Agenda and draft minutes

Councillor Conduct Committee - Wednesday, 22 January 2025 6.00pm

Venue: Meeting Room 1 - Level 3, Gun Wharf, Dock Road, Chatham ME4 4TR. View directions

Contact: Teri Reynolds, Democratic Services Officer 

Media

Items
No. Item

622.

Apologies for absence

Minutes:

There were none.

623.

Record of meeting pdf icon PDF 197 KB

To approve the record of the meeting held on 11 December 2024.

Minutes:

The record of the meeting held on 11 December 2024 was agreed and signed by the Chairperson as correct.

624.

Urgent matters by reason of special circumstances

The Chairperson will announce any late items which do not appear on the main agenda but which he/she has agreed should be considered by reason of special circumstances to be specified in the report. 

Minutes:

There were none.

625.

Declarations of Disclosable Pecuniary Interests and Other Significant Interests pdf icon PDF 371 KB

Members are invited to disclose any Disclosable Pecuniary Interests or Other Significant Interests in accordance with the Member Code of Conduct. Guidance on this is set out in agenda item 4.

Minutes:

Disclosable pecuniary interests

 

There were none.

 

Other significant interests (OSIs)

 

There were none.

 

Other interests

 

There were none.

626.

Review of Ethical Framework pdf icon PDF 153 KB

The government has recently launched a consultation exercise on reviewing the code of conduct for councilors and the ethical framework. The report seeks members views to feed into the consultation.

Additional documents:

Minutes:

Discussion:

 

The Assistant Director, Governance and Legal (the Monitoring Officer), introduced the report which set out details of a government consultation on reviewing the code of conduct for councillors and the ethical framework and sought the Committee’s views to help form the Council’s response to the consultation. The consultation consisted of 40 questions and drafted responses were contained within Appendix 1. He added that Group Leaders and Group Whips, along with the Independent Person, had been approached to give their view about what the most significant areas of the consultation were which the Committee could consider focusing on.

 

The Principal Democratic Services Officer updated the Committee on the responses that had been received from the Leader of the Council, the Leader of the Conservative Group and the Independent Person. The Group Leaders had suggested that the questions around suspension and sanction should be a particular focus for the Committee, along with the questions relating about rights of appeal.  The Independent Person had been largely content with the responses drafted at Appendix 1, adding that he supported the suggestion of the committee being chaired by an independent person but felt that they should not have voting rights.

 

Members then began to discuss the consultation and raised the following main points:

 

·       Right of reply – emphasis on the need for subject members to have the right to make representations throughout the process was made. It was confirmed that under the Council’s current procedures, this was provided.

·       Independent Person chair – there was consensus that committees dealing with councillor conduct issues should be chaired by an Independent Person.

·       Filtering system – reference was made to the current screening process undertaken by the Monitoring Officer, which was done in consultation with the Independent Person.  The Independent Person had expressed his support of this process.

·       Rights of appeal – rights of appeal for complainants and members was a concern for the committee.  Reassurance was given that currently, as part of the screening of complaints, the Monitoring Officer sought the view of the Independent Person ahead of finalising decisions on complaints and that there was the right to refer to the Local Government and Social Care Ombudsman, on complaints relating to the process and administration of complaint handling.

·       Power to suspend – Members shared the view that the power to suspend should sit with an external body, following a recommendation from a councillor conduct committee, not with committees directly.

·       Offences that could relate to suspension – when asked what types of breaches could relate to a sanction of suspension, the Monitoring Officer explained it was likely that should suspensions be reintroduced as a possible sanction for the most serious of breaches then there would be guidance issued to assist in determining when that may be appropriate. It was also suggested that should this sanction be reintroduced, this should not be as high as six months due to the six month rule relating to potential disqualification for non attendance at a formal meeting within that period.

·       Timescales  ...  view the full minutes text for item 626.