The Scotsman

Graham Speirs

First chief executive of the Convention of Scottish Local Authoritie­s

- DAVID SCOTT

Graham Hamilton Speirs, lawyer. Born: January 9 1927 in Burnside, Glasgow. Died: November 17 2020 in Haddington, aged 93

Graham Speirs was appointed the first chief official of the ‘ umbrella’ body set up to represent the interests of the new regional, district and island councils in 1975 following a radical redrawing of the local government map of Scotland.

The Convention of Scottish Local Authoritie­s ( COSLA) was establishe­d as a single l ocal government associatio­n, replacing four separate organisati­ons. Graham’s job title was secretary general, the equivalent of chief executive. It was a challengin­g role, requiring considerab­le administra­tive skills in overseeing the turbulent relations that developed between local and central government and in steering the organisati­on through a period of internal conflict between regions and districts over whether they were fairly represente­d.

Graham was an administra­tor, not a politician. “He was a pillar of the local government community – impartial, always calm in the middle of a political maelstrom t hat sometimes surrounded him,” said one observer of Scottish local government. “He was very much the civil ser vant – he could have been equally effective as head of a Whitehall department. Always neutral in the midst of a dispute, always discreet, calm in a crisis and always providing wise counsel”.

Si milar s enti ments have been expressed by f ormer council officials and elected councillor­s. Robert Peggie, the first chief executive of the former Lothian Regional Council worked closely with Graham when COSLA was set up. “He was impressive and instrument­al in bringing it all together. He had a talent for uniting different factions,” Mr Peggie said.

Former staff who worked with Graham speak of a man who expected high standards but was kind and considerat­e and always interested in the welfare of his staff. He essentiall­y came across as serious and very formal in his manner, perhaps typical of a lawyer of the old school but he also had a dry sense of humour. Graham Hamilton Speirs was born in Glasgow. At the age of 12 he and his sister were evacuated to Girvan. “These were grim days of war but I have nothing but happy memories of the time I spent there,” he recalled in a letter to the local newspaper later in his adult life. He never forgot the kindness and friendship of local people. It prompted him to write a moving account of his experience­s headed: ‘ Finding peace in wartime Girvan’.

On returning to Glasgow, he completed his education at Glasgow High School and then went to Glasgow Universit y to study law. He volunteere­d for the Royal Navy and ser ved for more than three years on HMS Gambia, mainly in the Far East. Following naval service, he returned to Glasgow University where he graduated in 1950 and completed his law degree in 1952.

His first job was in the legal depar t ment of t he f ormer Dunbarton County Council where he worked for two years before taking up an appointmen­t at Stirling County Council. In 1959 he joined the former Associatio­n of County Councils first as assistant secretary and then secretary.

When regions like Strathclyd­e and Lothian, and district and islands councils were set up in 1975, controvers­y arose over whether there should be two separate local government organisati­ons. It was decided to opt for a single body representi­ng all councils.

The new organisati­on brought together councillor­s from across Scotland, meeting as a full convention. It immediatel­y became embroiled in a row over spending, first with a Labour government and then with the Thatcher government which introduced unpreceden­ted powers to control rates rises. Graham resolutely maintained his impartiali­ty. His job was to give advice to the politician­s and implement their decisions.

One of his most challengin­g periods was dealing with an internal constituti­onal crisis in 1978 when a dispute over representa­tion developed between leaders of regions and districts. It was a situation that demanded all of his diplomatic and administra­tive skills in finding a compromise. When he retired in 1985 after 10 years in office, he said: “Wehave lost no members and that must be a yardstick of our success.”

During his stewardshi­p of COSLA he was also secretary of bodies representi­ng British councils in some of the institutio­ns of the European Union. After retirement, he accepted a part- time appointmen­t as a member of the UK delegation to the economic and social committee of the European Commission in Brussels.

For four years, he was vice- president of its regional developmen­t section. He also became a member of the Scottish Legal Aid Board, was honorary research fellow in the department of politics at Edinburgh University and held posts in Age Concern Scotland and Bield Housing Associatio­n.

Having decided around 1990 to fully retire, he started searching for a property abroad, eventually buying a flat in the resort of Puerto Pollensa in Majorca. He and his wife, Myra, spent many happy holidays there over a period of more than 20 years.

Graham was an elder in Abbey Church in North Berwick for more than 30 years. He was also a member of North Berwick Golf Club for 54 years, both as a playing member and later as a social member. The friendship­s he enjoyed there helped sustain him greatly in the years after the loss of Myra, who died in 2015,

He is survived by his son, Graham, and daughter, Lesley; five grandchild­ren and one great- grandchild.

 ??  ?? 0 Graham Speirs was a stickler for impartiali­ty within the Convention
0 Graham Speirs was a stickler for impartiali­ty within the Convention

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom