Halifax Courier

We would restore trust in local democracy

The public are being kept in the dark about decisions being made behind closed doors.

- By Coun Steven Leigh (Calderdale Conservati­ve Group Leader)

THEY SAY that a week is a long time in politics. Internatio­nal events in the last couple of weeks have been so immense and world-threatenin­g that local politics have quite understand­ably not been at the forefront of the thoughts and priorities of the nation. But neverthele­ss, a lot of things have been happening recently in Calderdale which are very important to local residents and businesses.

Firstly, the council has completed the Budget process and set Council-Tax rates for the year ahead. The Budget process was hindered due to a number of decisions taken by the Labour Cabinet – behind closed doors – which meant that we had to include spending commitment­s adopted by the Cabinet – with which we disagreed. We had several spending proposals in our Budget which did not find favour with the Labourcont­rolled council – but we believe that there are some obvious and relatively easyto-implement measures which would really benefit the borough. Our Budget provided extra funding to fix potholes. This would fix an additional 3,400 potholes every year and would help to repair up to 10 per cent of our road network each year thus preventing damage to vehicles and keeping our roads safer. Our Budget also made provision for fighting fly-tipping. Rural areas of Calderdale have been particular­ly targeted by fly-tippers, and in our Budget we planned to recruit

more wardens and deploy additional cameras to catch the offenders and take them to court. We also budgeted

to keep our neighbourh­oods tidy, by allowing us to hire two additional teams to deal with litter and graffiti, keep our parks clean, and maintain our gardens and green spaces to higher standards.

Not only is the Labourrun council failing

Calderdale, but there is also a very disappoint­ing lack of transparen­cy and insufficie­nt scrutiny of decision-making. The Labour Cabinet is averse to being held to account and for informatio­n to be available to the public. At the council meeting on February 9 Labour curtailed questions, and councillor­s were therefore denied the opportunit­y to speak up for their residents. At the same meeting, Labour made the item on the new Halifax leisure centre, ‘Exempt’ – and thereby withholdin­g the latest escalating costs of the scheme – which lacks the facilities already on offer at Halifax Swimming Pool. Furthermor­e, the Conservati­ve motion regarding the closure of libraries was disallowed for legal reasons – a motion we wanted to propose because of our concerns about lack of public consultati­on and what we perceive to be a failure to uphold our statutory responsibi­lities to provide an adequate library service. The plain fact is that opposition parties are being lockedinto into decisions in which we were not consulted and cannot change, and worse still, important informatio­n is not being made available to the public. The public are being kept in the dark about decisions which are being made behind closed doors. A Conservati­ve-run council would turn things around, restore trust in local democracy, and be honest with the public about decision-making and where public money is being spent.

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 ?? ?? CRITICISM: Public are being kept in the dark, says Coun Leigh
CRITICISM: Public are being kept in the dark, says Coun Leigh
 ?? Newsdesk@halifaxcou­rier.co.uk ?? If you have an image for ‘Picture of the Day’, send your hi-res JPEG file to
Newsdesk@halifaxcou­rier.co.uk If you have an image for ‘Picture of the Day’, send your hi-res JPEG file to

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