How ruthless chief executives avoid the sack

“The NHS was accused of a whitewash this evening after a hospital boss who spent £10million suppressing whistleblowers was cleared by an official report.

David Loughton, who earned £260,000 last year, has been allowed to keep his job despite using taxpayers’ money to fight staff who raised serious concerns about patient safety.

The review into how Mr Loughton’s hospital trust is being run would only go as far as saying that he had ‘an impulsive and honest style’. It appears he will now face no disciplinary action and no sanctions will be taken against him.

Whistleblowers who were forced out of their jobs by Mr Loughton were not even interviewed for the report, and only found out the review had been published when contacted by the Mail.

In a further twist, it has emerged that the consultancy firm chosen by the NHS to do the review has been paid £78,837 by Mr Loughton’s trust for other jobs this year.

Deloitte was paid £45,444 for the review by watchdog NHS Improvement.
Mr Loughton, 62, chief executive at The Royal Wolverhampton NHS Trust, is renowned for fighting whistleblowers through the courts.

They include leading heart surgeon Dr Raj Mattu, who was vilified and sacked after he exposed that two patients had died in dangerously overcrowded bays in a hospital at another trust run by Mr Loughton.

Dr Mattu was cleared at a tribunal and in February was awarded £1.2million damages.

Manager Sandra Haynes Kirkbright was also suspended after raising concerns that Mr Loughton’s Woverhampton trust had mis-recorded deaths, making it look like fewer patients had died needlessly.

An investigation into her case condemned the trust for its ‘significantly flawed’ and ‘unfair’ treatment.

It described an account of how Mr Loughton made sure Mrs Haynes Kirkbright was ‘out of the way’ before a visit from hospital inspectors, telling staff to ‘kick this into the long grass’.

After the report into her case was published in May, NHS watchdogs ordered a review into the management of Mr Loughton’s hospital trust. But the results of that review were only quietly published on the trust’s website earlier this week. And it emerged that Deloitte was instructed to focus on the hospital as it is now, rather than considering previous whistleblowing cases.

As a result, the report’s authors did not contact Dr Mattu, Mrs Haynes Kirkbright or former board members who have criticised the management. They did not check what they were told by Mr Loughton and his employees, writing in the review: ‘We have assumed that the information provided to us and management’s representations are complete, accurate and reliable.’

Describing Mr Loughton, the report stated: ‘The chief executive is a strong character with an impulsive style and can attract controversy from time to time. However, he is strongly supported.’ It added: ‘Any past behavioural challenges have tempered in recent years.’

Today Dr Mattu said: ‘They have taken at face value everything management has said. I have great experience of Mr Loughton and he ruthlessly attacks anyone who dissents. He has persecuted whistleblowers. This has been a disgraceful waste of taxpayers’ money.’

Mrs Haynes Kirkbright said: ‘I was not consulted at all on this report. I didn’t know a thing about it until the Mail told me.’

Professor David Ferry was outed last year by Mr Loughton’s hospital after he anonymously revealed in the Mail that 55 cancer patients were needlessly put through the agony of chemotherapy.

This evening, he said: ‘They have whitewashed everything. I told them about Dr Mattu, about Sandra, about my case, but they said this is about the future, not the past. They have rewritten history their way, whatever the facts are.’

Mr Loughton, an NHS chief executive for 28 years, was awarded a pay rise of about £35,000 last year.

He joined Royal Wolverhampton in 2014 after 14 years at Coventry’s Walsgrave Hospital.

Mr Loughton said: ‘We are pleased with the review’s conclusions. Our number one priority is always patient care. Having an open and transparent culture is one of the ways in which we can ensure we remain committed to providing the best care we possibly can.

‘We are always seeking ways in which we can improve and we will take on board the recommendations the review makes.’

A trust spokesman said NHS Improvement commissioned Deloitte to do the review and ‘in line with many other organisations we have used the services of Deloitte’.

NHS Improvement said: ‘Deloitte were appointed following a formal and thorough tendering and evaluation process.’
Deloitte declined to comment.”

