Teenage deputy provost for Aberdeen stirs comment
The news that Aberdeen is to have a teenager as
deputy Lord Provost and that two other councillors in their early 20s will take
control of powerful committees on Aberdeen City Council has produced a froth of
coverage in the media.
Given that one of the intentions of the shake up of
Scotland's councils was to get new, younger councillors, then Aberdeen's planned
appointments are surely spot on proof that the intention has been achieved. Long
serving councillors were offered golden handshakes to make way for the new ward
structures and a new proportional representation system of
elections.
Ushering in a new era for Aberdeen
City Council?The young man who is to
deputise for the Lord Provost is Aberdeen law student John West who is 18 years
old. The councillor for Hazlehead, Ashley and Queens Cross will deputise, when
necessary, for the city's new Lord Provost Peter Stephen.
His sister Kirsty, who is just three
years his senior, is the council's education spokesperson while Councillor
Callum McCaig (22) takes up the convenership of the Licensing Committee.
These appointments certainly breathe new
life into a council which, like so many around Scotland, has tended to be
dominated by older people who have reached a position in life where they are
able to give take time away from their employment to serve on the council.
I hope it also brings a fresh approach
and some much needed dynamism. Our local councils are good at 'talking the talk'
about the future development of our city (remember Aberdeen Futures, the Urban
Realm and now the Bon Accord Quarter), but many of these drift into history
leaving no trace.Now is the time for
action and with the added energy, fresh thinking and challenging of established
ways, from our younger eager councillors perhaps we will see some
action?
• How are we going to extend Aberdeen's role
as the oil capital or Europe?
• How are we going to turn Aberdeen into a
wider energy centre of excellence?
• How are we going to make Aberdeen a more
enjoyable and competitive place to live and do
business?In doing so we need fresh
thinking to sweep aside tired political dogma and plan for the real world and
real people. One classic example is transport and how to encourage people to
come back into our city centre. I know
it's asking a lot of our new younger local politicians, but I hope they can stay
away from the attitudes of "that is how we do things, because that is how they
have always been done".Let's see some
novel, ambitious and enterprising civic leadership that will shape the Aberdeen
of the 21st (and 22nd) century.
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Posted: Thu - May 17, 2007 at 01:44 PM