Difference between revisions of "Liz Cameron (Councillor)"

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Further, Cameron declares the following directorships:
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Cameron is remunerated for her work as Vice Chair of Glasgow City Marketing Bureau - the agency responsible for branding Glasgow and developing its tourism strategy (see [[Media:Glasgow_Scotland_with_style_-_The_City_Brand_SEPTE.pdf]]) She is also paid for her work as Vice Chair of Glasgow Cultural Enterprises.
  
Vice Chair, Glasgow City Marketing Bureau (remunerated) - see [[Media:Glasgow_Scotland_with_style_-_The_City_Brand_SEPTE.pdf]]
 
  
Vice Chair, Glasgow Cultural Enterprises (remunerated)
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Highly networked, Liz Cameron declares the following non-financial interests:
 
 
Chair, [[Culture and Sport Glasgow]] (unremeunerated)
 
 
 
 
 
She also declares the following non-financial interests:
 
  
 
*Board member Hutcheson Grammar School
 
*Board member Hutcheson Grammar School

Revision as of 14:45, 7 April 2008

A Member of Glasgow City Council since 1992, Councillor for Garscadden/Scotstounhill, Bailie Elizabeth Cameron is a member of the Scottish Labour Party. She has acted as Deputy Convener of the Women's Committee (1993-95), Arts and Culture (1995-98) and Convener of Culture and Leisure Services (1998-2003). Chair of the Board of Culture and Sport Glasgow, she is in a position to infleunce a wide range of cultural organisations including Scottish Arts Council (Member since 2002), National Galleries of Scotland (Trustee 2002-6) and Glasgow Film Theatre (President). [1]


Cameron is remunerated for her work as Vice Chair of Glasgow City Marketing Bureau - the agency responsible for branding Glasgow and developing its tourism strategy (see Media:Glasgow_Scotland_with_style_-_The_City_Brand_SEPTE.pdf) She is also paid for her work as Vice Chair of Glasgow Cultural Enterprises.


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)


From 2003 to 2007, she was Lord Provost and Lord-Lieutenant of Glasgow. According to an article in the Sunday Times in Scotland, while Lord Provost of Glasgow, 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.' [2] 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.[3]



In 2006, Liz Cameron was made an officer of the Orde des Arts et des Lettres, one of France's leading cultural decorations. [4]

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.'[5]

Notes

  1. Who's Who 2008. A&C Black, London, p. 365.
  2. Fiona McCade Restless Native: If they’re game arrest themFiona McCade The Sunday Times 22 January 2006 (accessed 6/2/08)
  3. Paul Drury ‘First-class travel and 5-star hotels ...the true cost of winning Games’ Mail on Sunday (London) 16 March, 2008
  4. BBC, Lord Provost Honoured by France, 6 July 2006.
  5. Register of Councillors' Interests (accessed 2 march 2008)