116 Labour council leaders demand 1-to-1 meetings with Cameron and his advisers

“The mass letter-writing tactic is aimed at ensuring that Mr Cameron is not offering any ‘special favours’ to his own council to cushion the impact of Treasury cuts.”

http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2015/11/12/david-camerons-hypocrisy-_n_8544624.html

Rich Hampstead residents raising large sums for their personal Met police officers

Hampstead is one of the richest boroughs in London, where – as in many other places – crime has fallen. The police would be employed by the Metropolitan Police but work only in the one borough. As of this morning pledges of £180,000 for each year had been made – enough for 3 officers – but more money is rolling in each hour from a crowd funding site.

The head of Met Police is said to have announced that he can see problems but is currently open-minded about the idea.

“Jessica Learmond-Criqui, who chairs the Frognal and Fitzjohns Safer neighbourhood panel, still hopes to secure a total of £600,000 over three years to fund five PCs and a Sergeant dedicated to Hampstead.”

http://www.hamhigh.co.uk/news/crime-court/fund_your_own_police_plan_in_hampstead_attracts_180k_pledges_in_four_weeks_1_4299030

Cameron offers Oxfordshire council leader fast access to no 10 advisers

“David Cameron has been accused of offering a Conservative council chief special access to No 10 advisers as a way to resolve a disagreement about proposed budget cuts.

The prime minister is facing questions about his conduct after he wrote to Ian Hudspeth, the leader of Oxfordshire county council, chastising him for considering cuts to day centres, libraries and museums. Cameron’s own constituency of Witney falls within the area.

In the letter, Cameron extended an offer for how to help to manage the cuts, saying he would be happy to “initiate a dialogue” with the No 10 policy unit about the possibilities of devolution deals and suggesting that Hudspeth contact his aide Sheridan Westlake, who used to work in the Department for Communities and Local Government.”

http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2015/nov/11/david-cameron-offered-oxfordshire-council-leader-access-to-advisers

When is an advertisement not an advertisement?

Tighter rules on local authority publications state that

” the new rules would define ‘appropriate use of publicity’ in relation to council newspapers and use of lobbyists: Advertising should be balanced, factually accurate and not likely to be perceived by the public as a political statement or a commentary on contentious areas of public policy.”

In the current edition of its online newspaper for councillors, the Knowledge, there is an article about “The Earth Centre” at Bicton which states: “The Earth Centre at Bicton College offers a unique event, conferencing and meeting venue located in the
heart of the beautiful East Devon countryside but within a short distance of Exeter. The venue acts as an 80 seat auditorium, 50 seat seminar room with external breakout area, or an open space to use as you please. It also has an additional private meeting room for up to 12 people, free car parking facilities for 60 vehicles, catering facilities, WIFI, audio and projector screens”.

Did they pay for this puff job one wonders? Isn’t the Bicton area, much of it owned by Clinton Devon Estates which wants to see housing there, a “contentious area of public policy”?

Or is it a pre-emptive strike for another East Devon District Council satellite office!

37,000 could end up in NHS care when care homes forced to close

Several towns in East Devon rely on care homes for many jobs. Most advertisements in local newspapers are for jobs in the sector. The increase in minimum wage and lower social care fees will cause many care homes to close. The closure of more community hospital beds will exacerbate the problem. Councils facing budget cuts of 40% cannot pick up any slack.

“The NHS could be forced to find room for 37,000 elderly and disabled nursing home residents by the end of the decade as the cash-starved care industry teeters on the brink of collapse, a new report warns.
A study of funding by the think-tank ResPublica concluded that a feared wave of care home closures and cutbacks could leave the NHS forced to pick up a bill of £3 billion a year.

The health budget has been given special protection from austerity cuts for the last five years but councils, which have a legal duty to provide social care, have seen their incomes slashed by 40 per cent. …”

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/health/elder/11987364/NHS-facing-37000-strong-influx-of-elderly-as-care-homes-close.html

David Cameron in denial about cuts – here’s the proof

“… In leaked correspondence with the Conservative leader of Oxfordshire county council (which covers his own constituency), David Cameron expresses his horror at the cuts being made to local services. This is the point at which you realise that he has no conception of what he has done.

The letters were sent in September, but came to light only on Friday, when they were revealed by the Oxford Mail. The national media has been remarkably slow to pick the story up, given the insight it offers into the prime minister’s detachment from the consequences of his actions.

