East Budleigh: Clinton Devon – 5 houses with FOURTEEN parking spaces in AONB on grade 1 agricultural land

5 houses with no less than FOURTEEN parking spaces, on grade 1 agricultural land in an AONB. Clinton Devon Estates surely you are having a laugh …

Plans for five new homes at East Budleigh have attracted opposition from the parish council.

Clinton Devon Estates is seeking outline planning permission for five new homes, including three affordable homes, on land at Frogmore Road, east of Oak Hill.

The landowner has previously proposed a larger residential development on the site but those plans were withdrawn in the face of local opposition.
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A local housing needs survey report prepared for Clinton Devon Estates by chartered town planners Bell Cornwell identified a need for at least three to five units of affordable housing in the parish.

The site is on the edge of the village, to the north of Frogmore Road, within the East Devon Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty.

Clinton Devon Estates wants to build two four-bedroom houses for sale on the open market along with two three-bedroom and one two-bedroom affordable homes. The proposals include 14 car parking spaces.

In a planning statement supporting the application, Bell Cornwell said discussions with the parish council about the potential development of the site had been going on for some time. …

… The application was debated by East Budleigh with Bicton Parish Council on Tuesday, July 26. Councillors resolved to object to the plans on the grounds that the application does not provide a sufficient proportion of affordable dwellings relative to open-market housing.

The parish council also objects to building on Grade 1 agricultural land when lower grade agricultural land is available, and to building on what it described as “an environmentally sensitive site, adjacent to a flood zone and inconvenient for access to village facilities”.

http://www.exeterexpressandecho.co.uk/east-budleigh-homes-plan-faces-parish-council-opposition/story-29565789-detail/story.html

Tim Farron: Cameron’s honours list “so full of cronies it would embarrass a medieval court”

The Liberal Democrat leader has called for an end to resignation honours and peerages.

He said: “David Cameron’s resignation honours list is so full of cronies it would embarrass a medieval court.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2016/08/04/david-camerons-full-honours-list-revealed/

Honours: “…backdoor state funding of parties for the re-election of incumbents”

“Research for the Committee on Standards in Public Life said individual large donations created ‘questions’ about alleged rewards of honours and peerages”

“[The researcher] added that the use of public funds for partisan political purposes was a further major challenge, reporting: ‘At almost all levels of elective politics, incumbents have become entitled to public money to aid them in their duties to their electors.

‘There is a tendency to use some of this money as a form of backdoor state funding of parties and for the re-election of incumbents.’

Mr Pinto-Duschinsky said it was crucial to re-examine the role of the Electoral Commission and other regulators such as the Charity Commission.
The row over Mr Cameron’s resignation honours – a traditional opportunity for departing prime minister’s to reward allies – has renewed calls for reform to the honours system.

Anger has been focused on moves by Mr Cameron to reward major party donors from his decade as Tory leader – with one, Ian Taylor, declining a knighthood, and another Michael Spencer, being blocked from the House of Lords by officials.”

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3724000/Political-parties-dangerously-reliant-mega-donors-raises-questions-alleged-sale-honours-standards-watchdog-warns.html

And it’s official – arise Sir Hugo!

Claire Wright and MP Hugo Swire with protesters at Ottery St Mary hospital on Saturday Ref sho 21-16SH 4964. Picture: Simon Horn.

Claire Wright and MP Hugo Swire with protesters at Ottery St Mary hospital on Saturday Ref sho 21-16SH 4964. Picture: Simon Horn.

Rewarded for … er … doing the job he was already handsomely paid for at the Foreign Office … whilst saying he could not speak for East Devon in Parliament … and being a very good friend and former schoolmate of David Cameron.

And that’s all.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2016/08/04/david-camerons-full-honours-list-revealed/

P.S. Owls don’t give or accept honours, even if the Owl went to Hogwarts – just so you know.

Hinkley C and National Security

An abbreviated article by Max Hastings.

Our Local Enterprise Partnership does not seem to share his concern, pushing hard for the deal to go through. Membership of our LEP is heavily dominated by the nuclear interests of several of its Board members.

The abbreviated article:

The Prime Minister’s decision to review the £18 billion Hinkley Point nuclear power project has won a cheer from everyone not in line to make money from it. When the holidays are over, there are two good reasons why Theresa May should go further and cancel the scheme. The first is that its electricity will be fantastically expensive.

The second, which we shall consider here, is that it was a critical error of judgement for the Cameron government to invite the People’s Republic of China to fund a huge national infrastructure project.

Allowing the Chinese access to Hinkley Point, and beyond it to other British nuclear plants, would give a hostage to fortune. The record shows that the Chinese can’t be trusted with sensitive industrial data. Fair dealing has no place in their system.
A decade ago, Robert Zoellick, then World Bank president, said the West’s future relations with China required the country to become a ‘responsible stakeholder’ in the international order.

This it has not yet done. Until it happens, we cannot do big business with Beijing.

The last government, and especially the then-Chancellor George Osborne, cherished naive ambitions to create a historic new trading relationship with the dragon. …

… A nation that engages in global industrial espionage, employing an estimated 1.5 million geeks to penetrate other people’s computers — while denying its own people online access — is not a comfortable business associate. … We underestimate at our peril the ruthlessness with which they pursue their objectives. …

… Already, China’s long arm has stretched to Africa and South America, where it is effectively colonising huge areas by buying up the supplies of raw materials such as oil, copper and iron ore which it needs to feed its endless consumption of energy and its vast building programme.

