News
Councillors condemn embattled chief
CHIEF EXECUTIVE PENSION PAYMENTS SCANDAL
FOLLOWING the publication of the WAO report last week, The Pembrokeshire Herald can confirm that Dyfed Powys and South Wales police forces are seeking legal advice from the Crown Prosecution Service about whether there is any evidence to support criminal charges in relation to unlawful pay supplements given to Pembrokeshire County Council Chief Executive Bryn Parry Jones and Carmarthenshire County Council Chief Executive, Mark James.
The Pembrokeshire Herald now understands that the referral to the police was made by Plaid Cymru MP Jonathan Edwards, who wrote to the chief constables of Dyfed Powys and South Wales police forces.
Meeting due to be held
WITH THE County Council due to hold a special meeting to consider the report within the next three weeks, it is unclear whether the intervention of the authorities will have any effect on the timing of such a meeting.
In light of dithering at the head of the Council and no sign of a date being set for the crucial meeting, a motion has been submitted for an emergency meeting to discuss the report’s content.
One question that any meeting must address is whether Bryn Parry Jones will be compelled to repay the unlawful pay supplement he has received over the last two years. While the County Council has the power to request repayment of any and all sums paid under the tax dodging scheme, it is not clear whether it will – in fact – do so. In addition, it is not clear whether any personal tax penalties will have accrued to the tax dodge’s beneficiaries.
Councillors tell Herald “Bryn should go”
COUNTY councillors across the political spectrum have already been in touch with The Pembrokeshire Herald giving their views as to the future of controversial chief executive, Bryn Parry Jones. The majority of those who have provided their opinion is in favour of the Council setting up its own investigation into the affair and suspending their CEO while the investigation takes place.
Some Pembrokeshire councillors have also called for the suspension of those who sat on the Senior Staff Committee that approved the unlawful payments to Bryn Parry Jones in September 2011.
Second officer shielded
PEMBROKESHIRE County Council continues to refuse to reveal the identity of the second officer who has benefited from the unlawful payments agreed by the Senior Staff Committee. A Council spokesman told The Pembrokeshire Herald:
‘We are not prepared to identify the second staff member who took up the new pension arrangements agreed on September 28, 2011.’
The Pembrokeshire Herald understands that the Council’s refusal to disclose the identity of the second staff members is simply delaying the inevitable revelation of their identity when it publishes its annual accounts. It was the appearance of the Chief Executive’s name in the authority’s accounts that gave rise to the current and ongoing scandal.
Leader’s email row
AS THE storm over the unlawful payments made to Bryn Parry Jones continues to rage around County Hall, a communication sent to IPPG members using the Council’s own IT infrastructure has caused further controversy.
IPPG leader Jamie Adams sent the email below from his County Council email address.
The email, which seeks to reassure members of Cllr Adams’s IPPG party, is a response to the scandal that has engulfed the Council over an unlawful pay supplement implemented to help senior officers avoid tax on their publicly-funded pensions.
The Pembrokeshire Herald understands that, in using his Council email address, Cllr Adams has potentially broken rules about the use of Council emails for party political purposes.
We were notified of the email’s existence by Hakin Cllr Mike Stoddart, who has also published the story on his website.
The use of the Pembrokeshire County Council facilities for party political purposes has been a past cause of significant controversy for the supposedly “independent” IPPG. Former Councillor and IPPG Cabinet member David Wildman was heavily criticised by the Ombudsman for using Council IT facilities for party ends: “During the investigation the Ombudsman considered the twenty three files containing election literature for former colleagues … Councillor Wildman accepted at interview that he was recorded as being the author or the last person to have saved the files, and that he used Council computer systems to create the election material. He said that he had been given election material because some candidates had difficulty working computers and that he had prepared their manifestos.”
Having resigned before the publication of the Ombudsman’s report, Cllr Wildman escaped further censure. The Pembrokeshire Herald understands, however, that the Ombudsman is to consider the activities of a separate and current Cabinet member in relation to the same conduct.
The use by Cllr Adams of the Council’s own infrastructure to transact party business appears to be a similar breach of the rules as that in which Cllr Wildman became embroiled.
A spokesperson for Pembrokeshire County Council told The Pembrokeshire Herald:
“The Monitoring Officer has confirmed that elected Members are allowed to manage group business using Council resources to facilitate Council business. This applies to all political groups.”
Carmarthenshire set the date
ACROSS the border in Carmarthenshire, the Council have adopted an aggressive and assertive approach to the Auditor’s findings of unlawfulness.
The date has been set for an extraordinary meeting for Carmarthenshire County Council to debate the Wales Audit Office reports.
The Leader and Executive Board have called for the meeting which has now been agreed by the Chair of Council Cllr Terry Davies. It will take place on Thursday, February 27, and the only items on the agenda will be reports regarding the two WAO issues.Council Leader Cllr Kevin Madge said: “It has been difficult being unable to speak out, particularly knowing the full facts and having seen all the evidence, it will be a great relief to be able to share that with all county councillors and with the public.”
