Voting omnishambles – they deal with them differently in the USA

“A New York City Board of Elections official has been suspended after reports of voters being turned away and polling sites opening late in Brooklyn during Tuesday’s presidential primary election.

Brooklyn Chief Clerk Diane Haslet-Rudiano has been suspended without pay pending an internal probe into ‘the administration of the voter rolls’
Roughly eight percent of active voters in Brooklyn were removed from the voter-registration roll.

Haslett-Rudiano made an error that caused them to be removed during a periodical purging for voters who died or moved away. Other problems included some polling sites being opened late, training of poll workers and incorrect primary notifications were mailed out.”

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3554123/New-York-election-official-suspended-primary-voting-issues-Brooklyn-removing-100-000-active-voters-registration-roll.html

Around 6 per cent of voters in East Devon disappeared from our electoral roll, postal voting papers had to be reissued because they were wrongly printed (blamed on inexperienced helpers) and our electoral officer decided not to send out election officials to visit homes where people were not registered and the officer was called to a parliamentary committee to explain himself.

Then? Nothing at all happened.

“Housing Bill: 16 Defeats And U-Turns Inflicted On Government’s Flagship Reforms”

“The Government’s flagship housing legislation is having a miserable time of it in the House of Lords. Three defeats last week followed by five this mean the Housing and Planning Bill will look significantly different by the time it returns to MPs a week on Monday.

And peers have another day at it.

From ending council houses for life to selling off expensive social housing to subsidise home-buyers, the Housing and Planning Bill is the Government’s answer to the housing crisis.

But it has critics. And with an “anti-Tory” Labour-Lib Dem majority in the House of Lords, plus disgruntled Tory peers, the Bill is being slowly demolished.

MPs may ignore the will of the Lords, but there has already been a series of concessions. Here are 16 defeats and U-turns it’s suffering from.

1. The Treasury has been blocked from keeping the proceeds of the forced sale of high-value council houses – to fund Right-to-But discounts – without parliamentary approval.

2. A flagship scheme to hand well-off first-time buyers a taxpayer-funded 20% discount on a Starter Home has been moderated.

3. English councils can decide how many starter homes are built-in their area.

4. Peers voted in support of a Labour-led amendment to give local councils the discretion over whether to implement “pay to stay”, a market rate charge for better-off tenants.

5. Peers to back an amendment to lower the “pay to stay” taper rate from 20p to 10p in every pound, so lower-paid families would not be hit as hard.

6. The Lords voted 266 to 175 to increase the “pay to stay” threshold by £10,000.

7. Wide open “planning permission in principle” powers are to be limited to housing development.

8. Parish councils and local forums right to appeal against developments they think go against a “local plan”.

9. The Government will consider a proposal to ensure a one-for-one – and like-for-like – replacement of council homes sold under the forced sale.

10. The Government is to look at backing down on the forced sale of council homes in national parks and areas of national beauty.

11. Ministers have accepted a proposal to make it harder for landlords to evict vulnerable people that have abandoned their homes.

12. The Government has been forced to consider giving councils discretion to exclude building homes in rural areas.

13. Ministers backed down on replacing lifelong secure tenancies with contracts lasting up to five years, and agreed to extend maximum to 10 years.

14. Ministers will insist letting agents have to put money in to a Client Money Protection account to stop “rogues” running off with deposit.

15. Ministers agreed to review planning laws relating to basement developments amid fears councils cannot control the growth of “subterranean development”.

16. The Government will look again at private landlords being able to reclaim properties when the become vacant after concern that it was open to being used as a “back-door” way to evict tenants.

Source: http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/entry/housing-bill-defeats-u-turns_uk_571a0368e4b077f671e7bb8e

Lights on or off? Hinkley C – who do we believe?

Another view on current delays

Controversial power station is a key part of the Government’s plan to ‘make sure the lights stay on’

The French electricity giant EDF has thrown the British government’s energy strategy into disarray by reportedly delaying – possibly until next year – a decision on whether it will build a new £18bn nuclear power station at Hinkley Point in Somerset.

Jean-Bernard Lévy, the head of EDF, has bowed to pressure from unions and senior company engineers and agreed to seek a fresh opinion from the company’s union-management consultative council, the respected French newspaper Le Figaro reported.

EDF said it could not immediately confirm the report. Sources in the company told the French newspaper that the consultation process would take several months and that no decision on whether to go ahead with its involvement in Hinkley Point – expected to supply eight per cent of British slectricity by 2025 – would be made before next year.

An internal report to the EDF board warned in February that it would be impossible for technical reasons to complete the two “new generation” nuclear reactors at Hinkley within the nine-year timetable. The report also suggested that the project could be financially disastrous for EDF, despite a commitment by the UK government to pay double the market rate for Hinkley’s electricity.

