by seanie » 17 Nov 2011, 22:01
And those 6 to 8 are unlikely to be demographically representative.
There is a genuine difficulty here that the core statutory purpose of a Community Council is to relay the views of the community to relevant parties, principally the Council. All the guidance and codes are explicit; Community Councils need to reflect the views of the wider community and individual Community Councillors need to put their own opinions second to that. But actually determining the views of the wider community is genuinely difficult, especially for a group of volunteers who meet once a month for a couple of hours.
Faced with the practical difficulties, most Community Councils don't do much to seek the views of the wider community. Instead they hope that, as a group, they are reasonably representative of the community as a whole. That can work reasonably well if people are careful about controversial things or at least express themselves with some restraint and acknowledgement that they may not be representing that wider view. In the past our Community Council avoided votes and would only comment when there was a clear consensus. That approach meant that the community views may not have been represented, but at least there was no risk of misrepresentation.
But over the last couple of years that approach has changed and we comment on things when the consensus is far less clear or there is none. I'm not sure we've found the correct approach to that.