Skip to content
DHWNEWS
Menu
  • Home
  • About
  • Contact
Menu

Email to DPC Clerk 8-3-2026

Posted on March 8, 2026March 9, 2026 by ecwlarcombe
Good Morning.
I bring your attention to the DPC Social Media, Website and Press Policy.  Section 7: Website – states as follows:
The Website shall, in principle, not contain material of a deliberately contentious, offensive or disputatious nature or material that criticises or implies criticism of one or more members of the public, individual Councillors, groups of Councillors or the Council as a whole. 
 
The following pages on the Datchet Parish Council web site (and then reproduced on social media and in the Press) clearly fail to comply with your own policy.  Please remove them.
Cllr Ewan Larcombe

https://www.datchetparishcouncil.gov.uk/_VirDir/CoreContents/News/Display.aspx?id=75775

https://www.datchetparishcouncil.gov.uk/_UserFiles/Files/Documents/Website%20Statement%20-%20Datchet%20Parish%20Council%20Takes%20Action%20to%20Ensure%20Proper%20Governance%20of%20the%20Datchet%20Recreation%20Centre%20Charitable%20Trust.pdf

https://www.facebook.com/www.datchetparishcouncil.gov.uk/posts/datchet-parish-council-acts-to-dissolve-drcct-committee-to-protect-staff-datchet/1126453722843617/

https://www.sloughobserver.co.uk/news/25112754.datchet-parish-council-dissolves-village-hall-charity-committee/

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recent Posts

  • Email to DPC Clerk 8-3-2026
  • DPC Clerk continues to publish disinformation about the DRCCT
  • RBWM 2026/27 Budget Meeting – Cllr. Buckley
  • RBWM 2026/27 Budget Meeting
  • DRCCT – an open letter to David Buckley

DATCHET

The name "Datchet" is thought to be Celtic in origin, and the last part may be related to cet ("wood"). In the Domesday Book it is called "Daceta".lla. Datchet is first mentioned between 990 and 994, when King Ethelred made small grants of land here.

HORTON

The village name "Horton" is a common one in England. It is Old English in origin and derives from the two words horu 'dirt' and tūn 'settlement, farm, estate', presumably meaning 'farm on muddy soil'.In the Domesday Book of 1086 it was recorded as Hortune.

WRAYSBURY

The village name was traditionally spelt Wyrardisbury; it is Anglo Saxon in origin and means 'Wïgrǣd's fort'. Its name is recorded in the Domesday Book of 1086 as Wirecesberie and as Wiredesbur in 1195. The name is seen again as Wyrardesbury in 1422.

©2026 DHWNEWS | Design: Newspaperly WordPress Theme