Devon’s 14 best beaches given famous Blue Flag status for 2023

[Even when it’s raining and the flood gates are opened, because you can get a warning to stay away! – Owl]

Devon is known for it’s stunning coastlines and beautiful beaches. Many of those beaches are now proud owners of the prestigious Blue Flag, an internationally recognised award for beaches and marinas.

www.devonlive.com (Extract)

The Blue Flag is only presented to well-managed beaches with high standards of cleanliness, safety and environmental management. Oddicombe in Torbay has scooped the award every year for 36 years, making it one of the best beaches in the world.

Elsewhere Seaton has retained the Blue Flag it won for the first time last year. Exmouth has now won the accolade for the fifth year in a row, while this is the fourth year for Sidmouth.

Beer features in the list this year, having not made the cut in 2022.

[Budleigh only gets the “seaside award” – see below]

 Blue Flag Water Quality criteria

  • The beach must fully comply with the water quality sampling and frequency requirements
  • The beach must fully comply with the standards and requirements for water quality analysis
  • No industrial, waste-water or sewage-related discharges should affect the beach area
  • The beach must achieve ‘excellent’ water quality as set out in the Bathing Water Directive.  

Seaside Award Water Quality criteria

  • The beach must fully comply with the water quality sampling and frequency requirements 
  • The beach must fully comply with the standards and requirements for water quality analysis  
  • No industrial, waste-water or sewage-related discharges should affect the beach area 
  • At designated bathing waters from 2016 the water quality should be graded as ‘sufficient’ as set out in the Bathing Water Directive. (In 2015, bathing beaches should of mandatory standard.) 

So the difference lies in water quality: “excellent” versus “sufficient”.

Plymouth shootings: Frustration grows at delayed response

Kicking it into the long grass, where is the selfie commissioner? – Owl

Campaigners for changes to gun laws in response to the 2021 Plymouth shootings are frustrated at delays in responses to recommendations from the coroner.

BBC News www.bbc.co.uk

The government had been due to respond to an extended deadline on Tuesday.

But the Home Office said it was still considering the findings and wanted a “short extension”.

Jake Davison, 22, used a legally-held shotgun to kill his mother Maxine Davison, 51, and four others before shooting himself.

Three-year-old Sophie Martyn, her father, Lee, 43, Stephen Washington, 59, and Kate Shepherd, 66, were all killed.

Gill Marshall-Andrews, chair of the Gun Control Network, told the BBC: “I think the delay is indicative of a reluctance to grasp the issues.

“What we worry about is that the whole thing is going to be put out to some sort of consultation and will be kicked into the long grass until everybody’s forgotten about it.”

Analysis: Ben Woolvin, BBC Spotlight Home Affairs Correspondent

The Home Office has at this stage been unable to give us any information about the reason for the delay.

In a very short statement a spokesperson says the government is “still giving careful consideration to the recommendations made by the coroner”.

Luke Pollard, Labour MP for Plymouth Sutton and Devonport, said he had not been told the reason for the delay.

He said it was possible there was an administrative issue which would delay things only by a few days, but he also said he was concerned this could be an indication that the government was no longer as committed to gun law reform as it previously said it was.

After the inquest in February, senior coroner for Plymouth, Torbay and South Devon, Ian Arrow, wrote a series of prevention of future deaths reports, saying current gun laws were “at odds with public safety”.

He wrote to Home Secretary Suella Braverman, Policing Minister Chris Philp, the Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales Sir Ian Burnett, the National Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC), every chief constable in England and Wales and the College of Policing, identifying areas of concern.

The recipients were legally required to respond within 56 days.

A Home Office spokesperson said: “We are still giving careful consideration to the recommendations made by the coroner in the Keyham inquest, and are currently seeking a short extension from him.”

No 10 food summit ‘no more than a PR stunt’ and failed to tackle key issues

Another day, another PR stunt! – Owl

Rishi Sunak’s Downing Street food summit has been described as “empty” by food and farming industry representatives, who rounded on the prime minister for failing to discuss soaring inflation or set out measures to safeguard British food production.

Joanna Partridge www.theguardian.com 

The Farm to Fork summit, the first meeting of its kind, brought together farmers, food producers and some of Britain’s largest supermarkets.

