Public ‘not excited by devolution’ says firm of consultants

Owl says: They missed the main point: we have sussed out that finance and decisions are being moved from elected, accountable local authorities to groups of unelected and unaccountable, greedy (and sometimes shady) business people. But then again this is a report from a consultancy firm – which probably is getting, or hopes for, los of business from Local Enterprise Partnerships!

“The public is becoming increasingly disengaged with devolution despite its political priority for the government, research from consultancy firm GK Strategy has found.

A state-of-the-nation report on devolution in England found that whilst the agenda continues to be a political priority for the government, the prospect of further powers and accountability being shifted to a local level has failed to capture the public’s attention.

Yesterday’s report states “devolution has so far failed to win over the hearts and minds of people” because of a consistent reluctance by Whitehall to relinquish control over public spending.

Researchers explain that where local authorities do have greater control, they are working with smaller budgets and having to do more with less.

The perception that devolution is “merely passing the buck” of spending cuts to local authorities may be another reason why the concept has failed to capture public interest. …

… According to the researchers, there are two likely reasons for the level of disengagement with the concept of devolution, both of which are closely associated with the specific roles of elected mayors.

Firstly, the two largest English cities outside of London – Manchester and Birmingham – both voted against having an elected mayor less than five years ago in a referendum in each city.

Secondly, the public lacks a clear understanding over the role of the mayor in relation to the devolution process and the elected councils.

Chief executive of GK Strategy, Emily Wallace, said: “Our research clearly shows that whilst devolution in England has been a project of successive UK governments and been broadly supported by all major parties, it has failed to capture people’s interest in the way other issues have.

“A number of factors lie behind this, but a common view is that devolution in England has been delegation of blame at a time of public spending consolidation, rather than delegation of power and responsibility.”

http://www.publicfinance.co.uk/news/2017/04/public-not-excited-devolution

1,060 of the extra 63,000 school places needed in England are in Devon

“Devon needs to add an extra 2,320 school places by September 2018 to meet demand – on top of numbers already planned – according to new figures.

The county is set to see primary pupil numbers rise by 17 per cent between May 2010 and September 2018, up from 49,808 in 2010 to a projected 58,278 in 2018.

Between 2010 and 2016, an extra 6,520 places were created in schools in the area, and a further 2,713 are planned but an estimated 1,260 are still needed by the 2018/19 school year to meet demand, according to Department for Education figures.

Secondary school pupil numbers are expected to rise by one per cent from 37,748 in May 2010 to 38,200 in September 2018.

Within Devon an extra 4,181 places were created between 2010 and 2016 to help meet demand, with another 145 planned, but 1,060 are still needed by the 2018/19 school year.

England is set to see primary pupil numbers rise by seven per cent between May 2010 and September 2018, up from 3.8m in 2010 to a projected 4.6m in 2018.”

http://www.devonlive.com/figures-reveal-squeeze-on-school-places-across-devon/story-30252477-detail/story.html

Just as EDDC forms a housing development company …

A slowdown in housebuilding last month dragged down activity in the construction sector, adding to concerns that the economy may be losing some momentum.

The Markit/CIPS purchasing managers’ index for construction in March dropped to 52.2 from 52.5 in February, falling short of forecasts. Although the index was still above 50, indicating growth, economists described the data as disappointing.

“The construction sector remains at the sharp end of the decline in corporate confidence and the renewed squeeze on households’ real wages, both of which are consequences of the Brexit vote,” Samuel Tombs, chief UK economist at Pantheon Economics, said. “We continue to expect the construction sector to tread water this year.”

Signs of a slowdown in housebuilding will come as a setback to the government, which announced a white paper last month to help to boost new homebuilding and to fix what it called Britain’s “broken” housing market. The country is building about 100,000 fewer homes than the 250,000 it needs annually, which is helping to drive up prices.

The PMI’s sub-index on housing dropped to 51.7, its lowest level since August 2016.”

Source: Times (paywall)

“French government urges EDF to close aging nuclear plant as decision looms”

These are the people (with the Chinese) that we are trusting with Hinkley C!

