Social Media and Electronic Communications Policy

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Last Reviewed: January 2024
Next Review: October 2025


1.   Users of Council social media
2.   Principles
3.   Guidance for Town Council Officers on the Use of the Council Social Media
4.   Town Council Website
5.   Town Council Email
6.   SMS (Texting)
7.   Video Conferencing
8.   Internal Communication and access to information within the Council
9.   Third Party social media and Individual Councillor Usage


1.   Users of Council social media

The use of digital and social media and electronic communication enables Spilsby Town Council to interact in a way that improves the communications both within the Town Council and between the Town Council and the people, businesses and agencies it works with and serves.

The Town Council will maintain a Website and Facebook page and uses Email to communicate. The Town Councill will always try to use the most effective way that improves the communications.  Over time the Town Council may add to the channels of communication that it uses as it seeks to improve and expand the services it delivers. When these changes occur, this Policy will be updated from time to time to reflect the new arrangements. This policy will apply to new methods of communication as they develop.

The Town Council Facebook page intends to promote information and updates regarding activities and opportunities within our Town and promote our community positively. Councillors must remember that they are personally responsible for the content they publish on any form of social media.

Approved Town Council social media:

•   Town Council website.
•   Facebook page.

Users of Town Council social media

The Town Clerk is the Town Council’s nominated Press Officer with the authority to issue official press releases. No other member of staff (other than any employee deputising for the Town Clerk) has the authority to issue public statements on behalf of the Town Council.


2.   Principles

•   To publish information about the work of Spilsby Town Council and relevant local information from other agencies to a wider audience.

•   To avoid entering into online debates or arguments about the Town Council’s work.

•   Social media must NOT be used in the recruitment process for employees or new councillors, other than for the sole purpose of placing vacancy advertisements, as this could lead to potential discrimination and privacy actions, as well as breach of data protection issues.

Communications from the Town Council will meet the following criteria:

•   Be civil, tasteful and relevant.
•   Not contain content that is knowingly unlawful, libellous, harassing, defamatory, abusive, threatening, harmful, obscene, profane, sexually oriented or racially offensive.
•   Not contain content knowingly copied from elsewhere, for which we do not have copyright.
•   Not contain any personal information.
•   Official Town Council business and the account will be administered by the Clerk to the Town Council.
•   Social media will not be used for the dissemination of any political advertising.

In order to ensure that all discussions on the Town Council Page are productive, respectful and consistent with the Town Council’s aims and objectives, we ask that you follow these guidelines:

•   Be considerate and respectful of others.  Vulgarity, threats or abuse of language will not be tolerated.
•   Differing opinions and discussion of diverse ideas are encouraged, but personal attacks on anyone, including the Council members of staff, will not be permitted.
•   Stay on topic.
•   Refrain from using the Town Council’s Facebook page for commercial purposes or to advertise market or sell products.


3.   Guidance for Town Council Officers on the Use of the Council Social Media

a.   Councillors must ensure that they are familiar with the guidance that is set out within this policy and that their use of social media is not damaging to the reputation of the Council

b.   Councillors should be familiar with the terms of use on third party websites, e.g. Facebook, and adhere to these at all times.

c.   No information should be published that is not already known to be in the public domain, i.e., available on the Council’s website, contained in minutes of meetings, stated in Town Council publicised policies and procedures, etc.  Where necessary, this should be ratified by the Town Council first.

d.   Information that is published should be factual, fair, thorough and transparent.

e.   Everyone must be mindful that information published in this way may stay in the public domain indefinitely, without the opportunity for retrieval/deletion.

f.   Copyright laws must be respected.

g.   Conversations or reports that are meant to be private or internal must not be published without permission.

h.   Other organisations should not be referenced without their approval - when referencing, link back to the original source wherever possible.

i.   Do not publish anything that would be regarded in the workplace as unacceptable.

j.   Staff and Councillors must remember that they will be seen as ambassadors for the Town Council, and should always act in a responsible and socially aware manner.

k.   Councillors must adhere to the Members’ Code of Conduct and be aware of the risks of action for defamation and the need to respect copyright, data protection, freedom of information and other laws.

l.   Councillors must not use insulting, offensive or racist language or engage in any conduct that would not be acceptable elsewhere. They must show consideration for others’ privacy and for topics that may be considered objectionable or inflammatory.

m.   Social media sites are in the public domain and it is important that councillors are confident about the nature of the information they publish. They must not publish or report on meetings or discussions that are meant to be private or internal to the Town Council.

n.   Councillors must not cite or reference customers, partners or suppliers without their approval.

o.   As members of the public may nevertheless recognise officers as employees of the Town Council, it is important that officers ensure that their personal use of social media is not damaging to the reputation of the Town Council. They must not use insulting, offensive or racist language or engage in any conduct that would not be acceptable elsewhere. They must show consideration for others’ privacy and for topics that may be considered objectionable or inflammatory. 

p.   If an officer receives any threats, abuse or harassment from members of the public through their use of social media then they must report such incidents to the Clerk.

q.   Where officers use social media in a professional capacity to represent the Town Council, the Town Council’s corporate identity will be used and not that of any individual officer. Town Council email addresses will be used. The use will be non-party political.

r.   Officers using social media in this way must respect copyright, data protection, freedom of information and other laws. They must be aware of the risks of action for defamation.

s.   Officers must not use insulting, offensive or racist language or engage in any conduct that would not be acceptable in the workplace or elsewhere. They must show consideration for others’ privacy and for topics that may be considered objectionable or inflammatory.

t.   Officers must not download any software, shareware or freeware, unless this has been approved and authorised by the Clerk.

u.   Failure to comply with the guidelines could result in disciplinary action being taken.

