Our Clerk doesn't automatically copy councillors in with all emails sent out on behalf of the council, let alone forward to councillors all correspondence sent to the council through the Clerk. This results in councillors left out of the loop on council business and finding themselves not fully informed to take decisions in meetings about agenda items that have no supporting documents or emails or papertrails.
I complained about this at a recent council meeting and was told that the Clerk would devise a policy on correspondence to be decided at a meeting tomorrow night (15 July). The Clerk sent out this policy document-
Draft Correspondence Policy
Date adopted:
All correspondence should be addressed to the Clerk. By email or by post to The Clerk at the relevant addresses.
Correspondence will be acknowledged or responded to within 3 working days. The personal information you provide, such as name, address, email address, phone number will be processed and stored so that it is possible to contact you and respond to your correspondence.
Your personal information may be shared with Parish Councillors, where appropriat1]<!--[endif]-->, but will be not shared or provided to any other third party without your prior consent.
Your communication will be kept to deal with your enquiry and then removed from the Parish Council records at the earliest convenience.
NALC LTN1 Councils Powers to Discharge their Functions. 26 The Need to Know. Councillors do not have a ‘need to know’ all aspects of council’s business and cannot claim an automatic right to see all council documentation and information. In other words, councillors are not permitted a fishing expedition in respect of council documentation and information simply because they are councillors.
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Reading the above policy document, it seems that councillors, who should be seeing all correspondence sent to the council via the Clerk as they are 'the council', will not be guaranteed that access if this policy is adopted.
If the above policy is adopted, all decisions about council business that must be made by members in open meetings would end up being dealt with in an ad hoc, selective and private fashion by an employee who has no decision-making role. The Clerk would be able to deal with all correspondence, receiving it, triaging it answering it and finally deleting it without sharing it with the council, without the council's instruction or permission, and the council would be none the wiser.
A dangerous precedent surely?
It appears that the Clerk would become the sole decision-maker on any/all matters of council business he/she chooses to address and make public, rather than the elected members of the council making decisions in convened council meetings - ie an open, transparent public forum. If that is the case, why bother having a council at all?
Despite repeated requests, our Clerk refuses to put a list of the emails/letters etc received by the council in any of the published agendas for council meetings.