Title

LEGISLATION

Government urged to allow remote council meetings

Council leaders have urged the Government to rethink the rules to allow remote council meetings.

Council leaders have urged the Government to rethink the rules to allow remote council meetings.

During the initial stages of the pandemic, councils were able to hold official meetings via video conferencing while the country was in lockdown. But when the emergency legislation ran out, councillors were forced back into council chambers.

Now that the government has put Plan B in place to deal with the Omicron variant, which requires people to work from home where possible, the Local Government Association (LGA) has urged central government to ‘urgently bring forward emergency legislation' to allow remote and hybrid meetings.

LGA chairman, Cllr James Jamieson said: ‘Holding face-to-face council meetings, with supporting staff, could easily involve up to 200 people in one room even before adding in members of the public and reporters.

‘This is an unnecessary public health risk for elected members and officers to take when councils have demonstrated over the pandemic that it is possible to hold formal decision-making meetings in a remote or hybrid manner,' he said.

The call follow that of the Association of Democratic Services Officers and Lawyers in Local Government, who called for a change of the rules earlier this month.

LEGISLATION

Regeneration: Developing devolution

By David Blackman | 13 May 2026

UK plans for fiscal devolution, announced by chancellor Rachel Reeves, could significantly reshape how city regions fund transport and regeneration projects....

LEGISLATION

EXCLUSIVE: Whitehall delay to reorganisation legislation

By Dan Peters | 13 May 2026

Reform UK vows to ‘be awkward’ to thwart government plans for local government reorganisation.

LEGISLATION

A calm place in the storm

By Ann McGauran | 13 May 2026

The new leader of England’s place directors, Katie Stewart, talks to Ann McGauran about the need for adaptability, resilience, and a broader basket of skills...

LEGISLATION

Splitting successfully

By Kate Ryan | 13 May 2026

Kate Ryan explains why district disaggregation is LGR’s next challenge, and why sector-wide learning must be speeded up.

Heather Jameson

Popular articles by Heather Jameson