The LEP Pop up cafe in Exeteron 6 April 2016 just popped down

Originally advertised for 6 April 2016 at the Fresha cafe in Sowton, Exeter, the link now takes you to a completely different date (Wednesday 27 April). No explanation – no notice of how or why the date has had to be changed.

However, rather than 28 slots for “business advice” of which two had been taken last week, there are now 32 – with extra slots with a taxation expert. All 32 slots are currently available for booking.

Come on you businesses, get that advice from these unidentified experts, otherwise this will look like a very expensive (6 experts each being paid for at least a morning’s work) damp squib on the part of the LEP.

https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/heart-of-the-south-west-pop-up-business-cafe-exeter-registration-22583110692

Axminster needs regenerating: who took their eye off the ball?

News is that Axminster is going to get a regeneration board a la Exmouth and Seaton.

Time was that Seaton was the poor town of East Devon. Now, with the promise of a Premier Inn and the opening of the Jurassic Centre it finally appears that it might just be on the way up.

Axminster has been ruled by two of EDDC’s leading Tory Cabinet members for years (Moulding*** and Godbeer) and by the Lib Dems Douglas Hull – a councillor for more than 50 years. They seem to rotate the Mayorality on a regular basis. Moulding is current deputy leader of EDDC, Godbeer was the previous chairman of EDDC before current Chairman, Stuart Hughes.

Question: Who took their eye off the ball and allowed Axminster to get into such a state it needs regenerating?

Or is it just an excuse to redefine areas so that planning permissions can be fast-tracked and/or a “partner” like Moirai (Exmouth) or Tesco (Seaton) can take over?

***
All the more worrying why Axminster lost the plot given Councillor Moulding’s extensive DCC and EDDC experience:

DCC
Chair of “Place” Committee (Which exists to “review the implementation of existing policies and to consider the scope for new policies with regard to all aspects of the discharge of the Council’s functions concerning the environment, economic activity and enterprise, integrated planning and transport and community services, including community safety and emergency planning, libraries, arts and cultural heritage of the County.”

EDDC

Deputy Leader of the Council

Portfolio – Strategic development and partnerships

Committee membership
Cabinet (vice chairman)
Interviewing chief officers committee (vice chairman)
Employment appeals committee (chairman)
Panels and forum membership
Asset management forum
Budget working party
Capital strategy and allocation group
New homes bonus panel
New office executive group

Joint bodies membership:
East Devon stakeholder panel
East Devon local strategic partnership
Exmouth regeneration programme board
New growth point delivery team steering board (substitute)
Sidmouth main and east beaches working party

Representative on outside bodies
Exeter science park board of directors (stakeholder representative)
LGA general assembly (substitute)
LGA annual rural assembly (voting right in absence of Leader)
LGA people and places board (substitute)

Academies: (another) Tory rebellion

“The leader of the backbench Conservatives at Westminster has raised serious concerns about plans, announced in last month’s budget, to force all state schools to become academies by 2022. This is a blow to the government’s hopes of forcing the proposals on to the statute book.

In a sign of the depth of Tory unrest, Graham Brady, chairman of the 1922 committee, said the plans announced by George Osborne could lead to the creation of “new and distant bureaucracies” rather than delivering greater freedom and autonomy for schools. He also said they could have the unwelcome effect of removing parents from governing bodies and reducing accountability.

Brady, who spoke out as new data suggested the reorganisation could cost more than £1.3bn, is writing to education secretary Nicky Morgan in the hope that the proposals spelled out in the recent education white paper can be changed. He also wants reassurances from Morgan that the plans will not be rushed through parliament – suggesting that without a rethink they could trigger a backbench Tory rebellion. …”

http://gu.com/p/4t3ej

Academies: land grab “like the dissolution of the monasteries”

Councils decry government’s academy schools ‘land grab’
Sally Weale Education correspondent, and Rebecca Ratcliffe, the Guardian:

“Councils opposed to government plans to force all schools to become academies have raised concerns about what has been described by some as a land grab reminiscent of “the dissolution of the monasteries”.