French Energy Minister Segolene Royal warned EDF’s board on Wednesday against trying to prevent the closure of France’s oldest nuclear plant, as a long-running conflict between the state-controlled utility and the government comes to a head.

EDF has scheduled a board meeting on Thursday to decide the fate of the 1,800 megawatt Fessenheim plant near the German border. Its closure was an election promise of outgoing President Francois Hollande in 2012, but the company has so far managed to put off a final decision.

Unions oppose the closure, saying it would cause job losses and France’s hardline CGT trade union urged its members to picket EDF’s headquarters during Thursday’s meeting to keep pressure on the board members.

“The board is going to have a debate and normally EDF’s chairman should give me a request (afterwards) to close Fessenheim as planned,” Royal said on CNEWS.

Environmental groups have long suspected EDF of playing for time, seeking to prevent the closure from becoming irreversible before the end of Hollande’s presidency next month.

EDF’s management has argued that safety issues would not be a reason to close the plant since the nuclear watchdog deemed it safe after the utility invested hundreds of millions of euros to reinforce security following the Fukushima disaster in Japan.

Fessenheim’s two 900-megawatt reactors each bring EDF about 200 million euros ($213 million) in earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) per year.

The CGT union called on workers’ representatives on the EDF board to oppose the plant’s closure, saying it would be an economic and industrial waste.

“The Fessenheim plant is safe, and it is recognized as such by the Nuclear Safety Authority,” CGT said in a statement, adding that the plant contributes to French energy security.

France, a major electricity exporter in Europe, depends on its 58 nuclear reactors for more than 75 percent of its electricity supply.

“I’m warning the board members who are tempted to listen to inexact information and could harm the company’s interests,” Royal said.

EDF and the government have reached a 490 million euro compensation agreement covering costs associated with the closure.

The company also received some guarantees that could allow it to shut down the reactor by end-2018, when it starts production at its new generation EPR reactor under construction in Flamanville in northern France.”

“Energy projects including Hinkley Point threatened by Brexit, experts warn”

Vital energy projects including the £18bn Hinkley Point C nuclear power plant and interconnectors used to import cheap electricity from Europe are under threat due to Brexit, energy experts have warned.

They said the projects, which are key to efforts to keep the UK’s lights on, could be at risk if the energy sector is denied entry to Europe’s internal energy market.

That looks increasingly likely, after the European parliament passed a resolution on Wednesday opposing “piecemeal or sectoral provisions” for individual UK industries.

Speaking at an event organised by the Energy and Climate Intelligence Unit, experts said plans by French power firm EDF to build two new reactors at Hinkley Point C could be affected.

Antony Froggatt, senior research fellow at Chatham House, said EDF was already concerned that Brexit will make it harder to import skilled EU nationals to build Hinkley, which is slated to provide 7% of UK electricity.

“I was at a conference recently where EDF were saying their main concern about skills was specialised steel fitters for the construction of Hinkley,” he said.

“They said there were not enough in the country to build Hinkley and therefore this is the main area that they’re concerned about.”

He added that the staff shortage could be exacerbated by the building of the HS2 high-speed rail link, which will be competing with Hinkley to attract steel fitters.

EDF did not return requests for comment.

Froggatt and his fellow panellists at the ECIU event also raised concerns about the impact on plans for interconnectors, wires connecting the UK with the European electricity network.

Interconnectors are considered increasingly important as Britain turns to renewable energy, because they allow electricity to be imported to make up for shortfalls when the wind doesn’t blow or the sun doesn’t shine.

Plans are in place to build 14GW of interconnectors between the UK and countries including Norway, France, Belgium and Iceland.

But building them could prove less attractive to investors if the UK cannot remain part of Europe’s internal energy market.

This is because the agreement allows electricity to be automatically traded on a short-term “intra-day” basis, improving efficiency and making it more lucrative to build interconnectors. …”

EDDC Cabinet commits to £10 million plus relocation with no Knowle buyer confirmed

East Devon District Council are being advised to go ahead with their relocation from Sidmouth, despite not having a buyer for their current Knowle HQ.

The council decided to relocate its headquarters in March 2015 to new offices in Honiton and Exmouth and to finance the move, East Devon District Council had agreed to sell its Knowle headquarters to Pegasus Life Ltd for £7.5m.

