Privatisation of the NHS continues

GPs are set to find themselves dealing with the controversial public services giant Capita, it has been revealed.

The company has won a £330 million deal to take over the primary care support services run by NHS England.

Capita specialises in taking on public administration tasks.

NHS England claims the deal will cut costs by more than quarter over a seven-year period.

Capita will take over the services from the beginning of next month. Some 29 offices are due to close in the course of the year – reflecting a purge of the local facilities that were run by primary care trusts until two years ago.

Dr Richard Vautrey, chair of the British Medical Association’s GP committee, told the Health Service Journal: “The big question is whether Capita have enough resource to deliver the service – Primary Care Support was already overstretched.”

Source: Doctorsnet

Pickles article on election fraud

Sir Eric Pickles, who is launching the biggest-ever investigation into electoral fraud in Britain, warns in an article for The Daily Telegraph that the authorities are “turning a blind eye to criminal conduct”.


By Peter Dominiczak, Political Editor7:35PM BST 12 Aug 2015
Electoral fraud is being ignored in the same way that child sex abuse allegations have been because politically correct police forces and councils fear offending ethnic minorities, the Government’s anti-corruption tsar says today.
Sir Eric Pickles, who is launching the biggest-ever investigation into electoral fraud in Britain, warns in an article for The Daily Telegraph that the authorities are “turning a blind eye to criminal conduct”.
It comes after Lutfur Rahman, the mayor of Tower Hamlets in east London, was earlier this year removed from office after he was found guilty of electoral fraud.
Sir Eric compares the lack of action on allegations of electoral fraud to the scandal of local authorities and police forces ignoring claims of child sex abuse in towns across Britain.
Many of those allegations concerned Asian gangs targeting vulnerable young girls.
The law must always be “applied equally and fairly to everyone”, Sir Eric warns.
“In Tower Hamlets, police and council staff failed to tackle intimidation – often in foreign languages – both inside and outside polling stations,” Mr Pickles writes.
“Just as we have seen with child sexual exploitation in places like Rochdale and Rotherham, institutionalised political correctness can lead to the state turning a blind eye to criminal conduct. But the law must be applied equally and fairly to everyone.
“Integration and good community relations are undermined by the failure to do so.”
He adds: “The problems go deep – despite years of warnings of misconduct in Tower Hamlets, the state watchdogs gave the borough’s electoral system a gold-star rating for integrity in inspection reports. We still have a series of tick-box inspections of town hall returning officers that are as ineffectual and useless as those once practised by the now-abolished Audit Commission.”
Sir Eric, who was Communities and Local Government Secretary until David Cameron’s last reshuffle, said that the Government is “no longer prepared to turn a blind eye to Britain’s modern day rotten boroughs”.
His review will report by the end of the year and will examine what steps are necessary to stop voter registration fraud and error, postal voting fraud, impersonation, intimidation and bribery.
Sir Eric raises concerns that the London mayoral elections next year could be mired by voter fraud.
“Despite the fact there are London elections next year, a sizeable minority of those voters signed up in Tower Hamlets remain unverified and could be fakes,” he writes.
“In Hackney, the situation is even worse, with almost a quarter of the electorate unverified and potentially non-existent. We urgently need to clean up these registers. Across the country, electors from abroad are not properly checked to ensure that they qualify to vote when they register.
“Fraudulent registration is frequently tied to illegal immigration, as illegal migrants sign up to make it easier to get credit or a mobile phone. Such illegality feeds through to further crimes, such as benefit and housing fraud.”
Theresa May, the Home Secretary, earlier this year set up a major inquiry into child abuse following revelations about the crimes committed by Jimmy Savile as well as disclosures about abuse in Derby, Oxford and towns across Britain.
There were also a series of allegations about a Westminster paedophile ring.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/conservative/11799673/Eric-Pickles-Political-correct-officials-ignoring-electoral-fraud-just-like-sex-abuse.html

40% of Right to Buy homes being rented out

Right to rent – and not affordable rents one must assume:

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/right-to-buy-40-of-homes-sold-under-government-scheme-are-being-let-out-privately-10454796.html

Feniton residents can quiz officers on new recycling arrangements

East Devon District Council has announced that Feniton will host a road show on Saturday, 22 August from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Sports and Social club for residents to discuss the trial of the new recycling arrangements which will start in September.

For more information see:

https://susiebond.wordpress.com/2015/08/13/opportunity-for-feniton-residents-to-quiz-eddcs-recycling-officers/

East Devon Alliance hits the headlines

” … Another conversation that influenced me was with Paul Arnott, one of the founders of the East Devon Alliance. The EDA was formed only two years ago to take on the Conservative-dominated council, but it already has 10 councillors and the independent candidate it backed in the general election came second to Tory Hugo Swire, polling an astonishing 13,000 votes, well ahead of Ukip, Labour and the Lib Dems.

