The uneasy alliance between the region’s political leaders crumbled spectacularly as four Council Leaders pulled out of a public meeting with Metro Mayor, Dan Norris, to discuss hundreds of millions of pounds of investment.
Bristol’s City Mayor, Marvin Rees and the leaders of South Gloucestershire, Bath & North East Somerset and North Somerset Councils – Cllrs Toby Savage, Kevin Guy and Don Davies respectively – refused to attend over claims Mr Norris’ power of veto is “unlawful”.
The bust-up has been widely criticised and vital funding decisions are now on ice.
West of England Combined Authority (WECA) committee, and the joint committee with the addition of North Somerset, was due to take place in the Council Chamber at Bristol City Hall last Friday morning. But when the West of England Mayor arrived shortly before 10.30 am he was told the booking had been cancelled and what was left of the meeting was moved into a small committee side room, where only a few agenda items that could take place went ahead, including public forum and a report from the scrutiny committee.
But the bulk of the meeting – and crucially the decisions – did not happen because of the breakdown in relationships which is threatening to become a full-blown regional constitutional crisis.
These included approving a £50 million green recovery fund, with at least £20 million from the combined authority and the rest “leveraged” from other sources for projects like retrofitting and electric vehicle charging points, and an extra £10 million to double Covid recovery aid. Those big new projects are now on hold, along with a WECA senior officer restructure to create new director roles for environment and transport, while members were also due to discuss a half-billion-pound, five-year Government settlement for buses, as well as other major bus programmes.
The bust-up follows concerns that Mr Norris vetoed proposals last month at the West of England joint committee, which is WECA committee – the two Mayors and Cllrs Savage and Guy – plus Cllr Davies.
Legal advice to the Metro Mayor said he had a veto on joint committee decisions, but this week a leaked letter revealed the Council leaders are disputing he has this power, calling it “unlawful”, and point out that North Somerset residents do not have a say in the WECA mayoral election. They insist they withdrew from Friday’s meeting because any decisions made could be challenged.
Mr Norris said it may take the Government to intervene to break the deadlock because there are similar tensions between Councils and combined authorities across the country. He opened the meeting by explaining it was not “quorate”, which means not enough members were there to make any decisions.
“That’s clearly disappointing. No money will be allocated today for some of the really important projects,” the Metro Mayor said.
“I’m interested in policies, not process. The public hate political game-playing and they must come first.
“We have to get on with tackling the climate emergency. We have ambitious carbon targets for 2030 and I don’t want our region to get an unfair reputation as climate delayers. The COP summit is three weeks away and we are not able to make big decisions about how to spend £50 million to make our environment better, which seems crazy.”
Speaking afterwards he said the arguments were “all about power and money”. Mr Norris said the disputed veto on joint committee voting would not have been an issue at the meeting because the main funding decisions required the agreement of WECA committee members only, where different rules apply.
“Their issue is with the joint committee. They could have parked that and said ‘we’re not dealing with that but we’ll deal with the WECA committee’, which is where I have power to allocate money if I have the support of the leaders. So it was their choice to stop the money. They didn’t have to do that.”
West of England Local Enterprise Partnership Chairman, Richard Bonner, a non-voting committee member, told the meeting: “The business community and business members of the LEP board are frustrated that the important and strategic business of the combined authority has been unduly disrupted.
“We don’t think that’s acceptable to the business community or the citizens of the region.”
Scrutiny committee chairman and B&NES Lib Dem Cllr Winston Duguid said: “There are ten combined authorities up and down the country and they all face the same challenges as us. There is inherent friction. Conflict is inevitable but combat is optional, so it’s about how we approach this.”
In a joint statement, the leaders of B&NES, Bristol city, North Somerset and South Gloucestershire Councils said: “Our top priority for the region is to bring the homes, jobs, skills and good transport links that the communities and people of West of England need.
“Unfortunately West of England leaders are unable to attend the scheduled meeting today due to ongoing legal concerns.
“These unanswered concerns relate to the governance of the joint committee, specifically the voting arrangements on which policy is decided.”
They said they hoped to reschedule Friday’s meeting on November 5th – firework night! Adam Postans, LDRS






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