Laura Freeman’s speech at the Exmouth seafront march – Skinner where are you?

““In April this year, just over 4,500 Exmouth people voted yes in a Town Poll. We voted yes for independent, public consultation. This means that we told East Devon District Council – and anyone else listening – that we want to have a say in what happens on our seafront.

“We came out in huge numbers, despite none of the usual help that comes with a general or council election. We came out despite the fact that polling stations were only open for a very, small space of time. Some of us even went out prior to voting, to stand around town – in all weathers – to tell people about the poll, as many people didn’t even know what was going on.

“And what’s happened since the poll in April? Nothing. Why are we being ignored? Ignored by the very people we elect. Well, that’s just not good enough. Today, we have sent a message to East Devon District Council. We have said “We will not be ignored. Our views are important.” East Devon District Council, you need to listen to us.

“We live here. We work here. Some of us will have grown up in this town like generations before, and others will have moved here for a better life or opportunity. When people feel they are being ignored, they shout louder. And that’s what we are doing here today. We are shouting louder!

“Now for those who don’t know, there is a group of people at East Devon District Council who are responsible for the development of this site on the seafront. They are the ‘Exmouth Regeneration Board’. The Chair of this board is Councillor Philip Skinner. We asked Councillor Skinner to come today, along with all East Devon District Councillors and all Exmouth Town Councillors.

“Now, we’ve asked Councillor Skinner to meet with the public before, but this has proven a very tricky task. Actually, we’ve been asking him for months. But he just cannot seem to find any time for meeting with the public. Though, we will still keep trying!

“Councillor Skinner, we hope that you – as someone who can influence something that affects our lives so much – will still come and meet with the people of Exmouth, to answer questions we have, and discuss our ideas and concerns. But with the demolition of assets, closing of businesses and loss of jobs, I’m sure everyone here today will all agree with me, that this meeting with Councillor Skinner must happen soon. There is urgency in this situation.

“So, thank you all for coming here today, standing side-by-side with other members of your community.

“We have shown East Devon District Council that we will take to the streets when they refuse to listen to us through official platforms.

“In a few weeks’ times, on Thursday, December 1, we are having an SES meeting at 7.30pm in the Harbour View Cafe. I really hope many of you will be there. I know that together we can create some great ideas to sort through this situation, and help to protect, as well as enhance, this town we call home.

“Oh, and before I finish, please show your support for the businesses still trading on the proposed development site, The Crazy Golf Course is open today, so go and have a play! And also pop along to the Harbour View Cafe for a nice hot cup of tea and cake! Thank you so much!”

http://www.exmouthjournal.co.uk/news/save_exmouth_seafront_speech_by_laura_freeman_1_4773423

Well done, Laura!

Exmouth seafront demonstration: video

Just in case EDDC or a local newspaper tries to give the impression of only a handful of protesters today, here is a video which disproves it.

https://www.facebook.com/Exmouthsplash/?ref=br_rs

and here:
http://m.exeterexpressandecho.co.uk/save-exmouth-seafront-campaigners-stage-protest-march-over-redevelopment-plans/story-29889839-detail/story.html

Chalk cliffs disappearing at high speed compared to past

East Devon’s chalk cliffs are between Seaton and Beer – perhaps time to look at a different kind of beach management plan.

Study reveals huge acceleration in erosion of England’s white cliffs

“Researchers analysed rocks from Beachy Head and Seaford Head in East Sussex and discovered that the cliff erosion rate over most of the past 7,000 years was just two-six centimetres a year. But the erosion rate over the past 150 years has been much higher at 22-32cm a year. …

Hurst and his colleagues now aim to apply the technique to other parts of the UK coastline, including the stretch at Hinkley Point, the site of a large new nuclear power station.

http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2016/nov/07/study-reveals-huge-acceleration-in-erosion-of-englands-white-cliffs

Sidmouth seafront: how to say nothing much in several hundred words

” Seafront project is a ‘golden opportunity’ for Sidmouth
“Landowners Sidmouth Town Council (STC) and East Devon District Council (EDDC) are together conducting a scoping study and will be commissioning experts to appraise the area.