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3995418/NHS-boss-Royal-Wolverhampton-NHS-Trust-faces-no-action-spending-10m-silence-whistleblowers.html

EDDC lack of transparency challenged – again

“EDDC’s transparency challenged over relocation from Sidmouth

06:30 05 December 2016 Stephen Sumner
Jeremy Woodward (front right) with campaigners from Save Our Sidmouth at Knowle in 2014
Jeremy Woodward (front right) with campaigners from Save Our Sidmouth at Knowle in 2014
A transparency campaigner is questioning what district chiefs are ‘so desperate to hide’ after they refused to release correspondence on how a developer for Knowle was selected.

Jeremy Woodward’s Freedom of Information (FoI) requests to East Devon District Council (EDDC) about the decision to sell the site of its headquarters to PegasusLife, and the deal between them, were denied.

He appealed to the Information Commissioner to force the disclosure of two key documents – but the authority again refused as it argues the papers are commercially sensitive. The matter will now go to a tribunal.

Mr Woodward said: “What are they so desperate to hide? Why is the council so determined to avoid being held properly accountable, let alone transparent to its rate-paying electorate?”

The tribunal will not be resolved before PegasusLife’s planning application for a 113-apartment retirement community comes before EDDC’s development management committee (DMC) on Tuesday (December 6).

Mr Woodward added: “This timing seriously puts into question the extent to which the DMC’s decision-making is being compromised. Any information touching on the planning application should be made available to DMC members – and the developer’s contract clearly refers to the planning application.”

He said EDDC would rather incur ‘further embarrassment and potential damage’ to its reputation, as this is the second time it has appealed against a ruling from the Information Commissioner.

Last year, the authority refused to release progress reports Mr Woodward submitted FoI requests for on its relocation project. The eight-month legal battle saw EDDC blasted as ‘discourteous and unhelpful’ and cost taxpayers £11,000 in lawyers’ fees.

After Mr Woodward’s latest challenge, EDDC complied with one of three rulings from the Information Commissioner and revealed that PegasusLife will pay £7,505,000 for the site, subject to planning permission.

A spokesman said EDDC is challenging the ruling on the other two documents on legal and procedural grounds as it believes the Information Commissioner has not applied her own guidance consistently or correctly. It argues that the documents are commercially sensitive – but the spokesman said it has always promised to publish them when this is no longer the case.

The spokesman noted the concerns about the DMC meeting but said contractual terms agreed between two parties is ‘legally an immaterial consideration’ to any planning decision.”

http://www.sidmouthherald.co.uk/news/eddc_s_transparency_challenged_over_relocation_from_sidmouth_1_4801011

Redrow homebuyers beware

PROBLEM

We reserved a new-build, off-plan, home at a local Redrow development at West Malling in Kent earlier this year, after accepting an offer on our house.

Unfortunately, a couple of weeks ago, our buyer pulled out at the 11th hour. Redrow decided immediately to put our reserved house back on the market.

During the construction, Redrow offered us a variety of upgrades such as nicer kitchen units, fancier sanitary ware etc, to which we agreed. These decisions had to be made by certain stages in the build or you lose the option. On this basis, we paid around £4,000 for our upgrades, but since the sale fell through, Redrow has told us we won’t receive any of this back.

Further to this, they are marketing the house at an increased price compared with the other identical homes in the development, to take into account the upgrades that have been installed. We have obviously lost the £500 reservation fee, but where do we stand in terms of the £4,000 we have invested in the house, whether they sell it or not?”
MS, Kent

ANSWER

Given how often house purchases fall through, it’s a brave person that invests £4,000 in a home that they don’t own.

Initially, Redrow stuck to the line that all your payments were non-refundable. “Once products are ordered and paid for, cancellations and refunds are unable to be accepted and this is made very clear through the terms and conditions which buyers are required to agree to before being able to make any MyRedrow (upgrade) purchase,” it said.

