Well, well, well: Heart of the South West “board minutes” appear on their website

Except, erm, they don’t!

What we get is a summary. No names, no discussion, no resolutions – just notes.

Here, for example, are the latest “board minutes” for November 2015 are shown below. NOTE THAT THERE IS NOT ONE CONCRETE ACTION TAKEN AT THIS MEETING. They reported, discussed, were briefed, had outlines, thought about shaping plans AND THEN DEFERRED ACTION UNTIL THEY HAD TALKED TO DEVELOPERS FURTHER.

And a prize to anyone who can translate the final sentence: “The roles of the Leadership Groups and their terms of reference are being explored with a view to improving the synergy and lines of communication and decision making throughout the LEP and its partners.”

Board Minutes

Summary of November Board

“The LEP Finance and resources committee will report to the board on the potential use of Growing Places Funds to attract new investment, and will consider a proposal from the board to fund further research to support the economic case for the Peninsula Rail Task Force campaigns.

The board discussed the implications on the LEP had the funding for Growth Deal 2 not been confirmed, and agreed in all events to increase the momentum in engaging local MPs to use their influence in government to focus on the Heart of the South West. The LEP is working to align the profiling of expenditure on Growth Deal projects.

The board was briefed on the issue that the Department of Work and Pensions’ inflexibility surrounding the details of ESIF funding and the LEP continues to seek influence.

Patrick Flaherty, Chief Executive of Somerset County Council, outlined the current proposal and timelines for a Devolution Deal and the outstanding issues around governance. Feedback from business indicates that they are not very concerned about governance but are in favour of regional decision making, more funding for skills and have a desire to push a vision for growth. Board members believe that the deal needs to ask for something bold, ambitious and innovative, and that LEP and Business involvement needs to be ramped up to ensure the final document portrays a passion for innovation and transformation.

Increased pressure on government is taking place to mitigate the delays, bureaucracy and revised funding allocations and outputs within the ESIF strategy.

Findings of the LEP Annual Review were outlined, which will shape the business plan, measuring performance against the Strategic Economic Plan, resulting in a single improvement plan to be reviewed by the Finance and Resources group

The Place Leadership group chair gave a presentation on the recent report from the Housing Task and Finish Group which aims to address barriers and solutions to the provision of housing. The board discussed the ideas presented in the report and its implications on partner funding and the areas’ Local Plans.

It was noted that much of this paper is relevant to Devolution in terms of offering a local solution, and it was suggested that rural villages and small towns had a role to play in addressing housing shortages which would also benefit the viability of small communities.

In conclusion the Chair deferred the paper for further work and discussion with Local Authority planning managers and input from local house builders prior to the housing agenda being incorporated into the Devolution Deal.

The roles of the Leadership Groups and their terms of reference are being explored with a view to improving the synergy and lines of communication and decision making throughout the LEP and its partners.”

http://www.heartofswlep.co.uk/board-minutes-0

Eat your hearts out Euro bureaucrats – this is how it is done LEP style!

 

Our Local Enterprise Partnership and “Brexit”

Does our LEP have a strategy for if the UK leaves the European Union?

Does it matter?

You bet it does: it is relying on the EU for at least one of its funding streams:

http://www.heartofswlep.co.uk/news/european-structural-and-investment-funds-strategy

“EDF under pressure to abandon Hinkley Point”

An internal report to the EDF board has warned that for technical reasons it will be impossible to complete the two “new generation” nuclear reactors at Hinkley Point within the nine-year timetable.

The report also suggests that the much-delayed project would be financially disastrous for the struggling French company, despite a commitment by the British Government to pay double the market rate for the station’s electricity.

EDF is also reported to be having difficulty raising the £12.4bn it needs to build the two European Pressurised Reactors (EPR) in Somerset – a capital sum almost as much as it entire stock market valuation.

The company’s powerful unions and several senior EDF executives are said to believe that the project could be suicidal for the world’s biggest generator of nuclear energy. They want EDF to abandon the project – or at least persuade Britain to wait for another three years until a more advanced generation of EPR reactors is available.

Nonetheless, the French government, which owns more than 80 per cent of EDF, is putting pressure on the company to fulfil its agreement.

The British Government would face huge embarrassment if Hinkley Point, intended as the first of three new mega-stations, was abandoned or postponed. In October last year, China agreed, amid much fanfare in London and Beijing, to invest £6.2bn in the project.”

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/edf-under-pressure-to-abandon-hinkley-point-c-nuclear-power-plant-project-a6873936.html

Oh dear, what will happen to those MILLIONS of pounds our Local Enterprise Partnership plans to spend on it and the HUNDREDS of jobs it has factored into their plans for Somerset and Devon if it is aborted?

80 MPs ( including Neil Parish) in line for third payrise within a year

“Senior MPs could be in line for their THIRD bumper pay rise in a year.
Around 80 members who also help chair committee meetings and debates are set to get the eye-watering wage hike.

Half are in line for an extra £3,700 a year – the other half could see up to £15,000 more in their pay packets.

Chairs – who lead meetings of the influential groups – already get up to £15,000 on top of the £74,000 they get for being an MP, depending on their length of service.

In April, all MPs are in line for a 1.3% increase in their basic salary – which is already more than three times the national average.”

Daily Mirror online

“Defund, make sure things don’t work, get people angry – privatise”!

Several media sites have recently quoted famous philosopher Noam Chomsky on privatisation (and devolution):

That’s the standard technique of privatization; defund, make sure things don’t work, people get angry, you hand it over to private capital.”

So is that what happened with Knowle?

And will we see the new EDDC HQ in Honiton one day sold off to Clinton Devon Estates or Eagle One – or even Moirai Capital investments when district councils cease to exist!

Osborne’s family firm has paid no corporation tax for seven years

Today’s Sunday Times front page:

George Osborne has shares in a £335,000 dividend payout from his family’s wallpaper business – even though it has not paid corporation tax for the past seven years.”

It has avoided paying the tax “partly because it has rolled over losses from previous years and has deferred tax payments“.

The company made a profit of £772,000 on turnover of £34,000,000.

East Devon Alliance evidence to House of Lords inquiry on affordable housing

East Devon Alliance has submitted excellent evidence to a House of Lords inquiry on affordable housing and to other housing inquiries. Here is the summary but the full report is well worth reading.

Has EDDC submitted evidence? Not that we are aware.

SUMMARY:

The NPPF [National Planning Policy Framework] inflated housing forecasts and other government policies have resulted in an oversupply of high-end homes and a lack of genuinely affordable housing.

East Devon is one of the least affordable areas in the country with average house prices almost 12 times average income. It is an attractive region for retirement. Demand for houses outstrips supply and the affluent can always outbid the locally employed.

EDDC has already granted permission, or received planning applications, for 80% of its 18-year 17,100 high growth scenario housing target. Evidence given at the public examination of the Local Plan shows that slow build-out rates of new houses are due to developers reacting to “market saturation”.

Rented accommodation is too expensive for the average renter, often in a poor state, and there are high eviction rates. Social housing rents are being cut by government, leading to “black holes” in local authority housing budgets. Councils and housing associations are being forced to sell houses on “right to buy” discounts, leaving insufficient funds to build replacements.

The East Devon Alliance has made several submissions to organisations who are reviewing the state of the housing sector, and these are shown below.”

http://www.eastdevonalliance.org.uk/district-issues/housing/