1. Mr Cook introduced the
report and advised that it was felt a review was appropriate
following recent discussions with Members. The number of signatures needed to meet the
thresholds for debate at County Council and Cabinet Committees, was
one of the areas raised as a concern.
Mr Cook added that last time the Petition Scheme was reviewed, the
Committee had chosen not to make any significant
changes.
2. Mr
Cook provided Members with a presentation to give context around
how the Petition Scheme currently operated. During the presentation the following points were
noted:
a.
All petitions must go to Democratic Services to be
verified.
b.
Before setting up a petition, organisers were
encouraged to contact the Democratic Services team; they were
available to offer advice and ensure that the petition was relevant
to a service provided by KCC.
c.
The most common subject of a petition related to
highways matters. The most common
outcome of a petition was to issue a written response from the
relevant Cabinet Member. Petitions were
often about very localised issues.
d.
Petition organisers were encouraged to coordinate
with others when similar petitions took place
simultaneously.
e.
KCC’s signature thresholds were compared to
the thresholds at other councils. There
was a significant degree of variation in the number of signatures
required by each council.
f.
The Green and Independent Group (G&I Group)
indicated that they wished for the threshold for County Council
debate to be reduced from 10,000 to 2,000 signatures and for the
threshold for Cabinet Committee debate to be reduced from 2,500 to
1,500.
g.
If the G&I Group proposed thresholds had been in place over
the last 9 years, the number of petitions considered by County
Council would have increased from one to ten, and the number of
petitions considered by a Cabinet Committees would have reduced
from eight to six.
h.
Consideration could be given to a mechanism that
would handle small, localised petitions more
effectively.
3. Members asked questions and made
comments. The following points were
noted during the discussion:
- The
county populations needed to be considered when comparing other
council’s signature thresholds.
- The
eligibility to sign a petition should be reviewed, for example, a
signatory should have a local connection or be over a certain
age. Currently KCC required signatories
to live, work or study in the county; the Committee intentionally
left the eligibility requirements relatively open when the Petition
Scheme was reviewed last time.
- For
small petitions, considered at a local meeting, the number of
signatures should be comparable with number required at
District/Borough Councils.
- If a
petition related to an executive function, which was often the
case, neither the County Council or
Cabinet Committee could act upon the petition directly. They could only make recommendations to the
Cabinet for consideration.
- 10,000
was a lot of signatures, people do a petition when they have been
told to gather evidence that people want something. If the threshold was reduced, more voices would be
heard.
- The
G&I Group’s suggested the threshold for County Council
debate was proportionally in line with the Parliamentary
threshold. This reduction would
increase democratic engagement.
- Officers could send a survey to petition organisers to
incorporate their experience and feedback into the
review.
- There
were some advantages to hosting petitions on the KCC ePetition system, it could be used to provide
updates to those who have signed the petition. The ePetition user experience was an area that could be
further explored as part of the review.
There were reports that the KCC ePetition system was a cumbersome experience for
users.
- In
cases where there was a paper petition and an ePetition running simultaneously about the same
issue, the number of signatures could be combined. There was petition guidance that advised people
not to sign both petition formats as there would be checks for
duplication.
- In
cases when there were multiple petitions about a similar, but not
identical issues, the number of signatures were not combined,
however they would be grouped together to enable to decision maker
to see what had been received.
- Part
of the review would look at to handle multiple different petitions
that had a strategic connection. The
aim was to help ensure peoples voices were heard. It was recognised that petitions were often
submitted as an act of last resort.
- There
would always be the opportunity for an individual to submit a paper
petition.
4.
Members comments would be incorporated into the review and
proposals would be brought back to the Committee for further
consideration.