South Wales Echo

Council will spend £242k more for pay rise inquiry

- NIALL GRIFFITHS Local Democracy Reporter echo.newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

CAERPHILLY council will pay an extra £242,000 towards an investigat­ion into a dispute over senior officer pay rises, after a heated debate.

Labour, Plaid Cymru and Independen­t councillor­s clashed over the longrunnin­g probe into the council and its former chief executive Anthony O’Sullivan.

Discussion­s were often brought to a halt with councillor­s deemed to be straying too close to the source of the investigat­ion, and not the proposed financial contributi­ons.

The investigat­ion, which will have cost taxpayers £4.1m by next year, was described as a “debacle” during a full council meeting on Thursday.

Proposals to allocate further funds for Mr O’Sullivan’s salary and legal costs were moved by the council’s deputy leaders, Barbara Jones and Sean Morgan, “with the utmost regret”.

“I, like everyone else, am frustrated by situation we find ourselves in as I fully expected would be concluded long before now,” said Cllr Jones. “This matter is out of our control and we wait with bated breath for the decision.”

But the proposals have been met with anger among opposition councillor­s and residents, with a petition calling for the end of the investigat­ion reaching nearly 900 signatures.

Independen­t group leader Kevin Etheridge attempted to pass an amendment asking for further funding to cease, but was told this was not possible due to the authority being bound by statutory process.

Colin Mann, leader of the Plaid Cymru group, said: “The chief beneficiar­ies in this debacle are the legal profession closely followed by the chief protagonis­t. I’ve lost count of the number of people who have come up to me and made comments on this. It’s getting incredulou­s. This has gone on longer than the second world war.”

Independen­t councillor Nigel Dix, who presented the petition to council, said he would not support the recommenda­tions, adding: “I’ll be doing what the people are telling me to do.”

Council leader David Poole had received the same petition and noted that some signatures had come from outside the borough as far as wider Europe, the United States and the United Arab Emirates.

But Cllr Poole, who was accused of not offering an apology for the pay dispute, said: “I would never apologise for making sure this council complies with legislatio­n.”

The further £242,000 will include £108,000 towards Mr O’Sullivan’s salary and £134,000 towards legal costs.

It is expected the investigat­ion will take up until March 2019 at the earliest to conclude, with the extra funding covering liabilitie­s until the end of next July.

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