Vile person?

“A Sidmothian satirist is offering East Devon residents the chance to ‘meet your MP’ – in the form a cabbage sporting a blue ribbon.

Alex Ritchie claimed that the vegetable’s ‘spokesman’, Sir Hugo Swire, was unavailable so he was sat with it on Sidmouth’s Esplanade.

The Conservative MP was re-elected for a fifth term with a majority of more than 8,000 votes.”

http://www.sidmouthherald.co.uk/news/sidmouth-satirist-s-fresh-take-on-election-result-1-5055711

Just to clarify: Owl has never known, known of or met or corresponded with Mr Richie.

Will Mr Swire be commentating on this legitimate protest?

“Ordinary people” – millionaires!

“This morning’s BBC Breakfast show contained an absolutely astounding series of interviews about the the Tories’ hated Dementia Tax policy and the state of the NHS.

What the BBC failed to mention during the course of both sections is that their supposedly ‘impartial’ voice of concern for the NHS (a man who the BBC described as ‘loving the NHS’ was actually an ex-Tory Councillor, millionaire property mogul who had worked for a PRIVATE healthcare company for 33 years.

The ex-Tory Councillor was interviewed both as a seemingly ordinary member of the public at 07:25, saying the council had been “phenomenal” when his wife was diagnosed with dementia and needed help, and just an hour later he returned in a pre-recorded segment debating the future of the NHS with a junior Dr who was distraught at the destruction caused the Tory cuts.

The first discussion was about Theresa May’s disgusting dementia tax. The interview starts with another member of the public expressing deep concerns about the cap on social care, saying she is worried that her children will be left with nothing if her or her husband have to go into care.

The conversation then moves on to a man who is referred to just as “Gordon”, and he speaks about his experience of funding care for his wife who he says was diagnosed with dementia in 2009.

The conversation then moves on to a man who is referred to just as “Gordon”, and he speaks about his experience of funding care for his wife who he says was diagnosed with dementia in 2009.

Gordon Maclellan BBCHe says that he found the local council to be “phenomenal” in offering him and his wife support to help fund her care. He goes on to say that he would certainly benefit from the Tories proposals to raise the cap on care costs from £23,000 to £100,000.

Just over an hour later on the same programme, we encounter another interview with the same man, or to give him his full title Dr Gordon Maclellan, who introduces himself as being recently retired.

This time he’s here to talk about the NHS crisis and discuss the best way to fix it with a 33-year-old junior doctor.

Breakfast describes Maclellan as being somebody who “loves the NHS”, and the purpose of the segment is to help people decide which party is best suited to cure the NHS crisis.

Throughout the interview, Gordon consistently uses classic Tory talking points and the usual ridiculous defenses of their carving up of the NHS, at one point he defends the Tories cuts by saying:

“people died in my day too”

So, who is this Gordon Maclellan? And why does he always seem to keen to defend the Tories? …

… Dr Gordon MacLellan worked as a Private Orthopaedic consultant for the Nuffield Health Brentwood Hospital for 33 years.”

http://www.devonlive.com/five-sets-of-roadworks-to-affect-major-devon-roads-next-week/story-30381759-detail/story.html

“CPRE: Give councils cash to build homes and stop developers playing the system”

Difficult times as the recent housing minister Brandon Lewis (author of a book on how to win marginal seats) yesterday lost his marginal seat.

“The next government must give councils cash to build homes and stop developers using the planning system to get out of building affordable homes, a rural charity has said.

A report from the Campaign To Protect Rural England said homebuilders are using ‘viability assessments’ to force through developments with minimal affordable housing.

This way developers can increase their profits, the CPRE pointed out. The organisation said developers are “gaming” the planning system, which allows them to draw up an assessment to show a development is no longer financially viable with the number of required affordable homes.

Local authorities grant planning permission to applications on the condition that a certain number of affordable homes are built but these can be overturned by a viability assessment study.

Many councils’ targets of achieving 35 to 40% affordable homes per development are being routinely missed because of this, the report out on Tuesday stated.

Paul Miner, planning campaign manager at CPRE: “If we don’t change things this will just get worse.

“The next government must reduce the power of these viability studies, stop highly profitable developers gaming the system and give councils the hard cash to start building houses again.”

