

Wednesday 16 December 2009

Different Words -Different Meanings



So far, all my deliberations have been to do with what I viewed to be an inadequate Consultation organised by Bolton Council prior to drawing up proposals for a change of Governance.

When I received replies from several Councillors to my round-robin e-mail, some of the comments they made suddenly brought to my mind a further, and probably a more important, point of contention.

These comments and the 'Amendment' to the motion put before the council on this matter, made it obvious that all the Councillors believed that the Government was the instigator of these changes and the Act left the Council with no choice but to change the way it was doing things.

The Amendment, submitted by Councillor David Wilkinson, read as follows:-

"That in approving this Motion, Council wishes to put on record that constant Government inspired tinkering with local democratic processes does nothing to improve Council performance and merely serves to erode local decision making.”

The comments included:-

" I agree with your sentiments but not your legal argument; in fact the Council last night unanimously passed a resolution regretting central government interference in the domestic political arrangements of the Council; ........................."

".......................... this was the least worst option legally available and was therefore unanimously backed by last night’s Council."

"....................... The real culprit in all this is the Government, who seem to have given little in reasoning as to why they suddenly want to change things................."


..................................................................................

Now consider the following three statements:-

1) The Consultation, drawn up by Bolton Council, in its various forms, states the following:-

"New National legislation - The Local Government and Public Involvement in Health Act 2007 - means the Council has to change the way it is governed by May of next year.........etc"

2) In a letter to Brian Iddon MP dated 17th November, Alan Eastwood states:-

"Under section 33(a) of the Local Government Act 2000, as amended (by the 2007 Act), Councils must consider to change to a different form of Executive..........etc"

3) The Act itself (as amended) in Section 33(a) actually states:-

"A local authority in England which is operating executive arrangements may

(a) vary the arrangements so that they provide for a different form of executive, and
(b) if it makes such a variation, vary the arrangements in such other respects (if any) as it considers appropriate. "


(The meaning of the use of 'may' is further re-enforced by Section 33E ( Proceedure to be followed) which states in Sub Section (1):-

"This section applies to a local authority which wishes to make a change in governance arrangements")

.........................................................................................................

Now the English language is very precise. The people who draft Acts of Parliament are experts at precise use of the language.

In the three examples above "Has to change", "Must consider to change" and "May (vary)" mean three completely different things.

It is inconceivable that Alan Eastwood, the author of examples 1) & 2) did not know this.

Further to this even 1) & 2) both authored by Alan Eastwood are inconsistent with one another.

............................................................................................................

So, the second point of contention, (as well as the Consultation/Guidelines business,) is that the Government didn't require or compel the Council to do anything. It merely amended the 2000 Act to provide the facility for the Council to change from one form of Executive to another if the Council so wished.

The Amendment put to the Council by David Wilkinson and duly passed alongside the Proposals by all the Members present, was completely pointless since, from my reading of the Act, the Government didn't inspire anyone to tinker with anything.

It confirms, in my mind, that the entire body of Bolton Councillors, by passing this amendment, were proceeding in ignorance of these irreconcilable differences in wording in the belief that the legal advice of Alan Eastwood was reflecting the requirements of the Act.

This is the same legal adviser who is adamant that the Guidelines don't apply to the Consultation.

So- what was the purpose - and who's purpose was it?

.........................................................................................

On the face of it, and at the very least, the Councillors have been misled.
The question is - by whom and why?

.............................................................................

The Consultation document tells the public that the way of governing has to change.
If, in fact it didn't, then the choices presented to the public for their views should have been three-fold

1) 'New style' Leader & Cabinet (with the leader having the same powers as an elected mayor would have) etc

2) Elected Mayor etc

3) Leave the damned thing as it is.

If I am right, then the public has been misled as well.

................................................................................

It is difficult not to arrive at the following conclusion.
An 'Elite' at the top of the Town Hall wanted to concentrate power in the hands of a small group - shall we say the leader(s) and their close advisors.

To make this change they had to go through the rigmarole of the famous two choices/ Consultation etc.

The Consultation was designed to create the minimum response which could therefore be, and was, easily ignored.

The backbench Members were easily convinced on the advice of the Director of the Chief Executives Office that to change was compulsory and that the eventual Proposals were the least worst option legally available

I am no more stating that I am right in this than I did in the matter of the Consultation, but the logic is there to see.

If I am right...........................................????????????????

Over to John Denham, Secretary of State for Communities & Local Government who is examining the point about Consultation Guidelines and who may soon be examining the point of everybody being misled.

Paul

Next Blog - Secretive Leadership Courses paid for by you.

Tuesday 15 December 2009

More Letters to the Bolton News - Elected Mayors

Just to update the record of letters printed in the Bolton News on the subject of Elected Mayors.

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Chance to cast vote would be nice

Monday 7th December 2009

RE the letter from Mr Peter Johnston. There are some points I would like to answer. I don't remember ever saying that I wanted an elected mayor — what I want is the opportunity to vote for one.

I will accept the majority decision of the democratic vote. I asked, what number of voters would be acceptable for the council? No answer. I don’t want to know what the Labour Party would have done many years ago.

Mr Johnston is entitled to his view, but not to say that most of the population is not interested in such an idea. How does he know?

I presume that this senior colleague from Yorkshire he speaks of actually means, The Mayor of Doncaster. This colleague of his says, “we’ve got one and you can’t keep tabs on the blighter, and if we can’t keep tabs on him, what chance has the ordinary punter?”

It looks to me that Yorkshire have the same “I know best” attitude that Bolton Council has. Classing the voter as an “ordinary punter” — how condescending. Unlike Mr Johnston’s colleague, The Mayor of Doncaster is probably out working for the council taxpayers of Yorkshire, trying to make savings and get value for money.
Great Britain was built on democratic values which are now being denied us by Europe, the Government and local councils.

James Birch - Sharples


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The maths proves a lack of interest

Thursday 10th December 2009


JAMES Birch (Letters, December 7) asks how I know that the majority of the population are not much interested in the notion of an elected Mayor.

Simple.

There are, give or take, about 100,000 households in Bolton MBC. I do not know the precise circulation of Bolton Scene, but it is a fair working assumption that it reaches at least half of them.

Assume an average of two adults per household, of whom only one actually reads the paper.

Assume further that half of those who do read it are too busy, too overburdened, or have more important things to do than to respond to the question about whether there should be a ballot.

That leaves an electoral base of 25,000 of whom only 700, or 2.8 per cent, were sufficiently interested to reply. That hardly suggests a high level of general interest.

If that is insufficient proof, remember that, when the Anti Congestion Charge campaign was at its height, the opponents of the charge attempted to raise petitions for elected mayors in several of the Greater Manchester authorities. In none of them were they able to secure the required 10,000 signatures.

I do not anyway believe in governance by plebiscite, for the simple reason that, for any complicated issue, a majority of the electorate will be ill equipped either by training or experience to reach an informed conclusion.

But as to democratic accountability. If this means anything at all apart from the occasional opportunity to reject our chosen representatives at the ballot box, it surely means that we can from time to time challenge them as to their activities, and hold them accountable.

