Ethical standards clinic
In the pre-hearing stage, the subject member has made a request
to hold the hearing in private. How should I respond as no reasons
have been given as to why the request should be made in private and
the Chairman is adamant the hearing take place in public?
There is a general presumption that Standards Committee hearings
will be held in public. However in some circumstances, parts of, or
the whole of, the hearing may need to be held in private to deal
with matters that may be considered exempt under Schedule 12A of
the Local Government Act 1972 (as amended), including matters which
may reveal sensitive personal information about the member or a
witness.
The first point to appreciate is that the request is made to the
Standards Committee and not the Monitoring Officer or the Chair
person of the Committee. This means that the Standards Committee,
as a decision making body, must decide whether the proceedings will
take place in public or private.
The Standards Committee may decide to consider the request at a
separate meeting in advance of the hearing, or may decide that it
will make the decision at the hearing and treat it as a preliminary
issue in the order of proceedings. In either case, the Committee
should be prepared to accept submissions by or on behalf of the
subject member and from either the local investigator or Ethical
Standards Officer (depending on how the investigation was handled –
local or central).
The Standards Committee are entitled to seek further information
from the subject member who has made the request as to reasons why
it is necessary for the hearing to be held in private. This will
enable the Committee to consider the request and make a decision
based upon all relevant information available.
If the request is dealt with as a preliminary issue at the
hearing, the investigator’s report and accompanying papers (if any)
should not be made available to the public in advance of the
hearing. In these circumstances, an agenda listing the order of
proceedings should be made publicly available (without the
investigator’s report). On the day of the hearing, public copies of
the report may need to be made available in the event that the
Committee decides the hearing should take place in public.