Power corrupts …

“Sneaky Tories have stopped publishing the names of big bucks donors to the party.

David Cameron pledged to reveal the names of his “Leaders Group” , who stump up more than £50,000 a year.

They get access to the PM and his Cabinet at dinners in Downing Street, Chequers or Tory HQ.

The first list was published in March 2012 and ­appeared quarterly on the official Tory website.

But there has been nothing since last summer’s list.

It revealed the Conservatives received £2.7million in the previous three months from people who attended dinners or meetings with the PM.

That represented 40% of the party’s total donations for the quarter.”

http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/tories-stop-naming-partys-big-6791018

“Forget loyalty to your party – everyone should be a floating voter”

… “I’ve never understood people who treat politics as if it were football. In football, you support the same team from birth to death, through thick and thin; no matter how hopeless they become, you never abandon them for a superior rival.

In a voter, though, that kind of blind devotion is bizarre. If the party you normally vote for starts propagating ideas you oppose, then you’re entirely free – indeed, you’re wise – to dump them and back a rival.

Voters owe no loyalty. Give me the turncoat over the ideologue any day. You can’t trust ideology: it does your thinking for you.

Our democracy would be healthier if everyone were a floating voter.”

Michael Deacon, Daily Telegraph
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/comment/11980291/Forget-loyalty-to-your-party-everyone-should-be-a-floating-voter.html

What EDDC giveth, EDDC taketh away …

… East Devon District Council (EDDC) had called on ministers to reconsider a one per cent rent reduction for council and social tenants.

The authority says the change will leave it £7.9million out of pocket after four years …

http://www.midweekherald.co.uk/news/rent_reduction_plans_will_have_a_devastating_impact_says_eddc_leader_1_4300546

SOUNDS GOOD DOESN’T IT? BUT HOLD ON …

“… East Devon is planning to raise rents for new tenants from the end of November, according to a proposal going to the Housing Review Board on 5th November. Rents will be raised to the ‘target/formula rent’ in one go, the average difference being £2.21 per week although obviously in many cases it will be more.

Giving with one hand, taking with the other

The reason for this change is given as: ‘The Government announced in the summer budget that from April 2016, social housing rents will reduce by 1% each year for a period of four years. By moving rents at tenancy changes to formula/target levels for new tenants, some of the loss of rental income will be offset and lessen the severity of the 1%, 4 year rent reduction.’

In other words, what tenants gained on the one hand, EDDC (which is losing income through the reductions) will take back with the other. Tenants will pay to keep services funded. …”

http://seatonmatters.org/2015/11/02/rent-rises-for-new-east-devon-tenants/

Frinton … East Devon … take your pick

… Many people all over the country feel not merely neglected but abandoned by central government. They pay their taxes, as they have always done, but the services which they expect in return — be it health, education or policing — are now in steep decline.

And, while the simplistic Left like to blame it all on ‘Tory cuts’, these citizens know it’s not all about budgets. Instead, it’s about the fashionable causes and warped priorities of a richly rewarded managerial elite versus the expectations of the people they serve.

For example, the public hear the Chief Constable of Surrey saying that her officers may no longer bother chasing car thieves or those who drive away from petrol stations without paying.

They hear the Police Commissioner for Devon and Cornwall say officers may no longer bother investigating some suicides or those who do a runner from a restaurant (in an area dependent on tourism).

They hear the Police Commissioner for Bedfordshire saying — as he did this week — that motorway speed cameras might be recalibrated to extract fines from the tiniest infractions (with no mention of ‘road safety’).

Yet they also know there are plenty of police available to swoop on pensioners who remonstrate with feral youths, or to take sneak photos of celebrities from helicopters, or to round up journalists who talk to whistleblowers and so on. And sympathy is in short supply.

If Frinton was very multi-cultural or very troublesome, there might be grants and pilot schemes and shiny new infrastructure. But it is not.
This is forgotten England: one of those unglamorous, unsexy back-waters where nothing much happens and things just slowly become more and more rubbish every day.

The local GP surgery, for instance, once a partnership of doctors who tended families from cradle to grave, reached crisis point last year after the last permanent GP departed. Patients had to queue round the block at dawn to see a ‘locum’ doctor.

‘It was dreadful,’ says Tony Comber, chairman of the surgery’s patient participation group. ‘If you did manage to get in, these locums would just keep repeating, “You’ve only got ten minutes”, even when my wife was having an epileptic fit right there.’

The surgery has been taken over, in the short-term, by a local employee-owned healthcare provider, with three doctors hired until March and locums filling any gaps. But elderly patients, often with complex problems, yearn for someone who knows their medical needs.

It will be a familiar story to millions, of course, but it simply compounds the sense of neglect in end-of-the-line places such as Frinton.

While other parts of the country look forward to expensive new railways or chunks of motorway, there’s nothing new heading in this direction. No one has mentioned an ‘Eastern powerhouse’.

The street lights go out between midnight and 5am to help the county council save money. The schools are overcrowded.

At the same time, central government is planning 10,000 new homes for the district, with no obvious employment for all the new arrivals, let alone extra health workers or schools.