v.   The site is not monitored 24/7 and we will not always be able to reply individually to all messages or comments received. However, we will endeavour to ensure that any emerging themes or helpful suggestions are passed to the relevant people or authorities.  Please do not include personal/private information in your social media posts to us.

w.   Sending a message/post via Facebook will not be considered as contacting the Town Council for official purposes and we will not be obliged to monitor or respond to requests for information or services through these channels. Instead, please make direct contact with the Town Clerk and/or members of the Town Council by email. The official email address is townclerk@spilsbytowncouncil.gov.uk.

x.   We retain the right to remove comments or content that includes: 

i.   Obscene or racist content

ii.   Personal attacks, insults, or threatening language

iii.   Potentially libellous statements

iv.   Plagiarised material: any material in violation of any laws, including copyright

v.   Private, personal information published without consent

vi.   Information or links unrelated to the content of the forum

vii.   Commercial promotions or spam

viii.   Alleged breach of the Town Council’s policy or the law

y.   The Council’s response to any communication received not meeting the above criteria will be to either ignore, inform the sender of our policy or send a brief response as appropriate.  This will be at the Council’s discretion based on the message received, given our limited resources available.  The Town Council delegates the day-to-day administration to the Town Clerk.  Any information posted on the Facebook page not in line with the above criteria will be removed as quickly as practically possible.

z.   Repeat offenders will be blocked from the Facebook page.  The Council may post a statement that ‘A post breaching the Council’s Social Media Policy has been removed’.  If the post alleges a breach of the Council’s policy or the law the person who posted it will be asked to submit a formal complaint to the Council or report the matter to the Police or the external auditor for the matter to be properly investigated.


4.   Town Council Website

Where necessary, those contacting the Town Council may be directed to the Town Council’s website to see the required information, or their question may be forwarded to one of the Councillors for consideration and response. The Town Council do not respond to every comment made or received and there is no obligation to do so. The Town Council will maintain the Website to provide transparency regarding its decisions and will comply with its Publications Scheme.

The Town Council may, at its discretion, allow approved local groups to have a link to their own website or source of information on the Town Council’s Website. The Town Council reserves the right to remove any or all of a local group’s information from the website if it feels that the content does not meet the Town Council’s standards to be on its website.


5.   Town Council Email

The Town Clerk has their own Town Council email address: townclerk@spilsbytowncouncil.gov.uk. The email account is monitored during office hours, and we aim to reply to all questions sent as soon as we can. An ‘Out of Office’ message will be used when appropriate.

The Town Clerk is responsible for dealing with email received and passing on any relevant mail to members or external agencies for information and/or action. All communications on behalf of the Town Council will usually come from the Town Clerk, and/or otherwise will always be copied to the Town Clerk.  All new emails requiring data to be passed on, will be followed up with seeking a data subject’s consent if the information is to be shared before action is taken with that correspondence.

Individual Councillors are at liberty to communicate directly with parishioners about Town Council business in relation to their own personal views, if appropriate, copy to the Clerk. Please note that any emails copied to the Clerk become official and will be subject to the Data Protection Act and The Freedom of Information Act. These procedures will ensure that a complete and proper record of all correspondence is kept.

Do not, without prior consent, forward personal information on to other people or groups outside of the Town Council, this includes names, addresses, email, IP addresses and cookie identifiers.


6.   SMS (Texting) and Messaging Apps

Members and the Town Clerk may use SMS and messaging apps as a convenient way to communicate at times.  All are reminded that this policy also applies to such messages.


7.   Video Conferencing 

If this medium is used to communicate, please note that this policy also applies to the use of video conferencing.


8.   Internal Communication and access to information within the Council        

Spilsby Town Council are continually looking at ways to improve its working and the use of social media and electronic communications is a major factor in delivering improvement. Councillors are expected to abide by the Code of Conduct, Standing Orders and the Data Protection Act in all their work on behalf of the Council.

As more and more information becomes available at the press of a button, it is vital that all information is treated sensitively and securely. Councillors and Staff are expected to maintain an awareness of the confidentiality of information that they have access to and not to share confidential information with anyone. Failure to properly observe confidentiality may be seen as a breach of the Town Council’s Code of Conduct and will be dealt with through its prescribed procedures (at the extreme it may also involve a criminal investigation).

Members should also be careful to ‘cc’ essential recipients on emails i.e. to avoid use of the ‘Reply to All’ option, if at all possible, but of course copying in all who need to know and ensuring that email trails have been removed.


9.   Third Party social media and Individual Councillor Usage                                 

Councillors need to think about whether they are acting in a private capacity, or whether any impression might be conveyed that they are acting for and on behalf of Spilsby Town Council. The Council has adopted a Code of Conduct which is binding on all members. If a councillor uses social media in their official capacity, they should always be mindful of the Code, and of the seven Nolan principles applicable to holding public office - selflessness, integrity, objectivity, accountability, openness, honesty and leadership.  

Do:

a.   Set appropriate privacy settings for any blog or networking site.

b.   Watch out for defamatory or obscene posts from others on any blog or page and remove them as soon as possible to avoid any perception that you condone such opinions.

c.   Be aware that the higher a councillor’s profile is, the more likely it is that they may be seen as acting in an official capacity when you blog or network.

d.   Ensure any Town Council facilities are used appropriately. If using a Town Council-provided blog site or social networking area, any posts made are extremely likely to be viewed as being made in an official capacity.

e.   Avoid publishing any information that could only have been accessed by being in position as a councillor.

f.   Be careful if making points that can be regarded as political, and avoid being specific or personal about individuals.

Don’t:

a.   Blog in haste.

b.   Post comments that you would not be prepared to make in writing or in face-to-face contact.

c.   Use Town Council facilities for personal or political purposes.