Sidford: controversy gets an airing on BBC Radio Devon

Sidford Employment site result of “heroic calculation” on a “speculative basis” , SOS Chair tells Radio Devon

BBC’s Simon Bates’ interview with Richard Thurlow last Friday (3rd June), can be heard on the Radio Devon website. http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p03vh95v

Go to Simon Bates o3/o6/2016, from 00.45-01.02, and 49.50 to 57.14.

The interview was followed up by a phone-in from Independent East Devon Alliance (IEDA) Cllr Marianne Rixson, EDDC Ward Member for Sidmouth-Sidford since May 2015. You can listen to what she said, from 01.41.05 to 01.47.25 in the recording.

Simon Bates suggests he wants to pursue the Sidford business park planning application issues, on his breakfast show later on.

And don’t forget there are just a few days’ left to comment to EDDC DEADLINE is 8th June:

See https://saveoursidmouth.com/2016/05/26/urgent-sidford-business-park-planning-application-now-in-the-more-people-who-write-in-the-better-deadline-for-comments-weds-8th-june/

Sidford Employment site result of “heroic calculation” on a “speculative basis” , SOS Chair tells Radio Devon

The democratic deficit – from the top down

Replace Parliament with EDDC and Executive with Cabinet [and backbenchers with Independents] and you have a dead-ringer for local politics too!

“Scrutiny of the executive

The prime minister’s active participation in parliamentary proceedings is a key mechanism for ensuring the accountability of the executive, but they have been less and less present in the Commons since the time of Thatcher and Blair. David Cameron’s attendances are limited to a 30 minute question time (PMQs) once a week when Parliament is sitting, occasional speeches in major debates, and periodic public meetings with the chairs of Select Committees in the new Liaison Committee.

More encouraging is recent research is showing that backbenchers used PMQs in 1997-2008 as a key public venue, with backbenchers often leading the agenda and breaking new issues that later grew to prominence. The current Leader of the Opposition, Jeremy Corbyn, has also routinely been using PMQs to ask questions sent in on email by the public, somewhat changing the tone of the session.

The ‘payroll vote’

Parliament’s independence vis-a-vis the executive has long been qualified by strong partisan loyalties amongst almost all MPs, who (after all) have spent many years working within parties before becoming MPs. The members of the government’s frontbench are expected to always vote with the executive, as are Parliamentary Private Secretaries (who are pseudo-ministers) The last official data in 2010 showed approximately 140 MPs affected. Unofficial estimates of the size of the payroll vote suggest that it was equivalent to well over a third of government MPs, by 2013. Given the smallish number of Conservative MPs in the 2015 Parliament the ratio will still be high. When Commons seats fall to 600, the prominence of the payroll vote will increase, unless government roles for MPs are cut back.

Dissent by backbench MPs

The coalition period marked not just a period of record dissenting votes by backbenchers against their party line, but also the extension of this behaviour to larger and more consequential issues. The cleavages inside the Conservative party between pro and anti-EU MPs are exceptionally deep. During the summer of 2016 the Cameron government backed off several controversial legislative proposals, and proposed an exceptionally anodyne set of bills in the Queen’s Speech, apparently to avoid straining party loyalties further in the aftermath of the Brexit referendum. The rise of serial backbench dissenter Jeremy Corbyn to be Labour leader has also created a serious gulf between his team and many of the Parliamentary Labour Party, which may reduce the cohesion of the main opposition party’s voting.

Conclusion

Public confidence in Parliament was very badly damaged by the expenses scandals of 2009, and trust in the House of Commons remains at a low ebb, despite some worthwhile but modest reforms in the interim, especially making Select Committees more effective in scrutinizing government. The Commons remains a potent focus for national debate, but that would be true of any legislature in most mature liberal democracies. There is no evidence that the UK legislature is especially effective or well-regarded, as its advocates often claim.

