New sewage spill policy ‘like asking arsonists to assess fire damage’

“Now you see it, now you don’t!” Catch phrase of the trickster. – Owl

The government response [to pollution] appears to be to change how incidents are classified, rather than greater effort to tackle the cause of them.

The Environment Agency has told its officials to cut back on inspections of bathing water pollution incidents and rely instead on water company assessments.

Adam Vaughan, Environment Editor www.thetimes.co.uk 

England has more than 400 designated bathing waters from beaches to lakes in the Cotswolds and The Serpentine river in London. However, some are regularly hit by sewage spills including those that have plagued the Isle of Wight, a Cornish cove and beaches along the southeast coast in recent weeks.

Despite rising public concern over the issue, the country’s environment regulator has privately issued guidance that weakens its inspection regime when people report pollution incidents.

One UN campaigner said the shift was “like asking an arsonist to assess fire damage” and a “hammer blow” to clean water efforts.

Previously, for the two most serious of four categories of incident, “cat 1” and “cat 2”, Environment Agency officers would attend and investigate in person after a member of the public reported pollution.

However, in August, shortly before heavy rains led to a series of shocking sewage spills from Seaford in East Sussex to beaches in Devon and Cornwall, the regulator issued supplementary guidance to staff on how to classify bathing water incidents.

Officials have now been told that their usual presumption “that an impact has occurred” can be overturned if “appropriate information to demonstrate no impact has been provided by the water company.”

A source at the agency said: “It used to be: incident reported, someone from the EA on site, then contact the water company to see what they have to say about it. You’re now missing that ‘someone on site’.”

Lewis Pugh, an endurance swimmer who recently became the first person to swim the Red Sea in a bid to increase action at the Cop27 climate conference, said: “Asking water companies to assess their own pollution is like asking an arsonist to assess fire damage. Our beaches are already amongst the most polluted in Europe.”

Pugh, 52, who is the UN Patron of the Oceans, continued: “This is a hammer blow for what remains of our efforts to protect Britain’s coastal waters from pollution. It’s offensive to swimmers, surfers, beach walkers and our precious wildlife.”

The motivation for the new guidance, leaked to Greenpeace’s investigative unit Unearthed and seen by The Times, appears to be concern within government that a growth in bathing water incidents looks bad. Last year there were 126 incidents in bathing waters, most of them caused by sewage. The figure is more than twice that of recent years.

The government response appears to be to change how incidents are classified, rather than greater effort to tackle the cause of them. The document circulated to Environment Agency officers, sensitive enough to be marked “controlled content,” said: “Judging the appropriate classification for bathing water incidents has been recognised as of particular concern.”

Experts working with the water sector said the shift was in line with how regulation on water pollution has changed in recent years. “This is part and parcel of the overall approach which has become apparent over degrading inspections, or heavy prioritisation attached to attending only the worst incidents,” said Alastair Chisholm, director of policy at the Chartered Institution of Water and Environmental Management.

The water companies “have always” provided impact assessments of pollution events, but the guidance suggests the agency will have to place greater reliance on them, Jo Bradley, formerly a water quality adviser at the Environment Agency, told Unearthed.

The regulator received an increase in its government funding this year. But even its chairman has admitted that cuts in recent years have hampered its ability to undertake inspections. James Bevan told the House of Lords in October “the amount of resource that we have had over the last decade or so … has affected our ability to regulate in certain ways”.

Jim McMahon, the shadow environment secretary, said: “It is astonishing that the Environment Agency would even consider asking water companies to mark their own homework given their record on sewage discharges. What’s next, putting Matt Hancock in charge of counting votes for the next bushtucker trial?”

Failure by water companies to properly self-report pollution incidents has been a growing source of controversy, and has led to an investigation into water companies’ sewage treatment plants by the sector’s other main regulator, Ofwat. The regulator wrote to the chief executives of all the wastewater companies last month to raise concerns over firms’ draft improvement plans, which are meant to ensure the “best outcome for the environment”.

“This summer has underlined how important it is for companies to step up and improve their performance. These plans are a chance for them to address some of the key challenges the sector is facing, including storm overflow spills, pollution incidents and sewer flooding,” an Ofwat spokesperson said. “Unfortunately, the draft plans companies have submitted fall short of our expectations.”

An Environment Agency spokesperson said: “There has been no change to how we classify and assess pollution incident reports. We are promoting a precautionary approach which assumes a water quality impact has occurred unless proven otherwise, providing bathers with the best information on any risks associated with using affected bathing waters.”

However the agency went on to implicitly admit there had been a change in guidance as it said the document issued in August provided a greater consistency of approach. In the past fortnight, Environment Agency staff with the Prospect and Unison unions have both voted to go on strike over below-inflation pay offers.

More than a third of hospitality businesses at risk of failure.

Closure of Digger’s Rest in Jupp’s constituency features in National Press

‘We are not even full for Christmas’ – England’s restaurants count their lost bookings

Joe Middleton www.theguardian.com (Extract)

More than a third of hospitality businesses are at risk of failure in early 2023 due to cost increases, the UKHospitality survey found. Figures from the Insolvency Service showed that the number of restaurants and food outlets across the UK entering liquidation has increased by 46% in the three months to September.