Cameron complains that he is “disappointed” by the council’s proposals “to make significant cuts to frontline services – from elderly day centres, to libraries, to museums. This is in addition to the unwelcome and counter-productive proposals to close children’s centres across the county.” Why, he asks, has Oxfordshire not focused instead on “making back-office savings”? Why hasn’t it sold off its surplus property? After all, there has been only “a slight fall in government grants in cash terms”. Couldn’t the county “generate savings in a more creative manner”?

Explaining the issue gently, as if to a slow learner, the council leader, Ian Hudspeth, points out that the council has already culled its back-office functions, slashing 40% of its most senior staff and 2,800 jobs in total, with the result that it now spends less on these roles than most other counties. He explains that he has already flogged all the property he can lay hands on, but would like to remind the prime minister that using the income from these sales to pay for the council’s running costs “is neither legal, nor sustainable in the long-term since they are one-off receipts”.

As for Cameron’s claim about government grants, Hudspeth comments: “I cannot accept your description of a drop in funding of £72m or 37% as a ‘slight fall’.”

Again and again, he exposes the figures the prime minister uses as wildly wrong. For example, Cameron claims that the cumulative cuts in the county since 2010 amount to £204m. But that is not the cumulative figure; it is the annual figure. Since 2010, the county has had to save £626m. It has done so while taking on new responsibilities, and while the population of elderly people and the numbers of children in the social care system have boomed. Now there is nothing left to cut except frontline services.

… It’s worth remembering that Oxfordshire, which is run by Conservatives, is among the wealthiest counties in England, with the nation’s lowest level of unemployment. In common with every aspect of austerity, the cuts have fallen hardest on those least able to weather them: local authorities in the most deprived parts of the country.

As a report commissioned by the Joseph Rowntree Foundation discovered, the cuts in some areas are so extreme that local authority provision is now being reduced to little more than social care, child protection and other core services, while the budgets for libraries, museums, galleries, sports facilities, small parks and playgrounds, children’s centres, youth clubs, after-school and holiday clubs, planning and environmental quality have already been slashed to the point at which these can barely function.

In July, the Financial Times revealed that the funding for children’s centres across England has been cut by 28% in just three years: is Cameron unaware of this? As for public protection, it is all but gone. Visits to workplaces by health and safety inspectors have fallen by 91% in four years, and have been abandoned altogether by 53 local authorities. If you want to endanger your workers, don’t mind us. You begin to see how the government’s agendas mesh.

Now, as there is nothing else left to cut, the attack turns to social care, with untold consequences for children, the elderly and people who have mental health problems.

And we are only halfway through the government’s elective, unwarranted austerity programme. The spending review this month will demand even greater cuts from budgets that have already been comprehensively fleeced. How will this be possible without dismantling the basic functions of the state?

The government justifies its austerity programme on the grounds of responsibility: people must take responsibility for their own lives, rather than relying on the state; local authorities must take responsibility for their spending. But, as Cameron’s letter shows, he takes no responsibility for his own policies. Like pain, responsibility is to be applied selectively.”

George Monbiot

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/nov/11/david-cameron-letter-cuts-oxfordshire

Exmouth: re/de/generation

” … The legal procedures underway with tenants form part of this ongoing regeneration process.”

http://www.exeterexpressandecho.co.uk/Exmouth-action-group-criticise-new-EDDC-planning/story-28149375-detail/story.html

Regeneration: another word for “aren’t we clever – we call it “ongoing regeneration” and then we can do anything we like”.

You have only until tomorrow to (attempt to) shape EDDC services

http://eastdevon.gov.uk/consultation-and-surveys/moving-and-improving-consultation/

But best guess is Devon and Somerset devolution and “greater Exeter” trumps our wishes!

Plans for referendum on extra council tax for policing dropped

http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/PCC-drops-plans-council-tax-rise-following-delays/story-28147650-detail/story.html

Mr Hogg has said that the social media outcry and mistakes made government accountants about how much will be lost has caused his change of mind.

Many social media comments were on the lines of: “why don’t we just get rid of you and your very expensive staff” and ” if there is a mistake in the accounting, how can we trust government information anyway”!

According to research by The Taxpayers Alliance:

Total spending across all OPCCs in 2013-14 was £52 million, equivalent to the starting pay of over 2,200 Constables and

Devon and Cornwall OPCC and West Midlands OPCC both had 7 staff whose role is to promote the OPCC.

https://d3n8a8pro7vhmx.cloudfront.net/taxpayersalliance/pages/5606/attachments/original/1438848618/PCC_research_note.pdf?1438848618

Cranbrook says no to gypsies and travellers

” … As part of that consultation, Cranbrook Town Council made it clear that it did not want the provision of a new site for gypsies and travellers in the new town.

In a formal response Cranbrook Town Council clerk Nick Randle said Cranbrook is “not suitable” as it is subject to “strategic allocations for residential development.”