The cabinet were recommended to approve the ‘go now’ option at the meeting, and voted in favour of that recommendation. Full council will make a decision at their next meeting. …”

http://www.devonlive.com/eddc-cabinet-live/story-30252167-detail/story.html

Hugo Swire defends his Eton mate “6 jobs” Osborne – says being an MP isn’t a job and leaves p,enty of time for other things

His whole blog post is shown here in full:

“George Osborne has been denounced for “greed”, “moonlighting” and “neglecting his constituents” after accepting an appointment as editor of the Evening Standard. Whilst I do not deny there may be some conflicts of interest which may well have to be unreeled, my main response, after years of intense public service in the front line, is good luck to him.

The reality is that in all George’s Osborne’s positions he is being employed as a figure head rather than the man that gets his hands dirty. At the Evening Standard I suspect the Deputy Editor, who is a trained journalist, will be doing most of the leg and legal work! At Blackrock, his main job will be to advise on economic matters and to represent the company in a social capacity. As for abandoning his constituents, I shouldn’t think the hours he puts in will be any less than those of when he was Chancellor which, I might add, was also a second job and quite a considerable one at that!

George has formidable talent and phenomenal energy. Even when he was Chancellor he was moonlighting, attending the daily Downing Street meetings morning and evening and running two election campaigns. Then that is the sort of person he is. Fingers in lots of pies. He just can’t help himself. He was never going to flounce off into the wilderness when Theresa May sacked him. And he might just have taken the Standard job as a fight back for the metropolitan electorate with whom he is identified and possibly even for the ‘remoaners’; the 48% whose voice have been drowned out by the Brexit brigade. George Osborne could well become the Standard bearer for the entrepreneurs, the disaffected young, the internationalists with his new platform of power, a vacuum that was looking to be filled. Who knows, only time will tell, but I suspect it is a clever and counter intuitive move by the paper’s proprietor Evgeny Lebedev.

The scrutiny of politicians working arrangements is now so intense – boosted by a voracious social media – that I fear it will deter good people going into politics. Sometimes we just can’t win! I remember the days when George Osborne (who had never had a job outside politics) was accused of being a member of the political class, a ‘professional politician’ who had no understanding of the real world because he only operated in the Westminster bubble. Ironically now he is a mere backbencher he is being criticized for going out to work!

The problem lies in a misunderstanding that being an MP is a job. It isn’t really, it is more a representative role. A back bencher’s task is to represent his or her constituents, make laws and hold the Government to account. It is not an executive function. With about 550 others doing the same thing, it should not require full-time labour. Not everyone can be on a committee for example. Representing constituents involves case work, and this is often shared with a dedicated team of back room staff who are invaluable in sifting through the ‘system’ and its diverse bureaucratic obstinacies. Although the MP bears overall responsibility in what he signs off.

We are also expected to be accessible – not just by holding surgeries but also across an array of events in our constituencies. Then there is the task of upholding the broader constituency interests – for instance working with business and local government in seeking to ensure the local economy thrives. Surely each MP’s effectiveness should be measured by their output and their results not by the false measure of how many hours are put in. Still less should there be envy over how much money they earn. Besides, if the electorate find their MP lazy or underachieving or completely distracted elsewhere they have the ability to kick him or her out.

Being a Minister of course is entirely different, that is a job, a job in which you run, or help run, a Government department, therefore any other work would be a conflict of interest, which is why it is disallowed.

If an MP uses his time efficiently he has plenty of room for other interests. I, for example, have some paid outside interests but I’m also Chairman of the Conservative Middle East Council (CMEC) and Deputy Chairman of the Commonwealth Enterprise and Investment Council (CWEIC); both these posts keep my interest in foreign affairs active and enable me to ask informed questions to the executive on foreign matters.

What about another Devon MP, Geoffrey Cox, the Conservative MP for Torridge and West Devon? He earned over half a million last year as a barrister. Have his constituents suffered as a result? His surgeries in Torrington and Tavistock are fairly regular. Even though more case work comes via email these days. Geoffrey is still lobbying for the Appledore Shipyard and like all of us is active on hospital closures and funding for Devon schools. Only last week he arranged a meeting with the Health Secretary about the loss of beds at Holsworthy Hospital.

