Wokingham Today

Off the end of the pier

That was the week

- Tony Johnson

THANK you to the ever observant few who’ve pointed out certain topics that this writer had pretty much completely missed. So if you can tolerate hopping through a number of recentWoki­ngham Borough meetings in no particular order, it should be just the ticket as ‘the show’ (thatwas so last week) takes a running jump right off the end of the pier and straight into…

The good old days

You’ll remember these, back before covid when therewere meeting rooms and debating chambers open at Shute End.

Alas they are as Yorick – a pale shadowof their former selves.

All those carefully copied and painstakin­gly bound reams of printed meeting papers have gone, much to some Councillor­s’ anguish, but to the relief of thosewho prefer their politics to use less paper.

The provision and maintenanc­e of the public record, that all our elected representa­tives rely on aswell as contribute to, has been hugely improved too. Exceptwher­e it hasn’t, orwhen you can’t find things using these search engine thingies.

Meetings are, by and large much more accessible. You canwatch them from the comfort of your armchair, no need towalk or cycle to Shute End even.

But …

… and you knewthiswa­s coming …

… things could be better.

Do not adjust your set

Every council has to make sure that our tax money’s usedwisely andWBC’s Audit Committee is part of the process – required to report to Full Council – as set out in the Council’s rules.

Except that this year, their report got duplicated on its way to an Executive Meeting and an extra million quidwas put into it “in the interests of transparen­cy” before being allowed to go for Full Council approval.

To use an analogy, imagine yourmonthl­y direct debits all add up to £900. Then you discover that someone’s upped them to £1,000 without your agreement and they don’t all appear to be going to the place you thought they were.

Howare you going to feel?

Partly political speeches

At a Full Council meeting, WBC’s rules clearly prohibit Executive Members from making party political speeches.

WBC’s rules also make it clear that the Council’s press releases, alongwith any statements made by staff, cannot be used to promote a political group.

But there’s no rule banning party political speeches at Executive meetings (the ‘cabinet’ of local government).

Sowhen an Exec Membermake­s a party political speech at the Executive meeting saying something like “this Conservati­ve-controlled councilwil­l not be foundwanti­ng” or says “financial crisis” in the same sentence as “control [by] the Lib Dems”, you might think that’s a normal for local politics.

Save that… the rules also say that Council services “should not be used … in connection with party political or campaignin­g activities”.

And Council services seem to include the Exec meeting videos, Exec minutes, created or provided by Council staff.

So that’s all OK.

Isn’t it?

Yorick’s alive!

While there’s still someway to go until the country has managed its way through the covid pandemic, there’s signs thatWBC’s Full Council is planning ahead – as the meetings timetable discussion showed.

It was a mix of the bizarre, banal and brilliant, lasting just under 18 minutes, nearly seven of whichwere actually ‘on topic’ – but that included almost two minutes for the voting.

While the Leader’s proposal spent rathermore time off topic than it did on it, it was refreshing to hear his suggestion that physical meetings could be restarting in the foreseeabl­e future.

But I felt sorry for the Deputy Leaderwhos­e speech seconding the proposal came immediatel­y after. OK, he started off topic and tried to keep going, but it was no use.

The Lib Dem opposition leader had finally woken up, realised that a repetition of “Ich bin ein Berliner” might be about as relevant as his £700 million debt claims and he ought to call a point of order.

Which he tried to do. Valiantly. Except his pointwasn’t in order, it didn’t challenge the ‘secret meetings’ (not timetabled, not listed, no public minutes) and he let the deputy leader off the hook.

Who promptlywe­nt on, ending upwith a political triumph: supporting pandemics; residingwi­th the community; fighting the help.

Maybe that’s not quite right, but a lot closer than Eric Morecambew­aswith Grieg’s piano concerto.

Sowhile the actualword­s may have left viewers a debate or two short of a timetable, as pre-election campaign practice it was great stuff …

For the party faithful.

The Last Word

And if all this hasn’t put you off Council meetings, there’s more coming along very soon. Tonight’s pair focus on the budget.

We can look forward to the usual buzzwords being trotted out, polished to a high shine, lovingly displayed for the electorate to marvel at.

Of course, it might turn out to be a completely target-free environmen­twith sensible adult debate about Council finances, full of thingswe can all understand.

And if JackieWeav­er’s free, nextweek’s commentary­might get … animated.

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