Miner said you have to “look at those developers who continually use shady tactics to renege on promises to build affordable homes and new community infrastructure”.

“These are often the promises that win them permission in the first place.”

This is affecting the number of homes built in rural areas, the CPRE said.

In 2011-12, 35% of homes built were affordable in rural areas. This has dropped to just 16% in 2015/16 – a year in which Department for Communities and Local Government figures show councils built only 1,890 homes across the country.

CPRE’s research also shows that five of the 15 most unaffordable districts outside London have met their most recent lowest affordable housing target.

Andrew Whitaker, planning director at the Home Builders Federation, said: “The private sector currently provides around 40% of all affordable homes built in this country via cross subsidy from private sales.

“Local authorities should ensure they do not set unrealistic affordable housing targets which prevent developments from coming forward at all.”

http://www.publicfinance.co.uk/news/2017/06/cpre-give-councils-cash-build-homes-and-stop-developers-playing-system

“Developer submits appeal to £7.5m Knowle plan refusals”

PegasusLife submitted its challenge to East Devon District Council’s (EDDC) ruling to the Planning Inspectorate on Wednesday before today’s deadline.

Councillors defied officer advice to refuse the scheme in December – arguing it would overdevelop Knowle and represent a departure from the site’s 50-home allocation in the Local Plan. They also had concerns about the lack of ‘affordable’ housing provision.

An EDDC spokeswoman confirmed that PegasusLife has lodged an appeal with the Planning Inspectorate, but said it can take weeks for the process to begin.

The developer has agreed to pay EDDC £7.505million for the site of its current HQ if the application is approved. The proceeds would go towards the authority’s £10million relocation to Exmouth and Honiton, but councillors have since voted to press ahead with the project before a buyer is guaranteed.

This means construction work, funded by a loan, will begin at Heathpark in Honiton before Knowle is sold. Work on Exmouth Town Hall is already under way.”

http://www.sidmouthherald.co.uk/news/developer-submits-appeal-to-7-5m-knowle-plan-refusals-1-5055742

Swire calls East Devon Watch, Claire Wright and East Devon Alliance supporters “a vile swamp”

… here’s what he said:

and here are a few of the comments he refers to:

His comment on East Devon Watch:

There is something called East Devon Watch which is again tied in with East Devon Alliance – they’re all the same sort of people and frankly it’s time to call them out now. It’s no good them hiding behind their nice little smiles and pretending they are independent. These are not, they are vile some of these people”.

1. East Devon Watch has never made any secret of supporting (but not being part of or supported by) East Devon Alliance.

2. EDW has never hidden behind a nice little smile – there is nothing to smile about with the politics of East Devon. Indeed, crying would be more appropriate!

3. There is no pretending to be independent – EDW is indeed independent and proud of it.

4. Vileness …. well, Owl leaves readers to make up their own minds.

EDW will continue to hold the politics and politicians of East Devon to the light and looks forward to doing so for many, many years.

Swire says NOTHING about his one-man hustings last night

Nothing, zilch, nada, zero!

Correspondents reported car park spaces and empty seats at the start.

BUT he has made a whistle-stop tour of EVERY polling station. Anxious night for him!

EDDC and East Devon Alliance cited in Guardian postal vote cock-ups article

… In East Devon postal votes were sent out to voters without an official security mark. The acting returning officer for the East Devon constituency, Mark Williams, issued a statement earlier this week reassuring postal voters that if they had not yet returned their postal votes they should still do so. “We have taken all the necessary steps to ensure the postal votes are valid and will be counted,” William said.

Paul Arnott, chairman of the East Devon Alliance, expressed his dismay at the situation, calling for the new government “to centrally digitise the issuing of ballot papers and remove the potential for fraud in all levels of elections”. …”

https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2017/jun/08/plymouth-blames-loss-of-1500-postal-voting-packs-on-computer-problem

EDA could, of course, also have mentioned:

the lost 6,000 voters of 2015:
https://eastdevonwatch.org/2014/07/07/the-missing-6000-voters-eddc-named-and-s/

which led to Electoral Officer EDDC CEO being summoned to Parliament to not-very-satisfactorily explain himself:

https://eastdevonwatch.org/2014/11/15/the-missing-6000-voters-and-the-award-for-best-lame-excuse-goes-to-mark-williams/

AND the other mistakes that took place in 2015:

https://eastdevonwatch.org/2017/06/02/east-devon-alliance-hit-out-at-unforgivable-mistake-over-postal-voting-cock-up/

EDDC Scrutiny Committee – we await your input!

