Help to buy scandal

“Overall, 1,758 help to buy loans were handed out to individuals or couples who take home more than £100,000 a year – despite them being in the top 10 per cent richest households in the country.

In addition, almost 500 of the couples earning over £100,000 who were given government help already owned a property.

Government officials insisted today that the scheme was working well – pointing to figures showing almost half the loans to first time buyers went to those earning £40,000 or less.

However, this masks the fact that more than 30,000 loans were handed to households earning more than £40,000 a year – which puts them in the richest 30 per cent of earners in the country.”

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3227614/Helps-Buy-helps-rich-1-750-couples-earning-100-000-Osborne-s-cheap-loans-including-500-house.html

“10 weeks to save democracy”

’10 Weeks To Save Democracy’ Before 2 Million People Are Wiped Off Electoral Register’

…”Two million people could be dropped from the list by the end of the year if they don’t identify themselves as a “genuine voter”, thanks to the government’s “rushed” changes to registration rules, according to anti-extremism group HOPE Not Hate.

The changes – which could happen without people realising – represent a loss of voting rights on a scale that is “almost inconceivable”, the group claims.”

…”Nick Lowles, HOPE Not Hate Chief Executive, said: “Originally there was another year to get all these people verified. Instead of which we are about to see the greatest disenfranchisement in British history.

“The scale of it is almost inconceivable. And the situation is actually going to get worse in the next few days as students return to university and have to register individually.

“There are just 10 weeks left to save democracy,” he said.

The two million who could be removed would join an existing eight million ‘missing’ voters, people who are eligible to vote, but don’t according to HOPE Not Hate.

The total of 10 million ‘missing Britons’ is the equivalent of losing the entire population of London, Birmingham, Leeds, Glasgow and Sheffield combined from the electoral roll.

Earlier this year the then-Labour leader Ed Miliband warned that nearly a million people have already “disappeared” from the register. Labour said the figure was a result of what it called the “hasty” way the Government introduced individual voter registration.”

http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2015/09/09/missing-voters-electoral-register-individual-electoral-registration-_n_8110676.html

Website for planning whistleblowers in London

Oh, if we had this in East Devon:

“CONCRETE ACTION IS A PLATFORM TO PROVIDE SUPPORT FOR ARCHITECTURE AND PLANNING PROFESSIONALS AND COMMUNITIES FIGHTING FOR HOUSING IN LONDON
The space is for those working in building design, planning and construction to anonymously provide advance information on proposed developments, to disseminate planning and development knowledge to communities and activists, and to link professionals who are willing provide educational and design services for those negatively affected by property development.
https://www.concreteaction.net/”

“Where does legitimate business end and organised crime begin?”

By George Monbiot, published in the Guardian 9th September 2015

Be reasonable in response to the unreasonable: this is what voters in the Labour election are told. Accommodate, moderate, triangulate, for the alternative is to isolate yourself from reality. You might be inclined to agree. If so, please take a look at the reality to which you must submit.

To an extent unknown since before the First World War, economic relations in this country are becoming set in stone. Is not just that the very rich no longer fall while the very poor no longer rise. It’s that the system itself is protected from risk. Through bail-outs, quantitative easing and delays in interest rate rises, speculative investment has been so well cushioned that, as Larry Elliott puts it, financial markets are “one of the last bastions of socialism left on earth.”

Public services, infrastructure, the very fabric of the nation: these too are being converted into risk-free investments. Social cleansing is transforming inner London into an exclusive economic zone for property speculation. From a dozen directions, government policy converges on this objective. The benefits cap and the bedroom tax drive the poor out of their homes. The forced sale of high-value council houses creates a new asset pool. An uncapped and scarcely regulated private rental market turns these assets into gold. The freeze on council tax banding since 1991, the lifting of the inheritance tax threshold and £14 billion a year in breaks for private landlords all help to guarantee stupendous returns.

And for those who wish simply to sit on their assets, the government can help here too, by ensuring that there are no penalties for leaving buildings empty. As a result, great tracts of housing are removed from occupation. Agricultural land has proved an even better punt for City money: with the help of capital gains, inheritance and income tax exemptions, as well as farm subsidies, its price has quadrupled in 12 years.

Property in this country is a haven for the proceeds of international crime. The head of the National Crime Agency, Donald Toon, notes that “the London property market has been skewed by laundered money. Prices are being artificially driven up by overseas criminals who want to sequester their assets here in the UK.”

It’s hardly surprising, given the degree of oversight. Private Eye has produced a map of British land owned by companies registered in offshore tax havens. The holdings amount to 1.2 million acres, including much of our prime real estate. Among those it names as beneficiaries are a cast of Russian oligarchs, oil sheikhs, British aristocrats and newspaper proprietors. These are the people for whom government policy works, and the less regulated the system that enriches them, the happier they are.