Five years of Coalition government 2010-15 (almost automatically) somewhat reduced executive predominance over Parliament. But it did not break traditions of strong executive control over the Commons. Tory divisions over the EU (plus the artificial exclusion of UKIP from Commons representation) have perpetuated backbench unrest after 2015. But these ameliorations of party discipline may still be termpoary. Structural reforms to make the Commons a more effective legislature, and to modernise ritualistic behaviours and processes, are still urgently needed.”

http://www.democraticaudit.com/?p=22396

Fixed term parliaments – a headache for the EU referendum

“What do fixed term Parliaments mean?

The new rules require a PM with a Commons majority to call the next general election on a five year fixed timetable.

However, should the PM resign or lose a no-confidence vote, the process to be followed is still unclear. The monarch could ask another member of the largest party to try to form a government. But if they too declined, conceivably the Leader of the Opposition could be asked to and might seek to form a minority government without any immediate dissolution.

To dissolve Parliament early a vote of two thirds of MPs is needed, which would normally require that (most) MPs from both the government and the main opposition should support the motion.”

How effective is Parliament in controlling UK government and representing citizens?

Fabian Society on devolution

A notable feature of the 2015 general election campaign was the degree of apparent unanimity across all parties that Britain has an overcentralized governmental structure, which is ripe for devolution.

In the wake of the Scottish independence referendum, and the desperate resort to ‘devo -max’ to save the day for Better Together, this was hardly a surprise.

But the superficial unanimity of the narrative concealed a gaping void in the intellectual underpinnings of what a devolved governmental structure might look like. From both the Tory and Labour camps, the message was a fuzzy ‘make it up for yourselves and we’ll discuss it with you’ – in effect, ducking any intellectual engagement with the tricky issue of taking fiscal and social policy responsibility out of the hands of Whitehall and Westminster and into the hands of local communities and their elected representatives.

That political and intellectual evasiveness continues to dominate both Labour and Tory thinking.

The government’s policy since the election has justifiably been described as incoherent and inconsistent by the Local Government Select Committee, and Labour-led local authorities have been ploughing their own local furrows without any coherent party policy to refer to.

In practice, the government’s approach has been a travesty of genuine devolution. Their policy is best described as an incremental extension of the City Deal/Local Growth Fund policies inherited from the Coalition period. Local authorities are encouraged to come together to propose expenditure plans (notably for transport, housing and skills infrastructure) that will promote economic growth over a medium-term period.

In return for a multi-year capital funding allocation, the local authorities are expected to create a different and more unified decision making structure across their chosen area, preferably with an elected mayor at the helm of the new structure.

Three things are notable about this policy:

it takes powers away from local communities and places them in the hands of more distant combined authorities and their elected mayors;

no fiscal devolution is being offered;

the capital allocations are timebound, while the new structures of local government are permanent. In brief, it’s a policy of local government reorganisation by stealth. Devolution is not on offer.

This conclusion is reinforced by the simultaneous stream of massively centralising government measures which have drained even more powers out of local community control, such as the Housing and Planning Act, which spells the death of social housing and dictates how local housing markets should work, the nationalising of schools through academisation, and central control of Council Tax levels.

Labour’s policy is unclear. The innovative work that was undertaken by the LGA Labour Group and the Local Government Innovation Taskforce before the 2015 Election and published in ‘People, Power and Public Services’ has been forgotten, and the centralising instincts that come from the worthy desire to ensure that all our citizens get equal treatment regardless of where they live, have revived. The party remains strong in local government and there needs to be more policy engagement with the issues of devolution, community involvement, local government structure and local democracy.

From discussions with other Labour local authority leaders, a framework for rethinking the party’s approach to devolution is emerging:

The old two tier local government structures are no longer appropriate and the basis for devolution has to be new unitary authorities. A rational approach to the creation of new unitaries which respect community loyalties and pride in ‘place’ is required. This process should be overseen by an Independent Commission and undertaken within a defined time period.

A wide measure of freedom for local authorities to set their own levels of taxation, and service charging structures, allowing them to raise and control a large proportion of their income locally.

A transfer of business rate income to local authorities with a redistribution mechanism which recognises the differential capacities and needs of different communities and is not skewed by government bias towards their own councils – whatever the colour of the government in power.

