Councillors in Boston are threatening to derail an alliance with East Lindsey through a judicial review, it has been revealed.
ELDC leaders however were not concerned by the news as the authority voted 33 for and 11 against to pass the agreement which should see £15.4m saved over 10 years.
Following a vote to approve the latest move at Full Council last night, the alliance officially came into effect today (July 1).
It will see the two councils sharing Chief Executive Rob Barlow and other senior officers as part of a wider move to join workforces over the next few years.
Both authorities have been keen to say the move is not a merger and that they will retain their own identities.
Councillors in the virtual full council meeting of ELDC on July 1.
Boston Borough councillors however, have issued a barrister’s letter to the authority’s leader setting out their “grave concerns” and threatening a judicial review if they are not addressed.
They said they were not opposed to an alliance in principle, however, “we simply cannot support this alliance in its current form.”
“Despite asking for answers to our many legal, financial and procedural questions, we have received absolutely no response from the ruling group at this council,” said the councillors.
They said the barrister, Simon Bell, was recommended by the Local Government Association and had already offered advice.
“There is no doubt that the proposed Strategic Alliance has been rushed through our council in a matter of weeks,” said the statement.
“Our questions about staffing, finances, processes and procedures have fallen on deaf ears, and this left us with no choice but to seek a remedy elsewhere.”
"I really don't think some councillors here tonight understand how vulnerable district councils are at the moment in terms of making sure we are paddling with our own canoe," said Cllr Sarah Parkin. – DJ #LDReporter
— Lincolnshire Reporter (@LincsReporter) June 30, 2020
During ELDC’s meeting Councillor Andrew Leonard, who had been told of the move beforehand, said: “I don’t think we should be voting on anything tonight, in fact I think it should be deferred. They’ve engaged a barrister.”
“It doesn’t stand and [one councillor]’s described it as a complete fiasco, the whole thing is invalid and we shouldn’t be moving until we know what their final decision is… they’re adamant they’re going to be looking to a judicial review.”
He added concerns that when deputy leader of Boston Councillor Nigel Welton withdrew the alliance following initial difficulties, he did so without a seconder to the motion.
However, East Lindsey District Council leader Craig Leyland said: “Judicial reviews have to be judged on their quality and for us not to proceed tonight on the basis of a judicial review, written and not actually understood, would be foolish.”
Councillors sought reassurance over incomplete information, redundancy payments, scrutiny and the impact if either council chose to withdraw at a later point.
In a joint statement following the meeting, Cllr Leyland along with Boston Council leader Paul Skinner said: “Though we have always worked closely, a formal partnership will strengthen both organisations as we seek to deliver our growth ambitions and look to overcome future challenges.
“By working closer together, we will be able to continue to deliver the services our residents expect in a more efficient and innovative way.”
The Lincolnite welcomes your views. All comments are reactively-moderated and must obey the house rules. Please stay on topic and be respectful of other readers.
Seeing family, being cosy by the fire, and fun in the snow, contrasted with dark mornings and cold weather, are among the most loved — and hated — things about winter for people in Lincoln.
New research shows that 81% of people admitted they hate the winter season. According to a poll of 2,000 by the Post Office, dark mornings (49%), slipping on ice (44%), and having a cold face (41%), runny nose (38%), and paying the heating bills (34%) are considered the worst things about winter.
Two years after her five-year-old son died of a suspected food anaphylaxis, a mum from Stamford is using the foundation she set up in her little boy’s name to raise awareness of the dangers around allergies in schools.
It’s December 1, 2021. The Blythe family in Stamford are preparing for another Christmas together. The household consisted of mum and dad Helen and Pete, along with their two young children Benedict, who was 5, and Etta, 2 at the time.