The General Election will be done and dusted within a couple
of days and (unless there is some calamity and a re-run later this summer) the
next time we all have a vote in Nairn will be in November when the Community
Council elections will come round with a lot less fanfare than the present
goings-on.
Nairn West CC and Nairn Suburban CC hoped to be joined
together in municipal matrimony by November. If all goes well Nairn will
then be split into two CC areas, one of which will broadly encompass the West
End and the Western Suburbs and the other will take in the town centre and the
rest of the town. A long time ago some official somewhere drew up three lines
on the map setting out the boundaries for the three existing CCs. At the last reorganisation the Westies and the Subbies wanted
everything to go into one Council for Nairn but River Community Council
objected. Those members of the public that responed to consultation at the time
were by a large majority in favour of a single community council for Nairn which
would have been an embryonic vehicle that would have been well placed for the
forthcoming Scottish Government Community Empowerment bill and other possible
future initiatives that will attempt to turn round the last two or three
decades of centralisation.
Other towns have a single community council, there’s a list of some of them here and other debate in favour of a single Community Councilfor Nairn from back in 2010 here. It wasn’t to be though and the status quo of three
CC’s has remained since. We could be down to two soon though.
Will the novelty of an amalgamated Westies and Subbies CC
come to fruition by November however? There is worry that the Highland Council
are dragging their feet in setting a date for meeting open to the public where
the merits of the merger can be debated and, presumably, offering the
opportunity for any citizen to display just cause why the two CCs cannot be
joined together? Lack of information about what form
the meeting will take is also causing disquiet. Brian Stewart, the Chair of the
Westies, said at their regular meeting last week:
“What we don’t know from the Council who have required this meeting is who is going
to chair it? What the proposition or what motion is going to be on the table
and indeed what the idea and purpose of the meeting is.
It is not us who is driving this. We’ve said to the Council
we are very happy to engage in whatever process they see as suitable and
appropriate but it is a requirement they have put upon us.
If we had the opportunity to convene a meeting, get ourselves together, get everyone who is interested to come along, we’ll do it. The difficulty at the moment is that we are in a sense subject to the direction and the guidance of Highland Council as the local authority.”
If we had the opportunity to convene a meeting, get ourselves together, get everyone who is interested to come along, we’ll do it. The difficulty at the moment is that we are in a sense subject to the direction and the guidance of Highland Council as the local authority.”
There was also discussion about whether the meeting would be
open only to the residents of the West and Suburban CC areas or whether members
of the public who live in the River CC area would attend. Is this anxiety all
about nothing? Will the Westies and the Subbies get to the Church in time or
will fate and the speed of local government machinery deal a fatal blow to the
romance?
So a handful of River CC folk hold the town back and go against general opinion
ReplyDeleteDemocracy but not what we need
Some of us think we should have MORE community councils, based on the old areas we used to have to elect our Burgh Councillors.
ReplyDeleteThe River community council must have there reasons for not wanting to amalgamate, could it be they don't want the westies trying to take over?
ReplyDeleteThe Westies will take over and the Tradespark folk should steer clear!
ReplyDeleteThe ones that take over the the new Westie/Subbie CC anon will be the ones who are duly elected by the democratic process
ReplyDelete