Venue: Council Chamber, County Hall, Northallerton
Contact: Daniel Harry
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To elect a Chair of the Council to serve until the May 2024 AGM Minutes: It was moved and
seconded that Councillor David Ireton be elected Chairman of the Council to
serve until the Annual General Meeting of the Council in 2024. The vote was taken and
the motion was declared carried with 84 for, none against and no abstentions. Resolved - That Councillor
David Ireton is elected Chairman of the Council, to serve until the Annual
General Meeting of the Council in 2024. Councillor David
Ireton then made his declaration of acceptance of office of Chairman of the
Council. Councillor
David Ireton in the Chair |
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Minutes of the meetings held on 22 February 2023 and 24 February 2023 To move that the Minutes of the Quarterly meeting of the County Council held on 22 February 2023 and on 24 February 2023, having been printed and circulated, be taken as read and be confirmed and signed by the Chairman as a correct record. Minutes: It was moved and seconded that the Minutes of the meeting of the County
Council held on 22 February 2023 which was
adjourned and then reconvened on 24 February 2023, having
been printed and circulated, are confirmed and signed by the Chairman as a
correct record. The vote was taken
and the motion was declared carried with 84 for, none against and no
abstentions. |
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Apologies for absence Minutes: Apologies for
absence were received from Councillors John Cattanach,
Liz Colling, Steve Shaw-Wright, Andy Solloway and
David Whitfield. |
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To elect a Vice-Chair of the Council to serve until the May 2024 AGM Minutes: It was moved and
seconded that Councillor Roberta Swiers be elected
Vice-Chairman of the Council, to serve until the Annual General Meeting of the
North Yorkshire Council in 2024. The vote was taken
and the motion was declared carried with 84 for, none against and no
abstentions. Resolved - That Councillor
Roberta Swiers is elected Vice-Chairman of the
Council, to serve until the Annual General Meeting of the Council in 2024. Councillor Roberta Swiers then made her declaration of acceptance of office of
Vice-Chairman of the Council and thanked the Council for her appointment. |
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Declarations of Interest Minutes: Declarations of
Interest were made as follows: Councillor Karl
Arthur regarding Minute 12(a). Councillors Joy
Andrews, Lindsey Burr, Caroline Goodrick and Steve
Mason regarding Minute 8. Councillor Keane
Duncan regarding Minute 8. Councillor Yvonne
Peacock regarding Minute 12. |
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Chairman's Announcements Any correspondence, communication or other business brought forward by the direction of the Chairman of the Council. Minutes: The Chair welcomed
the Honorary Aldermen and members of the public and press who were present. The Chair informed
Members of the usual arrangements for the meeting. The Chair informed
Members that there were two Notices of Motion on the agenda and requests had
been received that these be debated at the meeting. The Chair was required to give a ruling on
whether to follow the normal procedure of referring these to the relevant
committee or whether they should be debated at the meeting. The Chair considered that that Motion
relating to Crustacean die-off be debated, and the Motion relating to the
Police, Fire and Crime Commissioner be referred to the Corporate and
Partnerships Overview and Scrutiny Committee.
The Chair reminded
Members that when considering Notices of Motion a Member can move that the
motion can be put now and one Member can speak for five minutes for that Motion
and one Member can speak for five minutes against. Should the motion on the
Police Fire and Crime Commissioner be referred to the Corporate and
Partnerships Overview and Scrutiny Committee then it would be moved and
seconded without comment. The death of former
County Councillor David Billing was noted.
