Ask the Council

Birmingham residents are to be allowed more open local government.

Birmingham City Council House

Birmingham City Council House

Question Time will be coming to Birmingham city council from this month, as residents will be able to challenge council leaders directly – in person and in public – at a session during the full city council meeting.

Introduced by new council leader Sir Albert Bore, members of the public will be able to ask any Cabinet Member or District Committee Chairman questions during a 20-minute session at the beginning of each of the monthly full council meetings. Sir Albert is keen to encourage as many people as possible to submit questions – via email or post – for the next meeting on Tuesday 12th June, saying With my new leadership comes a new style of engagement and participation with the residents of Birmingham. I want people to be involved with us in governing their city and I want to hear questions about the city council and the services we provide, and we will do our best to answer them.”

Residents who want to take part should email their question (which must refer to an issue which affects Birmingham or falls within the council’s responsibilities) and contact details no later than 12 noon on the day before the full council meeting (Monday 11th June 2012) to Council.Team@birmingham.gov.uk or send them in by post to The Council Team, Room B19, the Council House, Victoria Square, Birmingham, B1 1BB.

Once the question has been agreed, the individual will be contacted with the arrangements for full council and invited to attend and ask their question with a microphone from the public gallery in the council chamber.

The entire question time section of full council has been extended from half-an-hour (30 minutes) to an hour-and-a-half (90 minutes), of which the first 20 minutes is questions from the public. It is one of the first items on the agenda and the three remaining sections of the question time will be questions from councillors to a) committee chairman or lead member of a joint board; b) a cabinet member; and c) the Leader or Deputy Leader.

 

2 Comments

  1. I forgot to give the link to http://www.tramscam.com (now above on my name).

  2. Robin P

    What a joke, a deceitful pretence of openness.
    The only questions allowed through their pre-vetting will be ones they find convenient to have aired. The awkward questions that OUGHT to be heard and answered will be precisely the ones that don’t make it into this sham.

    For instance, in respect of their Metro organ extension through Corporation Street:

    When and how did Centro consult the bus users about removal of buses from Corporation Street? What words in what documents show this consultation?

    Answer: No words in no documents because there never has been any consultation, just misleading tricks instead, designed to keep bus users in the dark.

    If the extension of the Metro down Corporation Street is a good idea, why have Geoff Inskip and the rest of Centro gone to such lengths to avoid any consultation or even publicity about the removal of buses from Corporation Street?

    Answer: Because it isn’t a good idea, but rather would devastate the bus system and the transport system in general. Their profit-spinning Metro scam is the only thing that would benefit from the scheme.

    And why was there no answer to my email of these questions from such marvellously comminity-serving councillors as Albert Bore, Kath Hartley et al.? (Not to mention Centro’s “Chief Executive” Geoff Inskip.)