A re-establishment of local education authorities with strong links to the skills agenda and to children’s services.

A national structure merging adult social care and local health services, managed through an Expert Group that can bring about the necessary transformation of service structures within a defined period.

A revived public scrutiny system based on panels drawn from large ‘colleges’ of scrutineers, whose composition reflects the social and demographic make-up of the area.

No requirement for directly elected mayors which run directly counter to the aim of drawing local communities closer to the decision making processes which affect them.

As the new party leadership develops the agenda for the next election we should be endorsing genuine devolution of power to local communities. Place-based unitary authorities should be reflective of, and responsive to, their residents and services should be delivered by ward-based political leaders open to regular scrutiny and challenge.


http://www.fabians.org.uk/decentralising-britian/

Greater Lincolnshire has devolution doubts – one councillor feels like a “used car salesman”

“I have a gut feeling that this is not right,” warned portfolio holder for the rural economy Councillor Adam Grist (Con, Legbourne).

It seems like an attempt to transplant a metropolitan solution on a shire county. …

… Councillor Terry Knowles (Ind, Grimoldby) described the 67-page proposal document as being “heavy on fine words but almost empty of content”.

He continued: “I am not at all impressed – the creation of an elected mayor would simply provide an easy blame-channel when things go bump. …

…also came from Councillor Sarah Dodds (Lab, Louth Primary and St James) and Councillor Stephen Palmer (Ind, Sutton-on-Sea), with the latter demanding: “How much will this cost?”

He asked: “Is the drive for a new authority coming from the people of Lincolnshire or from the Government? Why should we have forced on us something we don’t want?”

There were plaudits at the meeting for council leader Craig Leyland (Con, Woodhall Spa) for his hard work in liaising with counterparts at other authorities, including North East Lincolnshire Council leader Ray Oxby, to move the initiative forward.

But even Mr Leyland admitted to doubts on the project.

“I feel like a car salesman just praying that the customer doesn’t ask to look under the bonnet,” he quipped.

“We need to seek the views of electors,” insisted the leader.

http://www.grimsbytelegraph.co.uk/Doubts-Greater-Lincolnshire-devolution/story-29342843-detail/story.html

South Hams community raising crowd funding to protect wildlife

A community in Devon taking South Hams District Council to a Judicial Review, for granting planning permission to a developer bent on destroying wildlife. The scheme also forces social tenants, against their wishes, from bungalows with gardens into flats.

The group says Council won’t protect them, so they are doing it for ourselves. They are asking for help to set a vitally- needed national precedent and stand up for the rights of wildlife, for local people and kids futures.

The campaign is for Brimhay; a close of small bungalows set around a green adjoining a wild stream valley, in the heart of Dartington village, near Totnes, Devon. The valley is home to dormice and five species of bats- all endangered and which should be protected by European legislation.

Their crowdfunding page is here:
http://www.crowdfunder.co.uk/www-dontburydartington-co-uk

East Devon Alliance Chairman on devolution

Paul Arnott was filmed on 25th May 2016 outside the Guildhall in Totnes, just prior to a public meeting on the encouragement and support of independent councillors in local democracy.

The meeting hosted a number of people from across the region (and beyond) and invited them to discuss ideas and exchange strategies. Here Paul Arnott, the Chairman of the East Devon Alliance, talks about a couple of the issues that motivated the group of independents he represents to take action.

Independence in Democracy Interviews: Paul Arnott

Knowle relocation cost neutral? Knock that one on the head! £6m loan and counting

Future Borrowing
There are plans for the Council to borrow £13,262,782 to fund its capital programme in 2016/17.

This borrowing may be from internal resources, PWLB, or from the market, the most cost effective method being selected at the time the funds are required.

The 2016/17 borrowing requirement is made up as follows:

£400,000 LED (not drawn in 2015/16 as planned)
£750,000 Queen’s Drive Exmouth
£5,990,000 Office Relocation
£4,900,557 Refuse Fleet (actual figure, £6,000,000 per budget)
£290,000 Refinancing of Beer CLT loan (agreed since budget set)
£932,225 Borrowing required to fund the balance on various smaller projects included within the Capital Programme. This requirement has increased since the budget was set due to slippage in the capital programme from prior years.

