Sidmouth: a chance for EDDC to get regeneration right for once

Letter published in Sidmouth Herald:

Sir,

The seemingly heavy-handed ‘regeneration’ of nearby coastal towns does not bode well for Sidmouth. The sell-off in Seaton has left it dominated by Tesco, and it appears to me a loose agreement to build affordable homes has been broken since the supermarket giant fell on hard times.

I believe things are not looking good, either, in Exmouth. The plans presented to the public there, for a seafront leisure complex, bear little resemblance to the residential development now proposed. Long-established small businesses have apparently been swept aside.

This week, EDDC’s regeneration team have turned their attention to Sidmouth, with an agreement to do a £10,000 ‘scoping report’ for the eastern end of the town, with the Town Council contributing £2,000. This arrangement suggests who is likely to have the most say.

Fortunately, much of the ‘scoping’ has already been done, voluntarily, by local organisations. In 2006, the Vision Group for Sidmouth presented EDDC with a detailed study on behalf of the town’s “residents, visitors and businesses”. More recently, the Save the Drill Hall campaign produced
architect’s plans of how that building could be transformed.

And right now, in a new and timely initiative, an international architecture competition has been launched, based on what local people want, — and don’t want. The
simple questions in phase 1-public consultation , can be completed at this link:

http://www.easterntownpartnership.com

Find out more at a free public Information drop-in session, this Saturday , 9 Jan, 10-12noon, Leigh Browne Room, Old Meeting Dissenters’ Chapel (opposite High Street post office).

Best of all, the new Sidmouth Town Council are beginning work on a Neighbourhood Plan to establish what the town needs. If EDDC looks and listens, it could get the ‘regeneration’ right for THIS coastal town.

Jackie Green
Sidmouth

All you need is trust, says Diviani

Chairing Wednesday’s Cabinet meeting at Knowle (6 Jan 2016), the Leader was in ebullient mood, announcing that the Local Plan is likely to be adopted quite soon, and that Lidl is now taking what was to be Sainsbury distribution site on the so-called ‘intermodal hub’, creating 450 new jobs. It was not specified how many of the jobs would be well-paid.

He was still upbeat, when Cllr Ian Thomas (Con) emphasised the financial risks threatening EDDC’s Budget, and that in the coming years, the relationship with the Local Enterprise Partnership (LEP) would be crucial.

Cllr Phil Twiss agreed that you “can’t underestimate the impact of Devolution,” as he’d learned from the counterparts from northern powerhouse councils, whom he’d recently met at Warwick Business School. “There was much uncertainty”, he said.

The leader had the solution. “The most important thing you need is trust” he told his Cabinet colleagues – adding jocularly, “We don’t trust the government, and they don’t trust us”.

MP says: “Stop us marking our own homework”

” … MPs have long been criticised for ‘marking their own homework’ by only allowing a watchdog who they appoint to police their affairs.

Mr Flynn, the MP for Newport West asked Commons Leader Chris Grayling for a debate on whether “Parliament is slipping back into its bad old ways that led to the expenses scandal?”

He said: “In recent cases involving Malcolm Rifkind, Jack Straw, Tim Yeo and Lord Blencathra, very lenient decisions were made by bodies in this House but very harsh decisions were taken by independent voices outside, including Ofcom.”

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/12088034/Stop-us-marking-our-own-homework-MPs-tell-minister-after-Jack-Straw-and-Malcolm-Rifkind-rulings.html “Stop us marking our own homework

Bit like a Monitoring Officer, paid by a council, adjudicating on his or her own councillors and officers … and being dependent on them for their jobs …

Local Plan declared sound-ish, sort of … 17,100 homes to be shoe-horned in to the district

Well, it’s sort-of sound except that it isn’t yet being published because EDDC has to “fact check” it and/or respond to it ….. or simply agree with it.  It appears that Mr Thickett, aware of EDDC’s foot-dragging in this area has said that he wants their response within two weeks.  The press release also mentions “main modifications.

http://www.exmouthjournal.co.uk/news/eddc_s_local_plan_finally_judged_sound_by_inspector_1_4370685

So, don’t hold your breath – many a slip twixt cup and lip and every delay means that developers can whap in more pre-agreement planning applications …..

And EDDC will, of course, have to find time to accept it in their very busy meetings schedule, which might also take some time.

 

MP gets involved in flooding issue on development site

NO, of course it isn’t Hugo Swire! He couldn’t raise matters in Westminster because he is a Minister … though Neil Parish did go into bat for Feniton some time ago, he didn’t succeed in solving its problems either.

Seems developers don’t take any notice of councils OR Westminster!

“Geoffrey Cox says residents of Acacia Close in Bideford have experienced “severe” flooding since work began on the nearby College Park development.

The Torridge and West Devon MP suggests a drainage pond for the site is to blame, and has raised the issue with the council and the construction companies.