So are the parliamentary Quangocrats who think they are echoing the views of the public really going to stop MPs coming to parliament who are practicing doctors? or stop barristers like Geoffrey who bring an eagle legal eye to legislation? I hope not. The Commons is a much richer place for the experience it holds. If they do, I can assure you, many of the brightest and best will leave only to be replaced by politically obsessive, self promoting campaigners that see politics as a career not a vocation.

And as Michael Gove pointed out if we believe in a free press, should proprietors not have a right to appoint who they see fit as editor, without the executive or anyone interfering in that decision? Should unelected and undemocratic bodies in Parliament make decisions – waving the banner of morality and standards – about MPs? Are they really superior to the decisions made by the the electorate who have the democratic right to kick out an underperforming MP? I don’t think so. Parliament is, and should remain sovereign.

In 1909 there was a warning from Sir William Bull, the Conservative MP for Hammersmith, against a proposal to pay MPs. Sir William predicted the next thing would be that local councillors would be paid and there was a danger of “a very distinct class of professional politicians.” Well, both have happened. A local councillor was always meant to be a pillar of the local community who devoted his or her spare time to public service; now we have some councillors who do nothing else.

In 1995 Lord Nolan’s Committee on Standards in Public Life declared:

“A Parliament composed entirely of full-time professional politicians would not serve the best interests of democracy. The House needs if possible to contain people with a wide range of current experience which can contribute to its expertise. The onward march of the professional politician may be an irresistible feature of modern life, but we believe that nothing should be done by way of institutional arrangements which would hasten it.”

In my opinion that conclusion remains valid.

I fear much of the uproar surrounding Mr Osborne’s new jobs tells us more about salary envy than anything else, and that is not a good basis for an argument.

So, nice work if you can get it George!”

https://www.hugoswire.org.uk/news/blog-greed-george-osborne

What you can do when you don’t have party politics to worry about!

“”A little-known candidate emerged as the star of the televised French presidential debate after challenging two of the frontrunners over their honesty and implication in fraud scandals.

The militant Philippe Poutou, of the New Anti-capitalist party, weighed into the far-right favourite, Marine Le Pen, and conservative François Fillon, who are both under investigation for misuse of public funds.

While the 10 other candidates stuck to their political programmes during the four-hour live televised debate – which was watched by 6 million viewers – Poutou was determined to address the elephant in the room.

Having refused to pose with the others for the official photograph, saying “they’re not my colleagues”, Poutou (whose name means “little kiss” in French) told Le Pen that ordinary workers did not have the option of ignoring a legal summons. …

… Poutou, 50, the son of a postman, left school without qualifications after failing his baccalaureate in mechanics. He currently works at a Ford factory repairing the production line machines.

He arrived at the studio wearing a beige T-shirt – in stark contrast to the other male candidates all in suits and ties – and was combative from the start.

Asked to introduce himself, he said: “I’m a factory worker and apart from Nathalie Arthaud, I believe I’m the only one to have a normal job”, adding that he was against the “indecent rich”.

When the moderators pointed out he was running over the time limit, Poutou said: “Just because I’m not wearing a tie, doesn’t mean you can interrupt me.”

At one point he added: “Everyone is fed up with corrupt politicians, and some here know that.”

Poutou stood in the 2012 presidential election, with the slogan “Let the capitalists pay for their crises”, and obtained 1.15% of the votes – 411,160 – in the first round.

This time his slogan is: “Our lives not their profits.”

An Ipsos survey on Wednesday suggested 65% of those asked considered honesty and probity important in a leader.” …

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/apr/05/french-election-factory-worker-philippe-poutou-emerges-as-star-of-tv-debate

Bovis gets a new boss … same old merry-go-round

“Bovis Homes today snubbed a £1.2 billion takeover bid from rival Galliford Try — and lured its former chief executive to be the new boss. …

… Fitzgerald admits he is obsessed by work, though he does find time to listen to Level 42. He told the Sunday Times in 2015 that he has “never read a book”.

