‘Significant risk’ to beach users after storm exposes pipework

‘Significant risk’ to beach users after storm exposes pipework

Owl assumes everyone can guess what the purpose of the pipe was. Is it still operational as a storm overflow?

Charlotte Becquart www.devonlive.com

The recent weather and sea conditions have exposed old pipework on a Devon beach.

The picture above was taken at Exmouth beach, west of the lifeboat station.

It shows old broken pipework which is a significant risk to all beach users.

Exmouth RNLI shared the picture above to raise awareness. The team said the pipes could cause ‘serious injury’, especially during high tides.

It is urging people to avoid the area.

A spokesperson wrote on Facebook: “Fierce sea conditions have exposed some old broken pipework that is a significant risk to sea swimmers, kite surfers and other water users on Exmouth beach and could cause serious injury especially during high tides.

“The hazard is located about 80 yards west of Exmouth Lifeboat Station.

“Please avoid this area.”

Meadow-makers plan to get East Devon and the Blackdowns blooming and buzzing

Two new community groups for East Devon and the Blackdown Hills aim to support landowners and gardeners keen to restore or create wildflower meadows.

Obviously this is something Owl would encourage – the traditional manicured lawn is pretty much a wildlife desert, a wildflower patch doesn’t have to be big. Everyone with a garden can have one. Make this your spring project.

The local More Meadows groups are based on the successful Moor Meadows Dartmoor community, which since its founding in 2015 has grown to include more than 800 meadow-makers, managing more than 1,000 acres of wildflower meadow to benefit wild plants and wildlife on Dartmoor and beyond.

Thanks to funding from Devon Environment Foundation, the More Meadows concept is an attempt to replicate the original Moor Meadows group’s success by supporting new networks of meadow-makers across Devon.

The new More Meadows groups for the Blackdown Hills and East Devon have been founded by local nature enthusiasts concerned about ongoing wildlife declines but inspired by efforts to create more wildlife-friendly habitats.

Although lost from much of the countryside due to changes in agriculture during the 20th century, traditional wildflower-rich grassland can be maintained, restored or created on farmland, in gardens and churchyards and on road verges.

This conservation work can play a crucial role in turning around the fortunes of threatened bees, butterflies and other pollinators as well as the birds and mammals that rely on insects for food.

Helping to start the Blackdown Hills More Meadows group is Julian Pady of Goren Farm, at Stockland Hill, near Honiton. The wildflower meadows at Goren Farm already provide a commercial supply of wildflower seeds, with customers including many meadow-makers in Devon.

Julian Pady said: ”Covid restrictions permitting, we will be opening our meadows from the 1st of May in conjunction with the National Gardens Scheme and we will be running open meadows events throughout June for meadow makers to attend. I will lead guided walks, talking about meadow management and demonstrating how we approach farming and wildlife on the 70 acres at Goren.”

Potential meadow-makers in East Devon joining the new More Meadows group also have an opportunity to help one of England’s rarest animals. The grey long-eared bat preys on moths and other insects, so wildflower-rich meadows provide ideal foraging habitat. With two key maternity roosts located in East Devon, a new project led by East Devon AONB and Bat Conservation Trust is focused on securing the future for this rare species.

Leading the new bat project is Craig Dunton, who said: ”If you are seeking support for meadow creation, this project will be providing land management advice to reconnect and restore wildflower meadows in the parishes of Colyford, Colyton, Musbury, Shute, Uplyme, Combepyne and Rousdon, Kilmington, Axminster and Hawkchurch. More meadows will mean more vital foraging habitat, helping to save the grey long-eared bat.”

An online forum for meadow makers launched last month to encourage the creation and spread of new More Meadows groups. Julien Pady of Goren Farm said: “The More Meadows forum is an amazing space, a valuable resource of information for all who join.” The Blackdown Hills and East Devon groups are the latest to form and details of both groups can be found at http://forum.moremeadows.org.uk/ 

Supporting this process for More Meadows is Devon ecologist Tracey Hamston, who said: “New groups of local meadow enthusiasts are being formed as individuals reach out to other wildlife-friendly landowners in their area. The online forum is providing a network for people to find others living nearby, organise getting together and planning how to move forward, with the aim of creating and restoring as much species-rich meadow as possible and connecting to like-minded folk in the process.”

Joining the forum is free and offers resources and advice on managing a meadow – including where to source wildflower seeds or seed-rich ‘green hay’ – while forum members can help identify the wild plants and creatures in field or garden meadows.

