Difference between revisions of "Liz Cameron (Councillor)"

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[[Image:Liz_Cameron_2.jpg|thumb|right Bailie Liz Cameron: bonne vivante at the city's expense]]A Member of Glasgow City Council since 1992 and Councillor for Garscadden/Scotstounhill, Bailie Elizabeth Cameron is a member of the Scottish Labour Party.
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[[Image:Liz_Cameron_2.jpg|thumb|right| Bailie Liz Cameron: Voted 2008 Scotswoman of the year by the ''Evening Times'' <ref>Hamilton and Ellis, 'Joy as Liz is crowned Queen of Scotland', ''Evening Times''. 1 February, p.4.</ref>]] A Member of Glasgow City Council since 1992 and Councillor for Garscadden/Scotstounhill, Bailie Liz Cameron is a member of the Scottish Labour Party.
 
 
  
 
==Cultural Interests==
 
==Cultural Interests==
As Deputy Convener  of Arts and Culture (1995-98) and Convener of Culture and Leisure Services (1998-2003), she has been in a position to infleunce a wide range of cultural organisations including the Scottish Arts Council (of which she has been a member since 2002), [[National Galleries of Scotland]] (Trustee 2002-6) and [[Glasgow Film Theatre]] (President).<ref>''Who's Who 2008''. A&C Black, London, p. 365.</ref> She has been a vocal campaigner on behalf of Glasgow's museums, advocating their national status, and involving herself in the Kelvingrove Refurbishment Appeal Trust.
 
  
In March 2007, Cameron was appointed as Chair of the Board of [[Culture and Sport Glasgow]]. As such, her thinking largely coincides with that of its Executive Director, [[Bridget McConnell]] and the pair often travel together.
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As Deputy Convener  of Arts and Culture (1995-98) and Convener of Culture and Leisure Services (1998-2003), Cameron has been in a position to infleunce a wide range of cultural organisations including the Scottish Arts Council (of which she has been a member since 2002), [[National Galleries of Scotland]] (Trustee 2002-6) and [[Glasgow Film Theatre]] (President).<ref>''Who's Who 2008''. A&C Black, London, p.365.</ref> She has been a vocal campaigner on behalf of Glasgow's museums, advocating their national status,<ref>Liz Cameron, 'Glasgow's strategy for galleries' ''The Herald'' 27 April 2001, p.23.</ref> and involving herself in the Kelvingrove Refurbishment Appeal Trust.
  
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In March 2007, Cameron was appointed as Chair of the Board of [[Culture and Sport Glasgow]]. As such, her thinking largely coincides with that of its Executive Director, [[Bridget McConnell]] and the pair often travel together.<ref>Mark Aitken, 'How Bridget McConnell opened a new chapter in free trips contro-versy', The Mail on Sunday 20 February 2005, p.12.</ref>
  
 
==Bonne Vivante==
 
==Bonne Vivante==
Liz Cameron travels the world at Glasgow's expense. From 2003 to 2007, she was Lord Provost and Lord-Lieutenant of Glasgow, during which time she racked up 'travel expenses of £60,000, 11 times the amount spent by her counterpart in Edinburgh, Lesley Hinds. ... The lord provost’s travels included an indispensable trip to New York for its Tartan Day celebrations, at a cost of £17,000. A visit to Sri Lanka after the tsunami racked up another £12,000, though ironically its purpose was to see how relief money raised in Glasgow was being spent.' <ref>Fiona McCade [http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2090-2001319,00.html Restless Native: If they’re game arrest them]Fiona McCade ''The Sunday Times'' 22 January 2006 (accessed 6/2/08)</ref> It would seem that Cameron's luxury travel habits have persisted as part of the Glasgow Commonwealth Games team. As part of a lavish delegation to Melbourne led by Derek Casey, Liz cost the taxpayer £1,877.<ref>Paul Drury ‘First-class travel and 5-star hotels ...the true cost of winning Games’ ''Mail on Sunday'' (London) 16 March, 2008</ref>
 
  
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Liz Cameron travels the world at Glasgow's expense. From 2003 to 2007, she was Lord Provost and Lord-Lieutenant of Glasgow, during which time she racked up 'travel expenses of £60,000, 11 times the amount spent by her counterpart in Edinburgh, Lesley Hinds. ... The lord provost’s travels included an indispensable trip to New York for its Tartan Day celebrations, at a cost of £17,000. A visit to Sri Lanka after the tsunami racked up another £12,000, though ironically its purpose was to see how relief money raised in Glasgow was being spent.' <ref>Fiona McCade [http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2090-2001319,00.html Restless Native: If they’re game arrest them] ''The Sunday Times'', 22 January 2006 (accessed 6/2/08)</ref>
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It would seem that Cameron's luxury travel habits have persisted as part of the Glasgow [[Commonwealth Games 2014]] team. As part of a lavish delegation to Melbourne led by Derek Casey, Liz cost the taxpayer £1,877,<ref>Paul Drury ‘First-class travel and 5-star hotels ...the true cost of winning Games’, ''Mail on Sunday'', 16 March 2008</ref> prompting Matthew Elliott, of the TaxPayers' Alliance, to remark 'There's a big difference between promotional travel and living it up at the taxpayers' expense.'<ref>Paul Drury, '£ 1.7m bill for fun 'n games', The Sun, 17 March 2008.</ref>
  
