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Any corrupted city government
Any corrupted city government















At present if a councillor abuses their position for personal gain it may result in a complaint to the local authority’s standards committee with the councillor simply having to apologise. However councillors will have to conform to the highest standards of conduct.

#ANY CORRUPTED CITY GOVERNMENT CODE#

The whole Standards Board regime consisting of a centrally prescribed code of conduct, standards committees with the power to suspend councillors and an unelected central body will be axed in the upcoming Localism Bill. Councillors who have been prevented from speaking on the very issues they had been elected on, such as planning matters, will now have the freedom to express their views.īut councillors will have to register certain personal interests in a publicly available register this could include anything that could reasonably be regarded as likely to influence or affect their actions, conduct when on business for the authority or voting. The government will also legislate to make it clear that councillors can campaign and vote freely on their issues. Failure to register or declare an interest, or deliberately seeking to mislead the public about an interest, will become a criminal offence while a newly empowered Local Government Ombudsman will investigate incompetence on behalf local people. Unsubstantiated and petty allegations, often a storm in a teacup, damaged the reputation and standing of local government, as well as wasting taxpayers’ money.īut by abolishing the failed standards committees we’re not letting councillors off the hook. The standards board regime became the problem, not the solution. In the future councillors must expect to be judged at the ballot box by an electorate with real access to their accounts and personal interests in a new transparent era.Ĭommunities Secretary Eric Pickles added: This government is freeing councillors from central prescription and top down bureaucracy so they can get on with their job. If a councillor behaves ineffectively or irresponsibly then it’s a matter for the electorate not an unelected quango. Instead we will legislate to ensure that if a councillor is corrupt and abuses their office for personal gain they will be dealt with in the criminal courts. That’s why we are axing the unpopular and unelected standards board regime. Frivolous allegations undermined local democracy and discouraged people from running for public office. Nearly every council had investigations hanging over them - most of which would be dismissed but not before reputations were damaged and taxpayer money was wasted. The Standards Board regime ended up fuelling petty complaints and malicious vendettas. For the first time local authorities will be legally compelled to implement the Ombudsman’s findings. The government intends to give the Local Government Ombudsman, the established body for investigating public complaints over the way they have been treated by their council, real teeth. Under new plans the public will also have greater confidence to challenge poor local services. While councillors themselves will have the confidence to get on with their job knowing they won’t be plagued by petty allegations. Ministers believe these changes will give voters the confidence that councillors who misuse their office will be effectively dealt with. Councillors will have to register certain personal interests in a publicly available register. Genuine corruption in local government needs to be rooted out and the new government is legislating to make serious misconduct a criminal offence dealt with by the courts not committees. The government is axing the entire Standards regime including the central board, which costs over £6 million a year with investigations of complaints costing thousands of pounds each. Local Standards Committees investigated 6,000 complaints in the first 2 years - of which over half were judged not worthy of any further action. Each 1 had to be examined, but only 3 were considered worth investigating and after investigation all were dismissed. For example, 1 authority had to fork out £160,000 after receiving over 170 complaints from the same person.

any corrupted city government

Mr Stunell said the top-down regime set up by central government to monitor council conduct had become a vehicle for malicious and frivolous complaints. Serious misconduct for personal gain will be a criminal act, while petty local vendettas will no longer get a hearing as the unpopular standards board regime is axed, Communities Minister Andrew Stunell announced today (20 September 2010).















Any corrupted city government