Dacorum Council become first in Herts to return to in-person meetings

Hertfordshire Count Council made a High Court appeal to keep virtual meetings

Author: Scarlett Bawden-GaulPublished 14th May 2021

Dacorum became the first council in Hertfordshire to return to ‘in-person’ meetings.

On Wednesday Dacorum held an in person meeting - after a change in the law meant councils could no longer meet online.

For the past 12 months, Coronavirus regulations have allowed councils to meet – and vote – virtually.

But on May 7 those regulations lapsed and – despite a High Court bid by Hertfordshire County Council to allow virtual hearings to continue – councils now have to meet in the same physical space.

On Wednesday Dacorum Council became the first in the county to meet, since the change in the law, for the annual meeting in which the Mayor and Deputy Mayor are elected.

Partitions were removed to increase the size of the coucil chamber in order to enable social distancing, numbers were limited and seats were placed two metres apart.

Neither the Press nor the public were allowed to attend ‘in person’ – but could watch the proceedings, by arrangement, by Microsoft Teams.

And there were changes in the proceedings such as the wiping down of the mayoral chain and the sanitizing of the Mayoral chair, as the positon was passed from one coucillor to another.

At the meeting Cllr Stewart Riddick was elected as Dacorum’s Mayor and Cllr John Birnie as Deputy Mayor.

After noting that it was the first time the council had met in the chamber since the start of the pandemic, Cllr Riddick said he wanted to focus on Dacorum as a thriving community.

He said he wanted the borough to be known as a place where everyone has the best start in life, where families and young people are welcome, where older people are valued and where the vulerable can get the help they need.

He announced that Mayoral charity for the next 12 months would be DENS, which suports those facing homelessnes, poverty and social exclusion and whose services include a day centre, a hostel and a food bank.

At the meeting retiring Mayor Cllr Terry Douris announced that over the past two years the Mayors charity had raised more than £22,000 for the Sunnyside Rural Trust.

In addition he said £1101 had been raised for the Daisy Cave Foundation and £528 for NHS charities.

Meanwhile Hertfordshire County Council is already making plans for its own annual council meeting on May 25 – which will be their first meeting since the regulations changed.

They are to hold their meeting at the Gordon Craig Theatre, in Stevenage, in order to comply with Coronavirus restritions.

But despie the larger venue the capacity will still be just 86 – just eight more than the 78 councillors elected to the couty council on May 6.

Again neither the public or the Press will be allowed to attend ‘in person’ – but the meeting will be broadcast online.

The county council estimate that the cost of holding the meeting at the theatre – including the £1500 venue hire – will be around £3100.

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