Council Constitution 04 Part 4 - Council Procedure Rules
Contents
-
Part 1
- Introduction
-
Part 2
- Meetings of the Council
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Parts 3-9
- Minutes
- Appointment of Members to Committees and Sub-Committees
- Time and place of meetings
- Notice Of And Summons To Meetings
- Chair Of Meeting
- Quorum
- Duration Of Meeting
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Part 10
- Petitions, Deputations And Questions By The Public
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Parts 11-13
- Questions By Members
- Executive Business
- Motions
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Parts 14-16
- Rules Of Debate
- Honours
- Previous Decisions And Motions
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Parts 17-24
- Voting
- Committee Recommendations
- Overview And Scrutiny Business
- Exclusion Of Public
- Members’ Conduct
- Disturbance By Public
- Adjourned Meetings
- Terms Of Reference For The Council
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Parts 25-28
- Application To Committees And Sub-Committees
- Conduct Of Business & Debate At Committees Or Sub-Committees
- Rights Of Members To Speak At Meetings Of Committees And Sub-Committees
- Urgent Business Sub Committee
Part 1
Introduction
- Interpretation
- Throughout these Council Procedure Rules the following words and expressions shall have the under-mentioned meanings respectively assigned to them:
“Cabinet Member” shall mean a member of the Executive appointed by the Leader in accordance with the Council’s Constitution.
“Chief Financial Officer" shall mean the officer holding the post of Chief Financial Officer of the City Council who is also designated as the “Chief Financial Officer” responsible for the purposes of Section 151 Local Government Act 1972, Section 73 Local Government Act, 1985, and Section 112 Local Government Act 1988 for monitoring the Council's financial affairs.
"Clear Day" in relation to a meeting excludes the day on which the summons or agenda for a meeting was published, the day on which the meeting was or is to be held and in this context "Day" shall mean a day other than a Saturday or a Sunday, or a day which is a public or Bank Holiday.
"Committee" shall mean a Committee of the Council.
“Constitution” shall mean the Council’s Constitution as approved by the Council in accordance with the 2000 Act.
"Council" shall mean Southampton City Council acting through the Full Council, save where applied to a Committee or Sub-Committee where it shall mean that Committee or Sub-Committee.
“Executive” shall mean the Executive of the Council as set out in the Constitution and defined by the 2000 Act.
"Head of Paid Service" shall mean the officer holding the post of Chief Executive in the City Council who is also designated as the Head of Paid Service by virtue of Section 4 Local Government and Housing Act 1989.
“Leader” shall mean the Leader of the Council, elected by the Council in accordance with the Constitution and the 2000 Act.
"Lord Mayor" shall mean the Lord Mayor of the Council or the Person Presiding.
"Meeting" shall mean a meeting of the Full Council or in relation to a Committee or Sub-Committee, a meeting of that body.
"Member" shall mean in relation to a meeting of the Council, a Councillor, and in relation to a Committee or Sub-Committee shall mean a member of that Committee or Sub-Committee, whether a Councillor or a person who is not a Councillor but who is appointed to be a member of the Committee or Sub-Committee under Section 102 of the 1972 Act.
“Motion" includes a recommendation contained in any report concerning an item of business for a meeting and a new motion.
“Panel” is the description and label applied to a regulatory Committee or Sub-Committee of the Council.
"Person Presiding" shall mean the person appointed or entitled to preside at any meeting including the Chair or Vice-Chair where either presides
“Protocol” means a protocol approved by the Director of Legal & Governance under these Council Procedure Rules.
"Proposition" shall include "Motion".
“Rule” shall mean a Council Procedure Rule.
"Special Procedure" means a procedure approved by the Director of Legal & Governance under these Council Procedure Rules.
"Specialist Committee" means a Committee or Sub-Committee to which a Special Procedure applies.
"Summons" shall mean the summons for a meeting, or in relation to a Council Procedure Rule applied to a Committee or Sub-Committee, shall mean the agenda for the meeting.
"Sub-Committee" shall mean a Sub-Committee of a Committee of the Council.
“Terms of Reference” shall mean the terms of reference of the Committees, and Sub-Committees as varied from time to time.
"Urgent" means that the matter giving rise to the urgency must be unforeseeable (in an objective sense) and is not attributable to a failing on the part of the Council (and similar expressions shall be construed accordingly).
“Vice-Chair” shall mean the Vice-Chair of a Committee or Sub-Committee and shall encompass the term “Person Presiding” where the Vice-Chair does not preside.
"Voting Member" means either a Councillor or other person appointed as a member of a Committee or Sub-Committee under Section 102 of the 1972 Act who is entitled by law to vote at a meeting of the Committee or Sub-Committee.
"1972 Act" shall mean the Local Government Act 1972.
"1989 Act" shall mean the Local Government and Housing Act 1989.
“2000 Act” shall mean the Local Government Act 2000. - Unless the context otherwise requires, the singular includes the plural and the plural the singular.
- Any reference in a Council Procedure Rule to a numbered or lettered paragraph is, unless the context otherwise requires, a reference to the paragraph of that Council Procedure Rule.
- Throughout these Council Procedure Rules the following words and expressions shall have the under-mentioned meanings respectively assigned to them:
- Council Procedure Rules
- Subject to paragraphs (b), (c) and (h), only the Council may vary, revoke, add to or suspend these Council Procedure Rules.
- This Council Procedure Rule and Council Procedure Rule 2.1 (The Annual Meeting), 3 (Minutes), 6 (Notice and Summons to Meetings) and 17 (Voting), are not capable of being suspended.
- Any of the other Council Procedure Rules may be suspended by the Council provided that:
- a motion is given with due notice; or
- notice of intention to move such suspension is embodied within a minute or report referred to in the Summons.
- No Council Procedure Rule shall be suspended, revoked or varied by the Council without the consent of the majority of Members present and voting, and there shall be no speeches other than by the mover of the motion whose speech shall be confined to the reasons for moving the suspension of the Council Procedure Rule(s) in question, and no discussion on a motion to suspend a Council Procedure Rule.
- Any proposal to permanently alter these Council Procedure Rules, other than a motion to implement a recommendation of the Governance Committee, shall be in the form of a motion instructing the Governance Committee to report upon such proposals. Any such motion upon being seconded shall be put to the vote without discussion. The Governance Committee shall report to the next ordinary Council meeting upon any matter referred to it under this Council Procedure Rule.
- These Council Procedure Rules embody the requirements of the mandatory Standing Orders, as provided for by the Local Government Act 1972, Local Government and Housing Act 1989 and the Local Government Act 2000, together with secondary legislation, where appropriate. These Council Procedure Rules, therefore, constitute the Council’s statutory procedural standing orders, and should be interpreted accordingly.
- Subject to Council Procedure Rule 26(2), a Special Procedure or Protocol may vary, revoke, add to or suspend these Council Procedure Rules.
- Where any step or action under these Council Procedure Rules is prescribed to be performed by a designated officer, that officer may nominate or authorise another officer in his/her place.