But despite “regular” contact with all parties, Mr Cox says nothing has yet been done to address the problem and hopes to raise the matter in Westminster.”

http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/Dispute-Devon-development-causing-floods-taken/story-28476821-detail/story.html

Local Govt Association says charge council tax on unbuilt homes with planning permission

Developers that fail to swiftly build properties when planning permission is in place should face stiff penalties, the Local Government Association says.

Builders should pay full council tax on homes not built before the original planning permission expires, the body, which represents local councils, said.

It said 475,000 homes with planning permission were not completed in 2014-15, but councils were not to blame.
The government said building had started on more than half of these.

‘Bumper backlog’

The LGA – which represents local authorities across England and Wales – said its research had found that a “bumper backlog” of homes to be built in England had “grown at a rapid pace over the past few years”.

In 2012-13, the total of “unimplemented planning permissions” was 381,390. But in 2013-14 it was 443,265, rising to 475,647 homes in 2014-15, it said.

Peter Box, the LGA’s housing spokesman, said the figures proved the planning system was “not a barrier” to house building. He said councils were approving almost 500,000 more houses than were being built.

“To tackle the new homes backlog and to get Britain building again, councils must have the power to invest in building new homes and to force developers to build homes more quickly,” he said.

“Skills is the greatest barrier to building, not planning.
“If we are to see the homes desperately needed across the country built, and jobs and apprenticeships created,
councils must be given a leading role to tackle our growing construction skills shortage, which the industry says is one of the greatest barriers to building.”

A spokesman from the Department for Communities and Local Government said there had been “a 25% increase in the number of new homes delivered over the past year alone”, saying the government had “got Britain building again”.

“Alongside this we’re working closely with developers to ensure it [Britain] has the skills it needs – and saw 18,000 building apprenticeships started in 2014.

“We’re also directly commissioning thousands of new affordable homes and recently doubled the housing budget,” the spokesman added.

‘Misleading data’

Sadiq Khan, Labour’s candidate for Mayor of London, said: “Under the Tories, the UK, and London in particular, has been falling far short of building the number of homes we need.

“We need powers to get developers building – alongside support for councils and housing associations which are building too.”

But John Stewart, from the Home Builders Federation, said “speeding up the rate at which permissions are granted” was one of the keys to “significant, sustainable” increases in house-building.

“Too many sites are stuck in the planning system, with an estimated 150,000 plots awaiting full sign-off by local authorities,” he said.

He dismissed claims that developers were guilty of “land banking” – or holding land in order for its value to increase.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-35245313

“Distorting Discourse: Transparent debate needs sincerity, not soundbites”

” … Generic party line phrases distort meaning.

An unpopular imposition becomes a ‘settlement’.

The Conservatives oversaw a protracted real wages fall, cut income support, yet sought to position themselves as the ‘party of working people’

Circumventing an informal convention to protect low-income workers creates ‘constitutional issues’

A minimum wage increase still below the Voluntary Living Wage becomes a ‘National Living Wage’.

The last government’s headline slogans of ‘Big Society’ and ‘Green Government’ quietly disappeared. Related policies steadily faded. Environmental NGOs criticised the disconnect between stated green intentions and actions.

Reneging on election-campaign promises protecting tax credits, and subsequently U-turning, [is] either inconsistent or deliberately deceptive.

This attitude pervades government rhetoric, even unbelievably calling the opposition leader a ‘threat to national security’.

When ministers replace reflective, honest arguments with disingenuous soundbites it masks real motivations and undermines democratic debate. This makes it difficult for many to trust and engage with political discourse, and it needs to change. …”

http://www.democraticaudit.com/?p=18652

Selling assets?

Overheard:

“The council is selling its assets” …

Response: “No, it isn’t, it’s offloading costs to very reluctant buyers who get no discount for taking them on!”

One-third of Government transformation projects unlikely to transform anything, says National Audit Office

“… There are currently 149 projects in the Government Major Project Portfolio, with a combined whole-life cost of £511bn and an expected spend of £25bn in 2015-16. Such projects require Treasury approval based on their size, risk and impact.

…The NAO said that nearly 80% of the Portfolio projects due to be delivered by 2019-20 were to either transform or change the way that services were delivered or accessed.

However, transformation programmes could present the greatest risk of failure and there was a need to balance ambition and realism in setting goals, it argued. “For instance, the Better Care Fund was a challenging initiative which ministers paused and redesigned after the early planning and preparations did not match its scale of ambition.”

The watchdog described progress in improving portfolio management as “disappointing”, with no single organisation having a view of the whole portfolio of government projects.

“The Portfolio provides increased assurance, and other central departments have an increased role in assuring, approving and improving quality of delivery,” the NAO said. “But an effective mechanism still needs to be developed for prioritising projects across government or judging whether individual departments have the capacity and capability to deliver them. The NAO has often reported on the difficulties caused for government projects by unrealistic expectations and over-optimism.”

