The last battle for local hospital services

From the blog of Independent DCC Councillor Claire Wright (Ottery Sy Mary). We assume local MP Hugo Swire will be at the meeting … in our dreams.

The last battle. D-day for Ottery Hospital – please attend this meeting!

The decision on the fate of Ottery St Mary Hospital will be made next Thursday (16 July), and the Northern, Eastern And Western Clinical Commissioning Group (NEW Devon CCG) appear as determined as ever, to close it.

Also at risk across East Devon, are all of Axminster Hospital beds, and minor injuries units at Ottery, Axminster, Sidmouth and Seaton Hospitals.

The CCG’s board papers, published yesterday, argue strongly in favour of closing Ottery Hospital’s beds and minor injuries unit and against any other option, including the recommendations presented by the stakeholder group – a group set up by the CCG in January.

The paper, in my view, has totally misrepresented the stakeholder group’s recommendation on hospital beds, by implying that the group supported “consolidation” as a long-term measure (moving hospital beds out of Ottery and Axminster to other hospitals).

The stakeholder group’s recommendation was that beds should remain at all our community hospitals and a minor injuries service should be retained in each town.

The paper that goes before the CCG’s governing body on Thursday states that the cuts will be implemented immediately once a decision has been made.

The paper acknowledges the significant projected population increase in East Devon over the next few years – over 11 per cent by 2026), but seems to believe that the best way of handling this is to move community hospital beds to other nearby hospitals.

At the last health and wellbeing scrutiny committee meeting on 18 June, the CCG’s update report, scarcely mentioned the work of the stakeholder group, bar a passing reference. Certainly it did not allude to its recommendations, despite the group being established by the CCG in January!

You can view discussions at this meeting here. The speakers names are now included within the webcast – http://www.devoncc.public-i.tv/…/portal/webcast_inte…/159084

I have not been able to find any mention of the CCG’s plans for Ottery Hospital, if the beds and minor injuries unit closes, yet paperwork claims that the stakeholder recommendations will cost an additional £200K. And the savings from closing all the beds at Axminster and Ottery will be £500,000.

The existing 15 bed stroke unit housed at Ottery is set to move to a site in Exeter – probably the RD&E. Ottery is viewed as an interim measure.

One of the stakeholder group’s recommendations included that no changes should take place until integration with a new provider had taken place (a decision about who gets to run local community hospitals – likely to be the RD&E).

But the papers submitted for next Thursday’s meeting tacitly admit that providers have not even been consulted with.
The CCG makes a strong case for its own proposals and dismisses the alternatives.

To view the recommendations turn to page 110 of the papers, in this link –

file:///C:/Documents%20and%20Settings/Claire/My%20Documents/Downloads/GB%20Pack%20PUBLIC%2016%20July%202015.pdf

The meeting starts at 1pm on Thursday 16 July, at Newcourt Community Centre, Exeter. It is open to the public, but please bear in mind that the relevant agenda item isn’t likely to start until after 3pm.

It is absolutely vital that there is a big public attendance from across East Devon, as this is when the decisions are made.

There is no facility for public speaking unfortunately (I did ask twice but was refused). However, there is the option of submitting questions in advance, in writing.

http://www.claire-wright.org

Best utilisation of council assets?

Is it perhaps time to sell leases on Knowle office car parking spaces – as with proposals for leases on beach hut

sites?  It might only be for a year or two but it definitely would make a profit on the current charge to staff and councillors of – nothing!

They can then do it in Honiton and Exmouth and make a tidy profit!

Corruption in the UK (Updated)

A few excerpts from an article in the New Statesman http://www.newstatesman.com/politics/2015/06/think-britain-corrupt-russia-its-time-get-out-more :

“The last prime minister to make a fortune out of public office was Lloyd George. Today’s cabinet ministers earn middle-class salaries, and most of them live in modest houses. So why do people think otherwise?”