And if, in any specified political framework, it is difficult for experienced politicians to hold a Mayor accountable, it is bound to be 10 times as difficult for anyone else, without experience or understanding of the way local government works.

Peter Johnston Kendal Road Bolton


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An elected mayor would be sensitive to public opinion

Saturday 12th December 2009

PETER Johnston is not in favour of an elected Mayor (“An elected Mayor is not a good idea”, Letters, November 18).

He backs up his view by citing a comment made to him by a “senior colleague in a Yorkshire authority” who claimed that it was difficult to keep tabs on the mayor.
This statement got me wondering.

Was this senior colleague of his an elected official of this Yorkshire authority, or one of the unelected officials who believe that it is their God-given right to rule over us?

Having an elected executive mayor is by no means perfect (Ken Livingstone’s regime in London is a prime example).

But, for example, if Bolton had had an elected mayor at the time of the market hall episode, I would very much doubt we would have the market hall like it is today.
An elected mayor would be far more sensitive to public opinion than the present administration which, overall, would not be a bad thing.

Stuart A Chapman Patterdale Road Harwood


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And finally, one I have submitted on 10th December which has yet to be printed.

...........................................................................................................

Dear Sir

So, Bolton Council has succeeded in passing the resolution required to change its governance arrangements.

Up until now your correspondents (including myself) have concentrated on the quality of the Consultation.

It seems to me that for the Council, it was never about elected mayors, but, in order to implement the changes they wanted, the Act required them to go through this rigmarole.

Resting upon the assurances of their top legal officer they have done, in my view, the minimum consultation they think they can get away with.

It might be appropriate to examine what is actually going to change.

This is laid out in the required publicity for the proposals on page 2 of November's issue of Bolton Scene.

Basically, from next May, instead of the full Council choosing the Executive Members and determining their roles and responsibilities, this power will now be given to the 'new style' Leader. He will have the same powers as would have an elected mayor.

The Leader will be chosen by the whole Council after the local elections next May and will serve until he or she, personally, has to face their own ward election - up to a maximum of four years.

The governance will mimic the Westminster set up with the difference that after the following local elections in 2011 it would be theoretically possible to have, say, a Conservative Leader in a Council that has a majority of Labour Councillors. Sounds great fun!

It seems to me that power will have shifted even more towards the 'Elite' of the town hall (including officers) away from the backbench - foot soldier - dare I say lobby fodder of the people you and I elect.

More democracy - I think not.

To Mr Johnston (Letters 10th Dec) I say - try keeping tabs on this Cabal at the top after next May.

Paul Richardson etc.

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More very soon on who runs the Town Hall.

Paul

Sunday 13 December 2009

Bolton Council - 9th December -



Well, the Council met on Wednesday 9th December to consider its proposals for the new form of governance.

These proposals, as required by the Act, were published in the November issue of Bolton Scene in an article on Page 2.

The article read as follows:-

Bolton Scene Nov 2009. Publication of proposals.

How Council Decisions will be made

The way the Council is governed is to change next year

Proposals to have the Council directed by a 'new style' leader & cabinet have been approved by the Councils Executive

They will now go to the full Council next month

the 'new style' leader and cabinet will see a councillor elected as leader of the executive for up to four years by the full council

The length of term of the leader will be determined by how long is left before he or she has to stand for election again.

Between two and nine councillors will be appointed to the executive by the leader who will also decide their roles and responsibilities

The leader will also appoint a deputy leader

There will still be a ceremonial mayor

At the moment the council is governed by a leader and an executive.

The full council (a meeting where all the councillors can attend) decides who the leader is, who the members of the executive are and their roles and responsibilities.

The system was introduced in 2000 following national legislation to change the old committee model of government.

Voters will still elect councillors to represent them and their areas.

New national legislation - the Local Government and involvement in public Health act 2007 - means the Council has to change the way it is governed by May next year.


End of Article

......................................................................................

Actually, quite a lot happened on the day of the Council Meeting.

Having been thwarted by Alan Eastwood in communicating with all 60 Councillors through the Town Hall distribution system, I re-hashed the e-mail and painfully sent it to each individual e-mail address.

This went as follows. Most of this is known to you but I record this so that it is known what information the Councillors had prior to the meeting.

PUBLIC CONSULTATION 7th Sept -4th Oct 2009

Dear Councillor

May I bring the following to your attention and would you forgive me for the detail - that is where the devil is.

Firstly, may I state that I could be wrong in what I am asserting in this e-mail since I am no expert at wading though Acts of Parliament. I leave that to your judgement.
.....................................................................................

This Wednesday, recommendations will be put to the full Bolton Council meeting on the form of Executive that it proposes to operate after next May.

.....................................................................................

The Primary Legislation upon which this is based is the Local Government Act 2000. This Act required a change from the previous Committee system to one of three options.

Elected Mayor + Cabinet
Leader + Cabinet
Elected Mayor + Council Manager

I am not privy to the details, but as a consequence of this Act Bolton Council adopted the option that it currently operates.

Section 25 of the Act lays down a procedure to be followed.

Section 25, Sub Section (2) states the following:-

"Before drawing up proposals under this section, a local authority must take reasonable steps to consult the local government electors for, and other interested persons in, the authority’s area."

Section 38 Subsection (1) requires:-

"A local authority must have regard to any guidance for the time being issued by the Secretary of State for the purposes of this Part."

The guidance for this purpose was issued by the then Department of Transport Environment & Regions in October 2000 under the heading ' New Council Constitutions - Consultation Guidelines for English Local Authorities'

This can be downloaded from the following Government Website.

http://www.communities.gov.uk/publications/localgovernment/newcouncilconstitutions3

This document comprises 58 pages.

Again I assume that the public consultation at the time of the original change was in line with this guidance.

.....................................................................................

In 2007, the Local Government and Public Involvement in Health Act 2007 amended and added to the provisions of the 2000 Act.

First of all, for English Authorities, it removed the third option of Elected Mayor and Council Manager.

Secondly it introduced the means by which an English Local Authority could change from the Executive Arrangements it had introduced following the 2000 Act to a different form.

This was done by amending the 2000 Act by adding the following- Quote

.....................................................................................

Section 64 Changing governance arrangements
After section 33 of the Local Government Act 2000 (c. 22) insert—
“Changing governance arrangements: general provisions.

.....................................................................................

There then follows Sections 33A to 33O which are added to the 2000Act

Section 33A states:-

.....................................................................................

Executive arrangements: different form of executive
A local authority in England which is operating executive arrangements may—
(a) vary the arrangements so that they provide for a different form of executive, and
(b) if it makes such a variation, vary the arrangements in such other respects (if any) as it considers appropriate.

.....................................................................................

This is the Section under which the current changes in the operation of Bolton Councils Executive Arrangements are proceeding.

.....................................................................................

Section 33E, Sub section (6) states:-
"Before drawing up its proposals, the local authority must take reasonable steps to consult the local government electors for, and other interested persons in, the authority’s area."