Amyas Morse, head of the National Audit Office, said: “I acknowledge that a number of positive steps have been taken by the Authority and client departments. At the same time, I am concerned that a third of projects monitored by the Authority are red or amber-red and the overall picture of progress on project performance is opaque. More effort is needed if the success rate of project delivery is to improve. “

http://localgovernmentlawyer.co.uk/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=25574:one-third-of-major-government-projects-qin-doubt-or-unachievableq-nao&catid=62&Itemid=30

Housing Bill debate: started 8.50 pm ended 2 am

The government has been described as “not grown up” for going ahead with a debate over its housing bill that did not begin until 8.50pm and continued to 2am.

The debate on the report stage of the bill was pushed back to late on Tuesday after a series of urgent ministerial statements, by the prime minister and the home secretary, were announced in the Commons.

Labour tried to get the debate postponed until a later date, but MPs voted by 303 to 195 in favour of pushing on with a session to scrutinise the legislation on Tuesday evening.

The housing bill will offer discounts of up to £102,700 in London and £77,000 in the rest of England to people renting from housing associations who want to buy their homes. The policy would not apply in Scotland or Wales, where the right to buy is being abolished.

The policy would be partly funded by requiring councils to sell the top third of their most valuable council homes from their remaining stock. The government also quietly tabled an amendment to the housing and planning bill that sets a maximum of five-year terms for new secure tenancies.

Fiona Mactaggart, the Labour MP for Slough, told MPs: “I am very unhappy about the programme motion, merely because of the time we are starting to debate it: 10 minutes to 9pm.”

She said this meant that “really important clauses” would be considered after midnight. “There are a number of really important issues which, frankly, I think our constituents, who are concerned about housing and planning, would not expect to be decided after midnight,” she said.

That is not grown up; it is a return to the days when I first came to this house and voted against beating children at 4am. I vowed never to have such important votes at that time of the morning again.”

Brandon Lewis, the minister for housing and planning, said the arrangements for the debate had been “agreed through the usual channels to ensure proper and full scrutiny of the bill”.

“Given the comments made by some members about the time until which we may be here tonight, all colleagues have the ability to exercise self-restraint if they wish, and from a ministerial point of view, I will do that to ensure that backbenchers have a good opportunity to speak,” he said.

Roberta Blackman-Woods said:

Never in my experience of many bills in this house have I witnessed 65 pages of government new clauses and amendments being produced at the last minute for a bill that is 145 pages long,” she said. “That is simply appalling and means that there will be no proper scrutiny in this house of almost a third of the bill.

“We wish to register our strong view that that is no way for legislation to be made, and the government should do the honourable thing and reprogramme this debate.”

EDDC and DCC raise council taxes

EDDC by 1.9%
DCC by 2.00%

and both slash services as government help dries up and more services are privatised. 2% is maximum allowed by central government before triggering a referendum.

Here is what Claire Wright thinks about the DCC rise:

http://www.claire-wright.org/index.php/post/devon_county_council_hikes_council_tax_by_two_per_cent_as_govt_slashes_budg

Planning Bill: the potential for corruption

” … Labour’s shadow planning minister Roberta Blackman-Woods said: “I cannot believe that the government are serious about this. I know that they tend to carry out pilots, but they must realise that the potential for this mechanism to generate a degree of corruption and totally inappropriate conflicts of interest is probably endless. These new clauses need to be subjected to a degree of scrutiny that will not be possible this evening.”

She said that ministers’ decision to table the amendment late in the bill’s passage through Parliament meant that it has “not been possible for the planning agencies that will be affected by the changes to have a say or to have any input into the process. That is quite frankly disgraceful, because these will be huge changes to the planning system”.

Communities and local government select committee chair Clive Betts said that the new clause is “effectively about the privatisation of the planning service. That is what it potentially amounts to after pilots have been brought in”.

He said: “Let me explore what that might mean. Does it mean that an individual or organisation will be free to shop around for whichever alternative provider they think can give them the best chance of getting a planning application accepted? Will they be able to look at the track record of providers around the country?”

Betts added: “My worry here is that someone parachuted in from outside, with no knowledge of an area but a track record of dealing with applications quickly, may not be as sensitive to the needs of a local community.

“If I was a local MP in an area with particular planning pressures and had concerns about getting those decisions right, I would start to be very worried about the scenario that is developing.”

http://www.planningresource.co.uk/article/1378327/mps-blast-plan-privatise-processing-applications

Daily Telegraph: “Developers can circumvent planning departments that take too long to clear approvals”

Sneaked in hurriedly just before Christmas, changes to planning rules means that developers will be able to go to private planning consultants of their choice rather than to local authority planning departments – a backdoor privatisation of the planning function.