The speculative property market is just one current in the great flow of cash that sluices through Britain while scarcely touching the sides. The financial sector exploits an astonishing political privilege: the City of London is the only jurisdiction in the UK not fully subject to the authority of parliament. In fact, the relationship seems to work the other way. Behind the Speaker’s chair in the House of Commons sits the Remembrancer, whose job is to ensure that the interests of the City of London are recognised by the elected members. (A campaign to rescind this privilege – Don’t Forget the Remembrancer – will be launched very soon). The City has one foot in the water: it is a semi-offshore state, a bit like the UK’s Crown dependencies and overseas territories, tax havens legitimised by the Privy Council. Britain’s financial secrecy undermines the tax base while providing a conduit into the legal economy for gangsters, kleptocrats and drug barons.

Even the more orthodox financial institutions deploy a long succession of scandalous practices: pension mis-selling, endowment mortgage fraud, the payment protection insurance con, Libor rigging. A former minister in the last government, Lord Green, ran HSBC while it engaged in money laundering for drugs gangs, systematic tax evasion and the provision of services to Saudi and Bangladeshi banks linked to the financing of terrorists. Sometimes the UK looks to me like an ever-so-civilised mafia state.

At next month’s Conservative party conference, corporate executives will pay £2,500 to sit with a minister. Doubtless, because we are assured that there is no link between funding and policy, they will spend the day discussing the weather and the films they have seen. If we noticed such arrangements overseas, we might be inclined to regard them as corruption. But that can’t be the case here, not least because the invitation explains that “fees associated with business day & dinner are considered a commercial transaction and therefore do not constitute a political donation.”

The government also insists that there is no link between political donations and seats in the House of Lords. But a study by researchers at Oxford University found that the probability of so many major donors arriving there by chance is 1.36 x 10-38: roughly “equivalent to entering the National Lottery and winning the jackpot 5 times in a row”. Why does the Lords remain unreformed? Because it permits plutocratic power to override democracy. Both rich and poor are kept in their place.

Governed either by or on behalf of the people who fleece us, we cannot be surprised to discover that all public services are being re-engineered for the benefit of private capital. Nor should we be surprised when governments help to negotiate, without public consent, treaties such as TTIP and CETA (the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement), which undermine the sovereignty of both parliament and the law. Aesop’s observation that “we hang the petty thieves and appoint the great ones to public office” remains true in spirit, though hanging has been replaced by community payback.

Wherever you sniff in British public life, something stinks: I could fill this newspaper with examples. But, while every pore oozes corruption, our task, we are told, is merely to trim the nails of the body politic.

To fail to confront this system is to collaborate with it. Who on the left would wish to stand on the sidelines as this carve-up continues? Who would vote for anything but sweeping change?

http://www.monbiot.com/2015/09/08/britains-mafia-state/

Scrutiny Committee agenda 17/9/15 – beach hut omnishambles to be discussed

Agenda for Scrutiny Committee Thursday, 17 September 2015; 6.00pm

Click to access 170915-scrutiny-agenda-combined.pdf

The “analysis” of the questionnaires should be used for university first year econometrics students as a model study in how NOT to do and report a “consultation”!

Perhaps we could use Knowle to put up refugees

Well, with almost zero affordable housing in East Devon, where else is there? Cranbrook, perhaps?

This is what Leader Diviani has said (our translation: we won’t do a damned thing unless simeone forces us):

“EDDC leader councillor Paul Diviani said: “During the past 48 hours EDDC has received a number of enquiries from concerned local residents as well as the media regarding the Syrian Refugee Crisis, asking how they and the council will be able to help. 
“While we are awaiting more detailed advice from the Government, we would like to express our deep concern about the refugee situation and to confirm that we are keen to assist in any way we can as part of a practical local support network to help refugees resettle successfully.”

Columnist blasts David Cameron

Journalist and author Peter Hitchens has laid into David Cameron brutally, claiming the Prime Minister has “no interest in changing anything” and tries to keep only upper-class men in high Government posts.

In a wide-ranging interview with Guardian columnist Owen Jones, the brother of the late famed atheist Christopher Hitchens also accused the Tory leader of orchestrating a clever, costly election campaign which only won him the May general election on points, rather than as the result of a moral victory.

While he insisted the Prime Minister was a “perfectly nice chap”, Hitchens claimed that Cameron did not stand for anything and decried the UK for being a bankrupt, non-sovereign and country robbed of both its culture and its past.

“I simply underestimated the enormous power of lies and money which enabled the Conservative Party to obtain a victory in the election,” he told Jones in a video published on Monday.

“There was no national trend, what there was was a fantastically clever, well-targeted very costly campaign by the Conservatives in targeted constituencies, which won them a technical on points, which wasn’t a moral victory.”