Although China has agreed to invest £6.2bn in Hinkley Point, EDF has failed to find other backers, leaving it responsible for two thirds of the cost. Problems with the bulding of similar high-pressure water reactors in Finland and Normandy have led EDF unions and senior executives to recommed a three-year delay – until a new generation of technology become available.

But Paris and London are reported to have applied intense pressure on EDF to go ahead immediately.

The British government would face huge embarrassment if Hinkley Point, intended as the first of three new mega power 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.

In September, the Chancellor George Osborne said Hinkley Point was a central part of the government’s strategy to “make sure the lights stay on”. “The current generation of nuclear power stations are coming to the end of their life. That’s going to create a very big hole in our base electricity supply unless we do something about it,” he told a House of Lords committee.

John Sauven, director of Greenpeace, which has campaigned against the reactor, told The Independent: “Delays to EDF making a decision about whether to invest in Hinkley are nothing new. So much so that it’s been 14 months since it was first said that the decision would be coming imminently. But this latest delay from EDF is different.

“President Hollande, the French Economy Minister and EDF’s chief executive have all very publicly promised the UK government a final decision before the 12 May. Backtracking on this pledge now is symbolic of the utter mess that EDF is in.

“But even if they could agree a finance package, it could be declared illegal state aid by the European Commission. This may now be the sign that the entire project is coming to a grinding halt and the UK government urgently needs to back renewable energy as a more reliable alternative.”

No one from the Department for Energy and Climate Change was immediately available to comment.”

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/18bn-hinkley-point-nuclear-power-station-plan-could-be-coming-to-a-grinding-halt-a6997131.html

“EDF delays Hinkley Point decision to consult works council”

Another decision delay announced. What is our LEP doing with the money set aside for this project? Is it training people whose skills will need to be upgraded in a few years time because they are out of date? What happens if some other major industry needs different skills in the meantime – e.g. tourism (lol!) or marine industries – how long will it take the Hinkley C nuclear tanker to turn round?

“French utility EDF (EDF.PA) has delayed the final investment decision for its Hinkley Point nuclear project in Britain until after its May 12 shareholders’ meeting to allow time to consult its works council, two sources familiar with the situation told Reuters.

French Economy Minister Emmanuel Macron told parliament last month that a final investment decision on the 18 billion pound UK project would be taken by early May and that delaying the decision would create a strong risk that EDF (EDF.PA) could lose the contract.

The sources said EDF Chief Executive Jean-Bernard Levy told a board meeting on Friday afternoon that he had decided to consult the firm’s works council, which had threatened legal action unless it was allowed to give its view on the project.

“This procedure will take several weeks,” one of the sources said.

EDF declined to comment.

The new delay – several deadlines have passed without a decision in the past two years – will give EDF the chance to smooth relations with its unions, who consider the project so risky that it threatens the company’s survival.

Sources have told Reuters that at least five of the six union representatives on EDF’s 18-seat board plan to vote against the project and Force Ouvriere (FO), one of EDF’s more radical unions, has threatened to strike.

A third source said Levy wants to take time to appease the social climate at EDF, which is 85 percent state-owned.

Former chief financial officer Thomas Piquemal resigned over the project last month, while employee shareholders’ association EAS demands that the state buy out EDF’s minority shareholders, saying the government abuses its majority control to use EDF as a lever for its energy policy.

At a meeting at President Francois Hollande’s palace on Wednesday, the government did not agree on whether to give extra financial support for EDF, which is weighed down by 37 billion euros (£28.8 billion) of net debt and struggles with record-low power prices.

French media have reported that Macron is not in favour of recapitalising EDF now, because investments for Hinkley Point and a 50 billion euro upgrade of France’s nuclear reactors are several years away.

Greenpeace UK director John Sauven said the UK government urgently needs to back renewable energy as a more reliable alternative to nuclear.”

http://feeds.reuters.com/~r/Reuters/UKTopNews/~3/QaksMSLtJ74/uk-edf-nuclear-britain-idUKKCN0XJ25S

“Illicit enrichment”- tell the government what you think about this possible new offence

“The Government is consulting on the creation of an illicit enrichment offence, “for use when a public official has a significant and inexplicable increase in their assets”.

The proposed offence is included in a package of measures in the Government’s latest action plan for anti-money laundering and counter-terrorist finance.

The Home Office said the aim was to make the UK “a more hostile place for those seeking to move, hide or use the proceeds of crime or corruption”.
The proposals subject to consultation also include the creation of a new power to require individuals to declare their sources of wealth, and the creation of a linked power to seek forfeiture of assets if they fail to declare their sources of wealth.