Total £13,262,782

Click to access 080616-combined-final-cabinet-agenda.pdf

Google and our Government – a cosy relationship

“New concerns have been raised about the political influence of Google after research found at least 80 “revolving door” moves in the past decade – instances where the online giant took on government employees and European governments employed Google staff.

The research was carried out by the Google Transparency Project, an initiative run by the Campaign for Accountability (CfA), a US organisation that scrutinises corporations and politicians. The CfA has suggested that the moves are a result of Google seeking to boost its influence in Europe as the company seeks to head off antitrust action and moves to tighten up on online privacy.

In the UK, Google has hired people from Downing Street, the Home Office, the Treasury, the Department for Education and the Department for Transport. Overall, the company has hired at least 28 British public officials since 2005.

Those hired have included Sarah Hunter, a senior policy adviser to Tony Blair when prime minister, who became head of public policy for Google in the UK. Hunter is now head of policy for Google X, the arm that deals with new businesses such as drones and self-driving cars.

In 2013 Google hired Verity Harding, a special adviser to former deputy prime minister Nick Clegg. Harding is now policy manager for Google DeepMind, its artificial intelligence arm, which recently secured a contract with the NHS.

Overall, the research suggests that Google, now part of parent company Alphabet Inc, has hired at least 65 former government officials from within the European Union since 2005. These include Tomas Gulbinas, a former ambassador-at-large for the Lithuanian government, and Georgios Mavros, a former adviser to a French member of the European parliament: both became Google lobbyists.

During the same period, 15 Google employees were appointed to government positions in Europe, gaining what the CfA claims are “valuable contacts at the heart of the decision-making process”.

In the UK, appointments include that of Baroness Joanna Shields, a former managing director for Google, who was made minister for internet safety, and Google’s executive chairman, Eric Schmidt, who David Cameron appointed to his business advisory council. Dame Margaret Hodge, former head of the Commons’ public accounts committee, told the CfA that the appointments were part of a deliberate strategy by Google to gain influence in the public sphere. “I have absolutely no doubt it’s part of their strategy,” Hodge said. “Google deliberately nurtures that culture, and I have absolutely no doubt that they see it as strategically important to be as close as they can to government.”

She added that, unlike other large American companies, such as Apple, “one gets the impression that [government] ministers are in awe of Google”. …

… In the UK, Google has been moving into a raft of new areas now being heavily promoted by the government. “We need to rethink how we view Google,” said Tamasin Cave of the campaign group Spinwatch. “It’s not a search engine, it’s a political beast that has captured the attention of our policy-makers. Most worryingly in health and education, where privatisation through technology is gathering pace. Even if our politicians have bought into its thinking, we as a public should be asking how Google’s involvement in the NHS and schools will impact them, what are the consequences, and who benefits: us or Google?””

http://gu.com/p/4k9je

Wonder if any of our LEP members have Google associations!

Quote of the day

Unhappy events … have retaught us two simple truths about the liberty of a democratic people.

The first truth is that the liberty of a democracy is not safe if the people tolerate the growth of private power to a point where it comes stronger than their democratic state itself.

That, in its essence, is fascism – ownership of government by an individual, by a group or by any other controlling private power….

Among us today a concentration of private power without equal in history is growing.

The second truth is that the liberty of a democracy is not safe if its business system does not provide employment and produce and distribute goods in such a way as to sustain an acceptable standard of living [for everyone].

Both lessons hit home.

Among us today a concentration of private power without equal in history is growing.” “

Franklin D Roosevelt, message to the US Congress 1938

http://www.presidency.ucsb.edu/ws/?pid=15637

The rest of the article scarily foreshadows the exact same events today.

Quart into pint pot at new EDDC offices?

Owl see that the designs for the new offices at Honiton have been published in an EDDC agenda and wonders why there is no scale with the drawings.

Maybe the building may have been increased in size for two reasons: staff were apparently shocked at the lack of space and complained, plus the numbers of staff have increased a lot recently.

