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06
Jul 2023
Two Conservative councillors have called for the proposed number of people elected to a future Harrogate Town Council should be reduced from 19 to 10.
Cllr Sam Gibbs put forward the idea on behalf of himself and Cllr Michael Harrison at a meeting of the council’s standards and governance committee in Northallerton yesterday.
The two would also like to see councillors elected to a single council without wards, which they believe would allow the new council to work more effectively and not replicate the work of North Yorkshire Council councillors on issues like potholes and streetlights.
North Yorkshire Council is developing proposals to create town councils for Harrogate and Scarborough, which are the only two unparished areas in the county.
Officers have recommended that each of the proposed 10 wards in Harrogate, which are based on current North Yorkshire Council divisions, be represented by two councillors per ward with the exception of Saltergate, which would have one councillor.
But Cllr Gibbs, who represents the Valley Gardens and Central Harrogate division, said he was skeptical of the new council's potential size, which he said would be “unwieldy”.
He said:
The areas in Harrogate which would fall under the new town council.
Cllr Gibbs also said residents do not have attachments with the current council boundaries that would also be used for the town council.
He gave the example of his own division, which was created out of a combination of the old High Harrogate and Low Harrogate wards and includes over 6,000 households.
He said electing councillors to one council area would allow for a more “strategic” approach to local democracy.
However, Monika Slater, the Liberal Democrat councillor for Bilton Grange and New Park, said she was not in favour of their proposals.
She said:
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