Ottery General Election upset on the cards?

An increasing number of people seem to think so…http://www.heart.co.uk/exeter/news/local/ottery-general-election-upset-on-cards

Backbench majority councillors labelled “kicked dogs” by their former Leader!

Cardiff Council is having major problems and there have been calls for the sacking of their Leader. One councillor said.

“… in an explosive leaked email, Coun Cook told the embattled council leader the cabinet should have paid more attention to the views of its backbenchers.

The email added: “I am surprised that you seem unable to appreciate that if you kick a big dog enough times and ignore its growls of displeasure, it will eventually rip the aggressor’s throat out.

You and your Cabinet (and the Group Officers) have signally failed to heed our warnings, some of you have completely failed to understand and live up to your responsibilities and collectively the entire Cabinet as well as the Group Officers have failed to convince me that any of you have the ability to take this Group and Council forward out of the hole into which you have lead us.

“The call from beyond the Labour Group is for you to stand down, privately I support that call.”

Contrast this with Conservative East Devon District Council where their own backbenchers do as they are told by block voting with the Leader (whilst insisting they are not whipped).

Less barks from a big kicked dog, more like little squeaks from a tiny, ignored chihuahua frantically licking the Leader’s … throat.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-wales-south-east-wales-31690755

… OF FREEDOM OF INFORMATION AND MANAGED DEMOCRACY: A PERSONAL VIEW OF EAST DEVON

Jeremy Woodward, whose Freedom of Information requests led to the current court case betweem the Information Commissioner and EDDC pens his personal story:

It all started with a simple request back in November 2012. I had asked the chair of the DMC – the Development Management Committee, which is the District Council’s planning committee – for details about the secretive ‘Office Accommodation Working Parties’. (I later discovered that there are in fact several of these…). This was because I thought there might be conflicts of interest should any from one committee be sitting on another committee, as the DMC was expecting to consider the Council’s own planning application for Knowle. Moreover, I had also asked for access to the ‘Reports, Action Notes and Updates’ on relocation which had been presented to Cabinet meetings, as I felt they should be available for ‘public scrutiny’ in the context of the planning application.

Of course the answer was ‘No’ to all of these. Perhaps that was to be expected, and over the coming months and years it became clear that the East Devon District Council is really one of the most intransigent and arrogant local authorities in the area not to mention the most secretive and least transparent.

For example: if you go to the whatdotheyknow website and type in the name of a pubic authority, whilst Mid Devon has 117 Freedom of Information requests, North Devon 102, West Devon 105, Teignbridge 109, Torridge 101 and South Hams zero, East Devon has 299 to date – three times that of any other in Devon.

Of course, East Devon District Council is not alone in refusing to allow more transparency when it comes to its planning decisions. To put this into context, the Guardian’s architecture correspondent Oliver Wainwright looked into ‘the truth about property developers and how they are exploiting planning authorities’ – and he concluded after considerable research that “Across the country authorities are allowing planning policies to be continually flouted, affordable housing quotas to be waived, the interests of residents endlessly trampled.”

These same authorities will insist that they cannot divulge any pertinent information because it is ‘confidential’. However, as Wainwright noted, “confidentiality is closely guarded, in order to preserve developers’ trade secrets, but where the sale of public assets is concerned, there is increasing pressure for the books to be opened.” And the pressures are increasing – helped largely by the Freedom of Information Act.

To quote again from Wainwright on a specific but illuminating case of cosy relationships: “Without some commercially sensitive information remaining private, developers could simply refuse to work with councils, leaving boroughs without the housing and regeneration we all need,” says a spokeswoman for Southwark Council. The borough brought a legal challenge against a decision by the Information Commissioner’s Office last year ordering the council to disclose the full details of a viability report, after a freedom of information request was denied. The tribunal concluded that the information must be disclosed, stating … ‘the importance … of local people having access to information to allow them to participate in the planning process’. It sets an encouraging precedent for campaign groups battling similar situations elsewhere.”