Inevitably, private consultants will have worked closely with developers in the past.

This is potentially the biggest change to planning law for decades and is being introduced with no consultation and the minimum of debate.

It creates a loophole where, if a planning application is controversial, a local authority can deliberately drag its heels, see the application passed to a private consultant of the developer’s choosing and be approved. The local authority can then throw up its hands and say “Sorry, not our fault” when it patently is.

Current local authority planners will be seduced by initial high salaries offered by private consultants, leaving planning departments unable to function and with private consultants holding the balance of power.

Here is how today’s Daily Telegraph reports yesterday’s “debate” on something already agreed behind closed doors.

What a Christmas present for developers!

“Developers will be able to circumvent planning departments that take too long to process applications.

Housing minister Brandon Lewis told MPs the Government wants to pilot schemes which allow people to choose who processes their planning applications to speed up the process.

However, they were warned that allowing people to “shop around” by outsourcing planning applications risk undermining council planning departments.

He said this would “test the benefits of introducing competition” while local authorities will still make decisions on the applications.

But Labour’s Helen Hayes, a member of the Communities and Local Government Committee, warned the policy is “potentially very damaging” as it “weakens the accountability” of local authority planning services.

Speaking during report stage of the Housing and Planning Bill, Mr Lewis explained the new regulations would allow the communities secretary to decide who is able to offer their services to process planning applications.
He said: “Let me be very clear this evening with the House – this is about competition for the processing of applications, not the determination of applications.

“The democratic determination of planning applications by local planning authorities is a fundamental pillar of the planning system and will remain the case during any pilot schemes the secretary of state brings forward.
“Let me also be clear with the House that new clause 43 will require that any pilot schemes brought forward by the secretary of state will be for a limited period of time, specified in the regulations.”

Further proposals also outline how fees will be developed and allow the communities secretary to intervene if fees are judged “excessive”, MPs heard.

Mr Lewis said: “These new clauses will allow us to test in specific areas of the country and for a limited period of time the benefits of allowing planning applicants to choose who processes their applications.

“It’ll lead to a more efficient and effective planning system, better able to secure the development of homes and other facilities that our communities need and want.

“Introducing choice to the applicant enables them to shop around for services that best meet their needs and enable innovation in service provision, bringing new resources into the planning system and driving down costs while improving performance.”

But Ms Hayes, the MP for Dulwich and West Norwood, said: “New clause 43 introduces the outsourcing of planning applications. This clause is potentially very damaging.

“It weakens the accountability of local planning services and it removes with one hand the fees which the Government is enabling local authorities to raise with another.

“Fundamentally, it’s a solution to a symptom of the problem of the disproportionate effect of local government cuts on planning departments.
“This is a symptom which we alleviated by the proper resourcing, which a system of new planning fees will facilitate.

“So I urge the Government to rethink this proposal, which simply undermines local planning departments.”

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/earth/greenpolitics/planning/12084354/Developers-can-circumvent-planning-departments-that-take-too-long-to-clear-approvals.html

“A wholesale power grab: how the UK government is handing housing over to private developers”

“In any sane universe, something called the Housing and Planning Bill might safely be assumed to stimulate house building and improve planning. But the bill, which receives its third and final reading in the House of Commons today, does exactly the opposite of what it says on the tin. It will exacerbate the housing crisis and further enfeeble the planning system in ways we cannot yet comprehend.

The primary assault on social housing has been much discussed in these pages. The bill’s flagship measure – promoted at ownyourhome.gov.uk – will replace genuinely affordable homes with public subsidies for property investors. Rather than building homes for affordable rent, the legislation will force local authorities to build “Starter Homes” for first-time buyers. Capped at £450,000 in London and £250,000 in the rest of England, these homes will be unaffordable for people on average incomes in over half of the country, as Shelter has pointed out. Buyers will be free to sell their assets after five years at full market value, thereby minting a new generation of property speculators and removing any long-term benefit for future first-time buyers.

In addition to this, the bill will extend Right to Buy to housing associations, further depleting the number of homes for social rent. It will also compel local authorities to sell their highest value housing stock and pass the proceeds on to central government. Given that these high value areas are already subject to the greatest pressures on affordable housing, the effect will simply be to remove resources from the places that need it most. It will see British cities divided further into segregated enclaves for rich and poor.

The bill will bring an end to secure lifetime council tenancies, replacing them with two to five-year tenancies, and force those with a total household income of over £30,000 to pay market rents – hitting low-paid working families hardest.

In short, it is a raft of misguided measures that will only increase housing inequality. As campaign group Architects for Social Housing – demonstrating outside Parliament today – puts it, the bill is “an extremely subtle and duplicitous piece of legislation that in almost every aspect does something very different, if not the direct opposite, of what it is claiming to do.”