And Owl further sees they are taking money from the transformation fund, so the cost is rising further still …

Click to access 060416-combined-cabinet-agendasm.pdf

Old people are a “tension” for devolution – and so is happiness!

From a slide on a devolution workshop:

Tensions

Local and national government perspectives eg business rates reform and what must central government continue to lead

Small family businesses and ambition (lifestyle businesses) and do they have a role in transformation?

Productivity at what cost – not sacrificing the environment

Backing the ‘winners’ v spreading the jam

Other measures – e.g. happiness

Dealing with retirees

Click to access 060416-combined-cabinet-agendasm.pdf

page 91

Knowle relocation: cost now approaching £10 million

Page 32 onwards.

Click to access 060416-combined-cabinet-agendasm.pdf

Greens and Independents learn from each other

Good to see EDDC Independents Leader Ben Ingham talking today at the Green Party South-West conference on the Local Enterprise Partnership devolution fiasco and at a workshop about Green and Independent co-operation.

This is the way politics should and will go.

Hernandez update

“Adrian Sanders

Torbay Election Expenses Update and New Questions

According to the Devon & Cornwall Constabulary all matters in relation to the expenses returns from the General Election 2015 that relate to our newly elected Police and Crime Commissioner Alison Hernandez have been referred to the Independent Police Complaints Commission. They in turn have referred the matter as a “managed” investigation to West Mercia Police. They now hold responsibility for the ongoing investigation in order to provide the complete and clear separation between Devon & Cornwall Police and the elected PCC.

On 19th May the Police were successful at magistrates court in extending the time limit on prosecutions for a further year in relation to all the MPs and their Agents in Devon & Cornwall.

Investigations will begin into:

Whether the expense of bringing activists to Torbay to campaign for Kevin Foster should have been declared locally or nationally?

Whether the cost of the mention of the battle bus locally in relation to canvass cards should have been fully declared on the General Election return and not apportioned to local council candidates and the Mayoral campaign?

Whether the omission of said battle bus canvass cards from council candidate expense returns bring council candidates and their agent under investigation, or whether this was an attempt by the General Election Agent to pass off costs onto others without their knowledge?

Where other costs of the battle bus should have been declared?

Whether the expense of direct-mail shots naming the constituency as one where people should vote Conservative were a local expense given there was only one Conservative Candidate in the constituency whom they could be asking people to vote for, or whether it was correctly omitted from the return?

These are probably the main issues but now there are some more and one is very serious indeed.

Thanks to a right-wing blogger I’ve had to check my own expense return. Following a complaint from someone based on the blogger’s allegations into my own return the police quite rightly have had a good look.

The Devon & Cornwall police (who should have passed the complaint to another force in my opinion, after all which Police & Crime Commissioner could my Agent or I complain to if dissatisfied with their conduct!) acted on the complaint and requesting copies of election materials from the original suppliers.

Having inspected my expense return and my literature this was their conclusion:

“Initial enquires with regards to these allegations have not provided evidence to support the allegation therefore no further police action will be taken at this time. This includes any consideration of an application to extend time limits for such alleged offences.”

The New Questions for the Tories

In having to look again at my returns I came across an item correctly declared by myself that I had previously overlooked in relation to the Conservative return. I properly declared an amount for telephone canvassing. No such costs are recorded on the Conservative election expense return.

While checking the Conservative return for a declaration of those costs I then noticed something else. It is the date entered under “Date you became the candidate”.

The date is usually the date of the dissolution of Parliament that was Monday 30th March 2015 but Alison and Kevin have put it down as 10/4/14 – over a year early – on their Short Campaign Return and 10/4/15 on their Long Campaign Return.

This is probably a clerical error the candidate and agent will wish to report to the Electoral Commission if they haven’t already done so before investigations begin in earnest.

It does however raise yet another question and that is when exactly did the Conservative Candidate become the Candidate? This is very important as the limited expense limits of the Short Campaign kick in from the date declared and a false declaration is a criminal offence.

