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NSW to simplify model meeting codes

The NSW Minns Labor Government is continuing to progress reforms to strengthen local government, announcing changes to the way council meetings are conducted to ensure greater transparency and increase community confidence in council decision making.

Minister for Local Government Ron Hoenig said all councils were required to adopt a code of meeting practice based on the Model Meeting Code issued by the Office of Local Government.

“Council meetings are where a council’s most important decisions should be made,” he said.

“It concerns me that these decisions are increasingly being made behind closed doors in private briefings, locking out the community and protecting councils from public scrutiny.

“As a former mayor, I want to see all councils conducting their business in an open and public forum, where communities can engage with their council on issues that directly affect them.

“The current Model Meeting Code has become unwieldly and is prone to drawing the general manager into political disputes which should be left to elected councillors to resolve.

“These changes are part of the government’s commitment to restoring public trust in local government which has been eroded by years of neglect and a cultural shift towards secrecy over public service.”

The government has now released a consultation draft of amendments to the Model Meeting Code for public comment.

The changes aim to simplify the Model Meeting Code and ensure councillors are making decisions in the full view of the communities they are elected to represent.

They also aim to increase the dignity of the council chamber and remove the general manager’s involvement in council politics.

Key changes, some of which have been recommended by the Independent Commission Against Corruption (ICAC) include:

• preventing councils from holding private councillor briefing sessions

• requiring information considered at closed meetings to be made public after it ceases to be confidential

• requiring councils to give reasons when making decisions on planning matters that depart from staff recommendations

• de-politicising the role of the general manager by removing the requirement for them to prepare reports on councillors’ notices of motion

• expanding the powers of the mayor to expel councillors from meetings for acts of disorder

• requiring councillors to stand when the mayor enters and when addressing the meeting

Changes to the Model Meeting Code were flagged in a discussion paper outlining the government’s proposed reforms to the councillor code of conduct system.

Submissions will be accepted until Friday, 28 February 2025. To learn more and provide feedback, go to: www.olg.nsw.gov.au/councils/governance/model-code-of-meeting-practice/reforms-to-the-model-code-of-meeting-practice/

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