- Save as in respect of any notice that has to be signed to be valid (Council Procedure Rule 13.1(a) and 13.1(d)) any other notice may be given by email to the address as prescribed by the Director of Legal & Governance as designated for the receipt of such communications
- Lord Mayor’s Decision Final
The Lord Mayor’s ruling on any point of order, interpretation of these Council Procedure Rules, matters arising during the debate or with regard to the admissibility of an explanation, or otherwise, including any logistical arrangements for any meetings, shall be final and not open to discussion. The Lord Mayor may, from time to time, issue guidance as to how s/he will discharge his/her responsibility in chairing Full Council.
Part 2
Meetings of the Council
- The Annual Meeting
- Timing and business
In a year when there is an ordinary election of Councillors, the annual meeting will take place within 21 days of the retirement of the outgoing Councillors. In any other year, the annual meeting will take place in March, April or May.
The annual meeting will:- elect a person to preside if the Lord Mayor is not present;
- elect the Lord Mayor;
- elect the Sheriff;
- approve the minutes of the last meeting;
- receive any announcements or reports from the Head of the Paid Service, Monitoring Officer, Chief Financial Officer or Lord Mayor;
- elect the Leader;
- appoint the Overview and Scrutiny Management Committee, the Governance Committee and such other committees as the Council considers appropriate to deal with matters which are neither reserved to the Council nor are Executive functions (as set out in Part 3, Table 1 of this Constitution);
- agree the scheme of delegation or such part of it as the Constitution determines it is for the Council to agree (as set out in Table 3 of this Constitution);
- approve a programme of ordinary meetings of the Council for the year; and
- consider any business set out in the notice convening the meeting (including Motions and Questions).
- Selection of Councillors on Committees and Outside Bodies
At the annual meeting, the council meeting will:
- decide which committees to establish for the municipal year;
- decide the size and terms of reference for those committees;
- decide the allocation of seats and substitutes to political groups in accordance with the political balance rules;
- receive nominations of Councillors to serve on each committee and outside body; and
- appoint to those committees and outside bodies except where appointment to those bodies has been delegated by the Council or is exercisable only by the Executive.
- Sub-Committees may be appointed by a special meeting of Committees held immediately following their appointment during the proceedings of annual, Council, subject to the powers of Committees to appoint Sub-Committees, Members to those Sub-Committees and Chairs and Vice-Chairs.
- Timing and business
- Ordinary Meetings
- Ordinary meetings of the Council will take place in accordance with a programme decided at the Council’s annual meeting. Ordinary meetings will:
- elect a person to preside if the Lord Mayor and Sheriff are not present;
- approve the minutes of the last meeting;
- matters arising from the minutes of the last meeting;
- receive any declarations of interest from Members;
- receive any announcements or reports from the Lord Mayor, Leader, the Head of Paid Service, Monitoring Officer or Chief Financial Officer;
- receive deputations, petitions and requests from and provide answer to the public in relation to matters which in the opinion of the person presiding at the meeting are relevant to the business of the Council;
- receive reports from the Executive and receive questions and answers on any of those reports;
- deal with any business from the last Council meeting;
- consider any other business specified in the summons to the meeting, including consideration of proposals from the Executive in relation to the Council’s Budget and Policy Framework;
- receive reports about and receive questions and answers on the business of joint arrangements and external organisations; and
- receive reports from Overview and Scrutiny and receive questions and answers on any of those reports.
- consider motions;
- receive questions on notice to any chair or the Lord Mayor;
- The order of business in this Council Procedure Rule may only be varied by:
- direction of the Lord Mayor, made with the unanimous consent of the Members present; or
- a resolution of the Council, moved, seconded and put without comment but not so as to preclude the consideration of any business required by law or to override the provisions of Council Procedure Rule 3.
However, the content of the Summons may be differentiated and subject to any legal requirements, the order and nature of business may vary from meeting to meeting.
- Matters brought forward by the Lord Mayor
The Lord Mayor may bring forward without notice at any meeting any business judged by the Lord Mayor to be sufficiently urgent to warrant so doing and such business shall have precedence over any notice of motion on the summons. The special circumstances which warrant inclusion of an item without notice shall be specified in the minutes.
- Ordinary meetings of the Council will take place in accordance with a programme decided at the Council’s annual meeting. Ordinary meetings will:
- Extraordinary Meetings
- Calling extraordinary meetings
Those listed below may request the Director of Legal & Governance to call Council meetings in addition to ordinary meetings:
- the Council by resolution;
- the Lord Mayor of the Council;
- The Leader;
- the Chief Executive;
- the Monitoring Officer;
- the Executive Director: Enabling Services; and
- any five Members of the Council if they have signed a requisition presented to the Lord Mayor and they have refused to call a meeting or has failed to call a meeting within seven days of the presentation of the requisition.
- Business
The Director of Legal & Governance shall, in calling an Extraordinary Meeting of the Council, restrict the business on the summons to that required by law, any matter or matters that the Chief Executive, Monitoring Officer or Chief Financial Officer wish to raise and the business for which the Extraordinary Meeting has been called. - Timing and Logistics of Extraordinary Meetings
The Director of Legal & Governance shall determine the time and day of any Extraordinary Meeting in accordance with the Constitution and following consultation with the group leaders, but shall endeavour to arrange any such meeting to be held, where possible, at 6:00 pm on a Wednesday. - Timing and Logistics of Extraordinary Meetings
The Lord Mayor shall, following consultation with the Group Leaders, subject to any legal obligations and provided that the Director of Legal & Governance is satisfied as to its legality, be entitled to vary any process or procedure at Full Council and/or introduce new procedures or processes for the purpose of experimenting or trialling new initiatives. - Timing and Logistics of Extraordinary Meetings
If, following either annual elections or a by election, the political control of the authority changes, as a direct result no meetings of Council can be called, or the Urgent Business Sub Committee convened to enable significant decisions to be taken until the next meeting of Council. - Timing and Logistics of Extraordinary Meetings
Such changes will not affect the Council’s ability to react to any time limited or emergency matters, in the rare event that they should they arise as there are existing powers under the Officer Scheme of Delegation to permit the Chief Executive or Director of Legal & Governance to act.
- Calling extraordinary meetings
- Budget Meeting
The Budget Meeting, which shall commence at 2:00 pm, shall transact such business as:- in the opinion of the Executive Director: Enabling Services, is necessary to enable the Council to comply with its legal obligations in terms of setting a budget and other legal matters associated with the determination of the Council Tax, etc;
- is necessary to approve, review, refresh or otherwise consider in the opinion of the Chief Executive, the Medium Term Plan; and
- any other business which the Chief Executive, Executive Director: Enabling Services or Monitoring Officer consider should be placed before Members.
Parts 3-9
Minutes
- Minutes of every meeting of the Council, of any Committee or of any Sub-Committee shall be submitted to, and signed at that meeting or at the next following meeting of the body concerned.