.....................................................................................

This is the identical wording to that in Section 25 Sub Section (2) of the original Act.

.....................................................................................

So after 2007, the Local Government Act of 2000, as amended, states both in Section 25 and Section 33E:-

"Before drawing up its proposals, the local authority must take reasonable steps to consult the local government electors for, and other interested persons in, the authority’s area."
It is my contention that tt cannot be the case that the Guidelines referred to previously which apply to Section 25 do not apply to Section 33E - both in the same Act.

The Guidelines which apply to Section 25 ( and in my contention to Section 33E) have not (to my knowledge) been rescinded, deleted or amended.

.....................................................................................

This is the knub of the problem which I bring to your attention.

Should you trouble to read the Guidelines, then it becomes obvious that the recent consultation organised by Bolton Council between 7th Sept and 4th October comes nowhere near to satisfying the spirit or letter of the Guidelines.

Alan Eastwood has stated the following ( after quoting the provisions of Section 33):-

"Despite the above being included within the Act it does not provide either for any specific form of consultation or for any specific consultation period. In addition the department for Communities and Local Government decided not to issue any guidance to Local Authorities as to what the Department considers would constitute 'reasonable steps'. As a result, each Local Authority has had to reach its own decision as to the form and level of public consultation that it considers to be appropriate."

He is saying that the Guidelines which apply to Section 25(2) don't and were never intended to apply to Section 33(6) in spite of the fact that both Sections are in the same Act and contain the same wording.

I presume that he has received clarification from the Department for Communities and Local Government that he is correct (and thus I am incorrect) and has not, for whatever reason, just assumed that the Guidance doesn't apply .

If, in fact, I am correct, then it could well be that Bolton Council have failed to satisfy the provisions of the Act so far and thus cannot proceed to the next stage.

..................................................................................

In any event, a public consultation method which produces a response from just 0.2% of the electorate must, as a consultation, be viewed to have been hopelessly organised let alone a waste of time and money. The poor response cannot, in my view, just be put down entirely to the apathy of the residents.

The consultation didn't even involve those most important meetings between the Council and public - i.e the Area Forums. (At least not in my locality)

The consultation wasn't, according to the Guidelines, just to do with the electors. How the Council is organised is also important for other 'stakeholders'

Why were not the views sought of the local Chamber of Trade, the local Trades Unions, The Residents Associations, the Council of Mosques, other Church Bodies etc etc??
.....................................................................................

Finally, a point which I most indignant about.

On Tuesday 1st December I tried to send a similarly worded e-mail on this subject to all the Elected Members by the more convenient method of asking Claire Atkinson to circulate it.

Two days later I received a response from Alan Eastwood stating that he was reluctant to circulate my e-mail to yourselves since 'the information contained within it is incorrect'

To put it mildly I was furious - and I still am.

What right has an 'employee' of the Council, of whatever status, to interfere with a communication between a local elector and the elected representatives of Bolton Metro residents.?

Why was this shown to him in the first place?

What other e-mails are you not getting or is it just to do with this subject?

I have no doubt whatsoever that half the e-mails you receive from electors contain incorrect information - but that is for you to judge and if you think, or know, in this case that I am wrong, to dismiss or ignore what I am saying.

.....................................................................................

So, as I said at the beginning - I could be wrong in what I am asserting.

I am confident that you will form your own judgement.

Yours Respectfully and Sincerely etc etc


End of e-mail.

.....................................................................................

On the 7th Dec I received replies from 5 Councillors commenting in various ways but nevertheless thanking me for the information.

A further 3 responses were received on the 9th Dec - the day of the meeting - the last being at 4.29pm.

Within the hour I was informed that Alan Eastwood had circulated an e-mail to all the Councillors at 4.26 pm - two & a half hours before the meeting was due to start.

This e-mail read as follows:-

Dear Councillors,

I understand that Paul Richardson has contacted a number of you regarding the proposals on the new Governance arrangements which appear on the agenda for Council this evening. Please see the e-mail below which I sent to Mr Richardson in response to his request that I circulate his view of consultation and guidance in this regard.

If I can be of further assistance, do not hesitate to contact me.

Alan R Eastwood


As stated above this e-mail included the original reply to me on 3rd December as follows:-

Dear Mr Richardson,

I refer to your e-mail which you sent to Claire Atkinson dated 1 December 2009 requesting that the information you have provided be circulated to all Elected Members. I am afraid that I am reluctant to circulate your e-mail, as the information contained within it, is incorrect. The guidance to which you refer was issued in respect of new Council Constitutions which came into force in 2000 and brought in the initial Cabinet/Executive Model along side others. This guidance does not relate to the current consultation and in fact, no guidance was issued in this regard. I hope this clarifies the position
.

End of e-mail

.....................................................................................

A classic move to shut down any doubts in the Councillors' minds at the last minute!!

I thought 'two can play at this game' and duly flashed off the following to all 60 Councillors:-

Dear Councillor

I have just had sight of the e-mail Mr Eastwood has circulated to you which includes his response to the e-mail from me that he felt unable to circulate.

May I also thank each of you who have taken the time to reply to me.

Regarding the matter of the Consultation, in the e-mail to yourselves, Mr Eastwood merely states his position without responding to the detail or logic of my argument, Frankly, I don't think he has answered the any of the points I have made.

Beyond this, I have had some indication that it is not universally understood amongst all Elected Members what the purpose of the changes is or what the implications of these changes are on the ability of 'backbench' Councillors to influence decisions on behalf of the electors of their wards might be.

I assume that every implication has been adequately explained to you.

All I can say is that, where I in your position, I wouldn't easily support anything that I didn't fully appreciate the consequences of and perhaps would consider withholding my support or opposition until such time as I did.

May I wish you all the best in your deliberations.

Yours respectfully

Paul Richardson


End of e-mail

.....................................................................................

One of the responses I had received was from the Liberal Democrat Councillor Barbara Ronson who included a copy of the Amendment to the motion to be debated in the name of her colleague David Wilkinson. The amendment read as follows:-

Amendment in the name of Councillor D A Wilkinson:

Addition of paragraph

"That in approving this Motion, Council wishes to put on record that constant Government inspired tinkering with local democratic processes does nothing to improve Council performance and merely serves to erode local decision making.”


I was informed on the 10th December that the Proposals and the Amendment were passed unanimously by the Council.

.....................................................................................

Next Blog - More correspondence in and to the Bolton News.

After that - Was this change of governance demanded by the Government or was it the choice of the Council.?

Paul

Saturday 5 December 2009

Good News + Good News

Whadya Know !! The Bolton News printed my letter today. (The short one) Let's see what response that gets.

Good news 2 -

Precinct Planters in place. Piccys as follows.








Well, it's a start.

Plastic Litter bins on square have been replaced with cast iron ones. I've not bothered taking photographs of those.

Paul

Elected Mayors - The Treacle Thickens

Since the Bolton News chose not to print my overly long letter, I submitted a shorter letter on the 26th November as follows:-

.....................................................................................