While Hunt’s autumn statement included a £13.6bn package to support business rates payers, industry experts were critical of the lack of focus on economic growth.

Arwen Beaton (right) publican at the Digger’s Rest in Woodbury Salterton, Devon, with Daniel Kelly.

Arwen Beaton (right) publican at the Digger’s Rest in Woodbury Salterton, Devon, with Daniel Kelly. Photograph: Emily Whitfield-Wicks

“It’s absolutely heartbreaking, we worked so hard and we have walked away with nothing to show for it after almost three years,” said Arwen Beaton, publican at The Digger’s Rest in east Devon after closing its doors for the last time. The thatched pub nestled in the picturesque village of Woodbury Salterton was taken over by Beaton, 48, and her partner Daniel Kelly, 42, in April 2020 at the start of the pandemic.

The couple offered free food delivery to vulnerable people and opened a shop selling essential items to locals, before reopening after lockdown.

“At the beginning of this year we were in a good place, we had somehow got through Covid and everything was looking positive and then we were hit with massive cost increases,” said Beaton.

Energy costs at the pub “tripled”, food prices went through the roof with key items such as cooking oil more than doubling and the pub operator which owns the premises increased the rent by 10%.

Beaton said that for the first time customers were “talking about their finances at the bar” and footfall began to decline as they went from seeing regulars once a week to less than once a month.

In August, The Digger’s Rest was 30% down on the previous year’s takings , forcing it to close its doors for good on 7 November.

Beaton said that three other pubs within a five-mile radius also shut up shop in recent weeks, adding that rural pubs in particular were “part of the community” and when they are gone “you will struggle to get them back”.

Emma McClarkin, the chief executive of the British Beer and Pub Association, said the industry remained on a “knife-edge” and it was “very disappointed” that a 12.5% rate of VAT was not implemented.

Kate Nicholls, the chief executive of UKHospitality, welcomed the business rates support but said the chancellor failed to outline “any plan for economic growth” and there is “nothing to give firms confidence, let alone invest”…

A spokesperson for the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy said it had “provided an unprecedented package of support including VAT cuts, business rates holidays and government backed loans worth around £400bn”.

Asylum seekers to be housed at Exmouth hotel

A hotel in Exmouth has been confirmed to host an unspecified number of asylum seekers within the coming days. East Devon District Council said it has been informed by the Home Office that an unnamed hotel in the town will be temporarily housing asylum seekers who are beginning their asylum application.

Shannon Brown www.devonlive.com

A number of hotels across the country are being used by the Home Office to house asylum seekers temporarily, following a backlog of asylum applications yet to be processed.

This comes after an investigation into the Manston processing centre in Kent found there to be 4,000 people temporarily housed there – over double its 1,600 capacity. It has since stood empty, since the people being held there were moved to hotels across the country, including one in Cornwall.

According to East Devon District Council, asylum seekers would be arriving in Exmouth within the next few days. Their accommodation will be funded by the Home Office, the council confirms, adding that it was not consulted on the decision.

A statement from the council said it will consider the best way to facilitate support needs for the visitors, in collaboration with its partner organisations including Devon County Council and NHS Devon.

Councillor Steve Gazzard, Exmouth Town Council’s chairman, said: “Exmouth extended an extremely warm welcome to our Afghan families in 2021 and I hope the community will once again help these asylum seekers to feel safe, respected and understood as members of our diverse community.

“The town council will be working with its partners to support the new arrivals and more details will be provided next week on ways in which you can potentially help.”

Councillor Roger Croad, Devon County Council’s cabinet member with responsibility for communities, said: “We are aware of the Home Office’s commissioning of the hotel, as short-term emergency accommodation for asylum seekers who are at the start of the asylum application process. This is one of many across the country that the Home Office is utilising for this purpose.

“We don’t know how long those placed here will remain in Devon, but we and our district, parish and town councils partners in Devon, and with excellent support from NHS Devon colleagues and the voluntary sector, are well placed to provide care and support to individuals. We are extending our hand of welcome to those new arrivals, and with a duty of care, will do all we can to support them.”

NHS Devon’s chief medical officer Dr Nigel Acheson said: “The NHS in Devon has well-established processes in place to ensure our doctors and other health professionals can provide essential care to support very vulnerable people arriving in our country as refugees or asylum seekers. Local people can continue to access health services as normal.”

On Wednesday Home Secretary Suella Braverman faced the Commons Home Affairs Committee over whose fault the conditions at the Manston processing centre were. The Home Office has now been threatened with five legal actions over the site.

Speaking to MPs on Wednesday, Ms Braverman said: “I’m not going to point the finger of blame at any one person. It’s not as simple as that.”

When pressed further, she said: “I tell you who’s at fault. It’s very clear who’s at fault. It’s the people who are breaking our rules, coming here illegally, exploiting vulnerable people and trying to reduce the generosity of the British people. That’s who’s at fault.”

However, MPs said there is a “shortage of safe and legal routes” to the UK for asylum seekers after the Home Secretary struggled to explain how an orphaned African child fleeing war and religious persecution, who has a sibling living legally in the UK, would be able to make a claim from abroad.

