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Councillors accuse South Kesteven District Council leaders of 'culture of secrecy'




Councillors have accused South Kesteven District Council leaders of a "culture of secrecy" after a highly-critical report on scrutiny was examined.

The report, from the Centre for Governance and Scrutiny, was received by the authority in August last year but was not released for public consumption until July, and did not appear before council discussion until Wednesday (September 28) – more than a year later.

It had highlighted a lack of regular scrutiny of the council’s leader, along with a number of gaps despite a “clear commitment to scrutiny”.

Councillor Ashley Baxter. (54509689)
Councillor Ashley Baxter. (54509689)

Alliance SK member councillor Ashley Baxter said the amount of time it had taken to come to committee was “disgraceful”.

Coun Baxter, said: "It’s taken over a year for it to get from the desk of the recipient to this meeting - that’s way too long.

"The levels of secrecy around the report over the last year are indicative of the council’s general attitude to openness and scrutiny. We have a culture of secrecy and opacity and I understand that the cabinet members absolutely hate scrutiny."

He accused the ruling group of “forcing” through changes to the constitution that reduce the amount of public and councillor access to meetings.

“Nearly all the changes to the constitution [agreed recently] resulted in less and not more scrutiny,” he added.

Councillor Adam Stokes. (54509707)
Councillor Adam Stokes. (54509707)

He said the report “does nothing to address the problems identified”.

He also accused council leaders of punishing previous committee chair-people.

He added: "Look at the the previous chair of planning committee, Bob Adams, and the previous chair of finance, Graham Jeal, who had been removed from their posts because they had the audacity to challenge the administration.”

Fellow Alliance SK member councillor Phil Dilks, who was not a member of the committee but was allowed to speak, said the council had a “track record” of issues with openness and transparency, pointing to issues such as the Riverside scandal.

However, councillor Paul Wood, the independent chairman of the committee defended the leadership saying: "You say about this council’s about secrecy. It’s not, and I don’t think the cabinet hate scrutiny, we’re all trying to improve scrutiny."

He said there had been opportunity to discuss the plans and consult, however, Coun Baxter disagreed.

Deputy leader of the council councillor Adam Stokes said he took offence to the comments that cabinet members did not like scrutiny.

He said: "You will see me at most scrutiny meetings if I’m able to attend but the language that you choose councillor Baxter doesn’t help any debate.”

He said that the report before councillors and the work to tackle it had to “start somewhere”.

The report on Wednesday (September 28) included an action plan for the council to undertake, however, councillors felt there was a lack of information and called for the review to go before a full scrutiny workshop before returning to members for recommendations to full council.

Actions will include a series of comprehensive reviews, further informal meetings to share best practice and changing how the chairmen and vice-chairmen of committees are appointed.



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