Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Nottingham Post
Nottingham Post
National
Andrew Topping & Oliver Pridmore

Tom Hollis won't resign from Ashfield council's cabinet after court sentence

Disgraced Ashfield Councillor Tom Hollis has attended his first cabinet meeting since being sentenced in court and confirmed he will not be resigning from the post. The Ashfield Independent, 29, was found guilty of harassment without violence and careless driving during two separate trials at Nottingham Magistrates' Court in September.

He was sentenced at the same court last month for both offences and was handed a 12-month community order and ordered to complete 200 hours of unpaid work. He was also ordered to pay the victims £500 each as compensation, a £95 victim surcharge, costs of £1,000, a fine of £570 and six points were added to his driving licence.

It led to calls from some local politicians for Councillor Hollis to resign from his positions as a councillor on both Ashfield District Council and Nottinghamshire County Council. He represents Huthwaite and Brierley for the Ashfield Independents on Ashfield District Council and is the divisional member for Sutton West at County Hall.

READ MORE: Criticism over building 'lit up like Christmas tree' amid crisis

The Sutton-in-Ashfield councillor is also the portfolio holder for housing on the Ashfield authority – a position he was not relieved of by the council's leader, Councillor Jason Zadrozny. Councillor Zadrozny did, however, sack Councillor Hollis as deputy leader of the council after his guilty verdicts in September.

Now the convicted councillor has attended his first cabinet meeting since the court proceedings ended and revealed he does not plan to step back from his role in the council's administration. Councillor Hollis gets paid £12,238.68 a year in special responsibility allowances for the portfolio holder for housing position, on top of £6,901.68 in standard allowances for being a councillor.

But his sacking as deputy leader cost him slightly more than £3,000 of taxpayers' cash. He also continues to receive a basic allowance of £15,000 for separate role as a Nottinghamshire county councillor.

Speaking to the Local Democracy Reporting Service after the cabinet meeting on Tuesday (November 8), Cllr Hollis said he plans to stay on and continue his work as the portfolio holder for housing. When asked if his actions set a bad example to residents, he said: "I'm a normal human being, I make mistakes like everybody makes mistakes and, when you're in the public eye, there's nowhere to hide.

"I've been humbled by the fact the judge has given me a punishment, but I've got a job to do here at Ashfield Council and the county council." On whether he will apologise to residents for his behaviour and why he is not resigning, he added: "I've been dealt a punishment, I make mistakes and I'm a normal guy.

"I apologise for the people I've hurt, to my own family, to my colleagues who have been embarrassed by what's happened, but there’s a job to be done here and I'm going to keep my head down to do it. I think I'd be letting people down if I didn't do that."

Councillor Hollis could only have been forced from office legally had he been handed at least a three-month custodial sentence by the court. This means he would either have to resign from his elected position or be removed from office by residents during an election, with the next full Ashfield Council poll due in May next year.

The councillor says whether to run in the election is a decision he will "have to make" between now and voters going to the ballot box. In a statement after his sentencing, an Ashfield Independents spokesperson confirmed Cllr Hollis was not being sacked from the cabinet.

The spokesperson added: "The incidents were well over two years ago in a time of high pressure. Since then, Tom has matured and will now continue his job – serving his beloved communities of Carsic, Huthwaite and Sutton."

Councillor Hollis also recently attended his first Nottinghamshire County Council meeting since his conviction. Arriving 40 minutes into the start of a full council meeting on Friday (November 4), Councillor Hollis did not speak at the meeting and abstained on the vote on whether to proceed to consultation on the East Midlands devolution deal.

READ NEXT:

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.