Evidence relating to the two issues is being shared with all county councillors in advance of the matter going before council. This includes advice from QCs and previous communication with the Wales Audit Office.
Carmarthenshire Council has also published the advice of Tim Kerr QC relating to the costs indemnity it gave to its own Chief Executive, Mark James to bring a counterclaim for libel against Carmarthenshire blogger Jacqueline Thompson.
Carmarthenshire County Council instructed Mr Kerr, a specialist in local government law, jointly with Pembrokeshire County Council in relation to the pensions tax dodge that bother authorities passed entirely coincidentally in 2011. It is not clear why the tax dodging advice has not been published, although the nature of the joint advice means that both Pembrokeshire and Carmarthenshire would have to agree to its publication.
Crime
Currys worker denies stealing £2,500 of store stock
Trial listed after alleged theft of iPads, iPhone, AirPods and other electrical goods
A CURRYS worker accused of stealing more than £2,500 worth of stock from the Aberystwyth store has denied the allegation.
Megan Ihle, aged 25, of Flat 3, Pembroke House, Queen’s Road, Aberystwyth, appeared before Aberystwyth Magistrates’ Court on Thursday (Jun 11) for a further case management hearing.
She is charged with theft by employee, contrary to sections 1 and 7 of the Theft Act 1968.
The charge alleges that on December 14, 2025, Ihle stole items belonging to Currys at Llanbadarn Fawr, Aberystwyth, with a total value of £2,567.98.
The items listed include a Nintendo Switch Luigi’s Mansion 2 game, a USB-C stick, two Apple iPads, an iPhone Air, Apple AirPods 4 and an Apple Pencil.
Magistrates directed the defence to file and serve an expert report by 4:00pm on July 3.
Ihle was remanded on conditional bail. Her bail conditions include not entering Currys PC World, Llanbadarn Fawr, unless invited by managers for matters connected to their investigation or other requirements.
She is due to stand trial at Aberystwyth Magistrates’ Court on August 6 at 2:00pm. The trial is expected to last three hours.
Community
Fire service announces summer events across Pembrokeshire
PEMBROKESHIRE residents will have the chance to meet local firefighters, support station-led fundraisers and enjoy a series of community events over the summer.
Mid and West Wales Fire and Rescue Service has announced a busy programme of open days, car washes and public events across the region, with several taking place in Pembrokeshire.
The first local event will be a car wash at Crymych Fire Station on Saturday (Jun 27), followed by another at Milford Haven Fire Station on Sunday (Jul 19).
Narberth Fire Station will then host an open day on Tuesday (Jul 21), giving members of the public the chance to meet crews and learn more about the work of the fire service.
Pembroke Dock Fire Station will hold its open day on Wednesday (Jul 29), followed by Tenby Fire Station on Wednesday (Aug 5).
Firefighters will also be present at the Pembrokeshire County Show on Tuesday and Wednesday (Aug 19-20), before Haverfordwest Fire Station hosts an open day on Saturday (Aug 29).
The service said its community-based events offer “a warm welcome to all” and provide “a great opportunity to connect with your local firefighters and support their station-led events.”
Other events across Mid and West Wales include car washes and open days in Tumble, Montgomery and Brecon, as well as appearances at the Royal Welsh Show and the National Eisteddfod.
Full details of all open days, events and activities are available on the Mid and West Wales Fire and Rescue Service website.
The service also shares updates on its Facebook and Instagram pages.
News
Row over ‘white privilege’ wording in Welsh Government anti-racism documents
A ROW has broken out over the use of the term “white privilege” in official Welsh Government documents.
Conservative Senedd Member Andrew RT Davies has criticised Plaid Cymru ministers for continuing to use the phrase in material linked to the Anti-Racist Wales Action Plan.
Mr Davies, who represents South Wales Central, raised the issue in a written question to Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Social Justice and Equality Sioned Williams.
He asked why official Welsh Government documents use terms including “white privilege”.
Ms Williams replied: “The Welsh Government uses terms such as ‘white privilege’ to reflect well-established evidence and language used in equality research and policy.”
Mr Davies said: “Plaid Cymru separatist ministers should not be promoting the concept of white privilege.
“A House of Commons Select Committee found the term may have contributed to the systemic neglect of white people facing hardship.
“All references to white privilege in Welsh Government documents must be removed.”
A 2021 report by the House of Commons Education Select Committee said the term “may have contributed towards a systemic neglect of white people facing hardship who also need specific support.”
However, supporters of the term argue it does not mean all white people are wealthy or free from hardship. They say it refers to the idea that white people do not face additional barriers caused by racism in the same way as people from ethnic minority communities.
The Welsh Government’s Anti-Racist Wales Action Plan is intended to tackle racism and inequality across public services, employment, education, housing, health and other areas of Welsh life.
The Herald has asked the Welsh Government for further comment.
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