What does EDDC Leader Paul Diviani know about the Brown investigation?

There seems to be some confusion.

When he was asked by Cllr Susie Bond at last week’s Full Council meeting (23rd July) for an update on the police inquiry into the activities of ex-councillor Graham Brown, Cllr Diviani replied: “Along with everyone else, I await hearing from the Police on the outcome of their investigation”.

Strange, therefore, that he was able to confidently tell an EDA member in June that the inquiry was about to conclude with no finding of wrongdoing against Mr Brown? “There is no evidence”, he said.

Stranger still, where did M.P. Hugo Swire’s office get the same information, which was passed on to another member of the public some weeks ago?

Disgraced ex-Councillor Graham Brown: Express and Echo update

Good precis of the current situation here

http://www.exeterexpressandecho.co.uk/Police-confirm-investigating-East-Devon/story-22045324-detail/story.html

One has to wonder why this is taking so long. The original story broke on the front page of the Daily Telegraph in March 2013

see here
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/9921344/Councillors-for-hire-who-give-firms-planning-advice.html

and here:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/9921333/If-I-turn-a-green-field-into-an-estate-then-Im-not-doing-it-for-peanuts.html

Information Tribunal rules on councils keeping employee grade criteria secret: they can’t

Bradford Council loses its appeal as they tried to stop an employee finding out how posts are graded:

The council had originally argued against disclosure under s. 43(2) FOIA (prejudice to commercial interests) but at the tribunal changed this to claim an exemption under s. 36(2)(c) FOIA (prejudice to effective conduct of public affairs).

Bradford argued that disclosure would lead to “a risk that a proportion of applicants will exaggerate the responsibilities of the post which could then result in an undeserved higher grading” and that were the methods published there would be an incentive for a significant proportion of the 3,000 or so staff to whom its ‘Professional Scheme’ applied to make fresh grading applications.

The resulting applications would “themselves place a significant burden on the authority’s resources and would be likely to thereby prejudice the effective conduct of public affairs,” it argued.

The council suggested that the balance of the public interest favoured non-disclosure.

But the Information Commissioner said that even where applicants do not know the criteria upon which their posts will be graded, it was still open to them to speculate on this and non-disclosure could not, therefore, sensibly be said to prevent exaggeration by applicants.

The idea that disclosure would lead to an increase in exaggeration was merely a hypothesis unsupported by evidence, it said.

If employees did exaggerate, this would not necessarily create a cost burden for the council since a single evaluation might apply to a number of individual post-holders.

It was therefore unlikely to be the case that each individual application would need to be dealt with separately, the Commissoner said, adding that transparency – as guidance from the Equality and Human Rights Commission made clear – was “the cornerstone of a non-discriminatory pay structure”.

The tribunal said it agreed with the Commissioner and the requester in their analysis of the public interest test, concluding that there was a significant public interest in favour of disclosure of the disputed information.

“Further we are not persuaded that there will be any significant damage to the public interest by disclosure,” it added. “In particular we are not persuaded that such risk of exaggeration by applicants as does occur is either increased or altered in any way that cannot be dealt with in the normal scope of the Human Resources work. [The council’s single status project manager] conceded that exaggeration is commonplace in any event.

“We find little tangible evidence of the nature or extent of the perceived increase in applications or in difficulties that would arise in dealing with any increase in the number of applications as a result of disclosure. Again we find little evidence about the increase in the financial burden that the council might suffer over and above that which will be incurred in the transfer that is already planned.”

http://localgovernmentlawyer.co.uk/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=19458%3Atribunal-tells-council-to-disclose-criteria-used-for-grading-positions-of-employees&catid=57&Itemid=25

It seems that the push is for greater transparency …..

Musings on the damage being done to the countryside by the National Planning Policy Framework

A thoughtful article in today’s Western Morning News:

http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/Region-threat-building-countryside-easier/story-22044503-detail/story.html

Perhaps if we re-designated our green fields as “green manufacturing industries” and our tourist industry as “coastal and rural economic growth generators” we might get some people to understand why they are so important.

As both our local MPs are “hunting, shooting, fishing” men perhaps they could weigh in on our behalf?