- The Lord Mayor shall put the question that the minutes submitted to the meeting be approved as a correct record of that meeting, or of a specified former meeting, as the case may be.
- Any question on their accuracy shall be raised by motion, and shall be duly seconded. If no such question is raised, or if it is raised, then as soon as it has been dealt with, the Lord Mayor shall sign the minutes (“the Approved Minutes”).
- The Lord Mayor shall ask if there are any matters arising upon the Approved Minutes, pursuant to which any member may ask as to the current position or progress made on any item contained in the Approved Minutes. The Lord Mayor shall avoid any debate or discussion that could be construed as attempting to change or vary a previous decision and shall not allow any debate or discussion to transgress the statutory rule that only business specified in the Council Summons may be disposed of at a Council meeting. Information provided under this Rule shall not be minuted.
- Where in relation to any meeting of the Council the next such meeting is a meeting called under Paragraph 3 (extraordinary meetings) of Schedule 12 to the 1972 Act, the next following meeting of the Council (being a meeting called otherwise than under that Paragraph of the 1972 Act) shall be treated as a suitable meeting for the purposes of Paragraphs 41(1) and (2) (signing of minutes) of that Schedule.
Appointment of Members to Committees and Sub-Committees
- Allocation
The Council will allocate seats on the Committees and Sub-Committees of the Council in accordance with the 1989 Act and secondary legislation. - Appointment of Members to Seats
The Director of Legal & Governance shall be the Proper Officer for the purposes of the 1989 Act and associated secondary legislation in respect of appointing members to seats on behalf of political groups in accordance with the wishes of political groups as prescribed by the law. - Replacement Members on Committees and Sub-Committees
In the event that a member of a Committee or Sub-Committee resigns from that Committee or Sub-Committee, the Director of Legal & Governance shall be the Proper Officer for the purposes of the 1989 Act and secondary legislation for the purposes of appointing a replacement member, in accordance with the wishes of the political group to whom that seat has been allocated. - Procedure
The Director of Legal & Governance shall, following consultation with the Group Leaders, issue such procedures, protocols and other guidance associated with this Council Procedure Rule as they deem necessary.
Time and place of meetings
The time and place of meetings will be determined by the Director of Legal & Governance and notified in the summons.
Notice Of And Summons To Meetings
The Director of Legal & Governance will give notice to the public of the time and place of any meeting in accordance with the Access to Information Rules. At least five Clear Days before a meeting, the Director of Legal & Governance will send a summons signed by themself to every Member of the Council or leave it at their usual place of residence. The summons will give the date, time and place of each meeting and specify the business to be transacted, and will be accompanied by such reports as are available.
Chair Of Meeting
The person presiding at the meeting may exercise any power or duty of the Lord Mayor. Where these rules apply to committee and sub-committee meetings, references to the Lord Mayor also include the Chair of committees and sub-committees.
Quorum
The quorum of a meeting will be one third of the whole number of Members. During any meeting, the Lord Mayor shall conduct a count if any Member present so requests or if the Lord Mayor so determines of his/her own volition. If the Lord Mayor counts the number of Members present and declares there is not a quorum present, then the meeting will adjourn immediately. Remaining business will be considered at a time and date fixed by the Lord Mayor. If s/he does not fix a date, the remaining business will be considered at the next ordinary meeting.
Duration Of Meeting
- Interruption of the meeting
- At a time when a period of not less than four hours excluding adjournments has elapsed since the commencement of a meeting of the Council a Member of the Council may move, without comment, that the meeting shall end at a time to be specified in the motion;
- The Lord Mayor may refuse to accept the motion and must do so if a similar motion has been rejected earlier in the same meeting;
- If the motion is accepted, it shall be seconded and put without comment.
- Motions and recommendations not dealt with
If the motion is passed, when the time specified arrives, if there are other motions or recommendations on the agenda that have not been dealt with, they are deemed formally moved and seconded (together with any amendments). No speeches will be allowed on these items and the vote(s) will be taken in the usual way. - Recorded vote
If a recorded vote is called for during this process it will be taken immediately. - Motions which may be moved
During the process set out in Rules 9.1 – 9.3, the only other motions which may be moved are that a matter be withdrawn or that a matter be delegated or referred to an appropriate body or individual for decision or report. - Close of the meeting
When all motions and recommendations have been dealt with, the Lord Mayor will declare the meeting closed. - Presumption in favour of meetings ending by 6:30 pm
There is a presumption in favour of all meetings of the Council, Committees and Sub-Committees that start at 2:00 pm will finish by 6:30 pm. When a meeting reaches that time, any member of the Council, Committee or Sub-Committee may move, without comment that the meeting shall end. If the motion is accepted and seconded, it shall be put without comment and if passed, if there are any other motions or recommendations on the agenda that have not been dealt with, the Lord Mayor or person presiding may determine either to deal with them in accordance with this Council Procedure Rule, or to defer remaining business to the next meeting, but in doing so shall take particular account of any advice from the Chief Executive, Executive Director: Enabling Services and/or Monitoring Officer as to any business that, in their view, the Council or the meeting of the Council should determine at that meeting. In the event of a motion being put to the meeting under this Council Procedure Rule, it will be necessary for two thirds of the members present and voting at the meeting to support a proposal that the meeting should carry on for the meeting to proceed beyond 6:30 pm.
Part 10
Petitions, Deputations And Questions By The Public
- Petitions
Petitions shall be managed in accordance with the Petition Scheme set out in Part 11 of this Constitution save as provided elsewhere within the Constitution or as provided by law. At a meeting of the Council any Member or member of the public may present a petition which is submitted in accordance with the Council’s scheme for handling petitions as annexed to Part 11 of this Constitution. - Action
- Petitions containing 1500 signatures or more (a qualifying petition) will require a debate at a Council meeting;
- Petitions with less than 1500 signatories (non-qualifying) shall be presented to the Council meeting and be received without discussion and shall be included on the agenda for the next available meeting of the Cabinet. The Member of the Council or member of the public presenting the petition shall be invited to attend any meeting to which it is referred; and shall be informed subsequently of any action taken or proposed in accordance with the requirements of the Council’s Petitions Scheme;
- Petitions containing a minimum of 750 signatures but less than 1500 signatures and requesting a senior officer to give evidence will be referred to a public meeting of the Overview and Scrutiny Committee in the first instance;
- Petitions with more than 50 signatories will be treated as a petition that requires a response in accordance with the Council’s Scheme for Handling Petitions; and
- The Council will take a more flexible approach on a case by case basis in responding to Petitions with less than 50 signatories.
