~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The report of the Independent Remuneration Panel appointed to review the allowances paid to Councillors
of Brighton and Hove City Council
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1. INTRODUCTION AND BACKGROUND
3. PRINCIPLES UNDERPINNING OUR REVIEW
3.1 The Public Service Principle
3.2 The Fair Remuneration Principle
4. CONSIDERATIONS AND RECOMMENDATIONS
4.2 Special Responsibility Allowances (SRAs)
4.3 Co-optees’/ Independent Persons Allowance0....................... Travelling and Subsistence Allowance0
4.5 Dependants’ Carers’ Allowance1
4.8 Revocation of current Scheme of Allowances / Implementation of new Scheme4
6. APPROVED COUNCILLOR DUTIES4
Appendix 1 Basic Allowance/Special Responsibility Allowances/Independent Persons’ Allowance/ Dependants’ Carers’ Allowance / Mayoral Allowances – Summary of Recommendations |
15 |
Appendix 2 Comparative data of allowances paid to councillors of the other unitary councils (South East Employers, Members Allowances Survey 2023) |
|
John Bateman- Retired teacher of Corporate Governance in the Department of
Business and Management at the University of Sussex, Chair of Panel.
Jaine Jolly - Local Resident and Planning Inspector.
Rachel Potter- Local Resident, Journalist and Editor specialising in
local government and the public sector.
Elizabeth Culbert- Assistant Director, Legal and Democratic Services, Brighton
and Hove City Council provided Panel support.
Mark Palmer – Director: Development and Governance, South East Employers
provided advice and Panel support.
(a) the amount of basic allowance to be payable to all councillors.
(b) the level of allowances and whether allowances should be payable for:
(i) special responsibility allowances.
(ii) travelling and subsistence allowance.
(iii) dependants’ carers’ allowance.
(iv) parental leave and.
(v) Independent Persons’ allowance.
and the amount of such allowances.
(c) whether payment of allowances may be backdated if the scheme is amended at any time to affect an allowance payable for the year in which the amendment is made.
(d) whether adjustments to the level of allowances may be determined according to an index and if so which index and how long that index should apply, subject to a maximum of four years before its application is reviewed.
Remuneration should not be an incentive for service as a councillor. Nor should lack of remuneration be a barrier. The basic allowance should encourage people from a wide range of backgrounds and with a wide range of skills to serve as local councillors. Those who participate in and contribute to the democratic process should not suffer unreasonable financial disadvantage as a result of doing so.[2]
(i) allowances should apply to roles within the Council, not individual councillors.
(ii) allowances should represent reasonable compensation to councillors for expenses they incur and time they commit in relation to their role, not payment for their work; and
(iii) special responsibility allowances are used to recognise the significant additional responsibilities which attach to some roles, not merely the extra time required.
(i) the voluntary quality of a councillor’s role.
(ii) the need for appropriate financial recognition for the expenses incurred and time spent by councillors in fulfilling their roles; and
(iii) the overall need to ensure that the scheme of allowances is neither an incentive nor a barrier to service as a councillor.
· Representatives of a particular ward.
· Community leaders.
· Decision makers for the whole Council area.
· Policy makers for future activities of the Council.
· Scrutineers and auditors of the work of the Council; and
· Regulators of planning, licensing and other matters required by Government.
Required Time Input
Public Service Discount (PSD)
Remuneration Rate
Calculating the basic allowance
Council |
Unitary Councils: Basic Allowances (£) 2023[7] |
Bracknell Forest Council |
9,038 |
Brighton & Hove City Council |
13,593 |
Buckinghamshire Council |
13,458 |
Isle of Wight Council |
8,832 |
Medway Council |
11,474 |
Milton Keynes Council |
11,689 |
Portsmouth City Council |
11,684 |
Reading Borough Council |
8,942 |
Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead |
8,472 |
Slough Borough Council |
8,438 |
Southampton City Council |
13,900 |
West Berkshire Council |
8,154 |
Wokingham Borough Council |
7,784 |
WE THEREFORE RECOMMEND that the Basic Allowance payable
to all Members of Brighton and Hove City Council be £14,218 per annum
· Leader of the Council
· Deputy Leader of the Council
· Cabinet Members
· Leader of the Opposition
· Leader of the Minority Groups
· Chair of Overview and Scrutiny
· Chairs of Planning
· Chair of Licensing
· Chair of Audit and Standards
· Chair of Health and Wellbeing Board
· Mayor
· Deputy Mayor
· Independent Persons
· Cabinet Advisors
One SRA Only Rule
WE THEREFORE RECOMMEND that that no councillor shall be entitled to receive at any time more than one Special Responsibility Allowance and that this One SRA Only Rule be adopted into the Scheme of Allowances.