“Corruption in British public life can be divided schematically into three phases. Until the 19th century men entered politics in ­order to enrich themselves and to reward their dependants. Samuel Pepys was a senior civil servant at the Admiralty. His diaries in the 1660s are a squalid record of how he accepted endless financial and sexual favours in return for awarding contracts and arranging promotions. Sir Robert Walpole, Britain’s first prime minister, amassed a prodigious fortune.

“For reasons that are still not well understood, something fundamental changed in Britain in the Victorian period. Gladstonian liberalism brought moral rectitude to national life. The sale of military commissions was abolished. The Northcote/Trevelyan reforms led to the creation of an impartial civil service, with promotion by merit rather than nepotism. The Victorians consolidated the idea of the public domain, a sphere where the common good rather than self-interest and greed was paramount.

“Of course corruption continued, because human nature is venal. But it was no longer part of the system of government. Corrupt public officials were now rogue elements, who were sent to jail and held up to public scorn if they were caught.  …

“David Whyte, professor of socio-legal studies at the University of Liverpool, challenges this complacency in How Corrupt Is Britain?, an ambitious collection of essays. Professor Whyte maintains that only a “residual racism” prevents us from acknow­ledging that we are corrupt on the scale of southern Europe, Afghanistan or Russia. Corruption is once more embedded in British public life, Whyte asserts…

“These are extremely large claims and Whyte endeavours to substandestrtiate them by citing all kinds of malfeasance: phone-hacking, the LIBOR banking scandals, child abuse allegations, the manipulation of evidence by police over the Hillsborough disaster, the 2013 horse meat labelling scandal, and so forth. Corruption, he concludes, is “a central mode of power-mongering in contemporary Britain”.

“The same applies to police misconduct, the subject of several other essays in this book. The police have largely not been subject to the same sorts of pressure to adapt to market forces as have been brought to bear on the NHS, schools and the welfare state. Episodes such as Hillsborough are horrifying, but cannot be laid at the door of Milton Friedman. In any case, police corruption dates back to well before the neoliberal revolution, as the Mark report into Met corruption during the 1970s shows.”

Try this report as well Corruption_in_UK_Local_Government-_The_Mounting_Risks

A report from The Independent

Hugo or David

Or maybe they are the same person?  Certainly sound the same

http://www.exeterexpressandecho.co.uk/letter-Hugo-Swire-Working-brighter-future/story-26584375-detail/story.html

Pay up or leave EDDC sheltered housing

No compromise: pay higher charges for a full service or leave your sheltered accommodation:

https://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/increased_charges_to_sheltered_a?nocache=incoming-644262#incoming-644262

We have to hope that compassion will return to EDDC after the elections on 7 May 2015.

Devon and Cornwall and Dorset police areas to merge services

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-32079079

Might we also now have one Police and Crime Commissioner, one Chief Constable , etc and use the very large amount of money we would save to fund more beat officers?

One law for the councillors, one for the doctors? Which one puts public service before personal luxury?

Isn’t it interesting that our doctors and nurses can work without complaint in Victorian – even Georgian – buildings, yet our councillors can’t bear working in offices built in the 1980’s?

Haven’t the priorities of our councillors put their taste for luxury before what they could have spent the money on had they stayed put.

Sad days – but remember, your Independent councillors were prepared to stay put and spend the money saved on US.

EDDC Tories promise more ….. of what exactly?

East Devon Conservatives have taken a half page advertisement in the local press this week (* see link below). In this advertisement they make claims for what they have achieved during the last 4 years.

Let’s take a look at these claims.

First though let’s look at what ISN’T in the advertisement:

No Local Plan four years and still nowhere near completion, the lack of a Local Plan has allowed a development free-for-all throughout the entire district.

