Jo Bateman: It’s time for Labour to take action on sewage – petitions parliament

with support from The Good Law Project.

Very honoured and excited to be handing this [petition] in next week! Hoping that there’ll be a good ‘gathering’ of supporters at the gates to Downing Street, please come if you can, it’s a great opportunity to express frustrations with South West Water. – Jo Bee

[Jo will be handing in her petition to No 10 Downing Street at 2:30 pm on Tuesday September 10, gathering at the gates to Downing St from 1:30 pm.]

Sign her petition here. The numbers are approaching 50,000

By Jo Bateman goodlawproject.org

Sewage dumping robs me of my daily swims and harms my mental health. So I’m heading to 10 Downing Street to demand urgent action.

Five years ago, I moved from the Midlands to Exmouth to be closer to the sea, and from the moment I took my first outdoor swim, I was hooked. I try to swim in the sea every day because of the huge benefits to my mental and physical health. Even in winter, when I’m shivering on the beach with the wind barrelling across the bay, I think of the buzz I feel as soon as I get out and that’s what makes me get in  – I couldn’t live without it. 

I’ve been on antidepressants for years, but since I began swimming in the sea, I’ve been able to reduce my dosage to the minimum – and I feel so much better for it. My daily dip is essential for my wellbeing, so when I can’t get in the water it takes a serious toll on my mental health. But there are some days when I can’t swim at all. Why? Sewage. As I’m writing this now – at the height of the summer holiday season – the beach is shut for swimming because of pollution from sewage. And this happens so often I have to check my phone all the time for alerts from Surfers Against Sewage.

I only learned about the sewage scandal when I started swimming and experienced its effects first hand. I didn’t realise how often it’s released and just how much of it is spread all over the country, with almost half a million spills last year. I’ve watched friends get sick from swimming in contaminated water and seen how it affects fish and seagrass – all while water company executives line their pockets.

So earlier this year, with the support of Leigh Day and Good Law Project, I started legal action against South West Water for dumping sewage again and again in my local swimming spot. I’ve had enough. 

And I’m not alone. Almost 40,000 people have joined me in calling on the new government to take action so that water companies are forced to clean up their act, and we can all enjoy our right to swim. Labour ministers have promised they won’t turn a blind eye to water companies like the Tories did, but actions speak louder than words. There’s no time to waste. So next week, I’m heading to 10 Downing Street to deliver the petition in person.

I can only dream of a time when I can just go for a swim without putting my health at risk. But if we carry on this fight, together we can make that dream a reality and we can all enjoy our right to swim.

Jo Bateman

Sign her petition here. The numbers are approaching 50,000

Jo Bateman’s case claiming damages against South West Water can be found here (with privacy redactions)

Feargal Sharkey: Water Bill fails to tackle ‘dysfunctional’ regulatory system

“The failure has clearly got to do with regulatory failure and a regulatory system that’s completely dysfunctional; there’s nothing here that deals with that, that even discusses it, there’s no reform…”

Pol Allingham www.independent.co.uk 

Environmental activist and singer Feargal Sharkey has criticised the new Water Bill for failing to target a “dysfunctional regulatory system”.

Under the new Bill, executives could face jail if they fail to co-operate or obstruct investigations, and regulators would have the power to issue severe and automatic fines without having to direct resources to lengthy probes.

However, Mr Sharkey, the Londonderry-born former singer of punk band The Undertones, told Sky News that the water pollution crisis “has clearly got to do with regulatory failure” and new laws are not required to solve it.

He said on Thursday: “The failure has clearly got to do with regulatory failure and a regulatory system that’s completely dysfunctional; there’s nothing here that deals with that, that even discusses it, there’s no reform.

“We don’t need new regulations, we don’t need new laws, we’ve got 35 years’ worth of laws that have never been applied – you should force them (the regulators) to go out and apply the law as it stands today, that would have been a massive step forward.

“I also note that simple instruction is missing from this long list of stuff.

“I think Government had a real opportunity here to show clear visionary leadership, to show it had an action plan, to fix all of this, and unfortunately we’ve ended up with a long list of stuff that, frankly, costs nothing and I suspect will achieve even less.”

Mr Sharkey told the programme that “for 20 years” existing laws have allowed for company directors to receive “unlimited fines” for “that kind of environment vandalism”.

“I cannot find a single example of any company director ever prosecuted, ever being fined a penny”, he said, adding that potential jail terms announced in the new Bill would be for executives who fail to co-operate or who obstruct investigations.

“I guarantee you right now it will never ever happen; what we needed was decisive clear leadership and sadly I can’t see that today”, he said.

Mr Sharkey told Sky that he became an environmental campaigner due to his love of rivers and fly fishing, and growing up in a “very unsettled” Northern Ireland with a mother who demanded they confront apparent social injustices when they see them.

Infrastructure is key for the future – Cllr Todd Olive on local plan

Is there any way the council can take a more active role? in directing development?

Government threatens to put our housing numbers up by 250 a year if we don’t publish a draft new Local Plan in the next three months.