- Presentation
The presentation of non-qualifying petitions shall be confined to reading out, or summarising the petition and indicating the number and description of the signatories. Petitions shall be presented in the order in which notice of them is received by the Lord Mayor. - Debate on Petitions
A qualifying petition will require a debate at Full Council, if timescales permit, except where the petition is asking for a senior officer to give evidence. Where timescales do not allow a debate at Full Council, the matter will be referred to the first available meeting of the appropriate decision-maker or relevant committee. The length of debate shall be at the discretion of the Lord Mayor and in accordance with the Council’s procedure rules, after which a vote will be put. - Response to Petitions
The Council will decide how to respond to the petition and shall decide either:
- To take the action the petition requests;
- Not to take the action the petition requests for reasons stated in the debate;
- To commission further investigation into the matter prior to consideration at a future meeting of the Council, which may include holding an inquiry or public meeting, commissioning research or reference to a particular committee or body for their views;
- To refer the petition to Cabinet or the relevant Cabinet Member meeting where the matter relates to an Executive function, in which case the Council may make recommendations to the relevant Executive decision.
- Officer Evidence
The senior officers to be called to give evidence at a public meeting under section 16 Local Democracy, Economic Development and Construction Act 2009 and pursuant to the Council’s Scheme for Handling Petitions are:- The Chief Executive
- Executive Directors
- Service Directors
- Deputations
- Persons wishing to make a deputation to the Council shall give at least seven Clear Days’ notice in writing to the Director of Legal & Governance explaining the subject of the deputation, unless in the opinion of the Lord Mayor the matter is one of significance and urgency, such that it would not have been possible for the above timetable to be complied with. In such circumstances the Lord Mayor may, at his or her sole discretion, either permit the deputation to be heard or alternatively ask Council by vote without discussion to determine whether it wishes the deputation to be heard. All requests shall be referred to the Lord Mayor for consideration. The Lord Mayor shall have the discretion to reject or refuse any request or may determine that such a request should be redirected to the Executive, a committee or sub-committee of the Council or, by agreement, a third party (eg a partner). Petitions presented as part of or with a deputation will be dealt with in accordance with the provisions of the Council’s Constitution and Scheme for Handling Petitions.
- A deputation to be received by the Council shall be read by the Director of Legal & Governance or other officer, and immediately after having done so, any proposal to receive the person or persons or the deputation shall be formally moved and seconded without discussion and shall be put to the vote. If the motion is carried, the person or persons shall be conducted into the meeting and shall present their deputation.
- A deputation may comprise between one and three persons all of whom may address the Council. The deputation shall not exceed seven minutes in duration, such time to include any time taken by the deputation to read any petition or other document.
If in the view of the Lord Mayor the deputation is duplicatory or overlaps with other deputation(s) to be considered at the same meeting, the Lord Mayor may move that the deputations be consolidated and the time limit for the deputation varied accordingly. - Subject to this Council Procedure Rule, the Director of Legal & Governance shall deal with requests for deputations in accordance with the following:
- Where the issue is the subject of a recommendation or notice of motion to the next meeting of the Council
The request shall be placed on the agenda for that Council meeting and the Council shall be asked whether it is willing to receive the deputation.
When a deputation has been received by the Council, there shall be no discussion on the points raised and the matter shall stand deferred until the relevant recommendation or notice of motion is presented to the Council. - Where the issue is the subject of a previous deputation or resolution of the Council within the previous six months and is not covered by (a) above
The deputation shall not be entertained by the Council, when the Council has considered a previous deputation within the previous six months. - Where the issue is not before the Council and has not been resolved upon in the previous six months
The request shall be placed on the agenda for that Council meeting and the Council shall be asked if it is willing to receive the deputation.
When a deputation has been received by the Council, the Lord Mayor shall refer the matter to the Leader or appropriate Cabinet Member for a response. In the absolute discretion of the Lord Mayor, Members may thereafter be permitted to comment or ask questions in relation to the Leader or Cabinet Member’s response. Where the Lord Mayor permits such questions or responses to be raised, the Lord Mayor shall allow the Leader or appropriate Cabinet Member a right of reply at the end of the debate on the deputation. - Where
- the issue is within the terms of reference of a Specialist Committee; or
- the issue is or relates to matters of a quasi-judicial nature; or
- where the issue is defamatory, frivolous or offensive; or
- where the issue refers to legal proceedings being taken or being anticipated by or against the Council;
- where the issue relates to the provision of personal (eg a care package, housing) services; or
- where the deputee has a commercial or financial interest in the issue
the deputation shall not be entertained and the deputee shall be advised accordingly by the Director of Legal & Governance.
- Where the issue is the subject of a recommendation or notice of motion to the next meeting of the Council
- Questions
- General
Members of the public (who are not Councillors or Officers) may ask questions of the Lord Mayor, Chairs of Committees and Members of the Executive at ordinary meetings of the Council. - Order of questions
Questions will be asked in the order notice of them was received, except that the Lord Mayor may group together similar questions. - Notice of questions
A question may only be asked if notice has been given by delivering it in writing to the Director of Legal & Governance no later than midday seven Clear Days before the day of the meeting. Each question must give the name and address of the questioner and must name the Member of the Executive or Chair to whom it is to be put. - Number of questions
At any one meeting no person may submit more than three (3) questions and no more than three (3) such questions may be asked on behalf of one organisation. - Scope of questions
The Director of Legal & Governance may reject a question if it:
- is within the terms of reference of a Specialist Committee; or
- is or relates to matters of a quasi-judicial nature; or
- is defamatory, frivolous or offensive; or
- refers to legal proceedings being taken or being anticipated by or against the Council; or
- is substantially the same as a question which has been put at a meeting of the Council in the past six months; or
- requires the disclosure of confidential or exempt information; or
- relates to the provision of personal (e.g. a care package) services; or
- where the questioner has a commercial or financial interest in the issue
- Record of questions
The Director of Legal & Governance will enter each question in a book open to public inspection and will immediately send a copy of the question to the Member to whom it is to be put. Rejected questions will include reasons for rejection. Copies of all questions to be asked will be circulated to all Members and will be made available to the public attending the meeting. - Asking the question at the meeting
The Lord Mayor will invite the questioner to put the question to the Member named in the notice. If a questioner who has submitted a written question is unable to be present, they may ask the Lord Mayor to put the question on their behalf. The Lord Mayor may ask the question on the questioner’s behalf, indicate that a written reply will be given or decide, in the absence of the questioner, that the question will not be dealt with. - Supplemental question
A questioner who has put a question in person may also put one supplementary question without notice to the Member who has replied to his or her original question. A supplementary question must arise directly out of the original question or the reply. The Lord Mayor may reject a supplementary question on any of the grounds in Rule 10.4. - Written answers
Any question which cannot be dealt with during public question time, either because of lack of time or because of the non-attendance of the Member to whom it was to be put, will be dealt with by a written answer. - Reference of question to the Executive or a committee
Unless the Lord Mayor decides otherwise, no discussion will take place on any question, but any Member may move that a matter raised by a question be referred to the Executive or the appropriate committee or sub-committee. Once seconded, such a motion will be voted on without discussion.