“I just wanted to take young Russell Brand and flush his head down the khazi,” Arnott told me. “It was so frustrating because we were doing precisely what he was advocating, though we were rather more middle-aged and unattractive. We really wanted to provide an alternative, but because unlike him we’re grown-ups, we knew the only way to do it is to put yourself up at local elections – do the hard yards first, Russell.”

I warmed to this notion of a disparate band of locals demanding greater transparency and accountability in local government, drawing support from all parts of the political spectrum and taking on the might of the Conservative political machine.

“People from different backgrounds could come together because they shared a similar radicalism as far as reforming governance was concerned,” said Arnott. “It’s made some quite rightwing people think very hard about the social economy.

This sounded like fluid, grassroots modern politics, not the class-based trench warfare of old. I mooted a national Citizens’ party to Arnott, the EDA writ large. “If you are prepared to launch the Citizens’ party,” he said, “the East Devon Alliance would be interested in opening talks with you.”


http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2015/aug/12/could-you-build-new-part-of-the-left-labour-jeremy-corbyn

Pickles: Whitehall in denial about election fraud

Pickles: Whitehall in denial over election fraud (Guardian, D Mail, Mirror, Tel)

The former Local Government Secretary Sir Eric Pickles has warned Whitehall that it is in denial about the scale of election fraud in Britain.

“The British system is among the world’s most trusted democracies, but it is essential that it remains so.

Financial and electoral sleaze go hand in hand,” he commented as it was announced that he will now carry out a review of the issue, and consider whether any new powers are needed.

http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2015/aug/13/uk-election-fraud-whitehall-in-denial-says-eric-pickles

Fracking being encouraged over wind power because it may bringbigger tax revenues?

Are onshore wind turbines – often in ones or twos on farming land – being thrown out so that the mega-business of fracking can reign supreme and provide the Treasury with vastly more tax income?

Some intriguing possibilities:

“If fracking yields ample supplies of gas (which is still an unknown), the Treasury will be relieved. The tax take from North Sea oil and gas tax has dropped by more than £6bn over three years and the Office of Budget Responsibility recently slashed its long-term North Sea revenue forecast by 94%. …

… Daisy Sands from Greenpeace said: “The contrast between [the government’s] view that local councils should be ‘masters of their own destiny’ and the new provisions announced today is staggering.

“Local residents could end up with virtually no say over whether their homes, communities and national parks are fracked or not.

“There is a clear double standard at play – the same government that is intent on driving through fracking at whatever cost has just given more powers to local councils to oppose wind farms, the cheapest source of clean energy. The government is riding rough-shod over democracy to industrialise our most beautiful landscapes and damage the climate. …”

So, wind farms not supplying enough tax to the Treasury but fracking looking much more lucrative.

Teflon coating – 2

From P Freeman, comment on earlier post:

I learned today from a FoI to the Electoral Commission that our ERO / RO has not fulfilled his responsibilities in another area, specifically ‘How many people tried to vote on polling day and were found not to be registered?’.

Most other ERO/RO have provided this information, but a few including East Devon’s RO/ERO have not.

See https://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/east_devon_may_2015_elections_re?nocache=incoming-691871#incoming-691871 .

EDDC will not be able yo use a blanket ” commercial confidentiality” excuse after 1 September 2015

http://www.localgovernmentlawyer.co.uk/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=24024:policy-note-issued-on-contracts-and-compliance-with-transparency-principles&catid=53&Itemid=21

Our officers will DEFINITELY need some special training on this one!

And what a difference it would have made on the Information Commissioner v East Devon District Council case!

Bad news for coastal tourism

Particularly that young people feel less connected to the coast than over 55’s and that, according to the National Trust, coastal tourism is down 20% overall:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-33870056

Is our Electoral and Returning Officer Teflon coated?

It would seem so.

East Devon Election and Returning Officer Mark Williams (also CEO of East Devon District Council) rather grudgingly admitted that “things had gone wrong” at the last election but said it would not happen again in this newspaper article published today:

image

No mention of the fact that he was hauled in to a Parliamentary Committee to explain why he “lost” 6,000 voters (answer: because he thought his idea of telephoning missing voters was better than the government’s guidance of visiting them), was particularly noted by the Electoral Commission for not following those guidelines, or why East Devon was one of only SEVEN councils out of more than 400 to have made MULTIPLE mistakes. OR that he has been doing the job for years but still doesn’t seem to have got it quite right.

If it were a junior officer or councillor who had not been considered up-to-scratch (particularly an Independent Councillor) would he or she had got off so lightly?