No pressure then! – Owl

Cllr. Todd Olive writes in this week’s local press (from print edition):

The expression “May you live in interesting times- supposedly comes from an old Chinese curse, though no source for that has ever been found.

When I first heard it, I thought it must mean “May you never be bored!”. Today, though, as East Devon’s Portfolio Holder for Strategic Planning – responsible for, among other things, production of the new Local Plan – I think of it in a different light.

Regular readers of this publication will know that East Devon has several “interesting” and challenging decisions to take soon about where new housing development should go.

Those decisions have gained added urgency with the news that the new government intends to revamp the national planning system – putting up our housing numbers by 250 a year if we don’t publish a draft new Local Plan in the next three months. That would mean adding a community about half the size of Whimple, where I live, to East Devon every year – on top of the 900 homes a year we must already deliver.

If my inbox over the last week is anything to go by, deciding where to put those homes – around 20,000 over the life of the new Local Plan up to 2042 – is not going to win any of your District Councillors, of any political stripe, many popularity contests. An apparent failure to deliver on new infrastructure, not least to contain the sewage kindly dumped in our rivers and on our beaches by our water company, has quite rightly soured everyone’s taste for new development. The purely commercially-driven approach to the building of Cranbrook hasn’t helped, either. Listening to the new Labour Secretary of State, Angela Rayner’s announcement of sweeping changes to national planning policy back in August, though, you could be forgiven for thinking that “infrastructure” wasn’t in her vocabulary – much like the previous Conservative government. Her proposed changes are heavy on housebuilding, but light on the things that make development work.

No move towards a genuinely infrastructure-led system. No new powers for your local council to hold developers to account on their promises. No sign of the revolution in local authority housebuilding needed to deliver the government’s 300,000 homes a year target – let alone the affordable homes for rent that we so desperately need.

It’s a bleak picture. That’s nothing new at East Devon, we have little choice but to take that on the chin – and try to do the best we can with the few tools we have.

One of the ways we can do that is to try to make new development large enough that we can require developers to provide shops, schools, and GP places alongside new homes. Another is for the council to take a more active role in directing development.

Water bosses face jail over sewage dumps in tough new laws

Today the government publishes new legislation

Is this enough?

Does it restore the chronic under funding of the regulator and consequent “hands off” attitude which is in danger of becoming institutionalised?

Does anyone really expect a water boss to be jailed? – Owl

Water bosses face up to two years in prison if they repeatedly obstruct investigations into the pollution of the UK’s rivers and seas, under tough new measures to crackdown on the sewage crisis.

Richard Vaughan inews.co.uk

Ministers will publish new legislation on Thursday that will hand regulators sweeping new powers to bring criminal charges against water executives if they are found to be deliberately obstructing and failing to cooperate with any investigation into a water company.

The proposals are contained in the new Water (Special Measures) Bill, which will also hand the Environment Agency (EA) and the Drinking Water Inspectorate the ability to ban the payment of bonuses to water executives if they fail to tackle sewage dumping.

Under the tougher new measures, water companies will face automatic fines, similar to how speeding tickets are issued, if newly required real time monitors pick up any illegal spills from emergency outlets.

The bill will also lower the burden of proof in civil cases to allow the EA to bring criminal charges against water bosses more easily, which would amount in fines.

Crucially, the proposed laws will also ensure that water companies will foot the bill for any costs of investigations if they are found guilty of any wrongdoing, which officials believe will free resources for the regulators.

The laws will also tweak arrangements if a water company goes bust and falls into what is called “special administration”, where the Government steps in until a new operator is found.

Changes under the bill will mean if the likes of Thames Water goes bust and is sold for a fraction of the Government’s costs, the Secretary of State will be able to enforce any shortfalls be made up through higher water bills.

The bill is the second step in a three-part plan from the new government to regain control over the sewage crisis. The first was announcing a reset in relations with the water industry, setting out how the new water price settlement would require ring-fenced spending on infrastructure from the sector.

The third will come later in the parliament with further legislation that will seek to reform the wider water sector beyond sewage pollution, including improving water resilience, speeding up infrastructure delivery, and boosting upgrades.

Environment Secretary Steve Reed said the measures were needed to “end the disgraceful behaviour of water companies and their bosses”.

Mr Reed told i: “There’s been little accountability for the illegal sewage dumping that’s killing our waterways. That all changes today.

“The threat of a two-year prison sentence will focus water bosses’ minds on cleaning up our rivers, lakes and seas.

“Regulators’ new powers to issue severe automatic fines for illegal sewage discharges will stop companies treating pollution as a cost of doing business. The regulator will also be able to claw back the cost of prosecution from offending company so they can pump the money back into further enforcement.”

The action comes after years of under-investment by the privately-run water firms combined with ageing water infrastructure, a growing population and more extreme weather that has led to the quality of England’s rivers, lakes and oceans plummeting in recent years.

Sewage spills have contributed to a situation in which no single river in England is considered to be in good overall health, and beauty spots including Windermere in the Lake District have been polluted. Agricultural pollution has also played a significant part in the damage to waterways.