- General
- Representations on an Item of Business
At the sole discretion of the Chair, members of the public may be invited to address the Council, a Committee or Sub-Committee on any report in which they have a genuine or relevant interest. This includes (but is not limited to) the presentation of petitions by the public. - Aldermen
At the discretion of the Lord Mayor Honorary Aldermen shall be entitled to speak on any item of business up to a maximum of 5 minutes per item (save this does not apply to any confidential business or exempt items). - Application and Variation of this Council Procedure Rule
The Director of Legal & Governance, may, at his/her discretion, in exceptional circumstances, vary the procedure set out in this Council Procedure Rule and a Special Procedure or Protocol may regulate whether and the manner in which representations by Members, officers of the Council or other organisations and individuals may be made.
Parts 11-13
Questions By Members
- On reports of the business of the Executive
Subject to Rule 11.4, a Member of the Council may ask the Leader or Cabinet Member any question on notice during the Report of the Executive when that item of business is under consideration by the Council. - Questions to the Lord Mayor, Cabinet Members or Chairs
A Member of the Council may ask:- the Lord Mayor;
- Cabinet Members; or
- the Chair of any committee or sub-committee
- a) a question on any major policy, project or strategic matter related to their role, responsibilities and/or office, or which is not similar to any question asked in the preceding Council meeting
- b) Questions on matters relating to the day-to-day provision, management and administration of services will not be permitted. This includes any requests for data or any other operational information where Members should seek this information from officers.
- The Lord Mayor will be the final arbiter on whether any Question is to be tabled after consultation with the Director of Legal & Governance. No Question will be struck out without consultation with the tabler and/or Group Leader.
There is a limit of ten (10) questions per Council meeting and two (2) supplementary questions at the discretion of the Lord Mayor. The questions can only be submitted by opposition members and will be divided pro rata depending upon political proportionality.
- Questions on notice at committees and sub-committees
Subject to Rule 11.4, a Member of a committee or sub-committee may ask the Chair of it a question on any matter in relation to which the Council has powers or duties or which affect the area and which falls within the terms of reference of that committee or sub-committee. - Notice of questions
A Member may only ask a question under Rule 11.1, 11.2 or 11.3 if:- the question is given in writing to the Director of Legal & Governance by noon five (5) Clear Days before the meeting. The Director of Legal & Governance will acknowledge receipt of such questions; or
- if the question relates to urgent matters, they have the consent of the Lord Mayor and the content of the question is given to the Director of Legal & Governance prior to the commencement of the meeting. The Lord Mayor must seek the advice of the Director of Legal & Governance before deciding whether to permit the Question to be asked.
- for the Annual General Meeting in May each year, the question is given in writing to the Director of Legal & Governance by noon six Clear Days before the meeting. Director of Legal & Governance will acknowledge receipt of such questions;
- in the event that the decision on whether or not to allow a question, the Director of Legal & Governance will consult with the Lord Mayor.
- Form of Response
An answer may take the form of:- a written answer tabled at the meeting
- a direct oral answer;
- where the desired information is in a publication of the Council or other published work, a reference to that publication; or
- where the reply cannot conveniently be given orally, a written answer circulated later to the questioner.
- Transferring the Response
Every question shall be put and answered without discussion, but the person to whom a question has been put may ask another Member to respond or may decline to answer. - Supplementary question
Any Member, following a question asked under Rules 11.1, 11.2 or 11.3 may ask one or more supplementary questions without notice to the Member to whom the first question was asked at the discretion of the Lord Mayor and subject to Rule 12. The supplementary questions must arise directly out of the original question or the reply. - Written Answers
On request from the Member asking a question, a brief summary of key points in an oral answer shall be provided within 10 working days. - Record of Questions and Answers on Notice at Full Council
Questions asked on Notice at Full Council under Rule 11.1 or 11.2 will be recorded in the minutes, as will any answer. For the avoidance of doubt, neither supplementary questions nor answers shall be recorded. Where a verbal answer is given to a question asked under Rule 11.1 or 11.2, the precise wording of the answer to be included in the minutes shall be agreed with the Member giving the response.
Executive Business
- The Leader shall present a verbal report of the Business of the Executive for each ordinary meeting of the Council. In presenting the report, the Executive shall have fifteen minutes to make any statements that they wish, either relating to the report before Council or in relation to any other item, topic or subject that they feel should be drawn to the attention of Council.
- Following the presentation of the Report of the Business of the Executive, any member may ask a question of the Leader or a Cabinet Member arising from either the written report or a verbal statement made by a member of the Executive provided that the question is not one which is to be put under Council Procedure Rule 12.3. This item of business shall not last longer than fifteen minutes unless in the view of the Lord Mayor, or on a motion moved by a Member, seconded and approved by Council, it is deemed appropriate to extend the time. In this event, the Lord Mayor shall specify the duration of any extension.”
- Following the presentation of the report and questions arising on that, the Lord Mayor shall, subject to Rule 12.6, call Members to ask questions for which due notice has been given of the Leader or a Cabinet Member submitted pursuant to Rule 11.1.
- Where possible, the answer to the question shall be made available in writing to Members and the public prior to the meeting and, in that case, the Executive Member shall not read the answer out in full.
- Following any question asked pursuant to Rule 12.3, subject to Rule 12.6, any Member may ask one or more supplementary questions provided the supplementary question arises directly out of the original question or reply.
- The Lord Mayor, in his/her absolute discretion, shall determine the order of speaking, the order in which questions are put, and shall endeavour to ensure the widest possible debate between the Executive and the Council on issues relating to the business of the Executive. The Lord Mayor may also determine that a question should not be put, or does not warrant or justify a supplementary.
- The Lord Mayor, in his/her absolute discretion, may allow a Member to ask a question not on notice if in the opinion of the Lord Mayor the matter is one which should be raised, whether it has been referred to by the Executive in their report or not.
- This item of business shall not last longer than one hour unless, in the view of the Lord Mayor, or on a motion moved by a Member, seconded and approved by Council, it is deemed appropriate to extend the time. In this event, the Lord Mayor shall specify the duration of any extension.
- Any question properly submitted under Rule 12.3 but which is not reached in the timeframe allotted for this item of business shall receive a written response from the Executive.
- Members shall ensure that questions and answers are concise, relevant and to the point.
Motions
- Motions on Notice
- Notice
Except for motions which can be moved without notice under Rule 13.2, written notice of every motion, signed by at least one (1) Member, must be delivered to the Director of Legal & Governance not later than 10:00 am on the Monday in the week preceding the next meeting of the Council (or if the Council meeting is held on a day other than a Wednesday, by 10:00 am six Clear Days before the meeting). These will be entered in a book open to public inspection. - Motion set out in agenda
Motions for which notice has been given will be listed on the agenda in the order in which notice was received, unless the Member giving notice states, in writing, that they propose to move it to a later meeting or withdraw it. - Scope
Motions must be about matters for which the Council has a responsibility or which affect the City of Southampton. - Notice of Motion to Amend
Members shall use their best endeavours to ensure that notices of motion to amend shall be in writing, signed by the Member giving the notice, and delivered not later than 12:00 pm (noon) on the day before the day of the meeting to the Director of Legal & Governance. - If notice is given of any Motion that the Director of Legal & Governance considers proposes action which is ultra vires, unconstitutional or otherwise illegal, said motion shall not be printed in the Council Summons. If Director of Legal & Governance considers that a motion is otherwise out of order, such Motion shall be submitted forthwith to the Lord Mayor. The Lord Mayor shall, in their absolute discretion, have the right to either rule the Motion out of order or place it on the Council Summons if, in his/her opinion, it is one that ought properly to be considered by the Members of the Council with a view to determining its validity. In the event of a Motion being rejected, the Director of Legal & Governance shall so inform the Member giving notice as soon as reasonably practicable.