The Maximum Number of SRA’s Payable
WE THEREFORE RECOMMEND that the Council should adhere to a maximum
number of SRA’s payable at any one time that does not exceed 50% of Council
Members (27 Members).
Calculating SRAs
Council allowance based on a multiplier of the Basic Allowance; this role carries the
most significant additional responsibilities and is the most time consuming.
We grouped together in Tiers those roles that we judged to have a similar level of responsibility. The outline result of this approach is illustrated in a pyramid of responsibility:
The rationale for these tiers of responsibility are discussed below.
Leader (Tier One)
WE RECOMMEND that the Leader of the Council should receive a Special Responsibility Allowance of 260% of the Basic Allowance, £36,967.
Deputy Leader (Tier Two)
WE RECOMMEND that the Deputy Leader receive a Special Responsibility Allowance of 60% of the Leader’s Allowance, £22,180 or, if undertaken on a job share basis between two Cabinet Members, an allowance of £17,559.23
Cabinet Members and Chair of Planning (Tier Three)
WE RECOMMEND that a Cabinet Member and the Chair of Planning Committee
should receive an allowance of 35% of the Leaders’ Allowance, £12,938.
Leader of the Opposition and Chair of Licensing (Tier Four)
WE RECOMMEND that the Leader of the Opposition and the Chair of the
Licensing Committee should all receive a Tier Four Allowance, 33% of the
Leader’s Allowance, £12,199.
Chair of Overview and Scrutiny, Mayor and Chair of Health and Wellbeing Board (Tier Five)
continue to be a pivotal role. The Panel recommends that the Chair of the Health and
Well Being Board should receive a Tier Five allowance, 30% of Leader’s Allowance,
£11,090
WE RECOMMEND that the Chairs of Overview and Scrutiny, Mayor and Chair of the Health and Wellbeing Board should each receive an allowance of 30% of the Leaders’ Allowance, £11,090.
Leader of the Minority Groups (Tier Six)
WE RECOMMEND that the Leader of a Minority Group should receive an
allowance of 20% of the Leader’s Allowance, £7,393. The Panel further
recommends that to qualify for this allowance the group should consist of at
least 10% of total councillors, six councillors.
Chair of Audit and Standards Committee (Tier Seven).
WE RECOMMEND that the Chair of Audit and Standards should receive a Tier
Seven allowance, 15% of the Leader’s Allowance, £5,758.
Deputy Mayor (Tier Eight)
has a significant impact across the Council area and a high workload based on the
number and frequency of civic engagements. The Panel is of the view that the role of
Deputy Mayor should continue to receive an allowance based on 6% of the Leader’s
Allowance, £2,218.
WE RECOMMEND that the Deputy Mayor receive a Tier Eight Allowance, 6% of
the recommended Leader’s Allowance, £2,218.
Deputy Leader of the Opposition, Deputy Chair of Planning and Deputy Chair of
Licensing
4.2.25 The Panel is of the view that the roles of Deputy Leader of the Opposition, Deputy
Chair of Planning and Deputy Chair of Licensing are not roles that meet the criteria of
a Special Responsibility Allowance and the allowances for these three roles should be
withdrawn.
WE RECOMMEND that the Special Responsibility Allowances for the roles of
Deputy Leader of the Opposition, Deputy Chair of Planning and Deputy Chair of
Licensing should be withdrawn.
Cabinet Advisor roles (up to four Cabinet Advisors appointed for a 12 month period)
4.2.26 The Panel has been made aware of proposals to support the new Cabinet with up to four Cabinet Advisor roles. Cabinet Advisors would be appointed by the Leader, following consultation with Cabinet, to lead on a specific policy area for a duration of 12 months. Cabinet Advisors will not be members of Cabinet and will not have decision making powers. The Panel are aware that this is a model operated by other Councils with a Leader and Cabinet system, to support the Cabinet with recommendations in specified areas.
4.2.27 The Panel has been made aware of a Cabinet Advisor role which would be to provide a regional role on Devolution and Functional Economic Areas. This is anticipated to be a more extensive role than the other 3 Cabinet Advisor roles, as it will operate across the Greater Brighton Economic Region and be a member of the Greater Brighton Economic Board. Taking into account the regional nature of the role, the Panel proposes an allowance of 12% of the Leaders’ Allowance for this 12 month role, £4,436.04. For the other three City-focused Cabinet Advisor roles the Panel have considered comparative data and consider that these other three Cabinet Advisor roles should receive an allowance of 4% of the Leaders’ Allowance, ie £1,478.68.