But the planning side of the bill has yet to receive the attention it deserves, in either the Commons or the national media. The proposed changes are shrouded in a haze of intentional ambiguity, but they threaten to eat away at the last shreds of the democratic process that safeguards how our communities are made, putting power instead in the hands of developers.

The most radical measure is the introduction of automatic planning permission in principle on sites allocated for development, without applications being subject to the usual rigours of the planning process. When the idea was mooted in October, ministers suggested it would initially be limited to proposals for housing on brownfield land but nothing in the legislation prevents it from being applied to any kind of development on any site.

“It is extremely dangerous,” says Hugh Ellis, policy director at the Town and Country Planning Association. “It could apply to all forms of development – for example, fracking could easily be given ‘permission in principle’ as part of a minerals plan. You can’t make a decision in principle about a site until you know the detail of its implications, from flood risk appraisal to the degree of affordable housing. Giving permission in principle would fundamentally undermine our ability to build resilient, mixed communities in the long term.”

Ellis fears that the bill marks the introduction of a “zonal” planning system, along US lines, whereby land is zoned for particular uses at a broad-brush scale and permission granted without the finer-grain negotiation of applications on a case-by-case basis, which has always defined the English postwar planning system.

“Zoning is one of the major contributors to the economic and social segregation of cities in America,” says Ellis. “If the government is going to make such a fundamental change to the planning system there needs to be an enormous amount of public debate and research. The future of British cities is at stake here, but there’s been no white paper and no public discussion at all.”

Lack of debate seems to characterise the entire bill, which saw several crucial amendments slipped in under the radar just before Christmas. In a change that opens the door for the privatisation of the planning system, communities secretary Greg Clark added a clause in December to allow the “processing of planning applications by alternative providers”. Rather than submitting a planning application to the local authority, it suggests that developers could assign a “designated person” to process the application for them instead.

Dr Bob Colenutt, planning expert at the University of Northampton, describes the move as “iniquitous”. “It will replace a public-sector ethos with a developer-led ethos,” he says. “The ‘designated persons’ are likely to be consultants who also work for the private sector, which introduces probable bias and reduces the public scrutiny trail. And it is very likely to reduce the right that the public has to make comments on planning applications.”
In the same way that developers’ financial viability assessments have been hidden from public view, it could mean that the entire planning process happens behind closed doors, with applications assessed by private consultants, paid for by the applicants.

“The question is, what problem is this really trying to solve?” asks Janet Askew, president of the Royal Town Planning Institute. “Local authority planning departments are critically underresourced, so if it’s a question of them being too slow then the government needs to increase their capacity, not strip it away further.”

Elsewhere in the bill, if local powers aren’t being handed out to the private sector, they’re being trampled by central government. Independent planning inspectors will be bypassed in a measure that lets the secretary of state intervene in the assessment of local plans. Another clause introduces a new power that will allow the government to produce plans for areas where it deems the local authority to be “failing or omitting” to do the work.

“It is all profoundly undemocratic,” says David Vickery, a recently retired senior planning inspector. “The bill represents a significant centralisation of powers by government to micro-manage planning, without thinking through the consequences. It reads like a panicked reaction to current low housebuilding rates, and the fact that the government doesn’t trust anyone other than itself to do the job. It proves that localism is dead.”

By further diluting the planning system in the name of “cutting red tape”, the government has picked the wrong target once again: the problem isn’t with planning, but with developers sitting on land. DCLG figures show that planning permission was granted for 261,000 homes in the year ending March 2015 (against the need for at least 240,000 homes per year), but only 125,110 homes were actually built. Put simply, 136,000 more homes were consented through the local planning system than were built by house builders. And, as a recent Guardian investigation revealed, the UK’s biggest developers have a land bank big enough for 600,000 new homes. It might be an idea to get them to use it. Instead, this bill represents a wholesale power grab, transferring both housing assets and planning powers from public to private hands in a drunken festival of deregulation.”

http://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/architecture-design-blog/2016/jan/05/housing-and-planning-bill-power-grab-developers

EDDC budget: Financial black holes and how to fall into them

A correspondent writes (views expressed below are the personal views of the correspondent).

“At Cabinet on Wednesday this week (agenda here), and at joint Scrutiny & Overview Committee on Wednesday of next week (agenda here), EDDC will be discussing the proposed budget for the next financial year.

