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MAJOR TOWN ISSUES
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Do our councillors pay them selves too much ? FoI details (December 11, 2010)
WARMINSTER'S
five unitary councillors banked almost £90,000 between them in the
first full year of operation of the new Wiltshire Council, we can
reveal.
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On
top of this they have already agreed to a 7.7 per cent rise which came
into operation in April 2010 and will receive a 7.2 per cent pay rise
in 2011 and a 6.7 per cent increase in 2012.
Top of the local claimers was
councillor Keith Humphries who represents Warminster south and gets
extra bonuses because he is a member of the cabinet.
He
pulled in £25,205 between July 2009 and June 2010 but by the final year
of office on the current council he will be topping £30,000 a year
because increases in his cabinet allowance and basic allowance are
already agreed by the full council.
Next in the pecking order is Fleur de rhe Philipe, another cabinet member, who grossed £24,768 over the same period.
Third
highest is cllr Andrew Davis, who received £16,176. Although he is not
a cabinet member Andrew receives additional money from his chairmanship
of the area board.
Lowest remunerated Conservative is cllr Pip Ridout who received £11,992 for her work.
Lowest paid councillor locally is Independent group leader Christopher Newbury who only received £11,423,
Although cllr Newbury is also entitled to addition allowances by virtue
of his membership of the fire authority he is the only councillor not
to have made any claim in relation to travel or subsistence.
All councillors get a technology allowance - so there's no excuse for not answering e-mails.
The
information was obtained via a Freedom of Information request made to
County Hall and there is no suggesting of any improper behaviour by any
member.
''I think most people will be as shocked to hear of the
large sums paid out to our councillors for performing this public
service function as I am but what will amaze them is the size of the increases
in the pipeline and already agreed,'' said former county councillor
Steve Dancey.
''To agree to such big rises at a time when the budget
is under such pressure and when councillors are trying to weasel
through new charges to hit ordinary people hard, then someone has to
tell them to stop and think.''
Paul Macdonald served as a councillor on the former district council and was constantly out of pocket each month because of his commitment to serving the community.
"I cannot accept that most members deserve this
amount of financial support for pushing through a party political
agenda at a local level," says Paul.
"I served as a 'pavement politics' politician
with a vision for Warminster back then and if called upon would have
given the skills needed to serve with additional responsibilities on a
loss of earnings basis."
Think again pleaSteve Dancey added: ''I intend to address the full council
to remind them of their responsibilities and at the same time produce a
new system of allowances which will be fair, more open and will
encourage a wider spectrum of society to come forward for election.
''In 1989 allowances were £20
a meeting and that was it but the calibre of members was infinitely
higher with emeritus professors, retired brigadiers, chairman of
national businesses, big landowners and farmers and future MPs within
the ranks.
''Councillors will say that the pay was agreed by an
independent panel - to that I would say stuff the panel and ask the
voters - you'd get a very rude noise back.''Click here to return to the MAJOR TOWN ISSUES page
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