One representative of a trade body that attended the summit described it as an “empty meeting” with no action on price or inflation discussed. “It was there for the Tories to show they are supporting farmers,” they said.

Another attender said the summit elicited a “low-key response” from those present because it “did not touch the fundamental problems of food price inflation”.

“If you are not doing something about the cost of living, cost of production, access to labour and affordability of food then you are never going to fix the overall problem,” the attender said.

The summit had been expected to tackle topics such as food price inflation, fairness within the supply chain and helping farmers to invest in domestic production, but there was no subsequent announcement on those issues. Ministers offered no commitments in response to a call by the National Farmers’ Union (NFU) to stop Britain’s self-sufficiency in food slipping below its current level of 60%.

The summit took place against a backdrop of stubbornly high inflation, partly driven by food and drink prices, which rose 19.1% in the year to March, according to official figures.

In advance, consumer groups had called on ministers to ask grocery bosses to commit to holding down prices to help squeezed consumers, after an agreement by supermarkets in France to cap prices on key food items and a move by the French government to support food producers.

Hours before the meeting, Sunak published an open letter to farmers, promising to put UK farming at the heart of future trade deals and vowing that chlorinated chicken and hormone-fed beef would not be allowed on to the UK market.

Sunak’s pledges were welcomed by the NFU, which had repeatedly asked the prime minister to hold a food summit.

The union’s president has previously criticised the government for making farmers “a pawn in trade deals”, including those struck with Australia and New Zealand by Sunak’s predecessor, Liz Truss, during her time as international trade secretary.

Tom Bradshaw, the NFU’s deputy president, said the union believed the government had “put food security on a par with energy security” at the summit, which he called “a big step forwards”.

He added that farmers had battled to get ministers to “deliver resilience to the food supply chain”, which he hoped would help reverse recent falls in domestic production, as farmers have quit the industry amid soaring costs.

However, the government did not immediately answer the NFU’s calls to make the summit an annual event.

The meeting, which according to one person present was attended by between 60 and 70 people and lasted all morning, began with a welcome from the prime minister, before participants took part into four separate discussion groups.

Richard Griffiths, the chief executive of the British Poultry Council, who attended the summit, believed the meeting represented only “a little step forward” for the food industry.

He welcomed the government’s promises regarding future trade deals, but said “there needs to be more attention on how we and the government promote British food”.

He said promising to support producers in international trade deals without making plan on how to tackle food inflation “was like taking one corner of a big problem and trying to fix it without reference to the rest”.

Lee Stiles, the secretary of the Lea Valley Growers’ Association, a trade body for glasshouse growers, described the food summit as “no more than a PR stunt” with “nothing of substance” to help growers.

Stiles, who was not at the meeting, called on the government to take action to help with labour shortages.

He described the current seasonal agricultural workers scheme as “not fit for purpose” because it only enables holders to work for six months, although workers are needed for almost twice that period, meaning that multiple groups had to be trained each year to keep production flowing.

Stiles added: “The idea you can fill these roles with local workers is ridiculous and has been since the 1950s.”

Fresh election for Sidmouth Town Council seats after no candidates stand

A fresh election will be held for four seats on Sidmouth Town Council after no candidates stood for them in the local elections.

sidmouth.nub.news 

All of the local authority’s current councillors were automatically elected as too few people competed for the positions.

It is likely that if anyone stands for election this time, they will also be immediately appointed.

Nomination papers must be submitted by 25 May, and if any election is contested the poll will take place on 22 June.

One councillor is to be elected for the Sidmouth East ward, two for Sidmouth Sidford Village, and one for Sidmouth West.

What is: “the one overarching threat to British conservatism” ?

(Greater even than the climate emergency!)

The answer according to Miriam Cates MP, one of the rising stars of Tory MPs when she gave the warmup speech at the, mostly male, National Conservatism gathering on Monday, is the UK’s low birthrate.

She also said: “Spending so much time and money on education also makes it much more difficult, particularly for women, to decide when is a good time to pause and have children.”

And concluded by saying “Conservatism is always common sense.”

Owl wonders what Simon Jupp and his local conservatives make of all this.

Will they embrace the problem with enthusiasm?

Time is running out before the general election to make much headway on tackling this threat to conservatism.

The other snag is that the younger generations are less likely to vote Tory, so we are talking long term. – Owl