The closing date for responses to be submitted is 2 June 2016.”

http://localgovernmentlawyer.co.uk/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=26736%3Ahome-office-targets-public-officials-with-plans-for-illicit-enrichment-offence&catid=59&Itemid=27

Page 57 of this document:

http://localgovernmentlawyer.co.uk/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=26736%3Ahome-office-targets-public-officials-with-plans-for-illicit-enrichment-offence&catid=59&Itemid=27

gives a list of questions the government wants to consult on and

The Treasury welcomes your views in response to the questions posed in this Annex and would be keen to hear views on how to best deal with the issues raised with a view to making the supervisory regime more effective. This will help ensure evidence-based policy decisions in these areas.

Electronic responses are preferred and should be sent to: aml@hmtreasury.gsi.gov.uk

Questions or enquiries specifically relating to this consultation should also be sent to the above email address.

Please include the words CONSULTATION VIEWS or CONSULTATION ENQUIRY (as appropriate) in your email title. If you do not wish your views to be published alongside the Government response to this consultation, please clearly specify this in your email.

Hard copy responses may be submitted to:

Review of AML/CFT Supervision Sanctions and Illicit Finance Team 1st Floor Blue
HM Treasury
1 Horse Guards Road London
SW1A 2HQ

“Halt Hinkley Point until Brussels approves state aid plans, Osborne told”

“French government support for EDF to continue UK nuclear project might break EU competition rules, says Greenpeace:

Greenpeace has written to George Osborne warning him not to allow the Hinkley Point C nuclear project to proceed until the European commission approves further planned support from the French state.

The letter, which is signed jointly with the energy supplier Ecotricity, follows legal advice that plans for state help from France’s government to enable EDF to continue with the reactor scheme could break European competition rules.

The legal opinion was given to Greenpeace by three competition barristers from Monckton Chambers in London and came as EDF held a board meeting on Friday in Paris to discuss once again the controversial £18bn project in Somerset.

“The only way Hinkley can be kept alive is on the life support machine of state aid. EDF, if it is to stay in business, needs a new vision which is not looking backwards,” said John Sauven, executive director of Greenpeace UK.

“The UK government needs to stop penalising the UK renewable energy industry in favour of propping up an ailing state-owned nuclear industry in France.”

Dale Vince, founder of Ecotricity, said it was time for everyone to realise that it was the end of the road for Hinkley Point.

“Illegal state aid is one thing, and we’ll work with Greenpeace to challenge that if it happens, but it’s not just financial issues, there are technical problems with Hinkley Point too – EDF are yet to build one of these reactors and their first two attempts are, between them, 16 years late and billions over budget,” he added.

The letter was also sent to Amber Rudd, the energy and climate change Secretary. Rudd and Osborne have been key figures in trying to steer investment into new nuclear plants.

EDF, which is 85% owned by the French state, is struggling against a mountain of debt and has told ministers it will not build Hinkley unless it obtains help from France’s government.

The country’s economy minister, Emmanuel Macron, has talked about taking future dividends in shares rather than cash and a range of other options to lessen the financial burden on EDF.

It is these proposals that the London barristers believe would need clearance from Brussels, a process that would subject Hinkley to further delays.

Molly Scott Cato, Green MEP for the area covering the plant, said: “The numbers for the Hinkley deal have never stacked up and it is clear that the commercial case for this white elephant is dead. We have now a political battle where the stakes for both the UK and France are just too high to admit failure. But we cannot let this override EU rules on state aid or fair competition.”

http://gu.com/p/4th9q

“London’s luxury property market is crumbling and that’ bad news for affordable housing”

Although this is about London, it applies to all areas of England.

“The latest set of evidence shows that the luxury market is crumbling and this is really bad news for affordable housing in London. If luxury properties don’t tempt the rich then those in a lower band will, pricing out prospective buyers with less money.

Houses in the most sought after areas in London — such as Belgravia, Kensington, and Knightsbridge — are selling at a huge discount, according to LonRes data cited by the Financial Times.

For example, 59% of sales in Knightsbridge and Belgravia were selling at a discount of at least 10%. Meanwhile over half the properties on sale in Mayfair and Marylebone had similar discounts applied. …

… Firstly, anyone buying a property over £1.5 million is stung with a huge 12% stamp duty fee. …

… Secondly, if you own more than one property, a 3% stamp duty is applied. The new fee came into force in April and is applicable to buy-to-let investors and those who are buying a second home. This 3% fee is on top of the extra cost of a new purchase in April.

The knock-on effect on affordable housing

… Investors will instead consider buying properties that fall within a lower bracket with lower fees. This only squeezes the already squeezed market.

… So what does this all mean? As London’s richest slip from luxury properties to avoid fees, they’re likely to turn so-called affordable housing into something completely unaffordable for the average Londoner.

http://uk.businessinsider.com/lonres-luxury-properties-in-london-data-and-affordable-housing-impact-2016-4