That’s a very long way around to provide a statement of the obvious, completely avoid the fundamental question and demonstrate why our opinions diverge on so many issues.
Much of the reply is simply a regurgitation of fairly lame corporate organisational process.
Fundamentally where I think we disagree so often is however illustrated in your post where you see the clerk role as CEO and I simply do not. Is this a line that is being touted by ALCs and enthusiastically lapped up by clerks wishing to aggrandise their role? It is patently nonsensical - if anything, and as has been presented (even by yourself) on these pages, a clerk role is actually more akin to office manager rather than CEO. At an absolute stretch, Company Secretary is considerably closer to reality than CEO. Please do look up the recognised definitions of these roles.
Anyone that had spent any time in any corporate structure would recognise this.
Maybe our difference of opinion also aligns with the scale of our relative councils? What I mean by that is, if for example, a council had a £500k to a million precept, you might be getting somewhere sniffing towards such grand opinions and titles such as company secretary but there is no way on this earth a £15/hr clerk in an English parish is even stepping on the lowest level of day to day operational management. I’m sorry if that smarts - but they are just not.
You seemed to effectively skirt around the entire question of why a clerk might need a committee to undertake an appraisal (in stark comparison to what they see as acceptable singleton appraisal for others) by referring back to the so-called unique position a clerk supposedly holds.
I’ll lay my cards on the table - it is that so-called unique position, the perpetuation of it by incumbent clerks and the reinforcement of it by ALCs, plus the ignorance, idleness and / or lack of confidence and experience by Cllrs which absolutely perpetuates the antagonism between the council / clerk and leads to so many examples of pathetic claims for industrial tribunal.
You may find this approach ‘direct’ but it is not rude and it is not wrapping the scenario up in a sugar coating. It is simply an honest representation of my opinion.
What normally happens when such opinions are presented to public officials is that they refuse to engage claiming they are being bullied or the like.
It’s no wonder the public sector is in such disarray when nobody seems capable or willing of engaging in honest discourse.