Dear Sir
Should any of your readers still feel disenfranchised or un-consulted over the matter of how the Council executive will operate in the future, perhaps they would care to read the document entitled ' New Council Constitutions - Consultation Guidelines for English Local Authorities'

This can be downloaded from the following Government Website.

http://www.communities.gov.uk/publications/localgovernment/newcouncilconstitutions3

After reading this, they can then make a judgment as to what extent Bolton Council's Consultation measured up to these guidelines.

Interestingly, Bolton Council are adamant that no such guidelines were ever issued by the Government.


End of letter

.....................................................................................

By Tuesday of this week , this letter still not having appeared, I was starting to worry that maybe there is some agenda going on here to block discussion. (It's easy to get paranoid).

Anyway, faced with the prospect that the Proposals for change are going to be submitted to the full Council on December 9th and knowing that once it gets past there it would be even more difficult to undo, I formulated an e-mail to send to all 60 odd Councillors of Bolton Metro.

The e-mail read as follows:-

.....................................................................................

Dear Elected Member of Bolton Council

Forgive me for communicating with you in this way.

As you are aware, the officers of the Council have recently conducted a Consultation with the residents of Bolton Metro with respect to new arrangements for the Executive and a choice of two options.

As a result of this, out of a population of 240,000, 622 replies were received.

The Local government Act of 2000 requires that "before drawing up proposals under this section, a local authority must take reasonable steps to consult the local government electors for, and other interested persons in, the authority’s area."

The Act also requires that "A local authority must have regard to any guidance for the time being issued by the Secretary of State for the purposes of this Part."

The guidance for this purpose was issued by the then Department of Transport Environment & Regions in October 2000 under the heading ' New Council Constitutions - Consultation Guidelines for English Local Authorities'

This can be downloaded from the following Government Website.

http://www.communities.gov.uk/publications/localgovernment/newcouncilconstitutions3

This document comprises 58 pages

A comparison of these guidelines with the actual consultation carried out by the Council strongly suggests to me that the consultation comes nowhere near to satisfying the requirements of the Act.

This is re-enforced by the statement of Alan Eastwood on the 17th November that -

"........Despite the above being included within the Act it does not provide either for any specific form of consultation or for any specific consultation period. In addition the department for Communities and Local Government decided not to issue any guidance to Local Authorities as to what the Department considers would constitute 'reasonable steps'. As a result, each Local Authority has had to reach its own decision as to the form and level of public consultation that it considers to be appropriate."

If it is the case that the Council has not recognised the existence of such guidance, let alone designed its consultation in accordance with such guidance, then it would appear to me that the requirements of the Act have not been fulfilled and the matter cannot proceed to the next stage.

In any event, the response of only 0.2% of the population amply demonstrates the inadequacy of the consultation method.

You may therefore, after confirming to your own satisfaction that which I have laid out above, feel that these matters are likely to further re-enforce the perception of the public that their views are not being sufficiently taken into account on this most basic matter of how we are governed locally.

Accordingly, you may wish to make representations in the appropriate places.

I remain
Yours sincerely etc


End of E-mail

.....................................................................................

Now I reckon that this is a respectful communication between a local resident and elected representatives on an important issue. It does not demand that the Councillors agree to what I am suggesting, it only asks that they look at the matter, come to their own conclusions and act accordingly (or not as the case may be).

A councillor friend of mine suggested that instead of sending 60 e-mails it would be easier to simply send it to Claire Atkinson, the Members Secretary and with the push of one button she could distribute it to them all. As this councillor friend of mine has demonstrated today, this is not an unusual occurrence when a resident wants to bring something to the notice of all the elected members.

This I duly did on Tuesday 1st December.

Yesterday I received the following e-mail from - who else but the above named Alan Eastwood - saying :-

.....................................................................................

Dear Mr Richardson,

I refer to your e-mail which you sent to Claire Atkinson dated 1 December 2009 requesting that the information you have provided be circulated to all Elected Members. I am afraid that I am reluctant to circulate your e-mail, as the information contained within it, is incorrect. The guidance to which you refer was issued in respect of new Council Constitutions which came into force in 2000 and brought in the initial Cabinet/Executive Model along side others. This guidance does not relate to the current consultation and in fact, no guidance was issued in this regard. I hope this clarifies the position.


End of E-mail.

.....................................................................................


To put it mildly I was bloody furious - and I still am.

What right has an 'employee' of the Council, of whatever status, to interfere with a communication between a local elector and the elected representatives of Bolton Metro residents.

Why was this shown to him in the first place?

If he had 'allowed' circulation of the e-mail with a rider stating that in his (and the Councils) view I was incorrect in some of the things I was stating, then to me, that would have been understandable and acceptable. If I was so wrong then the 60 Councillors would have been able to dismiss and ignore what I was saying.

What is it that Alan Eastwood and the higher echelons of the Town Hall are afraid of?

All this is starting to raise the cynic in me and causing me to ask ' Who is running this Town Hall, - the Councillors or the Officers????????'

What part of Democracy don't they get?

.....................................................................................


Anyway, back to the point.

Either Alan Eastwood is right or I am right. - Straightforward.

.....................................................................................

In doing a little more digging I have discovered the following. (this includes a refresher course)

The Primary Legislation to do with creation and change of Executive Operations for Local Authorities is the Local Government Act of 2000.

.....................................................................................

The Local Government Act 2000 initially dealt with the creation of the Executive operations with a choice of three options.

Elected Mayor + Cabinet
Leader + Cabinet
Elected Mayor + Council Manager

Section 25 - PROPOSALS - of this act deals with procedures to be followed and Sub Section (2) states:-

"Before drawing up proposals under this section, a local authority must take reasonable steps to consult the local government electors for, and other interested persons in, the authority’s area."

This is the subsection which without doubt is the subject of the Guidance ' New Council Constitutions - Consultation Guidelines for English Local Authorities' mentioned before.

One assumes, in the absence of information, that the Public Consultation which took place prior to the creation of the existing Executive Arrangements for Bolton Council some years ago conformed to these guidlines.

.....................................................................................

The Local Government and Public Involvement in Health Act of 2007 amended and added to the provisions of the 2000 Act.

First of all, for English Authorities, it removed the third option of Elected Mayor and Council Manager.

Secondly it introduced the means by which an English Local Authority could change from the Executive Arrangements it had introduced following the 2000 Act to a different form.

This was done by amending the 2000 Act by adding the following- Quote

.....................................................................................

Section 64 Changing governance arrangements
After section 33 of the Local Government Act 2000 (c. 22) insert—
“Changing governance arrangements: general provisions.


.....................................................................................

There then follows Sections 33A to 33O which are added to the 2000 Act

Section 33A states:-
.....................................................................................

Executive arrangements: different form of executive

A local authority in England which is operating executive arrangements may—
(a) vary the arrangements so that they provide for a different form of executive, and
(b) if it makes such a variation, vary the arrangements in such other respects (if any) as it considers appropriate.


.....................................................................................

