Posts Tagged ‘Town Councils’

Power to the People – See for yourself how local councils would benefit The Potteries

January 24th, 2012

The proposals to reform local government in the City of Stoke-on-Trent by creating local councils (called town or parish councils) are challenging and stimulating.

Although these  proposals are controversial, more than 9,000 towns and villages throughout England already have their own local town or parish council.

There are 181 town and parish councils in Staffordshire.

Many communities in North Staffordshire are served by local councils.

Biddulph, Cheadle, Kidsgrove, Leek, Stone and Uttoxeter have town councils and there are parish councils at Audley, Endon, Keele, Silverdale and Werrington.

Local councils in North Staffordshire include:

Some of them have websites which you can visit to find out more about their work and the services they provide.

Members of the public can attend local council meetings. Why not go to one of these meetings and see for yourself  how town and parish councils would benefit The Potteries.

 


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Power to the People – More news from Keighley

January 21st, 2012

Keighley Town Council’s £1.1 million scheme to turn the town’s old police station and courthouse into a civic centre is nearing completion.

Workmen have renovated the run down Victorian building, which stood empty for nearly five years, giving it a new lease of life.

Keighley’s new civic centre is due to open in April and the council hopes a member of the royal family will perform the ceremony.

When opened, the civic centre will house a conference centre, a restaurant, a coffee bar, a police contact point, community advice surgeries, meeting rooms and council offices.

There will be a tourist information centre and a police museum containing a horse-drawn black maria and cells with barred doors, straw mattresses and wooden barrel toilets. Graffiti which prisoners scrawled on the walls of the exercise yard has been retained. Two scene of crime rooms have been created and exhibits include old fashioned microscopes, truncheons and handcuffs.

 

 


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Power to the People – A meeting to discuss Fenton’s future

January 20th, 2012

The action committee campaigning to create a town council in Fenton is holding a meeting at 7pm on Tuesday, January 24th in Temple Street Methodist Church.

Abandoned by those responsible for regenerating our city, Fenton is in a bad way.

The Library and the Town Hall are going to be put up for sale.

Natwest Bank is closing its Fenton Branch and other facilities, including the Community Centre, are under threat.

A serious, well organise petition to give Fenton a town council could help protect these assets and regenerate a dying town.

Anyone who cares about Fenton’s future is welcome to attend Tuesday’s meeting.

 


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Power to the People – Silsden residents helping to create a vision for the future

January 8th, 2012

Writing in the Bradford Telegraph and Argus (7th January, 2012) Clive White reports that residents living in Silsden, West Yorkshire, will be asked to help create a new town plan.

The town council is drawing up the plan to help guide future development in the area.

It has almost completed a questionnaire which is due to be delivered to most properties in Silsden.

A  spokesman for the town council said it was important that residents have their say.

He said: “We want to hear their views, concerns and ideas for making Silsden an even better place in which to live, work and play.”

The plan will provide information for Bradford Council’s district development plan and give Silsden Town Council a chance to influence Bradford’s decisions.

Similar plans have been devised in recent years by Keighley Town Council and several parish councils in the area. The plans identify the priorities of residents on issues such as education, crime and the environment and set out visions for the future.

In neighbouring Steeton, residents’ suggestions for their parish plan led to the council successfully raising £200,000 for a new community centre next to the bowling green.

 


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Power to the People – A vacancy for a town councillor in Leek

January 4th, 2012

Leek is an historic market town in the Staffordshire Moorlands with a Royal Charter dating back to 1214.

Known as the “Queen of the Moorlands” the town has an estimated population of 20,000.

It is a civic parish with a town council and a town mayor.

There are 12 elected town councillors who hold office for four years. The death of one of its members has created a vacancy on the council and if the seat is contested a by election will be held on Thursday, February 9th.

Most people are eligible to stand for their local town council although there are a few restrictions.

A candidate must be:

  • a British citizen, or a citizen of the Commonwealth or the European Union, and
  • 18 years old or older on the day he/she is nominated for election.

The rules relating to candidacy are complex but the basic principles are that people who:

  • are the subject of a bankruptcy restriction order or interim order, or
  • have, within five years before the day of the election, been convicted in the United Kingdom of any offence and have had a prison sentence (whether suspended or not) for a period of over three months without the option of a fine, or
  • work for the council they want to become a member of

cannot stand for election.

Members of the public have the right to attend town council meetings.

Leek Town Council meets in the Council Chamber, Moorlands House, Stockwell Street, Leek and its next meeting will take place on January 17th at 7pm.

For more information about Leek Town Council and the services it provides visit the council’s website at www.leektowncouncil.co.uk

 

 


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