News / Politics

Council committee model under review

By Alex Seabrook  Monday Oct 7, 2024

An upcoming review will look into teething problems of Bristol’s new committee model.

The new committee system of governance at Bristol City Council came into force earlier this year, which saw former mayor Marvin Rees pass the baton on. The new system includes eight policy committees, each taking control over a wide range of political decisions affecting everyone in the city.

But a number of issues have come up since they took over, sparking rows such as over who has power in the new system. Some policy committee meetings have been chaotic and confusing, with councillors learning as they go how the new system works.

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A new committee model review group will take six months to explore all of these problems and suggest possible solutions.

The review group will explore: leadership, functions, roles and structure of the committees; policy development and task groups; report writing and options papers; briefings and agenda-setting procedures; public participation; local decision-making; budget-setting processes; and delegations to officers.

The group will be made up of three or four Green councillors, two or three Labour ones, one Liberal Democrat and one Conservative, to fairly represent the seats held.

They will meet in public monthly, and report back to the full council with recommendations in March next year, which could lead to the constitution changing. There have been a few recurring issues since the new system was introduced in May.

One is the obstacles to public participation. While the new committee model reveals the internal debates about policy that used to happen much more behind closed doors, members of the public have to attend public meetings in person — as the council does not record most meetings, apart from the strategy and resources policy committee.

A Labour councillor previously said supporters of the committee model should be “up in arms” at the fact that these meetings are not filmed and published online, given how the system was billed as more transparent than the mayoral model. Some meetings however are recorded by a member of the public, democracy activist Dan Ackroyd, and then uploaded to YouTube.

But under the mayoral model, all key decisions — including spending over £500,000 or affecting two or more wards in the city — were filmed by the council and made available to watch online. This no longer happens, due to a “resourcing issue”, preventing many people from observing how policy decisions are made that could have a massive impact on their lives.

The group will form pending a vote by the full council on Tuesday – photo: Hannah Massoudi

Another issue is the “nodding-dog” nature of the new policy committees, as previously described by one back-bench councillor. In a few instances, staff have presented committees with options to choose from, but in effect one option has already been chosen and the others are unrealistic.

This problem came up during a meeting of the adult social care committee on September 2, when council bosses “strongly suggested” they renew a contract. Councillor Jos Clark, leader of the Liberal Democrat group, said choosing not to renew the contract would be “very difficult”.

She said: “I’m not sure we’re going to make a difference today. With this contract, the ship has sailed and we can’t really adjust it. If we vote against it, that would be very difficult for us to actually do anything. I’m kind of wondering what our purpose and function is.”

There is also an issue with the unequal balance of power within each policy committee. Chairs are paid much more than other members, are given more access to information, and can make policy decisions behind the scenes — like a controversial one recently on scrapping new council housing.

An example of this was when a relatively straightforward decision, on changing the type of gas the council buys to heat its buildings, sparked a row over access to information. The environment policy committee ended up taking a 25-minute break, on September 26, to thrash out a deal.

During the meeting, Labour councillor Ellie King, vice-chair of the committee, said: “What’s the point of this committee if they’re not the ones making the substantive decision, the well-informed decision? These aren’t the only options that could come here. We need to be looking at the council’s estate and how to reduce our energy consumption.

“There’s a huge amount of work going on that needs to be brought to this committee so that they can understand that. We have buildings that aren’t being used at full capacity and they’re using huge amounts of energy. They’re not making a well-informed decision, because this information isn’t being brought to them.”

The committee model of governance is rare in England but used in a few other councils, such as Sheffield, for example.

Main photo: Hannah Massoudi

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