This is the Section under which the current changes in the operation of Bolton Councils Executive Arrangements are proceeding.

.....................................................................................

Section 33E, Sub section (6) states:-

"Before drawing up its proposals, the local authority must take reasonable steps to consult the local government electors for, and other interested persons in, the authority’s area."

.....................................................................................


This is the identical wording to that in Section 25 Sub Section (2) of the original Act.

So after 2007, the Local Government Act of 2000, as amended, states both in Section 25 and Section 33E:-

"Before drawing up its proposals, the local authority must take reasonable steps to consult the local government electors for, and other interested persons in, the authority’s area."

It cannot be the case that the Guidelines which apply to Section 25 do not apply to Section 33E - both in the same Act.

The Guidelines which apply to Section 25 (and in my contention to Section 33E) have not (to my knowledge) been rescinded, deleted or amended.

It is therefore my case that because Bolton Council's recent Public Consultation under section 33E patently did not satisfy the guidelines, then the Council has not satisfied the requirements of the Act.

.....................................................................................

At the end of the day it will be the Secretary of State, John Denham, who decides who is right and who is wrong - that's if I can get through to him.

.....................................................................................

One final point - This, to me, is not about wanting an elected mayor, even though I think that such a culture shock is required to get the Town Hall back in the real world. This is about the day to day, week to week interaction between the governed and the governors and particularly to make sure that the people we elected, irrespective of party, are the people who decide and are in control. From my experiences on different matters with Bolton Council over the last twelve months, I'm not sure that that is the case.

Paul

Bolton News

I read an interesting article in the Daily Mail a couple of weeks ago and was prompted to send off a letter to the Bolton News as follows:-
.....................................................................................

Dear Sir,
Perhaps your readers would be interested in the recent comments of The Lord Chief Justice, Lord Judge, to the Conference of the Society of Editors.

He said that people should get their information about what local Councils are doing from independent sources.

Quote "I don't want the proceedings of the local Council to be reported to the public by an employee of that Council." Unquote

He further said that local papers that used to report fully on what town halls are doing have been weakened by the recession and the growth of the internet and in some cases Councils have launched their own expensively produced papers to rival the independent press.

In addition he said that some local weekly newspapers are relying on Council press officers for the information they print. Quote " If that is true it should send a shiver down all our spines. Unquote.

I am sure that the Bolton News is not one of these papers. If it is not already, the Bolton News should be the major campaigning organ holding the Council to account in terms of prudence, efficiency and competence. In the unlikely event that anyone ever read the Bolton Scene they would think that everything in the Bolton garden was lovely - as opposed to the reality that it is not.

By all means the Council are entitled to publicise its achievements but it should also honestly own up to its shortcomings, the catalogue of which grows longer by the week.

The public would respect them more for that.

As Lord Judge said - 'Spin is neither a cornerstone or a bulwark of a free society'.


End of letter.
.....................................................................................

This was duly printed.

I'm posting this on the Blog in view of my being unsuccessful in getting the Bolton News to print my last two letters about Elected Mayors. ( See next Blog)

Incidentally, Alan Calvert has been commenting again as follows:-


...................................................................................

I’m no dummy . . . now who wants a gottle of geer?

I cannot remember being compared to a ventriloquist’s dummy before.
Mr P. A. Williams of Northwood, Harwood suggested in a reader’s letter that I was one of those when I said that the very idea of an elected Mayor for Bolton is plain daft. He thought I was toeing the ruling party line on this issue — presumably he meant the Labour-led council. Here in Bolton there was a consultation of sorts that failed to suggest that there was any popular groundswell of opinion along those lines. Labour, Conservative and Liberal Democrat leaders agreed to kick the idea in to the long grass.

Mr Williams challenged me to “speak for the people and champion real democracy”. I like to think I do that in my quiet little way — there is no evidence that “the people” want affairs to be dictated by an individual.
Should this version of “real democracy” ever come to pass, I will gladly buy Mr Williams a celebratory gottle of geer.


End of Article.
..................................................................................

Does this represent the Bolton News policy on Elected Mayors?

Paul

Wednesday 25 November 2009

Elected Mayors - The Plot thickens

Elected mayors - The plot thickens.

Looks like the Bolton News are not going to publish my overly-long letter copied to my previous blog.

However, todays Bolton News carries another letter on the subject, this time from a Mr P A Williams of Harwood.

Let's have a referendum

I take issue with Alan Calvert’s comment that the “Elected mayor plan is plain daft”.

If the result of the consultation was democratically flawed, then it was undemocratic, and as such the voters deserve a referendum on the matter. He makes a point about the few people that replied in the consultation but surely this was due to the way it was organised.

I haven’t received a Bolton Scene for months, and when I requested a consultation form at my local library I was told they had none and didn’t know they were available. After the Market Hall fiasco, it seems to me that unless any result is to the liking of this council it is rejected.

Councillors are elected to represent their constituents and, on the whole, do this well. But are any of them qualified to run the town? I doubt it, and certainly not part-time.

If any of the existing councillors would like the job of elected mayor they could stand for election, that way all the people of Bolton would have a vote and not just the few ward members who vote for their councillor who then becomes leader. Is that democratic??

So Alan, don’t toe the ruling party line like a ventriloquists’ dummy, speak for the people and champion real democracy.

Mr P A Williams Northwood Harwood

.....................................................................................

Had no response yet to my e-mail to John Denham but I have sight of a response from the Director of the Chief Executives Department at Bolton Council to a similar complaint from another Bolton resident.

After listing the procedures prescribed by the Local Government Act in relation to changing the way the Executive operates, he writes:-

"Despite the above being included within the Act it does not provide either for any specific form of consultation or for any specific consultation period. In addition the department for Communities and Local Government decided not to issue any guidance to Local Authorities as to what the Department considers would constitute 'reasonable steps'. As a result, each Local Authority has had to reach its own decision as to the form and level of public consultation that it considers to be appropriate."

This is simply not true !!!!!!

The predecessor of the Department for Communities and Local Government, i.e. The Department for the Environment, Transport and the Regions, in December 1999 issued the following:-

New Council Constitutions
Consultation Guidelines for English Local Authorities


This can be downloaded in pdf format from the following website.

http://www.communities.gov.uk/publications/localgovernment/newcouncilconstitutions3

It is difficult to get past many pages before realising that the consultation organised by Bolton Council comes nowhere near satisfying these guidelines and best practice.

It is worrying that the Director of the Chief Executives Dept is seemingly unaware of this document and it simply re-enforces my cynicism about the Council paying lip service to the requirements of the Act in the hope of pushing through their preferred option of Leader and Cabinet.

I've e-mailed this info to John Denham.

The Council seems to think they are in the clear on this one.

An interesting thought. If the Secretary of State concludes that the consultation was flawed and didn't fulfill the requirements of the Act, does this mean that any subsequent actions by the Council in pursuing their preferred option of Leader & Cabinet through full Council on December 9th and beyond would be 'Ultra Vires'?

This one has still got legs - as they say in the press.

I feel another letter to the Bolton News coming on.

