Appearing before a scrutiny committee – (Finance, about “The Scrutiny Mutiny”)

Manchester City Council has six scrutiny committees (Young People and Children’s, Neighbourhoods, Economy, Communities, Finance and Health).  These aim to keep tabs on what the Executive (9 top councillors) and officers of the City Council are doing.  The Council really needs to establish a seventh committee, devoted to environmental matters.

The committees meet, in public, about 10 times a year each.  Meetings are open to the public, and usually held in the Town Hall.  The public do NOT have an automatic right to speak, but if you ask the chair to speak on a specific item, it’s unlikely you’ll be turned down.  The following video, shot by Sam Darby (thanks Sam!), is of me appearing before Finance Scrutiny Committee (it deals with finance, but also council communications, HR and a lot of other stuff).  I advocate in under two minutes, for the survey about scrutiny to be redone, point to our three page PEST report called “the Scrutiny Mutiny” and end with strategic but not-hypocritical flattery.  Somewhere between “practitioner” and “expert”, I think, in terms of lobbying. In the end, the Finance Scrutiny Committee joined the at least two other committees (Neighbourhoods and Economy) in calling for the survey to be reconducted.  Comments welcome!!

If you want to get involved in doing these – and other sorts of things – please email environmentalscrutiny@gmail.com, and/or visit environmentalscrutiny.info

Posted in Campaign Update, Manchester City Council | 4 Comments

Job Alert: #Manchester Veg People Worker Co-op Member

http://www.vegpeople.org.uk/jobs

 

Want to help bring the freshest, most local organic produce to Manchester? Do you have a passion for good food and want to support local farmers? Then Manchester VegPeople may be for you.

We are a unique multi-stakeholder co-operative of local organic growers and food businesses working together to provide fresh, seasonal food of the highest possible quality and we are recruiting for a Worker Co-op Member.

We are looking for someone who is passionate about local food, and able to enthuse others about the benefits of buying local and organic.  This is a great opportunity to be part of an expanding team that is growing the take-up of local, sustainable food across Manchester and supporting local farmers.  The job will involve working as a team with the other worker co-op members to carry out all tasks involved in running the co-op, including day-to-day operations, sales and marketing, customer service, and strategic planning, and to enable the growth and development of our pioneering co-operative at this exciting and challenging time.

The role is 30 hours per week, starting in December 2014, and is a 4 month contract that will be extended dependant on the co-op reaching the necessary sales targets or securing further funding to enable it to continue trading when our current funding runs out at the end of March 2015.  Working days will be Tuesday to Friday, plus one Sunday in every three with the extra hours taken as TOIL in the week.  The salary is £15,600 pro rata per annum.

The job description & person specification and application form can be downloaded below.  If you have any problems downloading the documents please emailsales@vegpeople.org.uk

To apply:

Please send us a completed application form along with a covering letter to sales@vegpeople.org.uk and mark it ‘MVP Recruitment’

Timetable:

Closing date is Monday 20th October at 9am.

Interviews will take place on Thursday 30th October.

We will notify interviewees of the outcome on Friday 31st October.

Start date: Monday 1st December

Attached files:

Posted in Job Alert | 2 Comments

No eco-dashboard, no apology, just a “clarification”

Rather than turn up in person and admit that he had, albeit unintentionally, given the Finance Scrutiny Committee duff information, Richard Leese (for it is he), got the Environmental “Strategy” Team (for it is them), send a retraction and apology… sorry a ‘clarification‘ that was read out by the Scrutiny Support Officer. Who is not paid nearly enough, imho.

Posted in Climate Change Action Plan, Democratic deficit, Manchester City Council | Leave a comment

Victory regained: Finance Scrutiny Committee demands action and answers on Clean City Fund

It’s been a long long fight, but slowly the Council is being forced to be minimally and routinely open about how it has been spending the £14.5m “Clean City Fund.”

Here’s a 10 minute video of what was discussed at Finance Scrutiny Committee today (Thurs 25th September). The highlight comes at 3 mins in, where the chair of the committee, Cllr Carl Ollerhead, points out that the most minimal information is STILL not on the official website, despite specific and repeated requests by elected members, dating back several months. The answer he gets is very very weak, and is challenged by another councillor.