The authorities have pulled together valley organisations and Devon County Council to form a reference group that will ‘act as a bridge’ between the expert consultants, the stakeholders and the wider public.

The Sid Valley Neighbourhood Plan Group, the Sid Vale Association, Vision Group for Sidmouth and Sidmouth Chamber of Commerce are all represented.

Councillor Jeff Turner, who chairs the reference group and the town council, said: “We have a good representation of the major bodies from the town on this group who have shown historic leadership and a keen interest in the future of Port Royal.

“With the help of our experts, the study will provide us with information on the constraints and opportunities for the area with options and how viable they are.

“This will help us move forward toward a detailed vision for the area.

“Sidmouth is one of the best coastal towns in England and, with land being in public ownership, this is a golden opportunity to look at ways of renewing the eastern gateway to the town, ensuring that it is both enhanced and protected.”

Cllr Turner stressed that no decisions have been made about the future of the area.

“The scoping study is the start of a process that will involve detailed visioning for the area that will inform decisions in the future,” he said.

“The study is likely to take three to four months to complete and during this time consultants will carry out consultation both with tenants and members of various clubs as well as our residents and businesses.

“Wherever possible, we will work together with Sidmouth’s organisations to ensure that consultation is carried out in a coordinated way.”

The reference group decided it will involve existing work already carried out on Port Royal, and send out communication to tenants to update them after every meeting.”

http://www.sidmouthherald.co.uk/news/seafront_project_is_a_golden_opportunity_for_sidmouth_1_4750184

Neil Parish knows exactly how to drum up post-Brexit trade!

Question in Parliament yesterday:

Does my hon. Friend agree that what is different about having a new royal yacht now is that we are sailing into a brave new world, and that we will do, and need to do, many more trade deals across the world? There is a great opportunity not only to support the royal family, but to support the nation in getting those trade deals

His other parliamentary questions in 2016 have covered. Bear in mind he is a dairy farmer and Chairman of the Commons Transport Committee.

Summary: good to have onside if you are a farmer or use the A303 a lot. Not so good if you are an ordinary voter desperately trying to get on the housing ladder or a struggling seaside town in his area (Seaton is in his constituency) or a pensioner worried about your current or future health!

To be fair: he did speak up at the Feniton development public inquiry – but his written questions fo reflect his major interests:

Questions 2016

The Swansea tidal lagoon – two questions this year
Olympics and doping
Hybrid cars
Veal
Congratulations to Ministers
Broadband – several questions
EU sanctions on Russia
Bsdger Culling
Milk prices
Dualling A303/ West Country roads – many questions.
Eating Well
The dairy industry
Universal Credits
Working with industry instead of bringing in a sugar tax
Stimulating venture capital investment
Farming in general – many similar questions
Police grants
Renewable heat
Onshore gas and shale extraction
Flooding ( after Somerset floods)
Biofuels
Rural areas

https://www.theyworkforyou.com/search/?pid=24779&pop=1&p=5

Take control …

“Take control” are two of the most potent words in our language that have come to mean just one thing in the weeks since the Brexit vote.

But the desire for more control over our lives is not the exclusive preserve of Leave voters – and nor can it or should it be confined to the issue of immigration.

Our polling shows that people from all backgrounds and with every kind of belief now feel they have lost control over what matters most to them, whether it is the price of a home, the pace of technological change or the poisoning of our planet.

Far from being supporters of the status quo, a clear majority of remain supporters specifically identify big business and corporate elites as having “too much power over their lives”.

By an even bigger margin of 62%, those who voted remain in the referendum say that only a few people in power take all the big decisions, adding that there is not much the average citizen can do about it.

Those decisions now seem further out of reach than ever for millions of people after the party conference season. The government has confirmed its determination to pursue a hard Brexit, even though that risks making matters worse for people who already feel left behind in this economy.

At the same time, many people see opposition parties as being in disarray and deeply divided, leaving some to despair at the prospects for progressive politics ever providing answers, let alone getting the chance to put them into practice.

A storm in our economy and our democracy that has been gathering for decades is now firmly upon us. A torrent of wealth of power is washing away even the fragile footholds people had established in the economy. Many more now face losing control all together in the face of global, technological and climate change.