PLEASE GO OUT AND VOTE!!!!!!!!!

In this election it REALLY DOES matter. No more posts from Owl till tomorrow – so anyone who doesn’t vote can’t blame Owl.

Don’t get it wrong, vote Wright in East Devon.

In Honiton and Tiverton, if you value your NHS, vote tactically or specifically for Kolek.

Swire fails to draw a crowd – empty seats at his one-man “hustings”

Report from Exmouth:

“I went into the college soon after the meeting started.

Given that a number of those present were Tory councillors, the numbers of ‘ordinary folk’ looked pretty small for a town of 36,000. Far fewer there than the last Town Council meeting I attended, plenty of spare chairs.

Perhaps a better indicator was the car park, often a struggle to find a place, it was no trouble this time. For some peculiar reason 5 or 6 spaces were taped off for Jill Elson- these remained empty. Maybe there was a last minute rush expected- but it hadn’t arrived by the time the meeting started.”

At least one local paper stands up for itself – but not here

“While taking Conservative cash to place the ad, The Blackpool Gazette ran a headline above it which read: Poverty-hit families are forced to rely on food bank handouts. And inside, the paper ran a special report detailing the impact of Conservative austerity on local families [as quoted below]:

Food bank Britain

Britain is hungry. The figures from the Trussell Trust, Britain’s largest network of food banks, reveal a staggering rise in emergency food dependency across the country. As shown below, food bank dependency was virtually a non-issue in 2008/9. But the number of emergency food supplies given out now essentially accounts for one in every 60 adults in the UK.”

https://www.thecanary.co/2017/06/07/one-defiant-local-paper-absolutely-shafted-theresa-may-final-day-campaign-image/

Even the Cabinet Office cocks up voting! Doesn’t auger well for Brexit legislation!

On Monday this week, just days before general election polling day, the government was forced to table a new set of rules for the general election after numerous errors in a key statutory instrument drawn up by the Cabinet Office came to light.

Both the original faulty and sudden replacement statutory instruments cover the costs Returning Officers can claim from central government for the running of the election in their constituencies. The Parliamentary Elections (Returning Officers’ Charges) (No. 2) Order 2017 replaces the previous legal order from 4 May because of problems with the ‘maximum recoverable amount’ (MRA) which the original legal order set for each constituency, limiting how much can be claimed.

As the Electoral Commission’s latest bulletin to Returning Officers explains, a new legal order has been required because:

This revision is to take account of a number of incorrect MRAs that came to light after Cabinet Office received a few enquiries from Returning Officers about their level of allocation. A full review of all the allocations for England, Scotland and Wales has identified that a mixture of erroneous and inconsistent data on combinations and polling station resource, added to some clerical errors in transposing numbers, has led to a number of the MRAs being incorrect.”

Or in other words, the Cabinet Office drew up a bit of legislation which was so full of errors that it had to be hurriedly replaced.

Hardly a good sign for how the vastly greater and more complicated reams of legislative changes required for Brexit will go.

http://www.markpack.org.uk/150331/parliamentary-elections-returning-officers-charges-order-2017/

EDDC Cabinet meeting highlights

Wednesday, 14 June 2017; 5.30pm

page 26:

EDDC has underspent its Disabled Facility Grants by £336,000 as “Demand not as high as budget/grant allocation from Devon County Council”.

page 42:
Freedom of Information

658 requests have been dealt with under the Freedom of Information Act (Environmental Information Regulations) during the year 2016/17.

This figure has risen from 588 in 2015/16.

There continues to be a trend for requests originating from commercial organisations asking questions relating to council contracts; information pertaining to businesses and their payment of business rates; and topics of general news interest like the impact of changing legislation.

The council’s major projects, such as the office re-location and the regeneration of Exmouth seafront are also continuing to generate interest amongst local residents, and campaign groups, although these requests form a relatively small proportion of the overall number received.