Read more: http://www.exeterexpressandecho.co.uk/Plans-large-traveller-site-Cranbrook-criticised/story-28146597-detail/story.html

Welcome to our world Cranbrook, now “flavour of the month” has worn off, where it doesn’t matter diddly-squat what you think or what you want – where “consultation” is pointless and where your district councillors and officers ride rough-shod over you.

And show us anywhere in East Devon that DOESN’T have “strategic allocations for residential development”!

But we can be fairly certain that travellers won’t be sited in Whimple!

Think tank says economic growth being forfeited in favour of elderly

If economic growth is being sacrificed as this article implies, where does that put our Local Plan where it is the be-all-and-end-all of it? With no money for infrastructure who will live on new estates with no road connections to employment areas? Who will buy the houses? Who will be able to afford them? Where will the jobs come from with the wages high enough to pay for the houses that young people can’t afford to buy or rent?

” … The Resolution Foundation calculates that, from 2010 to 2019, the budgets for current spending will have been cut by 75% at the Department of Transport, by 64% at the Department for Communities and Local Government and by 53% at the Department for Business. Capital spending is not included in the calculations. By contrast, the NHS budget will have risen by 14% over the same period and the international development budget increased by 40%.

The thinktank questioned whether politicians had thought sufficiently about the reshaping of the state brought about by the mix of cuts and the protections provided to specific departments and age groups.

The foundation said: “While the focus of the autumn statement will largely be on how the pain of spending cuts has been spread around departments – as well as any changes to tax credit reforms – it’s important to step back and consider what the chancellor’s plan means for the long-term role of the state and the support it provides across different parts of the population”.

The thinktank found a growing generational divide since the financial crash, with average spending per head set to fall by 7% for children and 9% among working age adults.

In contrast, spending per capita on older people will rise by about 19% over the same period. By the end of this decade, spending on the state pension will account for more than half of all welfare spending. This is despite the big shift in welfare spending towards pensioners being cushioned to some extent by significant increases in the state pension age since 2010, culminating in a rise to 66 for men and women in 2020.

Continued demographic changes post-2020 are likely to exacerbate the shift in welfare spending towards elderly people.”

http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2015/nov/09/george-osborne-skews-spending-towards-health-and-elderly-people

The end of social housing and the welfare state?

” … The housing and planning bill, now in the Commons, is designed to finish off social renting. It carries out the manifesto pledge of a right to buy housing association properties at heavy discounts. Local authorities have to sell their most valuable homes to pay towards that discount – so two social homes are lost for every one sold.

Council and housing association rents are cut by 1%, which sounds good but the Institute for Fiscal Studies says it helps very few of the 3.9 million social tenants: it just comes off their housing benefit. But it’s a bonus for the Treasury, taking £1.7bn off the housing benefit bill by leaving a disastrous hole in council and housing-association finances: they will build 14,000 fewer homes to rent. Borrowing to build will be harder, as this loss of rent caused Moody’s to downgrade housing associations’ credit ratings. The FT reports that, as a result of the rent cut, council plans to build 5,448 homes were cancelled instantly.

…For every nine social homes sold off, only one has been built. “Get Britain building,” Cameron said, but few expect those million homes he promised. Housing is at the root of all good social policy. Good jobs, better education, decent communities, children at home in secure families – all depend on somewhere permanent and decent to live. Macmillan knew it, yet Cameron has abandoned it.”

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2015/nov/10/housing-target-david-cameron-dismantling-welfare-state