More Meadows also organises a series of free online talks by expert speakers, open to everyone. The next event, ‘How to Create a Meadow’, is a guide on how to turn a field or paddock into a wildflower-rich meadow. Tickets for the online talk on Thursday 25 March are free but you must register a place at https://createameadow.eventbrite.co.uk 

For more information on More Meadows visit the forum at http://forum.moremeadows.org.uk/

small tortoiseshell

Planning applications validated by EDDC for week beginning 1 February

Remove the existing roof coverings from the area over the failed timber members, reconstruct the roof structure and reinforce with structural steel beams then re-thatch and put back existing slate tiles Open for comment icon

Lincombe Farm Sidbury Sidmouth EX10 0QE

Ref. No: 20/1736/LBC | Validated: Tue 02 Feb 2021 | Status: Awaiting decision

Despite the success of the vaccination rollout the consultancy gravy train continues

The consultancy gravy train shows no sign of stopping. The Department of Health awarded the multi-national professional services firm, Deloitte, a COVID-19 contract that could be worth almost £1 million a day without the contract ever going to tender. 

The deal, worth up to £145 million, was handed to Deloitte to ‘support testing for Covid 19’ for just five months. Deloitte has been given at least 25 public sector COVID-19-contracts since the outbreak of the pandemic, of which contracts totalling £170 million were awarded without any competition. 

Not only did Government fail to advertise or put this huge contract out to tender, they didn’t come clean about the enormous sum of public money handed to Deloitte until around the time the contract had ended. The contract started in September 2020 and was only made public by the Government in January 2021. It’s almost impossible to scrutinise contracts when Government routinely fails to publish the details within the legal timeframe. 

We do not believe the award of this contract worth up to £145 million was lawful. We are left with no option but to pursue transparency through the courts. We have taken the first step in legal proceedings.

Government’s approach to procurement throughout this pandemic has been characterized by a repeated failure to follow its own rules. For the sake of the public purse, we will continue to push for proper governance. 

Thank you, 

Jolyon Maugham QC

Director of Good Law Project

UK vaccine rollout success built on NHS determination and military precision

Owl’s view of the welcome success of the vaccine rollout is that it stands out as using “in-house” expertise rather than consultancies such as Deloittes. If only the Government had taken a similar path earlier…….

Extracted from Sarah Neville and Helen Warrell in London February 12 2021 www.ft.com

…The UK had carried out more than 14m vaccinations by Friday morning and was fast approaching the target of inoculating the 14.6m most at risk from Covid-19 by the start of next week. Only Israel and the United Arab Emirates, among larger countries, have inoculated more per head of the population.

Global leadership is an unaccustomed status for a country with one of the highest rates of excess deaths in western Europe. Multiple missteps, such as the government’s failure to deliver on a “world beating” test and trace system, have engendered cynicism about its handling of the pandemic.

The UK’s achievements have come despite far more constrained vaccine supply than Israel, for example. This has ruled out a demand-led model in favour of a “risk pyramid” laid down by government advisers, with the oldest immunised first alongside frontline health workers. 

Jeremy Hunt, UK health secretary until 2018, said Asia had provided inspiration. Having failed to learn from that region’s recent experience in tackling deadly diseases caused by other coronaviruses in the early part of the pandemic — the UK halted community contact tracing, for example — the opposite was true when it came to vaccination.

“The main difference is that we really did learn the lessons from Sars and Mers when it came to the importance of the vaccine,” he said.

The Financial Times has spoken to more than a dozen people at the heart of the programme to discover the key decisions that were taken and examine whether the right lessons were learned from a litany of earlier failures.

Planning began long before it was clear whether any of the vaccines being developed at historic speed would win the approval of regulators. Back in the summer UK prime minister Boris Johnson put Sir Simon Stevens, head of the NHS in England, in charge of delivering the country’s biggest ever mass inoculation campaign.

The challenge was to avoid the problems that had befallen the highly centralised test and trace system, which was delivered by outsourcing companies and had largely ignored expertise on the ground.

Stevens chose a different approach. Rather than creating a new system, he used existing groups of GPs, known as primary care networks (PCNs), which each cover up to 50,000 patients, as his main conduit. Each had to commit to vaccinating for 12 hours a day, seven days a week.