No Knowle relocation – the vanity project of the Leader and three of his Executive Board councillors (see blog of Councillor Ian Thomas:

Using the construction estimate of £2,439/m2, and a building size of 2,776m2, overall construction costs at Honiton are expected to be £6.77M. However, the market value of the resulting premises is estimated to be only £3.25M. From an investment point of view, this indicates that there is an immediate deficit on the project, of £3.52M.
https://eastdevonwatch.org/2015/03/14/tort-cabinet-member-notes-knowle-relocation-risks/

Those claims

A RECORD OF ACTION

Local homes for local people, building and buying homes for rent

Look at their latest press release dated 15th March 2015, which begins:

Due to high house prices, relatively low incomes and a high need for affordable homes but limited existing stock, we have a major shortfall of affordable housing in East Devon. To overcome this shortfall, new residential development will need, in most cases to include some affordable housing.

http://eastdevon.gov.uk/housing/affordable-housing-in-east-devon/what-you-need-to-know-about-affordable-housing-if-youre-building-homes-in-east-devon/introduction-to-building-affordable-housing-in-east-devon/

However, recent developments have been allowed to cut their affordable proportion to NIL (e.g. Tesco site, Seaton) as house builders have pleaded poverty and EDDC has gone along with them.  Saying you need affordable housing is not the same as getting it!

Waiting list cut from over 3 years to less than 1 year

In 2011, EDDC said that:

As at 17 January 2011 there are 2,800 people on the council’s housing register. There are currently 45 empty council owned properties in total. About a third of these are “long term voids” which are being re-developed, have serious structural problems or have suffered fire/flood damage.

https://www.whatdotheyknow.com/request/affordable_housing_3

Many councils have cut their waiting lists by simply deciding that certain people will no longer qualify for social housing – e.g. people under 25. Where have all our housing waiting list applicants gone. Certainly not into affordable homes.

Community Development Workers to help local communities

Thriving communities do not need Community Development Workers – they are usually employed either in new towns (such as Cranbrook) or towns with multiple social problems or deprivation. Indeed at one time having a Community Development Worker was seen as a bad thing!

Cranbrook – a new town with employment opportunities close by

Well, yes, but have you been there and seen it! Tiny houses, tiny “gardens, narrow streets, very little parking, currently one shop (a pharmacy). Housing for Exeter people with Exeter jobs!

Supporting leisure opportunities, encouraging a healthy lifestyle

“Supporting” – such a useful word. Not “funding” – “supporting” – that’s all you really need to know!

Good development in the right places.

Now, that’s rich: in the last year we have had so much bad development in the wrong places, perhaps they have run out of wrong places!  Just about every town, village and (currently) hamlet has its own “development horror story” and it is about to get even worse.

LOCAL ISSUES, LOCAL ACTION

Council Tax frozen for the 5th year

Sure, but many services have been stopped or charges raised, or they have been taken over by town and parish councils. It is simply the transfer of costs from EDDC to them which means an increase for us!

Supporting our local economy through regeneration projects

There are two: Exmouth and Seaton. Exmouth consists of a concrete jungle of paid-for “leisure facilities” and Seaton’s consists of a small Jurassic Coast Visitor Centre, a Tesco and over 200 high cost homes on the regeneration site (the developer having pleaded poverty and had 40% affordables reduced to 20% and then zero)

Improving recycling rates

Councils are penalised if they do not achieve certain recycling rates. EDDC still does not collect cardboard.

Conserving the Jurassic coastline, our nature reserves and AONB’s
One phrase: “Sidmouth’s beach management plan” – rather like the local plan – the promise of jam tomorrow, or maybe the day after, or maybe not.

Conservative East Devon offers “excellent value for money”*
*Independent auditors report
Ah, best not dwell on what this blog, others such as Sidmouth Independent News, and http://futuresforumvgs.blogspot.co.uk/  have said about this – just that a cosy relationship breeds contentment on both sides!

Here’s the EDDC ad. in question: Toryad17thMarch2015

National Auditor General highly critical of public service cuts

” … The NAO boss, who reports directly to Parliament rather than the Government, pointed to cuts to local authority budgets which had resulted in a reduction in money available for social care, with knock-on effects on the NHS.

“Now if you’re going to go through much deeper, more profound organisational cuts . . . you need to understand what you’re doing better than that,” he said.