He added: “Nobody really won that election morally but it was quite efficient to forming a majority Government – and it was more effective than they thought it would be.”

“He’s quite likeable – I can’t feel any passion against him – its impossible.

“He’s a perfectly nice chap, I’m sure, but he has absolutely no interest in changing anything; he has a great deal of interest in maintaining things as they are and in being in office while they are maintained.”

Watch the full exchange below:

Hitchens’ criticism of Cameron came as the Prime Minister’s pledge that Britain would take in 4,000 Syrian refugees a year was brutally dissected on social media.

Twitter users piled in to lambast the Tory leader for taking a two hundredth of the refugee numbers that Germany had committed to, and announcing the pledge amid another revelation about a Welsh-born jihadist being executed by an RAF drone strike in Syria.”

Source: Huffington Post

What if the boot was on the other foot and councillors criticised officers in public?

Regarding our earlier post about derogatory remarks made by a senior EDDC officer about councillors defending the East Devon countryside, imagine the same comment turned 180 degrees and being about officers – this is what it would say:

“Where in the past some Officers have sought to drive up housing numbers to damage the environment and satisfy the expressed desires of the Conservative government to see only massive growth and inappropriate development, this has arguably been a short sighted and perhaps self defeating approach. In terms of following through on the Government’s objectives, we are required to have an objectively assessed housing need which meets the identified needs of the district and then to purposively meet that need.”

Might then “some officers” be extremely angry?

Local health commissioning group “not fit for purpose”

This is the group that is top-heavy with jargon-speaking managers behind the closure of community hospital beds. Can we now expect to see a re-assessment of that decision?

Article in today’s “View from …” titles:

image

Cameron tries to change the rules to his advantage for EU referendum – defeated

The new government has suffered its first defeat in the House of Commons, over changes to rules governing the in/out EU referendum campaign.

Ministers wanted to amend so-called “purdah” rules which limit government activity during the campaign period.
But Labour teamed up with rebel Tory MPs to block the move by 312 to 285 and ensure the normal rules would apply.

…Purdah is a long standing convention whereby governments refrain from making any major announcements in the run-up to general elections or other polls to avoid influencing their outcome.

The existing rules were set out in legislation passed in 2000. They prevent ministers, departments and local authorities from publishing any “promotional material” arguing for or against any particular outcome or referring to any of the issues involved in the referendum.

…Arguing for a partial suspension of the normal purdah rules, Europe Minister David Lidington told MPs it would ensure the normal running of government business during the final weeks of the referendum campaign.

“Limited modifications” to the purdah rules would enable the government to transcribe wider EU business “without legal risks”, he said.

‘Humiliating defeat’

But he was accused by Tory Eurosceptic MP Sir Edward Leigh of offering “legalistic claptrap” in a bid to avoid a defeat in the Commons.

He said the process must be “considered to be fair” and argued for Labour’s amendment – to reinstate the full purdah rules – to be accepted.

Commenting after the vote, shadow foreign secretary Hilary Benn said the government had tried to play “fast and loose” with the arrangements for the referendum.

“This is a humiliating defeat for David Cameron, with members from all sides of the House supporting Labour’s approach to purdah, which ensures fairness in the conduct of the referendum campaign while permitting normal government business to take place,” Mr Benn said.

“The government should never have rushed through its flawed plans to play fast and loose with the rules on the referendum.” …

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-34173126

Exeter City Council corruption scandal nears its end

http://www.exeterexpressandecho.co.uk/contractors-admit-Exeter-City-Council-corruption/story-27751836-detail/story.html

Makes you wonder how easy this sort of thing is …

Coastal towns have a week to apply for £3 m funding pot

http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/Coastal-towns-urged-bid-3-million-revive-fading/story-27751288-detail/story.html

Why do most Germans rent their homes?

“It’s just a fact. Many Germans can’t be bothered to buy a house. The country’s homeownership rate ranks among the lowest in the developed world, and nearly dead last in Europe, though the Swiss rent even more. Here are comparative data from 2004, the last time the OECD updated its numbers.”

http://qz.com/167887/germany-has-one-of-the-worlds-lowest-homeownership-rates/

Peers who NEVER spoke in the House of Lords claimed £1.3 million

“Peers are entitled to claim £300 a day for attending Parliament – even if they do not speak or vote in any debate. Between 2010 to 2015, 30 peers claimed more than £750,000 without ever speaking.”