In total, around 1,500 vaccination centres have been established in England, including some in football stadiums and other large venues, staffed by 30,000 NHS workers and as many as 100,000 volunteers.

Some decisions were devolved — PCNs chose their own jabbing sites, for example — but for others the NHS’s ability to compel action through national edict proved effective.

When, several weeks into the rollout, ministers took the key decision, announced on December 30, to delay second doses to stretch supplies, Stevens, along with UK chief medical adviser Chris Whitty held a video call with hundreds of PCN leaders on a Sunday night to explain the new policy. The next week, second shots largely stopped — a level of compliance a more fragmented health system would have struggled to secure.

Planning had moved into a higher gear in November. With regulatory approvals for at least one vaccine imminent, Emily Lawson, NHS chief commercial officer, selected by Stevens to run the programme, assembled military and private sector support.

Brigadier Phil Prosser, commander of the army’s 101 Logistic Brigade, was taking part in an exercise with more than 2,000 soldiers on Salisbury Plain when he got the call on November 11 instructing him to leave immediately to start work on vaccine delivery.

Five days later, he and 50 military logistics experts were installed at the NHS headquarters in Skipton House, south London, to help co-ordinate distribution and set up vaccination centres. 

Military specialists calculated the optimum location of centres to ensure every UK resident could access a jab within 10 miles of home, as ministers had promised. Security officials worked out how to safeguard shipments of vaccines from theft or attempts to disrupt the rollout. 

“There’s no other supply chain that’s built like this,” said Prosser. “This is the largest vaccination programme this country has ever run.”

Three weeks later, on December 8, the first cohort were inoculated.

For those at the sharp end, the day starts at 8am with a meeting chaired by Lawson, where the head of each delivery group — GPs, hospitals and mass vaccination centres — reports on progress and the logistics team briefs colleagues on vaccine stocks for the next three days.

Palantir, the US data analytics company which had also worked with Lawson previously on a mechanism for PPE delivery, was contracted in November to provide a vaccine supply database. 

“The issue essentially is how do you get it into the right arm in the right place,” said Louis Mosley, head of Palantir UK, who works on the programme. “You’ve got a huge number of logistical constraints, because the vaccine expires . . . [and] you often don’t know until the last minute how much you’re going to get.”

Each vaccine centre set up outside GP practices or hospitals needs more than 400 items of equipment to function, from needles to fridges and resuscitation equipment. Palantir’s system brings together warehouse inventories and information about patients and the readiness of trained staff. The database also keeps a running total of vaccinations to give the NHS instant progress reports. Palantir said it does not receive or hold identifiable patient data.

When it came to allocating the vaccine, the uniting principle has been to ensure equal access. Christina Pagel, professor of operational research at University College London, said that in Germany, by contrast, it is usually up to individuals to book an appointment once they are informed they are eligible. She said that sort of approach favoured the “tech-savvy” and made the process a “bit of a lottery”.

However, the scale of progress, and the political narrative ministers have woven around it, would by now look very different were it not for the decision to delay the second dose of the UK’s two approved vaccines by up to three months.

Supplies of the vaccine stood at only half the volume needed to fully immunise the most vulnerable by mid-February, threatening to leave millions unprotected as troubling new variants spread.

That move sparked international criticism, including from Anthony Fauci, the US president’s chief Covid-19 adviser. This week, however, the World Health Organization backed the approach with the Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccine — one of the two used in the UK.

Mary Ramsay, head of immunisation at Public Health England, said the agency had originally discussed the importance of aligning the dosing intervals for the BioNTech/Pfizer and Oxford/AstraZeneca vaccines, which were meant to be given respectively three and four weeks apart. “Operationally it was felt it would be easier to stick to a single interval,” she said. 

Then data came in from AstraZeneca showing the effectiveness of a single dose up to 12 weeks. Moreover, as more analysis came in from the Pfizer trials, following the vaccine’s approval by regulators in early December, it reassured government advisers that it, too, was likely to be highly effective after the first dose — although the US pharma group was insistent on sticking to the approved three week schedule.

Former UK prime minister Tony Blair, who was an early advocate of the delayed second dose strategy, praised the government for the rollout of the programme. “I was sceptical as to whether the government would perform the logistics effectively enough but . . . by and large, they have.”

While the numbers vaccinated point to a successful project, there have been inevitable bumps along the road. Some GPs have criticised the model through which vaccine supplies were “pushed” out to them, particularly those with low-income patients who tend to suffer poor health at younger ages…