 
==Glasgow the Brand==
 
==Glasgow the Brand==
Capitalising on her civic pride, Cameron is remunerated for her work as Vice Chair of Glasgow City Marketing Bureau - the agency responsible for coining the term 'Glasgow: Scotland with Style' and for developing Glasgow's tourism strategy <ref>C. Landry (ed) [http://www.glasgow.gov.uk/en/YourCouncil/PolicyPlanning_Strategy/ServiceDepartments/CultureandSportGlasgow/  Glasgow: The People, The Place, The Potential. Glasgow’s Cultural Strategy], Glasgow City Council Cultural and Leisure Services, 2006 (accessed 11 February 2008).</ref>
 
  
Liz is also paid for her work as Vice Chair of Glasgow Cultural Enterprises.
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Capitalising on her civic pride, Cameron is remunerated for her work as Vice Chair of [[Glasgow City Marketing Bureau]] - the agency responsible for coining the term '''Glasgow: Scotland with Style'''<ref>Glasgow: Scotland with Style Brand Guide [[Media:Glasgow_Scotland_with_style_-_The_City_Brand_SEPTE.pdf ]]</ref> and for developing Glasgow's tourism strategy.<ref>[http://www.glasgowtourismstrategy.com Glasgow's Tourism Strategy to 2016]Co-published by [[Glasgow City Marketing Bureau]], Glasgow City Council, Scottish Enterprise and VisitScotland, 2007 (accessed 4 April 2008).</ref> Liz is also paid for her work as Vice Chair of [[Glasgow Cultural Enterprises]].
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==Power and Influence==
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Liz Cameron sits on many influential committees in the city, not least the planning applications committee, so not only does she decide that the city needs a luxury hotel but she also decides which developers secure permission to build it.<ref>Jonathan Paisley, 'Go-ahead for six-star hotel: Councillors back plans to build £125 iconic development, ''Evening Times'', 14 November 2007, p.11.</ref>
  
  
  
==Non-Financial Interests==
 
 
Highly networked, Liz Cameron declares the following non-financial interests:
 
Highly networked, Liz Cameron declares the following non-financial interests:
  
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:Patron of the Glasgow Celtic Society (for the promotion of Gaelic language and Culture)
 
:Patron of the Glasgow Celtic Society (for the promotion of Gaelic language and Culture)
 
On the Register of Councillors' Interests, she declares 'my husband, Duncan F. Cameron, is a Partner of a firm of Educational Consultants, C.M. Associates. It is not without the bounds of possibility that he will, through his company, tender for work that may be local government related.'<ref>Register of Councillors' Interests [http://www.glasgow.gov.uk/NR/rdonlyres/C0F25EE1-14D0-46D7-9618-FD76F31CB8A7/0/REGISTEROFMEMBERSElizabethCameron.pdf (accessed 2 March 2008)]</ref>
 
  
  
Fluent in three languages, Liz Cameron was made an officer of the Orde des Arts et des Lettres, one of France's leading cultural decorations, in 2006. <ref>BBC, [http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/glasgow_and_west/5153780.stm Lord Provost Honoured by France], 6 July 2006.</ref>
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On the Register of Councillors' Interests, she declares 'my husband, Duncan F. Cameron, is a Partner of a firm of Educational Consultants, C.M. Associates. It is not without the bounds of possibility that he will, through his company, tender for work that may be local government related.'<ref>[http://www.glasgow.gov.uk/NR/rdonlyres/C0F25EE1-14D0-46D7-9618-FD76F31CB8A7/0/REGISTEROFMEMBERSElizabethCameron.pdf Liz Cameron]Register of Councillors' Interests  (accessed 2 March 2008).</ref>
  
  
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Fluent in three languages, Liz Cameron was made an officer of the Orde des Arts et des Lettres, one of France's leading cultural decorations, in 2006. <ref>Alan MacDermid, 'France bestows top honour on Cameron', ''The Herald'', 19 April 2007, p.8.</ref>
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
 
<references/>
 
<references/>

Latest revision as of 13:59, 17 April 2008

Bailie Liz Cameron: Voted 2008 Scotswoman of the year by the Evening Times [1]

A Member of Glasgow City Council since 1992 and Councillor for Garscadden/Scotstounhill, Bailie Liz Cameron is a member of the Scottish Labour Party.