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3225160/Peers-NEVER-spoke-House-Lords-claimed-1-3-million-expenses-year.html

Senior EDDC officer roundly criticises un-named councillors in public papers

A rather extraordinary inclusion in the papers for tomorrow’s Development Management Committee has piqued the Owl’s interest:

Ed Freeman (Head of Planning) has written an extraordinary attack against previous (unnamed) councillors reproduced verbatim here:

“Where in the past some Members have sought to drive down housing numbers to protect the environment and satisfy the expressed desires of residents to see only limited growth and development this has arguably been a short sighted and perhaps self defeating approach. In terms of following through on the Government’s objectives, we are required to have an objectively assessed housing need which meets the identified needs of the district and then to purposively meet that need.”

Surely it is inappropriate for a senior officer to attack councillors in public for wanting “to protect the environment” and for standing in the way of “Government objectives”? And if EDDC exists ONLY to follow government objectives, what is the point of its existence, one might ask? And that of its officers, whose job is supposed to be to provide neutral and objective support, whatever party might be in power in the district at the time.

It’s particularly rich when it could be said that it is only thanks to EDDC’s self-confessed persistent failure to build enough houses over the past decade, and its inept performance when it comes to the Local Plan, that some councillors are trying to protect the countryside that EDDC itself has put at risk.

Owl wonders if councillors feel it worth a slapped wrist – an officer of the Council should not be criticising councillors for doing their job and who, if not named, can surely be identified .

Click to access 080915-combined-dmc-agenda-compressed.pdf

BBC will help local newspapers

The BBC is to offer staff and content to local newspapers and allow rival shows to be seen on its iPlayer catch-up service as part of a multimillion-pound reshaping of the corporation designed to head off government attempts to reduce its output.”

http://www.theguardian.com/media/2015/sep/07/bbc-will-offer-staff-and-content-to-help-local-newspapers

But will any of those “happy, clappy, never mind the content, feel the advertising” local “newspapers” (they know who they are) be up to publishing REAL news?

“A nice pile: the executives cashing in on Britain’s housebuilding boom”

Developers Berkeley, Persimmon and Barratt are handing out bumper payouts this year, but who gets what?

Berkeley Group

Tony Pidgley, the top beneficiary of Berkeley Group’s executive pay scheme with £23.2m, has become one of the top-earning business executives in the UK, second only to Sir Martin Sorrell, the boss of marketing services group WPP, who earned £43m last year.

Five executives at Berkeley shared £42m this year in the first of a series of payouts from an incentive scheme based on the group’s return on equity. The scheme was agreed many years ago in the aftermath of the financial crisis. The managing director, Rob Perrins, was the second highest earner with £12.3m.

Persimmon

Executives at Persimmon, the UK’s largest housebuilder, will award the first tranches of bonus shares to its senior executives in December. The scheme was agreed a couple of years ago and could be worth more than £600m by 2021.

Unlike the Berkeley scheme, which applies to just five executives, Persimmon’s embraces 135 of the top team. The chief executive, Jeff Fairburn, who received a pay package worth £1.9m for last year, stands to receive the largest number of shares and could eventually be in for cumulative windfalls of £100m.

Barratt

Mark Clare, the former chief executive of Barratt Developments, received £6.03m last year, thanks to a £4.1m payment from a long-term incentive scheme. The group, which reports its results on Tuesday, has been a beneficiary of the government’s Help to Buy scheme. Earlier this year Clare, who stepped down in July after nine years, cashed in nearly £12m worth of shares.

http://www.theguardian.com/business/2015/sep/06/nice-pile-executives-cashing-britains-housebuilding-berkeley-persimmon-barratt

Ministry of Defence has 123 Twitter accounts and 500 spin doctors

“Military chiefs were attacked today after it emerged taxpayers’ money has been used setting up more than 100 official Twitter accounts as part of a £230million PR blitz.

Overall, the Ministry of Defence is spending £210,000 a day boosting its public image – despite facing cuts of up to £1billion to its budget.

The money has been used to hire 500 spin doctors and some 123 special Twitter accounts.”

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3224249/Ministry-Defence-lavishing-120-000-DAY-boosting-public-image-including-100-special-Twitter-accounts.html

Black is white and white is black: Hugo Swire changes his tune on Knowle

MP Hugo Swire seems to have forgotten his own pre-election advice that there were “more intelligent ways of using Knowle”, and that it was “prudent” to “put Knowle relocation on hold”. At yesterday’s poorly-attended tea and talk meeting in Sidmouth, he apparently told some attendees that the Knowle protest was just “a parochial matter”.

Some former Sidmouth District and Town councillors, who recently lost their seats, were amongst the few people present at All Saints’ Hall. They must be glad of his change of mind.

Some history: https://eastdevonwatch.org/2015/01/03/another-split-amongst-east-devon-tories/

http://saveoursidmouth.com/2014/12/30/leader-paul-diviani-rejects-mps-call-to-put-knowle-relocation-project-on-hold-save-our-sidmouth-responds/

http://saveoursidmouth.com/2012/11/05/hugo-swire-has-asked-secretary-of-state-for-knowle-call-in/