Whitehall civil servants had “a responsibility to be much better informed at the centre” about the impact of reforms, rather than leaving local government to deal with the fallout, he said.”

http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/Impact-Government-cuts-understood/story-26185842-detail/story.html

http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/Impact-Government-cuts-understood/story-26185842-detail/story.html

Devon Libraries to become mutually owned

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-devon-31846907

But, of course, if money is being saved, it has to come from somewhere. Volunteers (although dedicated, already fully stretched it communities and unfortunately inherently unreliable due to age and other committments) will need to run their local libraries on a shoestring, opening when they can be found rather than when the service is most needed.

Buildings will presumably be retained by DCC. If not, this will be an insurmountable problem for some libraries in older, outdated buildings, which will soon close or move to smaller and smaller and cheaper and cheaper premises until they gently disappear into the night with ne’er a trace.

When will this end? When we pay our community charges for no services, just to keep councillors and officers in meaningless jobs or( in EDDC’s case) to finance plush offices where all they do is service developers.

And, of course, if libraries do fail, they are on prime development land …

Promises that local Tories made to East Devon prior to the last general election in 2010 – read and weep

Real Zorro

http://realzorro1.blogspot.co.uk/

has drawn attention to the lamentable lack of policies from East Devon’s Tories (except, of course, for HQ relocation, which is the only things that has occupied them for MONTHS) with their website bereft of information or ideas about what they would do if re-elected.

A similar state of affairs pertains over at the Tiverton and Honiton official Tory website with a post which has been on the website since well before 2010 and which is still there today (but probably not tomorrow!). And what an embarrassing post it is! No doubt once it has been drawn to their attention it will disappear but, fear not, EDW has kept a copy for posterity and took this recent screenshot (taken on 19 February 2015 but the same page is still there today).
IMG_0708

http://www.tivertonhonitonconservatives.co.uk/campaigns

On the webpage (under the heading “Campaigns”) EDDC Tories state that UNDER LABOUR in 2009:

♦  There were 200 fewer rural schools (there are now even fewer)
♦  1,400 rural post offices had been lost since 2000 (even more post offices have since been lost)
♦  384 police stations had closed in the shires in Labour’s first two terms (even more police stations have been closed and we have far fewer police on the streets
♦  Dramatically widened funding gap between urban and rural areas (the funding gap between urban and rural areas has widened even further)

and they promised that, if they were successful in 2010 they would:

have an agenda that would:

RESPECT RURAL PEOPLE

♦  Give rural communities a voice to decide their own future
♦  Respect the rural way of life
♦  Only regulate where self regulation fails
♦  Fairer rural funding

They said that they would

EMPOWER RURAL COMMUNITIES

♦  Return real power to individuals and communities
♦  Give villages the right to build their own affordable homes
♦  Allow councils to oppose development planned for green belt land

THEY SAID THEY WOULD

PROTECT RURAL SERVICES

♦  Realise the social value of vital rural services like post offices
♦  Give parents the power to stop rural schools closing and open new ones
♦  Allow rural public services to diversify
♦  Pilot new rural transport solutions

They said that they would

REVIVE THE RURAL ECONOMY:

♦  Cut tax rates for small businesses to encourage growth and protect jobs
♦  Allow councils to offer rural business rate discounts
♦  Simplify the planning system to improve accountability
♦  Reduce the burden of regulation to give businesses more freedom

THESE ARE THE PROMISES THEY MADE TO YOU IN 2010

WILL YOU STILL VOTE FOR THEM IN 2015?

 

A conundrum

Can you say that council tax has been frozen if you are providing fewer services for the same money? Surely, if you are providing fewer services then council tax should go down, then you can claim it’s frozen.

Fewer services, same council tax = rise.

Police and Crime Commissioner staff – a comparison with South Wales

A good comparison for the type of area that our local Police and Crime Commissioner covers (Devon and Cornwall) is South Wales. It also has a mix of large cities (Cardiff, Swansea), large and small towns and coastal and very rural areas. It has a similar number of police – 3,556 in Devon and Cornwall and 3,148 in South Wales.