Some water utilities are also creaking under high levels of debt or face criticism over dividends to shareholders and executive bonuses.

The situation has prompted i‘s Save Britain’s Rivers campaign, which before the election called on the Government to sign up to a manifesto of five pledges in order to help the country’s rivers recover from decades of pollution.

It urges ministers to overhaul Ofwat and provide more funding for the Environment Agency to allow it to do its job properly.

Some of Labour’s pledges to date align with i‘s manifesto, including plans to introduce tougher penalties and restrict bonuses. However, the Government is yet to meet all i‘s demands, including increased funding for the regulator and farmers.

Responding to the bill, Charles Watson, chair of River Action, said: “It is obviously a relief to finally see the true horrors of years of incessant pollution and the accompanying abject failure of our regulators to do anything about it being candidly acknowledged by our government of the day.”

But he added that the “few one-off actions” announced are not alone going to fix the underlying causes of water pollution.

“It is imperative that this commitment to supplement today’s small steps with much more fundamental action is now brought forward with real vigour and urgency,” he said.

New sewage laws

What has been announced?

A new bill has been published that will allow regulators, including the Environment Agency and the Drinking Water Inspectorate, to hold the chief executives of water companies criminally liable amounting to possible imprisonment for persistent failures.

What will amount to jail time?

Under the plans, water bosses will be held personally criminally liable if they are repeatedly found to be failing to cooperate and obstructing an investigation by the regulators.

How does the law operate currently?

The Government says since privatisation a “justice gap” has emerged when it comes to criminal liability. As it stands, if a water company executive fails to cooperate by providing data or materials as part of an investigation, the maximum that an executive could receive was a fine, with the maximum at around £300.

How common is this?

The Government believes there is widespread illegality, but due to the shortcomings in the existing laws, only three people have faced criminal prosecution since privatisation was introduced.

What else is in the legislation?

The bill will hand the regulators powers to ban the payment of any bonus to water bosses to ensure that water companies fit real time monitors on all sewage outlets, including emergency outlets, with automatic fines, similar to speeding tickets, issued if any illegal sewage dumps are recorded.

LibDem MP highlights ‘hollowed out’ Devon communities in maiden speech

“Developers build and build to support the immigration of wealthy retired people from other areas of the country. We have more than met our housing targets, but we are still in a desperate housing crisis….”

Maiden speech puts county’s problems in the spotlight

Guy Henderson – Local Democracy Reporter www.radioexe.co.uk

A Devon MP has used her maiden speech in the House of Commons to highlight what she claims are the county’s harsh inequalities.

Caroline Voaden, the new Liberal Democrat MP for South Devon, called for change in places like Salcombe, and told fellow MPs: “I would like us to think really hard about how we can help even out our society, so that no one is raising a disabled child in a mould-filled home within sight of a millionaire’s yacht in the harbour below.”

At the general election in July, Ms Voaden overturned a 14,000 Conservative majority to oust former MP Anthony Mangnall from the seat previously known as ‘Totnes’.

In her speech, she told parliamentarians how she came to live in rural Devon, and outlined some of its attractions and successes.

But, she added: “There is so much more to South Devon that does not make it onto the postcards or the chocolate boxes.

“We have Britain’s most expensive seaside town in Salcombe, where an average house costs £970,000, but not far away we have left-behind neighbourhoods where people struggle to make ends meet on low-paid seasonal work and live in poor-quality housing.

“This disparity of wealth can be hard to get your head around.

“We have communities that have been hollowed out by second homes to the extent that schools are closing, village shops have long gone and the last pubs are closing.

“Families are being evicted so that landlords can turn their homes into short-term holiday lets, and second homes registered as businesses are causing our council to lose out on millions of pounds a year of desperately needed resources. We must close this loophole.”

She said businesses are struggling to find staff because no one can afford to live nearby and there is no social housing.

Yet, she added: “Developers build and build to support the immigration of wealthy retired people from other areas of the country. We have more than met our housing targets, but we are still in a desperate housing crisis.

“The solution is not just build, build, build. It is about land prices, what we build and where, and who buys those homes.

“What we need is social housing, more community land trust schemes, innovation and ideas for breaking out of the developer-led disaster we are in.”

Clarity sought on Tipton St John school rebuild

Richard Foord MP has put in a written question to parliament to make sure the school building program is going ahead and that Tipton St John is still part of it. He believes Rachel Reeves’ spending assessment doesn’t extend to the DfE’s capital budget.

Bradley Gerrard, local democracy reporter www.radioexe.co.uk

Certainty over a proposed scheme to relocate a Devon school is being sought amid the government’s spending review.

Tipton St John Primary School was in the previous administration’s priority schools’ rebuilding programme, but with Labour now seeking to cut plug a national funding gap, the future of the scheme is up in the air.

The Department for Education (DfE) had agreed to fund the construction of the new school, with Devon County Council providing the land and paying for work such as road access.

Former East Devon Conservative MP Simon Jupp, who lost his seat the election, had campaigned on the issue, and earlier this year welcomed the-then education secretary Gillian Keegan to the school to urge that work begin quickly.

