Andrew Moulton

Council: Wokingham

Activity Timeline

Meetings Attended Note this may include planned future meetings.

21 meetings · Page 1 of 5

Standards Committee Officer

Standards Committee - Tuesday, 10th March, 2026 7.00 pm

The Standards Committee of Wokingham Council met on Tuesday 10 March 2026 to review the year's activities and consider an update on code of conduct complaints. The committee noted that the number of complaints remained low, with only one finding of a breach during the 2025/26 municipal year.

March 10, 2026, 7:00 pm
Audit Committee Officer

Audit Committee - Wednesday, 4th February, 2026 7.00 pm

February 04, 2026, 7:00 pm
Audit Committee Officer

Audit Committee - Wednesday, 26th November, 2025 7.00 pm

November 26, 2025
Standards Committee Officer

Standards Committee - Tuesday, 28th October, 2025 7.00 pm

October 28, 2025
Standards Committee Hearings Panel Officer

Standards Committee Hearings Panel - Monday, 15th September, 2025 9.30 am

The Standards Committee Hearings Panel met to consider a report from the Monitoring Officer relating to a Code of Conduct complaint against Councillor Stuart Munro. The panel was scheduled to note the Hearings Panel Procedure as set out in the Council's Constitution, and to consider the Investigation Report into the alleged breach of the Code of Conduct by Councillor Stuart Munro.

September 15, 2025

Decisions from Meetings

1 decision

WBC Consultation response to Remote Meetings and Proxy Voting

From: IMD 2024/15 Wokingham Borough Council response to the enabling remote attendance and proxy voting at local authority meetings consultation, Executive - Individual Member Decisions - Wednesday, 11th December, 2024 1.00 pm - December 11, 2024

For the Executive Member for Finance and Governance to agree the Council’s response to the Government’s consultation on enabling remote attendance for elected members and proxy voting at Council meetings.

Recommendations Approved

Summary

Meetings Attended: 21

Average per Month: 0.8

Decisions Recorded: 1 Not all decisions are recorded, so this may significantly underestimate the number of decisions actually made.