This is what the rules say for the Short Campaign:

“The earliest date you can officially become a candidate is the day that the UK Parliament is dissolved. Parliament is scheduled to be dissolved on 30 March 2015. You will become a candidate on this date if you or others have already announced your intention to stand. If your intention to stand has not been announced by the day of the dissolution of Parliament, you will officially become a candidate on the earlier of the date you or another person announce your intention to stand, or the date when you are nominated.”

The key is “You will become a candidate on this date (30th March) if you or others have already announced your intention to stand. “

A chat with the Electoral Commission on this point may also be necessary given the literature and campaign materials that were distributed by the Tories between the 30 March and 10th April in the Torbay Constituency.

For the record I declared I became the candidate on the 30th March 2015, the day of dissolution.”

Yet another MP rebellion – this time Land Registry privatisation

” … Sixty-five cross-party MPs sign letter written by Labour’s David Lammy saying sale would enable ‘shady offshore entities to buy up property in this country’. …

… The letter, addressed to the business secretary, Sajid Javid, warns: “We need a government that is determined to take serious steps to make it harder for shady offshore entities to buy up property in this country and also make it harder for them to shield themselves from scrutiny and investigation. The privatisation of the Land Registry would achieve the opposite.” …

…mA report by the Times linked all the prospective buyers of the Land Registry with offshore firms, a matter also addressed in the letter. The privatisation plans have been opposed by a wide range of organisations and individuals. A petition run by 38 Degrees has almost reached its target of 300,000 signatures, and organisations speaking out against the plans include the Competition and Markets Authority, solicitors and media firms.”

http://gu.com/p/4k6v9

Radio Devon to air Sidmouth Business Park issue tomorrow approx 7.20 am

Radio Devon breakfast show interview tomorrow with SOS Chair, about Planning Application for Sidford business park.

Richard Thurlow will be interviewed by Radio Devon’s Simon Bates, at 7.20 a.m. on Friday 3rd June. To phone in comments, tel. 0345 301 1034

Here’s a reminder of some of the issues:

URGENT! Sidford Business Park Planning Application now in. “The more people who write in, the better”. DEADLINE for comments, WEDS 8th JUNE.

Hinkley C: experts say public has right to facts

“We strongly agree with Dr David Lowry’s well-reasoned criticism of the information commissioner who has refused public interest access to information on key EDF and DECC nuclear waste contracts (Report, 31 May).

There is no justifiable reason for the information commissioner, EDF or the DECC to keep secret these key facts from the people of the UK and north Somerset in particular.

In doing so, the commissioner has put EDF’s narrow commercial interests before the interest of the health and safety of the community. There is a key public interest in all of us knowing exactly the economic case for how or if radioactive waste from the proposed reactors at Hinkley Point C may be dealt with.”

Dr Paul Dorfman Founder, Nuclear Consulting Group, The Energy Institute, UCL
JRCT Nuclear policy research fellow
Dr Carl Iwan Clowes
Prof David Elliott
Emeritus professor of technology policy, The Open University
Dr Phil Johnstone
Research fellow, Science Policy Research Unit (SPRU), University of Sussex
Jeremy Leggett
Founder and chairman of Solarcentury and SolarAid, Author of The Carbon War and Half Gone
Jonathon Porritt
Founder, director and trustee, Forum for the Future, Co-director of the Prince of Wales’s business & sustainability programme
Pete Roche
Editor, No2NuclearPower, Policy adviser to the Nuclear Free Local Authorities
Prof Andy Stirling
Director of Science for SPRU, Co-director Centre on Social, Technological and Environmental Pathways to Sustainability, University of Sussex

http://gu.com/p/4k63q

Lyme Regis Independent wins council seat against former Mayor

Larger-than-life lively independent Jeff Scowan, who creatively used social media to promote his cause, won a seat contested by former mayor Ken Dibben who said his strength was “experience”. Seems new thinking was preferred to old thinking in Lyme Regis!

http://www.bridportnews.co.uk/news/14533749.Jeff_Scowen_elected_to_Lyme_Regis_Town_Council/