A supposed advantage of electing people from different walks of life to
a Parliament or Council Chamber would be that better decisions are
reached. Elected MPs or councillors
bring expertise; knowledge or life experience to the subjects under
debate. In return, they are listened to,
proposals modified and better decisions reached.
For all its faults (and I happen to favour an elected second chamber),
the House of Lords very often reflects this well. If only the same could be said of West
Lancashire Borough Council. Instead we
regularly see two tribes going to war. Any
comment made by someone not in their tribe is one to be dismissed out of hand.
At the council meeting just prior to Christmas, Skelmersdale
Councillor, Claire Cooper had tabled an important motion on fire safety in the
aftermath of the Grenfell Tower tragedy.
As I work professionally in health and safety, including fire safety, I
suggested that Cllr Cooper might want to strengthen her motion which was a
representation to the Government on how national fire policy should change
after the tragedy in Kensington.
I made a suggestion about defining what was meant by high rise building
(was it five storeys, 10 storeys or what?) using the current definition in
current building regulations. I also put
forward that if we really wanted to create a positive impact on fire safety
that we should lobby the government to require sprinklers to be fitted in all
new Care Homes in addition to the calls in the motion for sprinklers in high rises
and schools. After all, fires in care
homes such as Rose Park and Newgrange only 8 months ago have claimed more lives in recent years than
school fires.
Councillor Cooper is the sort of councillor that West Lancashire
needs. She is very active in her
community and prepared to listen. She agreed
to amend her motion to take on board and strengthen it.
Alas, we reckoned without the more typical tribal West Lancashire
Councillor. Cllr John Hodson a Labour
cabinet member quickly jumped in and bullied his group to stick to the straight and narrow pre-rehearsed wording. Perish the thought that anything put down on
paper before the meeting could possibly be improved through the process of
debate. Then we, had a Conservative
councillor misunderstand how sprinklers work, though afterwards in private he
had the good grace to apologise. Meanwhile
another Labour councillor showed his complete ignorance by stating that burnt
toast could set off a sprinkler.
Anyone watching the debate would have been dismayed at many of the
contributions, often from councillors woefully ignorant of the subject or
simply tribal.
“He knows nothing; and he thinks he knows everything. That points
clearly to a political career.” George
Bernard Shaw
No comments:
Post a Comment