Anglesey County Council has been dogged by scandal ever since it was formed in 1996.
| IN PREPARATION |
| THE ROAD TO INTERVENTION It took the Welsh government far too long to intervene in the affairs of Anglesey. |
| THE LORD OF AMLWCH Gareth Winston Roberts OBE is one of the island’s most important politicians. He became a millionaire partly on the back of his council dealings. He also stood by and watched fellow councillors ruin an innocent man who happened to be a business rival … |
| THE GOSPEL ACCORDING TO JOHN ARTHUR JONES Former council official and councillor, John Arthur Jones is one of the island’s most controversial characters. This is the story of a man who considered himself better than Tony Blair. |
| CANNON
BALL Lawyer Lynn Ball is the council’s officer charged with keeping the council on the straight and narrow. But she refuses to answer REBECCA questions about some of her activities. |
| A PLAGUE ON ALL THEIR HOUSES The engine of Anglesey’s troubles is the planning regime. Millions have been made out of the system — this article homes in on some of the more outrageous examples. |
| DURKIN’S LAST STAND Councillor Barrie Durkin is one of the few people to fight against the island’s culture. But his own council has branded him a troublemaker and he’s fighting for his political life. |
He forced the council to appoint a high-powered trouble-shooter to hammer the island into shape.![]() |
| David Bowles
tried to keep the amount he was paid a secret. It took the council
months to reveal his basic daily rate of £1,160 but it still refuses to
say what his expenses are. REBECCA has analysed the council accounts and
has worked out that these add a further £166 a day to the bill Anglesey
ratepayers have to pay. The money is paid to the organisation which
negotiated the contract so Bowles does not receive the full amount. |
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| John Arthur Jones has rarely been out of the limelight. Sacked as a council official in the 1990s after his housing department was hammered by the District Auditor, he was elected to the council in 2004. He then helped form a coalition that generated one controversy after another. |
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| The chalet at Parc Cefni that David Bowles moved into in October 2009. The chalet featured in many TV current affairs programmes. Bowles says he knew his landlord as “Arthur” and did not connect him with John Arthur Jones. |
The Parc Cefni
programmes were produced by REBECCA editor Paddy French while he was
employed as a producer on the ITV WALES THIS WEEK strand. He left the programme in 2008. John
Arthur Jones dismissed these broadcasts, saying they “relied on
repeating the falsehoods and lies put forward by those who have a
personal agenda based on malice and jealousy.” |
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| Council Leader Clive McGregor: had business dealings with John Arthur Jones. |
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John
Chorlton, a long-standing councillor and the chairman of the housing
committee when John Arthur Jones was the director in 1997. He denies
that the housing director talked to him about the contract with the private
investigations agency set up by Clive McGregor, the current Leader of
the council. He criticised REBECCA for asking questions about the
care allowance he has received from the council towards assisting him
with the care of his disabled daughter. She is in full-time council
care. He insisted he was "legally and morally" entitled to the money and that an internal review "could not find anything wrong". He
said we were unfairly dragging his family into the public arena: “It
shows a sign of desperation on your part that you need to use this to
get at me.” |
CENSORSHIP The council has responded to REBECCA questions by attempting to restrict the amount of information it makes available. The
press office, which usually deals with questions from
journalists, appears to have instructions to give as little information
as possible. When REBECCA asked for a photograph of David Bowles,
press officer Gethin Jones told us; “The authority does hold its own
mages of David Bowles. However, we are not inclined to provide these
images for use on REBECCA.” Many other questions are now
routinely passed to Huw Pierce Pritchard, the officer responsible for
implementing the Freedom of Information Act. This process allows the authority to take weeks rather than days to answer questions. Even
this doesn’t seem to be sufficient. Now Pritchard has ruled that the
questions REBECCA asked about the council’s head of legal services
Lynn Ball are “vexatious” and “manifestly unreasonable”. We asked for a review of this deicision which was carried out by Caren Lewis, a lawyer from Lynn Ball's department. She
noted "that the opening sentence of the request 'Happy New Year — it's
certainly going to be an interesting one' is language that is strongly
suggestive of vexatiousness". Needless to say, the review found the decision was valid. REBECCA is appealing this nonsense to the Information Commissioner but, of course, this will take months to hear. Officials are also refusing to answer letters. We wrote to Lynn Ball in January this year. After
three weeks, the council press office said Lynn Ball “had been
instructed not to reply” and the letter had been referred to the
council’s external solicitors.
Anglesey Council Offices: siege mentality. Photo: Barry Davies Finally,
seven weeks after it was sent, David Bowles answered. “Neither Miss
Ball or any other council officer will reply to your letter.” He
added, “our refusal to reply to your letter does not imply that any of
its contents are accurate or that the council or Miss Ball cannot answer
your questions. We choose not to do so.” Bowles added that “your
letter contains and implies a number of scurrilous allegations against
Miss Ball and others” and warns that “Miss Ball reserves the right to
take legal action against you on that account.” REBECCA replied
to Bowles and urged him to answer the questions: “In a democracy,
openness and transparency — especially in an authority as troubled as
Anglesey — are priceless.” There was no reply. We had also written a long letter to David Bowles on January 25. By the time this article was completed he had not replied… |
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| Anglesey Commissioner Byron Davies collecting his OBE in 2008 from the Prince of Wales for services to local government. Davies was chief executive in the Welsh capital during the expenses scandal which cost the city millions of pounds. |
The REBECCA investigation continues…