The DfE’s preferred location for a new school is two miles away at Thorne Farm, Ottery St Mary.

But now, the county council says it is trying to find out whether the government will honour its predecessor’s commitment.

“With the new government still identifying its priorities, we are not yet clear what its intention is with the priority schools rebuilding programme,” a council spokesperson said.

“We are, however, seeking clarity.”

Following boundary changes at the last election, Tipton St John is now in the Honiton and Sidmouth constituency, represented by Liberal Democrat Richard Foord who says he would prefer to see the school stay in the village rather than moved to neighbouring Ottery.

This is despite the school being in a flood-risk area and being under water on several occasions.

Shortly after his election win, he went to visit the school and its headteacher and governors.

“It is a school that absolutely does need to be rebuilt, but there is a very big question over where,” Mr Foord said.

“Personally, I’m of the view that it should be kept in the village if at all possible.”

Mr Foord said that as it stands, chancellor Rachel Reeves’ spending assessment doesn’t extend to the DfE’s capital budget – the pot of money it would use for large schemes such as rebuilding schools.

“Again though, we want some certainty so I have put in a written question to parliament to make sure the school building program is going ahead and that Tipton St John is still part of it.”

A Department for Education spokesperson said: “We remain committed to improving the condition of the school estate, and the rebuild of Tipton St John is a part of that.

“We continue to work with the school and local partners and look forward to progressing the project when a new suitable site has been secured.

“All future decisions remain subject to the spending review.”

Susan Davey visits Maer Lane. Apologises to Exmouth. What about the rest of East Devon?

Yesterday the following beaches: Budleigh, Sidmouth and Seaton were also polluted. What about them Susan?- Owl

We have all the workarounds in place and our absolute job is to protect the environment and the watercourses and make sure we’re doing it in such a way that we minimise impacts on the community, which I know is really tricky at the moment and I fully understand and I apologise for all the disruption that we are causing here.”

Speaking in a video message from the Maer Lane site, Susan Davey, as reported by DevonLive,  said: “I’ve come down to Exmouth again just to make sure that I can see the good progress that’s being made by all the teams and this really is a joint effort. We have many teams who are working around the clock to make sure that we’re passing through all the sewage right up to the treatment works whilst we are working on the fix for the main that obviously burst previously.

“The teams are working 24/7. They’re fully supported with what they need to do. Obviously this is an enormous undertaking that we are working through but the teams are on with it and doing a very good job.

“Looking round the works that are being done today it’s incredible, the scale of the undertaking that we are on with. Obviously we are working with all our partners to make sure we get this done in short order but it will take a number of weeks before we get to a position that we have replaced the main that we need to replace

“In the meantime, we have all the workarounds in place and our absolute job is to protect the environment and the watercourses and make sure we’re doing it in such a way that we minimise impacts on the community, which I know is really tricky at the moment and I fully understand and I apologise for all the disruption that we are causing here.

“But absolutely, our focus is on protecting the environment and making sure that we get this main recharged in the way that it needs to be and that we are minimising our impacts on the community.

“One of the things that I’m really keen to do is that we have a wider plan for Exmouth that’s in train and we will see a new works being developed, which we want to make sure is in and up and running and working by 2028.

“Now what we’re going to look at is how do we bring some of that work forward, how do we make sure that we are supporting the community and all the work that we’re doing here will feed into that new infrastructure we’ll be putting in place.”

Planning applications validated by EDDC for week beginning 19 August

Economic impact of sewage spills on Exmouth becomes national news

‘I’m an Exmouth business owner – I’ve lost thousands due to sewage outpours’

Businesses say they have lost thousands of pounds because of sewage outpours at a popular coastal holiday town in east Devon.

Kyriakos Petrakos, Alexa Phillips inews.co.uk

One business owner in Exmouth, who teaches watersports, said he had to repeatedly cancel classes and issue refunds last month following a “no swim” alert triggered by a burst sewage pipe.

The alert was lifted but i found that South West Water, which is responsible for wastewater services in the area, poured sewage into the sea at Exmouth again days later following downpours. Water companies are allowed to pump untreated sewage into the UK’s rivers and surrounding seas when too much rainfall threatens the capacity of their water tanks.

i also revealed earlier this year that 240 tankers a day drove through Exmouth carrying up to 18,000 litres of sewage to the Maer Road Sewage Pumping Station, just 200 metres from the beach, following a series of major pipe bursts.

Edward John Morgan, 52, said he and other business owners in the area have lost money because of repeated sewage spills last month.

Mr Morgan, who runs watersports business Red Rock, said the impact of sewage spills this August was “the worst I’ve ever known”, saying it was “very disappointing” that people were unable to go swimming. August is usually his busiest month of the year.

“We’ve had large school groups waiting on the beach to go afloat, and then had to do something else with them because we couldn’t take them on the water,” he told i. “That’s significant, because one of our big selling points is being on the water for our camps.

“We’ve also had cancellations. People are on holiday and they can’t come back – we have to refund them if they can’t take them out that day.”