WE RECOMMEND that the Special Responsibility Alowances for the role of Cabinet Advisor (Devolution and Functional Economic Areas) and the three roles of Cabinet Advisor (City-focused) should receive an allowance of £4,466.04 and £1,478.68 respectively.
WE RECOMMEND that the Independent Persons should continue to receive an allowance of £1,030 per annum. The role will also receive travel, subsistence and other expenses in accordance with the scheme applicable to councillors.
WE ALSO RECOMMEND that the allowance for an Independent Person or Co-Optee chairing a Standards Panel hearing continue to be at a rate of £200 per meeting.
WE RECOMMEND that travelling and subsistence allowance should continue to be payable to councillors and independent persons in connection with any approved duties. The amount of travel and subsistence payable shall continue to be at the maximum levels payable to council staff in line with HM Revenue and Customs’ rates. We propose no changes to the current travel and subsistence allowances.
allowances such as Childcare to be made within two months. To support a more
manageable approach to claiming allowances the Panel is of the view that councillors
be provided with up to three months to submit any claims relating to approved
councillor duties.
4.5.7 The Panel is also of the view that the Monitoring Officer be given the
discretion to accept claims outside of the three month limit in exceptional
circumstances, such as illness or other circumstances beyond the councillor’s control
or where the Monitoring Officer otherwise considers it appropriate in all the
circumstances. No extension should be given beyond six months.
WE THEREFORE RECOMMEND that the Child and Dependant Carers’ Allowance should be based on two rates: childcare and specialist care.
The childcare rate should be linked to the Real Living Wage as recommended by the Living Wage Foundation, currently £12.00 per hour (reviewed on an annual basis).
Specialist care should be based at cost upon production of receipts and in the case of specialist care a requirement of medical evidence that this type of care is required.
The allowance should have no maximum claim when undertaking Approved Councillor Duties.
The Panel further recommends that the maximum claim for travel time and handover as part of the Child and Dependant Carers’ Allowance be increased from thirty to sixty minutes for each journey.
WE ALSO RECOMMEND that the Council should actively promote the allowance to prospective and new councillors both before and following an election. This may assist in supporting greater diversity of councillor representation.
FINALLY WE RECOMMEND that the timescale to make claims for allowances related to approved councillor duties be extended to three months and that the Monitoring Officer be given discretion to extend this timescale further in exceptional circumstances. No extension should be given beyond six months.
for maternity, paternity, or adoption leave. According to the Fawcett Society (Does
Local Government Work for Women, 2018) a ‘lack of maternity, paternity provision or
support’ is a real barrier for women aged 18-44 to fulfil their role as a councillor.
not wish to stipulate an exact policy/procedure. The Panel is aware
that the Local Government Association (Labour Group) has developed a model policy
that has been adopted by a growing number of councils across the southeast region.
However, as a way of improving the diversity of Councillors, the Panel would
recommend that the Members’ Allowance Scheme should be further updated to
include provisions that clarify that:
· All Councillors shall continue to receive their Basic Allowance in full for a period at least six months in the case of absence from their Councillor duties due to leave relate to maternity, paternity, adoption shared parental leave or sickness absence
· Councillors entitled to a Special Responsibility Allowance shall continue to receive their allowance in full for a period of at least six months, in the case of absence from their Councillor duties due to leave related to maternity, paternity, adoption, shared parental leave or sickness absence
· Where for reasons connected with sickness, maternity leave, adoption leave, paternity leave or shared parental leave a Councillor is unable to attend a meeting of the Council for a period of six months, a dispensation by Council can be sought in accordance with Section 85 of the Local Government Act 1972
· If a replacement to cover the period of absence under these provisions is appointed by Council or the Leader (or in the case of a party group position the party group) the replacement shall be entitled to claim a Special Responsibility Allowance pro rata for the period over which the cover is provided.
· If a Councillor stands down, or an election is held during the period when a Councillor is absent due to any of the above and the Councillor is not re-elected or decides not to stand down for re-election, their Basic Allowance any Special Responsibility Allowance will cease from the date they leave office.
WE RECOMMEND that the approach outlined is adopted as an update to the Council’s Policy to support Parental and Special Leave for councillors. This may include the adoption of the LGA Labour Group model policy for parental leave.
Any policy on Parental Leave for Councillors should be actively promoted to
prospective and current Councillors alongside the Dependents’ Carers
Allowance.
settlement recommended a flat rate increase rather than a percentage increase,
should this happen again during the period of this scheme then a mid-point Spinal
Column Point should be used for calculating the indexation of the members
allowances.