If you watch the video and wonder why so few of the members of that committee have questions, it’s because- despite asking for information for three consecutive months – they only received information (two sides of A4) shortly before the meeting. How on earth are they supposed to perform their scrutiny function under such conditions?!

Watch. This. Space.

Posted in Democratic deficit, Manchester City Council | Leave a comment

Blistering speech about fracking at the climate march in #Manchester, Sun 21st September

Well, a little over half the speech…

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Friends of the Earth talk about fracking, at the #Manchester Climate March

On Sunday 21st September Jane Thomas of Friends of the Earth explained the whys and hows of anti-fracking activism. (Interview at the People’s Climate March). Jane is great. The lack of a tripod means the video’s nowhere near as good as it should be…

Posted in Fracking, youtubes | Tagged | Leave a comment

American comedian Jon Stewart on climate change march, “global wobbling” etc #hilarious

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Finance Scrutiny Committee WON’T have promised report on £14.5m Clean City Fund

UPDATE 25th Sept 2014:  You will not BELIEVE the video that I put up later tonight.  Finance Scrutiny Committee DID have two officers and an Executive Member in front of them today.  With a brief report, circulated that morning that did not address their concerns. To say they were “not happy” is an understatement. Watch. This. Space.

Last month MCFly declared victory on  getting some sort of reckoning of the £14.5m “Clean City Fund”, set up with a windfall from the Airport. That declaration was premature.  The Finance Scrutiny Committee agenda for the morning of Thursday 25th September is below.  If you can spot the item, let me know.

Finance_25_September_2014_AgendaFinance_25_September_2014_Agenda2

At the August meeting (link here to video evidence and a transcript) it seemed to be agreed that the politicians in charge of the Fund – Rosa Battle and Bernard Priest – would be called to the committee, along with the head of communications, Sara Todd.

There were some basic questions that citizens and councillors have been asking for months;

– what money has been spent?
– what is the nature of the ‘review’ of the fund that has been undertaken?
– why has the instruction of the Finance Scrutiny Committee in June that a public accounting of spending be made STILL not been acted upon.

After the August meeting the chair of the committee was asked if a written report was expected.   His reply was that he was “hoping for a written report at the next meeting.”

Last week, having noticed the absence of an agenda item on the £14.5m Fund, I had an email exchange with the chair of the Finance Scrutiny Committee.
I’ll quote from myself (from Friday morning) –

Hi Carl,

thanks again for your reply.

I consider myself to be a relatively competent observer of council affairs.  I am probably the only member of the public who has attended all six scrutiny committees.
Right now, I feel like I am running in treacle, or drowning in it.
I have read this paragraph many times –
“The transcript you have listed below was also from the overview report and would have been sent as a written response, only the committee wasn’t happy with what was sent, therefore, I  have asked further clarity, and as the chair I have asked the aforementioned to attend to elaborate on item c in the  overview report which as previously mentioned “items for information”.”

– but cannot make head nor tail of it. I must be thicker than I feared.

a) Precisely *when* on the September agenda will this discussion of the £14.5m Clean and Green Fund take place?  Will it be at the very end in the “items for information”?  Does this therefore mean that members of the public cannot ask questions?
b) If that is the case, why isn’t this a specific separate item on the agenda?
c) When will the written report (see our previous email exchange) be circulated to the committee members and to members of the public?  Or will there not be a written report in advance of the meeting?

And again, where is the additional information about what has been spent that Councillor Lanchbury pressed for?

Yours with fingers crossed and brow furrowed

There was no reply to this email, so I repeated the questions on Monday morning.

Still no reply.

This is how democracy and transparency is done in this city. Am I the only person surprised, saddened or angry about it?

Posted in Democratic deficit, Manchester City Council | 2 Comments

Coal train occupied by UK activists.

At least one of ’em is Manchester-based. More to follow. (This has been done before, btw, but sequels can be better than the originals).

Hi Marc

I’m on top of a coal train right now with 49 ordinary people, who believe so passionately that we need to stop climate change, we’ve stopped a train reaching Cottam power station in Nottinghamshire. We flagged it down at 2.30pm and right now, we’re shovelling coal off the train.

It’s pretty dirty work but I’m here with good friends, and we know it’s the right thing to do.

