The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)
Councillors hit out after ethical standards ruling
BRECHIN: Complaint against SNP trio thrown out after probe
Battle lines have been drawn after an ethics watchdog threw out a complaint against three Angus SNP councillors.
Brechin Community Council said it was “quite frankly appalled by the outcome of the investigation by ethical standards”.
Brenda Durno, Alex King and Bill Duff were the subject of a complaint by community councillor Steve Dempsey following an 11th hour bid to halt a housing project on the site of the town’s Damacre Centre.
Mr Dempsey said the community council was now considering its options despite there being no right of appeal to the watchdog’s decision.
He said: “People who were at the meeting were quite shocked and appalled at how the councillors behaved.
“We think we can and should expect better from their elected representatives.”
A statement from councillors Durno, King and Duff said: “We are deeply concerned that it would appear that a statutory body such as Brechin Community Council do not accept a decision taken by the Commissioner for Ethical Standards in Public Life in Scotland after a thorough investigation.”
A community council has been left “appalled” after SNP councillors were cleared of any wrongdoing by a watchdog.
Brenda Durno, Alex King and Bill Duff were the subject of a complaint to the Commissioner for Ethical Standards in Public Life in Scotland by Steve Dempsey from Brechin Community Council.
However, an investigation threw out the complaint made about their conduct at January’s meeting of the development standards committee in Forfar after a failed community bid to halt a housing project on the site of the town’s Damacre Centre.
Mr Dempsey said people who were at the meeting were shocked and appalled at how the councillors behaved and the community council was considering where to take the complaint next.
He said: “Mr King said residents should be ‘ashamed of themselves’ for contacting their local councillors to raise concerns about the housing application and they were ‘disgraceful’ for contacting their councillors.
“Mr Duff mocked the number of complaints raised about the application.
“He commented that 19 out of the population of 7,000 people in Brechin
“There is no appeal. We were left feeling the councillors can do and say what they want. STEVE DEMPSEY OF BRECHIN COMMUNITY COUNCIL
was not representative population.
“He made no reference to the nature or content of the complaints.”
Mr Dempsey said Ms Durno had also sent a private message to a Brechin resident, telling them ‘we’re building new houses not a nuclear waste plant’.
“People who were at the meeting were quite shocked and appalled at how the councillors behaved,” he added.
“We were quite frankly appalled by the outcome of the investigation by Ethical Standards.
“There is no appeal. We were left feeling the councillors can do and say what they want.”
The community representatives had urged the committee to delay the planning decision to allow further consideration of its future under the Community Empowerment Act.
However, their 11th hour bid to halt the project failed and work started on clearing the site at the start of March.
The Damacre Centre closed in early 2016 following the opening of the £26 million community campus in the town, despite a petition from 20 groups to keep the building open.
A statement from councillors Durno, King and Duff said: “The commissioner found that we had not contravened the Councillors’ Code of Conduct at Angus Council development standards meeting of January 4 and on subsequent social media posts.
“We are deeply concerned that it would appear that a statutory body such as Brechin Community Council do not accept a decision taken by the Commissioner for Ethical Standards in Public Life in Scotland after a thorough investigation.” of the