We reported yesterday on the discussion at
the Suburban CC meeting on Wednesday night where the Chair, Dick Youngson,
revealed that there will be another meeting of the Nairnshire Community
Councils plus Croy and Ardersier CCs in the near future. There was then some
discussion centring on the proposed new Nairn Badenoch and Strathspey area
committee proposed by Highland Council and whether this or other forms of
administration, would be the best format for Nairnshire. Some chat too on the
various geographical administrative areas that other public bodies use for
Nairn. Colin MacAulay, one of our four Highland Councillors, had some thoughts he
shared with the meeting, he started by talking about the moribund Nairnshire
Partnership that used to meet regularly in the Courthouse:
“I think the Partnership is the right thing
to do in terms of throwing some of these ideas around and not being firm about
what shape that actually takes in the future. In terms of the geographies I
think there are all kinds of arguments. To my mind I can see the logic of
Nairnshire. Beyond that you are into geographies that are of convenience. The
Badenoch and Strathspey link is just as convenient as the Ardersier and Croy
one. The police are aligned to Nairn, Badenoch and Strathspey, the bulk of the
Council services aren’t linked into Inverness are in Nairn, Badenoch and Strathspey and have been since the end
of the District Councils and the collaborative, licensing and planning and whatever
else. So historically there’s a link there.
There are more similarities with Badenoch
and Strathspey than we have with our pals in Culloden or whatever else and I
think that is the dilemma you’ve got, as eight Community Councils to me makes zero
sense. You have four elected members who cover Nairn and then you have four
half councillors that cover the other area, that has to be as bonkers as
anything. We’ve got the wrong system of public service and local government in Scotland .
The lines need redrawn. They’re not going to be redrawn in the short term so
someone’s suggesting there’s this style of fuzzy management. That’s what we are
into for the short term, it’s making the best of illogical things. The Scandinavians
would sort this in a minute, they would just…”
Colin was then interrupted by John Hart who
said:” The suspicion is that its nice to keep it fuzzy because it’s nice and
confusing.”
“Oh, that’s a conspiracy,” replied Cllr
MacAulay.
“That’s my cynical view, you change it!” countered
John.
Colin laughed and said, “I can’t change your
frame of mind or I would.”
This observer awaits the promised
developments with the (possibly revamped) Nairnshire Partnership with interest.
Could we have the nucleus of a body that could become a focus for those many
individuals in the community that are willing to help carve out a better future
for Nairn, or will we just have talking shop mark 2 with more officials from
Glenurquhart Road coming through to practise their PowerPoint skills?
I think you're right, the chance for men in suits to come through and kick a deflated football of a Powerpoint presentations around for a day or two, and then produce some glossy A4's
ReplyDeleteWe need action not more talking shops, someone to propose and another to second, job done
Next!