Paul

Saturday 21 November 2009

Elected Mayors - Flawed Consultation

.

I suppose I'm becoming cynical but, having had some experience documented in this blog of Bolton Council's 'Consultations', I was incensed by an article in the Bolton News a few weeks ago where Sean Harris the Chief Executive stated that following the pathetic response to the so called Consultation on the future operation of the Executive of the Council, where the majority were in favour of an elected mayor, they were going to ignore it anyway and go their own sweet way.

I rattled off a letter to the Bolton News which this time round they actually printed. It went as follows.
...................................................................................

Dear Sir

So we are not to have an elected mayor. The powers that be decided to consult the people. Another consultation - this time through Bolton Scene, almost guaranteed to produce a poor numerical response.

Come on, -who reads it? It goes either straight into the recycling bin or the outside toilet. But this suits the purposes of the Town hall, elected or employed. Turkeys just don't vote for Christmas.

Even though a miserable number of 622 people took part in the consultation and even though a majority supported the idea, this was sufficient for it to be ignored. If only 622 people voted in a Council by election then whoever the majority voted for would be elected. What's the difference?

Unfortunately the Council have a track record on arranging consultations which they can then ignore. What about the Market Hall? What about spending £31,500 ripping up a perfectly good footpath in Little Lever that's only been down five years? (Work starts this Sunday).

The existing structure of the Council, with it's executive members for this and that, means that the Councillors elected by Little Lever, irrespective of party, are 'junior' to certain other councillors. Does this mean that they are less able to effectively represent their electors?

The proposed Cabinet structure would only make this situation worse. This is emulating the situation with national Government. It doesn't lend itself to more efficiency, it just means they can do what they want for four or five years.

Why is the Chief Executive, Sean Harris, commenting on this? It's Cliff Morris's job. He is the one who was elected. Who is running this Town hall?

My manifesto for running for elected mayor would be obvious to all and no doubt would be shared, no doubt, by many other of your readers who would want to run.

Competence, Value for money, scrap final salary gold plated inflation proofed pension schemes, scrap all this political correctness stuff, stop translating every document into a dozen different languages, fewer chiefs, more workers, enforce the laws and by-laws without fear or favour, make people do the jobs they are paid to do with our money and don't think you only need to listen to the electors in the three weeks before polling day.

The question of elected mayors should be put to a referendum of registered electors and be independently organised by the Electoral Commission, not left to the whim and fancy of the incumbents who wish to preserve their position.

My points are completely without reference to one party or another, but democracy has to happen every day, not just once a year or once every five years.


End of Letter
.....................................................................................

Since then there have been several other mentions of Elected Mayors in letters and Columns.

First of all Alan Calvert of the Bolton News
.....................................................................................

Unlike some of the people who write letters to this newspaper, I think the idea of an elected Mayor for Bolton is plain daft.

I have said the same thing at various intervals over the years and it pleases me that council leaders dismissed this option after a consultation exercise that provoked little interest or excitement.

Six people used one of the 4,000 leaflets produced by the council and only 35 people returned the tear-off consultation slip contained in 120,000 copies of Bolton Scene, the council newspaper.

Some 622 people took part in a month-long consultation that cost £4,300 and, not surprisingly, more people were in favour of an elected Mayor than against.
The ruling Labour executive, supported by the Conservative and Liberal Democrat opposition parties, chose to ignore this flawed democratic result and concentrate on the other option being pushed by the government — a new-style council leader and executive.

A final decision on whether to adopt this new system will be made by the full council on December 9.

This new leader — presumably Labour’s Cliff Morris — would have more responsibility and that would apply equally to John Walsh (Conservative) and Roger Hayes (Liberal Democrat) if either of those gentlemen were to win the most seats at next year’s election.

Before the decision is taken it would be helpful if the council could spell out the details in full for our benefit.

Would the new-style leader receive a larger allowance and be expected to put in more hours?

Would the same apply to a new executive?

If so, what would the advantages be for those of us who pay council tax?

I am delighted that the elected Mayor idea is dead in the water, but I have yet to be convinced that the alternative change is necessary for the town.


End of article.
.....................................................................................

This prompted a letter from a James Birch of Sharples as follows:-

.....................................................................................

So, Bolton Council have decided that we will not have an elected mayor.
I don’t like to say I told you so, but several weeks ago my letter was published in The Bolton News saying that the decision had already been made by the council and I was proved right.

No, I did not attend any meetings or return any tear-off consultation slip from the Labour Party propaganda paper Bolton Scene which just goes directly into my paper recycle bin
.
As I said before, what’s the point?

I believe that 622 people took part in the consultation which was not sufficient numbers for the council. Could they inform me, and others, how many people would be an acceptable number? 722? 922? 1,022?

If a councillor was elected with a majority of less than 622 I presume that would not be acceptable and a second election would be called.

Dream on!

According to Alan Calvert (The Bolton News, November 9), Labour, Conservative and Liberal Democrats chose to ignore this flawed democratic result.

Is democracy flawed if you don't get the result you want?

It is typical of Bolton Council’s “I know best attitude”.

I look forward to December 9 when the full council will again vote for no change.


End of letter
.....................................................................................

In response to this a letter was published from Peter Johnson as follows:-

.....................................................................................

James Birch complains that a majority of 622 people (0.07% of the electorate) failed to procure an elected executive mayor for Bolton.

In the days when the Labour Movement had more regard for the rules and procedures thanit apparently does now, a major constitutional proposal of this significance would require not merely a simple majority but the support of 75% of all those eligible to vote, it being deemed in the absence of such levels of support that there is insufficient majority for constitutional change

Clearly, most of the population is not in the slightest interested in such a change. Not suprising.

A senior colleague in a Yorkshire Authority said to me a couple of years ago 2 If you are thinking of having an elected mayor, I have one simple word of advice for you - Don't"

"We've got one and you can't keep tabs on the blighter and if we can't keep tabs on him what chance has the ordinary punter?"

Says it all, really.


End of letter.
.....................................................................................

In the meantime I had been researching the background to all this and composed a further letter to the Bolton News which summarised my findings.
I sent this a week ago but so far it hasn't been published. (Hopefully because it was too long, rather than any collusion between the Bolton News and the Council)
The letter went as follows.
.....................................................................................

Dear Sir

Further to my letter of last week about an Elected Mayor for Bolton, a little further research has produced the following points of interest.

The Local government Act of 2000 requires the Council to draw up proposals for the operation of executive arrangements within the Council. They have a choice of two options.

A directly elected Mayor and a Cabinet of up to nine Councillors appointed by that Mayor.
A Leader elected by the Council and a Cabinet of up to nine Councillors not necessarily appointed by the Leader.

Originally there was a third option of Elected Mayor and Council manager but for English Authorities this was removed by a Local Government Act in 2007.

Bolton Council as of today however are still quoting the three options on their Website.

