
I had been invited to a Memorial Service on 20th August 2011 to commemorate the 70th Anniversary Continue reading

I had been invited to a Memorial Service on 20th August 2011 to commemorate the 70th Anniversary Continue reading
Yes, Argyll and Bute Council’s unanimously approved budget has frozen Council Tax for the second year running. But we knew it would. Not to do so would have been financial madness, throwing away the grant support from the Scottish Government for agreement to freeze the tax and requiring a rise in Council Tax of around 7%-8%. These are not the days for such a rise.
The real achievement of the Council is not the freezing of the Council Tax but the attitudes and processes whcih have made it possible for all shades of political opinion to set aside their narrow interests and work together constructively in the interests of Argyll.
The very aura of the Council Chamber during the budget meeting was one of mutual support and collective responsibility. It was serious. It was listening. It was alive to what it is on the way to becoming. If only Holyrood was half as mature, Scotland would not have had to endure the blinkered and old fashioned party politicking that saw the Scottish Government’s budget recently downed on its first outing.
Councillor Ellen Morton, Leader of the Opposition followed Council Leader Dick Walsh’s opening presentation and moving of the motion to approve the budget. Confidently on top of her brief, she dealt only with the issues of general concern to the Council in the framing of the budget and engaged in absolutely no party points scoring. How long is it since anywhere in the UK has seen this sort of grown up, engaged behaviour- which was reflected in the words and attitudes of every Councillor who spoke?
Councillor Morton and other Councillors paid particular tribute to the Council Leader, Dick Walsh, in the openness with which he had conducted the cross-party discussions that had led to this highly constructive outcome. When one such tribute was paid, Councillors on all sides of the chamber banged their desks in approval.
So what did they do with the budget? The budget allocation of £257 million for 2009-2010 was a tight one charged to dealing with difficult circumstances.
Councillors agreed that their unanimous priority was the protection of the most vulnerable citizens in Argyll and this was evident in the range of strategies adopted, one of which was the allocation of £2.66mllion to affordable housing.
Councillors have agreed to draw upon an additional £1.7million of Council reserves to balance the budget, enabling them to reject proposed savings on matters of significant community importance. This means that, among other decisions:
The amount of £1.7million taken from accumulated reserves to enable the additional allocations described above leaves the Council with its stable internal contingency of 1.5% of its budget, or £3,873,000. This will remain as the contingency to support next year’s budget.
The word perhaps most used in the meeting – by the Leader, Councillor Walsh, by Depute Leader, Councillor Robert MacIntyre who seconded the motion to approve the budget, by Councillor Morton and by almost every Councillor who spoke, was – ‘challenging’. This was applied to the nature of the current and coming times. It means that there will continue to be hard choices and hard decisions to be made. No one will be surprised about that.
The last word here has to be a repetition of the first word – that Argyll is seeing the evolution of a confident, informed, collaborative and responsible council refusing to allow itself to be derailed by outdated party political posturing.
Cove Burgh Hall has sustained significant internal damage so the hall and the library located in the hall will be closed for repairs from Monday 10th November until Friday 14th November. The library should be open again on Monday 17th November.
Look at the next few days in our Event Calendar – moving the cursor over a date will immediately list the events of the day. This is a pretty action-packed period across Argyll and its islands. How many of these fun experiences in Argyll’s less travelled places can you get to?
Actress Tilda Swinton’s recent all-but-free film festival in Nairn – where you could bring a tray of fairy cakes as your entrance fee – has drawn attention to the community value of films for their own sake, rather than the promoters’. The Cove and Kilchreggan Film Society, sponsored by the Cooperative Community Fund, are aiming to repeat, if not better, last year’s launch of their Free Film Festival.
This year’s event will run at Cove Burgh Hall for three days from Thursday 11th September. The programme includes the film classic, High Society; Son of Rambow, a funny and heart-rending story of two boys adventures in the 1980′s; Bee Movie (for the young and young at heart); and the big production number to close the festival on the Saturday night – Michael Clayton, a major thriller with George Clooney – and Tilda Swinton.
The Chairman, Secretary, and Treasurer of Cove and Kilcreggan Community Council accounted for three of the four Community Councillors who have just resigned in protest at the Area Planning Committee giving developers permission to build five homes at Portkill, near Kilcreggan in spite of community opposition. Former Secretary, Rolf Johannessen, said: ‘We see no point in continuing to hold our positions when the views of the electorate are not taken seriously.’
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