Nicholas Rushton - Councillor for North West Leicestershire (Long Whatton and Diseworth)

Councillor Nicholas Rushton

Conservative Long Whatton and Diseworth Infrastructure Portfolio Holder

Is this you? Claim this page.

Activity Timeline

Meetings Attended Note this may include planned future meetings.

49 meetings · Page 3 of 10

Council Committee Member

Council - Thursday, 19th February, 2026 6.30 pm

February 19, 2026, 6:30 pm
Cabinet Committee Member

Cabinet - Tuesday, 17 February 2026 - 5.00 pm

February 17, 2026, 5:00 pm
Cabinet Committee Member

Cabinet - Tuesday, 3 February 2026 - 5.00 pm

February 03, 2026, 5:00 pm
Cabinet Committee Member

Cabinet - Tuesday, 13th January, 2026 5.00 pm

The Cabinet of North West Leicestershire Council met on Tuesday 13 January 2026 to discuss the Council Tax base for the upcoming financial year, review recommendations from the Scrutiny Committee, and consider a compulsory purchase order for a property on Station Road. The meeting also included a discussion on the council's environmental policy.

January 13, 2026
Cabinet

Cabinet - Thursday, 9th January, 2025 5.00 pm

January 01, 2026

Decisions from Meetings

8 decisions · Page 1 of 2

LGA Peer Review

From: Cabinet - Tuesday, 17th December, 2024 5.00 pm - December 17, 2024

Recommendations Approved

Consultation on Enabling Remote Attendance and Proxy Voting at Local Authority Meetings

From: Cabinet - Tuesday, 17th December, 2024 5.00 pm - December 17, 2024

To consider whether the Council wishes to submit a response to the Government's consultation on enabling remote meetings for Local Authorities

Recommendations Approved

Draft Local Nature Recovery Strategy

From: Cabinet - Tuesday, 17th December, 2024 5.00 pm - December 17, 2024

To agree to the proposal from Leicestershire County Council that the strategy be published for consultation in January 2025.

Recommendations Approved

Summary

Meetings Attended: 49

Average per Month: 1.7

Decisions Recorded: 8 Not all decisions are recorded, so this may significantly underestimate the number of decisions actually made.