Saturday 23rd November 2024,
North Yorks Enquirer

What Could Be Buried In Hinderwell Cemetery?

June 22, 2015 Hinderwell

What Could Be Buried In Hinderwell Cemetery?

  • an “In My View” article by NIGEL WARD, reporting on some preliminary enquiries into what could be buried in Hinderwell.

~~~~~

Following an impromptu visit to Hinderwell Parish Council (HPC) on Thursday 14th May 2015, I offer readers a brief up-date to my earlier article – now appearing in a very public third place in a Google search for “Hinderwell Parish Council”.

Up-Date

On Friday 15th May 2015, I submitted the following request to HPC for information under the terms of the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) – a first step towards conducting a thorough-going examination of the Counci.

I requested:

  • (A) All documentation held by the Council, for the time-period 1st April 2005 until the date of your response in respect of Grass-Cutting arrangements – i.e. tender submissions (you must redact the identifying details of unsuccessful bidders), emails, reports, Minutes, Agendas, contracts (unredacted), payment record, etc., in e-format. Thank you.
  • (B) Copies in e-format of all Registers of Interests (current and historical, throughout the same time-period of 1st April 2005 until the date of your response) of all Councillors past and present who have served on Hinderwell Parish Council. Thank you.

It is a statutory requirement that FOIA requests are fulfilled in toto within twenty working-days of receipt.

It follows, therefore that the last day upon which HPC Parish Clerk Carole BARKER could lawfully respond to my FOIA in toto was Friday 12th June 2015.

And guess what?

Yep. The Clerk responded at 11:27 on the last possible day – but did not provide any of the requested Grass-Cutting information (A), nor any of the Registers of Interests (B).

Following a firm prompt from me, the Clerk finally provided some of the Grass-Cutting information (not all) on Tuesday 16th June 2015.

It makes interesting reading.

The specification for the Grass-Cutting tender process looks like this:

HPC_GC_Spec

Predominantly to be cut (or strimmed), let us note, only six times per year – hardly a gargantuan task – with clippings to be burnt.

H'WELL_CEMETERY_Aerial

In her FOIA response, Clerk Carole BARKER has provided just two Tender bids for the Grass-Cutting. She has not provided the required evidence of Public Liability Insurance cover for either Tenderer. Did HPC ever receive that evidence? Without it, the contract would be null and void. If it does exist, the Clerk had a legal duty to provide it to me within her FOIA response.

The specification that cuttings must be burnt is both wasteful and environmentally unfriendly – hardly ‘best practice’. In point of fact, the burning of plant material requires a D7 Exemption registered with the Environment Agency. It is difficult to believe that HPC has registered. Certainly, the Clerk has not provided copy evidence of the EA registration.

Moreover, grass clippings may have required transportation from the site and a licence is required to do this. Did the Council ascertain that licencing was in place? No evidence of this has been provided by the Clerk.

Tenderer ‘A’ (name and address quite correctly redacted by the Clerk, in accordance with the rquirements of the data Protection Act 1998 – though the Tenderer’s forename was disclosed, perhaps inadvertently, as ‘Paul’) submitted a detailed and professional-looking bid of £4,220 for the three years 2013/14/15, plus VAT (total, £5,064). If it was Paul’s intention to quote £4,220 for each year, the total would be £12,660 plus VAT (£15,192) for the three years 2013/14/15.

TENDER_A

£5,064 including VAT for the three years 2013/14/15.

Now let us consider the competition:

Tenderer ‘B’ (by name one Peter TURNBULL, of a Saltburn address – disclosed by the Clerk, quite wrongly, breaching the gentleman’s rights under the Data Protection Act 1998) submitted an overall generalised bid of £6,900 per year (specified, but with no mention of VAT, which would possibly bring it to £8,280 per year). That would produce a total of £20,700 for the three years 2013/14/15 (or £24,840, if VAT is to be added).

Is VAT to be added?

Peter TURNBULL’s 4-bedroom farmhouse is on the market at an asking price of a cool £580,000, strongly suggesting that he is likely to have business interests exceeding the VAT-registration threshold, presently set at £82,000 p.a.).

TURNBULL_HOUSE

Here is Peter TURNBULL’s tender bid:

TENDER_B

£6,900 per year, remember, amounts to £20,700 for the three-year contract. That figure would increase to £24,840 if VAT at 20% were to be added.

There appears to have been no Tenderer ‘C’, though it is considered best practice to assess a minimum of three Tender bids. What steps did the Council take to advertise the Grass-Cutting Tender? The Clerk has not produced any record of same.

In fact, the documentation provided thus far by the Clerk betrays an extraordinarily slipshod approach to the Council’s finances and procurement procedures. The Clerk is the Responsible Financial Officer.

The Minutes of the HPC meeting of 7th March 2013 record that, in the event, HPC awarded the Grass-Cutting contract (no copy provided in the Clerk’s response to my FOIA) to Tenderer ‘B’ – Peter TURNBULL – a decision costing either £20,700 or £24,840 (if VAT is to be added) for the three years 2013/14/15, compared to the VAT-inclusive figure of £5,064 (including VAT) for the years 2013/14/15, as specified in the bid from Tenderer ‘A’.

Even if the Tenderer ‘A’ bid was actually intended for a single year (though that is not what is stated in the bid), this would produce a grand total of only £15,192 including VAT for the three years 2013/14/15 – and a potential saving over the three years of either £19,776 or (at the opposite extreme, and in the event that bid ‘A’ was intended to offer a yearly rate and ‘B’ already included VAT) £5,508 – still a significant saving.

And Tenderer ‘B’ does not appear to hold a licence to transport waste. Has HPC checked?

Nevertheless, HPC determined to award the Grass-Cutting contract to Tenderer ‘B’ – Peter TURNBULL:

HPC_070313_Minutes_GC_Resolution

The Parish Clerk’s letter of confirmation to Peter TURNBULL bears some hand-written annotations, specifying 10 monthly payments of £690 (April, May, June, July, August, September, October, Novemnber and December a total of only nine), with no payments scheduled for January, February or March. This would appear to clarify the VAT situation.

TURNBULL_SUCCESSFUL

It is not suggested that Peter TURNBULL’s work has been less than satisfactory. Nor is it suggested that ‘Paul’ (Tenderer ‘A’) was offering a lesser service.

So I was at a loss to envisage any plausible explanation for HPC’s costly decision, until I looked again at the Clerk’s letter awarding the contract to Peter TURNBULL, addressing him by his given name ‘Peter’ – rather chummy, I thought, for the formal confirmation of a contractual obligation between a local government authority and a procured contractor.

It begs the question: is there some special relationship between the parties?

HPC has a web-presence here. I have not been able to locate a copy of HPC’s Financial Regulations, but it is likely that the Council has adopted the Yorkshire Local Council Association (YLCA) template – or some closely similar form of words – along the lines of:

  • “All members and the RFO are responsible for obtaining value for money at all times. The RFO issuing an official order shall ensure as far as reasonable and practicable that the best available terms are obtained in respect of each transaction, usually by obtaining three or more quotations or estimates from appropriate suppliers, subject to any variations in Regulations.”

One wonders whether or not the Responsible Financial Officer (the Clerk) and her Councillors realise that they have a joint and several responsibility for “obtaining value for money at all times”? Perhaps they are not aware – judging by their astonishing ignorance regarding the right of members of the public to film/record meetings.

That “best available terms” proviso also seems to have gone by the board, along with the “three or more quotations”, citing only the unquantifiable “Cllrs are happy with the standard of Mr Turnbull’s work” (another breach of Peter TURNBULL’s DPA rights, by the way). There must be some significant undisclosed reason for this inexplicable unanimous decision.

Of course, it would not be necessary to speculate about these transactions if Clerk Carole BARKER had provided – as the law demands – the entirety of the information I requested, including the invoices. But she did not.

I ask again; is there some special relationship between the parties?

And the costliness of the decision is all the more astonishing in the light of remarks made by a predecessor of Carole BARKER, former Parish Clerk Penny FENTON, who stated to the Whitby Gazette (24th August 2011):

  • “We have got £7,000 a year, and it costs £12,000 to maintain the cemeteries.”

Can HPC’s finances sustain any profligate spending? Probably not.

But 2015-style austerity is apparently not biting all that hard at HPC.