However, just as we asked for a copy of the terms and conditions with a view to getting a lawyer to look at them, it emerged that the local sales manager had decided that you would, in fact, be getting your £4,000 back, and this has now happened. It may be coincidental timing, or not.

Other Redrow home purchasers may want to reflect on this experience. We would advise buyers to wait until they exchange contracts before paying for any upgrades, otherwise you leave yourself open to losing any payments made.

https://www.theguardian.com/money/2016/dec/05/redrow-new-build-upgrades-cost-refund

“Last winter’s flooding ‘most extreme on record’ in UK”

Flooding across parts of the UK last winter was the most extreme on record, experts have said.

Gales and heavy rain swept across large parts of the UK, causing devastating flooding in Cumbria and Lancashire, as well as parts of southern Scotland.
On the first anniversary of Storm Desmond, experts say November to January were the wettest three months since UK records began in 1910.

Review author Terry Marsh said flooding was “extensive and repetitive”.
Storm Desmond began battering parts of the UK on 5 December, depositing a record month’s worth of rain on Cumbria in just one day.

About 5,200 homes were flooded in Cumbria and Lancashire, while tens of thousands more lost power after an electricity sub-station in Lancaster was flooded.

The storm caused an estimated insurance bill of more than £1.3bn.
Major storms “Abigail”, “Frank” and “Gertrude” also hit the UK last winter.”

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-38204334

Hinkley nuclear plants – tsunami threat?

“Scientists have warned that Britain’s coastal areas and infrastructure are under threat from tsunamis.

New research has revealed how the British Isles have been hit by giant waves at a much higher and intense frequency that previously believed.
One tsunami reached more than 60ft in height, with warnings that the waves could devastate coastal installations such as power stations and shipping ports.”

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3999354/Britain-s-coastal-towns-nuclear-power-stations-risk-TSUNAMIS-caused-undersea-landslides-scientists-warn.htm

The illustrative map shows the vulnerable areas include the Hinkley nuclear plants.

DDC to debate health cuts on Thursday

Thursday 8th December 2016, 2.15 pm, County Hall

Discussion and vote on whether to halt the “Sustainability and Transformation ” process in order to investigate fair funding for the Devon rural area.

Email your DCC councillors with your views:

http://democracy.devon.gov.uk/mgMemberIndex.aspx?bcr=1

and remind them to attend and to vote in favour of motions to suspend the process.

Agenda here:
http://democracy.devon.gov.uk/ieListDocuments.aspx?CId=132&MId=195

The live webcast of the meeting will be here:
http://devoncc.public-i.tv/core/portal/webcast_interactive/244711

Recall that, when last discussed at the DCC Health Scrutiny Committee, a similar motion proposed by independent councillor Claire Wright was defeated with DCC Councillor and EDDC Leader Paul Diviani voting AGAINST her motion.

More “Future [lack of care] Care” roadshows – probably your last chance to give your views

Seaton
Friday 16 December 2016
Town Hall, 09.30 – 11.30

Sidmouth
Friday 16 December 2016
Kennaway House, 14.30 – 16.30

Exmouth
Monday 19 December 2016
All Saints Church Hall, 09.30 – 11.30

Woodbury
Wednesday 21 December 2016,
Village Hall, 09.30 – 11.30

Budleigh Salterton
Wednesday 21 December 2016
Public Hall, 13.30 – 15.30

Honiton
Thursday 22 December
The Beehive, 14.00 – 16.00

Axminster
Friday 23 December 2016
Guildhall, 13.30 – 15.30

Brexit money could go to landowners rather than NHS

Wonder why pro-Remain farmer Neil Parish supported Andrea Leadsom (pro- Brexit, now Minister of Agriculture) for PM?

“Prominent Brexit campaigners and big landowners could pocket millions in farm subsidies if Tory minister Andrea Leadsom gets her way, an investigation has found.

The Vote Leave campaign said the gross amount of money we sent to the EU, £350 million a week, could go to the NHS. But they also quietly made a series of other promises about spending that money, leaving far less for the NHS.

