Helen Cliff - Councillor for Melton (Melton Sysonby)

Councillor Helen Cliff

Deputy Mayor

Labour Melton Sysonby Melton
Committees & roles

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Activity Timeline

Meetings Attended Note this may include planned future meetings.

40 meetings ยท Page 1 of 8

Audit and Standards Committee Committee Member

Audit and Standards Committee - Tuesday, 28th July, 2026 6.30 pm

July 28, 2026, 6:30 pm
Council Committee Member

Council - Thursday, 23rd July, 2026 6.30 pm

July 23, 2026, 6:30 pm
Council Committee Member

Annual Meeting, Council - Thursday, 21st May, 2026 6.30 pm

The Melton Borough Council's Annual Council meeting saw the election of Councillor Jim Adcock as the new Mayor and Councillor Helen Cliff as Deputy Mayor. The meeting also addressed the council's committee structure, appointments to various bodies, and updates to its constitution and meeting schedule.

May 21, 2026, 6:30 pm
Scrutiny Committee Committee Member

Scrutiny Committee - Thursday, 23rd April, 2026 6.30 pm

The Scrutiny Committee of Melton Council met on Thursday 23 April 2026 to review the council's housing regulatory compliance, the annual report of the Landlord Assurance Board, and receive an update on the Stockyard project. Key decisions included noting the progress made in housing regulatory compliance and the positive impact of the Landlord Assurance Board, and receiving a detailed update on the Stockyard project's development and operational plans.

April 23, 2026, 6:30 pm
Council Committee Member

Extraordinary, Council - Tuesday, 21st April, 2026 6.30 pm

Melton Borough Council held an extraordinary meeting to elect a new leader following the resignation of Councillor Pip Allnatt. After a tied vote between Councillor Mike Brown and Councillor Ronan Browne, the Mayor, Councillor Siggy Atherton, used her casting vote to elect Councillor Ronan Browne as the new Leader of the Council.

April 21, 2026, 6:30 pm

Decisions from Meetings

1 decision

Summary

Meetings attended
40
Average per month
1.3
Decisions recorded Not all decisions are recorded, so this may significantly underestimate the number of decisions actually made.
1