At Bovis he will get a basic salary of £650,000. Bonuses and incentives mean he could make up to £7 million in the first three years.”

http://www.standard.co.uk/business/bovis-fends-off-galliford-and-nabs-its-old-boss-a3507821.html

“NHS in ‘Mexican standoff’ with locums due to new tax rules”

The press release below is not well constructed. It gives the impression that self- employed people in the NHS are refusing to work because they are being forced to have tax deducted by the NHS.

It is rather more complex. Indeed, the NHS WILL deduct taxes BUT the contractors will NOT gain any benefits of being a direct employee – i.e. no sick pay, pension contributions or holiday entitlements.

They will be treated as employees for tax purposes but not as employees for any other purposes. They will have the obligations of employees, but not the rights.

-New tax regulations for off-payroll staff come into force on Thursday
-Some locums and temporary staff are refusing to work at NHS trusts

-Trusts face “Hobson’s choice” over locums’ pay demands, says finance director

-Medical director says NHS “must hold the line” on pay cap

The NHS is in a “Mexican standoff” with locum doctors, agency nurses and private contractors, with some threatening not to work when new tax rules come into force this week; some locum doctors are demanding uplifts of more than 50 per cent in their pay as NHS trusts take on responsibility for paying their tax and national insurance from Thursday, under new IR35 regulations from HM Revenue and Customs.

-In one example of the problems facing the NHS, IT contractors walked away from working on a multimillion pound project at Guy’s and St Thomas’ Foundation Trust rather than accept the new rules.

-At Blackpool Teaching Hospitals FT, 14 locums are refusing to show up for work on Thursday. This was revealed in an email to trust consultants, appealing for help to fill gaps. One consultant described the situation as a “disaster”. The trust had not responded.

-In other trusts, substantive staff are being asked to work extra shifts.

Trusts have cancelled non-mandatory training time, consultant supporting professional activities time and have suspended secondments so staff can work on wards.

Some trusts have prepared processes used during last year’s junior doctors’ strike to respond to any significant staffing shortfalls.

The IR35 regulations apply to any temporary staff being paid through a personal service company and could reduce income for temporary staff by more than 20 per cent.

One NHS finance director said: “It is akin to a Mexican standoff. Some locums have been asking for between 30 and 50 per cent price uplifts. More than likely we will have to pay this; it is a Hobson’s choice.”

NHS Improvement said it was working with trusts to resist any demand for higher pay because of the new rules and added it would work with NHS trusts to try and tackle the culture that led to locums charging high rates.
Some trusts have longstanding relationships with locum doctors and agency nurses to maintain staffing in key specialties such as emergency departments, intensive care and medicine.

An email to a trust director at a hospital in the South West, said three locums were putting pressure on the trust to increase pay by more than 56 per cent.

The email said: “All three have advised their agency that they will only be working with us if a pay rate of £95 is agreed, meaning the total charge would be £100 per hour. They were all previously on total charge rates between £64 and £69.”

An FT medical director at a different trust said: “We have had some locums who have joined our substantive staff, some have agreed the lower rates but some have said they are taking a two week holiday at the start of April and will see how it plays out before making a decision.”

They added: “Some individuals and agencies are playing games. Locums will play trusts off against each other and some of these people are quite prepared to travel long distances. The first two weeks in April will be crucial. If the NHS can hold the line, then we might see a change in the market.

“But if one trust breaks the cap for one doctor in one ward then it will fail. We need to all hold the line on this.”

At Guy’s and St Thomas’, 35 contractors working on a £16m IT project to update the trust’s Windows XP system left the project last month.

A trust spokesman said they left because of the IR35 regulations and efforts by the trust to replace their contracts with permanent staff. He said the trust was under a legal duty to comply with IR35 rules and provided the contractors with “clarity” about this. “It was then a matter of personal choice if contractors left the trust as a result of these changes,” he added.

Chris Hopson, chief executive of NHS Providers, said: “A number of our members have reported that some contractors are seeking to put pressure on them to pay more or interpret the rules more generously than they should be. This is a concern as every trust wants to guarantee safe care at a time of workforce shortages…

“The law is the law. As we have seen with issues such as agency rates that when the whole sector acts collectively it can be more effective. There could well be immediate impacts on rotas, which means that NHS Improvement needs to stand ready to support trusts to overcome these.”