A Greenpeace investigation has found that prominent Brexiter said she would guaranteed the controversial single farm payment to continue at current levels, if she were elected leader. She clearly didn’t win, but she is now the new environment secretary, and in a position to guarantee millions of pounds in farm subsidies post-Brexit.

This means that supporters and donors of Vote Leave, including Lord Bamford and Sir James Dyson, could get large taxpayer-funded subsidies. Others currently benefitting from the scheme include farming minister George Eustice and vice-president of Conservatives for Britain, Viscount Ridley. Iain Duncan Smith does not benefit directly but resides on the grounds of Swanbourne Estate, owned by his parents-in-law, who received £134,309 in farm subsidies last year.

The subsidy, which forms part of the EU’s Common Agricultural Policy (CAP), has been heavily criticised in the past for transferring wealth from the general public to rich landowners, including the aristocracy and billionaires from Denmark and Dubai.

The EU subsidies were meant to support family farming across the UK, but the money largely goes to large landowners. Many of them are Tory donors. Last year £2.3 billion was doled out as part of these payments. Prominent Brexit campaigners received over £4 million in EU farm subsidies in 2015, Greenpeace found.

That would mean more broken promises on the NHS – what a surprise.”

https://politicalscrapbook.net/2016/08/leading-brexiteers-could-keep-millions-in-farm-subsidies-under-tory-pledge-instead-of-nhs/

The Local Plan is now ready to depart from Sidmouth …

The agenda for the December 6th DMC meeting makes an interesting read. Two very contentious applications are being considered.

First: The Pegasus Life, Sidmouth scheme is, to quote a planning officer-

“A DEPARTURE FROM THE LOCAL PLAN, providing apartments with extra care in excess of the allocation or requirements of the plan, it therefore makes a meaningful contribution to housing delivery on a largely brownfield site.”

Second: The Syon House, Frogmore Road, East Budleigh scheme is, to quote again-

The application represents A DEPARTURE FROM ADOPTED POLICY as the proposal does not fully accord with Strategy 35 in that a lower than 66% affordable housing provision is proposed.”

It makes Owl think that council tax payers should wonder why East Devon District Council spent a lot of time, money, tears and effort to finally get a local plan adopted just to DEPART from it less than a year from adoption.

Budleigh Salterton Health and Wellbeing Hub to Open in Spring 2017 – is this Hub the bright new future of the NHS or what is left when the wheels fall off?

A press release of 30 November press claims this regeneration of the old Cottage Hospital, and one time specialist stroke unit, is aimed at providing a population of 50,000 with:

Bringing health, social care and well-being services together, as they will be at the Budleigh Hub, is a vision of the future and what can be achieved through partnership and focusing on the needs of the local community.

It will be a centre for a wide range of services in one place and it will provide a range of social and clinical services with the focus on prevention, rehabilitation and wellbeing.

Services will include NHS outpatient clinics, day centre, gym, café alongside health and wellbeing services such as diabetes and weight management support, dementia support, exercise classes, carers support, family groups, arts and craft and music. …”

Owl thinks that how you view this might depend on whether you interpret the provision of “spinning and other classes” alongside “jigsaws, knitting and crafts” as meaning something to do with spinning yarn, spinning words or exercise bicycles.

Whichever is correct it doesn’t seem directed at relieving the acute problem of bed blocking.

Trust: yes to nurses, no, no, no to politicians and journalists

“The Ipsos Mori 2016 Veracity Index, launched in 1983, annually assesses which roles are most trusted by the public. Included in the index for the first time, nurses are the new champions, trusted even more than doctors.

Government ministers, estate agents and journalists remain at the bottom of the league, joined in the wake of the Brexit vote and Donald Trump’s victory by the pollsters who didn’t see either coming. Politicians are trusted by just 15% of respondents – a precipitous 6% drop even on the level of trust they enjoyed this time last year.

People were asked to rate 24 job roles in terms of the trustworthiness of those who performed them.

Trust in the police, which dropped to a 33-year low of 58% in 2005 – the year of the London bombings and the police shooting of student Jean Charles de Menezes – has climbed to 71%.

