So, you want to work in Local Government …

Wasn’t sure whether to laugh or cry, but on balance cried, especially over the bits about “what councils do” (the FULL list from the brochure is shown below)!

People who work for councils:

teach our children

protect vulnerable people

support and promote local businesses and jobs

ensure we are treated well and not over-charged by shops and restaurants

put out fires

make our neighbourhoods safer and more pleasant to live in

run our parks, leisure centres and libraries

help to keep us and the community healthy.”

So now you know!

http://www.local.gov.uk/documents/10180/6803404/workforce+-+L14-508+Working+in+LG_third_05+(4).pdf/df04093f-694a-4c46-b133-407d7a59d12a

John Betjeman, Jane Austen, Coleridge and Walter Raleigh ‘appearing’ in Sidmouth tomorrow evening…

…And there’ll be live (!) performances by current East Devon writers, too, at tomorrow evening’s Book Launch (6-8pm, All Saints’ Hall, All Saints’ Rd, Sidmouth)
‘East Devon’s Literature and Landscape’ by Peter Nasmyth, has stunning original photographs and lots of new insights about East Devon’s links to writing by such diverse authors as H.G.Wells, Beatrix Potter, Jane Austen, and all-of-the-above, to name but a few! PLEASE NOTE: Performance starts at 6.30pm precisely.
Launch poster Nov 2014  low

More info here: https://eastdevonwatch.wordpress.com/2014/11/06/the-perfect-christmas-present-for-lovers-of-east-devons-literature-and-landscape/

For SEE INSIDE page, scroll down to Literature and Landscape in East Devon /strong> on HOME, at http://www.mtapublications.co.uk

Another U-turn – Smokers and overweight will not now be rationed health care in Devon

What is it about our district and county that leads to so many omnishambles and U-turns recently? Policies announced, weaknesses pointed out, public outcry, backtrack. Are our local politicians and civil servants fit-for-purpose?

And perhaps we need some better overview and scrutiny, transparency and consultation in these organisations… not to mention accountability before disastrous decisions are made rather than after.

The article raises serious questions of the quality of corporate governance.

http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/Health-body-U-turn-refusing-treatment-smokers/story-25643617-detail/story.html

PS Spotlight – a senior officer was asked:

“Did you get it wrong?”
“No ….. yabba, yabba”

Er, so why the U-turn?

But it’s ok: they regret the anxiety they have caused.

So, that’s ok then.

Oh for the day when someone says: “We blew it, heads have rolled, so sorry”!

East Devon District Council twinned with Birmingham City Council?

The city council’s size acted as “both a badge and a barrier: it has led to a not invented here, silo based and council knows best culture”. These characteristics were not an inescapable feature of the authority’s size but they needed to be acknowledged and addressed. There was much to learn here from other large authorities;

The narrative within Birmingham and the council needed to become more positive. “Birmingham City Council too often sees itself as a victim. Whilst the financial and other challenges are considerable and must be tackled, the public and businesses are calling for a more positive vision”;

Thirty years ago the council was at the cutting edge of innovation in local government but had lost ground. “To return it needs to start with getting the basics right”;

There was a blurring of roles between members and officers. “The relationship needs to be reset and officers given the space to manage”;
The current devolution arrangements within the city were confused and very few people understood them. They had also not been reconciled with the council’s financial position;

The council’s vision for the future of the city was neither broadly shared nor understood by the council’s officers, partners or residents;
Instead there was a multiplicity of strategies, plans and performance management processes which lead to unnecessary complexity and confusion and were not followed through to delivery;

The chief executive and corporate leadership team lacked the corporate support and capacity that was needed to undertake their role effectively;
Neither the savings nor the staff reductions the council had made had been underpinned by a long-term strategic plan for the nature and shape of the future council and the people it needed;

The council faced very significant budget difficulties in the next few years and did not yet have credible plans to meet these;

Performance management was ineffective and not up to the scale of the task;
The council, members and officers had too often failed to tackle difficult issues. They needed to be more open about what the most important issues were and focus on addressing them;

Partnership working needed fixing. “While there are some good partnerships, particularly operationally, many external partners feel the culture is dominant and over-controlling and that the council is complex, impenetrable and too narrowly focused on its own agenda”;

The council needed to engage in across the whole city, including the outer areas, and all the communities within it; and,

Regeneration must take place beyond the physical transformation of the city centre. There was a particularly urgent challenge in central and east Birmingham.

