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Next weekend sees the launch of a campaign to
wrest control of Shetland Charitable Trust away from Shetland
Islands Council where it has lain since its inception in the 1970s.
Former Labour candidate Peter Hamilton, one of the gang of four
behind the move - and a self-confessed "political anorak" - sets out
his philosophy for reform.
Peter Hamilton
22 November, 2007
WHY
REFORM Shetland Charitable Trust? The short answer is that Shetland
suffers from too few fingers in too many pies. So at a point when a
big decision about what to do with the people's oil money is taken,
like deciding to buy Viking Energy from the council, there was no
debate between the two bodies, and no reference to the public.
The longer answer to why reform Shetland Charitable Trust is more
complicated, one perhaps for political anoraks. But if change is
thought necessary, there has to be some consideration of what
democratic principles have been breached, so that we can be sure the
new body is likely to be an improvement.
Many people in Shetland, including some trustee-councillors, will
not be familiar with the history of the democratic principles
currently at issue. Before more recent events are considered, it is
worth revisiting some of the arguments that are the basis of our
understandings and expectations of modern democratic governance.
Much has surely been achieved, and at great human cost, since
monarchs declared themselves divinely appointed, and were thus able
to exercise unchecked power over an ignorant and largely powerless
people. But, for the purposes of this piece, and because I am
scarcely an expert, I will focus on the contributions of one or two
key thinkers to guide us through the change from fearful obedience
to our basic expectations of democratic governance.
Act of submission
Thomas Hobbes, writing in the middle of the 1600s, argued we had to
create and then bow to a single source of absolute authority to save
us from infinite bickering and bloodshed - such was his view of
human kind. That act of submission would make us safer than to fail
to bow to authority at all. Because the people will the authority to
exercise power over them, they in turn must not question that
authority. After all, the right of the authority to exercise power
is the people's will. Therefore the powers-that-be can not be
accused of treating its subjects unjustly, or indeed be set aside by
them.
This was circular logic at its worst. Those who went before us chose
such a set up and so we are meant to suffer it unquestioningly.
Surely not? For all some similar ideas still linger on today,
Hobbes's settlement could not last and the various challenges to it
were, later the same century, brought together in the writings of
John Locke.
Status quo
In one sense Locke agreed with Hobbes. People join together to
ensure the preservation of their lives, liberty and property. There
is thus an agreement that binds the people to those who rule over
them. But crucially, for Locke, the agreement cut both ways. For all
the rulers could make demands upon the ruled, the ruler themselves
had to stick within reasonable limits. "If the governing authority
(whatever form it takes) misapplies its powers, the people with whom
it stands in contractual relationship have the right to resist and
depose it." Grayling:259(1)
This idea, that the people must, as and when necessary, overturn the
way things are (also known as the status quo and what has 'aye been'
), now lies at the heart of Western democracy. Others have added
that democracy, as an imperfect beast, requires regular attention,
without which those with power may happily forget to check the
arrangement is still to the people's liking. This echoes older
concerns. A fundamental question used to be asked by Mortimer Manson
in Latin in the council chamber: "Who guards the guards?"
Locke indeed went so far with this idea as to be credited with
paving the way for British Liberalism. He rejected absolute,
arbitrary power, arguing humankind cannot willingly forego
established rights. Helpfully, he stated at the very point [where]
those in power go beyond the limits of their agreement with the
people, when they cease to promote the 'publick good', the agreement
itself dissolves. Once those in power go too far we no longer owe
them loyalty. Our loyalty at that point is to ourselves to assert
our rights; to life, liberty and, critically to us now, to property.
The status quo becomes illegitimate and a new arrangement must be
sought.
No consultation
In this light the whys and wherefores of how the councillors, as
trustees of Shetland Charitable Trust, have acted on behalf of the
people of Shetland are worth revisiting to check if they have tried
to renew the agreement. They haven't. Indeed there has been no
consultation with the people of Shetland regarding their oil money -
their property right. The domination of Shetland Charitable Trust by
councillor-trustees strengthens their power in our community
considerably, even excessively, albeit not to the point that it is
quite absolute.
It is also worth re-considering if and when councillor-trustees have
overstepped themselves. This is a particularly important matter to
which we must give our minds if we are to accept the status quo.
John Scott, as an independent trustee, has given his opinion on this
matter with regard to the purchase of the Viking windmills project,
but there may be other instances worth considering.
So in as much as it could be argued that buying the £1.5m debt of
Viking windmills for £900 is risking the people's money, especially
given a further £3m seems to be at stake, it can equally be argued
that a relatively safe investment in a hospital should have had a
fairer wind.
How convenient
But John Scott's point was more acute than this. He identifies there
is a problem of conflicts of interests. If it is convenient for the
councillors to find a buyer for the Viking gamble, and so discharge
the debt from the council, how much more convenient is it for the
same people then to buy the same non-existent windmills from
themselves? For all the previous council seem to have got themselves
into a bit of a windmill ownership mess, is that really our problem
as beneficiaries of Shetland Charitable Trust?
Are the interests of the buyer really the same as those of the
seller? Common sense suggests otherwise. Yet our advice on this
matter comes from the same people. Our interests as beneficiaries of
the trust are not well served by risky investments obtained without
securing independent advice open to public scrutiny. Our interests
as council tax payers are to be shot of the Viking debt-gamble.
Selecting separate groups of representatives for each set of
interests provides the necessary check on arbitrary and excessive
power. A fully separate body could have determined if the purchase
was really in our interests.