Journalists were trusted by only 24% of people. Given growing levels of secularisation and a number of high-profile sexual abuse cases, the steep drop over the past three decades of trust in clergy and priests – from 85% in 1983 to 69% today – is perhaps unsurprising. Hairdressers (68%) score higher than lawyers, television newsreaders and charity chief executives. Since the 2008 financial crisis, economists and central bankers have had an image problem, but the 2016 index shows that they are trusted by 48% of people.

The stellar 93% rating for nurses was warmly welcomed by Janet Davies, chief executive and general secretary of the Royal College of Nurses. “Nurses are some of the most caring, hardworking staff in the UK and it is very encouraging to see their efforts reflected in the eyes of the public,” she said.

“A trusting relationship is absolutely essential in healthcare. As pressures on the health service rise, it’s particularly positive that the public have maintained their faith in the frontline staff working tirelessly for them throughout these difficult times. These results highlight the critical role nurses play in the lives of people in the UK. …”

https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2016/dec/03/poll-uk-trust-deficit-getting-worse-politicians-teachers-nurses

EDA Councillor Cathy Gardner on BBC Spotlight talking about health crisis

Lead story:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b083gk3j/spotlight-weekend-news-03122016

East Devon Alliance Councillor Cathy Gardner radio interview on health crisis

http://www.eastdevonalliance.org.uk/cathy-gardner/20161203/eda-councillor-continues-fight-for-local-hospital-beds-and-healthcare/

Exeter NHS Rally: East Devon Alliance well represented, no Tory councillors or MPs spotted!

East Devon Alliance:

img_1357

Spotted in the crowd (not an exhaustive list as crowd too large): East Devon Alliance councillors Marianne Rixon and Cathy Gardner (also on Spotlight and Radio Devon), Sidmouth campaigners Di Fuller and Robert Crick along with town councillor Martin Shaw of Seaton and Independent Councillor Roger Giles of Ottery St Mary.

Many people attended from Exeter, Okehampton and North Devon.

No East Devon Tory Councillors or MPs sighted at all. Nor Exeter MP Ben Bradshaw.

Hundreds protest over NHS cuts

“Protesters were seen marching in red lines from every direction along Sidwell Street, Fore Street, Queen Street, North Street, South Street, and Paris Street.

Protesters then gathered in Bedford Square where the speeches began.”

http://www.exeterexpressandecho.co.uk/hundreds-of-people-attend-protest-in-exeter-to-stop-nhs-cuts/story-29954867-detail/story.html

img_1358

It included a rousing speech by DCC councillor Claire Wright:

Hernandez: quick – find money, sell police stations, increase council tax

“Police and crime commissioner (PCC) Alison Hernandez has told officials to find millions in cash to boost neighbourhood policing with dozens of new officers.

The Tory crime tsar won the May election with a pledge to keep open police stations and deploy more “bobbies” in communities that felt “abandoned”.

… Now Ms Hernandez has instructed her office to find all the spare money she can to fund new officers – including raising council tax and digging into cash reserves.

The operation – which could generate an extra £4million, funding as many as 80 new officers – comes as the results of a huge public consultation in Devon and Cornwall, generating 1,400 responses, are revealed.

Ms Hernandez will attend the police and crime panel in Plymouth, which oversees the PCC, to formally present her plans next Friday.

Andrew White, chief executive at the Office of the Police and Crime Commissioner, said every potential source of fresh money would be tapped.

“I have been going through the budget to find all the money I can to turnover as much money as possible into frontline policing,” he told the Echo. …

… The plan is not explicit about the future shape of the force but promises to “retain a broad footprint for the police estate”.

“Police stations and offices are not the primary means by which the public engage with the police although they can play a part in connecting the community to the police,” it states.

The report also says “keeping underutilised or unnecessary physical buildings will tie up capital and revenue funds which we can spend in other ways”. “Going forward when a police station is vacated we will seek to provide an alternative base within that locality.