Yet, even in the midst of all this upheaval, a surge of energy is being generated that can crack open new possibilities for people to take more control right now – not at some distant point in the future.

The New Economics Foundation seeks to give people the tools to take control and change their lives for the better
Today, the New Economics Foundation is setting out ways to shift debate beyond secret negotiations over Brexit in the capitals of Europe, seemingly endless party infighting in Westminster’s opposition, or literal fights in Brussels over whose turn it is next to lead Ukip.

Instead, we are setting out an agenda for people to take control themselves, without having to wait for government to do it for – or to – them.

Our agenda for people draws on real experiences, ranging from those in seaside communities who feel abandoned by the political elite, taxi drivers in London trying to make a living in an Uber-ised economy, small businesses starved of finance, consumers overcharged for energy, and young families hoping for their first home or worried about the cost of childcare.

It seeks to give all of them the tools they need to take control and change their lives for the better. Coastal communities will find ways to revive a clean marine economy which brings together people who care about the environment with those who care about getting decent jobs. We are helping to develop a new taxi app owned and controlled by drivers themselves, from London to Leeds, to give them the chance to share in the vast new digital value being created around us.

The foundation is also drawing up plans to turn the scandal-torn RBS into 130 stakeholder banks that serve local firms rather than expecting them to serve it. We have teamed up with the Switched On London campaign to help communities generate renewable and affordable energy that gives them a real stake in a low-carbon future.

Furthermore, in a project with Citizens UK, we are creating the first maps of vacant public land available for the houses that need to get built. And we are helping parents expand the number of childcare co-operatives so they can not only afford a service fundamental to modern working lives, but also exercise more control over it.

This is not an agenda merely for clicktivists who think change happens on a smartphone screen on the way to a rally. We recognise that the tools people need to take control must be fashioned in partnership with institutions wielding real power, ranging from devolved government, city mayors and forward-looking businesses to trade union and community-led campaigns across the country.

But this is the first time a major thinktank has set itself a bigger ambition than merely influencing ministers or future legislation, or getting included in a political party’s manifesto.

The New Economics Foundation will focus on helping people and communities take control by engaging with new partners – from the Mayor of London and Google DeepMind to the GMB and Citizens UK – to explore new possibilities for change right now.

We are rooted outside the traditional boundaries of politics. We care most about people’s everyday experience. And we will work with communities of all kinds to give them the tools they need to build a better future because there has never been a more urgent need for a new economy than right now.”

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/oct/11/politicians-housing-employment-childcare-control-new-economics-foundation

“Brilliant” delivery of housing in coastal communities and market towns

“… When it came to housing delivery, Elphicke said biggest was not always best. “Some of our coastal communities, country villages and market towns, post-industrial heartlands and historic cities and counties of England are absolutely brilliant at making housing delivery happen and are delivering the majority of our new homes.”

http://www.theguardian.com/business/2016/sep/27/refocus-housebuilding-towns-villages-housing-finance-institute

Who says? Natalie Elphicke, of the Housing and Finance think tank.

Yeah, brilliant … for you Natalie!

Pop-up brothels in seaside towns!

“Inspector Dave Meredith said: “Pop-up brothels are usually holiday lets or apartments that are booked on-line by sex workers or persons who manage sex workers.

“The owners of the premises are unaware of the activities of the persons making the booking, and generally assume they have come to Newquay for a holiday.

“The booking is usually for one week, after which the premises is vacated.

“Due to the short period of time the premises is used as a brothel, it is often difficult for the police to establish that sex workers are residing there before they move on.”

He added: “We should be under no illusion that prostitution is a victimless crime.

“Women who work in these pop up brothels are often subjects of human trafficking and work under duress.

“Modern slavery is of concern to us all, and includes sex trafficking where women are forced into the commercial sex industry and held against their will by force, fraud or coercion.”

A neighbour at one of the brothels said she saw a number of shifty-looking visitors entering the house over a four-day period with some mistakenly knocking on her door.

She said: “I’ve had two blokes knocking on my door – one at four in the morning – and my neighbours have been around asking if I’ve seen anything.

