Parish Council


What is a Parish Council?

Parish councils are the lowest tier of government in England. They are no longer anything to do with the church, although they were in times past. The parish council is responsible for a parish, a small area normally enclosing one community. If the community is sufficiently large the council may be called a town council, rather than a parish council but its responsibilities and powers are identical. In some small parishes there is no parish council, just an annual parish meeting.

The next tier above parish councils is the district council, which covers a much wider area, and above that comes the county council. As town councils sometimes exist as an alternative to parish councils you sometimes find city councils in place of district councils, Wealden being an obvious example.

Not every community has a parish council. Finally, the last re-organisation of local government introduced the concept of unitary authorities combining the function of district and county councils.

The parish can get money from its residents in the form of a "precept", which is added to the figures requested by the county council, the police authority and the district council and is then collected by the district council in the council tax (previously called the community charge or "poll tax" and, before that, the rates).

Who is on the Parish Council ?

Here is a list of the current Parish Councilors for Pevensey & Pevensey Bay (You can use the BT online directory to find their Address & Telephone number)

Norman Donald Beaney

Retired British Telecom Supervisor

 

Carole Ann Clark

   

Susan Elizabeth Crosby-Jones

   

Maurice Hugh Gilbert

   

John David Grout

Retail Manager

Chairman

Pamela Gyton

Justice of The Peace, Teacher, Retired

 

Christine Pollard

   

Robert Alistair Slater

   

Terence Swales

   

Sheila Taylor

Retired Teacher

 

Mrs Smith

co-opted

 

Mrs Privet

co-opted

 

Mr Sear

co-opted

 

Have a read of "code of conduct local councils.pdf", this tell you what the Council should and should not do.


Updated: Thursday, September 8, 2005 9:51