An NHS Improvement spokeswoman said: “We’re absolutely clear that the NHS shouldn’t be picking up the tax liability or costs for individual agency staff – that’s not fair or right for patients and goes against the grain of what we know many nurses and doctors believe in. Any trusts that see locums increasing costs in this way should talk to us and we will support them to resist this.”

She said the regulator was offering trusts direct support including sourcing staff from other local providers to work shifts. She added: “We are working with medical directors and agencies to try and tackle the culture that’s behind locums charging high rates and bring about longer term improvement.”

Source:
http://www.hapia2013.org/

Midweek Herald front page – crack down on boy racers; page 16 NHS protests

Well, best be pleased the NHS protests get half a page on page 16 when the perennial problem of boy racers grabs the headlines:

and Otter Nurseries offering £10,000 to fight for a judicial review of bed closures only rates a third of a page on page 19!

Brexit trade deals – how low can we sink?

Owl assumes Hugo Swire is with Mrs May in Saudi Arabia persuading them to buy our arms – he’s been there before with the arms dealer British Aerospace.

“Liam Fox’s declaration of “shared values” with Rodrigo Duterte, the Philippines leader whose war on drugs has killed 7,000 people, has prompted dismay about the government’s approach to human rights as it seeks post-Brexit trade deals.

The international trade secretary, who will also visit Malaysia and Indonesia on his trip, said in an article published in local media that he wanted Britain to build stronger relationships with “our trading partners in south-east Asia” based on “a foundation of shared values and shared interests”.

As Fox visited the Philippines, Theresa May was in Saudi Arabia as part of a wider government effort to shore up the UK’s trading position after Brexit. Speaking to the BBC, she refused to criticise the government’s bombardment of Yemen, which is estimated to have killed more than 10,000 civilians and displaced more than 3 million people. …”

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/apr/04/liam-fox-meets-philippine-president-rodrigo-duterte

Cambridge: a better class of housing protest

“A development of luxury homes in Cambridge has been daubed with graffiti – written in Latin, of course.

Vandals spray-painted the new five-bedroom river-front houses with the words Locus in Domos Loci Populum.

Locals have said the messages, which appear to be a protest against the development, could “only happen” in the university city.

The homes, in Water Street, Chesterton, priced from £1.25m are on the site of an old pub.

Cambridge University Professor of Classics, Mary Beard, said: “This is a bit hard to translate, but I think what they’re trying to say is that a lovely place has been turned into houses.”

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-cambridgeshire-39490537

Tory election expenses

Owl assumes that Mr Sajid Javid’s expenses for his trip to Devon will be appropriately accounted for – particularly his help to the DCC Tory councillors who did the photo op with him today …..

Devon Tories are running scared

How does Owl know?

Sajid Javid was in Devon today drumming up support for their DCC manifesto.

Once upon a time, Devon was such a safe county that there would have been no need whatsoever for the big guns from national government. Bringing them in now shows just how frightened they are this time around.

Wonder what Leader John Hart thought about the bloke who has helped strip his council to the bone pretending all is well?

And that photo of ex-Monster Raving Loony Hughes, austerity-cutter Javid, worried-looking Hart and super-cool (not!) Swire:

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Really, if you are looking for a reason NOT to vote Tory (sensible people vote true Independent or, if no Independent is standing the person who would have expected to come second to a Tory, whatever party) this is the photo you should carry around in your wallet!

http://www.devonlive.com/sajid-javid-launches-devon-8217-s-manifesto/story-30246363-detail/story.html

EDDC relication costs £10.3 million and counting …

Owl says: are these audited costs or still on

“District chiefs are being advised to press ahead with their £10million relocation from Sidmouth – despite having no guaranteed buyer for their ‘not fit-for-purpose’ Knowle HQ.

East Devon District Council’s (EDDC) cabinet is being asked to sign off nearly £8.7million to press ahead with building work at Honiton’s Heathpark, on top of the approved £1,7million pot to refurbish Exmouth Town Hall.