At this same exact moment, thousands of miles away in New York, global leaders are coming together for a hugely important meeting about the climate.

But while world leaders like David Cameron talk, there’s a plan to give energy companies in the UK millions of pounds of tax-payers’ money to keep old coal power plants burning.

See what’s happening on top of the train:
https://secure.greenpeace.org.uk/people-vs-coal

I’m blocking this coal train today to show our leaders that it’s time for action. David Cameron is at the global leaders meeting. When he gets home, he needs to scrap the plan to give tax-payers’ money to keep coal power plants going.

And Ed Miliband needs to set out his plan to get us off coal. That could be enough to persuade energy companies to shut down coal plants instead of patching them up.

Click to see photos and video, and read stories:
https://secure.greenpeace.org.uk/people-vs-coal

There are 50 of us on this train in Nottinghamshire, but Greenpeace is millions of people around the world. Together we’re working for a green, peaceful future powered by renewable energy. We want a protected Arctic, and a world of oceans and forests teeming with life.

Back on the train, we’ll hold on for as long as we can – but to truly get our message out we need thousands more to support our call:
https://secure.greenpeace.org.uk/people-vs-coal
Thanks for all that you do,

Fran, from a coal train in Nottinghamshire
PS: You can see video clips rushed by bike from the stopped train, read the stories of the people on board, and sign the petition to end dirty coal here: https://secure.greenpeace.org.uk/people-vs-coal

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Richard Leese says Manchester Council has monthly eco-dashboard. Does it? Er, no…

Council Leader Richard Leese told a committee of councillors that Manchester council collates monthly data on environmental performance.  MCFly asked to see it. After being forced to wait 20 working days, it emerges Manchester is NOT a monthly environmental dashboard.

At the August meeting of the Finance Scrutiny Committee, Councillor Leese was giving a verbal report about the “Manchester Strategy”. Starting at about 1 min 40 of the following video, he mentions three “dashboards” which monitor how things are going on the economy, social policy and the environment.  He says that these are updated monthly.

Intrigued, Manchester Climate Monthly editor Marc Hudson wrote to senior officers;

yesterday I attended Finance Scrutiny Committee. During the discussion of the Manchester Strategy, the Council Leader, Richard Leese, mentioned that there are three dashboards that are maintained, and that these are “an economic one, a social policy one and an environmental one” that are “updated on a monthly basis” and that these are “real-time” dashboards.

Where on the Manchester City Council website can I find the Environmental Dashboards for the months of May, June and July 2014?

I note that the Economy Scrutiny Committee receives Real Time Economy Dashboard in its Overview Reports.

I also wonder if the members of the Neighbourhoods Scrutiny Committee already receive the equivalent? From the discussions on Tuesday 26th and looking at the Overview Report for that committee, it seemed they do not.

Many thanks in advance for your reply

The Freedom of Information Act, not mentioned by MCFly, was invoked. So, it took 20 working days to get this answer;

In his response the Leader of the Council was referring to the   commitment to develop a set of indicators to monitor progress against the city’s environmental priorities. This commitment is set out in the  report titled ‘Environmental Sustainability Sub-group; work programme  for response to recommendations’ issued to Neighbourhoods Scrutiny on 10   June 2014 and Economy Scrutiny on 11 June 2014. Work is underway to  develop these indicators, as part of the development of the Manchester Strategy.

A set of environment and climate change indicators has also been  developed by the Council and the Manchester: A Certain Future (M:ACF)  Steering Group, as part of the M:ACF Annual Report 2014. The intention is for these indicators to be used to monitor progress against M:ACF on  an ongoing basis. A copy of the M:ACF Annual Report 2014 can be accessed  online at www.manchesterclimate.com.

A monthly environmental dashboard does not exist at the current time, but work is underway to develop this as part of the work described above  on the Manchester Strategy. Verbal clarification on this matter can be provided to the September meeting of the committee. All of the reports received by the Neighbourhoods Scrutiny Committee relating to environmental issues are however informed by performance data.  [Emphasis added]

So, hands up if you heard Richard Leese use the future tense in that video.

If there were a functioning political opposition in this City, something would be made of this.  But there isn’t, so it won’t.

 

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