Comments:

a. EDDC has already had cuts in central government revenue of £2.3m between 2011 and 2014 and a further cut of £0.8m last year. They are facing a further cut of £0.8m this year – so a total reduction of almost £4m from c. £7.5m to £3.6m between 2011 and 2016. The government is phasing out the Revenue Support Grant by 2020, so there are c. £3.6m of cuts to come in the next 3 years. To put this in perspective, the total revenue income / expenditure is c.£15m so this is a very significant proportion.

b. The government has stated that in the future it expects councils to be funded from business rates, but it has also given business rates for the Enterprise Zones (where the majority of business growth is expected) to the Local Enterprise Partnership (LEP) for 25 years, presumably as a means of them raising capital loans to fund development of the Enterprise Zones in East Devon these are the East Devon Growth Point and Cranbrook). So growth in Business Rates is unlikely to replace the Revenue Support Grants.

c. EDDC is planning to increase Council tax for the first time in 6 years by 1.99% (para 2.14). No explanation is provided about why this particular level has been chosen, though it appears to have been decided upon as being as close to the 2% as they can get without triggering a referendum.

d. Despite increasing council tax, they state that the New Home Bonus will be used to cover a further revenue shortfall this year (see paragraph 2.9 in the budget report in the agenda papers) in addition to the same £1.5m needed again to make up last year’s revenue shortfall.

e. EDDC plans to run the Capital Reserve fund to zero (para 4.7) in order to provide the bridging funds required to build the Honiton Offices before receiving moneys from the sale of the Knowle. This does not seem to me to be financially prudent – and the figures are further risked by unknown capital projects and the reduction in New Homes Bonus.

f. As usual, it is essential to review these finance documents to see what is missing. Whilst I do not have either the time or the knowledge to do this, I have spotted that the Sidmouth Beach Management funding is disappearing from the budget!!!

The most worrying thing is the increasing reliance on capital receipts to plug increasing shortfalls in revenue income. This does not seem financially prudent, for several reasons:

  1. Revenue shortfalls continue every year and are cumulative, whilst capital receipts are one-off and not guaranteed in the future.
  2. The NHB is the current means of plugging this gap, but is under review by government and likely to fall substantially per home. It also seems fairly likely that EDDC will never get close to the number of homes they have committed to deliver in the draft Local Plan – so EDDC won’t make the money they expect either.
  3. On the other hand, EDDC will definitely be facing further cuts in central government funding of £3.6m per year – which is a lot more revenue shortfall to plug using a reducing NHB stream.

This is NOT a sound means of financing its ongoing costs. Put simply the council cannot afford to continue balancing its books by covering revenue shortfalls from capital receipts which are likely to decline substantially over the next few years.

This is the legacy of keeping Council Tax the same for 5 years running. The Tory leadership at EDDC did this because they accepted the Council Tax Freeze Grant, offered to councils (like EDDC) who kept their council tax the same year after year. The only problem with this is that a Council Tax increase (however unpopular) is a cumulative income increase (i.e. an increase this year creates additional revenue in each following year too) whilst the grant is a one-off payment. You would not decide that you could afford electricity by paying using one-off income like premium bond wins, so EDDC’s decisions appear to be both short-term and short-sighted.

Indeed, it appears that EDDC is addicted to one-off fixes from central government to the long-term detriment of the council’s finances.

However, continuing use of one-off capital payments to plug a widening gap in revenue is not a good direction for the future. If these capital receipts ever stop coming in, EDDC’s finances will be in real trouble.

With a current shortfall of £1.85m and a further reduction in government funding of £3.6m, EDDC will need to find £5.45m per year by 2020 (which is approximately 35%of expenditure) over the next 4 years – and it is difficult to see how EDDC can come even close to achieving these through efficiency savings or revenue increases or even both. EDDC’s plan appears to be too use the Transformation Strategy (pages 115-132) to fill this gap in funding through to 2020 – and whilst this does included a lot of small aspirational efficiency improvements, they all appear to be relatively minor in nature, with the bulk of the funding gap presumably covered by selling off assets (which again provide only one-off income boosts and failing to address the real issue of revenue shortfall). Of course, the detail of EDDC’s plans are deemed confidential – but is it any wonder that EDDC works so hard to keep the Agendas and Reports of its Asset Management Committee secret when it needs to sell assets in such quantities to plug this huge gap in its finances?

Eventually (presumably in 2020), there will be a £5m+ revenue funding gap, no more government Revenue Support Grant, no more New Homes Bonus and presumably no more assets remaining to sell – and then what happens?

It appears to me that this ongoing and increasing funding gap, temporarily bridged using first the Council Tax Freeze Grant and then the New Homes Bonus, is a direct consequence of Tory dogma to freeze council tax (which is a reduction in real terms). It also appears to explain why EDDC has been so set on having a Local Plan which includes huge numbers of new homes – because these new homes attract the New Homes Bonus and this appears to be their means of keeping the finances afloat.

I urge people to take an interest in what is happening at EDDC and to go and look at the budget and local plan documentation for themselves.

EDDC needs to start working towards being able to balance the revenue accounts without using NHB to cover the shortfall and to wean itself off one-off central government fixes to which it seems to be addicted.