David was a County Councillor from 1985 to 2009 and then from 2013 to
2017 and he was also a Scarborough Borough Councillor. A minute’s silence
was held in memory of the former County Councillor. |
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Statement by the Leader of the Council Minutes: Councillor Carl Les made
a statement and answered questions under Council Procedure Rule 2.3 as Leader
of the Council, a summary of the key points of which had previously been
circulated and which appeared at pages 31 and 32
of the agenda pack in the Minute Book (pages 25 to 26) |
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Public Questions or Statements Members of the public may ask
questions or make statements at this meeting if they have given notice and
provided the text to Barry Khan, Assistant Chief Executive Legal and Democratic
Services – email: barry.khan@northyorks.gov.uk
or in writing to Barry Khan, Assistant Chief Executive Legal and Democratic
Services, County Hall, Northallerton DL7 8AD by midday on Friday, 12 May 2023. Each speaker should limit themselves to 3
minutes on any item. If
you are exercising your right to speak at this meeting, but do not wish to be
recorded, please inform the Chairman who will instruct anyone who may be taking
a recording to cease while you speak. Minutes: There were nine
public questions, as follows: The following public statement was submitted
by John Plummer and read out at the meeting: How does the council intend to boost the poor levels of public
participation in elections in North Yorkshire without introducing proportional
voting? Surely the creation of the new
council is an ideal moment to take positive action? The following public question was read out by
Rosemary Livingstone I am Rosemary
Livingstone, a retired GP from Ripon and I am speaking in favour of the Motion
before you, requesting that the North Yorkshire County Council writes to the
Government urging it to adopt Proportional Representation for General, Mayoral
and Local Elections. (Thank you for
letting me speak). We British like to
think we live in a democracy but actually very few MPs are elected with more that half of the total votes cast. In General Elections
between 2001 and 19 the share of the vote in all of the individual
constituencies for the party that eventually formed the Government varied
between 35 and 44%. So the majority of people who vote in elections do not get
what they want. We therefore get
voter apathy and disillusionment. 35% of people do not bother to vote. In
recent canvassing, the commonest reason given for this was that it would not
make a jot of difference to the result. This is not
good for our democratic process. I feel very sad that
in this, our 21st century democracy so many people feel disenfranchised and
indeed are disenfranchised by our First Past the Post System. It leads to
disillusionment, a lack of trust in both politicians and the political process
and that then leads to a lack of trust in all our institutions and contributes
to the feeling so many people have, which is that nobody really cares about
them or their problems and they are not heard. We could do much
better. We had coalition
governments during both the First and Second World wars because it was thought
that in those awful times, consensual government would be more effective and would
serve the country better. Proportional Representation could achieve this today. If you won’t listen
to me, what about listening to a Conservative Councillor, Emma Best, a
London-wide member of the London Assembly who, on the Conservative at Home website
states: “The Conservative
Party is at risk of making a historic error. While the melodrama of the last
year has left the party preoccupied with avoiding defeat at the next election,
it is failing to grapple with an issue that could determine its fortunes far
beyond 2024: the end of First Past the Post (FPTP)”. She recognises that
PR is coming and says: “I am deeply
concerned that we do not have a thought-out or well-argued position on what could
be the most significant change to our political system in recent memory”. I am concerned that we need PR now and we need you, as our representatives here in North Yorkshire to ... view the full minutes text for item 8. |
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To consider the report and recommendations of the Executive and make decisions on them · Implications of TUPE · Local Area SEND Strategy Adoption · Response to DEFRA – Food Waste Collections in North Yorkshire Minutes: Implications of
TUPE The recommendation
at pages 35 and 36 of the agenda pack (page 30 of the Minute Book) was moved and
seconded. The confidential appendix to the report that went to the Executive on
2 May 2023 was circulated to Members in advance of the meeting, upon request. A vote was taken and
the motion was declared carried with 83 for, none against and 1 abstention. Resolved - That Council
approves the estimated costs, as detailed in paragraph 6.1 of the report, as
they are over £100,000. Local Area SEND
Strategy Adoption The recommendation
at page 35 of the agenda pack (page 29 of the Minute Book) was moved and
seconded. A vote was taken and
the motion was declared carried with 84 for, none against and no abstentions. Resolved - That the Local Area
Special Educational Needs and Disabilities Strategy be formally approved and
adopted. Waste Collections – Separate Collection of Food Waste The recommendations
at page 36 of the agenda pack (page 30 of the Minute Book) was moved and
seconded. It was moved that
separate votes be taken on each of the two recommendations and the Chair
agreed. Separate votes were taken
and it was Resolved – 1.