If approved, the relocation project’s total budget will stand at £10.36million, up from £9.2million in March 2015.

Members will also be asked if they support a further £225,000 cost for an improved access road to the Honiton base when they meet next week.

EDDC originally promised that the relocation would be ‘cost neutral’, that it would not borrow money and the project would not progress before Knowle was sold.

But after refusing PegasusLife’s £7.5million bid to redevelop Knowle into a 113-home retirement community, the authority now has to decide how to proceed with the relocation.

According to cabinet agenda papers, members have three options to choose from:

• ‘Go now’ – press ahead with building in Honiton in anticipation of an acceptable combination of cash for Knowle and prudential borrowing. Work could be completed as soon as December 2018.

• Delay relocation for one to two years, or more, so planning permission for Knowle can be secured to fund the project. EDDC understands PegasusLife is preparing an appeal, which would have to be lodged before June 9.

• A ‘do minimum’ option of giving up on the new-build Honiton HQ, completing the refurbishment of Exmouth Town Hall and modernising a section of Knowle. Essential repairs to Knowle would cost £1.9million, but there is no capital receipt for this expenditure.

Councillors have been recommended to pursue the ‘go now’ option. EDDC maintains that the move will save money in the long-run.

Its development management committee refused PegasusLife’s application because it represented a departure from Knowle’s 50-home allocation in the authority’s Local Plan and due to the lack of ‘affordable’ housing.

EDDC has considered various re-marketing options for Knowle – if a PegasusLife appeal is unsuccessful – that could fetch between £3.22million and £6.8million. One scheme proposes 50 homes, half of which would be ‘affordable’, and could bring in £4.2million.

Critics have long said EDDC could remain at Knowle rather than relocate. The cabinet papers say modernising the former hotel would cost nearly £11.3million, or, for the newer offices, the bill is expected to be more than £5.9million.

The relocation project has cost £1,784,884 to date.

Cabinet members will meet to discuss the options at Knowle at 5.30pm on Wednesday (April 5).”

http://www.sidmouthherald.co.uk/news/budget_for_eddc_s_relocation_tops_10_3million_1_4955207

How you explain snout in trough when you are a Tory MP

A Conservative MP advocated in favour of subsidies for the biomass industry after accepting more than £50,000 in political donations and hospitality from companies in the sector.

Nigel Adams, who has accepted tens of thousands of pounds in hospitality and political donations from biomass firms both in and outside his constituency, has called parliamentary debates, tabled questions, written opinion pieces, and written to the prime minister in support of subsidies for the industry.

But records compiled by Energydesk, the journalistic arm of Greenpeace, and shared with BuzzFeed News, show that on a number of occasions he did not mention the donations when he advocated for biomass – a sustainable form of energy generation based on burning wood pellets or other materials instead of coal and gas – over other forms of renewable energy such as onshore wind.

Parliamentary rules allow MPs to accept donations and hospitalities from businesses and others provided they are declared on official registers, as Adams’ contributions were. The rules also require MPs to “open and frank in drawing attention to any relevant interest in any proceeding of the House or its Committees”.

Adams told BuzzFeed News he referred to his hospitality and donations from biomass companies in parliamentary proceedings when his interventions were “substantively” about the industry.

Hospitality he accepted includes an £8,578 three-night trip to the Ritz-Carlton hotel in New Orleans to speak at a biomass conference. Adams accepted a further four trips to the same conference in following years, held at the five-star Fontainebleau on Miami Beach, a holiday spot beloved of America’s elite.

Adams’ trips to the resort from 2013 to 2016, worth £5,460, £7,177, £4,210, and £4,950 respectively, were funded by Eggborough Power Limited and Draw Power Limited, both of which operate biomass plants in Adams’ Selby and Ainsty constituency.

Adams also accepted auction prizes worth a total of £17,800 from another biomass producer from outside his constituency, Simec, as well as a trip to Dubai worth £2,850 to attend a pro-Brexit event in the city for UK expats.