The proposal to increase council tax by 1.99% is a start, but even with this proposal the revenue short-fall is still increasing compared to last year. And if increasing it by 2% or more triggers a referendum, all the better – as this will shine a light on the council’s finances and enable open debate about how the council’s services are best funded.

Whilst council tax rises will never be popular, to continue on this current slippery slope is to invite complete financial meltdown in 4 years time!!

“In defence of scrutiny”

Article by Baroness Smith, House of Lords

“At this time of the year, we often reflect on the past and make plans for the future. For politicians, it is particularly poignant as we look back over the first eight months of the only wholly Conservative government for 18 years and consider what the future holds.

Already, the true character of the government is evident. The Lobbying Bill – or rather, ‘Gagging Bill’ – introduced by the Coalition set the tone, by making it much harder for charities and campaigning organisations to get their messages across. But the Conservatives have now taken this aversion to challenge and scrutiny to a level that I thought was lost with the court of Charles I.

We’ve had had the review of constituency boundaries, where the Prime Minister took the unprecedented step of instructing the Boundaries Commission on how many constituencies there should be. As he seeks to reduce the number of MPs however, Mr Cameron continues to appoint Life Peers at faster rate than any of his predecessors.

Changes to voter registration have also been rushed in, contrary to Electoral Commission advice – meaning many thousands of people could lose the right to vote. No prizes for guessing which political party is expected to gain from this.

Then there’s the Trade Union Bill, which seeks to decimate the Labour Party’s funding base whilst making no commensurate changes that would impact on the Conservative’s sources of income.

And now, smarting from a defeat in the House of Lords on plans to slash tax credits for working families, the government is using a review by Lord Strathclyde as a Trojan horse to blunt Peers’ powers of scrutiny over secondary legislation.

So what did the Lords do that was so terrible? We dared to suggest that perhaps the Chancellor hadn’t got this right, declined to pass a Statutory Instrument, and gave the government the opportunity to pause and think again. Mr Osborne took full advantage of this and promptly scrapped his planned changes. After months defending his flagship policy, he realised what many others had from the start – that taking away thousands of pounds from the lowest-paid was neither good policy nor good politics.

Had the Lords not asked Ministers to think again, two million families would have had a very different Christmas. Indeed, that whole debate showed the Lords at its best – doing the quiet, unglamorous work of marking the government’s homework; going through legislation line-by-line, tweaking and improving; and from time to time asking the government to reconsider.

Since the beginning of this Parliament, Peers have scrutinised 60 pieces of legislation over hundreds of hours. We’ve had 42 votes and defeated the government 23 times. (MPs have voted close to 150 times during the same period.) At no point have we stopped a policy that the Conservatives were elected to implement; and crucially, 16 of the defeats were on Bills that started in the Lords and so had no prior scrutiny or approval from the Commons. A fair few of the Bills were in fact, half-baked.

On the day back in July when we broke for summer recess, I wrote another blog for Huffington Post on the votes we’d won by that point. Since then, we’ve won thirteen more.

We’ve amended the Childcare Bill to increase flexibility for parents and ensure the regulations derived from it are properly debated on. In the Energy Bill, we’ve voted to broaden the purposes of the Oil and Gas Authority, change the UKs climate budget’s metric to give greater certainty to Green investors, and block cuts to onshore wind subsidies. And in the Enterprise Bill we’ve voted to ensure the Green Investment Bank maintains its green purposes after privatisation, and supported pub owners in requiring pub companies to offer a market rent only option to tied tenants.

We also suggested that the early introduction of Individual Electoral Registration be halted, to prevent one million people dropping off the register, and called for 16 and 17 years olds to have a vote in the EU referendum. Although on both occasions, the government subsequently defeated us.

Finally, and in addition to our ‘help’ to Mr Osborne on tax credits, we also provided the opportunity for Lord Chancellor Michael Gove to reverse his ill-fated policy on criminal courts charges, which he duly did.

All of this doesn’t add up to a major attack on democracy. It is the job of Parliament to scrutinise the actions of the Executive – a job that becomes all the more vital when Mr Cameron is reported as telling Ministers to: “use statutory instruments wherever possible to get legislation through”.

During thirteen years in office between 1997 and 2010, Labour was defeated over 500 times in the Lords. We didn’t like it but we just got on with the job. No government likes to be told they’ve got something wrong, but the current Prime Minister needs to learn that scrutiny, transparency and challenge is fundamental to a healthy democracy. And, as the Chancellor will no doubt confirm, it can sometimes even be his friend.”

Baroness Smith of Basildon is Labour Leader in the House of Lords

http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/baroness-smith/house-of-lords_b_8911780.html

Sidmouth architecture competition gets mixed reaction at town council meeting

“At Sidmouth Town Council (STC) tonight, the architecture competition for eastern town was described as “a fantastic opportunity” (Cllr Dawn Manley) , and “a great initiative” (Cllr John Rayson). Chair, Jeff Turner was also supportive, saying he regarded the competition as “part of a mix” of ideas alongside those that would emerge from Sidmouth’s Neighbourhood Plan now being prepared by the Town Council, and from the District’s Local Plan. Cllr David Barratt, too, took an optimistic view. “It’s going to happen, let’s make it positive”, he urged his colleagues, emphasising that “it costs us nothing”, but with the proviso that “it must be open-ended”.