He worries others have not visited the area as a result of the spills.

Sewage was discharged into the sea at Exmouth after a burst pipe, according to Surfers Against Sewage’s Safer Seas & Rivers Service

“We want people to holiday in England,” he said. “We’ve got bad weather half the time, and now we’ve got that as well. It’s too much. It’s got to stop.”

He said the sewage spills have cost him thousands of pounds in cancellations.

It is not only watersports businesses like his that have been affected, but also local restaurants and pubs that rely on visitors to boost their income, he said.

Mr Morgan, who lives in the area, said water firms were “taking the p*** – literally”, adding that the town is “so fed up with it”.

‘This has put my wife off of going to Exmouth’

Andrew Halden, 68, has been going on holiday in Exmouth for each of the past 10 years – but their experience this year means he and his family may not be coming back.

“One of the main features of the holiday is the beach and sea swimming,” he told i.

“Last year, we lost a day or so due to storms but this year the sewer pipe break meant we couldn’t go on the beach or in the sea at all.

“Even on those days when South West Water said you could go in we were very wary of trusting this advice. The last thing we wanted on our holiday was to have a family member falling ill.

“We instead chose to play it safe and head to a beach that was consistently good.”

He said they usually do not drive outside the area, but this year they travelled 40 minutes to find a beach they “could trust” – in Dawlish Warren. He and his family, which includes his 11-year-old granddaughter, went to Topsham Lido on another day.

“We then weren’t spending money in Exmouth which must have impacted local businesses,” he said.

“As a family we felt that we hadn’t spent much leisure time at all in Exmouth and consequentially not spent our money with many of the local businesses.

“Having now had two years of uncertainty with regard to the beach we are now seriously looking at alternative locations for our family break in 2025. We will most likely be moving away from the South West altogether based on the way South West Water operate.”

He said sewage outflows have tarnished the area’s reputation as a “safe and happy holiday destination”.

“Last year we had a small issue with the sewage alerts but this year’s fiasco has definitely put my wife off going to Exmouth again,” he said.

“We as a family looked at our spending this year and we all found we had spent so much less in Exmouth this year.”

Local resident Tracey Bosworth, 58, told i she has been “so worried about the impact the sewage dumps have been having on the town, tourism and the businesses”.

“I’ve noticed a huge reduction in the amount of people visiting the beaches at Exmouth this year,” she said.

“Exmouth is my most favourite place on Earth and this is heartbreaking.

“We’ve all had enough of the contempt for our environment, the residents and businesses. Also, the lack of care by South West Water for people’s health, particularly the children who love being in the sea.

“They are our future and so this could have a detrimental effect for generations.

“Exmouth has such a bad reputation now regarding sewage and it’s completely the fault of South West Water.”

i previously revealed that another resident, Jo Bateman, is taking South West Water to court, claiming that sewage spills in Exmouth have prevented her from cold water swimming, which improves her physical and mental well-being.

A spokesperson for South West Water said: “We are doing everything possible to protect the environment while we complete a permanent fix to the burst pipe in Exmouth.

“Our teams continue to work around the clock. We fully understand the disruption this is causing and we are sorry for that.

“We are investing around £38m in the Exmouth area up to 2030. This includes upgrading our pumping stations and treatment works to significantly reduce the number of spills and further protect the environment.”

A new week, a new pollution alert

Following heavy rain last night, the Environment Agency detected a sewage discharge at Exmouth starting at 01:56 2 September.

Surfers against Sewage map shows alerts at Exmouth, Budleigh, Sidmouth, Beer and Seaton

Does this really help to find a solution to the sewage crisis?

“The best way to move forward is to move as one.” – David Reed MP

Surely we look to our MP to take the lead. – Owl

David Reed MP

This weekend’s ‘Red Flag’ sewage warning on Exmouth beach has become too common of a sight. The negative effect on local wellbeing, business and tourism has been palpable, and I have deep concerns that our area is starting to gain a national reputation for all of the wrong reasons.

Since being elected last month, I have kept to my word and prioritised finding the fastest but most long-term solution to sorting out the sewage situation we find ourselves in.

Over the last month I have met with South West Water (SWW), the Environment Agency and a range of local businesses and landowners to establish consensus on how best to move in the right direction.

SWW have told me that they are willing to quickly bring structural engineering funds forward to start upgrading and enhancing their network across Exmouth and Budleigh Salterton.

Although this is the right move by SWW, there needs to be a visible plan so that all local people can hold SWW to account on delivery, as well as seeing improvement.

I have let SWW know that once their investigation across the wider local network is complete (circa 3 weeks), they need to communicate their new delivery plan.

To that end, I will be getting in touch with all local councillors from affected areas (Town, District and County) to arrange an in person briefing session with SWW. There will also be an opportunity for representatives of local business and activist groups etc. to attend a briefing session.

The best way to move forward is to move as one. By collectively working together at the local level, we can get the local results we need.

I will also be working in Parliament to ensure that national legislation is effective, and that regulators have the teeth needed to bite down on underperforming water companies.

