Dec 24 2008 by Alistair Watson, West Lothian Courier
AN award winning council is in turmoil as allegations of corruption and sleaze threaten to tear it apart.
Council leader Peter Johnston faces calls for his resignation after Councillor Gordon Beurskens was reported to police over his role in an £8 million planning application for a mixed development scheme at Whitrigg, Whitburn.
Councillor Beurskens, who helps prop up the SNP administration, was working as a consultant for Aftondale Ltd, the firm who lodged the application, while sitting on the local authority’s development committee.
Councillors on the committee must show impartiality on planning applications but the Action to Save St John’s councillor is at the centre of a row regarding a financial interest in the plan being approved.
Despite the plan being rejected by planning officials the proposal was pushed through by councillors at a meeting last month with the casting vote coming from SNP committee chairman Jim Dickson. Councillor Dickson has since stood down from his post pending an independent inquiry.
Graeme Morrice, Labour group leader on the council, claims the allegations of wrong-doing go straight to the heart of the administration. He has called on Councillor Johnston to step down while the police and Standards Commission investigate.
But the council leader called the complaints a politically motivated campaign from the Labour party to discredit his administration.
He added that he was unaware of any substance to the allegations, which will also be investigated in an independent inquiry.
Councillor Johnston continued: “I think it’s important to recognise that the council has no evidence whatsoever to substantiate the claims made by Labour councillors in relation to irregularities by Councillor Beurskens.
“The council has, quite rightly I think, passed them on to the police for them to investigate.
“I would expect any responsible political party to wait for the results of the inquiry before celebrating.
“I am confident that the matters will be fully investigated and he will be completely exonerated.
“The results will be fully published and we will do that in an open and transparent manner and there will be no hiding anything.
“I think the political administration will come out of this clear and clean.”
It has also been revealed that council leader Peter Johnston was copied into e-mails sent to planning staff by Councillor Beurskens in his capacity as a consultant on the Whitrigg plans.
In some he uses choice and threatening language and in one he wrote it would take him “two minutes to change the complexion of a council”.
Councillor Johnston added: “I can’t condone his use of language in the e-mails. It wasn’t appropriate for council officers to be addressed in this way.
“We want the officers working in an environment that they are completely comfortable with.
“I think everyone will learn lessons from this. One of them will be that officers are to be treated with respect and not as political footballs.”
Labour leader, Councillor Morrice, said the council leader couldn’t distance himself from the actions of those members of his administration.
He added: “These actions go to the heart of the administration. It has now been revealed that Councillor Johnston was aware of these alleged wrong doings and did nothing about it. He is therefore complicit.
“Public confidence in the planning system is essential and people need to know that they can trust those who are taking the decisions.
“Before the SNP, Conservative and single issue local hospital councillors took over control of the council from Labour at the election, West Lothian Council was regarded as one of the best politically managed and highly regarded local authorities in Britain.
“Today, this reputation has been left in tatters.”
As the Courier went to press, Councillor Beurskens was unavailable for comment.
A West Lothian Council spokesman commented: “A serious complaint about a planning issue was made to the council. Given the nature of the allegation we have asked the police to investigate. As this is now an on-going enquiry it is not appropriate to comment further.”