Saturday, August 02, 2008

"This isn't the Roman Empire"

No, indeed ! Nor is this a reference to the Murdoch Media Empire's relations with the British Security Services, Boris Johnson's address in Latin at the opening of the Emperor Hadrian exhibition, or even London's preparations for the 2012 Olympics. No, this quotation - from yesterday's West Midlands edition of the Metro newspaper - refers to Worcestershire County Council's expenditure of "£850 000 on one room" (!) which provoked these comments from the TaxPayers' Alliance :

"This isn't the Roman Empire - taxpayers don't want glittering prestige buildings, they want their bins collected on time."

Now, as it happens, Worcestershire's bins are collected by the District Councils - Worcester City, Malvern Hills, Wychavon etc - and do not fall under the auspices of the County Council. However, the structure of Worcestershire's local government is pertinent to the underlying issues here : value for money, sustainable development and local democracy. The "room" in question, incidentally, is the Council Chamber in County Hall (built in the 1970s, when it accommodated not only Worcestershire but also Herefordshire County Council).

This annexation of Hereford County Council was subsequently abandoned, and it is a testimony to the rolling forward of the frontiers of the local state that said building - whose (? New Brutalist) structure would have done proud any former Soviet regime - now has difficulty accommodating the one County of Worcestershire's bureaucrats, and, more particularly, their vehicles in the adjoining acres of car-parking. Some may find such expansionism curious in a local authority which is regarded, by and large, as Conservative.

By way of explanation, I would propose that the expansion of this particular "empire" is testimony to the power of the local bureaucrat, many of whom now command salaries higher than their "peers" in higher eschelons of government, and, indeed, in some cases, the Prime Minister. Sadly, such power does not so much cascade, as trickle, down to local communities, as the individuals and groups whose concerns have been "silenced" in the Council Chamber of Worcestershire County Hall can testify, and, this is notwithstanding the current expenditure of :

"...£115 000 ...on electronics ...65 microphones, a sound system, two radio microphones...."

This expenditure, reported in yesterday's Metro, along with "about £631 000...on construction" helpfully brings me back to the subject of "waste", although not bin collections. For it was last year that the protestations of local people went unheard - because they were not allowed to speak - in that "room" now under consideration, when Worcestershire County Council granted planning permission for a major new waste facility on an environmentally sensitive site, served by poor infrastructure, and prone to flooding.

My prediction is that the Council's current "splashing out" of £850k will most certainly not lead to the creation of a Temple of Democracy in County Hall, nor will this facilitate better decision-making on controversial local development projects be they "glittering prestige buildings", waste facilities or the urban extensions much favoured by bureacrats. Real democracy in places like Worcestershire will require, quite simply, fewer empire builders facilitated through the streamlining and re-structuring of local government in the County. Let's get started !

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