Cllr Ian Barlow found himself a lone voice amongst the councillors. In an untypically rambling speech criticising the competition as “too early”, he was straightaway countered by Cllr Dawn Manley. “It’s never too early”, she said, pointing out that “EDDC say they do want to work with the Town Council and with the public”.

Cllr Kelvin Dent welcomed the “crucial” scoping exercise about to be started by EDDC with STC, but added a note of caution. He asked the Chair, “In view of our contribution (£2,000 from STC, with £8,000 from EDDC), could I request that the Town Council be represented on the scoping exercise committee,” to ensure that we are involved in, for example, the choice of consultants?”

The reply was not entirely reassuring. “I understand we still have to finalise the format for the scoping exercise” , Jeff Turner said.

At this point, the town clerk, Chris Holland, was invited to comment. “It is this council who will be leading the scoping exercise “ he vehemently claimed, adding, “I don’t care what’s happened in Exmouth and in Seaton” and “I don’t care what baggage EDDC brings with it. This is Sidmouth, and we will get it right”.

With this somewhat parochial assurance, the discussion was closed.”

http://saveoursidmouth.com/2016/01/04/architecture-competition-for-eastern-town-part-of-a-mix-of-ideas-says-chair-of-sidmouth-town-council/

EDDC’s New Year Resolutions

Diviani has put together the usual oleaginous press release about what wonderful things EDDC promises us this year.

Owl refuses to print it, discuss it or link to it – why waste precious breaths on weasel words.

You think Feniton is the only place where Wainhomes mucked up surface water drainage? Think again!

“Following heavy rain in November and December, local residents living at Hurst Meadows and Craiglands are in despair due to “dark brown” flood water that has been flowing towards their properties from a Broad Lane development.

At the beginning of November, it is understood that residents of Craiglands advised Rochdale Council that an attenuation pond at the top of Hurst Meadows was almost “full to the brim” and that that outflow pipe had “disappeared under the water and foliage that had not been removed”.

A resident reported to the council that surface water from the Wain Homes side of the development was “pouring onto the footpath and grass” around the attenuation pond and added that “the water was dark brown in colour” and that “so much of it had flowed into the pond that its contents were also dark brown.”

Neil Longsden from the Broad Lane Action Group (BLAG) said: “Rochdale Council has responded to the affected outflow pipe (which is owned by United Utilities) that had become defective and it was hoped the situation would be resolved quite quickly. Our member advised the council that when she walked over the land at 11am on Monday 16 November, the pipe was visible and the dark brown surface water only appeared between 11am and 12 noon that day. We question what is the ‘brown water’? Is it a danger to local residents and families? Where is it coming from? How will it be rectified?

“We do not hold our breath for an answer because we have been waiting almost 12 months for Rochdale Council to appoint an expert to identify the source of the water which has plagued Craiglands residents for 25 years and continues to do so. Councillor Kath Nickson requested this report at the beginning of 2015 and confirmed funds were available – the council say they cannot find an expert to carry out this research into an issue which has caused so much distress over the years.”

Plans to build a housing development on the site were approved by councillors in April 2014.

http://www.rochdaleonline.co.uk/news-features/2/news-headlines/86525/broad-lane-housing-development-plans-approved

Mr Longsden added: “When BLAG was objecting to the then proposed developments one of the issues raised was the extremely wet conditions of Spring Hill (the area going to be developed). During the Planning Inspector’s hearing Taylor Wimpey and Wain Homes both agreed to install attenuation tanks that would retain almost all surface water and then slowly release it into the attenuation pond at Hurst Meadows before being again released into the culvert which runs towards Oldham Road.

“Towards the end of November 2015 Rochdale started to experience continuous rainfall and the pond soon reached critical levels. The open space at the top of Hurst Meadows was flooded and covered in silt and other concoctions, as were the public footpaths running through the area which are used by local residents extensively on a daily basis.”

It is understood that Wain Homes have commenced groundworks to clear up the silt and other debris and is working to reinstate the land to its former ‘grassed terrain’. They also plan to install an attenuation tank, which should help to control the previously rapid flow of water.

Taylor Wimpey are said to be installing their attenuation tank and other control devices in the next couple of weeks, with their part of the engineering to control the surface water on schedule.

Rochdale Council did not respond to our request for comment.”

http://rochdaleonline.co.uk/news-features/2/news-headlines/99902/hurst-meadows-and-craiglands-residents-in-despair