John Scott is open minded about the virtues of the project, but is
deeply troubled as to the process. And it is right that he shares
this. For myself, although it is hard to oppose harnessing renewable
energy for the maxim advantage of everyone in Shetland, I remain
sceptical of the proposal. I just can't see that the goal of
securing maximum advantage for
the people of Shetland has been foremost from the outset. Had that
been the case, low cost renewable power would already be heating the
majority of our furthest flung housing schemes.
Chasing the debt
Regardless of that one issue, we still need to explore the
background to our understanding of conflicts of interests and
separation of powers. But before this I will qualify something Bill
Manson stated last week. He said on BBC Radio Shetland that Shetland
Charitable Trust has been becoming more and more independent of the
SIC. In a cosmetic sense he is quite wrong. If you phone you can now
get put straight through on the council's switchboard.
In a substantive way Bill is partly right. Shetland Charitable Trust
has thankfully been moving away from SIC development issues and the
buying and selling of land etc. via SLAP for some time. But, and
this is a big but, that trust-building trend has been dramatically
reversed by the Viking purchase, which, logic suggests, should have
gone through Shetland Development Trust instead - otherwise why have
such a body?
John Scott's concern, shared by others, is that trustees may now
feel obliged to start chasing the debt. Their ability to make an
impartial decision as trustees on what is in the beneficiaries' best
interests is now plainly compromised by a decision to sell, which
presumably was initiated by them as councillors. Yet their precise
job, as trustees, is to determine what is in our best interests as
beneficiaries, and act upon that above any other consideration.
Checks and balances
Our collective appreciation of the need for a separation of powers,
and the need of checks and balances on power, dates largely from The
Spirit of the Laws, by the Baron de Montesquieu in 1748. He saw
checks and balances as a vital means of checking tyranny. Separate
interests must be represented by separate bodies. Otherwise one
group sits alone acting at the same moment as judge, jury and
prosecution above the hapless accused.
Who then is to ensure fair play? Liberty is threatened where the
same person or body acts
both as legislative and executive. Locke had similarly agreed the
need for such a separation. The writings of both had a profound
impact on the drafting of the constitution of the United States and
informs how we have come to appreciate the fairness of government.
Locke and Montesquieus' approach strengthens the view that justice
not only needs to be done but needs to be seen to be done. Thus
ideas about what is to happen to the people's money need to be
considered and contested in the light of day - not rushed through
without a chance for the people to have a say. That contest can not
adequately happen if only one body is responsible for deciding what
can be considered; yet this is precisely the situation we find
ourselves in when the councillor-trustees themselves determine, as
councillors, prior to meetings of Shetland Charitable Trust, what is
to be brought before Shetland Charitable Trust in advance. I was
shocked to learn last week from John Scott that this is the case. If
it is our cash, why can only they get at it?
Conflict of interest
Expected checks and balances on excessive levels of power may have
been inadequate in Shetland for some time. The issue of conflicts of
interests may thus deserve further scrutiny above and beyond
Shetland Charitable Trust. It is hard, for example, to see how
councillor Betty Fullerton can reconcile her responsibility to
promote our interests as a trustee, as a councillor and as
chairperson of Shetland Health Board, especially when the topic of
the new hospital is being considered. This is not to say she is a
bad person - merely badly advised.
Our interests can be promoted by her as chair of Shetland Health
Board - go get us a hospital.
Our interests can be promoted by her as a councillor - go buy the
Gilbert Bain for council offices.
Our interests can be promoted by her as a trustee of Shetland
Charitable Trust - go find us a good investment.
But all these interests cannot properly be represented by one person
- within whom one interest must prevail above the others.
Rather than the same people changing hats, we need clearly separate
bodies. Rather than cosy chats behind closed doors, we need open
public debate.
So it is that little of what I have restated here as basic
principles essential to transparent democratic governance will be
greeted as welcome news across Shetland. The net required to pull in
all unacceptable conflicts of interests that have developed,
under-checked in Shetland since the arrival of oil, would require a
hefty collective haul. More shots may yet be necessary.
Fairer for all
This leads me to a point which was raised by J.S. Mill in his 1861
work, 'Representative Government'. Mill was concerned about the
tyranny of the majority; that the majority might overstep the rights
of minorities. He thus wanted an experienced (informed), educated
and rational public to elect representatives.
In a fairer-for-all 21st century Shetland, our massive oil wealth
would already have been used to extend the contemporary means of
becoming better informed. The right to access to the internet is
today a vital means for self-education and the accompanied extension
of rights. Whilst current levels of inattention and ignorance may be
convenient for some, there are depths of ignorance evident here
which we should no longer afford.
From all this I hope it is possible for a novice to make a diagnosis
of the difficulties which have beset all recent councils in
Shetland. Our current agreement with those who would wield power
over us on our behalf is plainly out of keeping with long
established (and essentially liberal and democratic) principles
regarding the separation of powers and avoidance of conflicts of
interests which are necessary to ensure efficient governance
and promote fair play. The prescription can hardly be more of the
same. Indeed there is a sincere need to question which doctor to
trust. Any prescription written up by those councillors who would
least willingly surrender their excessive levels of power must
certainly be considered with some caution.
It may be, of course, that there is something inherent in being a
resident of Shetland that means we have surrendered our right to
appropriate governance, but surely this would have been mentioned at
the council election?
A necessary addition to Mill's line of thinking holds - if we value
our rights we should seek to extend them to others. There is no
better way to preserve them than this. So it could be that ideas
like those above, which can be roughly be summarised as 'what has
aye-been can be improved if we demand it from a reasoned basis'
would become more widely appreciated.
To paraphrase a local radical Liberal, Arthur Anderson, we have to
imagine how society should be if we are to improve it. As for the
councillors, their real task might be to consider how to improve
trust in themselves. It may require them to put further trust in the
people.
(1)
A.C. Grayling, Towards The Light, Bloomsbury 2007, London |
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