WE RECOMMEND that the basic allowance, each of the SRAs, the Independent Persons and the Co-optees’ Allowance be increased annually in line with the percentage increase in staff salaries from April 2025 for a period of up to four years. After this period, the Scheme shall be reviewed again by an independent remuneration panel.
WE THEREFORE RECOMMEND that the new scheme of allowances to be agreed by the Council be implemented with effect from 16th May 2024, at which time the current scheme of allowances will be revoked.
WE THEREFORE RECOMMEND: That no changes are made to the Approved Duties as outlined in the Members’ Allowance Scheme.
However, the Panel recommends that a comprehensive evaluation of the Approved Duties is undertaken during the review recommended in quarter one of 2025.
John Bateman (Chair of the Independent Remuneration Panel)
Jaine Jolly (Member of the Independent Remuneration Panel)
Rachel Potter (Member of the Independent Remuneration Panel)
March 2024
Appendix 1: Summary of Panel’s Recommendations
Current Amount for 2023-24 |
Number |
Recommended Allowance (33% PSD) |
Recommended Allowance Calculation |
||
Basic (BA) |
|
|
|
|
|
Total Basic: |
£13,593 |
54 |
£14,218 |
|
|
|
|
||||
|
|
||||
Special Responsibility: |
|
|
|
|
|
Leader of the Council |
£33,593 |
1 |
£36,967 |
260% of BA |
|
Deputy Leader |
£20,390 |
1 |
£22,180 |
60% of Leader’s Allowance |
|
Deputy Leader if Job Share |
|
|
£17,559.23 |
“ |
|
Cabinet Members |
No SRA |
8 |
£12,938 |
35% of Leader’s Allowance |
|
Chair of Planning |
£11,894 |
1 |
£12,938 |
35% of Leader’s Allowance |
|
Chair of Licensing |
£11,894 |
1 |
£12,199 |
33% of Leader’s Allowance |
|
Leader of Largest Opposition |
£11,894 |
1 |
£12,199 |
33% of Leader’s Allowance |
|
Chair of Overview & Scrutiny |
No SRA |
3 |
£11,090 |
30% of Leader’s Allowance |
|
Mayor |
£10,078 |
1 |
£11,090 |
30% of Leader’s Allowance |
|
Chair of Health and Wellbeing Board |
£10,195 |
1 |
£11,090 |
30% of Leader’s Allowance |
|
Leader of Minority Group *1 |
£6,796 |
1 |
£7,393 |
20% of Leader’s Allowance |
|
Chair of Audit and Standards |
£5,098 |
1 |
£5,758 |
15% of Leader’s Allowance |
|
Deputy Mayor |
£2,016 |
1 |
£2,218 |
6% of Leader’s Allowance |
|
Independent Persons/ Co-opted Members |
£1,030 |
|
£1,030 |
|
|
Chair of Standards Panel Hearing |
£200 |
|
£200 |
|
|
Cabinet Advisor – Devolution and Functional Economic Areas |
- |
1 |
£4,436.04 |
12% of Leaders Allowance |
|
Cabinet Advisor – City Focus |
- |
3 |
£1,478.68 |
4% of Leaders Allowance |
|
1. Leader of Minority Group to lead a group of at least 10% of total Members (6 Councillors).
[1] The former Office of Deputy Prime Minister – now the Department of Levelling Up Housing and Communities. The Inland Revenue (now HM Revenue and Customs), New Council Constitutions: Guidance on Consolidated Regulations for Local Authority Allowances, London: TSO, July 2003, paragraph 68.
[2] Rodney Brooke and Declan Hall, Members’ Remuneration: Models, Issues, Incentives
and Barriers. London: Communities and Local Government, 2007, p.3.
[3] The former Office of Deputy Prime Minister – now the Department of Levelling Up, Housing and Communities. The Inland Revenue (now HM Revenue and Customs), New Council Constitutions: Guidance on Consolidated Regulations for Local Authority Allowances, London: TSO, July 2003, paragraph 67.
[4] The former Office of Deputy Prime Minister – now the Department of Levelling Up, Housing and Communities and New Council Constitutions: Guidance on Consolidated Regulations for Local Authority Allowances, London: TSO, July 2003, paragraphs 66-81.
5 The Nomis official labour market statistics: Hourly Pay – Gross median (£) For full-time employee jobs by place of residence: UK December 2023.
[7] Figures drawn from the South East Employers, Members’ Allowances Survey 2023 (October 2023).
[8] The former Office of Deputy Prime Minister – now the Department of Levelling Up, Housing and Communities. New Council Constitutions: Guidance on Consolidated Regulations for Local Authority Allowances, London: TSO, July 2003, paragraph 72.