In 2015, Adams held a debate on scrapping subsidies for onshore wind, during which he described it as being “about as much use as a chocolate fireguard”, claiming it was inferior to biomass in handling spikes in demand – naming Drax and Eggborough in his speech – and stating that cutting wind subsidies would “allow other, more efficient technologies to benefit from government support”. He made no mention of his contributions from the sector in that debate.

Similarly, in March 2016 Adams urged Andrea Leadsom, then an energy minister, to increase deployment of biomass, without making any mention of his contributions from Drax, Simec, or Eggborough.

Adams heads parliament’s all-party group on biomass, which is funded by the industry, and in 2012 urged then prime minister David Cameron to prioritise biomass subsidies over onshore wind. He also held a further debate on biomass, in which he declared he had received contributions from the sector.

Adams has declared all of these donations on the official registers of MPs’ interests as required and said he believes he has not breached any parliamentary rules because he has declared his interests in parliamentary proceedings. However, his failure to declare these interests on some occasions has drawn criticism.

Tamasin Cave of the lobbying transparency group Spinwatch told BuzzFeed News Adams risked the appearance of conflicts of interest – likening his situation to that of recently appointed Evening Standard editor George Osborne.

“Who does Mr Adams think he is working for?” she said. “A few transatlantic trips and fine dining could leave someone a bit muddled.

“And as George Osborne has just demonstrated, it’s clear that some in parliament don’t take their public role that seriously. With all eyes on Brexit, we also arguably have less scrutiny of what our MPs are up to.”

Greenpeace told BuzzFeed News that Adams raised concerns about conflicts of interest.

“As an MP, he has some serious questions to answer about whose interests he’s been looking after – the common good or the biomass industry funding his trips to Miami Beach,” said Greenpeace campaigner Hannah Martin.

Martin added that Greenpeace had concerns about biomass because in its view it has question marks over sustainability not shared by other energy sources.

“Ministers have spent millions of taxpayers’ money on controversial biomass when they could have invested it in far cleaner and more mature technologies like onshore and offshore wind. As a staunch advocate of biomass and a fierce critic of onshore wind, Nigel Adams bears at least some responsibility for a policy whose environmental and economic benefits remain in doubt.”

https://www.buzzfeed.com/jamesball/a-conservative-mp-has-been-criticised-after-accepting?utm_term=.ymgj7VPY#.ro7rGP9l

The tax woes of a big Tory donor

Lycamobile, the international phone call business and a major donor to the Conservative party, is embroiled in a £26m tax dispute with HMRC over VAT.

Accounts filed with Companies House show that Lycamobile’s UK division nearly doubled its pre-tax profits to £10.9m last year on turnover of £194m.

But the company, owned by Sri Lankan-born tycoon Allirajah Subaskaran, also revealed that it could face a bill of £26m from HMRC, including “potential penalties”, due to a dispute over VAT. …

… Auditors from KPMG have revealed that they are unable to form an opinion on the accounts due to a lack of “sufficient appropriate audit evidence”.

Last year, the accounting firm flagged up its confusion over £134m in funds owed to Lycamobile UK by related companies, adding that the knock-on effect on this year’s accounts meant it was still lacking information.

“Because of the significance of the matter […] we have not been able to obtain sufficient appropriate audit evidence to provide a basis for an audit opinion,” said KPMG. “Accordingly we do not express an opinion on the financial statements.”

It added: “We were unable to determine if adequate accounting records have been kept by the parent company.”

Lycamobile UK’s own directors’ report admitted that the tax dispute and complex structure create “material uncertainty that may cast significant doubt on the company’s ability to continue as a going concern”.

The Labour party and tax experts said the accounts raised questions for the Conservative party, which accepted £614,300 from Lycamobile in 2016 and nearly £1m the year before.

Tax accountant Richard Murphy said KPMG’s audit report and the VAT dispute raised “massive uncertainty” about Lycamobile’s financial position.

He said: “In the circumstances anyone dealing with the company has been given notice as to the risk they take. And the Conservative party is especially vulnerable. Taking donations from a company subject to this level of doubt as to its true financial position looks unwise. They’d do themselves a favour by saying no to further offers for the time being.” …

https://www.theguardian.com/business/2017/apr/03/tory-donor-lycamobile-in-26m-tax-dispute