December didn’t drift gently toward Christmas.
It built, piece by piece, from structural issues and political theatre to silence, exclusion and serious questions about public buildings, safeguarding and money.
Here’s the full December record — in chronological order.
1️⃣ Freeman of the Borough? Or Just Another Round of Political Theatre (5 Dec)
A critique of how Sandwell’s highest civic honour is increasingly handed to political insiders and establishment figures, while decades-long voluntary and community service goes unrecognised.
No criteria. No transparency. No resident voice.
2️⃣ PREVIEW: What Full Council WON’T Tell You — but You Definitely Should Know (7 Dec)
A resident’s guide to the agenda behind the agenda.
Public questions strangled, conflicts undeclared, scrutiny neutered and participation redesigned to be technically possible but practically meaningless.
3️⃣ Sandwell’s Three MPs: A Foundation Document for Accountability (7 Dec)
Residency, property, donors, voting records and silence.
Three MPs, three constituencies, and not one sustained challenge to Sandwell’s documented governance failures.
4️⃣ Sandwell’s Funding Mystery Machine: Scooby-Doo Meets the Consortium (9 Dec)
Satire backed by spreadsheets.
Six-figure grants, missing KPIs, councillor-linked organisations and governance that feels less like oversight and more like performance art.
5️⃣ Swept Under the Rug: Labour’s Motion on Women & Girls (9 Dec)
A forensic critique of a VAWG motion that carefully avoided naming Child Sexual Exploitation — despite Labour having voted against a national grooming gangs inquiry earlier in the year.
6️⃣ Sandwell Council: Another Evening in Wonderland (9 Dec)
Two meetings, one script, zero accountability.
Absent councillors, invisible conflicts of interest, paused webcasts, silenced residents and motions that avoided the most uncomfortable truths.
7️⃣ Friar Park Millennium Centre, FPUV & The Levelling Up Machine (9 Dec)
Millions funnelled into a politically connected building.
A reshuffled partnership board with no explanation.
An MP’s misleading letter — followed by silence.
8️⃣ Follow the Money, Sandwell: The Consortium That Ate the Voluntary Sector (22 Dec)
£1.66 million in two years.
No KPIs. No competitive commissioning.
A voluntary sector increasingly dominated by intermediaries while grassroots groups are told to “partner up”.
9️⃣ Follow the Power, Sandwell (Part 2) (23 Dec)
Money doesn’t move itself.
This post mapped the people, roles and relationships sitting between Cabinet, funded organisations and intermediaries — all declared, all compliant, all concentrating power in remarkably few hands.
π BWA – Follow the Money (Again): Accounts Filed, FOIs Blocked, Trustees Silent (24 Dec)
New accounts, rising staffing costs, high unrestricted reserves and growing cash balances — alongside blocked FOIs and trustees who simply will not engage.
1️⃣1️⃣ Same Circle, Different Bauble: CBO, BWA & the Consortium Christmas Special (24 Dec)
Different logos. Same ecosystem.
Large reserves, shared structures, overlapping roles and familiar accounting patterns wrapped in festive language and goodwill.
1️⃣2️⃣ A Christmas Message – It’s Beginning to Look a Lot Like an Unanswered FOI (24 Dec)
A seasonal round-up of missing minutes, delayed responses, “commercial sensitivity” and transparency politely placed in storage until the New Year.
1️⃣3️⃣ Wednesbury Town Hall – Peace on Earth (Terms & Conditions Apply) (27 Dec)
A Christmas-themed deep dive into Let’s Dance Again, showing a pattern of unexplained exclusions, safeguarding concerns treated as disloyalty, and a public building operating like a private members’ space.
1️⃣4️⃣ BWA – Follow the Silence (Part 3) (28 Dec)
After money and power comes silence.
Emails unanswered. Trustees disengaged. Deadlines ignored.
At this point, silence itself becomes the story.
1️⃣5️⃣ Sandwell’s Improvement Journey™: £1.5 Million, Zero Answers (28 Dec)
Wragge. Cox. Richards KC. Grant Thornton. Commissioners.
Reports commissioned, money spent, findings buried — and accountability quietly abandoned.
1️⃣6️⃣ When “Community” Comes With a Loyalty Clause (Wednesbury Town Hall – Follow-Up) (29 Dec)
New evidence. New patterns. Same themes.
Exclusions without explanation, safeguarding concerns followed by bans, opaque booking practices and financial activity that cannot easily be reconciled with published accounts.
Not allegations — questions that now demand answers.
❄️ December, Summed Up
What began as governance critique ended with serious questions about public buildings, safeguarding culture, financial transparency and how easily scrutiny is treated as disloyalty.
December didn’t create these issues.
It simply made them impossible to ignore.