To accept the DEFRA transitional arrangement to
implement separately collected food waste across North Yorkshire from 1
February 2043; (The recommendation was declared carried with 63 for, 18 against and 3
abstentions) 2.
To explore options for NYC to implement separately
collected food waste at an earlier implementation date and to engage with DEFRA
and Government to ensure that an earlier implementation date does not
negatively affect our eligibility for funding. (The recommendation was declared carried with 84 for, none against and
no abstentions) |
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Police, Fire and Crime Panel Governance paper Minutes: The recommendations
at page 40 of the agenda pack (page 34 of the Minute Book) were moved and
seconded. A vote was taken and
the motion was declared carried with 84 for, none against and no abstentions. Resolved – 1. That the seat
allocation on the Police, Fire and Crime Panel (PFC Panel) be agreed as seven
(7) seats for North Yorkshire Council and three (3) seats for City of York
Council; 2. That a substitute
Member Scheme is implemented for the PFC Panel, as outlined in Appendix A, and
adopted within the Panel’s Arrangements; 3. That the PFC Panel
has one Vice Chair appointment, to be appointed by the Panel in July 2023 and
annually thereafter; 4. That the Monitoring
Officer be authorised to make any consequential amendments to the North
Yorkshire Council Constitution. |
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Appointments to Committees and Outside Bodies Minutes: The recommendations
at page 44 of the agenda pack (page 38 of the Minute Book) were moved and
seconded. On a vote being
taken on appointments to the Police, Fire and Crime Panel, the recommendation was
declared carried with 84 for, none against and no abstentions. There were two
nominations for the role of Member Champion for Climate Change, Councillors
Paul Haslam and Arnold Warneken. It was moved and
seconded that both Councillors be selected to carry out the role jointly. On a vote being taken the motion fell with 40
votes for the motion, 43 against and there was 1 abstention. A vote was taken on
a single nomination and there were 43 votes for Councillor Paul Haslam, 38
votes for Councillor Arnold Warneken and 3
abstentions. The Chair declared that
Councillor Paul Haslam was appointed. On a vote being
taken on appointments to the Health and Wellbeing Board for North Yorkshire,
the recommendation was declared carried with 84 for, none against and no
abstentions. There were two
nominations for the role of Vice-Chair for the Transition (LGR) Overview and
Scrutiny Committee, Councillors Bryn Griffiths and Stuart Parsons. On a vote being
taken there were 27 votes for Councillor Bryn Griffiths and 5 votes for
Councillor Stuart Parsons. The Chair declared
that Councillor Bryn Griffiths was appointed. A standards issue
was raised in relation to the vote on the motion that the Member Champion for
Climate Change role be carried out jointly. The issue was addressed later in
the meeting. Resolved - That Council: 1.
Appoints to the Police, Fire and Crime Panel for North
Yorkshire and York:
2.
Appoints a Member Champion for Climate Change - Councillor
Paul Haslam; 3.
Appoints to the Health and Wellbeing Board for North
Yorkshire – the Executive Member for North Yorkshire Council with
responsibility for Housing and Leisure and the Corporate Director for Community
Development, North Yorkshire Council; 4.
Appoints a Vice-Chair for the Transition (LGR) Overview and
Scrutiny Committee – Councillor Bryn Griffiths 5.
Notes the following changes to Committee membership notified
by the Conservative group: Richmond Area Constituency Planning Committee – Councillor Caroline
Dickinson to be removed and Councillor Angus Thompson to be appointed in her
place. Scrutiny of Health Committee – Councillor Paul Haslam to be removed and
Councillor Nick Brown to be appointed in his place. Pension Fund Committee – Councillor Carl Les to be removed and
Councillor Mark Crane to be appointed in his place. 6.