- Notice
- Motions without Notice
- The following motions may be moved without notice:
- to appoint a Chair of the meeting at which the motion is moved;
- in relation to the accuracy of the minutes;
- to change the order of business in the agenda;
- to refer something to an appropriate body or individual;
- to appoint a committee or Member arising from an item on the summons for the meeting;
- to receive reports or adoption of recommendations of committees or Officer and any resolutions following from them;
- to withdraw a motion;
- subject to Rule 13.1(d), to amend a motion;
- to proceed to the next business;
- that the question be now put;
- to adjourn a debate;
- to adjourn a meeting;
- any matter arising under Rule 9;
- to suspend a particular Rule;
- to exclude the public and press in accordance with the Access to Information Rules;
- to not hear further a Member named under Rule 21.3 or to exclude them from the meeting under Rule 21.4;
- to give the consent of the Council where its consent is required by this Constitution; and
- in any other circumstances where the Lord Mayor considers it appropriate.
- The following motions may be moved without notice:
Parts 14-16
Rules Of Debate
- No speeches until motion seconded
No speeches may be made after the mover has moved a proposal and explained the purpose of it until the motion has been seconded. - Right to require motion in writing
Unless notice of the motion has already been given, the Lord Mayor may require it to be written down and handed to him/her before it is discussed. - Seconder’s speech
When seconding a motion or amendment, a Member may reserve their speech until later in the debate. - Content and length of speeches
Speeches must be directed to the question under discussion or to a personal explanation or point of order. Without the consent of the Lord Mayor, save where otherwise specified, the maximum length of speeches shall be as follows:
- Movers of motions: 7 minutes
- Movers of amendments: 7 minutes
- The Leader or appropriate Cabinet Member: 7 minutes
- All other speakers: 4 minutes
- All rights of reply: 4 minutes
- When a Member may speak again
A Member who has spoken on a motion may not speak again whilst it is the subject of debate, except:
- to speak once on an amendment moved by another Member;
- to move a further amendment if the motion has been amended since s/he last spoke;
- if his/her first speech was on an amendment moved by another Member, to speak on the main issue (whether or not the amendment on which s/he spoke was carried);
- in exercise of a right of reply;
- on a point of order; and
- by way of personal explanation.
- Amendments to Motions
- An amendment to a motion must be relevant to the motion and will either be:
- to refer the matter to an appropriate body or individual for consideration or reconsideration;
- to leave out words;
- to leave out words and insert or add others; or
- to insert or add words.
as long as the effect of (ii) to (iv) is not to negate the motion.
- Only one amendment may be moved and discussed at any one time. No further amendment may be moved until the amendment under discussion has been disposed of.
- If an amendment is not carried, other amendments to the original motion may be moved.
- If an amendment is carried, the motion as amended takes the place of the original motion. This becomes the substantive motion to which any further amendments are moved.
- After an amendment has been carried, the Lord Mayor will read out the amended motion before accepting any further amendments, or if there are none, put it to the vote.
- An amendment to a motion must be relevant to the motion and will either be:
- Alteration of motion
- A Member may alter a motion of which s/he has given notice with the consent of the meeting. The meeting’s consent will be signified without discussion.
- A Member may alter a motion which s/he has moved without notice with the consent of both the meeting and the seconder. The meeting’s consent will be signified without discussion.
- Only alterations which could be made as an amendment may be made.
- Withdrawal of motion
A Member may withdraw a motion which s/he has moved with the consent of both the meeting and the seconder. The meeting’s consent will be signified without discussion. No Member may speak on the motion after the mover has asked permission to withdraw it unless permission is refused. - Right of Reply
- The mover of a motion has a right to reply which shall be heard prior to any vote.
- If an amendment is moved, the mover of the original motion has the right of reply at the close of the debate on the amendment, but may not otherwise speak on it.
- The mover of the amendment has no right of reply to the debate on his or her amendment.
- Motions which may be moved during debate
When a motion is under debate, no other motion may be moved except the following procedural motions:
- to withdraw a motion;
- to amend a motion;
- to proceed to the next business;
- that the question be now put;
- to adjourn a debate;
- to adjourn a meeting;
- any matter arising under Rule 9;
- to exclude the public and press in accordance with the Access to Information Rules; and
- to not hear further a Member named under Rule 21.3 or to exclude them from the meeting under Rule 21.4.
- Closure motions
- A Member may move, without comment, the following motions at the end of a speech of another Member:
- to proceed to the next business;
- that the question be now put;
- to adjourn a debate; or
- to adjourn a meeting.
- If a motion to proceed to next business is seconded and the Lord Mayor thinks the item has been sufficiently discussed, s/he will give the mover of the original motion a right of reply and then put the procedural motion to the vote.
- If a motion that the question be now put is seconded and the Lord Mayor thinks the item has been sufficiently discussed, s/he will put the procedural motion to the vote.
- If it is passed s/he will give the mover of the original motion a right of reply before putting his/her motion to the vote.
- If a motion to adjourn the debate or to adjourn the meeting is seconded and the Lord Mayor thinks the item has not been sufficiently discussed and cannot reasonably be so discussed on that occasion, s/he will put the procedural motion to the vote without giving the mover of the original motion the right of reply.
- A Member may move, without comment, the following motions at the end of a speech of another Member:
- Point of order
A Member may raise a point of order at any time. The Lord Mayor will hear them immediately. A point of order may only relate to an alleged breach of these Council Rules of Procedure or the law. The Member must indicate the rule or law and the way in which s/he considers it has been broken. The ruling of the Lord Mayor on the matter will be final. - Point of Information
A Member, whether or not he or she has spoken on the question under discussion, may rise whilst another Member is speaking, in order to provide information of assistance to the Council on the subject matter of that other Member's speech and shall, upon rising, say "Point of Information please, Mr/Madam Lord Mayor". It shall then be for the Member who is speaking to decide whether or not to give way to the Member wishing to provide information.