I meet local councillors Jeff Bray and Richard Everett — both members of the Ukip opposition on the Tory-controlled district council — who say that Whitehall is clueless about the impact it will have.
Mr Bray represents a ward where an outlying village Many people all over the country feel not merely neglected but abandoned by central government. They pay their taxes, as they have always done, but the services which they expect in return — be it health, education or policing — are now in steep decline.
And, while the simplistic Left like to blame it all on ‘Tory cuts’, these citizens know it’s not all about budgets. Instead, it’s about the fashionable causes and warped priorities of a richly rewarded managerial elite versus the expectations of the people they serve.
For example, the public hear the Chief Constable of Surrey saying that her officers may no longer bother chasing car thieves or those who drive away from petrol stations without paying.
They hear the Police Commissioner for Devon and Cornwall say officers may no longer bother investigating some suicides or those who do a runner from a restaurant (in an area dependent on tourism).
They hear the Police Commissioner for Bedfordshire saying — as he did this week — that motorway speed cameras might be recalibrated to extract fines from the tiniest infractions (with no mention of ‘road safety’).

Yet they also know there are plenty of police available to swoop on pensioners who remonstrate with feral youths, or to take sneak photos of celebrities from helicopters, or to round up journalists who talk to whistleblowers and so on. And sympathy is in short supply.
If Frinton was very multi-cultural or very troublesome, there might be grants and pilot schemes and shiny new infrastructure. But it is not.
This is forgotten England: one of those unglamorous, unsexy back-waters where nothing much happens and things just slowly become more and more rubbish every day.
The local GP surgery, for instance, once a partnership of doctors who tended families from cradle to grave, reached crisis point last year after the last permanent GP departed. Patients had to queue round the block at dawn to see a ‘locum’ doctor.
‘It was dreadful,’ says Tony Comber, chairman of the surgery’s patient participation group. ‘If you did manage to get in, these locums would just keep repeating, “You’ve only got ten minutes”, even when my wife was having an epileptic fit right there.’
The surgery has been taken over, in the short-term, by a local employee-owned healthcare provider, with three doctors hired until March and locums filling any gaps. But elderly patients, often with complex problems, yearn for someone who knows their medical needs.
It will be a familiar story to millions, of course, but it simply compounds the sense of neglect in end-of-the-line places such as Frinton.

While other parts of the country look forward to expensive new railways or chunks of motorway, there’s nothing new heading in this direction. No one has mentioned an ‘Eastern powerhouse’. The street lights go out between midnight and 5am to help the county council save money. The schools are overcrowded. At the same time, central government is planning 10,000 new homes for the district, with no obvious employment for all the new arrivals, let alone extra health workers or schools.

I meet local councillors Jeff Bray and Richard Everett — both members of the Ukip opposition on the Tory-controlled district council — who say that Whitehall is clueless about the impact it will have. Mr Bray represents a ward where an outlying village of 750 homes is on course to absorb 1,000 new ones. ‘Where is the infrastructure and who will live in these houses if there isn’t the work here?’ he asks.

To cap it all, local policing is shortly to go through the wringer.
Faced with making £63 million of savings over the next five years, Essex Police is about to cut 15 of its 25 walk-in stations and shed 190 of its 250 police community support officers (PCSOs). The nearest police base to Frinton-on-Sea, in neighbouring Walton, is to be sold.

Morale is nose-diving. While the national average for sick days has fallen to four per year, the rate among Essex Police officers has risen to 13. Among PCSOs it’s 17.5. By the standards of any organisation, it’s a scandal.
‘This is the England that the politicians take for granted,’ says local MP Douglas Carswell, who defected to Ukip from the Tories and is his party’s only MP.

‘These are people who have paid into the system all their lives. Now they find themselves let down by the sheer incompetence of the state and by a political class cocooned in another world, spouting figures handed to them by civil servants. …”

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3307955/Forced-hire-police-town-old-white-politicians-care-about.htmlof 750 homes is on course to absorb 1,000 new ones. ‘Where is the infrastructure and who will live in these houses if there isn’t the work here?’ he asks.
To cap it all, local policing is shortly to go through the wringer.
Faced with making £63 million of savings over the next five years, Essex Police is about to cut 15 of its 25 walk-in stations and shed 190 of its 250 police community support officers (PCSOs). The nearest police base to Frinton-on-Sea, in neighbouring Walton, is to be sold.
Morale is nose-diving. While the national average for sick days has fallen to four per year, the rate among Essex Police officers has risen to 13. Among PCSOs it’s 17.5. By the standards of any organisation, it’s a scandal.
‘This is the England that the politicians take for granted,’ says local MP Douglas Carswell, who defected to Ukip from the Tories and is his party’s only MP.
‘These are people who have paid into the system all their lives. Now they find themselves let down by the sheer incompetence of the state and by a political class cocooned in another world, spouting figures handed to them by civil servants.’

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3307955/Forced-hire-police-town-old-white-politicians-care-about.html

Luxury is always available …

Several newspapers report that the UK’s largest care home provider (Four Seasons) is in financial difficulty both from “financial engineering” and the inability of social services fees to keep up with costs. They will now sell off some homes and cut maintenance and refurbishment costs in others.

Luxury accommodation will, of course, always be available to those who can afford it. But what of the rest of us?

Is it morally defensible for a council to sell its assets so that luxury accommodation is available for the elderly, when others cannot afford it and when local youngsters are priced out of the housing market? Is it morally defensible to spend the money gained from such asset sales to build itself new offices. If our elderly have to put up with less well maintained accommodation, our youngsters being unable to own or rent homes because of high prices, why do our officers and councillors deserve it? “Making do and mending” is what the rest of us without extra resources are having to do.

Yet another example of “Local Authority plc” – running councils as businesses for profit rather than for those paying council tax. Only in this case ” shareholders” are officers and councillors, not us.

If our council tax is not paying for the services WE need – should we be paying it?