Thursday, 13 October 2011

The Council of Despair Part II

Memo to self: Charles Dickens used to end each of his installments with a cliffhanger. Kevin Madge's ramble (has anyone ever heard him give a different speech?) hardly fits the bill, does it?

The Chair switched on his microphone, but looked down and mumbled something to introduce the next item. He repeated this act throughout the meeting, and was clearly having difficulty reading the lines. Perhaps he should go and see Mr Sully for a remedial reading session.

Up next was something to do with sunbeds. Questions? No. Proposed? Seconded? Next, mumble mumble mumble. Yes, we had reached the bit everyone was waiting for. Constitutional amendments. Over the last few years many of the councillors have seen more of these than most people have had hot dinners. Thoughtfully, the Executive Board had batched two amendments together to save time on what was a foregone conclusion.
  •  Changes to planning procedures to give officers more powers to determine planning applications without consulting elected councillors on the Planning Committee
  • A new requirement for any motions submitted for debate to have the support of at least 7 councillors
Delegating powers to officers is a very common occurrence in Carmarthenshire, and so nobody was too excited about it. After all, the elected councillors have voluntarily surrendered so many of their powers to the unelected officers that there is not much left in the cupboard to give away. This was exemplified a little later in the meeting by Cllr Pat Jones who is executive member with responsibility for Social Care. She repeatedly thanked her lucky stars that she did not have to take any difficult decisions; all that was left to the officers. Otherwise she would have difficulty sleeping at night. So why are we paying you £30,000 plus, then, Mrs Jones?

There were several passionate speeches on the subject of the change of the rules on motions, with several of the Plaid councillors defending the right of free speech and democratic principles. The People First members pointed out that the new rules would make it impossible for minorities to be heard. Another Plaid member said that, as for democracy, he had never seen any sign of it since he first became a councillor.

It was quite stirring stuff until Cllr Stephen James (Tub of Lard Independent, Burry Port) heaved his massive frame to a vertical position. This was in fact a very democratic measure, he opined, because it would save both time and money, and that's what his voters wanted.

Cllr James is one of the younger councillors, being slightly south of 50, and he is a big fan of Tesco. He even issued a welcoming press release to mark the opening of their new store in his home patch. Judging by appearances, he seems to be a big fan of their Finest Cream Buns as well. On another occasion he got so excited by all of the improvements the council has made under the wise leadership of the woman he loves, Meryl Gravell, that he claimed Burry Port was on its way to becoming the Saint Tropez of South Wales.

This blog does not usually give medical advice, but on this occasion, Stephen, a trip to the Embarrassing Bodies clinic for a chat about those man boobs may be in order before you go topless in Burry Port.

Following the line of Cllr James's logic, the council should also abolish voting and elections because they take up time and cost money, and very few people are actually interested anyway.

Cllr Siân Caiaich, fresh from rounding up the sheep, rose to speak. The journalists on the press bench quivered with excitement at the prospect of a punch-up. Instead she calmly pointed out that not one of the handful of motions submitted by her group had ever made it to the chamber; all had been rejected by the chief executive.

In fact a motion of no confidence in Mery Gravell put down for debate that day had also been rejected by the chief executive, Mark James. Mr James told the Carmarthen Journal that he had rejected it because in his opinion the proposers of the no confidence motion (Cllrs Caiach and Davies) were really trying to make a point about the proposed constitutional changes.

No, I can't see the link either. But in saying this, Mr James neatly summed up the county's constitution. It is whatever Mr James decides, in his opinion, it is. 

Cllrs Caiaich and Davies bravely fought on, pointing out that unlike previous changes, these new rules were being brought in in a rush and there were no background papers or justifications.

A bizarre tussle then broke out between the Chair, the chief executive and Cllr Arthur Davies. Cllr Davies never tires of trying to point out that Carmarthenshire County Council has become a one-man band. No matter what the issue, from drainage to finance to law, the chief executive takes charge of the meeting and gives all the answers. Although several millions pounds worth of senior officers responsible for this, that and the other attend these meetings, they leave all the talking and explanations to Mr James.

Cllr Davies wanted his question on the legalities of the proposed changes to be answered by the new interim (yes, another one) Head of Administration and Law, sitting next to Mr James, rather than by Mr James himself.

The chair was not standing for this. Questions had to be addressed to him, he glowered, and he would decide who would answer them. For a fleeting moment I swore I could see Mr James's arm operating the old dummy.

Mr James was now very cross. "Everything I do is legal, and I am empowered by the Constitution (the one what I wrote) to carry out these functions." L'état, c'est lui.

Round and round the argument went, until finally the interim Head of Administration and Law showed us why she is worth a five figure salary.


The essence of Cllr Davies's question was, "Do you agree that the proposed changes on voting are discriminatory to minority groups?"

"No, I don't", snapped Mrs Rees Jones, showing us in just three words why legal advice is so crippling expensive.