If it appears to the Lord Mayor that the Member who is addressing the Council does not intend to give way, the Lord Mayor shall have absolute discretion as to who speaks and in what order. - Personal explanation
A Member may make a personal explanation at any time. A personal explanation may only relate to some material part of an earlier speech by the Member which may appear to have been misunderstood or which contained a reference to that Member in the course of a speech by another Member in the present debate. The ruling of the Lord Mayor on the admissibility and timing of a personal explanation will be final. - Inappropriate or Excessive Interventions
Any use of Rules 14.12, 14.13, 14.14 which the Lord Mayor shall judge to be excessive shall be deemed to be a breach of order under Rule 21. - Disclosure of Interests and Participation
Where a member has a disclosable pecuniary interest under the Localism Act 2011 or a personal and pecuniary interest under Part 4 of the Code of Conduct for Members in any matter being discussed, then the member must declare that interest and withdraw from the room where the meeting is being held immediately after making representations, answering questions or giving evidence unless a dispensation to remain has been obtained from the Council’s Governance Committee.
Honours
- Where there is any proposal, howsoever it arises, to grant the status of Honorary Alderman or Freeman of the City to any citizen or group of citizens, it is a requirement of the person proposing that such an honour is conferred that the proposal shall be referred, without any further consideration, in confidence, to the Director of Legal & Governance. There shall be no public statement whatsoever by the proposer as to this matter at this stage. The Director of Legal & Governance shall determine whether and if such a proposal is to be taken forward to Council, in consultation with the Group Leaders.
- The Director of Legal & Governance shall, following consultation with the Group Leaders, operate a process and bring forward nominators for the Council to bestow recognition on citizens or groups of citizens for service and the City.
Previous Decisions And Motions
- Motion to rescind a previous decision
A motion or amendment to rescind a decision made at a meeting of Council within the past six months cannot be moved unless the notice of motion is signed by at least one third of the Members of the Council. - Motion similar to one previously rejected
A motion or amendment in similar terms to one that has been rejected at a meeting of Council in the past six months cannot be moved unless the notice of motion or amendment is signed by at least one third Members of the Council. Once the motion or amendment is dealt with, no one can propose a similar motion or amendment for six months.
Parts 17-24
Voting
- Majority
Unless the law or this Constitution provides otherwise, any matter will be decided by a simple majority of those Members voting and present in the room at the time the question was put. - Lord Mayor’s casting vote
If there are equal numbers of votes for and against, the Lord Mayor will have a second or casting vote. There will be no restriction on how the Lord Mayor chooses to exercise a casting vote. - Show of hands
Unless a vote is demanded under Rule 17.4, the Lord Mayor will take the vote by show of hands, or if there is no dissent, by the affirmation of the meeting. - Recorded vote
If 10 Members present at the meeting demand it, the names for and against the motion or amendment or abstaining from voting will be taken down in writing and entered into the minutes. - Right to require individual vote to be recorded
Where any Member requests it immediately after the vote is taken, their vote will be so recorded in the minutes to show whether they voted for or against the motion or abstained from voting. - Voting at Budget Meeting
Immediately after any vote is taken at a budget decision meeting of an authority there must be recorded in the minutes of the proceedings of that meeting the names of the persons who cast a vote for the decision or against the decision or who abstained from voting”
Committee Recommendations
- Upon a motion for the determination of minutes of a Committee containing recommendations of that Committee to Council, the Lord Mayor will ask the Chair and Vice-Chair or such other members as appropriate to move and second the minute. If the Chair wishes to move an amendment it should be moved at this time otherwise it is taken that the Chair has reserved his/her introductory speech. The Lord Mayor shall put that minute to the meeting following which it shall be open for general discussion.
- If there is more than one minute of a Committee containing recommendations of that Committee to Council, it shall be dealt with once the first minute has been disposed of.
Overview And Scrutiny Business
- The Chair of the Overview and Scrutiny Management Committee or another Member in his/her place, may move a motion relating to the business of Overview and Scrutiny and/or of the findings of a Panel, or a matter that Overview and Scrutiny consider should be debated by Full Council.
- For the avoidance of doubt, the Council does not have the legal power to overrule, vary or change an Executive decision, save as provided in the Constitution.
- The normal rules of debate for motions shall apply to this item of business.
- This item of business shall not last longer than one hour unless in the view of the Lord Mayor, or on a motion moved by a Member, seconded and approved by Council, it is deemed appropriate to extend the time. In this event, the Lord Mayor shall specify the duration of any extension.
Exclusion Of Public
- Members of the public and press may only be excluded either in accordance with the law, the Access to Information Rules in Part 4 of this Constitution or Rule 22 (Disturbance by Public).
Members’ Conduct
- Standing to speak
When a Member speaks at full Council they must stand (if they are able to) and address the meeting through the Lord Mayor. If more than one Member stands, the Lord Mayor will ask one to speak and the others must sit. Other Members must remain seated whilst a Member is speaking unless they wish to make a point of order, information or personal explanation. - Lord Mayor standing
When the Lord Mayor stands during a debate, any Member speaking at the time must stop and sit down. The meeting must be silent. - Member not to be heard further
If a Member persistently disregards the ruling of the Lord Mayor by behaving improperly or offensively or deliberately obstructs business, the Lord Mayor may move that the Member be not heard further. If seconded, the motion will be voted on without discussion. - Member to leave the meeting
If the Member continues to behave improperly after such a motion is carried, the Lord Mayor may move that either the Member leaves the meeting or that the meeting is adjourned for a specified period. If seconded, the motion will be voted on without discussion. - General disturbance
If there is a general disturbance making orderly business impossible, the Lord Mayor may adjourn the meeting for as long as s/he thinks necessary.
Disturbance By Public
- Removal of Member of the public
If a Member of the public interrupts proceedings, the Lord Mayor will warn the person concerned. If they continue to interrupt, the Lord Mayor will order their removal. - Clearance of part of room
If there is a general disturbance in any part of the room open to the public, the Lord Mayor may call for that part to be cleared.
Adjourned Meetings
When a meeting is adjourned to a future day, notice of the adjourned meeting shall be sent to each Member specifying the business to be transacted thereat, but it shall not be necessary to send with any such notice a second print of any Committee minutes or reports referred to therein. Only new business of an urgent nature may be introduced at an adjourned meeting.
Terms Of Reference For The Council
The Council may discuss any matter relevant to it, including its Constitution, election, powers and duties, and the City of Southampton.
Parts 25-28
Application To Committees And Sub-Committees
- All of the Council Rules of Procedure apply to meetings of full Council. None of the rules apply to meetings of the Executive. Only Rules 1, 5–9, 11–14 (but not 12), 16–18, 20-28 (but not Rule 21.1 in so far as it relates to standing) apply to meetings of committees and sub-committees subject to:
- in relation to Rules 5 and 6, the Director of Legal & Governance shall determine the time and place and be responsible for issuing Committee and Sub-Committee summonses and agendas; and
- in relation to Rule 17.4, the number of Members present at a meeting requisite to call a recorded vote, shall be three (3) or one third of the full membership of the Committee or Sub-Committee, whichever is greater.
- Whenever a casual vacancy arises in relation to a person appointed other than a Member to a Committee or Sub-Committee, the Director of Legal & Governance shall make that appointment.
- Special Meetings of Committees and Sub-Committees
- The Chair of a Committee or Sub-Committee may call a special meeting of that Committee or Sub-Committee at any time.