RECOMMENDATIONS:

The council should draw up an improvement plan with clear dates for delivery. Regular updates should be provided to the Communities Secretary and updates on progress should be provided to residents;

A report should be published in December 2015 about how the council had implemented the review’s recommendations;

The authority’s governance needed to be “reset” in a number of ways. These included clarification of the roles, responsibilities, behaviours and ways of working expected in relation to the Leader, Cabinet, councillors, chief executive and officers. The strategic, executive, independent scrutiny and community roles of members needed to be clearly defined and better supported. The council should also develop a simplified planning framework, and transformation support services such as finance and Human Resources should be managed corporately;

The Communities Secretary should move the council to all out elections replacing the current election by thirds. The Local Government Boundary Commission for England should conduct an electoral review that reflected existing communities. This should be completed to enable elections by May 2017;

The council needed as a matter of urgency to develop a robust plan for how it was going to manage its finances up to 2018/19 without recourse to further additional funding from central government;

The HR function should be strengthened in a range of ways. These included vesting the strategic role of workforce planning and HR in an existing Cabinet member. The whistleblowing processes that are being put in place in the child safeguarding service should also be mirrored in the council’s other services;

Birmingham should establish a new model for devolution, with the council focused on getting basic services right. The ten district committees should not be responsible for delivering services or managing them through service level agreements. The number of city-wide scrutiny committees should be reviewed and potentially reduced to three;

The creation of a new independent Birmingham leadership group should be facilitated. This group should approve the new long-term City Plan and be used to hold all involved in the delivery of the plan to account;
The council should redefine its partnership approach. This should be done by, amongst other things, having shared clarity about the mission, objectives and purpose of individual partnerships and how they will judge their performance;

A combined authority governance review based on an authority formed of at least in the initial stage the core functional economic area of Birmingham, Dudley, Sandwell, Walsall, Wolverhampton and Solihull should be completed by July 2015. Once this has happened the Government should begin to engage in a dialogue about further devolution;

The Government should support the creation of a new locally-led high powered partnership vehicle focussed on increasing employment and improving skills, starting in the most deprived parts of Birmingham. An agreed plan including proposals for Government should be developed by April 2015.

http://localgovernmentlawyer.co.uk/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=21098:kerslake-review-calls-for-improvement-panel-at-birmingham-for-qrobust-challengeq&catid=59&Itemid=27

The “excellent move” TO Knowle

Sidmouth District and County Councillor, Stuart Hughes, was unable to attend the Public Open Meeting (Tuesday 9th Dec) organised by the Sid Vale Association (SVA). He did, however, send his view on relocation to SVA Chair, Alan Darrant, to be read out at the meeting. Here is Cllr Hughes’ statement:
‘I’m not sure that this is the time to be contemplating any move away from Sidmouth as the future of local government is already raising its head and I do believe we could well be looking at a two tier system becoming the norm with the parish/town councils taking on a greater role.

It was the hindsight of Ted Pinney when the Districts became into being that he secured the Knowle back in 1974 and when you really look deeply why this was such an excellent move, then you only have to look at its location at the centre of the coastal towns of Exmouth Budleigh and Seaton and a short distance from East Devons only Primary road the A3052 (this runs from one side of East Devon to the other) Clyst St Mary (just off M5) and the Dorset border (Lyme Regis).

If and it looks as though a move will given the go ahead then we must take the serious threat of further flooding and ensure that as part of any development that the Surface Water Management Plan recommendation for a SUDs storage at Knowle is tied in with any development.

Finally loss of jobs and we should be looking to retain some of the services here in Sidmouth if the move is agreed at Council……………I have a suggestion that I feel should be explored and will elaborate more on that at the EDDC meeting next week.’

The Full Council will decide whether to agree a move FROM Knowle, at their meeting on 17th December, 6.30pm at Knowle (plenty of parking; set in lovely historic parkland; convenient access; energy rating certificate ‘C’; etc…)

EDDC HQ will rely on digital services: MP Neil Parish says they aren’t available in rural areas and there may be “riots” there!

Says it all really. EDDC says they will increasingly rely on internet links to provide “services” and the local MP says they aren’t good enough and there may be “riots” in rural areas if they don’t improve!

” … Neil Parish] MP, speaking at a House of Commons hearing into the plan to ditch paper-based EU farming subsidy applications from next year, accused the quango delivering the £1.2 billion broadband programme of picking “easy cherries off the tree” in towns and cities

Farming groups are livid over the move towards “digital by default” because of the poor broadband connections in the countryside

[He] said only around 8% of properties in his constituency are connected to super-fast broadband. The national target is 95% coverage by 2017 .

“… Questioning Chris Townsend, chief executive officer of BDUK, Mr Parish said: “Are you going to change your tactics and actually roll it out faster to those hard-to-reach rural villages? Otherwise there’s going to be a riot on your hands.”

http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/Devon-Tory-MP-warns-riot-countryside-denied-super/story-25634677-detail/story.html

Power and absolute power at EDDC

Transcript of Richard Eley’s Speech at the Sid Vale Association Meeting at the Unitarian Church, 9th December 2014

(Richard Eley was speaking about Richard Cohen’s figures for relocation costs.)

“The numbers are completely, hopelessly and scandalously wrong. They are useless, they are terrible and have to be challenged vigorously and strenuously. These numbers are rubbish. They don’t include the green travel plan, they don’t include compensation for the staff, they don’t include the cost of the move itself, they don’t include the costs of hubs the other towns and, most importantly, they don’t include the cost of officer time and members time that is involved in all of this.

