Reductions in Ward Committee funding - click to enlarge
The York Council have been forced to publish the results of the residents ballot on how Ward Committee funding should be spent this year.
The most striking feature of the process is the massive reduction in the value of funds allocated for local improvements. The ward by ward figures are reproduced left.
The reason, for the reluctance of the Council to provide information on voting patterns, is immediately apparent with a huge drop in the numbers participating in the ballot.
In part this will be the result of the way in which the ballot paper was distributed (tucked inside a free commercial magazine) and partly because many, previously popular, schemes had been deliberately omitted from the options made available for residents to consider.
For example, in the Westfield Ward, residents had no opportunity to indicate their support for the continuation of the local security patrols.
The Council was probably right, though, to start a new category for voluntary and other organisations – which had no local base in the Ward – but which were trying to access ward committee finding to pay for city wide schemes. These applications had grown in number to the point where it had become possible that no money would have been left for local neighbourhood improvements – the original intention of setting up the Ward Committee system.
Even with the new financial limitations, it is clear that many ward Councillors have ignored public opinion and decided to allocate funding to their pet schemes.
Westfield voting results. click to enlarge
For the first time ever, Westfield Ward Councillors have approved an allocation for a project which the majority of voters opposed (buying new pantomime costumes). Perhaps not surprisingly, this was actually the least popular proposal ever to appear on a Ward Committee ballot paper! A grant of £300 to the Acomb Bowling Club is also being made although the scheme never made it onto the ballot paper sent to residents.
Years of hard community based work have been put in jeopardy by a Council that prefers to try to manipulate public opinion through a combination of impenetrable silences, spin and misinformation. It will breed a cynicism in the Community about the Council and its motives, which may take a generation to reverse.
A copy of the voting results for all wards can be found at this web site http://tinyurl.com/York-FOI-11th-June-2012
Or Email us at libdem.york@btinternet.com and we will send you a spreadsheet with the voting information on it.