Former town clerk hands back honour

Er, but it wasn’t because they were new councillors, it was because that was what they, as elected councillors, had decided to do, after a debate and a vote.

A (former) town clerk may not agree with it, but it was a legitimate decision which they had every right to take.

Otherwise, councillors would always do what the town clerk (or at EDDC its CEO) instructed them to do. And we wouldn’t want that, would we!

Or, would we be happy for councillors to behave like headless chickens …?

Sorry, but it is democracy at work whether you agree with it or not – as Tory councillors would, and have, said numerous times at the Knowle.

http://www.sidmouthherald.co.uk/news/trina_hands_back_sidmouth_freeman_title_1_4196909

“UK housebuilding held back by shortfall”


“The Federation of Master Builders says 66% of construction firms have been forced to turn down work because of a shortage of skilled workers. This follows the Local Government Association’s declaration that the UK is training “too many hairdressers and not enough bricklayers”.

Housebuilders including Persimmon and Barratt Developments have warned that a shortage of skilled construction workers is hitting the housing market by holding back the building of new property.”

The Daily Telegraph, Page: 31 Daily Mail, Page: 73 Independent I, Page: 2

So how will this affect the number of houses in EDDC’s Local Plan?

And what impact will the labour shortage have on Govt Inspectors’ decisions nationwide?

Changes to neighbourhood plan procedures

The Government is to make it easier for villages to establish neighbourhood plans and allocate land for new homes, ministers have announced.

The Chancellor of the Exchequer, George Osborne, and the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, Elizabeth Truss, said this would include the use of rural exception sites to deliver ‘Starter Homes’.

A ten-point plan aimed at boosting rural productivity said: “Through the right combination of measures, the government wants to ensure that any village in England has the freedom to expand in an incremental way, subject to local agreement.”

Other proposals in the plan include:

In the current bidding round for Enterprise Zones, which closes on 18 September, preference will be given to proposals involving smaller towns, districts and rural areas;

A government review will be undertaken of planning and regulatory constraints facing rural businesses and measures that can be taken to address them by 2016;

A fast-track planning certificate process will be introduced for establishing the principle of development for minor development proposals;

Encouragement will be given to further proposals from local areas for devolution of powers “in return for strong and accountable local governance”;

Permitted development rights will be extended to taller mobile masts subject to conclusions from the Call for Evidence which closes on 21 August 2015;

There will be fairer funding for schools, including those in rural areas. “It will turn inadequate schools into academies and focus efforts to support school improvement in underperforming rural areas.”

The document, Towards a one nation economy: A 10-point plan for boosting productivity in rural areas, can be viewed here.

http://www.localgovernmentlawyer.co.uk/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=24138:ministers-to-make-it-easier-for-villages-to-establish-neighbourhood-plans&catid=63&Itemid=31