Tom told he has the right to appealFORMER Mayor Tom Wilson has been granted permission to appeal against his suspension for breaching Nuneaton and Bedworth Borough Council’s code of conduct.
Councillor Wilson was banned from sitting at council meetings for two months after being found guilty of not acting according to the rules during his term of office.
But he appealed to Local Government Standards in England and has been told he can question the judgement.
He has been granted what is known in legal terms as a `stay’ and his suspension is automatically lifted while the appeal process is in force.
A former Conservative member, who now sits as an Independent, Cllr Wilson said: “I am not taking this as an indication that my appeal will be successful.
“But I am delighted that Local Government Standards have looked at my case and decided to give me permission to appeal.”
A standards sub-committee sitting at the Town Hall decided that he was guilty of three breaches of the code of conduct for members while he was mayor in 2009/10.
The sub-committee ruled that he should not have used the mayoral car to attend the opening of a pharmacy at St Nicolas Park, which is the ward he represents, and being photographed in his chain office while using equipment at Nuffield Health Club.
Cllr Wilson was also told he was in breach of the rules for not registering the fact that the health club had given him free use of its facilities for three months, amounting a `gift’ worth more than £25 which has to be declared.
At the time Cllr Wilson said: “The punishment just doesn’t fit the crime. I didn’t expect privileged treatment, but I did expect fair play.”
He insisted that failing to register the `gift’ from the health club was an `oversight’ and that he had apologised to the standards sub-committee.
Cllr Wilson also intends to appeal after being censured and requested to make an apology in the press for refusing to judge a Hallowe’en pumpkin competition as mayor because he feels Hallowe’en is a Pagan festival and is against his religious beliefs.
His suspension from formal council meetings was due to end on February 15, but it was lifted in time for him to chair a meeting of the council’s economic scrutiny committee at the Town Hall last night.