“It’s a holiday let but it’s just a normal house so you wouldn’t know any different.”

http://www.exeterexpressandecho.co.uk/seaside-towns-are-being-plagued-by-pimps-and-prostitutes/story-29690076-detail/story.html

Promises, promises …

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn will today promise to pump billions into towns in the south east of England if he wins power.

Mr Corbyn, who is fighting a leadership challenge from Owen Smith, is to pledge a £30 billion investment bank for the area, more emphasis on renewable energy for seaside towns and better broadband.

The embattled leader will announce the plans at a re-election campaign rally in Ramsgate in Kent today.

Mr Corbyn is expected to say he wants to bring back pride and prosperity in “so-called left-behind Britain”.

He will say: “For Ramsgate, like other coastal towns, that commitment to invest means opening up the opportunities that are there.” …

http://www.standard.co.uk/news/politics/jeremy-corbyn-pledges-30-billion-for-leftbehind-towns-in-southeast-england-a3335801.html

Folkestone and Margate: a warning for East Devon’s seaside “regeneration” plans

” … The renovated pier is the first phase of a £337m redevelopment of the harbour, which will see 1,000 homes, restaurants, shops, sports centres and gardens built on the seafront over the next two decades. But experts on seaside regeneration warn that the project by local philanthropist and former Saga group tycoon Roger De Haan’s Folkestone Harbour Company risks a polarising gentrification of one of the town’s most deprived areas, with only 8% of the new homes classed as affordable.

James Kennell, a regeneration expert at Greenwich University, said: “It’s not a development for local people. All the primary benefits are for people moving in or for visitors.”

Over the past decade, De Haan’s Creative Foundation has transformed the town into an arts hub with a triennial art show, a new music and performance venue, a book festival and a public art collection featuring works by Tracey Emin, Mark Wallinger and Cornelia Parker.

Jonathan Ward, a sociology researcher at Leeds University, who recently published a report questioning the benefits of cultural regeneration in Folkestone and Margate, contends that the harbour development casts De Haan’s support for the arts in a different light. He said: “[It’s] a bit of cultural branding used to conceal what is basically a speculative property development aimed at elite consumers.”

Paul Sharp, senior branch manager at Ward & Partners estate agents in Folkestone, says there is a growing influx of wealthy out-of-town buyers, particularly from London, accounting for up to 40% of sales in the last 14 months. He expects the harbour development to bring local house prices more in line with Hythe, its more affluent neighbour, within five years. “We’re already seeing that with different people in the town,” he said. “Not so long ago I could walk down the street and bump into quite a few people I knew. That isn’t the case now.”

David Crump, director of the harbour development, said the homes on offer would range from “entry level apartments through to luxury detached beach houses”. He added that only 8% would be affordable housing due to the costs of converting the existing harbour, claiming the development was “utterly unattractive to a commercial developer”.

James Kennell said: “I’m quite positive about the harbour as a short-term intervention because of the jobs it will create in construction for local people. [But] 8% [affordable housing] is a clear statement of intent to gentrify an area of the town that has always been the most deprived. That brings it in line with controversial London housing developments such as those around the 02 or at the new Battersea power station site.”

He added that Folkestone was lucky to have a Victorian-style benefactor like De Haan but, despite the vast sums spent on cultural regeneration, the Office for National Statistics still rated the town as deprived. “It’s great to have a futuristic vision of the town being an entrepreneurial/creative hub with fantastic links to London but it’s all very outward-looking. Folkestone and Shepway have deeply entrenched social problems and the regeneration that takes place over the next 20 years has to bring those people in, otherwise what you’ll end up with is a very polarised town.”

Jonathan Ward said many low-earning artists who had been instrumental in the town’s cultural renaissance had been marginalised by the focus on attracting new consumers and investors.

Local artist Matt Rowe said: “Folkestone was on its knees before Roger’s money came in. The Creative Foundation does work. It’s now that there’s more demand that it is slightly different. The harbour arm and the housing development are going to bring in a much more mass culture audience. The people who come down are happy to spend £8 on a burger but they’re not happy to spend £20 on a print.” …

http://www.theguardian.com/cities/2016/aug/27/folkestone-gentrification-row-saga-tycoon-harbour-development

Seaside poverty (2): Cornwall

… the county’s six Conservative MPs are doing their “damnedest” to raise awareness of the poverty problems.