Teflon-coated?

More Devon community hospitals face axe

Pretty soon, community hospitals may cease to exist in Devon:

http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/Outrage-axe-falls-cottage-hospital-beds-rural/story-27585752-detail/story.html

South-West rents jump “for lifestyle reasons”

” … He noted that the South West of England was showing a particularly sharp rise in rents on the back of people attracted to the area for “lifestyle reasons”.”

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/rents-have-gone-up-by-12-per-cent-in-the-past-year-10449500.html

New GP surgeries costing councils millions in appealed rating valuations

Good for GPs and local health authorities (who receive refunds) bad for councils.

If this applies to EDDC, it, together with the £7m black hole which is soon to appear in EDDC’s council rent account must surely lead some councillors to wish that EDDC had invested in Knowle maintenance rather than allowing the building to deteriorate so they can build themselves new, expensive, offices in Honiton and massive refurbishment charges for offices in Exmouth.

“… According to Wychavon District Council, a number of GP surgeries had made successful appeals to the Valuation Office against the value given to their property in 2005 and 2010.

The council estimated that surgeries in its area alone would receive a £3.5m refund and £600,000 a year on an ongoing basis from this financial year.

Wychavon, the county council and Hereford & Worcester Fire Authority are expected to be responsible for half of the total losses.

The district said it would have to pay the majority share which will total £1.4m and £250,000 a year ongoing. …”

http://www.localgovernmentlawyer.co.uk/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=24008:councils-in-plea-for-help-after-tribunal-ruling-on-gp-surgeries-and-business-rates&catid=58&Itemid=26

Fracking to explode

Today’s Times newspaper:

…”Britain is set to fire up a big expansion of the fracking industry, handing out dozens of new drilling licences and fast-tracking planning decisions despite intense public opposition to the practice.

The Department for Energy and Climate Change will reveal next week the winners in an auction for dozens of shale gas exploration blocks, including swathes of southern England and heavily populated areas of Lancashire and the northeast.
About 95 companies are understood to have submitted bids for nearly 300 drilling licences, spanning more than 40 per cent of the UK’s land area. …”

Proposed new solar farm in Exmouth: consultation Tuesday 18 August 4-8 pm

image

Not ANOTHER Pegasus – we have enough winged horses in this district ( presume no link with Pegasus Life developing Knowle!).

Fracking consent to be fast- tracked to avoid local decisions

http://www.thesundaytimes.co.uk/sto/news/uk_news/National/article1591432.ece

Anyone remember “localism”?

Government was set to lose £693m and 37% of affordable housing from setting S106 contribution threshold too high

Setting the threshold for payment of S106 contributions from developers at 10 houses or more whereas it was previously 5 was set to lose the government contributions of £693m and cut the number of affordable homes being built by 37%.

Or to look at it another way, it was set to give developers £693m more profit and no need to build 37% more affordable homes. Now, either that was an unintentional mistake in drawing up the guidance (bad) or intentional (bad). Of course, the DGLC is appealing this High Court ruling on behalf of developers.

The judgment added that officials had advised ministers that if a threshold of ten units or fewer were to be introduced, 21 per cent of affordable housing contributions would be exempt, equating to an annual value of £693 million. According to research published last month by social charity the Joseph Rowntree Foundation, 37 per cent of affordable homes completed in 2013/14 were delivered through section 106 deals (see infographic).

Ricketts said the ruling “tells the secretary of state in capital letters that PPG is not a place for substantive changes to government policies”. He added: “There are lessons for the way in which the government approaches the next round of changes to the planning system about complying with appropriate legal principles on consultation and then for the responses to consultation to be taken into account by the government conscientiously.”

Ivory added that, since the introduction of the PPG, there has been a “blurring between policy and guidance”. He said: “I am concerned that policy is being announced by way of changes to the guidance. This case doesn’t quite tackle that point, but does seem to move in the direction of demonstrating the need for clarity.”

Mike Kiely, chairman of the board of the Planning Officers Society, said the ruling was a “shot across the bows of the DCLG”. He added that the judgment makes clear that consultation responses should be examined “diligently” and given due response. “It’s not a tick-box exercise”, Kiely said.”

http://www.planningresource.co.uk/article/1359134/repercussions-planners-landmark-affordable-housing-judgment

And independent councillors make a difference In Newton Poppleford

http://www.eastdevonalliance.org.uk/in-the-press/20150807/sidmouth-herald-fundamental-issues-with-40-homes-plan/

East Devon Alliance councillors make their marks

http://www.eastdevonalliance.org.uk/cathy-gardner/20150807/sidmouth-herald-publish-relocation-documents-now/