The expert, Mr Steve Pratten from Davis Langdon, he is going to cost £1million or more on his own. It doesn’t include the legal costs in all this. I say to the District Council that I have estimated the real costs to be £20 million. That figure was not disputed – Richard Cohen did not say it was exaggerated – he said he didn’t recognize the number. What that means is that I was bang on the money.

Ladies and gentlemen, we are trusting Richard Cohen to mastermind this whole process and we are assuming that he’s accurate in the mathematical calculations. This is the same man who measured the Knowle 40% smaller than it turned out to be! He got it wrong by 40%. Robin Fuller had to write a paper, he was rubbished in the press and it turned out that he was correct. The Knowle is 40% bigger than Richard Cohen thought it was.

This is the same man who was responsible for four attempts to compose the economic impact assessments rejected by his own planning committee. He can’t get simple mathematics right. This same man tells us that energy prices are going to go ahead for the next 20 years at 10% over inflation. He is alone in the entire world in thinking this. Nobody else believes that including your energy companies who will fix your energy costs for the next four years. That instantly takes £1.5million out of all the savings that are supposed to be made by moving, so he hasn’t even bothered to explore that possibility.

He is also the man who shifted the southern boundary of the Knowle to include the second tier of parkland without telling anybody and in contradiction to the specific instructions of the Development Management Committee. I was told this would not be investigated because the Inspector would look at it, which he would not do because it was not in his remit. So that has never been investigated by anybody at the Knowle.”

“He did it without managing to record that process; without managing to record any conversation with any individual, without writing a single email, or keeping a single note or sending any kind of correspondence to any third party. Because I made a freedom of information request, and there was nothing there.”

“He did it unilaterally, on his own, secretly, and he didn’t tell a single soul, and I only found out by accident.”

This is not the kind of person I would trust to do these calculations. Now when he says it is going to cost £15.9million to refurbish the Knowle, I would tell him that that’s a load of bunkum. This relates to the entire building, which nobody advocates retaining. Why is anybody working in a bathroom when the Knowle is two and a half times the size of the building EDDC says it needs? How can that be possible? Mr Cohen in his calculations also asserts that there is nil chance, not 1% chance of local government reform in the next 20 years.

Anybody who listened to the Autumn Statement knows that local government reform is highly likely and as John Dyson correctly said there is an 80% chance that EDDC will not exist in 5 years time, so the chances of us recovering all these millions over the next 20 years is much reduced.

Finally, he assumes that over the course of those 20 years with energy now costing astronomical amounts of money the average domestic bill according to Richard Cohen would be 30% of your income in energy costs. He assumes that the government, EDDC and none of the people working there will make any effort whatsoever to reduce the costs of energy in that time. They won’t switch off any lights, they won’t turn off any central heating and they will continue to occupy every single bathroom throughout that period despite the fact that there is going to be 140 less people working there, assuming they don’t go to Exmouth.”

Report: Not in my backyard: local people and the planning process

A useful and timely report from the Local Government Ombudsman:

Some interesting bits:

“… The government has recently introduced new legislation which requires council officers who grant permission under delegated powers to produce a written record of that decision. Councils must make the record available at their offices and on their websites. These written decision records must be kept for a period of six years and any background documents must be kept for four years. This only applies to decision made by officers with delegated powers however there is no reason why councils should not extend this to decisions made by committee. “

Ahmir’s Story:

Ahmir complained the council had given a local councillor planning permission for a house in an area of outstanding national beauty. The councillor was close friends with the Chairman of the Planning Committee. We found that both councillors had a close relationship as they and their families regularly attended the same social functions. The Chairman of the Planning Committee failed to declare this.

The council’s constitution and Code of Conduct said councillors must not take part in a meeting if they had a ‘prejudicial interest’ in what was being discussed. We found the chairman was at fault for not declaring an interest and that he should not have taken part in the meeting.

The council’s officer report recommended the committee refuse planning permission for the house because it was contrary to national and local policies and could set a precedent for inappropriate development in an area of outstanding natural beauty. The vote in favour of granting planning permission was finely balanced. If the chairman had not taken part in the meeting planning permission would have been refused.

Following our investigations the Leader of the Council applied to court to have the committee’s decision overturned. The judge overturned the decision and said “any fair-minded and informed observer would conclude that there was indeed a real possibility of bias in the decision to grant planning permission”. The Council incurred significant costs in dealing with the complaint and subsequent court action. The applicant wasn’t able to recover the cost of building the house or any of their legal fees. …”

Click to access 2093-Planning-Focus-report-final.pdf

Missing 6,000+ voters: will we ever get the truth?

Electoral Returning Officers are not obligated to respond to Freedom of Information requests though, in practice, the vast majority of them do so. Recent review has suggested that they should be legally obligated to respond, in part due to refusal by a very small minority of EROs to give electors crucial information on whether they have fulfilled their legal obligations to get electors on to the register.

EDDC was singled out specifically by the Parliamentary Commission on Voter Engagement as an example of a council which persistently failed to follow guidelines (and the law).

Here is an exchange which shows that our ERO (and Chief Executive) has no intention of complying with the recommendations on transparency:

https://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/conduct_of_the_may_22_2014_local#outgoing-397991