He says: “Politicians come down to Cornwall on holiday. They have their second, or maybe third home here. They have pictures of their family having a lovely time and just think ‘Oh, can there be poverty in lovely Cornwall?’”

“It is a beautiful place. But when you live and work here, the beauty is tinged because you know you’ve got this underlying poverty.”

http://www.theguardian.com/society/2016/aug/24/cornwall-child-poverty-blighting-lives-cuts

It’s a hard life for poor seaside kids

” … the biggest problems are often found by the sea: coastal towns are among the most deprived and one, Jaywick in Essex, tops the league. The Office for National Statistics rates Ryde third on its index of deprived mid-sized seaside towns.

Why do kids in seaside towns do so badly? That’s the question Mr Hoare was, rightly, trying to raise.

Economics is a good place to start. The industries, primarily tourism, that used to sustain jobs and relative prosperity in many seaside towns have faded and not been replaced. It’s a sad fact that poor parents have children who are more likely to grow up to be poor adults.

But poverty doesn’t automatically mean poor outcomes for kids. There are poor parts of London where children do much, much better than those in places like Blackpool and Great Yarmouth and Weston-super-Mare.

Another factor is isolation: many of these places are quite hard to get to. Brighton may have a (sometimes) quick rail link to London, but many seaside towns have poor public transport links, a significant barrier for people who don’t or can’t drive.

Isolation is one reason many seaside towns are relatively ethnically homogenous: they’re generally whiter than other comparably-sized towns elsewhere in England.

Isolation has many consequences, some easier to define than others. There’s the economic difficulty for people who live in isolated towns not being able to commute to higher-paid jobs elsewhere. There’s the challenge of drawing highly-skilled people from elsewhere to work by the sea, particularly in schools: the excellent Teach First, which places high-flying graduate teachers in struggling schools, is increasingly focusing on coastal towns.

The lack of good, well-paid jobs also means that seaside kids will eventually face a stark choice: stay at home and stay poor, or move away.

That’s often a harder choice than it looks, because physical isolation can lead to mental isolation. If neither you nor any of the people you know regularly leave your town to see other places, it’s that bit harder to imagine yourself moving away to work or study. The lack of aspirational role models for poor coastal kids is an important part of the under-explored story of working-class culture and its role in social immobility.

Few politicians are willing to say so explicitly, but part of the reason poor white kids stay stuck in poor seaside towns is a lack of ambition. Not personal ambition so much as social ambition. Unlike middle-class kids and the children of many first, second and third-generation immigrant groups, poor white coastal kids don’t grow up surrounded by people like them who hope and even expect to get a degree and a professional job.

Parents have a role too. Teachers like Paul Phillips, head of Weston College in Weston-super-Mare report that in towns like his, some parents just don’t want their kids to move away and so discourage them from higher education. Such feelings are partly driven by that physical isolation: who can blame someone for not relishing the prospect of their children going to live somewhere that takes a long, long time to get to?

It’s become commonplace among politicians to talk about social mobility and some, including Theresa May, are alive to the fact that the group that’s in greatest need of support here is what used to be called the white working-class. Their children are less likely than any other, including non-white kids of equal poverty, to get good exam results and go on to university.”

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2016/08/23/seaside-towns-arent-inbred-ghettos-but-their-isolation-traps-wor/

Friends of the Earth planning event in Exeter of particular interest to coastal communities

Please advertise this event as widely as possible, particularly to coastal communities – it appears to be free but tickets need to be reserved in advance:

“This is a 3-hour (from 6.30 to 9.30) evening skill-share and Power Up! session designed to better equip you to navigate and influence your local planning and development system – with a focus on coastal towns and communities. The intended outcome of this session is that you will be able to better protect your local communities against unwanted development that will cause environmental and social degredation.

We hope that this event can bring together groups and individuals from the surrounding areas who are either engaged in some way or another with planning concerns or who would like to be.

The evening will be hosted and facilitated by Naomi Luhde-Thompson, Friends of the Earth’s planning specialist.

We look forward to seeing you on the evening of Friday the 7th October!

