The alarm was raised by a councillor concerned mourners could be taken in by fraud.
First preference voting revealed a surge in Lib Dem support as the SNP dropped almost 16 per cent and Conservatives under 1 per cent.
In a formal complaint co-chair Craig Duncan backed by the board says the local authority made ‘incorrect and/or misleading’.
On a visit to Dingwall he said ‘I've certainly not seen any evidence of that in the last 50 hours. I've seen quite the opposite.’
The family at the centre of the allegations now just wants to ‘move on with our lives’ but are satisfied their daughter has been ‘vindicated.’
Disabled Councillor Andrew Jarvie appealed his city centre ticket which found ‘the entry sign is not a valid Restricted Parking Zone entry sign.’
He was backed by Struan Mackie who accuses the council of ‘creating a culture of fear and intimidation.’
She says ‘it would be hoped the Scottish Government are actively supporting Police Scotland to enable more patrols to be present on the A9.’
Convener Jackson Carlaw says they ‘can hopefully shed some light’ so ‘there will be no backsliding on the new 2035 anticipated completion date.’
He writes that ‘after nearly a quarter of a century of neglect’ the Scottish Government ‘must do better than the caveated pledge.’
The local authority said ‘suitable and robust arrangements were not effectively put in place at school.’
She says ‘I will be speaking with more third sector organisations and meeting with people to speak about all kinds of issues.’
He hit out at recent statements that dualling may be delayed again by saying ‘if it is allowed to drift then it will drift into never never land.’
MSP Fergus Ewing worries that could ‘threaten the availability of safe provision of other acute services such as trauma.’
The Greens MSP says 'centuries of land management practices have taken their toll, leading to a decline in wildlife and natural habitats.'
Councillors Chris Ballance says 'I hope Audit Scotland will keep the council’s feet to the fire (literally) on this one.'
The council refuses to say what 'approve leave' is or why the top official does not appear to have been at work since at least February 21.
Questions are being asked what is behind the move but the council refuses to say what it means by ‘approved leave.’
The local authority says she is 'currently absent from work' and Gairloch High head Wim Chalmet is taking over for now.
Highland Councillor Karl Rosie is to draft what Alex Salmond says is a 'call to arms' as they highlight significant regional issues.