Quote:-

Mayoral referendums

The Local Government Act 2000 set out a major change in the way local authorities in England and Wales are run. Most local authorities, except some of the smaller district councils in the area of a county council, operate 'executive arrangements'. There are three types of executive arrangement set out in the Act, two of which involve a directly elected mayor: mayor and cabinet, and mayor and council manager. The other involves a leader (who is elected by councillors) and cabinet. Local authorities consult on which arrangements local people want. If there is a proposal to have a mayor, the local authority must hold a binding referendum. Many councils in England have already conducted consultations with local people on this issue. Local residents can also require a mayoral referendum by organising a petition signed by 5% of local electors or more (10% or more in Wales).

Unquote.

Before drawing up such proposals, the Act requires that a local authority must take reasonable steps to consult the local government electors for, and other interested persons in, the authority’s area.

The term 'reasonable' is a generic and relative one and applies to that which is appropriate for a particular situation.

There can hardly be a more serious situation than an alteration in way in which we are locally governed by the Council.

This consultation therefore requires a method which will produce the maximum informed response from the 262,400 electors and residents.
The Council has many methods at its disposal of communicating with residents. Again I quote from the Councils Website.

Quote:-

Getting involved

We try to give as many people as possible the opportunity to ‘Speak Up’ and there are a number of different ways of getting involved including area forums, citizens panels, door to door surveys, postal and online questionnaires, telephone interviews and discussion groups.

Local Polls

Local Polls are a form of referendum that Councils can carry out to test public opinion within the borough. Local Polls can take place with the use of traditional polling stations or by all-postal ballot.

Unquote.

The Council chose to conduct its consultation by means of a questionnaire in the September issue of Bolton Scene. As far as I am aware none of the other above options were pursued. Nor as far as I am aware was there any pre-notification of this questionnaire in the Bolton News, the Area Forums, the Council Website or in the Libraries.

Although the Scene is delivered free to 120,000 households there are no statistics as to how many are read or how many go directly into the recycling bin.
There is nothing on the front page of the September issue to say that a most important questionnaire is on page 9. Don't throw this away.!!

The questionnaire produced a extremely poor response of 622 replies. Although a majority of respondents were in favour of an elected Mayor the Council has chosen to disregard the results and are therefore pursuing the Leader and Cabinet option.

The two options were laid out without any attempt to provide information about the consequences of choosing one or the other.

For instance it could have been pointed out that the elected Mayor would be able to appoint any Councillor to his Cabinet as he or she saw fit, irrespective of that Councillors Political allegiance thus possibly putting an end to the dominance of one party or another in the conduct of the Council's business.

The elected Mayor might choose to appoint a Cabinet of all the talents thus utilising the best brains amongst the elected Councillors irrespective of party.

They have not therefore provided in the questionaire sufficient information or detail for the electors to come to a conclusion which might have prompted more people to reply to it.

It is my contention that in using a singular method of consultation without pre-notification and in ill-informing the residents about the different consequences of the two options means that it did not fulfill the requirement of the Act that it was 'reasonable'.

I am writing to the Secretary of State concerned to point this out and it may well be that, should he concur, he will oblige Bolton Council to re-consult.

In any event, if a petition, signed by 5% of the electors of the Borough and asking for a referendum on the matter, can be presented to the Council, then they are obliged to conduct one.

I intend to organise such a petition, on the basis that the proposed method of operation of the Council would only further entrench the waste and incompetence that is described daily in your newspaper and that a new independant broom is required to achieve maximum value for our money and a greater attention being paid to the views of the Boroughs electors.

Those of you of a like mind may care to contact me at 'kathy.maddox@ntlworld.com' or write to me at the address below

Paul Richardson
24 Ripon Close
Little Lever
Bolton


(Dear Editor. I know this is a long letter but the subject matter is of the utmost importance to the residents of Bolton and your readers. I think the Council have contrived to do the minimum to avoid the possibility of an elected Mayor and they are having one over on us - again)

For your convenience I attach the relevant copy of Bolton Scene.


End of letter.
.....................................................................................


By this time, cynical old me suspects that Bolton Council think they have got away with this one, so, I thought in for a penny -in for a pound.

I have thus e-mailed John Denham, Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government the following and copied it to Brian Iddon, David Crausby and Ruth Kelly.
(Because I used my unpublished letter above as the main part of the e-mail I have bracketed this.)
.....................................................................................


Attn Mr John Denham
Secretary of State
Department of Communities and Local Government

Dear Sir,

May I bring to your attention a matter related to the statutory requirement in the Local Government Act of 2000 for Local Authorities to carry our a reasonable consultation with local government electors and other interested parties before drawing up proposals for changes in the way in which the Executive operates.
In the case of Bolton Metropolitan Authority it is my contention that this requirement has not been fulfilled.

My reasons for arriving at this conclusion are contained in a letter which I have written to the Bolton News (so far unpublished) which I copy for you below.

(BODY OF LETTER TO BOLTON NEWS)

To further re-inforce my point might I draw your attention to a definition of 'consultation'

Public consultation, or simply consultation, is a regulatory process by which the public's input on matters affecting them is sought. Its main goals are in improving the efficiency, transparency and public involvement in large-scale projects or laws and policies. It usually involves notification (to publicise the matter to be consulted on), consultation (a two-way flow of information and opinion exchange) as well as participation (involving interest groups in the drafting of policy or legislation.

The process is typical of Commonwealth countries such as the United Kingdom, Canada, New Zealand or Australia.

Incidentally when I down loaded the 'Petitioning for elected mayor - information pack' from your website, this is also still quoting the three options.

I would be grateful if you would examine the situation in relation to Bolton Council's handling of this matter and form a judgement as to whether they had satisfied the requirements of the Act.

It is obvious that Bolton Council ( or any other for that matter) would have a vested interest in not wanting an elected mayor which is why, presumably, the requirement for reasonable consultation was incorporated into the Act.

At the moment it seems that Bolton Council have only paid lip service to their statutary duty and have conducted and concluded the business with indecent haste.

Yours sincerely - etc


End of e-mail.
.....................................................................................

Let's see if that does anything !!!!

In regard to the Bolton News. I am becoming increasingly worried and irritated with the watered down reports and comments that it is producing which are not reflecting the frustrations and anger of many residents on many subjects - particularly related to the activities of the Council.
I have therefore just written a letter (yet to be published) based on a report in the Daily Mail this week.

It goes as follows.
.....................................................................................

Dear Sir,
Perhaps your readers would be interested in the recent comments of The Lord Chief Justice, Lord Judge, to the Conference of the Society of Editors.

He said that people should get their information about what local Councils are doing from independent sources.

Quote "I don't want the proceedings of the local Council to be reported to the public by an employee of that Council." Unquote

He further said that local papers that used to report fully on what town halls are doing have been weakened by the recession and the growth of the internet and in some cases Councils have launched their own expensively produced papers to rival the independent press.

In addition he said that some local weekly newspapers are relying on Council press officers for the information they print. Quote " If that is true it should send a shiver down all our spines. Unquote.

I am sure that the Bolton News is not one of these papers. If it is not already, the Bolton News should be the major campaigning organ holding the Council to account in terms of prudence, efficiency and competence. In the unlikely event that anyone ever read the Bolton Scene they would think that everything in the Bolton garden was lovely - as opposed to the reality that it is not.

