Last Friday I received the agenda for City Executive Board (CEB). It was three volumes totalling 944 pages, double-sided so only 472 pieces of paper. As normal this was delivered to my home by the council courier van (while I was probably at work). This would be the same for all 48 members of council (some may have elected to have papers delivered elsewhere but all are entitled to a delivery). That’s a staggering 22,656 pieces of paper for one meeting – and that’s without the officer copies and the spare ones for the members of the public at the meeting! At a conservative £5/500 sheets that’s approaching £300 just on the paper, without considering the staff time to prepare, print, collate and bind the material as well as the staff time to deliver it to houses and the costs of running the courier’s van.
CEB is an important meeting as it has all the executive power of the council so all members of council do need to see the papers but I really don’t believe many actually have time to read every sheet of paper in such a huge agenda. This is 944 pages to read between when I got home on Friday and the CEB meeting the next Wednesday. That’s about 5 full days that already have lots of time committed, not least to my day job!
Yesterday, given that the CEB meeting is in the past I put my papers in the recycling, as there was nothing confidential, for it to be collected by another part of the council.
Today I received the agenda for full council on 19th December. It’s another 350 or so pages! I’m seriously considering asking the courier to deliver straight to the recycling centre to cut out the middle man (me!)
Now it’s not that I don’t want to read these reports but as you can see from the links in this item, they are all available on the City Council’s web site. Why not just send councillors the contents pages so we can browse on the web for any reports that we actually need to read thoroughly?
I am pleased that City Council IT is looking into getting councillors to use tablet devices to read papers and it really can’t come too quickly as far as I am concerned. I read almost everything online these days and the council really does make it pretty easy to find stuff: There is a full public page on Council meetings and there is even an RSS feed for those that prefer to use things like Google Reader. That feed is also on this blog page.