This week’s “View from “…editorial in full

Does politics work for locals?

IN all the years I have been doing this job (too many according to my critics out there), I can’t remember a time when there was so much dissatisfaction with local government. Why is this?

You won’t be surprised, but I have a theory.

When I first started covering rural and borough councils in East Devon and occasionally Devon County Council, 50 years ago, politics had very little to do with it. We were all aware that East Devon was predominantly blue but the focus was very much on serving the electorate.

Councillors got little or no expenses and the officers were not paid such exorbitant salaries. Debates were not dominated by groups of politically affiliated councillors, with members of other political shades marginalised, and there were no grand titles such as “portfolio holders”. Matters were dealt with by committees where all councillors had an influence.

With the exception of town councils, being an elected representative today is as much a career as it is a service for many. I am not denying the amount of hours our councillors at district and county level put in, or questioning their commitment to their communities, but generally they are compensated for their efforts, especially the more capable and ambitious members who climb the political ladder. Some of them receive far in excess of the average weekly wage in this area.

I’m not talking about every councillor. I noticed when Googling councillors expenses, when I started thinking about a theme for t his week’s column, that one long serving councillor claimed only £12.50 last year.

Times change and the reorganisation to create the current three-tier system (county, district and parish/town) back in 1974 was deemed necessary. Like it or not, local government is in the politics game and it will always be that way.

This became clear to me last week after I compared the different interpretation being put on the summoning of EDDC chief executive Mark Williams to a Commons Select Committee to answer question on electoral procedures. Having read the Hansard transcript of proceedings, it didn’t seem to me that it was a wholly enjoyable experience for Mr Williams.

One district councillor emailed me to say he was “mildly disappointed” with the view I had taken but then, incredulously, went on to criticise the “tame” spin put out by his own council’s communications team. His words, not mine.

Talk to most people and they have no real interest in local government (it was ever thus) but those who have are pretty disillusioned. Controversy rages in most of the towns in Pulman’s Country at the moment but there is little faith in the ability of our elected representatives to find solutions.

I think there is also a degree of frustration among a number of long serving councillors, with some of them having already decided not to seek re-election when we go to the polls next May. The big question is: will their replacements do any better?

http://www.viewfromonline.co.uk

Seaton Heights Hotel complex: is it ready to start building?

The developer says yes:

http://lymebayleisure.co.uk/seaton-heights/

but EDDC says no: the site is listed as “awaiting decision” because no Section 106 agreement has yet been signed.

These can take months so perhaps Seaton should not bring out the champagne just yet.

Just in case our Overview and Scrutiny Committee don’t understand what they are supposed to do …

… here is a brief outline from Wikipedia, together with the relevant laws, that give Overview and Scrutiny Committees great power to scrutinise members and employees of the council and representatives of other organisations and the freedom to discuss “any issue which affects the local area, or the area’s inhabitants, whether or not it is the direct responsibility of the Council’s Cabinet“.

Please do note that Chief Executive Mark Williams cannot bend or break these laws – YOU have the power here, not him.

“Holding decision-makers accountable

“Overview and scrutiny committees are empowered to question elected members who sit on the council’s Cabinet and council employees,[5] and representatives of certain other organisations,[6] and to make recommendations to those people. Committees are able to investigate any issue which affects the local area, or the area’s inhabitants, whether or not it is the direct responsibility of the council’s Cabinet[7]

By law, Overview and Scrutiny must have the right to ‘call-in[8] decisions – i.e. ask the decision-maker to think again, or to refer the decision to the full council if it is believed that the decision-maker has taken a decision in contravention of the council’s budget or policy framework.[9] To be called in, decisions usually need to be “key decisions”.[10]”

Notes:

 

Source:  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Overview_and_Scrutiny#Overview_and_Scrutiny_in_England

 

 

25% of Homebase stores to close – rumours include Honiton store

Rumours abound on the internet that this includes stores at Honiton, Tiverton, Barnstaple, Bodmin, Plymouth and Taunton, though some stores may re-open quite quickly as “The Range” stores.

Source: http://www.diyweek.net/news/news.asp?id=16058

 

Any progress with new Local Plan?

EDDC has not updated the Local Plan Inspector since the end of August 2014.

Memo to EDDC:  he might appreciate an update from you.

Or are you afraid that, because you are obliged to publish any correspondence with him straight away, there are things you would rather the public didn’t know?

Cranbrook now part of Exeter according to Stagecoach

… The Exeter Megarider zone is being extended to include the new town of Cranbrook, with the cost of a daily ticket falling from £5.50 to £3.60 and the cost of a weekly ticket reducing from £20 to £14, savings of 35 per cent and 30 per cent respectively.

