About The Council

A Councillor’s Role

Councillors are elected to represent an individual geographical unit on the council, known as a ward or – mainly in smaller parishes – the entire parish or town council area. They are generally elected by the public every four years.

Councillors have three main components to their work:

  1. Decision making – Through meetings and attending committees with other elected members, councillors decide which activities to support, where money should be spent, what services should be delivered and what policies should be implemented.
  2. Monitoring – Councillors make sure that their decisions lead to efficient and effective services by keeping an eye on how well things are working.
  3. Getting involved locally – As local representatives, councillors have responsibilities towards their constituents and local organisations. These responsibilities and duties often depend on what the councillor wants to achieve and how much time is available, and may include:
  • Going to meetings of local organisations such as tenants’ associations.
  • Going to meetings of bodies affecting the wider community.
  • Taking up issues on behalf of members of the public.
  • Running a surgery for residents to bring up issues.
  • Meeting with individual residents in their own homes.

Visiting your council is the best way to find out what happens there. Give the council a call and find out when its next public meeting happens. By law, ordinary people are allowed to be present at most council business.

Becoming A Local Councillor – Get Involved

If you are interested in taking an active part in Parish life as a Councillor you may want to download and read the following resources provide by the National Association of Locals Councils:

Make A Change – Become Local Councillor

It Takes All Sorts – represent your community, make a difference

A Clerk’s Role

The clerk is employed by the Council, under section 112 (1) of the Local Government Act 1972, to provide administrative support for the Council’s activities. Any other staff, although employed by the Council, are supervised by the clerk who is their manager and is responsible for their performance. The Clerk is also the liaison for any contractors used by the Council.

The clerk’s primary responsibility is to advise the Council on whether its decisions are lawful and to recommend ways in which decisions can be implemented. To help with this, the Clerk can be asked to research topics of concern to the Council and provide unbiased information to help the Council to make appropriate choices.

The clerk has a wide range of other responsibilities which include management of all Council owned property as well as the daily running of Council administration. The clerk must recognise that the Council is responsible for all decisions and that he takes instructions from the Council as a body. The clerk is not answerable to any individual Councillor – not even the Chairman.

The Council must be confident that the clerk is, at all times, independent, objective and professional.

The clerk is the Council’s ‘Proper officer’ this is a title used in statute. It refers to the appropriate officer for the relevant function. In Town and Parish Councils, the proper officer is normally the clerk. In financial matters, the proper officer is known as the Responsible Financial Officer (RFO). It is not unusual for the Parish Clerk to be both the Proper officer and the RFO.

A Clerk must:-

  • ensure that the Council conducts its business lawfully
  • administers all the Council’s paperwork
  • ensures that meeting papers are properly prepared and the public is aware of meeting times
  • implements the Council’s decisions
  • oversees the implementation of projects
  • supervises staff & contractors as required
  • keeps property registers and other legal documents
  • keeps up to date by training /qualification