The County's Community Councils continue to press for a better and more democratic deal for Nairnshire. The latest events were described in detail at last night's (Weds 6th) joint meeting of Nairn West, Suburban and River Councils in front of around 30 assembled community councillors and members of the public.
Tommy chaired the meeting and after a discussion concerning the new traffic regulations he introduced Alastair to give an account of the recent meeting between the seven Councils and the Glenurquhart Road high heid yins. Alaistair said:
"We had a very good meeting on Monday
morning with Thomas Pragg, Stuart Black, Malcolm MacLeod and the outcome of
that is that we had a very serious discussion and that was on the back
obviously of what we thought and we all agreed was a very serious situation: a
real complete breakdown in trust and confidence between Nairnshire and the Highland
Council planners and we agreed we must resolve this and move on to a better way
of working in the future.
We had a long discussion where all seven
Community Council Chairs gave their opinion on what they thought was happening.
Basically you either believe that this planning process is going to continue
and whatever we say it won’t change or we basically say look, there are a whole
lot of things here that are just not right, that what was possibly true in 2006
is not true in 2013 and that we (that’s Nairnshire), the four Nairnshire
councillors, the seven Nairnshire Community Councils (if you include Croy),
really want to be involved in – what I think the new consensus is, a new plan
for the Inner Moray Firth. Especially in Nairnshire and to try and get to a
situation where we go forward. So the proposal we put forward is that we need
to agree realistic timescales. We think the plan should be between 2015 and
2020. […] A lot of this discussion was about prioritisation, and all this
prioritisation is against a limited financial pot.
Alastair then went on to say how these
ideas fitted with the Scottish Government’s Community Empowerment Bill and with
COSLA’s vision for a stronger local democracy in Scotland ,
the integration of Health and Social Care and also with locality planning.
He finished by saying that it had been acknowledged by Thomas Prag that to have
seven Community Council Chairs in a room unanimously saying they were not happy
had to be taken as a significant factor.
After Alastair had finished Dick went on to
describe a meeting between the three Nairn Community Council Chairs and the
town’s four Councillors and the ward manager Liz Cowie:
“We had a very short meeting and half an
hour to put our case to our local four and to Liz Cowie. We went with, we went
through virtually everything Alastair has just gone through and how we saw the
Community working very strongly with the Councillors who are elected, there is
a large vocal group behind them and the support of the communities they are
representing and the ward councillors – we felt we should be much closer in
with them so actually the decision taking that has got to be done locally with
them in a very balanced way. We didn't get much reaction, very little humour
and certainly not a lot of support which was rather unfortunate because we were
really opening the door for something that will actually fit with Government
policy."
Dick then also mentioned the Community
Empowerment Bill: “There’s tremendous change now, we are really at the start of
something quite major.”
Michael Green was the only Highland councillor present at
the joint meeting last night (although Liz and Colin had sent their apologies).
He offered his support once again to the efforts of the joint Nairn Community
Councils. Michael told how he and other colleagues had put forward a motion to
the Highland Council that will be discussed on the 19th of December
to try and get a new framework, “to try and implement the changes that we want
to see,” he said.
1 comment:
I'm amazed at just how many times the Gurn reports on meetings whereby apologies for not attending are proffered by certain councillors. Is local no longer no longer on their agenda, or are there more profitable meetings and committees to sit on in Inverness?
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