After a small tussle over whether the two changes should be voted on separately, the Yoof champion and head of Modernising Local Government, Cllr Pam Palmer, briefly stopped trying to pretend that she was tweeting, and sneered that she graciously agreed to allow separate votes as a "gesture towards democracy" .

The vote on changes to planning procedures was carried by a large majority. Although half a dozen Plaid members broke ranks and voted against the proposals on procedures for motions, Mark James carried the day.

Once again the butterfly of liberty lay crushed and lifeless on the floor of County Hall.

Mumble, mumble, mumble. The chair was moving us on to the next item. Caebrwyn has reported on the discussions on Single Status and Social Care, but special mention should be made of Councillor John Edwards. Cllr Edwards is a shining light in the gloom of County Hall. He opposed the motion to change the constitution, and throughout the meeting asked consistently intelligent and challenging questions. His grasp of issues puts the highly paid executive members to shame, with one of the most shameful being Kevin Madge who treated us to yet another rendition of his "improvement, progress, things are getting better" speech.

Then, right at the end, something rather odd happened. A Plaid member asked whether the Independent and Labour members of the Planning Committee had held a pre-meeting meeting on 15 September when a controversial supermarket planning application was being discussed.

The response was a blustering rendition of "How dare you suggest such a thing" from various members, including Labour's Terry Davies. Imagine a very pink, shiny round ball of smug self-satisfaction wearing glasses. Got the picture? Good. Mr Davies was feeling particularly pleased with himself, having just been voted in as deputy chair of the Planning Committee.

Despite their outrage, none of the Independent or Labour members was able to come up with an explanation as to how they just all happened to vote against local objectors and in favour of a the supermarket en bloc.

Next Cllr Pam Palmer, hyperactive today, stood up to announce in regal tones that it had been brought to her attention that some councillors had had a conversation in the gents' toilets in which it had been suggested that she had been heard instructing three members of the planning committee on how to vote in the supermarket planning application. If she was going to do that sort of thing, she said, she would do it discreetly by phone, before realising her mistake.

Fortunately for Cllr Palmer the seriousness of the charges were forgotten amid loud guffawing from the Independent benches at the mention of the gents' toilets.

So for any stand-up comedians booked for this year's Independent/Labour Christmas Party, all you have to do is stick to slavery and toilets, and they'll be rolling in the aisles.

The public in the gallery were left waiting for the Beadle to escort them back to the Workhouse, while the councillors shuffled off for lunch. Oliver decided for once that he would rather not ask for more.

Wednesday, 12 October 2011

The Council of Despair Part I

Being at a loose end, I decided to undertake the trek over to Carmarthen to watch today's meeting of the full Council. I really wish I hadn't.

As usual we had to endure the rigmarole of reading and signing declarations before signing the visitors' book, followed by a long wait until someone came to ferry the latest consignment of lost souls into the Pit of Hell, the foul smelling and stiflingly hot Public Gallery.

Following complaints from various members of the public, the guards now give a little spiel about what to do in case of fire. This involves being told to sit tight and wait until someone comes to rescue you, although the locks on the doors would open automatically, we were told.

But lights, camera, action!

Chair of Council, Cllr Ivor Jackson, began by warning that the fire alarm system was on the blink. If the alarm sounded, the meeting would be adjourned and everyone should go to the Members' Lounge, he said, forgetting that for anyone in the public gallery this would have meant leaping to an almost certain death.

Councillor Jackson is the living embodiment of the adage that in working life people rise to the level of their own incompetence. There are quite a few charmless, unpleasant and incompetent characters on the benches in County Hall, but Cllr Jackson leaves them all standing. In no other organisation would anyone pick him to run meetings or represent the Council to the wider world. But Carmarthenshire did.

There were a few apologies, including one from Cllr Siân Caiach, the flame haired radical leader of the People First group who regularly upsets the chief executive. Cllr Caiach is not well liked by many of the elderly councillors, and a chorus of cat calls met the announcement that she was busy trying to catch some loose sheep.

Cllr Alan Speake (Plaid Cymru) was unable to attend but had asked the Council to note that World Anti-Slavery Day was fast approaching. Cllr Jackson managed to spit this out with what looked like a sneer, and the chamber echoed with guffaws from the ruling Independent Group. Even in this enlightened age, it seems, there are still people who can find slavery amusing.

Next we moved on to a very long and tedious round of congratulations and back-slapping. Someone had had a grandchild, etc., etc. C'mon our boys! (official wishes for the success of the national rugby team in the World Cup). The grizzled form of Cllr Wooldridge (executive member for education and children's services) stood up to give an account of a visit to St. James's Palace in London with Director of Education, Robert Sully, to meet HRH the Duke of Edinburgh on the occasion of some beano to celebrate the DofE Awards. On and on he guffed about the success of schools in his care. He had even been close to the gilded throne, and the Duke had spoken to both him and Mr Sully!