Leaked letter: more bed closures for local community hospitals

A leaked letter has revealed that hospital bed closures are planned for Sidmouth, Seaton, Honiton and Ottery.
The closures are said to be temporary and part of a 15-bed package also affecting community hospitals in Exmouth and Exeter.
Sidmouth, Seaton and Honiton will each see two beds close, whilst the figure is three for Ottery, the letter reveals.
In addition, the Minor Injuries Unit in Sidmouth will also close temporarily.
Northern Devon Healthcare NHS Trust (NDHT), which manages the hospitals, did not inform Pulman’s View, but the details are in a leaked letter to stakeholders, dated November 2nd.
NDHT Chief Executive Dr Alison Diamond wrote: “We have had a spending limit (cap) on the amount of our budget that we can spend on agency staff imposed.
“We do not have permission to breach this limit and therefore were required to consider how we temporarily reconfigure our services in the safest possible way.
“Our approach was to explore only those proposals that maintained quality of care, addressed the risks of over-reliance on agency staff and which had the least impact on patients and our clinical workforce.
“It is important to note that these are temporary and urgent, in that they will be reversed in March 2016 and that we continue to recruit to our vacant clinical posts.
“So far the trust has spent £5million on nursing agency in six months, compared to £6million for the whole of last year.
“Our agency hotspots are mostly in the community hospitals.”
The most recent agency nurse figure for Sidmouth Hospital, for example, is 27.32 per cent.
The Chief Executive also said: “We would have preferred to have been able to involve you far more in the discussions about the safest way to maintain these services.
“However, the cap is being imposed from the middle of November and this means we must take emergency and temporary measures to address the safety concerns as well as ensuring we are not penalised for breaching the agency cap.”
Axminster GP Dr James Vann said he was not impressed by the decision when asked for comment.
Dr Vann played a leading role in pressure groups fighting the recent and much-publicised in-patient bed closures at Axminster Hospital.
He said: “We have heard this all before. NDHT does not make temporary cuts.
“In my opinion, previously they have been part of a closure campaign. “The sooner NDHT stops meddling with our community services in East Devon the better.
“I hope that the Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG) will be more active in controlling the actions of this provider.
“NDHT has known for the past two years that recruitment is difficult. “They worked closely with a group in Axminster to try and improve recruitment and were successful to the degree that Axminster Hospital nearly reopened, finding 10 new whole time equivalent nurses in three months.
“They have failed to learn from this experience and are now back again having to employ excessive numbers of agency nurses and spending more than most trusts on agency nursing.
“Closing beds is a panic measure being undertaken by the trust and certainly at this time of year cannot be in the patient’s best interest. “Please can the CCG try to accelerate the start of their new chosen provider, the Royal Devon & Exeter Trust.”
Dr Alison Diamond, chief executive, said: “We are working with the CCG and RD&E to look at whether alternative options are available. Our priority is to provide safe and effective care as well as resilient services for patients.”

http://www.otterystmary-today.co.uk/article.cfm?id=101434

Local police want council tax hike

“Police bosses claim a rise in council tax would save hundreds of officer posts, as it faced budget cuts.

The proposal, being put to the public, would add about £26 a year to the bill of the average band D property in Devon and Cornwall.

The force’s Police and Crime Commissioner (PCC), Tony Hogg, said a 15% increase in the police’s share of council tax could save 350 officers.
If there is support for the rise, a referendum will
be held on 5 May.”

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-devon-34763687

Local Government Department agrees 30% cuts over four years

“Four government departments have provisionally agreed to cut their spending by an average of 30% over the next four years, Chancellor George Osborne is to announce later.

The transport, local government and environment departments, plus the Treasury, have all agreed deals ahead of the spending review on 25 November.
The cuts will help the public finances back into surplus, he will say.

A Treasury source told BBC News the agreements were “really good progress”.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-34763261

But no doubt our council taxes will remain the same or increase as costs are offloaded from county and district and loaded on to town and parish council precepts.

And there no doubt will still be money to build a new council HQ in Honiton, subsidise the Thelma Hulbert Gallery, pay consultants exorbitant fees and continue to offer free parking to councillors and officers at Knowle.

Some assets won’t sweat quite as much as others.

2,000 senior council officers get private medical treatment paid for by us

Figures obtained by the Mail show that over the past three years, £3.43million of public money has been spent on private health insurance for council staff in England and Wales.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3309667/The-NHS-Not-fund-private-health-Town-Hall-bosses-Taxpayers-1m-bill-fund-treatment-2-000-chiefs.html?ITO=1490&ns_mchannel=rss&ns_campaign=1490

Seaton Heights: one year on from “ready to go” – no progress

Last October:

https://eastdevonwatch.org/2014/10/22/seaton-heights-hotel-complex-is-it-ready-to-start-building/comment-page-1/

Progress? None.

Yet, according to this web page (which we have saved in case it changes):

http://lymebayleisure.co.uk/luxury-properties/

“Discerning purchases (sic) can secure a plot of their choice now for an initial reservation fee of just £1,000, for further details of available plots, terms and conditions and time frames please email our dedicated sales team at info@lymebayleisure.co.uk”

Time for another update, perhaps?

House of Lords Housing Inquiry: written submissions sought

House of Lords

Economics of the United Kingdom housing market inquiry

The Economic Affairs Committee of the House of Lords, chaired by Lord Hollick, is conducting an inquiry into The Economics of the United Kingdom Housing Market. This inquiry will consider:

 the supply and affordability of housing for private buyers, for the private rental sector and for the social housing market across the UK;

 the effectiveness of Government policies on the demand for and supply of reasonably priced housing across the UK.