By all means the Council are entitled to publicise its achievements but it should also honestly own up to its shortcomings, the catalogue of which grows longer by the week.

The public would respect them more for that.

As Lord Judge said - 'Spin is neither a cornerstone or a bulwark of a free society'.


End of letter.
.....................................................................................

It may well be that should a referendum of all the electors of Bolton be held then the majority would reject the option of an elected mayor and opt instead for the Leader and Cabinet. If that was the case - fine!!

The point is we don't know.

The Council don't know.

We ought to know and that would be the end of the matter.

The Government have, to their credit, done a survey about the attitudes of the public to elected mayors, Councils, Local democracy and the like. It makes interesting reading. There are 91 pages, well laid out which I'm certainly not going to reproduce here but the link for those interested is:-

http://www.communities.gov.uk/documents/localgovernment/pdf/154842.pdf

Good reading to you all.

For your info I copy the questionnaire ex Sept Bolton Scene
.....................................................................................

How the councilmakes decisions
Do you want an Elected Mayor or a Leader?

The way the council makes decisions will change next year. And voters will have a
big say about what happens

New national legislation – the Local Government and Public Involvement in Health
Act 2007 – means the council has to change the way it is governed by May next year. It also has to ask residents what they think of the different systems of government on offer and which they prefer.

At present the council is governed by a leader and an executive. The full council (a meeting where all councillors can attend) decides who the leader is and who the members of the executive are and their roles and responsibilities.

The system was introduced in 2000 following national legislation to change the old
committee model of government. Whichever system is introduced, voters will still elect councillors to represent them and their area. Now the council is asking for people’s views about the following two options by October 4. Based on these views the council will have to make a decision about which method it chooses by the end of the year. The new system will have to be introduced by May.

Please fill in the form opposite and return to us by freepost. For further information visit our website: www.bolton.gov.uk where you can also make your comments.

If you require additional forms for other members of your household, these can be collected from your local library or you can complete the form online.

The Elected Mayor
• A mayor elected by voters every four years
• The elected mayor does not represent a ward
• The mayor is not a councillor
• Between two and nine councillors appointed to the executive by the elected mayor
• The elected mayor decides the roles and responsibilities of the executive members
• The executive submits the budget and strategic policies to the full council which can only amend or overturn the policies by a two-thirds majority • The civic role of the mayor would have to be discussed

The ‘new style’ Leader and cabinet
• A councillor is elected as leader of the executive for up to four years by the full council
• The length of term of the leader is decided by how long is left until she or he has to stand for election again
• Between two and nine councillors are appointed to the executive by the leader
• The leader appoints a deputy leader to act on their behalf when necessary
• The leader decides the roles and responsibilities of the executive members
• The executive submits the budget and strategic policies to the full council which can amend or overturn them by a majority

Questionnaire;
Which option would you prefer for Bolton?
Please tick one box only.
The Elected Mayor
The ‘new style’ Leader and cabinet
Why? (Please write your comments in the box below)
Name: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Postcode: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Signature: . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
.................................................................................

Cheers - Paul

Monday 16 November 2009

Updates

Not blogged for ages.

Pressure of work - staff shortages - but mainly because my burning issues have been in a bit of a flux. Anyway, things have settled down a bit so I'll try and update.

THE VILLAGE CENTRE

Finally got some response from Bolton Council re the spending of the £50k. Councillor John Byrne, the Executive Member who had signed off the spending proposals, had promised a review of the spending and a meeting was duly held between the Councillors and the Officers.

The upshot of this was that the block paving remained but signage and planters were to be included. Paula Connor, the Project Officer, subsequently attended a meeting of 'Love Little Lever' to make a presentation and immediately before this meeting had the conducted tour and was reminded of the Councils own projects within the Little Lever Action Plan, only two of which have definitely been concluded in the three and a half years since it started.

This same presentation was given to Public at the Area Forum meeting on 9th November.

I think that the Town Hall acknowledges that the consultation on this had been inadequate and it's just a pity that pressure hadn't been applied some six months before it actually was.

By this time the block paving had been started and should be completed within the next two or three weeks.

So -a battle lost in one sense, but we've still got the rest of the war to fight.

The Councillors and officers are looking towards the next amount of £50k from the District Improvement Fund due in 2011/1012. This time round, they have promised the proper consultation that didn't happen last time.

Personally I don't think there will be another £50k. Is it just me or do people not realise the scale of cutbacks that face the Public Sector after this current spending round?. I project that between 10 and 15% will be the order of things and District Improvement Funds of £100k per year across the four townships will be high up on the list of candidates. Same arguments apply to the Health Centre and the new Magistrates Court which has also been delayed.

Putting the £50k for this year behind us, there are still things that can and must be done before March of next year. The first three of these are and should be easy to achieve.

1) The repainting of the Walls
2) Moving the re-cycling bins
3) Getting serious about the ongoing litter and small scale anti-social behaviour. CCTV - Remember? -Fifty Thousand Pounds worth - Who's using it????

The Precinct buildings are still the main sticking point. I have said repeatedly that until the owners in person are identified - the people who 'own the money' (or not, as the case may be) - then there is no prospect of stopping the ongoing unacceptable dilapidation of the main feature of the Centre.

I have identified the Management Company for the Precinct as being Winex Services Ltd, which has been established for 14 years. These are the people the Council have been speaking to and who have said that they don't propose to spend any money, at least not this year.

The company's registered address is 8 RODBOROUGH ROAD LONDON NW11 8RY.

The directors are Ian Anthony Gilbert and Solomon Jakobowitz and a former director is Victor Winegarten.

The Councils 'contact' for the Precinct is Solomon at Winex Services and both Solomon and Victor are the people whom some of the Precinct tenants are in touch with.

The financial reports for Winex preclude this company from being the owner of the Precinct.

As I have said previously the 'Owners' of the Precinct, according to the Land Registry, are Miller Ltd - registered in Gibraltar. It may well be that Miller has the same directors as Winex. Anyway, by tomorrow, when I receive the Profile of this company from Companies House in Gibraltar, all will become a little clearer.

The main question is - do these guys have any money?. If they haven't and are up to their eyeballs with the mortagage company then fine - we know where we stand. If they have, then the Council must come to some arrangement with them to persuade them, or compel them, or enter into partnership with them to get something done to the place.

An interesting point:- Paula Connor has come up with a map from the Highways Department which shows that although the Precinct Square is private property is has been 'Adopted' by the Council as a Public Highway and so this removes the anomaly of the Council spending money on private land. Indeed, the subsided flags have been re-laid since my last Blog.

Just as an aside, the same map reminds us that all the properties from the Village Chippy up to and including the Co-op (R.I.P) orginally had little gardens or 'pallasadins' (spelled wrong) in front and the first three feet or so of the pavement remains private property.

Blog updates still to come. The Health Centre, Love Little Lever and my new burning issue - Elected Mayors

Paul