….. Stagecoach South West’s managing director, Michael Watson, said: “Exeter is a real success story with the city growing at an exponential rate and more and more towns forming part of the catchment area.”

 

So, if people from other parts of East Devon want to work at Skypark and use public transport to get there, they will pay substantially more than the people of Exeter or Cranbrook to get there.

“Economic growth” – well, for some, yes, for others – not a chance.

Source: http://www.cranbrookherald.com/news/stagecoach_announce_cranbrook_bus_fare_reduction_1_3813376

The law of unintended consequences?

“In East Devon, the ratio of house prices to incomes is 11.2, with the average salary of £22,870 dwarfed by the average house price of £256,312. …
…  In rural and coastal areas, the situation is even worse. With beauty spots commanding premium house prices and attracting wealthy second home owners, spiralling prices are forcing young people to move elsewhere.
… As more people in the region are priced out of buying a home, the number of private renters is increasing. As well as having short-term contracts that offer little stability, private renters in the South West are spending over a third (35 per cent) of their earnings on rent – the third highest rent-to-income ratio in the country.”
So, just remind us:  who are we building these houses for:  local people on low wages, people from outside the area with lots of money, or buy-to-let landlords cashing in?

Source:  http://www.exeterexpressandecho.co.uk/New-warning-South-West-housing-affordability/story-23340903-detail/story.html

Too much time in warm rooms with closed doors …

rain

In hindsight, might Council Leader have done better than appear on TV in Feniton on a cold, very wet and very windy day dressed in a lightweight suit? And where the BBC presenter had to shelter him under her umbrella.

While other outdoor contributors were dressed in fleeces and wellies and had on sensible rainwear, he must have felt extremely miserable.

He appeared to have just got out of his car without a thought for what the outdoor weather was like.

That’s what comes of running a council from warm offices where most of the time doors are firmly shut because most of the endless meetings are secret!

Beware “self help” when funding is cut

Today’s Midweek Herald carries a story that the residents of Uplyme, with the help of East Devon District Council, did work along a stream to lessen the risk of flooding. Unfortunately, although this has helped, it may now mean that they will find it hard or impossible to apply for grants for major works to improve the situation further.

EDDC councillors start to wake up

Rather like Sleepimg Beauty some previously somnolent EDDC councillors appear to be waking up after spending most of their time during this current council asleep.

They are popping up at parish council meetings (particularly to support current planning applications) and their photographs are appearing like a rash in local newspapers.

It wouldn’t have anything to do with council elections getting closer and still no six year land supply would it?

Would this also explain the sudden decision to extend Cranbrook by a further 25% from 6,000 houses to 7,500?

Speaking of which, a new wheeze seems to have made an appearance. We have heard of a local councillor asking EDDC for details of pre-application advice to an applicant and being refused and told to submit A Freedom of Information request – the due date for which would mean the answer (if indeed there was one) would arrive after the application had been to the Development Management Committee!

Feniton and Wain Homes on “The One Show” yesterday

Still available on iPlayer.

Basically, Wain Homes say they have not installed the attenuation tanks that should have bedn installed BEFORE any home was occupied because they want to install different ones. Six houses are now occupied, likely to increase to 15 by Christmas.

Why have the tanks not been installed?

Because Wain Homes intend to extend the site with more houses and to do so will need bigger or more tanks.

Just one problem: they have not submitted further plans for more houses and the Planning Inspector recently ruled that only the current number was sustainable (in part because of the tanks) in the village.

Wain Homes refused to allow the BBC reporter on their site and refused a comment.

A Google search on Wain Homes will show that this is by no means the first time that they have courted controversy … particularly in Cornwall.

Thank heavens the district councillor for Feniton is hard-working Susie Bond and not its former incumbent disgraced ex-councillor Graham Brown, under whose watch huge numbers of houses were planned for the village with no apparent discouragement from him – indeed he was often absent from crucial meetings and did not speak up for residents at council meetings where they were discussed.

At the time he was Chairman of the East Devon Business Forum and had been Chairman of the first Local Plan Panel (2007-2011) whose work was thrown out by the incoming council in 2011 only to see their plan similarly thrown out earlier this year by the Planning Inspectorate.

Had we had a Local Plan in place it is unlikely that the current situation would have happened at all.

The “View from” local newspapers – the voice of the people … and how they roar!

It is hard to choose from the articles and letters in this week’s FREE “View from” publications. Simply Google “View from” and Honiton, Ottery, Seaton, Sidmouth, Axminster, Colyton etc and you will get the full digital edition on your computer.