Notes the following changes to Committee membership notified
by the Labour group: Transport, Economy, Environment and Enterprise Overview and Scrutiny
Committee – Councillors Bob Packham to be removed and
Councillor Subash Sharma to be appointed in his
place. Councillor Melanie Davis to be
appointed as Vice-Chair of the Committee. At 12:45 pm the ... view the full minutes text for item 11. |
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Statements of Executive Members and Chairmen of Overview and Scrutiny Committees Minutes: Statements of Executive Members, in the order set out below, followed by the Statements of the Chairmen of the Overview and Scrutiny Committees |
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Executive Member for Highways and Transportation - Councillor Keane Duncan Minutes: Councillor Keane
Duncan, Executive Member for Highways and Transportation, made a statement and
answered questions. A summary of the key
points of which had previously been circulated and which appeared at pages 45 –
46 of the agenda pack and which appears in the Minute Book (pages 39 to 40). |
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Executive Member for Health and Adult Services - Councillor Michael Harrison Minutes: Councillor Michael
Harrison, Executive Member for Health and Adult Services, made a statement and
answered questions. A summary of the key
points of which had previously been circulated and which appeared at pages 47 -
48 of the agenda pack and which appears in the Minute Book (pages 41 to 42). |
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Executive Member for Culture, Arts and Housing - Councillor Simon Myers Minutes: Councillor Simon
Myers, Executive Member for Culture, Arts and Housing, made a statement. A summary of the key points of which had previously
been circulated and which appeared at pages 49 - 52 of the agenda pack and
which appears in the Minute Book (page 43 to 46). |
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Executive Member for Children and Families - Councillor Janet Sanderson Minutes: Councillor Janet
Sanderson, Executive Member for Children and Families, made a statement, a
summary of the key points of which had previously been circulated and which
appeared at pages 53 – 56 of the agenda pack and which appears in the Minute
Book (pages 47 to 49). |
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Executive Member for Managing our Environment - Councillor Greg White Minutes: Councillor Greg
White, Executive Member for Managing our Environment, made a statement and
answered questions. A summary of the key
points of which had previously been circulated and which appeared at pages 57 -
60 of the agenda pack and which appears in the Minute Book (pages 51 to 53). |
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Executive Member for Education, Learning and Skills - Councillor Annabel Wilkinson Minutes: Councillor Annabel
Wilkinson, Executive Member for Education, Learning and Skills, answered
questions. A summary of the key points of which had previously been circulated
and which appeared at pages 61 – 64 of the agenda pack and which appears in the
Minute Book (pages 55 to 57). |
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Executive Member for Finance and Assets - Councillor Gareth Dadd Minutes: Councillor Gareth Dadd, Executive Member for Finance and Resources, made a
statement and answered questions. A
summary of the key points of which had previously been circulated and which
appeared at pages 65 - 66 of the agenda pack and which appears in the Minute Book
(page 59 to 60). |
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Executive Member for Open to Business - Councillor Derek Bastiman Minutes: Councillor Derek Bastiman, Executive Member for Open to Business, answered
questions. A summary of the key points of which had previously been circulated
and which appeared at pages 67 - 72 of the agenda pack and which appears in the
Minute Book (pages 61 to 65). |
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Executive Member for Corporate Services - Councillor David Chance Minutes: Councillor David
Chance, Executive Member for Corporate Services, made a statement and answered
questions. A summary of the key points
of which had previously been circulated and which appeared at pages 73 – 78 of
the agenda pack and in the Minute Book (pages 67 to 71). |
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Scrutiny Board (Chair: Councillor Karin Sedgwick) Minutes: The written
statement of Councillor Karin Sedgwick having previously been circulated and
which appeared at pages 79 – 80 of the agenda pack and which appears in the
Minute Book (page 73), was noted. The
Chair of the Scrutiny Board then answered questions. |
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Minutes: The written
statement of Councillor David Staveley having previously been circulated and
which appeared at pages 81 – 82 of the agenda pack and which appears in the
Minute Book (pages 75 to 76), was noted. |
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Minutes: The written
statement of Councillor Barbara Brodigan having