Under current arrangements, when schools become academies they lease the land from local authorities. The new plans, however, will see all school land transferred directly to the education secretary, Nicky Morgan, who will then grant leases to academy trusts.

The government says the controversial change has been made in order to speed up the process of academy conversion by avoiding time-consuming negotiations over land, but critics are concerned it represents a major handover of local authority land worth billions of pounds.

Councillor Angela Mason, the cabinet member for children on Camden council in north London, said: “The government will own all the educational land. I don’t see how they will be able to deal with it all. It’s quite an extraordinary power to take. It reminded me of the dissolution of the monasteries.

“We are very concerned. Land in Camden is extremely valuable. There’s no mechanism by which we can be sure it will not be sold off for whatever reason. Those decisions will be made by the government and unelected trusts.
“I feel quite strongly it’s our land. It’s the people’s land. It’s quite wrong that this enormously valuable asset goes to government and then on to unelected, unaccountable organisations.”

The plans are outlined in the government’s recent white paper, Educational Excellence Everywhere, which says all schools are to be taken out of local authority control and will have to become academies in the next six years in order to raise standards.

On the land exchange, the document says: “The majority of academies currently lease their land from local authorities, typically over a 125-year lease. “To speed up the process of academy conversion and ensure that land issues do not get in the way of improving schools, when a local authority’s community schools convert to academy status, land held by the authority for those schools will transfer to the secretary of state, who will then grant a lease to the academy trust.

“We will also take steps to ensure that the wider education estate is safeguarded for future provision, and that the existing school estate can be used more easily for new schools and expansions where applicable.”

Roy Perry, a Conservative councillor and chair of the Local Government Association’s Children and Young people board said he believed the government was acting with good intentions, but added: “These are assets that have been looked after, protected and at times enhanced with investment by the council tax payers in a particular area. One can question whether it is fair to take those assets away from the people who have invested in them and looked after them for many years.”

There were also concerns about the cost of transferring school land, he said. “I’ve been advised in our council that the legal costs alone of arranging the transfer is something like £15k a go. We’ve got 200 such schools, so that’s quite a lot of money. Whether this is a process to try to do all in one swoop [we don’t know], but transferring land is obviously a complicated process so it certainly won’t be easy and whatever route they chose it could be very expensive … We seriously question whether they [the government] have actually got the resources.”

The Local Government Association, which represents councils across the country, has said it is opposed to the decision to strip local authorities of the ownership of school land.

Judith Blake, the leader of Leeds city council, said: “I don’t think the public is aware of this. There are many implications following on from this, not least the value of the land which in the city of Leeds could be over the billion mark.

“We are talking significant land holdings. It’s quite eye-watering. It’s taking local assets away from local people, moving them out of democratic control into a central pot. It has all sorts of possible ramifications.
“How would we ensure that local communities would have access to the playing fields which we have joint agreements on? These are all unknowns. We really need to get underneath and ask questions.

“We are talking with other councils across the country. These are the issues we will be looking at, trying to understand the implications of the proposal.”

A spokesperson for the Department for Education responded to concerns by saying: “We have clear safeguards in place that mean academies cannot sell or change the use of publicly funded school land without consent from the secretary of state and these proposals will not change that – it is disingenuous to suggest otherwise.

“The proposals on school land in the white paper are simply about removing obstacles to schools becoming academies, and there are too many cases where negotiations over the use of land delay this process.”

The shadow education secretary, Lucy Powell, said: “This land grab by central government will have local people up in arms. Not content with forcing all primary and secondary schools to become academies, the Tories’ are intent on taking school land from local communities across England in the process.

“Labour will oppose this costly top-down forced reorganisation of all schools which is unwanted and unnecessary.”

http://www.theguardian.com/education/2016/apr/01/councils-decry-governments-academy-schools-land-grab

Jeremy Corbyn criticised for listening to real people!