~~~

With regard to Part (B) of my FOIA request (Registers of Interests), the Clerk declined to provide members’ Registers of Interests at all, stating that:

  • “It is not reasonably practical for HPC to provide Register of Interest in e format as we only hold them in paper form.”

That is pure hogwash.

Given that all of the (incomplete) documentation that the Clerk has thus far provided in response to my FOIA request has been in the form of scans (JPEG images), there is, of course, no legitimate or practical impediment to providing the Registers of Interest in the same way.

Could it be, then, that there is something that the Clerk does not want me to see?

In any case, s.29 of the Localism Act 2011, paragraph 7 states:

  • (7) A parish council must, if it has a website, secure that its register is published on its website.

In her 12th June 2015 inadequate response to my FOIA, the Clerk stated:

“Hinderwell PC does not have its own website”

This is disingenuous in the extreme. The Council maintains a web-presence at the following URL:

[NB: There is no legal distinction between a ‘web-site’ and a ‘blog’]

Hinderwell Parish Council does display some Council public-record documentation on this site. However, I am unable to locate members’ Register of Interests. Perhaps the Clerk feels that it is not necessary to comply with the law in this respect? Here it is again:

  • (7) A parish council must, if it has a website, secure that its register is published on its website.

Overall, HPC seems to have little clue about how to conduct the statutory functions of third-tier local government in an open, transparent and accountable way – and Parish Clerk Carole BARKER appears to me to be dealing from a very slippery deck indeed. Parishioners are entitled to a far higher standard of public service from their Clerk in return for her generous salary of around £14.72 per hour (based on 48 weeks of 36 hours each). And I am entitled to a complete response to my FOIA request. I am also entitled to an appropriate degree of courtesy from the Clerk, and this has been far from forthcoming. (I will address this in detail in a future article).

In summation, a relatively perfunctory examination of HPC has raised more questions than answers – some of them rather disturbing. One cannot help but wonder what else may be buried at Hinderwell . . .

There’s nothing like a good Parish Council – and, in my view, HPC is nothing even remotely like a good Parish Council.

Finally – and for the avoidance of any doubt – the law entitles me to attend any Parish Council in the UK. I may, if I so wish, film/record the proceedings of any Parish Council in the UK. I may also, if I so wish, scrutinise Parish Councils using the Freedom of Information Act 2000 and, having scrutinised, I may form an opinion which, in accordance with Article 10(1) of the Human Rights Act 1998, I may express in the public domain “without interference by public authority and regardless of frontiers”.

There is no place in public life for those who refuse to embrace openness, transparency and accountability.

In simple language, if such persons cannot stand the ‘heat’, then they have the option to get out of the ‘kitchen’.

Their departure will be noted – and the public will not be slow to draw its conclusions.

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