previously been circulated and which appeared at pages 83 - 84 of the agenda
pack and which appears in the Minute Book (pages 77 to 78), was noted. The Chair of the Children and Families
Overview and Scrutiny Committee then answered questions. |
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Transition (LGR) Overview and Scrutiny Committee (Chair: Councillor Malcolm Taylor) Minutes: The written
statement of Councillor Malcolm Taylor having previously been circulated and
which appeared at pages 85 - 86 of the agenda pack and which appears in the
Minute Book (page 79), was noted. The
Chair of the Transition (LGR) Overview and Scrutiny Committee then answered
questions. |
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Minutes: The written
statement of Councillor Karin Sedgwick having previously been circulated and
which appeared at pages 87 - 90 of the agenda pack and which appears in the
Minute Book (pages 81 to 84), was noted.
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Minutes: The written
statement of Councillor David Ireton having previously been circulated and
which appeared at pages 91 – 92 of the agenda pack and which appears in the
Minute Book (page 85), was noted. |
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Scrutiny of Health (Chair: Councillor Andrew Lee) Minutes: The written statement
of Councillor Andrew Lee having previously been circulated and which appeared
at pages 93 - 96 of the agenda pack and which appears in the Minute Book (pages
87 to 89), was noted. The Chair of the
Scrutiny of Health Committee then answered questions. |
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Notices of Motion (1) Crustation
Die-Off Events along the North Yorkshire and Cleveland Coast since October 2021 This Council notes with concern: 1. the unexplained die-offs and wash-ups
of crabs, lobsters, prawns, clams, scallops, mussels
and some species of fish along the North Yorkshire and Cleveland coast since
October 2021 2. the significant reduction in the
catches of edible crabs and other crustaceans, as reported by the North East fishing communities 3. claims that recent capital dredging in
the Tees estuary has resulted in the disposal of contaminated sediment at sea 4. DEFRA’s failure to provide a conclusive
scientific explanation for these die-off events or to set out a plan for
research and action to avoid future recurrences. Therefore, this Council calls on the Secretary of State
for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs to convene a Public Enquiry with powers
to compel testimony and the release of all forms of evidence in
order to address public concern about this issue. Proposer – Councillor Neil Swannick Seconder – Councillor Bryn Griffiths The Proposer and Seconder have requested that the matter
be debated on the day of Council and not referred to the Executive or relevant
committee. The reason for this is that
“the issue of crustacean die off is a serious issue with devastating
consequences for the socio-economic and environmental future of the east coast.
The need for a public enquiry is the obvious next step. The support of NYC will
be pivotal in discovering the reason for the die off and subsequent recovery of
the socio-economic vitality of the east coast”. (2) Call for Police Fire & Crime
Commissioner to resign North
Yorkshire Council has serious concerns about the performance of the current
Police, Fire, and Crime Commissioner, as evidenced by the two recent reports
published by His Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary and Fire & Rescue
Services. The council
therefore calls for the Commissioner to resign with immediate effect. Proposed by Cllr. Bryn Griffiths Seconded by Cllr. Mike Schofield The Proposer and Seconder have
requested that the matter be debated on the day of Council and not referred to
the Executive or relevant committee. The
reason for this is that: His Majesty’s Inspectorate of
Constabulary and Fire & Rescue Services (HMICFRS) published two reports
on the performance on North Yorkshire’s Police. The first was published on 17th
March regarding the Police Effectiveness, Efficiency, Legitimacy: PEEL 2021/22 – An inspection of North
Yorkshire Police. It graded North Yorkshire Police’s
performance across eight areas of policing and found the force was ‘inadequate’
in one area, ‘requires improvement’ in four areas, ‘adequate’ in two areas and
‘good’ in one area. The strapline was “North Yorkshire must make improvements
to help keep people safe and reduce crime”. The second report was published on 3rd May, entitled “North Yorkshire – National child protection inspection post-inspection review”. This inspection reviewed the progress made by North Yorkshire Police since the publication of the last report for North Yorkshire in 2021. HMICFR had audited 33 child protection cases - ... view the full agenda text for item 13. Minutes: The Chair,
Councillor David Ireton, advised that two Notices of Motion had been
submitted. The Proposer and Seconder of
each of the motions had requested that each of the matters be debated on the
day of Council and not referred to the Executive or relevant Committee, for the
reasons given on page 5 of the agenda pack.