The service areas receiving the highest number of requests are Council Tax, Environmental Health and Planning. …”

Click to access 140617combined-cabinet-agendapublicversion.pdf

Four very naughty EDDC councillors

“In the 2016/17 council year:

1. How many councillors were issued with reminders for missing council tax payments due in the 2016/17 council year? – 4

2. Of those referred to in question 1, how many councillors complied with the reminders to the point where no further action was required? – 4”

http://eastdevon.gov.uk/access-to-information/freedom-of-information/freedom-of-information-published-requests/

Tories get money from Wonga – for the rest of us it’s the other way round!

“A major investor in Wonga, a banker and two billionaire hedge fund managers head a list of Conservative donors in the final set of election watchdog data released before Thursday’s general election. The Tories raised £1.16m in the final full week of campaigning, beating Labour by just over £69,000, the Electoral Commission disclosed on Wednesday.

Adrian Beecroft, the former government adviser and investor in payday lender Wonga, gave £50,000 in the week to 6 June. In 2012, he wrote the Beecroft report for David Cameron, which called for changes to make it easier for businesses to sack employees.

The hedge fund millionaire Reade Griffith also gave the Conservatives £50,000. In 2013, Griffith, who founded Polygon Investment Partners, was ordered to pay more than £800,000 to Kensington and Chelsea council for planning permission to build an “iceberg” basement under his house. Griffith and his wife had applied for permission to build a swimming pool and media area in a two-storey basement. The money was supposed to contribute to affordable housing elsewhere in the borough.

The billionaire hedge fund manager Sir Michael Hintze has given £250,000, making him the joint top individual donor in this particular week. Before the last general election, he gave the party their single biggest donation in six years – £1.5m.

Ehud Sheleg, an Israeli-born businessman now based in the West Midlands, has also given £250,000. He is the director of the Halcyon Gallery on Bond Street, which recently exhibited a collection of Bob Dylan’s artworks. Arne Groes, an executive at the London headquarters of French bank BNP Paribas, has given £100,000, as has Keith Bradshaw, a Birmingham-based businessman.

Labour has received £1.046m in the final full week of the campaign. Unite, the union, is the biggest donor, with gifts of £528,000, followed by the Communication Workers’ Union, with just over £320,000.

The Lib Dems received just over £103,000, most of which came from public funds. The Green Party received £10,000, around half the amount received by the Women’s Equality Party. Ukip received no donation of more than £7,500.

The Conservatives raised more than 10 times as much as Labour two weeks ago, partly thanks to a donation of over £1m from the theatre producer behind The Book of Mormon and The Phantom of the Opera. John Gore, whose company has produced a string of hit musicals, gave £1.05m as part of the £3.77m received by the Conservatives in the third week of the election campaign. In the same period, Labour received only £331,499.

Labour has concentrated on raising small sums from its members, most of which will not be included in these figures, sources said.

By law, political parties standing candidates at the general election must submit details of any donations and loans of more than £7,500, as part of weekly reports to the Electoral Commission.”

https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2017/jun/07/conservatives-raise-116m-in-final-full-week-of-election-campaigning

Hugo Swire refuses to discuss any aspect of his general election campaign

Hugo Swire, the Conservative candidate, has not responded to requests from DevonLive for comment on any aspect of his election campaign.”

http://www.devonlive.com/who-is-claire-wright-the-independent-candidate-who-could-win-in-the-east-devon-tory-heartland/story-30377481-detail/story.html

Claire Wright: the one to watch, the one to vote for

“… Claire, who lives in Ottery St Mary, is currently an Ottery St Mary town councillor and is the Devon County Councillor for the Otter Valley ward. She did represent Ottery St Mary on East Devon District Council from May 2011 to 2015, when she stood down.

She says that she has been a campaigner from the start – her first campaign letter was written when she was just nine when she wrote to the Brazilian Embassy demanding that they stopped killing dolphins for the eyeballs.

She made a foray into public relations and started working for the NHS in 2000. She said: “I set up campaigns on stopping smoking, coughs and sneezes spread diseases (in case pandemic flu arrived in the UK) and while working at Devon County Council in 2007, I established a campaign to improve adults’ perceptions of young people – called ‘Don’t Judge Us Before You Know Us!’.”