The Committee invites interested individuals and organisations to submit evidence to this inquiry.

Written evidence is sought by 17 December 2015.

Scope of the inquiry:

The Committee is to investigate the economics of the UK housing market. Buying a house is becoming increasingly unaffordable for first time buyers. The cost of private rented accommodation is rising and there is a lack of affordable social housing. This Inquiry will consider the economic factors that influence the demand for and availability of reasonably priced housing to buy and to rent. This is a complex topic and the inquiry will particularly focus on the effectiveness of government economic measures designed to improve housing affordability.

Its scope, remit and how to submit evidence is here:

Click to access Housing-Call-for-evidence-FINAL.pdf

COVOP summary: The state of planning today

Planning Situation: Background

There is very strong evidence to show that across England the Planning system is badly broken and that communities are being left to pick up the mess. The NPPF has resulted in planning-through-appeal and, in areas where Local Plans can’t get through the inspection process, the developers are having a field day. The common practice is to pick off sites that haven’t been identified for strategic development and take local authority decisions through appeal. The sites that have been identified for strategic development can then be picked off at leisure later on. Developers are building up magnificent stockpiles of permissions and their profits have shot up since the inception of the NPPF.

Permissions can last for a minimum of three years and on bigger sites this can be extended. All the developer has to do to secure the permission is to put a spade in the ground. He or she doesn’t have to build-out. Build-out rates are appallingly slow. In the midst of massive claims about housing need, the market, other than in London and the south east, is sluggish. Here in Cheshire East we have permissions coming out of our ears, but the builders churn out approximately 30 houses per annum, even on big sites. This is big business and neither councils nor communities can afford the level of legal expertise that is required to negotiate their way through the minefield. The cards are stacked against them, anyway. The NPPF is deliberately written to ensure that housing gets built, and sustainability, which is supposed to prevent adverse development is neither properly defined nor properly applied.

Developers have their own standard housing designs and they have finely tuned their businesses so that they build to those stock patterns and only build sufficient quantities to keep demand and prices high. That is why affordable housing is not built in the quantities that are needed and why the big builders won’t build things like bungalows. Land-owners have got in on the act and now only want to sell their land for housing because this brings in a bigger return than infrastructure or commerce.

Local authorities are being kicked by both government and their communities. In fact, their hands are tied because getting a local plan through an inspection is difficult and because the law has been constructed in such a way that opposition is neutered. The so-called objectively-assessed housing need is always based on figures that assume enormous levels of growth for the whole of the twenty-year plan period. Add in the Liverpool and Sedgefield decisions, which are ways of providing an extra provision to supplement the five year housing supply, and areas are stuck with unrealistic housing expectations. Which the builders argue for, but then don’t bother to supply.

The NPPF was compiled by four people, three of whom had interests in the construction industry and one of whom was an officer in the RSPB. It is considered by most communities to be a developers’ charter. The lead figure in pushing for this was a woman from the Treasury called Kate Barker who is now a director of Taylor Wimpey. I once carried out an assessment of a group of members of the House of Lords who were in a debate on housing and who were all demanding further deregulation of the planning regime. They all had some kind of personal pecuniary interest in the industry.

All this might be forgivable if housing for those who need it was being supplied. It is not. Generally speaking, the housing that is being built is often in the luxury end of the market and such unnecessary provision as second homes. There are now more private landlords than in the public or housing association sector. Evidence shows that the latter are not going to be building much more property for several years because they are having to make up the shortfall, in some instances by making staff redundant, as a result of the current changes to the welfare regime. The right-to-buy is also seen by them as a threat and makes them reluctant to invest in more property.

There are some useful studies about all these things, in addition to the evidence presented by communities to the Review that was held by the Committee for Communities and Local Development last year. They made recommendations that might have been really helpful and the Government chose to ignore these. The Secretaries of State and the Planning Ministers seem to be in total denial about the failure of their policy. Across England there are action groups in communities that feel bruised and damaged by the fall-out from all this. Because the emphasis has been on a kind of scorched-earth, build-at-any-cost, programme the basic infrastructure provision that underpins all development is being eroded or omitted. The gladiatorial contests in major planning appeals now include spirited attempts to get away with not making any contributions to community infrastructure. The government is complicit in this. All political parties, and many charities make statements about the quantity of housing need but they rarely present the evidence that supports these claims.

At local level, we know that our local association has no method of working out housing need because they allow multiple registration (the same person can apply for as many different kinds of accommodation as they want. Every time they apply, this counts as housing need. It doesn’t matter whether they are already housed. A member of their household can also register in the same way).

​(Jenny Unsworth, CoVoP and Protect Congleton)