Friday, 6 November 2015

ROLE OF TOWN CLERK


(Reproduced from notes for Councillors published in the Local Council Review by John Clark.)
 
The Town Clerk is an employee of the Town Council and head of the Council's staff. The Town Council is a body corporate so that in the last resort, a majority of Councillors acting correctly at a duly convened meeting can require the Town Clerk to carry out any lawful instruction within the scope of his/her employment. Although it is often a usual and acceptable practice that the Town Mayor, or indeed the Chairman of a Committee, can give necessary directions to a Town Clerk, they have no right by law to give any binding instructions other than those agreed by the Town Council and, in particular, have no power to suspend or dismiss the Town Clerk.

The Town Clerk is the "proper officer" of the Town Council (Section 270 of the Local Government Act 1972) i.e. the person responsible for formal acts, as set out in the Standing Orders.

The Town Clerk, as an employee, is covered by all the legislation relating to employment and the "Town Council" is in no special position as compared with other employers. In legal terminology, the Town Clerk is "the servant of the Council", but this carries no implication of civility or any legal relationship other than employer/employee.

The post of Town Clerk can be seen as analogous to that of the Chief Executive in a county or Borough. A local authority operation consists of policy-making and decisions, and administration. The Town Clerk is head of the administration and therefore responsible for the whole of that side of the work. The role is not that of a secretarial employee but that of a hands-on administrator. Neither Councillors nor the Town Mayor should take any responsibility for administrative, managerial or supervisory tasks, as they should correctly be discharged by the Town Clerk.

In some authorities, it has been known for Members to try to take over the role of the Town Clerk as, for example, where the Chairman drafts the minutes or Councillors write Council letters on the justification that the Town Clerk or Parish Clerk cannot be left to do it. If the justification is correct, the Council concerned has not appointed a suitable person; if the justification is a cover for Councillors to "do it their way" it should be rejected as a wrong attitude.

Since the Town Clerk is responsible for administration, he has the practical function of advising the Council, advising the Chairman of the Council or Town Mayor and Chairmen of Committees on procedural issues, and ensuring that the Council business is conducted according to the rules of law and procedure. More especially, the Town Clerk is expected to be suitably qualified both through experience and through formal training and Councillors (even if it be inconvenient or contrary to their expectations) should accept the guidance as to the existence and applicability of relevant facts of law and content themselves with making policy decisions using such guidance.

It is always right to record the advice of the Town Clerk if it has not been followed.

As part of his role as an employee of the Town Council, it is possible for the Town Clerk to take actions which are necessary to continue the running of the Council, where no decisions between alternative courses of action are needed, without reference to a Council meeting. For example, if a Member resigns his seat, this happens as soon as the written notice reaches the Town Council; the Council is required by Section 87 of the Act of 1972 to give public notice as soon as practicable thereafter. The Town Clerk does not need to get approval of a meeting for posting a notice because this is an automatic administrative consequence. Of course, the Town Clerk will report to the Town Council that he has posted the notice.

The Town Clerk is in the dual position of "independent" administrator but also of employee. He has to carry through adequately decisions of the Town Council which the Town Council has probably arrived at even though they are decisions which the Town Clerk would not have made. Councils, like any deliberative body, benefit from suggestions and the Town Clerk is particularly well placed because of the information regularly available to suggest lines of action; yet the Town Clerk must be careful to see these as suggestions which the Town Council may reject, whilst Councillors must see them as helpful, not an interference in their own duties.

As in all public life, the conduct of local Council affairs cannot be reduced to a precise set of rules. The component parts of any activity have to accept that the other parts have a proper role and must be allowed to get on with it.

Issues of dispute must be argued without malice and with deference to the view of the person who has principal responsibility. Without the very best of reasons, a Member will not challenge a Chairman's interpretation of procedures nor a Chairman reject the Town Clerk's guidance on a legal point. It is equally valid that the Town Clerk should not try to argue the Members into changing their minds.

"The Council is only as good as its Clerk."
"A Council is only as good as its Councillors"
"A Council is only good if well led by its Chairman."


All these are true; the truly good Council is the one which accommodates all three sayings at once. A truly good Council is an active, effective, resourceful Council quietly administered by its Clerk whilst the Members press on with the local public issues.