Please share this with others in your local community you would like to come: https://www.facebook.com/events/152782855158372/

WHEN
Friday, 7 October 2016 from 18:30 to 21:30 (BST)
WHERE
Exeter Community Centre – 17 Saint Davids Hill, Exeter, EX4 3RG

https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/friends-of-the-earth-planning-power-up-exeter-tickets-27045439638?invite=&err=29&referrer=&discount=&affiliate=&eventpassword=

South West Water – sewage discharge into sea in Devon and Cornwall worst for 2015

“Raw sewage is being pumped into the sea around Devon and Cornwall after heavy rain overwhelmed drainage systems, water bosses have admitted.
Water quality warnings have been issued on beaches in the county because of the problems, South West Water said.

It said intense rainfall leads to run-off from fields and towns combining and affect bathing water quality.

Andy Cummins, Surfers Against Sewage (Sas), said the drainage infrastructure needed to be upgraded. “We need a sewage infrastructure that can cope with the amount of rainfall we get year on year,” he said.

Raw sewage is being pumped into the sea around Devon and Cornwall after heavy rain overwhelmed drainage systems, water bosses have admitted.
Water quality warnings have been issued on beaches in the county because of the problems, South West Water said.

It said intense rainfall leads to run-off from fields and towns combining and affect bathing water quality.

Andy Cummins, Surfers Against Sewage (Sas), said the drainage infrastructure needed to be upgraded. “We need a sewage infrastructure that can cope with the amount of rainfall we get year on year,” he said. “Our infrastructure needs to be able to cope with everything we put down the loo.”

Sas has previously slammed South West Water’s systems after claiming there had been 40 incidents of raw sewage polluting beaches in one weekend last year.

Mr Cummins said many people were not even aware “raw untreated human sewage” was discharged into the sea when the problem arose.

Tourism groups in the area have complained about the sewage, saying it puts people off going into the sea.

Fatos Fida, on holiday from London, said: “I think it is disgusting. As a tourist I had no idea. It puts me off visiting the beach as it isn’t hygienic.”

A South West Water spokesman said they operate an information system telling people about storm water overflows and the risk of pollution affecting quality.

The firm was the only water and sewerage company of the nine operating mainly in England, to have performed “significantly below target” by the Environment Agency’s (EA) 2015 performance assessment. It had 171 category 1-3 pollution incidents per 10,000 km of sewer, 74 more than the next worst-offending firm, the EA reported.

An Environment Agency spokesman said being rated “poor performance” led to “more visits, scrutiny of incidents we attend and increases the number of audits we carry out”.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-cornwall-36956165

“Calls for post-Brexit fund to boost coastal towns”

http://www.plymouthherald.co.uk/calls-for-post-brexit-fund-to-boost-coastal-towns-and-fisheries/story-29586090-detail/story.html

MD of Butlins warns of seaside degeneration and youth unemployment

“In her first speech as prime minister, Theresa May set out her goals to tackle the social injustices faced by many, including the working-class young. One to add to the list is that of young people who come from our coastal and seaside towns.

The UK’s coastline is 7,700 miles (12,400km) long and contributes hugely to our cultural wellbeing. Some 250 million visits are made to the coast each year but it is an inconvenient fact that if you come from our seaside towns you are more likely to be poorly educated, unemployed, unemployable, lacking in ambition, claiming benefits and living in multiple-occupation housing.

This is largely down to the long-term decline of fishing, agriculture and tourism — the industries that traditionally supported coastal communities. Tourism could arrest that decline if government helped to create the environment to allow businesses to do so. Although tourism is the UK’s sixth largest export earner and employs nearly 10 per cent of the working population, it could do better.

A recent survey found that more than half of the British public have not visited the seaside in the past three years, 30 per cent have not visited as an adult and 65 per cent believe the seaside is run down and in need of investment.

This is why the British Hospitality Association has come up with a plan to revive these communities. The first step is to appoint a seaside tsar, someone to co-ordinate government and local authority spending. This person, who needs to be strong enough to make a real difference, would oversee the creation of coastal enterprise zones to bring in investment and encourage businesses to move to the coast.