The Chair confirmed that he had determined that the Motion relating to
Crustacean Die-off be debated at the meeting. Crustacean Die-Off
Events along the North Yorkshire and Cleveland Coast since October 2021 The Notice of Motion
was moved by Councillor Neil Swannick and seconded by
Councillor Bryn Griffiths. The motion was then debated.
An amendment to the motion was moved by Councillor George Jabbour and seconded by Councillor Paul Haslam. The Chairman
adjourned the meeting at 3:18 pm to enable the proposers and seconders of the
motions to agree upon revised wording. The meeting was
re-convened at 3:36 pm. The amendment was then debated and an amendment to the amendment
was then moved by Councillor Bryn Griffiths and seconded by Councillor Neil Swannick and this was accepted by the mover of the
amendment. A named vote was requested and over 20 Members stood to request
the named vote. The motion was declared
carried with 49 votes for, 27 against and 1 abstention. For: Councillors
Karl Arthur, Alyson Baker, Derek Bastiman, Nick
Brown, David Chance, Mark Crane, Gareth Dadd,
Caroline Dickinson, Michelle Donohue-Moncrieff, Keane Duncan, Richard Foster,
Sam Gibbs, Caroline Goodrick, Tim Grogan, Paul
Haslam, Robert Heseltine, Nathan Hull, David Ireton, George Jabbour,
David Jeffels, Janet Jefferson, Tom Jones, Mike
Jordan, Nigel Knapton, Andrew Lee, Carl Les, Cliff
Lunn, John Mann, Heather Moorhouse, Simon Myers, Andy
Paraskos, Stuart Parsons, Yvonne Peacock, Clive Pearson, Heather Phillips,
Kirsty Poskitt, Janet Sanderson, Karin Sedgwick,
David Staveley, Roberta Swiers, Malcolm Taylor, Angus
Thompson, Phil Trumper, Steve Watson, David Webster,
John Weighell OBE, Greg White, Annabel Wilkinson, and
Robert Windass. Against: Councillors
Chris Aldred, Philip Broadbank,
Eric Broadbent, Barbara Brodigan, Lindsay Burr MBE,
Sam Cross, Felicity Cunliffe-Lister, Melanie Davis,
Stephanie Duckett, Kevin Foster, Hannah Gostlow, Bryn Griffiths, Peter Lacey,
Pat Marsh, Steve Mason, Rich Maw, Andrew Murday,
David Noland, Bob Packham, Jack Proud, John Ritchie,
Mike Schofield, Subash Sharma, Monika Slater, Neil Swannick, Matt Walker and Arnold Warneken. Abstentions:
Councillor Andy Brown. On a vote being taken on the substantive motion the Chair declared
the motion carried. Resolved - This Council notes with concern:
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Minutes: Council were
requested to consider the recommendation of the Executive following consideration
of a Notice of Motion which had been referred to it by County Council at its
meeting held on 16 November 2022. The
original motion that was to be debated is as detailed below. “Council resolves to
write to H.M. Government calling for a change in our outdated electoral laws to
enable Proportional Representation to be used for General, Local and Mayoral
elections. First Past the Post
(FPTP) originated when land-owning aristocrats dominated parliament and voting
was restricted to property-owning men. In Europe, only the
UK and authoritarian Belarus still use archaic single round FPTP for general
elections. Meanwhile, internationally, Proportional Representation (PR) is used
to elect parliaments in more than 80 countries. Those countries tend to be more