The mention of Mr Sully, who has done for Carmarthenshire's schools what the Luftwaffe did for Swansea, always gets teeth grinding. This is the man brought in from "Special Projects" by chief executive Mark James to head the county's education department. Mr James made use of special superman powers to bypass the usual recruitment procedures and consultation with anyone outside the magic circle to make Mr Sully interim head of education. Normally the post would have to be advertised and candidates sought who have the relevant experience and qualifications, with the appointment being approved by the councillors. But not Mr Sully. He may have a few GCSEs and some civil engineering qualifications, but there is nothing on his CV to suggest that his experience of education was anything other than the fact that he went to school and college.

But I digress.

Another superstar in the form of Cllr Pam Palmer, whose responsibilities include "youth services", got up to ramble on about the DofE awards. There were problems with "the youth" in some areas, she said, but the number of DofE awards being won in Carmarthenshire was fantastic. For some reason she referred to young people once again as "the youth" in her cut glass English accent. Strangely, the PR department forgot to tweet this on "her" Twitter microblog.

Next up was one of those absolutely meaningless local government box ticking and back-slapping occasions when someone called Alan Morris read a statement about the Wales Audit Office Corporate Assessment Letter for 2011/12. The presentation consisted of a (mercifully short) recital of the words "plan, progress, objectives, improvement, satisfied, consultation, improvement, progress, oh and a few minor areas where there was possibly a tiny bit of room for improvement".

To anyone familiar with Carmarthenshire County Council, this was a damning indictment of the Audit Office, which declared itself satisfied with the way the council consults and engages with the public, one of the areas of the council's activities which attracts the most complaints from the public.

Cllr Peter Hughes Griffiths, leader of the Plaid Cymru group and leader of the opposition, pointed out some of the areas where there was room for improvement, including missing opportunities for capital savings and other efficiencies.

The council leader, Meryl Gravell, then gave a speech which would have most other council leaders in Wales throwing shoes and spitting if they had been able to hear it. They would have been very pleased to receive such a clean bill of health from the Audit Office, she purred, before going on to claim that no other council in Wales was so well placed to deal with the tough financial climate. In fact, she boasted, Carmarthenshire had been helping out its weaker brethren by accepting budget floors.

Next up was the truly awful Kevin Madge, leader of the Labour group. He could do everyone a favour, including himself, if he simply recorded a message to be played at every meeting. "I am proud...difficult decisions....great improvements have been made.....things are getting better.....the chief executive is delivering for us...so is the leader (nod to Mrs Gravell)....others in Wales are praising Carmarthenshire (WHO, Kev, WHO?)...small swipe at the opposition who are always playing politics and grumbling.....improvement."

A message for all occasions. No preparation or thought needed. No car journeys. Just press the button and play. It would be so much easier, wouldn't it?

But just like Charles Dickens used to, I am going to keep you waiting in suspense for the next installment, where things actually get mildly exciting. But there will be no happy ending.

Tuesday, 11 October 2011

Modernising Local Government the Pam Palmer Way - Updated


Councillor Pam Palmer, member of Carmarthenshire's Executive Board responsible for a vast ragbag of portfolios ranging from food hygiene to sustainable development and strategy, youth services and modernising local government, has taken to Twitter to mark "Democracy Week", currently also being celebrated in North Korea.

The aim of Democracy Week is to encourage more young people (for most Carmarthenshire county councillors that means anyone under the age of 60) to vote. To celebrate the event this year, Carmarthenshire has decided to push the boat out and has arranged an exciting programme of events, namely:
  • To create a bilingual microblog for Councillor Palmer to tell us about her hectic schedule of hospital visits and meetings.
  • To run a competition for the yoof to design a poster encouraging people to vote.
  • Err, that's it.
Could this be the same Councillor Palmer whose complaint about being filmed in the council chamber led to the arrest of Jacqui Thompson? You know, the one who earns around £30,000 per year in allowances? The one who compared elected councillors to children needing protection from predatory old men in raincoats with cameras?

It seems that it is one and the same. In her microblog, which some cynics believe may have been written by the council's PR department, she's a busy old bird. Meetings here and there to discuss energy, the Welsh language and other important stuff. Royal visits to hospitals - just like the Queen Mum, God Bless Her. Off to the canteen for a quick sandwich. Don't forget to mention "our boys" (in Wales this means the rugby team) - before you leap into the black limo and head off for Ammanford.

Update: Rather oddly for someone who appears to be able to write flawless if rather stiff and constipated Welsh, Cllr Palmer had to resort to using the headphones at today's Council meeting whenever someone spoke Welsh. How peculiar.

No wonder she has not had any time to answer any of the questions the public has asked her on Twitter, and what a pity all of those oafs had to spoil the occasion by being so impertinent.

Carmarthen 212?  I wish to make a tweet, young man
This is an experiment unlikely to be repeated because of all those nasty, ill-informed questions, so you've only got yourselves to blame.