About The Council

What a Parish Council Does.

Your Council is a corporate body, a legal entity separate from that of its members. Its decisions are the responsibility of the whole body. The Council has been granted powers by Parliament including the important authority to raise money through taxation (the precept) and a range of powers to spend public money.

Your Council is an elected body in the first tier of local government. Other tiers, known as principal councils or authorities, have many legal duties to deliver services such as education, housing, town and country planning, transport, environmental health and social services. Local councils have the legal power to take action, but they have very few duties and greater freedom to choose what action to take. They can play a vital part in representing the interests of the communities they serve and improving the quality of life and the local environment.

How is Gormsey Parish Council constituted?

Gormsey Parish Council is made up of 5 volunteer Councillors, who receive no monies whatsoever in return for their services, and they are supported by a paid, part-time Clerk. 

Our current Parish Councillors were voted in in May 2023. These Councillors represent all of the electors of Gormsey and have to stand for election every four years.  The Parish Council is not a political body and Councillors do not represent any political party when working for the Parish Council. 

What is Gormsey Parish Council responsible for?

Gormsey Parish Council is responsible for the upkeep of the villages including:

•    Play parks
•    Grass cutting
•    Village maintenance
•    Reviewing Planning Applications
•    Feeding into District and Country Council consultations
•    Liaise with the Police, District and County Council
•    Represent the parish on associated committees
•    Alerting other Authorities regarding problems with drainage, footpaths, bus shelters etc

Other Issues Parish Councils take on

Along with these main points of responsibility, Parish Councils are sometimes involved in planning, highways, transport and traffic, community safety, housing, street lighting, playing fields, litter, seats and shelters, rights of way. Central Government is encouraging local councils to deliver more services and play a greater part in their communities.

Why your local Parish Council is important

There are around 9,000 local councils in England and they are growing in number, especially as councils in urban areas are established. Most local councils were set up in 1894 by an Act of Parliament. This created the civil parish, separating it from the church after its long history of delivering local services such as care for the poor, maintenance of roads and collecting taxes. A typical local council represents around 2,700 people but some have much larger populations.

Who does what on the Parish Council.

The local council needs a range of skills to work as a team. Your Chairman has the role of team leader for Council meetings while your Clerk is also a vital team member. The Clerk provides advice and administrative support, and takes action to implement council decisions. The Clerk may have to act as a project manager, personnel director, public relations officer or finance administrator. The Clerk is not a secretary and is not at the beck and call of the Chairman or other Councillors; the Clerk is answerable only to the Council as a whole. The Clerk is the 'Proper Officer' of the Council in law. Legally Councils can delegate decisions to Clerks because they are trusted professional officers whose objectivity allows them to act for the Council.  The Responsible Financial Officer (RFO) is an officer appointed under section 151 of the Local Government Act 1972, and who is responsible for administering the Council's finances. The RFO is often the Clerk but in our case this is currently a separate post held by a second part-time officer of the Council.

Governance

The village lies within the Richmond UK Parliament constituency. It also lies within the Swale electoral division of North Yorkshire County Council and the Gormsey ward of Hambleton District Council. An electoral ward in the same name exists. This ward stretches north to Danby Wiske with a total population taken at the 2011 Census of 1,761.  In March 2022, there were 560 residents on the electoral roll.

How Much Does It Cost You?

For the year ending March 31st 2023, the Annual Council Tax charge for a Band C property in Gormsey is £1,761.  Of this, the Parish Council accounts for £33.58, or less than 0.02% of the total bill, and which was an increase £2.93 compared with the previous year.  The cost of running the Parish Council therefore works out at less than 50p per week for the average household.

 

Clerk Contact

Gormsey Parish Council

Paul Croft

Tel: 01189 555555
Email: Clerk@gormsey.gov.uk
Address - 53 Gormsey Road, Allerington, NO7 8CE