Newport Community Councils Failing to Publish Key Documents, City Council Warns
Every one of Newport’s 14 community councils is failing to meet national rules on publishing key documents, the city council has warned.
Community councils are the lowest tier of local government in Wales and typically cover small villages.
These organisations perform some civic duties, which can include providing public information noticeboards, seating, war memorials and some recreation facilities.
A new report by Newport City Council reveals the city’s 14 community councils have failed to properly publish registers of members’ interests on their websites.
By law, these registers must be published online as records of “any personal or financial interests that could influence or affect a member’s decision-making or conduct”, the city council said in its report.
In the majority (eight) of cases, these documents were not published at all, while two other community councils had “confused” registers of interests with the similarly-sounding declarations of interest members are required to make at meetings.
The remaining four community councils had published incomplete or out-of-date information.
This meant “none of the community councils met the expectations regarding compliance with legislation on maintaining registers of interest and making them publicly available to support transparency and impartiality in decision-making”, the city council warned.
The local authority added that discussions with community council representatives found “clear… differences of understanding of the duties” relating to registers of interest, which “must be available online to satisfy requirements for openness and transparency”.
The registers may be redacted to protect personal information, the city council advised.
It was also found that most community councils in Newport required “further work” so members could “ensure awareness and compliance” with their codes of conduct.
The code “sets out the standards of behaviour expected of them in their official capacity”, and also regulates how community councillors “should deal with conflicts of interest” and how members of the public can make a complaint about members’ conduct.
The city council found only five of Newport’s 14 community councils had published the code of conduct on their website, with the remaining nine failing to do so.
Following the findings, the city council’s standards committee could recommend various “actions” to community council’s, designed to “address gaps in their approach” to publishing the legally-required documents.
This could include training sessions, informal discussions with clerks, and a follow-up review to assess progress.
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