In the exchange on Wednesday, Ms Braverman replied: “Well, we have an asylum system and people can put in applications for asylum.”

Tim Loughton a Conservative member of the Commons Home Affairs Committee, then asked: “How would I do that?”

To which Ms Braverman said: “You can do it through the safe and legal routes that we have.”

But Mr Loughton replied: “I’m not Syrian. I’m not Afghan. I’m not Ukrainian… What scheme is open to me?”

“Well, if you are able to get to the UK, you’re able to put in an application for asylum,” Ms Braverman added.

Mr Loughton asked: “I would only enter the UK illegally then, wouldn’t I? How could I arrive in the UK if I didn’t have permission to get on to an aircraft to arrive legally in the UK?” At this point, Ms Braverman asked Home Office officials to step in and respond further.

Son of Devon MP ill after swimming in sewage polluted river

A Devon MP has raised concerns over sewage discharges in the House of Commons after his son became ill swimming in a local river. It comes as the Surfers Against Sewage Water Quality report was released uncovering evidence of people becoming sick from swimming in water polluted by sewage.

Lewis Clarke www.devonlive.com 

In a question to Leader of the House Penny Mordaunt, Richard Foord, the Liberal Democrat MP for Tiverton and Honiton, asked when the government will finally crack down on water companies polluting our waterways despite evidence of people getting sick – including his own son.

He said the coastal constituency of Tiverton and Honiton is plagued with sewage spills from South West Water, the second worst offender of “dry spills” in the UK according to the SAS Water Quality Report.

Speaking in the House of Commons on Thursday, November 24, Mr Foord said: “Today, we have seen a damning report from Surfers Against Sewage regarding the scale of discharges being committed by water companies. In particular, the report includes new revelations about dry spills that pollute our rivers and beaches even when there is no rainfall. My own son was ill after entering the water earlier this year, in the summer—he came down with a spell of gastroenteritis, as did his friend—so I have some personal experience of this issue.

“Thanks to that report, we now know that South West Water, which covers the Tiverton and Honiton constituency, is one of the worst offenders. Will the Leader of the House make time available so that hon. Members from across the House can discuss the report’s findings in relation to dry spills?”

Responding, Leader of the House, Penny Mordaunt MP said: “First, I am very sorry to hear that the hon. Gentleman’s son was ill, and that this was the cause. This issue is vital, and this Government have committed through the Environment Act 2021 and other work done by the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs to ensure both that genuine storm overflows are reduced and that we are monitoring what water companies are doing.

“In 2016, I think only five per cent of such discharges were monitored; from next year, that figure will be up to 100%, which is a key part of getting to the bottom of this. The report is an important one. I do not think there will be Environment, Food and Rural Affairs questions until 12 January, so I will write on the hon. Gentleman’s behalf and ask the Department to respond to his question.”

Speaking after the debate, Mr Foord, who lives in Uffculme, where the River Culm flows, added: “Our children should not be getting sick from spending time in nature or building sandcastles next to sewage. This is an environmental scandal. It is deeply shocking to hear people from across the South West, the Lake District and beyond have become sick from swimming in lakes and coastlines as a result of these ‘dry spills’. My own son became ill swimming in a Devon river.

“Months of Conservative chaos and an ever-changing cast of Environment Secretaries has meant that instead of action taken to hold water companies to account, we have only seen empty threats from the Government. Those MPs who voted against a ban on these sewage discharges last year should hang their heads in shame. The time is now to save Britain’s wild swimming spots and wildlife. This is a wake-up call to Conservative Ministers whose instinct is to do nothing.”

Green light given for development of 500-job new business park in East Devon

Development of a new business park in East Devon that will create up to 500 jobs has been backed by district council chiefs.

East Devon Reporter eastdevonnews.co.uk

A plot at Long Lane, opposite the Future Skills Centre near Exeter Airport, has been earmarked for the ‘Power Park’ scheme.

It will form part of the Exeter and East Devon Enterprise Zone.

East Devon District Council’s (EDDC) Planning Committee gave its seal of approval to a red tape-cutting Local Development Order (LDO) at its October meeting.

The document will ‘simplify’ the planning process so that developers can more easily bring forward ‘high-quality’ premises for a range of businesses.

EDDC says the LDO ‘will enable a sustainable new business park to be created to meet changing demands within the business and industrial sectors’.

“It will encourage investment and economic growth, creating up to 500 new jobs in East Devon,” said a spokesperson.

EDDC leader Councillor Paul Arnott, who chairs the Exeter and East Devon Enterprise Zone, added: “This new LDO shows we are committed to unlocking development in the Enterprise Zone to bring high-value jobs to local people.

“The LDO will simplify the planning process and minimise delays so that employment opportunities can come forward quickly.

“The LDO will provide a framework for sustainable development through a mixed-use scheme with good place making whilst mitigating the impact on the local environment and wildlife.”

The LDO will set out the type and quantity of development which can take place on the site.

Developers would need to demonstrate their proposals comply with the LDO before starting the development.