Cultural Interests

As Deputy Convener of Arts and Culture (1995-98) and Convener of Culture and Leisure Services (1998-2003), Cameron has been in a position to infleunce a wide range of cultural organisations including the Scottish Arts Council (of which she has been a member since 2002), National Galleries of Scotland (Trustee 2002-6) and Glasgow Film Theatre (President).[2] She has been a vocal campaigner on behalf of Glasgow's museums, advocating their national status,[3] and involving herself in the Kelvingrove Refurbishment Appeal Trust.

In March 2007, Cameron was appointed as Chair of the Board of Culture and Sport Glasgow. As such, her thinking largely coincides with that of its Executive Director, Bridget McConnell and the pair often travel together.[4]

Bonne Vivante

Liz Cameron travels the world at Glasgow's expense. From 2003 to 2007, she was Lord Provost and Lord-Lieutenant of Glasgow, during which time she racked up 'travel expenses of £60,000, 11 times the amount spent by her counterpart in Edinburgh, Lesley Hinds. ... The lord provost’s travels included an indispensable trip to New York for its Tartan Day celebrations, at a cost of £17,000. A visit to Sri Lanka after the tsunami racked up another £12,000, though ironically its purpose was to see how relief money raised in Glasgow was being spent.' [5]

It would seem that Cameron's luxury travel habits have persisted as part of the Glasgow Commonwealth Games 2014 team. As part of a lavish delegation to Melbourne led by Derek Casey, Liz cost the taxpayer £1,877,[6] prompting Matthew Elliott, of the TaxPayers' Alliance, to remark 'There's a big difference between promotional travel and living it up at the taxpayers' expense.'[7]

Glasgow the Brand

Capitalising on her civic pride, Cameron is remunerated for her work as Vice Chair of Glasgow City Marketing Bureau - the agency responsible for coining the term Glasgow: Scotland with Style[8] and for developing Glasgow's tourism strategy.[9] Liz is also paid for her work as Vice Chair of Glasgow Cultural Enterprises.

Power and Influence

Liz Cameron sits on many influential committees in the city, not least the planning applications committee, so not only does she decide that the city needs a luxury hotel but she also decides which developers secure permission to build it.[10]


Highly networked, Liz Cameron declares the following non-financial interests:

Board member Hutcheson Grammar School
Board member RSNO Chorus Trust
Chair: Culture and Sport Glasgow
Chair: Scottish Baroque Ensemble
Concert Hall Vice Chair GCE
Doctor of Glasgow's three universities, Glasgow, Strathclyde and Caledonian
Hon Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons
Member of Jazz Festival Board
Member of National Youth Choir Board
Member of the Board of Westbourne Music
Member the Museums Association United Kingdom
Member: Arches Theatre Co.
Member: City of Unesco Steering Group
Member: Glasgow Film Theatre
Member: Les Rencontres European Cultural Network
Member: North Glasgow College Board
Member: Scottish International Piano Competition
Member: Si Tous Les Ports du Monde
Patron of the Glasgow Celtic Society (for the promotion of Gaelic language and Culture)


On the Register of Councillors' Interests, she declares 'my husband, Duncan F. Cameron, is a Partner of a firm of Educational Consultants, C.M. Associates. It is not without the bounds of possibility that he will, through his company, tender for work that may be local government related.'[11]


Fluent in three languages, Liz Cameron was made an officer of the Orde des Arts et des Lettres, one of France's leading cultural decorations, in 2006. [12]

Notes

  1. Hamilton and Ellis, 'Joy as Liz is crowned Queen of Scotland', Evening Times. 1 February, p.4.
  2. Who's Who 2008. A&C Black, London, p.365.
  3. Liz Cameron, 'Glasgow's strategy for galleries' The Herald 27 April 2001, p.23.
  4. Mark Aitken, 'How Bridget McConnell opened a new chapter in free trips contro-versy', The Mail on Sunday 20 February 2005, p.12.
  5. Fiona McCade Restless Native: If they’re game arrest them The Sunday Times, 22 January 2006 (accessed 6/2/08)
  6. Paul Drury ‘First-class travel and 5-star hotels ...the true cost of winning Games’, Mail on Sunday, 16 March 2008
  7. Paul Drury, '£ 1.7m bill for fun 'n games', The Sun, 17 March 2008.
  8. Glasgow: Scotland with Style Brand Guide Media:Glasgow_Scotland_with_style_-_The_City_Brand_SEPTE.pdf
  9. Glasgow's Tourism Strategy to 2016Co-published by Glasgow City Marketing Bureau, Glasgow City Council, Scottish Enterprise and VisitScotland, 2007 (accessed 4 April 2008).
  10. Jonathan Paisley, 'Go-ahead for six-star hotel: Councillors back plans to build £125 iconic development, Evening Times, 14 November 2007, p.11.
  11. Liz CameronRegister of Councillors' Interests (accessed 2 March 2008).
  12. Alan MacDermid, 'France bestows top honour on Cameron', The Herald, 19 April 2007, p.8.