CALL TO END THE LONG RUNNING FIASCO OF
UNITARY COUNCILS FOR CHESHIRE
Cllr Brian Silvester, Leader of the Crewe and
Nantwich Borough Council has called for the Government to drop the
whole idea of Unitary Councils for Cheshire. He said,
"This has gone on for over a year now and it is time to say
enough is enough. The Government clearly can't make its mind
up so the whole idea should be dropped. Cheshire should be
left alone to do what most of the other shire Counties in the
country are doing. They are working together with other
Councils in their County area to
deliver good services at a lower cost. Over £10 million a
year could be saved in Cheshire this way and it could be done
without the massive disruption and uncertainty created by the
setting up of Unitary Councils.
Unitary Councils for Cheshire would be
remote, undemocratic and expensive. Also eminent professors have
declared that the Local Government Review
process itself is so flawed it corrupts the body politic.(
see below) They go on to state that 'dodgy’ financial data have
been accepted with inadequate scrutiny and there seems to be scant
concern for what ordinary people think. (In Crewe and Nantwich 85%
of residents voted against Unitary Councils and for the
present two tier system.) This fiasco needs to be ended
now. The long running uncertainty is unfair on the residents
and the staff of the Councils concerned. I hope that at long
last common sense will prevail."
Cllr Brian Silvester, Leader of the Crewe and
Nantwich Borough Council Tel/fax 01270 567757.
PRESS
RELEASE.
Local Government
Review Process Devastatingly Demolished!
Local Government experts, Professors Steve
Leach of De Montfort University and Michael Chisholm, Emeritus
Professor at Cambridge University, have produced a ‘no holds
barred’ indictment (see attached) on the Government’s proposals for
new Unitary Councils in England. The report was compiled at
the Authors’ own volition as an unprompted independent assessment
based on their direct experience with the 2006/07 process.
Both academics have a long standing interest in structural
re-organisations of Local Government and have published widely on
post 1976 re-organisation initiatives. Their latest report
reflects concerns about the way the current
re-organisation initiative is being conducted. Pulling no
punches, the report is a damning indictment of the Government, its
civil servants and the Local Government proposers of change, who
have simply failed to even consider the views of residents or the
electorate, never mind failed to put those views first.
In a clinical analysis, the report finds
that:
- The process is so flawed it corrupts the body politic.
- ‘Dodgy’ financial data have been accepted with inadequate
scrutiny.
- There seems to be scant concern for what ordinary people
think.
- The Secretary of State has chosen to ignore the statutory
procedures set out in the Local Government Act 1992.
- The Secretary of State has, instead, relied upon the
expectation of obtaining retrospective powers under a new
statute.
- Retrospective legislation is, in principle, pernicious.
- It is an example of what others have called an ‘elected
dictatorship’.
- The Department of Communities and Local Government (DCLG) has
completely failed to honour the undertaking given in October 2006
to consult the public. Only one conclusion is possible,
Ministers were aware that many unitary proposals would be unlikely
to receive public endorsement.
- Members of the public have been right to be sceptical about the
strength of the case for establishing unitary structures.
- The process was biased in favour of unitary outcomes.
- The DCLG has been seriously inconsistent and highly selective
in its appraisal of the bids.
- The criteria used is muddled, most obviously that
‘Affordability’ is largely defined in terms of ‘Value for Money
’.
- In October 2006, it was stated that bids must conform to
the five criteria, including the criterion of a broad cross section
of support for the proposals. By July 2007, this had
been diluted to reasonable likelihood after
implementation.
- With respect to costs/savings, bidders have been very inventive
in compiling their submissions’.
- With respect to the conflicting criteria of Strategic
Leadership and Neighbourhood Empowerment, the bids ‘display
considerable contortions in trying to comply’.
- In many of the county bids, the proposed size of the electoral
divisions presents a risk to Councillors’ capacity to engage with
the electorate.
Cllr Brian Silvester, Leader of Crewe and
Nantwich Borough Council said, “This report is a devastating
destruction of the whole Local Government Review (LGR). It is
clear from this report that the LGR process has been badly flawed
from the word go. Any self respecting Government would read
this very damning report and withdraw their plans for new Unitary
Councils forthwith. It is not too late to stop this flawed review
and it should be stopped in the interest of good Local Government
in this country”.
Councillor Brian
Silvester,
Leader of Crewe and Nantwich Borough
Council
Tel. 01270 567757
11/07