The second initiative is to create a tax environment that encourages people to visit and coastal businesses to invest in themselves. The obvious incentive for visitors is a reduction in tourism VAT — on accommodation and visitor attractions. UK visitors are taxed harder than almost everyone else in Europe for simply going on holiday. Our tourism VAT rate is a punitive 20 per cent while the average in Europe is half that.

If Mrs May is serious about rebalancing the economy, tourism is one industry that can deliver export growth by creating a seaside that is worth going back to.”

Dermot King is managing director of Butlins and chairman of the Cut Tourism VAT Campaign

http://www.thetimes.co.uk/edition/comment/our-seaside-towns-need-a-serious-economic-boost-8n9550crk

“A Dorset and East Devon national park could help with affordable housing”

Don’t get your hopes up – East Devon District Council has already stamped on it saying it would be just awful as they would lose control of planning!

“CREATING a national park across part of Dorset and east Devon could help ensure affordable housing goes to local people, according to campaigners.

The Dorset and East Devon National Park Team gave a presentation to Lyme Regis Town Council last week – pointing out the benefits the proposals could bring to the town and west Dorset.

Richard Brown, speaking on behalf of the national park team, said the proposals could “help affordable homes stay affordable”.

He added: “I think so many communities across Dorset are passing motions recognising that this is a great opportunity for Dorset.

National parks have a good track record in promoting the provision of affordable homes and keeping such homes affordable and available for local people.”

He added: “It would help develop affordable homes and a coherent Dorset tourism strategy.”

Speaking about a national park established in the South Downs, Mr Brown said that “people now stay longer and spend more”.

Although the project could be “five or six years away”, Mr Brown pointed out that “the proposed national park for Dorset remains unfinished business”.

The team say Natural England has already undertaken a positive first assessment of the proposal submitted to them in 2013.

The team’s current proposal for a national park includes the Dorset AONB land from Lyme Regis to Blandford Forum, excluding the Dorchester area, as well as much of Purbeck and east Devon, excluding Seaton and Sidmouth. But the national park boundary has yet to be finalised.

Mr Brown added: “The environment and the economy are two halves of the same coin.

“All of Dorset would benefit from the economic stimulus a national park brings. They are not against development. They work hard through local partnerships to deliver what local people want.”

The concept of creating a national park gained the backing of some town councillors.

Cllr Derek Hallett remained cautious, urging members to “look at it very carefully”, while Cllr Jeff Scowen described the proposals as “a marvellous idea”. …”

http://www.bridportnews.co.uk/news/14627353.National_park_for_Dorset_and_east_Devon_could__quot_help_affordable_homes_stay_affordable_quot_/

West country needs a “seaside csar”

“A report, commissioned by the BHA says that people living in seaside towns are more likely to be poorly educated, unemployed, unemployable, lacking in ambition, claiming benefits and living in multiple occupation housing. …

… According to the Department for Communities and Local Government 2015 Index of Multiple Deprivation, nine out of the 10 most deprived neighbourhoods in England are seaside communities. …

… workforce.

The association, which represents more than 40,000 businesses in the sector, cites the successful regeneration of areas along the Jurassic Coast in Dorset and east Devon as examples of how the British seaside can recover.

It has produced a seven point action plan to breathe new life into seaside towns which calls on the Government to:

Appoint a seaside csar to coordinate a coherent response across all departments and spending, much like Lord Heseltine’s work in Liverpool in the 1980s.

Establish Coastal Action Groups, to develop a coordinated response and investment strategy to target the specific social and economic challenges that seaside towns face.

Create a progressive tax environment, including a reduction in Tourism VAT, to encourage coastal businesses to invest in themselves.

Create Coastal Enterprise Zones to incentivise investment and encourage businesses to move to the coast and create jobs.

Invest in critical infrastructure and improve broadband, rail and road connections, and protect against the threat of rising sea levels.

Improve education and training provision for young people and adults to ensure that they have the skills for a variety of sectors.

Support local authorities to tackle social issues and housing problems which reduce their attraction as visitor destination.

Ufi Ibrahim, chief executive of the BHA said: “The British public want to enjoy the British Seaside, and those living in coastal communities want a thriving economy.” …

http://www.plymouthherald.co.uk/call-for-seaside-csar-to-champion-rundown-coastal-communities/story-29498741-detail/story.html