Here our Commissioner needs a staff of 23 or 31 (depending on who is counting). In South Wales, their Commissioner manages on a staff of 16, including the Commissioner.

Click to access Staff-Structure-Chart.pdf

Police and Crime Commissioner staff levels in the rest of the south west

See pist below – ours has 23 or 31, depending on who is counting!

Dorset: 15 plus 30 volunteers

Click to access OPCC%20Office%20Structure%201.10.14.pdf

Avon and Somerset:21

Click to access OPCC-Staff-Structure.pdf

Bristol: 21

Click to access OPCC-Staff-Structure.pdf

Gloucestershire: 16

Click to access Office-of-the-Police-and-Crime-Commissioner-as-October-2014.pdf

How many Police and Crime Commissioner staff does it take to change a lightbulb? 23 or 31 …

23! Or, according to a sharp-eyed reader, 31 (a recent newspaper said 23, the organisation chart below lists 31).

And see link below for the details of what the 23 or 31 (or more?) staff “do”.

Truly, truly shocking when you think we managed without him in the past with a panel that cost us a fraction of what he costs – not including the cost his £500,000 relocation to Middlemoor next year (something he said he would never do):

Click to access PCC-STRUCTURE-FOR-WEB-1.pdf

Are some of our MPs WORTH £67,000?

“The Lib Dems want to impose an additional 8% rate of corporation tax on UK banks, which they say will raise an extra £1bn a year towards cutting the deficit.”

No problem, the banks just put up our bank charges or interest rates on lending to cover the cost! Then it costs them nothing, their bonuses stay the same, the shareholders get their dividends, nothing changes – their increased income covers the tax, but it costs US the £1 billion in extra charges or interest.

Yes, the deficit goes down but so does our disposable income so and the banks don’t pay it off, we do as a stealth tax – real smart!

Rather than asking: can MPs manage on £67,000 should we be asking if some of them are worth that money?

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-31684503

Devon and Cornwall Police Commissioner to spend half a million pounds on office relocation

The Police and Crime Commissioner, Tony Hogg, and his 23 staff are to relocate to Police HQ in Middlemoor after he said when he was appointed that it would be inappropriate to be in the same building. We pay £100,000 a year for his current offices.

“Devon and Cornwall Police has to save another £9m in the financial year 2015-16, on top of £51m in cuts made over the last four years.

In 2013, Mr Hogg was criticised for using accommodation allowances to stay at the Royal Marine Commando Training Centre in Lympstone, rather than Middlemoor.

At that point, he said: “My role is all about holding the chief constable and the police force to account on the public’s behalf, and therefore it is not appropriate for my office, or my accommodation, to be sited there.

Is it some sort of virus? Austerity? Not in my (new) back yard!

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-cornwall-31673560

“Fiscal fears rocket” for local authorities

“Concern among council bosses over whether local authorities will be able to deliver their legal duties has rocketed in the last year, an exclusive survey published today has found.

Amid warnings that the current local government finance system is ‘bust’, more than half of council chief executives, finance bosses and leaders said there was a danger that financial constraints could put their authority in a position where it did not have enough funding to fulfil its statutory duties.”

http://www.themj.co.uk/EXCLUSIVE-Fiscal-fears-rocket/199710

The dead cannot cry out for justice …

Touching tributes on the Sidmouth Herald front page, inner pages and letters page to the homeless man, Tommy Duffy, who died on a bitterly cold night in a bus shelter in Sidmouth. A memorial service was recently held for him at the Unitarian Church in Sidmouth

Comments on the Letters pages:

“What greater irony could there be. Tommy Duffy, a homeless man, dies in freezing temperatures, in an area where the local council is spending thousands of taxpayers’ money on a vanity project to relocate their offices”

and

“… we are in real trouble when our elected representatives are unable to make an empty building available to someone in need because their own take on profit, value and worth extends towhether they might one day sell it to Persimmon or Premier Inn. I don’t know, but just maybe there is a different way of doing this.”

“The dead cannot cry out for justice. It is a duty of the living to do so for them.”
Lois MacMaster Bujold