#ExmouthandExeterEast

Sewage flowing, helmets on, at ease everyone!

Breaking: 6pm Friday 30 August Exmouth beach pollution alert EDDC notice from EA. Blue Flag lowered and Red Flags raised

This Heath Robinson affair of six pumps pumping into a tank with two tractors pumping it out and up to Maer Lane. This is what has overflowed and closed Exmouth beach for the third time in August.

This was supposed to replace a major pumping station for four weeks. Hand me another sticking plaster please.

This is SWWs solution to what should have been a replacement rising main.

It’ll cost Exmouth £m’s but SWW don’t care about that. Geoff Crawford ESCAPE

New Homes Accelerator programme to unblock thousands of new homes

Angela Rayner, who builds the sewage treatment works we will need for more homes and when will they build them? Sometime or never?- Owl

Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government www.gov.uk

  • A new expert group will speed up delivery of stalled housing sites.
  • Early analysis estimates there are 200 large sites across England which could delivery up to 300,000 new homes.
  • Call for sites launched inviting developers and councils to share details of large-scale housing projects.
  • Supports plans to boost economic growth and deliver 1.5 million homes.

Hundreds of thousands of new homes stuck in the planning system or partially built will be accelerated to help end the housing crisis and drive growth, thanks to the New Homes Accelerator launched by the Deputy Prime Minister today.   

An experienced team from the Ministry of Housing and Homes England will work across government and with local councils to accelerate the buildout of housing schemes delayed by planning and red tape to drive economic growth across every part of the country.

They will hit the ground running by bringing together key players, including government agencies, local planning departments and housebuilders, who will work to resolve specific local issues and deploy planning experts on the ground to work through blockages at each site identified. This includes looking at barriers to affordable housing delivery where relevant.  

Interventions could see the New Homes Accelerator provide resources to support local planning capacity where there are barriers and work across the board to make sure planning decisions are made in a timely fashion.    

Government analysis suggests 200 large sites have outline or detailed plans ready to go but are yet to begin construction, and the team is already getting started on some of those that would benefit from early interventions. The Accelerator will focus on lending a helping hand to frustrated housebuilders and local communities who want to play their part to get Britain building again, in turn driving local and economic growth.  

Councillors call for u-turn on winter payment axe

Devon County Council is set to launch a concerted campaign to persuade the Government to reverse the axing of winter fuel payments to needy pensioners.

Radio Exe News www.radioexe.co.uk

Conservative leader James McInnes and Liberal Democrat councillor Alan Connett have signed a motion to next week’s county council meeting calling on the Government to re-think.

The Government made the announcement last month that only the most needy elderly people on  Pension Credit and other benefits would continue to receive the £300 annual payment to help with their heating bills.

Even those whose only income is a basic State pension won’t qualify.

In the Notice of Motion, Mr Connett says: “In the Devon County Council area, the number of pensioners affected by the change in eligibility criteria is 180,579.

“That means around nine in 10 pensioners currently eligible for winter fuel payments will no longer be able to claim the payment from this winter onwards.

“Council believes that the Labour Government has set the threshold at which pensioners do not qualify for winter fuel payments far too low. 

“Only those receiving a pension of less than £218.15 a week or £332.95 a week for couples are eligible for pension credits. This is significantly lower than the living wage rate.”

“Council further notes that the Energy Price Cap is due to rise by 10 per cent in October which, combined by the removal of winter fuel payments, will push thousands of local pensioners into fuel poverty.”

Mr McInnes said: “It hasn’t taken this Labour Government long to show their true colours.

“The Government claims they will save £1.4 billion by this measure but at the same time has agreed above inflation pay increases for many.

“With their new salaries, many of them will be paying more in tax than our pensioners have to live on.

“It’s estimated these pay increases will cost the country £10 billion, dwarfing the cash that will be saved from hitting some of the most vulnerable members of our community.

“It may well be that some better-off pensioners do not need this money but by making the cap so low I am concerned the Labour Government is effectively forcing some of our most vulnerable residents to choose between heating and eating this winter.

“Historically in Devon many buildings are older and hard to heat – the Government needs to realise that Devon’s residents don’t live in big cities but in rural areas.

“Older people tend to spend more time at home and so need to keep the heating on for longer.

“They’re also more likely to have medical conditions which require them to keep warm.

“Research has shown that rural areas in Devon are already in the most deprived 20 per cent nationally for housing quality and the availability of central heating.

“With the proposed Energy Price Cap, the Government is creating a perfect storm for greater cost-of-living impacts on Devon’s residents.

“As a county council we will do what we can to mitigate the effects of this heartless policy but I believe the Government should use their first Budget next month to announce they are withdrawing this and thinking again.”

Time to celebrate! A decade since the River Otter was rewilded by beavers; and Claire Wright campaigned tirelessly to keep them

In reality it is likely to be longer than this “official” estimate but they certainly would have been “culled” without Claire’s tireless campaigning and liaising with DEFRA and Devon Wildlife Trust.

Even forcing Hugo Swire MP to take up their cause. – Owl

Beavers are thriving in Devon a decade on from rogue rewilding

Tom Whipple www.thetimes.com 

The beavers keep us waiting. By the side of a Devon river, over the course of an hour the fish jump, a kingfisher dives and an egret flaps. But for the two dozen people gathered at dusk — beaver o’clock — there is nothing.

Then it appears. There is a flash of brown under the water and a clatter of cameras above. It is furry, flappy and surprisingly graceful. The beaver is back.

Four hundred years ago Britain’s last beaver was killed — probably for its pelt. Today, though, beaver hats are out of fashion and rewilding is in.

Conservationists are calling for them to return across the UK, just as they already have, partly by accident, here. “We know from a huge body of research that these animals bring some quite significant and exciting changes to our wetland river environments,” says Matt Holden, from Devon Wildlife Trust.

Yet despite promises, despite Boris Johnson’s 2021 pledge to “build back beaver”, in England and Wales plans to reintroduce beavers have stalled. “Where’s the action?” says Holden.

To see why more beavers are a good thing, he said, you only have to look at what has happened in Devon.

No one knows how, but between ten and 15 years ago, the first wild beavers arrived here. At first, all there were were rumours. Like the nearby Beast of Bodmin Moor, the beavers were spotted in Devon in fleeting glances, glimpsed in implausible sightings — and dismissed as otters.

However, you can only ignore nibbled branches, grazed river banks and unexplained dams for so long. Soon, it was clear that beavers really had returned. How did they get here? An escape from a private enclosure? An epic transoceanic beaver exploration from mainland Europe?

Or was it rogue rewilding? Many suspect that conservationists, tired of the bureaucratic impediments to returning ancient species, frustrated by seeing reintroductions in Scotland, decided to circumvent regulations by smuggling in a pair of beavers.

If so, the strategy worked. Once there were beavery signs on the ground (and, in their lodges, under the ground), official beavers followed. Amid strong local support, beavers were taken from Europe, tagged and introduced to new habitats in Devon.

Over the course of a full beaver lifespan they have now been followed, photographed and studied and — in official academic reports — declared to be on balance a good thing. “The overwhelming weight of scientific evidence on the impacts of beaver reintroduction is positive,” Professor Richard Brazier, from the University of Essex said.

Also, we like them. Once, humans were the enemy of beavers. It wasn’t just their fur that we found valuable, it was their scent glands too — which were prized for their vanilla smell. Although, at the time they were confused for another part of the body. Medieval woodcuts show beavers being chased by hunters and gnawing off their own testicles to present to their pursuers, to save their lives.

As we reach the tenth anniversary of Defra-approved Devonian beavers, there is considerably less interest in their testicles and considerably more in their cute noses. There are beaver cafes, beaver merchandise, a healthy population of baby beavers and — on once straight and boring streams — ever-shifting beaver dams. And, each evening, there are people who come to spot them.

As 8.30pm approaches on the river — confusingly, it’s the River Otter — the beavers become bolder. One puts an ear adorned with a green tag above the water line and flops onto the bank. He nibbles at reeds. He masticates noisily. He gets photographed a lot.

Conservation researchers don’t name their animals. That kind of sentimentality is discouraged, in what is a serious science. So Holden only occasionally calls him Gordon the Beaver, before hurriedly correcting himself.

However charismatic Gordon is, though, the real economic case for his fellow beavers — if something furry and wet must be reduced to a spreadsheet entry — comes in what they do to the environment.

Twenty minutes’ drive away, cutting through the maize monocultures of a commercial farm, there is a little strip of woodland, too damp and soggy to be used. Here, there are also beavers. Holden stands on a dam: messy, bulky, leaky — and just occasionally patched up with stolen and nibbled maize.

When you manage waterways for flood protection, you build dams like this. It is hard work, said Holden. First you cut access, clearing trees for the HGVs. Then you move earth, bring in materials, and scar the soil. Afterwards, you have to maintain it.

Or, he said: “You can bring in a beaver … and they’ll go for it.”

The stream weaves and flows between pools. It makes wetlands and mudlands. It deposits sediment and runs clear. Most of all it takes its time. In storms four years ago, villages on an adjoining stream experienced once-in-50-year floods. Directly downstream from the beavers East Budleigh, the village where Walter Raleigh was born long after the loss of Devon’s last beaver, survived undampened.

Back on the River Otter, the light is fading. Gordon emerged from the underwater entrance to his lodge. This time, he is not alone. There is another beaver, younger than him. This time, they leave with purpose — with an intent to beaver away somewhere. But where that will be, the beaver watchers don’t know. Paddling together, they disappear into the Devon night.

New development proposals near your town – join the debate

In preparation for East Devon District Council’s new Local Plan, proposals for residential and employment development site allocations across East Devon will be considered at a series of public meetings throughout September.

Venue: Council Chamber, Blackdown House, Honiton

eastdevon.gov.uk

East Devon District Council’s (EDDC) Strategic Planning Committee will consider every potential development site allocation with dedicated time for residents, and town and parish councils, to make their views heard. EDDC has previously consulted on all sites under consideration either at the end of 2022 into early 2023 or in spring of this year and views expressed through these consultations are being considered as part of this process.

Each meeting will focus on certain areas:

  • 3 September: Exmouth, Lympstone, Woodbury, Exton (morning); Budleigh Salterton, East Budleigh, Otterton (afternoon)
  • 11 September: Sidmouth, Newton Poppleford (morning); Seaton, Colyton, Beer, Branscombe, Uplyme (afternoon)
  • 20 September: Honiton (inc. edge-of-town sites in Gittisham), Dunkeswell, Upottery (morning); Axminster, Hawkchurch, Musbury, Kilmington (afternoon)
  • 23 September: Strategic West End Sites, Broadclyst, Clyst St Mary, West Clyst, Whimple (morning); Ottery St Mary, Tipton St John, West Hill, Payhembury, Plymtree, Broadhembury (afternoon)

Details of how to participate in these meetings will be available on EDDC’s website. Meetings will also be streamed online via EDDC’s YouTube channel.

Agenda with easy access to the individual site selection reports can be found here

Cllr Todd Olive, EDDC Portfolio Holder for Strategic Planning, said:

“After three public consultations and years of technical work, we are now approaching the stage where we must make decisions about what sites should be developed under the new Local Plan.

“Deciding where to build in our part of the world is one of the hardest decisions we have to make. In many cases, as residents ourselves, we share your concerns, and your frustrations, about the process we are going through.

“However, we have little choice but to push on. If we don’t, the government have made clear that they will not hesitate to step in and make a Local Plan for us – with 28% higher housing numbers. To avoid this, we not only need to make tough decisions – we need to make them quickly. If we don’t publish a final draft plan in the next few months then we will have to restart the Local Plan process under the new, higher housing targets.

“Going forwards, we will be making a clear case to government about the constraints of our area and our desperate need for more funding for infrastructure. We are also working with South West Water to understand the issues with existing sewage infrastructure, and to make sure  that improvements align with the increase in demand from new homes and come forwards before new development is occupied.

“The new Local Plan has a target of 946 new homes per year. Through this new Plan, we will also be striving to provide more affordable homes for our residents, protect green spaces and biodiversity, and drive decarbonisation and job creation.”

Watch Cllr Todd Olive’s video message.

Mysterious tank in Budleigh has been removed

The Budleigh correspondent who sent in the images of this mysterious tank now reports that it was removed sometime last week. Since it has gone, it seems it was not part of the proposed pump upgrade mentioned by Susan Davy in her letter to Cllr Henry Riddell. 

Owl’s correspondent is pretty sure that it is a separation tank that might be used to separate debris from cleaning water. So perhaps it was intended to be part of the Lime Kiln sewage pumping station cleaning operation. This was scheduled to require night closures of the car park, but is now reported to have been postponed because of “ongoing operations” in Exmouth.

UK at risk of missing legally binding target to protect biodiversity – report

The UK is at risk of missing its legally binding target to protect biodiversity and nature, a report has warned.

Britain pledged to protect and conserve at least 30% of the country’s land and sea by 2030 – an international target known as 30×30 that was agreed at the United Nations Biodiversity Conference (COP15) in Montreal in December 2022.

Rebecca Speare-Cole www.independent.co.uk 

However, the government risks missing the target unless it acts urgently to halt and reverse the unprecedented environmental crisis in the UK, according to a report released by the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR) on Tuesday.

The UK ranks among the bottom 10% of countries globally for biodiversity, with only 53% of its biodiversity remaining and 41% of UK species seeing significant population declines since 1970, it said.

Meanwhile, there is fewer than than six years left to meet the UN but less than 3% of England’s land and 8% of its seas are effectively protected, the paper adds.

The think tank said the new Labour Government has the opportunity to embed nature recovery into a bold agenda for national renewal as it outlined a blueprint for ministers to tackle the issue.

This plan involves measures like tackling sewage polluters by developing legally binding targets and strengthening powers for the Environment Agency to enforce sanctions.

Other recommendations include delivering a fair transition for farmers, through additional funding for environmentally friendly farming in England and legislating for a right to roam, expanding rights of responsible access to the English countryside.

Joseph Evans, a researcher at IPPR, said: “Britain’s natural landscapes are a source of pride for many of us, but the UK’s nature is in a dire state: biodiversity is failing, species are declining and many people simply don’t have reasonable access to green spaces.

“The new government has an opportunity to reverse nature’s decline and drive progressive change around the country. Restoring nature must be a cornerstone of the government’s national renewal strategy.”

A Defra spokesperson said: “Britain’s nature is in crisis, which is why we have wasted no time in announcing a rapid review of the Environmental Improvement Plan to make sure it is fit for purpose to deliver legally binding targets and halt the decline in species by 2030. This government will also improve access to nature for all by creating nine new National River Walks and three new National Forests.

“We have taken immediate steps to put water companies under tough special measures and turn the tide on the unacceptable pollution of our waterways, while introducing a new deal for farmers to boost food security and restore nature.”