She took a step into the world of politics in 2009 when there was ‘the threat’ of a Tesco store coming to Ottery St Mary. It mobilised her to join the Sustainable Ottery’s campaign against it and it was from there that she joined Ottery St Mary Town Council.

As a councillor, she battled to get funding for West Hill’s very first play park and helped to improve the broadband service in the area.

In May 2011, she stood for election to East Devon District Council, and managed to oust long-standing conservative leader of the council, Sara Randall Johnson in the process – her first political giant-killing.

She said: “As an EDDC councillor I focused on two main themes – encouraging more transparency and openness – and trying to save the district from a very real threat of over-development.”

In May 2013, she was elected to Devon County Council where she is a member of the health and wellbeing overview and scrutiny committee, and she retained her seat in May 2017 with a massive majority.

In May 2015, she stood in the parliamentary elections in East Devon, running against foreign office minister, Hugo Swire.

She came second with 13,140 votes and a 24 per cent share, polling the most votes of any Independent in the country since 2001, when Independent, Dr Richard Taylor won Wyre Forest.

Now, in 2017, she is standing again, and her ‘people power’ army have hit the streets.

She only stood after she managed to secure an “army” of helpers and a crowdfunding appeal raised over £12,000 in just four weeks: with 75 per cent of donations being in small amounts of £50 or under.

One of Claire’s team said: “Claire stood up to Hugo in 2015, and despite a brilliant campaign got knocked back down. Instead of accepting defeat, she used that experience as a platform from which to fight even harder for the people of East Devon. If you’d asked me when I moved down here in 1995 that my vote could make a difference in this safe rural Tory seat, I would have laughed.”

But now the team are quietly confident that the support they’re feeling on the streets will be translated into a massive vote this Thursday.

“One of my team was stopped in the street by a man waving my manifesto who wanted more information: he will be voting for me. Young people voting for the first time, older people who are worried about the dementia tax, doctors, teachers, mothers with young children, students, the unemployed, a whole range of professions, all are uniting in a shared desire for a passionate, caring, hardworking MP for East Devon.

“A Sidmouth woman marrying an Exmouth man took time out from her wedding day on Saturday to have her photo taken with one of my boards. All her family are voting for me this time’.”

Joshua and Jamie Anderson (aged 21 and 19 respectively) are from Exton on the river Exe. They said: “We would prefer to vote for our own parties, but having read Claire Wright’s manifesto, we are happy to put our preferences aside and vote for her. For too long, the Tories have treated East Devon as a safe seat and Mr Swire has been neglecting us – and getting away with it. Whatever party you belong to, we need to rally now behind Claire Wright, our only hope in East Devon.”

West Hill resident and Claire’s team member Lisa Simpson said: “I’ve been a Labour supporter since I was old enough to vote and never contemplated supporting another party, nor indeed tactical voting, but I was won over, not only by a realistic opportunity to unseat a Conservative MP but by Claire’s integrity and work ethic.”

Claire added: “There are disenchanted Conservatives, angry that their man, Hugo Swire, did not bother to attend hustings, showing their support. The local Green party is backing me all the way.

“But more importantly, people who’ve never voted before, young voters, people who abstained last time, are realising they can be part of a quiet revolution right here in Budleigh Salterton and Sidmouth. We’re demonstrating a new way of doing politics that responds to local people and seeks consensus rather than confrontation.”

Claire has been endorsed by tactical voting sites Best for Britain and Tactical 2017 and even Booker prize-winning writer Hilary Mantel has endorsed her campaign, saying ‘she is local, energetic and knowledgeable… Claire Wright is the candidate who will speak up for Devon East.'”

http://www.devonlive.com/who-is-claire-wright-the-independent-candidate-who-could-win-in-the-east-devon-tory-heartland/story-30377481-detail/story.html

Midweek Herald excels again!

The EDDC postal vote scandal? Nothing. The general election? Just a blip on the landscape – reduced to one reluctant half page of candidates’ puff – and that’s been it for the last few weeks.

Anyone would think they had been told to keep it away from the public.

News? What news? Nothing to see here – move on please, move on.