“In addition the PCC and the Chief Constable will look at ways to widen the police footprint in local areas to improve community liaison and connectivity – including through the Citizens in Policing Programme, colocation with partners and community access points and will pilot options in the second half of 2017.”

Panel member and Plymouth City Councillor Philippa Davey said: “it is a good plan which contains lots of fantastic things but does not set out exactly how we will achieve them. “It will be interesting to hear from Alison Hernandez and the chief constable at the meeting. “The bottom line is going to be a reduction in workforce, officers and money.

“The PCC and the chief constable will be spending their time making savings rather than doing their job – keeping our communities safe from harm.”

http://www.exeterexpressandecho.co.uk/exeter-s-crime-czar-orders-officials-to-find-every-penny-for-dozens-of-new-police-officers/story-29953584-detail/story.html

More French nuclear plants offline after safety tests

“The company building the UK’s first new nuclear power station for decades is facing questions over the health of its fleet of French nuclear plants after an investigation which has left the country with the lowest level of nuclear power for 10 years and the prospect of power cuts during a cold snap.

Thirteen of Électricité de France’s (EDF) 58 atomic plants are offline, some due to planned maintenance, but most for safety checks ordered by the regulator over anomalies discovered in reactor parts.

The outages have prompted warnings of potential planned power cuts and pushed up wholesale power prices, boosting coal and gas operators but squeezing small energy suppliers. Carbon emissions will possibly rise too as France, which last year forged a historic climate change deal in Paris, has to import more fossil fuel power.

The problems stem from a fault identified last year by the Nuclear Safety Authority (ASN) in the as-yet-unfinished reactor at north-western France’s Flamanville plant – the same design approved for Hinkley Point C in the UK.

Pierre-Franck Chevet, president of the ASN, told Le Figaro the situation was “very worrying” and the discovery had led to “unprecedented” checks at all the country’s nuclear plants, which provide 75% of France’s electricity and normally help it export power to other countries. The issue is higher than expected carbon concentrations in steel reactor components, which could make them vulnerable to cracking.”

https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2016/dec/02/hinkley-point-edf-new-crisis-safety-checks-french-nuclear-plants

Iceland’s Pirate Party gets chance to form coalition government

Iceland’s president has asked the anti-establishment Pirate Party to try to form a government, after two rounds of coalition talks failed.
The Pirates are one of Europe’s most radical political parties and came third in Iceland’s election on October 29.

None of Iceland’s major parties won an outright majority, and President Gudni Johannesson asked the first-placed Independence Party and the second-placed Left-Greens to assemble a coalition.

The party was founded in November 2012 by Birgitta Jónsdóttir and several prominent internet activists and hackers. It has 10 seats in Iceland’s 63-seat Parliament. Members seek direct democracy, digital freedom, greater government transparency, a new national constitution and asylum for US whistleblower Edward Snowden.

Following the Charlie Hebdo attacks in January 2015, the Pirate Party began a campaign to repeal the country’s blasphemy laws. They were successfully repealed in early July 2015. Members have stated Iceland must never become a member of the European Union unless the membership agreement is put to a referendum.

Should Iceland join the EU, the party believe the country shall be a single constituency in elections to the European Parliament.”

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3995138/Iceland-s-computer-hacker-Pirate-Party-invited-form-GOVERNMENT-president-coalition-talks-failed.html

What a 24-year old has to say about homelessness and housing

“My film Half Way documents my family’s experiences when we were made homeless. I hope it goes some way towards changing the way we look at housing …

… Ultimately, we need many thousands of homes – affordable and council. We need to make the rental market affordable again, and we need to change policy so that it stops benefiting those that have multiple houses and punishing those that have nowhere to call their home. If the government can afford to renovate Buckingham Palace, do up the Houses of Parliament or support the Garden Bridge project in London, all to make Britain look like one of the greatest places in the world, don’t we have a duty to make sure everyone in the country has a decent home? Wouldn’t that be something to be truly proud of?”

Daisy-May Hudson, producer, age 24