The Labour leader reportedly infuriated photographers and the press by ignoring them, and instead talked to shoppers and young mothers in Bristol’s Easton district.

Local media reported that Labour officials “were left tearing their hair out” after Corbyn stopped and held up the media scrum to listen to people who stopped him in the street.”

“Instead of the usual stage-managed performance, meeting and greeting people specially handpicked for the occasion, Jeremy Corbyn took to the streets of Easton to talk, listen and have his photo taken with shoppers, traders and passersby,” Onions reported.

Tristan Cork, writing in the Western Daily Press, reported that Corbyn ignored spin doctors by stopping to listen to people who approached him in the street.

“That sparked chaotic scenes as the press and media jostled for photos and interviews, but Corbyn was having none of it. If a chat with a person took five or six minutes, then he would hold up the entire press pack,” according to Cork’s account.

http://gu.com/p/4t3cj

Public consultation, LISTENING to people – how dare he!

Yet another report on the NPPF …

House of Commons
Communities and Local Government Committee

Department for Communities and Local Government’s consultation on national planning policy

Third Report of Session 2015–16

Report, together with formal minutes relating to the report
Ordered by the House of Commons to be printed 22 March 2016

Blah blah blah blah …

“To ensure that proper consideration is given to the impact of changes resulting from this consultation, and from other developments in the housing and planning sector, the Department should carry out a comprehensive review of the operation of the National Planning Policy Framework before the end of this Parliament. The review must include sufficient opportunity for appropriate consultation with stakeholders, and should follow a two-stage approach to consulting, first on general principles, and subsequently on precise wording. (Paragraph 11)

We hope that the Department will learn lessons from the need to extend the consultation period as a result of the holiday period and the other significant developments in the housing and planning sector. (Paragraph 13)”

blah blah blah …

Click to access 703.pdf

Exmouth: independent Paul Rapley stands for beachfront ward

Independent candidate for Exmouth Littleham ward
Town Council Election
Thursday 14th April 2016

Mr Rapley’s manifesto from the East Devon Alliance website

Why should you vote?

Currently, all councillors representing the Littleham ward are Conservative and openly support what is happening with the seafront and Plumb Park developments. Do you agree with every Conservative Party Policy? At present you have no other representation in your ward…

Exmouth Town Council and East Devon District Council do not appear to have grasped the concept of openness, transparency and accountability, where many Exmouth residents are unaware of the facts surrounding proposed development until it is too late.

The realignment of Queens Drive for example of this, the detrimental impact being the loss of existing iconic Exmouth attractions and all the associated employment, the loss of seafront car parking spaces and, most importantly, the estimated timescales of the phased development … East Devon District Council’s own estimate is 3 to 4 years!

As the ward responsible for our beachfront, is this what you want?

Why vote for me?

I am fortunate to have appreciated Exmouth both as a tourist and as a resident, having spent many family holidays here and subsequently living in Exmouth for over 8 years with my partner Jennifer, who has lived here all her life.

I am very concerned about the way our town is being developed without proper consultation; from close to home issues such as the impact of the seafront and Plumb Park developments, to wider issues such as the lack of investment in our town centre for job creation and the difficulties in securing a decent transport interchange for our town.

As an Independent councillor I would be free to represent your concerns and wishes, both within the Littleham ward and in Exmouth as a whole, and without fear of a hard-line party whip telling me how to vote.

In other words, you would have a choice and an Independent voice on the town council. A voice that would represent your views without fear of influence from a political party. A voice that would represent your issues. A voice that is as concerned as you are about improving Littleham ward, and Exmouth, for everyone.

If elected I would:

consult with you, as well as with relevant local charities and campaign groups, when required;

hold open councillor surgeries throughout the year;

listen to what the residents within Littleham ward feel strongly about, and present those views to the town council;

support positive changes in our town which are endorsed by the local community;

oppose inappropriate future development plans;

push to improve standards of conduct, accountability, openness and transparency within our town council.