David Cameron and George Osborne hoped to cash in on a slice of the potentially huge trade market available in China, which is why last October the British government staged an unprecedentedly chummy state visit for President Xi Jinping, at which the Queen herself was obliged almost to kowtow. …

… involvement in the design of the Hinkley Point reactor is part of a wider plan, whereby by 2025 the Chinese could hold a £105 billion stake in British infrastructure.

Yet for this to make sense, we need to believe that China can be a benign, honourable, honest industrial partner. None of those adjectives seems appropriate now, or in the near future. …

… The price of industrial co-operation with Beijing is British silence about China’s systemic human rights abuses, of which the highest rate of state executions in the world is only the most conspicuous example. …

… We should be equally worried about the Second Bureau of the Third Department of the People’s Liberation Army — otherwise known as Unit 61398, which is engaged in the theft of intellectual property across the world. President Obama’s national security adviser Susan Rice said last autumn that Chinese industrial espionage is ‘not a mild irritation, it’s an economic and national security concern to the United States’.

Chinese hacking of personal and corporate information, she said, ‘undermines our long-term economic co-operation, and it needs to stop’. …

… David Cameron and George Osborne seemed to believe that Britain, by treating the Chinese nicely, might persuade them to behave better, at least to us. This seemed naively mistaken last year, and is mistaken now.

So, likewise, was British willingness to allow the Chinese telecommunications firm Huawei to bid for contracts in this country, when the United States won’t allow the firm anywhere near its domestic systems.

The UK’s intelligence and security committee expressed dismay that the government was so eager to promote Chinese trade and investment that it seemed willing to ignore the obvious risks of admitting the Chinese to our telecoms networks.

For Huawei — like the China Nuclear Power Corporation (CNPC) — is no independent entity. Both are arms of the communist state. The CNPC’s website acknowledges its commitment to ‘the building of national defence’, alongside its economic and industrial objectives.

It’s not necessary to be an old-fashioned Cold Warrior to consider it folly for Britain to treat China as a friend while it promotes values and pursues objectives utterly at odds with those of this country and its allies.

… For now, however, we need to sup with both nations [China and Russia] using a long spoon. There may be a time, when Beijing has showed itself worthy of trust, when we should cut deals for Chinese investment in our infrastructure. But that time has not come yet.

The involvement in Hinkley Point of one of the most repressive and secretive regimes in the world poses unacceptable risks. Britain will have to pay a stiff forfeit for abandoning the project, but it seems right for the Prime Minister to make that decision.

There are many powerful economic arguments for cancellation, but the threat to our national security is the clincher.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/debate/article-3722766/Espionage-Repression-sheer-folly-nuclear-deals-Chinese-writes-MAX-HASTINGS.html

Local NHS in the red

“Health trusts and commissioning groups in the South West had combined budget deficits of more than £150m in the last financial year.

The biggest deficits were almost £39.5m for Northern, Eastern and Western Devon Clinical Commissioning Group. Derriford hospital ended the year £36m in the red. But some trusts and commissioning bodies did balance their books.”

Source: BBC Spotlight live news

Would YOU accept an honour described as ” a very British corruption”?

Hugo Swire is widely rumoured to be on David Cameron’s resignation honours list to receive a knighthood. The two Old Etonians are such good friends David Cameron felt able to give him a playful slap on the bottom at a recent government reception:

image

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/politics/david-cameron/11946721/David-Cameron-caught-on-camera-giving-minister-slap-on-bottom-at-State-banquet.html

Here is what another (former) pal of the PM says:

“resignation honours list a “very British corruption”, says ex-PM’s pal Steve Hilton.

David Cameron’s bid to dish out gongs to Tory donors is “a serious type of very British corruption” – according to one of his oldest political pals.

Former Downing Street strategy guru Steve Hilton hit out at his chum’s attempts to reward party backers, which has triggered huge public anger.

The former Tory leader wants to hand accolades including knighthoods and peerages to 48 cronies .

But Mr Hilton, who was the PM’s director of strategy from 2010-12, launched a scathing attack on the plan.

He said: “ David Cameron ‘s resignation honours list is a symptom of a wider problem: our corrupt and decaying democracy. …”

Right- wing Tory group calls for innovative (market-oriented) solutions to housing problems

Owl thinks they want to know how to make more money out of more rented housing!

“The Tory Reform Group (TRG) has launched a public call for evidence seeking innovative policy proposals to address the two-fold challenge of availability and affordability of homes to rent and buy. The call forms part of a year-long focus on housing policy, launched at the organisation’s AGM in London on Tuesday.

TRG National Chairman, David Fazakerley, said:

“Rents are rising, home ownership is falling, and too many households are spending more than half their income on housing costs. A series of very welcome government initiatives have been launched to help people buy their first home, but there is undoubtedly more radical thinking needed to address the long-term crisis. The TRG is seeking evidence to help the Conservative Government continue stepping up to that challenge.”

The call comes as latest reports show average UK house prices have jumped by 8.1% in the past year to reach a new record high of £211,000, nearly 8 times the average UK salary. House prices in London increased 14.5% in the last year, with an average property price of £472,000.

Mr Fazakerely added:

“We are on an unsustainable path and need to think outside the box to begin turning things around. As a voluntary group, we draw on expertise from within the conservative family and from across the political spectrum to deliver a One Nation agenda in Government and I hope organisations and individuals with policy expertise will respond to this call and help shape our output over the coming year.”

The TRG was formed 41 years ago as the home of One Nation thinking within the Conservative Party, promoting policies which deliver a modern, socially liberal country pursuing a market oriented agenda that works for everyone, regardless of background.

Organisation, or individuals, wishing to submit to the call for evidence should email housing@trg.org.uk, with the first stage of the evidence call closing on September 30th 2016.”