Wokingham Today

Why it’s time for me to call it day after 27 days

- Cllr Gary Cowan Cllr Gary Cowan is councillor for Arborfield at Wokingham Borough Council

AFTER 27 wonderful years as the Borough Councillor for Arborfield it’s time to call it a day. I came into local politics for two reasons. The first was to do right for Arborfield and Wokingham residents. Second was to help Wokingham District Council as it was then, to become a more resilient organisati­on better fitted to deliver what residents want and pay for.

As a Conservati­ve I won in 1997 against an excellent opponent in Steve Bacon. A quarter of a century later, standing as an Independen­t in May 2022, over 75% of the electorate voted for me to continue as their representa­tive.

Looking back to 1997 I remember the District Council as a caring organisati­on that, while it didn’t get things right all the time, was conscious of its duty and worked to improve itself.

Over the years things have not changed for the better.

I’d like to see our Borough

Council become an outward looking organisati­on that is focused on delivering for residents.

In Westminste­r, every resident is represente­d by one MP, but a Borough Council sees every resident represente­d by three councillor­s – three times the cost for a third of the responsibi­lity looks less like a representa­tive democracy.

As an independen­t, it seems to me that this change has been introduced to benefit political parties and not residents. Having larger wards triples the cost for an independen­t candidate for canvassing, electoral material etc. So, Westminste­r has managed to get Whitehall to start the process of erasing independen­t political representa­tion.

It may be easier for the big political parties, but residents and democracy will be the poorer for it.

There are some suggestion­s I’d like to put forward as I feel that our Council needs to move fairly and squarely into the 21st Century.

Almost all companies record phone calls and in most, but not all, cases emails/letters to ensure that customers get timely replies.

Things do go wrong from time to time and customers have every right to complain about a service or product that doesn’t live up to the standard they expect. It might help the Council if there were a publicly visible scoring system on a department-bydepartme­nt basis.

This would with transparen­cy and could reduce bureaucrac­y. It would also change any perception that the Council acts as both judge and jury.

If it included elected Councillor­s, it could prevent an issue from mushroomin­g into something that takes far more time and resource to resolve.

The Council would also do well to reform the process for complaints about Councillor­s into one that is both transparen­t and scrupulous­ly fair - as nearby Councils have all done for years.

For me as an independen­t backbenche­r, while I’ve enjoyed many successes down the years, the one that shines out was persuading fellow Councillor­s in 2023 to agree to overhaul WBC’s Constituti­on - to make it fit for the 21st Century.

If carried out successful­ly, then perhaps the end of my time at Wokingham Borough Council may not be marked with the more usual failure that dogs every politician.

With my beloved Katie, wife of 57 years, passing away two years ago and my sailing past 80 (years not mph), a recent kidney removal together with ongoing chemo for prostate cancer have all meant that I am able to walk the ward no longer. Leading me to the inevitable recognitio­n that it’s time to pass the baton on to others.

It only remains for me to say thank you to Arborfield and other residents of the Borough for your continued support – it’s been an honour (and often a pleasure) to serve you all.

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom