Auditors KPMG (EDDC new external auditor) resigns as FIFA auditor

KPMG recently replaced Grant Thornton as external auditor to East Devon District Council.

“Fifa has welcomed the decision by its financial auditor KPMG to resign. The break in a decade-long relationship was announced Monday, months after KPMG said it would review its work with football’s scandal-hit world governing body.

In a statement, Fifa said it “welcomes this change as it gives the organisation the opportunity to work with a new audit firm.” It also noted “serious allegations involving financial transactions outlined by the Swiss and US authorities” who are investigating corruption implicating top football officials worldwide.

In a wide-ranging reform of its management structure, Fifa is looking to appoint an auditor plus finance and compliance officers. Fifa fired its finance director Markus Kattner last month after 13 years’ service over irregular bonus payments, worth millions of dollars.”

http://gu.com/p/4yx7f

Another devolution difficulty part 2

See also post directly below this one:

“The [Parliamentary] Committee also said councils need reassurances that they will not be required to take on new responsibilities that are or will become unaffordable. The report lists principles by which decisions on new responsibilities should be based, such as giving local government genuine discretion over how services are provided.

The Committee also calls for:

a review into whether Local Enterprise Partnerships should play such a key role in deciding whether to raise the infrastructure premium, following concerns that some are not representative of all business

consideration of whether, by making the infrastructure premium available only to those areas with a directly-elected mayor, it is placing areas without such a post at a disadvantage, in conflict with the aims of the new scheme

Cart … horses ..stable doors …

If Persimmon tells you they can’t afford affordable housing …

… this is why:

A leading City investor has called on housebuilder Persimmon to cut back an executive pay plan that could see the management share £600m over the next five years.

The scheme is one of the largest ever at a FTSE 100 company outside banking.

The biggest beneficiary will be chief executive Jeff Fairburn, who could earn more than £100m.

Mike Fox, from Royal London Asset Management, said the payments were too high “in all circumstances”.
He called on the board to show restraint in the light of the housing crisis and government support for the housebuilding industry.

When the scheme was put in place, the housing market had begun to recover from the 2008 recession. About 150 managers were given the opportunity to earn shares worth up to 10% of the company’s total value, provided they hit tough targets on returning money to investors.

The company recently said it was running well ahead of those targets, and analysts say it is likely the scheme will pay out in full. Persimmon shares have more than tripled in value since the incentive plan was put in place, rising from £6.20 to about £20.

Disclosure of the size of the payments is likely to stoke the debate over executive compensation.

There has been a string of investor rebellions against pay deals this year, and in April a majority of shareholders voted against a £14m package for BP boss Bob Dudley.

Shareholders cannot veto amounts paid, but do have the final say on companies’ pay policies. …

… The company has defended the payouts, saying that since the scheme was put in place. Persimmon has increased the number of new homes it builds by half and invested more than £2bn in new land. Over the same period it has handed back £1bn to shareholders.

“This is a long-term plan that runs for almost a decade which is designed to drive outperformance through the housing cycle and to incentivise the management to deliver the capital return, grow the business and increase the share price,” the company said.”

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-36501536

North Somerset council overwhelmingly rejects devolution deal

“One of Bristol’s neighbouring councils has given a resounding thumbs-down to a devolution deal which could see £1 billion of Government funding pumped into the Bristol region.

At an extraordinary meeting held tonight, North Somerset councillors voted overwhelmingly against the devolution deal which would see the four local authorities – Bristol, South Gloucestershire, North Somerset and Bath and North East Somerset, come together as a combined authority under an elected ‘Metro Mayor.’

North Somerset leaders had previously said they were against the deal, arguing the new money would do nothing for the area.

They fear Government funding allocated to the region as part of the devolution deal would be sucked away by Bristol, leaving the area they represent, which includes Portishead, Clevedon and Weston-super-Mare, as the poor relation.

Council leader Nigel Ashton said a combined authority and elected mayor was ‘unwanted’ and ‘unnecessary.’

Mr Ashton said: “North Somerset, South Gloucestershire and Bath & North Somerset are some of the best performing councils in the country.

“I wonder why anyone would want to get rid of them?

“We have an excellent relationship with our councils and this will continue.

“Local residents are overwhelmingly against a centralised mayor. Eighty five per cent of responses from residents and town and parish councils were against the devolution proposal.

“People do not want another level of government which could lead to North Somerset becoming a poor relation to Bristol.

“It didn’t work when it was Avon, Now it would be worse

” I love Bristol but it has different priorities to North Somerset.

“If the deal goes through there are no guarantees that North Somerset will get any significant money.

“All future power and resources will be devolved to an elected mayor.”

Councillors said that North Somerset already had excellent relationships with other councils and local businesses.

Many said that if the current arrangements were not broken, why fix them.

http://www.bristolpost.co.uk/North-Somerset-Council-rejects-devolution-deal/story-29372319-detail/story.html

If Plymouth has to say how much it sold its former HQ for, why is EDDC keeping us in the dark?

“The Civic Centre in Plymouth was sold to developers Urban Splash for £1, it has emerged.

Plymouth City Council confirmed that it received payment of £1 for the sale of the 14-storey local authority headquarters in the city centre. …

… The city council provided the £1 figure to David Every after a Freedom of Information inquiry. The council initially withheld the information, but finally reversed that decision this week.”

http://www.plymouthherald.co.uk/Plymouth-s-Civic-Centre-sold-1/story-29385867-detail/story.html

The “No Party Party”

Perhaps an unfortunate choice of name but still supporting independents:

Independence in Democracy Interview: Danny Bamping

The movement is DEFINITELY growing – REAL localism in action!

Two more Independent groups in the south-west

Plymouth Independents:

A group of independently minded people who have their own individual ideas, attitudes
and personalities.

“The object of the Party is to have a central point for the “Lone Voices” who regularly stand in local elections to gather, get advice and plan strategies for PLYMOUTH.

We want ORDINARY people to join us and get involved with local Democracy, we are not being told what to do by some remote CENTRAL OFFICE, our Central Office is the City and its residents.

Not all of us will agree, not all of us will even get on! But, and it’s a big but, we will ALL work for the City.”

http://www.pisw.uk/

and

North Somerset First Independents

We believe that the current administration within North Somerset Council is not democratic or transparent due to its majority stronghold. We want to break down this stronghold to make it a fairer and more balanced democratic council. We aim to reinvigorate local politics and believe localism is the key to this. But above all we want to renew your trust within local politics.”

http://www.northsomersetfirstindependents.org.uk/FAQs

Hugo Swire – you don’t have to be smart to be a minister, just in a safe seat

Interesting how many old-Etonians were parachuted into safe seats, including our own Hugo Swire. But it isn’t looking quite so safe at the moment. What on EARTH would Swire DO if he was just a constituency MP (or possibly not an MP at all). No wonder he rants at Independents – more of a threat now than ever before!

“Voters elect their members of parliament (MPs) in general elections, but a large majority of MPs have very little to do with the day-to-day governing of the country. It is rather the ministers in government, as selected by the victorious party leaders, who do. Hence there is an obvious link between the general elections and government formation with regard to who selects ministers.

In a recent study with Elad Klein, we show that there is another—albeit a less obvious—connection in terms of who gets selected as ministers; MPs in electorally safe seats are more likely to become ministers.

This is based on an analysis whether the constituency results from the elections to the House of Commons over the period 1992–2015 influenced the likelihood of MPs being selected as ministers in the United Kingdom (UK).

The House of Commons provides the perfect case to assess the electoral connection of ministerial selection due to the single-member districts, large government size, and the relatively decentralised candidate selection process in the UK.

Electoral safety affects the ministerial selection because elections are a constraint over the preferences of MPs and their parties. MPs need to stay in the parliament by being re-elected to be able to pursue other goals, including attaining promotion to government ranks. On the other hand, party leaders need to maximise the number of their MPs in order to stay in the government to achieve their policy ideals.

Electoral constraints differ with the marginality of seats for each MP in Westminster systems. In single-member districts, it is comparatively clear to members and to their leaders how electorally safe their parliamentary seats are.

As the electoral marginality of a seat increases, or in other words as the number of votes separating success from failure to secure a seat decreases, re-election becomes the dominant motivation.

Our results show that there is indeed a positive relationship between MPs electoral safety and their probability of securing a ministerial office. …

… For an MP with 5% electoral safety, which is often considered as marginal, the probability of becoming a minister is one in 10. In contrast, a 35% majority more than doubles this probability for MPs.

http://www.democraticaudit.com/?p=22300

Rotten apples in Parliament: more than you could ever imagine

“… For months, I’ve been investigating MPs’ money and business affairs for my book Parliament Ltd. But of all I’ve seen, one thing struck me the most: the level of transparency in Westminster is utterly pathetic.

There will always be some rotten apples, of course. No matter how honest and hardworking most politicians may be, some will always fall short. But if Westminster were more transparent, at least it would be easier to keep track of the finances. The truth is, however, that authorities actively help MPs to keep things under wraps.

How many of our representatives stand to gain directly from the decisions they push through? How many could profit from NHS privatisation, housing policies or even military action? We have no idea.

With the help of business intelligence firm DueDil, though, I began building a database of all the UK companies that had MPs and peers on their board of directors.

It was a mammoth task – and never done before – but the results were staggering. We identified about 2,800 active directorships, linked to almost 2,500 companies. Together, these firms employ at least 1.2 million people – equivalent to one in 20 of the UK’s full-time workforce. And they bring in more than £220bn of revenue annually. …

… This doesn’t necessarily mean MPs have broken any rules – although some have. But that’s exactly the point. The system itself fails to enforce transparency in politics. That’s why David Cameron can legitimately claim he didn’t break any rules when he failed to declare his stake in his father’s offshore Panama fund. The system allowed him to dodge transparency. Indeed, often the rules actually force MPs to hide information. One line says: “Members should not specify the value of the shares, or the percentage of shares in a company that are owned.”

The register of interests contains some of the most crucial information to our democracy. It doesn’t stop corruption in itself – but it does give a clue about whether MPs are speaking on behalf of voters or a private company they work for. Yet this vital document is scrutinised by no one. MPs’ declarations are only ever investigated if other people make an official complaint about someone. The whole thing is based on trust. And the result is that tons of stuff gets missed off – whether intentionally or not. …

… Because the system fails on transparency, it’s easy to see how financial controversies can brew undetected; not noticed until it’s too late. It’s a similar story with expenses. After the 2009 scandal we were promised a complete reform, yet the stories keep coming. For instance, one set of documents I found reveals how a peer claimed nearly £9,000 for a business-class return flight from New York, just to make a four-minute speech in parliament. Why had this not been discovered before? Because the files were buried in an archive, only retrievable through protracted freedom of information requests. What’s more, many of the worst abuses of the 2009 scandal would still be completely untraceable under the current system because key details are often redacted by the authorities.

We will never cut out financial controversies altogether – whether it’s business links, expenses or election spending. But if we’re ever going to clean up politics at all, transparency must be the first step.”

http://gu.com/p/4kgcj

Swire – many, many feathers ruffled!

Oh dear, Hugo really does have his tighty-whities in a twist with this (very long, very pompous, very verbose) rant on his website about independents (i.e. what he REALLY means is how much he is rattled by Claire Wright).

It’s just too rambling, too illogical and too vituperative to quote, but read it if you must here:

http://www.hugoswire.org.uk/news/blog-how-independent-are-independents

Poor old Hugo, times are changing and he just can’t keep up with it.

Hugo: an Independent has one BIG, BIG, BIG advantage over you – he or she can actually SPEAK out for East Devon in Parliament and elsewhere, whereas you refuse to do so, citing you ministerial foreign office post as an excuse ( not a reason, an excuse).

It will be very interesting to see, if Brexit wins, just what you will then do.

Oh, and an independent is likely to actually LIVE in the constituency, unlike you!

Rome favouring Independent for Mayor

“Italy’s anti-establishment Five Star Movement (5SM) took a large lead in the first round of voting for the mayor of Rome, according to exit polls published on Sunday, in a possible blow to prime minister Matteo Renzi.

Some 13 million people, or a quarter of the adult population, were eligible to vote for mayors in around 1,300 towns and cities, with attention focused firmly on a handful of major centres, including the capital.

Victory in Rome would be a huge breakthrough for anti-establishment 5SM, which was founded in 2009 by comedian Beppe Grillo and has grown to be Italy’s second largest party.

A victory by the populist party in the capital’s mayoral election is considered to be a key marker of whether the 5SM could eventually challenge Mr Renzi for leadership of the whole country.”

http://nr.news-republic.com/Web/ArticleWeb.aspx?regionid=4&articleid=65928995

Exmouth Splash developer facing problems in Swindon

“THE COMPANY behind the North Star multi-million pound development has moved to allay fears about its accounts.

Moirai Capital has a lease for the Oasis and the surrounding land with plans to convert the site onto one of the country’s leading leisure destinations.

However, the organisation missed an April deadline to file its accounts and has been contacted by Company House over the issue.

Should Moirai fail to respond to the letter, winding up procedures could be started later on in the summer.

But the company’s directors say the issue is being dealt with and the missed deadline was due to circumstances outside of their control.

Bobby Rach, of Moirai, said: “This is something which will be sorted within a few weeks. We are aware of everything and the letter is perfectly normal business procedure.

“We are a fully functioning business so there is no chance of the company being wound up.”

Moirai first took control of the lease in 2012, with the promise of refurbishing the Oasis and transforming the surrounding land.

The new leisure destination will have an indoor ski-slope, an arena, sport-related shops and a hotel as well as restaurants and a cinema.

An outline application was submitted last year and while there has been frustration at the length of time it is taking, Bobby says progress is being made.

He said: “When this is completed it is going to be a draw for the entire region. Getting these things right does take time but we should be able to reveal who has been signed up in the coming weeks.

“A lot of negotiation takes place as we have got everything right but when we have the details that should push the planning application forward.

“It could be that we are on site by next year. When we reveal everything this is something the people of Swindon will be able to get really excited about.”

The two areas which have held the application up is the signing up of partners to run the various parts of the development and the traffic management plan.

Highways England had initially said more work needed to be done to examine the impact the development would have on the town’s roads, most notably junctions 16 and 15 of the M4.

This has now been dealt with and the organisation have said the planning application can be accepted with conditions.”

http://www.swindonadvertiser.co.uk/news/14489657.Fears_over_North_Star_development_company_accounts__without_foundation_/

Sidford: controversy gets an airing on BBC Radio Devon

Sidford Employment site result of “heroic calculation” on a “speculative basis” , SOS Chair tells Radio Devon

BBC’s Simon Bates’ interview with Richard Thurlow last Friday (3rd June), can be heard on the Radio Devon website. http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p03vh95v

Go to Simon Bates o3/o6/2016, from 00.45-01.02, and 49.50 to 57.14.

The interview was followed up by a phone-in from Independent East Devon Alliance (IEDA) Cllr Marianne Rixson, EDDC Ward Member for Sidmouth-Sidford since May 2015. You can listen to what she said, from 01.41.05 to 01.47.25 in the recording.

Simon Bates suggests he wants to pursue the Sidford business park planning application issues, on his breakfast show later on.

And don’t forget there are just a few days’ left to comment to EDDC DEADLINE is 8th June:

See https://saveoursidmouth.com/2016/05/26/urgent-sidford-business-park-planning-application-now-in-the-more-people-who-write-in-the-better-deadline-for-comments-weds-8th-june/

Sidford Employment site result of “heroic calculation” on a “speculative basis” , SOS Chair tells Radio Devon

Fabian Society on devolution

A notable feature of the 2015 general election campaign was the degree of apparent unanimity across all parties that Britain has an overcentralized governmental structure, which is ripe for devolution.

In the wake of the Scottish independence referendum, and the desperate resort to ‘devo -max’ to save the day for Better Together, this was hardly a surprise.

But the superficial unanimity of the narrative concealed a gaping void in the intellectual underpinnings of what a devolved governmental structure might look like. From both the Tory and Labour camps, the message was a fuzzy ‘make it up for yourselves and we’ll discuss it with you’ – in effect, ducking any intellectual engagement with the tricky issue of taking fiscal and social policy responsibility out of the hands of Whitehall and Westminster and into the hands of local communities and their elected representatives.

That political and intellectual evasiveness continues to dominate both Labour and Tory thinking.

The government’s policy since the election has justifiably been described as incoherent and inconsistent by the Local Government Select Committee, and Labour-led local authorities have been ploughing their own local furrows without any coherent party policy to refer to.

In practice, the government’s approach has been a travesty of genuine devolution. Their policy is best described as an incremental extension of the City Deal/Local Growth Fund policies inherited from the Coalition period. Local authorities are encouraged to come together to propose expenditure plans (notably for transport, housing and skills infrastructure) that will promote economic growth over a medium-term period.

In return for a multi-year capital funding allocation, the local authorities are expected to create a different and more unified decision making structure across their chosen area, preferably with an elected mayor at the helm of the new structure.

Three things are notable about this policy:

it takes powers away from local communities and places them in the hands of more distant combined authorities and their elected mayors;

no fiscal devolution is being offered;

the capital allocations are timebound, while the new structures of local government are permanent. In brief, it’s a policy of local government reorganisation by stealth. Devolution is not on offer.

This conclusion is reinforced by the simultaneous stream of massively centralising government measures which have drained even more powers out of local community control, such as the Housing and Planning Act, which spells the death of social housing and dictates how local housing markets should work, the nationalising of schools through academisation, and central control of Council Tax levels.

Labour’s policy is unclear. The innovative work that was undertaken by the LGA Labour Group and the Local Government Innovation Taskforce before the 2015 Election and published in ‘People, Power and Public Services’ has been forgotten, and the centralising instincts that come from the worthy desire to ensure that all our citizens get equal treatment regardless of where they live, have revived. The party remains strong in local government and there needs to be more policy engagement with the issues of devolution, community involvement, local government structure and local democracy.

From discussions with other Labour local authority leaders, a framework for rethinking the party’s approach to devolution is emerging:

The old two tier local government structures are no longer appropriate and the basis for devolution has to be new unitary authorities. A rational approach to the creation of new unitaries which respect community loyalties and pride in ‘place’ is required. This process should be overseen by an Independent Commission and undertaken within a defined time period.

A wide measure of freedom for local authorities to set their own levels of taxation, and service charging structures, allowing them to raise and control a large proportion of their income locally.

A transfer of business rate income to local authorities with a redistribution mechanism which recognises the differential capacities and needs of different communities and is not skewed by government bias towards their own councils – whatever the colour of the government in power.

A re-establishment of local education authorities with strong links to the skills agenda and to children’s services.

A national structure merging adult social care and local health services, managed through an Expert Group that can bring about the necessary transformation of service structures within a defined period.

A revived public scrutiny system based on panels drawn from large ‘colleges’ of scrutineers, whose composition reflects the social and demographic make-up of the area.

No requirement for directly elected mayors which run directly counter to the aim of drawing local communities closer to the decision making processes which affect them.

As the new party leadership develops the agenda for the next election we should be endorsing genuine devolution of power to local communities. Place-based unitary authorities should be reflective of, and responsive to, their residents and services should be delivered by ward-based political leaders open to regular scrutiny and challenge.


http://www.fabians.org.uk/decentralising-britian/

Greater Lincolnshire has devolution doubts – one councillor feels like a “used car salesman”

“I have a gut feeling that this is not right,” warned portfolio holder for the rural economy Councillor Adam Grist (Con, Legbourne).

It seems like an attempt to transplant a metropolitan solution on a shire county. …

… Councillor Terry Knowles (Ind, Grimoldby) described the 67-page proposal document as being “heavy on fine words but almost empty of content”.

He continued: “I am not at all impressed – the creation of an elected mayor would simply provide an easy blame-channel when things go bump. …

…also came from Councillor Sarah Dodds (Lab, Louth Primary and St James) and Councillor Stephen Palmer (Ind, Sutton-on-Sea), with the latter demanding: “How much will this cost?”

He asked: “Is the drive for a new authority coming from the people of Lincolnshire or from the Government? Why should we have forced on us something we don’t want?”

There were plaudits at the meeting for council leader Craig Leyland (Con, Woodhall Spa) for his hard work in liaising with counterparts at other authorities, including North East Lincolnshire Council leader Ray Oxby, to move the initiative forward.

But even Mr Leyland admitted to doubts on the project.

“I feel like a car salesman just praying that the customer doesn’t ask to look under the bonnet,” he quipped.

“We need to seek the views of electors,” insisted the leader.

http://www.grimsbytelegraph.co.uk/Doubts-Greater-Lincolnshire-devolution/story-29342843-detail/story.html

Google and our Government – a cosy relationship

“New concerns have been raised about the political influence of Google after research found at least 80 “revolving door” moves in the past decade – instances where the online giant took on government employees and European governments employed Google staff.

The research was carried out by the Google Transparency Project, an initiative run by the Campaign for Accountability (CfA), a US organisation that scrutinises corporations and politicians. The CfA has suggested that the moves are a result of Google seeking to boost its influence in Europe as the company seeks to head off antitrust action and moves to tighten up on online privacy.

In the UK, Google has hired people from Downing Street, the Home Office, the Treasury, the Department for Education and the Department for Transport. Overall, the company has hired at least 28 British public officials since 2005.

Those hired have included Sarah Hunter, a senior policy adviser to Tony Blair when prime minister, who became head of public policy for Google in the UK. Hunter is now head of policy for Google X, the arm that deals with new businesses such as drones and self-driving cars.

In 2013 Google hired Verity Harding, a special adviser to former deputy prime minister Nick Clegg. Harding is now policy manager for Google DeepMind, its artificial intelligence arm, which recently secured a contract with the NHS.

Overall, the research suggests that Google, now part of parent company Alphabet Inc, has hired at least 65 former government officials from within the European Union since 2005. These include Tomas Gulbinas, a former ambassador-at-large for the Lithuanian government, and Georgios Mavros, a former adviser to a French member of the European parliament: both became Google lobbyists.

During the same period, 15 Google employees were appointed to government positions in Europe, gaining what the CfA claims are “valuable contacts at the heart of the decision-making process”.

In the UK, appointments include that of Baroness Joanna Shields, a former managing director for Google, who was made minister for internet safety, and Google’s executive chairman, Eric Schmidt, who David Cameron appointed to his business advisory council. Dame Margaret Hodge, former head of the Commons’ public accounts committee, told the CfA that the appointments were part of a deliberate strategy by Google to gain influence in the public sphere. “I have absolutely no doubt it’s part of their strategy,” Hodge said. “Google deliberately nurtures that culture, and I have absolutely no doubt that they see it as strategically important to be as close as they can to government.”

She added that, unlike other large American companies, such as Apple, “one gets the impression that [government] ministers are in awe of Google”. …

… In the UK, Google has been moving into a raft of new areas now being heavily promoted by the government. “We need to rethink how we view Google,” said Tamasin Cave of the campaign group Spinwatch. “It’s not a search engine, it’s a political beast that has captured the attention of our policy-makers. Most worryingly in health and education, where privatisation through technology is gathering pace. Even if our politicians have bought into its thinking, we as a public should be asking how Google’s involvement in the NHS and schools will impact them, what are the consequences, and who benefits: us or Google?””

http://gu.com/p/4k9je

Wonder if any of our LEP members have Google associations!

Old people are a “tension” for devolution – and so is happiness!

From a slide on a devolution workshop:

Tensions

Local and national government perspectives eg business rates reform and what must central government continue to lead

Small family businesses and ambition (lifestyle businesses) and do they have a role in transformation?

Productivity at what cost – not sacrificing the environment

Backing the ‘winners’ v spreading the jam

Other measures – e.g. happiness

Dealing with retirees

Click to access 060416-combined-cabinet-agendasm.pdf

page 91

Yet another MP rebellion – this time Land Registry privatisation

” … Sixty-five cross-party MPs sign letter written by Labour’s David Lammy saying sale would enable ‘shady offshore entities to buy up property in this country’. …

… The letter, addressed to the business secretary, Sajid Javid, warns: “We need a government that is determined to take serious steps to make it harder for shady offshore entities to buy up property in this country and also make it harder for them to shield themselves from scrutiny and investigation. The privatisation of the Land Registry would achieve the opposite.” …

…mA report by the Times linked all the prospective buyers of the Land Registry with offshore firms, a matter also addressed in the letter. The privatisation plans have been opposed by a wide range of organisations and individuals. A petition run by 38 Degrees has almost reached its target of 300,000 signatures, and organisations speaking out against the plans include the Competition and Markets Authority, solicitors and media firms.”

http://gu.com/p/4k6v9

Radio Devon to air Sidmouth Business Park issue tomorrow approx 7.20 am

Radio Devon breakfast show interview tomorrow with SOS Chair, about Planning Application for Sidford business park.

Richard Thurlow will be interviewed by Radio Devon’s Simon Bates, at 7.20 a.m. on Friday 3rd June. To phone in comments, tel. 0345 301 1034

Here’s a reminder of some of the issues:

URGENT! Sidford Business Park Planning Application now in. “The more people who write in, the better”. DEADLINE for comments, WEDS 8th JUNE.