The editorial from its editor, Philip Evans, is one of the best we have ever read, bemoaning the fact that, once in the dark and distant past, the political colour of district councillors was an almost total irrelevance – all councillors doing their best for the district and the particular towns they served. He points out that now it is simply politically-charged wrangling and insults with more insidious behaviour too – the destruction of public speech and accountability and a sense of some councillors doing the job more for the money than as a public service.

Elsewhere the newspaper reports on issues such as the hospital bed closures in Axminster, the new governance of the Beehive in Honiton and the still-pervasive sewerage issues in Ottery St Mary.

The Letters page is an absolute cracker too – stinging criticism of the reduction in public speaking at planning committees, a riposte from one Axminster councillor to another when Councillor Moulding accused Councillor Heywood of bad conduct on a personal Facebook page where he dared to make comments about the state of play in Axminster at the moment and a condemnation of the new parking extension for the main Seaton car park to serve the new visitor centre which destroys several mature trees on a green space.

If you do not have a copy rush out and get one – it is a beacon of what true local journalism should be – unafraid and unbowed.

Are you a property development solicitor? EDDC has a job for you

Job Description

£33,998 – £37,578 per annum (plus Market Supplement of £1,239)

East Devon District Council is ambitious for our district and our residents. We live in a beautiful part of the world, with much of our landscape falling into an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty. As well as delivering great services every day, we plan carefully for a sustainable future by delivering quality jobs and good local homes for local people.

Joining our talented legal team, you will support our Corporate Legal and Democratic Services Manager in providing a highly efficient and effective legal service. You will offer your first-class legal advice mainly in property development and regeneration work to our council officers, committees and sub-committees outside bodies. You will draft, negotiate and complete related legal documents, as well as establishing and maintaining partnership agreements.

A qualified solicitor, you will bring plenty of in-depth knowledge in property development/regeneration. With relevant experience in these areas, you will advise and communicate with in-house clients and elected members on a range of complex matters. You will have an eye for detail and superb organisational skills, which will enable you to juggle a heavy workload. Flexible and innovative in your approach, you will make things happen and help us to positively develop new areas of practice.

With outstanding communication skills, you will be confident influencing others and providing high level advice in a clear and appropriate way. A valid driving licence and own car are essential (reasonable adjustments may be possible according to the Equality Act).

http://www.localgovernmentlawyer.co.uk/index.php?option=com_jobs&task=detail_job&id=14991:solicitor&Itemid=148

What to do if you don’t like your Leader

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-devon-29698476

Unfortunately, he is also the Mayor which is not quite so easy to change.

The (ex) Leader sacked the majority of his Cabinet (5 members out of nine) because they did not agree with his decisions, now his colleagues have decided to sack him.

Just shows what backbenchers can do … if they have the will.

More than 80 MPs (including south-west Tories) back cut in tourism VAT

Which puts them at odds with our (Tory) council which savaged Independent councillor Claire Wright when she suggested they too should support this. Many EU countries have low or no VAT for their tourism industries.

http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/MPs-tourism-VAT-cuts/story-23271046-detail/story.html

However, our two MPs side with EDDC.

Coastal communities: will they change their voting patterns in the next election?

If the things that are currently happening in Exmouth (selling the seafront to the highest bidders, knocking down Elizabeth Hall), Budleigh (the Longboat, inappropriate development), Sidmouth (coastal erosion and job losses) and Seaton (strange statues in the wrong olaces and more retirement homes) it seems a good possibility!

http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/economic-reality-resorts-bring-political-shift/story-23270023-detail/story.html

86% of MPs think we trust them – 25% of us say we do!

If anything demonstrates the fact that politicians just have not understood us, this is it!

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/general-election-2015/11172654/MPs-are-less-popular-then-they-think-they-are-surveys-show.html

“David Babbs, executive director of 38 Degrees, added: “MPs don’t just speak a different language – they’re on a different planet to the rest of us.
“Ordinary people haven’t stopped caring about the way the country runs, but faith in tribal Westminster politics is crumbling. Giving voters the power to get rid of bad apple MPs would be the first step towards restoring people’s faith in politics.”

Still, 100% of us will be able to tell them what we really think when we vote in May 2015?

So, farewell Nigel Harrison, Economic Development Manager

… who slipped away quietly yesterday after having managed to avoid scrutiny of his role in the East Devon Business Forum for the past 18 months – but then EVERYTHING avoids scrutiny at EDDC now.

Will he pop up in South Somerset where the perfect job for him seems to have been recently created?