- If
- a requisition for a special meeting of a Committee or Sub-Committee, signed by at least three, or one-third of the total number of the voting Members of a Committee or Sub-Committee, whichever is the greater, has been presented to the person appointed to preside at their meetings, and
- either they have refused to call a meeting or, without him/her so refusing, no special meeting has been called within five Clear Days of the presentation of the requisition.
then any three, or one-third of the number of the members of the Committee or Sub-Committee, whichever is the greater, may forthwith call a special meeting of the Committee or Sub-Committee.
- If a meeting of a Committee or Sub-Committee is requisitioned under this Council Procedure Rule, the person doing so shall forthwith give notice in writing that they have done so to the Director of Legal & Governance, specifying the business proposed to be transacted. The Director of Legal & Governance shall forthwith give notice to all Members of the Committee or Sub-Committee and all persons entitled to receive the papers.
- Any requisition under this Council Procedure Rule may be presented by being left with the Director of Legal & Governance.
Conduct Of Business & Debate At Committees Or Sub-Committees
- Terms of Reference
Subject to and in accordance with the provisions of these Council Procedure Rules, and to any directions of the Council, the terms of reference of the various Committees and Sub-Committees shall be as set out in Part 3 of this Constitution. - Special Procedures and Protocols
- Any Committee or Sub-Committee shall follow a Special Procedure or Protocol, where one exists, for the transaction of the whole or part their business which has been approved by the Director of Legal & Governance.
- The Director of Legal & Governance may direct that a Special Procedure or Protocol shall apply to the transaction of the whole or part of business at other Committees or Sub-Committees or in respect of other functions or activities of the Council in order to comply with the Human Rights Act 1998 or any rule of law or to avoid maladministration by the Council or for the efficient despatch of business.
- Subject always to any legal requirements, a Special Procedure or Protocol may:
- vary, revoke or add to or suspend any of these Council Procedure Rules in respect of the rules and procedures to be followed by such Committees and Sub-Committees; and
- allow the Chair to waive or vary a Special Procedure or Protocol in exceptional circumstances where to do so would be in the interests of fairness or natural justice.
- Committee Business Restricted to Agenda Items
Except by reason of urgent circumstances, of which the Chair of the Committee or Sub-Committee shall be judge, no business shall be transacted at any meeting of a Committee or Sub-Committee except such as is set out on the agenda which shall be available to the public five clear days before the meeting concerned. - Reports to Contain Recommendations
Subject to any Special Procedure or Protocol, all reports relating to items of business on the agenda shall contain a recommendation or recommendations that shall be the original motion for determination by the meeting, and which shall be open to amendment. - Matters on the agenda raised by Members
Any Member requiring a report on a matter within the terms of reference of a Committee or Sub-Committee to be included on the agenda of that Committee or Sub-Committee must advise the Director of Legal & Governance in writing twelve Clear Days prior to the meeting of this request. - Any Member wishing to urgently raise a matter in the Committee or Sub-Committee after the agenda has been published may do so on giving to the Director of Legal & Governance reasonable notice in writing stating the reason for urgency. Such matter may only be discussed if the Chair of the Committee or Sub-Committee considers the nature of the business of sufficient urgency to warrant inclusion at the meeting.
Rights Of Members To Speak At Meetings Of Committees And Sub-Committees
- Save where the law or this Constitution provides to the contrary:
- the Lord Mayor and Sheriff of the Council, the Leader or any Cabinet Member may speak (but may not vote) at a meeting of a Committee or Sub-Committee of which they are not Voting Members.
- the Chair and Vice-Chair of a Committee may speak at a meeting of any Sub-Committee appointed by that Committee, but may not vote unless appointed as a Voting Member.
- a Member of the Council who is not otherwise entitled to speak at a Committee or Sub-Committee shall be entitled to do so (but not to vote) at a meeting of the Committee or Sub-Committee:
- during the consideration of any motion of which notice has been given which s/he has moved or seconded at a meeting of the Council and which has been referred to that Committee or Sub-Committee; or
- with the prior agreement of the Chair; or
- during the consideration of any matter which affects his/her ward differently from other wards.
- This Council Procedure Rule shall apply equally to meetings or parts of meetings of Committees and Sub-Committees to which the press and public are not admitted under the access to information provisions of the 1972 Act.
- A Special Procedure may exclude Rule 27.1(a) above and regulate the manner in which Rules 27.1(b) and (c) are exercised.
Urgent Business Sub Committee
- The Chair and Vice-Chair of each Committee and Sub-Committee of the Council and a representative of the Opposition Party(s) for each Committee or Sub-Committee shall constitute a Sub-Committee with power to deal with any urgent business arising at any time which cannot await the next scheduled meeting of the Committee or Sub-Committee. The quorum for such a meeting shall be two. The reason for urgency shall be included on the agenda, in the report and in the Minutes of the meeting.
- Where an Urgent Business Sub-Committee involves more than one Committee or Sub-Committee then the Chairs and Vice-Chairs of those Committees or Sub-Committees together with one representative from each of the Opposition Parties for each parent Committee or Sub-Committee shall constitute the Urgent Business Joint Meeting.
- Any Chair or Vice-Chair may nominate a Member of the Committee or Sub-Committee of which they are the Chair and Vice-Chair to act for the purposes of (1) or (2) above whenever they are absent or otherwise unable to act.
- Every Urgent Business Sub-Committee shall, when acting in pursuance of Rule 28.1 or 28.2 above, do so subject to the provisions of these Council Procedure Rules and the respective terms of reference of the Committee or Sub-Committee concerned, and in accordance with the appropriate Committee's general policies.
- Every decision of an Urgent Business Sub-Committee acting in pursuance of Rule 28.1 or 28.2 above shall be reported to the next following meeting of the Committee or Sub-Committee if time permits or direct to Council.
- An Agenda shall be published 5 clear days before the date set for the Urgent Business Sub-Committee's meeting or (if the meeting is called on less than 5 clear days’ notice) at the time the meeting is convened. Copies of the agenda shall be made available to the Leaders of the Political Group(s) or their nominated representatives and to the public at the time the agenda is published.
- The public shall have access to an Urgent Business Sub-Committee meeting but may be excluded by resolution if the urgent business relates to confidential or 'exempt' information as defined in Local Government Act 1972 as amended. The public will be automatically excluded if the business of the meeting is 'confidential' as defined by the Act.
Note: Urgent Business Sub-Committees shall only be called where it is impracticable to either (1) add the report to the agenda of a scheduled Committee or Sub-Committee meeting as a "late urgent item" or (2) to call a Special Meeting of the Committee or Sub-Committee in question. - In the case of any business which is included in the meeting of the Committee, Sub-Committee or Urgent Business Sub-Committee by reason of its urgency there shall be within the Minutes of such meeting a note specifying the special circumstances which warranted that the item be included.
- For the avoidance of doubt, no business other than urgent business shall be conducted at an Urgent Business Sub-Committee.