equal, freer and greener. PR ensures all votes
count, have equal value, and those seats won, match votes cast. Under PR, MPs
and Parliaments better reflect the age, gender and protected characteristics of
local communities and the nation. MPs & Councillors better reflecting their
communities leads to improved decision-making, wider
participation and increased levels of ownership of decisions taken. PR would also end
minority rule. In 2019, 43.6% of the vote produced a government with 56.2% of
the seats and 100% of the power. PR also prevents ‘wrong winner’ elections such
as occurred in 1951 and February 1974. PR is already used
to elect the parliaments and assemblies of Scotland, Wales and Northern
Ireland. So why not Westminster & Local Government here in North
Yorkshire.” Proposer –
Councillor Chris Aldred Seconder –
Councillor Andy Brown The motion was moved
by Councillor Chris Aldred and Seconded by Councillor
Andy Brown. The motion was
debated. A named vote was requested and over 20 Members stood to request
the named vote. The motion fell with 30 votes for, 45 against and 1 abstention. For: Councillors
Chris Aldred, Philip Broadbank,
Eric Broadbent, Barbara Brodigan, Andy Brown, Lindsay
Burr MBE, , Felicity Cunliffe-Lister, Melanie Davis,
Michelle Donohue-Moncrieff, Stephanie Duckett, Kevin
Foster, Hannah Gostlow, Bryn Griffiths, Peter Lacey, Pat Marsh, Steve Mason, Rich Maw, Andrew Murday, David Noland, Bob Packham,
Stuart Parsons, Kirsty Poskitt, Jack Proud, John
Ritchie, Mike Schofield, Subash Sharma, Monika
Slater, Neil Swannick, Matt Walker and Arnold Warneken. Against: Councillors
Karl Arthur, Alyson Baker, Derek Bastiman, Nick
Brown, David Chance, Mark Crane, Gareth Dadd,
Caroline Dickinson, Keane Duncan, Richard Foster, Sam Gibbs, Caroline Goodrick, Tim Grogan, Paul Haslam, Robert Heseltine, Nathan
Hull, David Ireton, George Jabbour, David Jeffels, Tom Jones, Mike Jordan, Nigel Knapton,
Andrew Lee, Carl Les, Cliff Lunn, John Mann, Heather Moorhouse,
Simon Myers, Andy Paraskos, Yvonne Peacock, Clive Pearson, Heather Phillips,
Janet Sanderson, Karin Sedgwick, David Staveley, Roberta Swiers,
Malcolm Taylor, Angus Thompson, Phil Trumper, Steve
Watson, David Webster, John Weighell OBE, Greg White,
Annabel Wilkinson, and Robert Windass. Abstentions: Sam
Cross |
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Minutes: The recommendations
at page 110 of the agenda pack were moved and seconded Resolved – That the
consequential amendments to the Constitution set out in Appendix 1 to the
report, made by the Assistant Chief Executive (Legal and Democratic Services)
under his specific delegated powers, be noted. |
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Minutes: The report on the
Use of Special Urgency Procedures since the last meeting of the Council on 22
and 24 February 2023 was considered and the recommendation at page 129 of the
agenda pack (page 122 of the Minute Book) was moved and seconded. Resolved – That the report on
the Use of Special Urgency Procedures since the last meeting of the County
Council in February 2023, be noted. |
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Council Procedure Rule 10 Questions Minutes: There were no
Council Procedure Rule 10 questions. The meeting ended at 4.30 pm |