And perhaps we can be similarly ‘encouraged’ – especially as the FOI Act in the UK seems to be working to some extent. Most famously, Heather Brooks broke the MPs’ expenses scandal story by first filing an FOI request. In other words, much of this has been achieved only through the clenched teeth of the powers that be: Tony Blair regretted the introduction of the Act and, still, government generally would like to see the FOI Act ‘neutered’ and is not “embracing the spirit of openness but [prefers] finding ways of avoiding compliance while staying within the letter of the law.”

Disappointingly, in the USA, which trail-blazed the whole notion of freedom of information, the FOI system does not seem to be working – to such an extent, that in the wake of Edward Snowden’s revelations about how the National Security Agency abuses access to information, people now believe that transparency can only be gained through whistleblowing: “[the NSA] don’t release anything through normal means. The only way the public really learns about them is through leaks.” Ironically, Snowden is now in exile in Russia, where lies and secrecy are the norm, where there is absolutely no tradition of a civil society and where the arrogance of power is all pervading.

Which brings me to the question of: How is it possible for them to get away with it? After all, whilst the UK is not Russia, nevertheless, it does seem that those in power will generally prefer to deal with others in power and seek to limit the amount of information the common man should have access to.

On the one hand, we have ‘managed democracy’ – and the example of Russia is pertinent, as ‘Putin’s puppet-master’ Vladislav Surkov and other ‘political technologists’ seem to have done very well in creating a society of ‘pure spectacle’. And yet in the West, we have many more years’ practice: it was Edward Bernays, father of the modern PR industry (and nephew of Sigmund Freud) who said: “The conscious and intelligent manipulation of the organized habits and opinions of the masses is an important element in democratic society… It is the intelligent minorities which need to make use of propaganda continuously and systematically.”

And so we have the churning out of press releases from the East Devon District Council reassuring us that everything’s alright and that we can sleep well in our beds – whether it’s the surreal nonsense of ‘Another happy year for Cranbrook’, which contrasts somewhat with several other perspectives, or the production of clever pictograms to sell the notion of energy savings by relocating from Knowle, or the announcement that Skypark is no longer the centre of the known universe.

Meanwhile, the situation around the Knowle relocation project gets progressively more Kafkaesque , with “misleading figures, loaded and biased consultations and the heavy handed (and expensive) use of lawyers to force a decision through…” – all of which contrasts with a set of hopelessly out-of-date ‘Moving and Improving’ pages which provide plenty of questions but very few answers.

On the other hand we have what politicians complain of as the ‘democratic deficit’ – ie, that nobody can be bothered because we can’t make a difference anyway. Of course, we are ‘too busy changing nappies to change the world’ – although we manage to enjoy our regular dose of ‘bread and circuses’. Besides, as the stand-up comedian George Carlin said about the American Dream , we are expected to be “just smart enough to run the machines and do the paperwork. And just dumb enough to passively accept all” the other stuff.

Meanwhile back in East Devon, we have a Scrutiny Committee which does not scrutinise and a system which prefers patronage and cronyism to serving constituents.

In May 2011, the new District Council administration announced “a fresh outlook on serving East Devon for the next term, with a promise of greater transparency.” And yet it was Anna Minton’s excoriating analysis of ‘the local mafia’ in East Devon which captured the sense that ‘there have been a large number of concerns about the operation of the council subverting the democracy process… and that this culture won’t change.’ In the meantime, there are still serious, unanswered questions about lobbying and transparency – and particularly about the ex-Councillor Graham Brown saga and the influence of the East Devon Business Forum, especially with regard to development – all of which the District Council has been determined to both ignore and quash.

And so it is left to those ‘outside’ to ask the difficult questions and to try to bring to account those who manage our democracy. The Freedom of Information system might be flawed and terribly slow, but it is one of the few mechanisms we have to challenge the arrogance and insulation of power.

Jeremy Woodward
28th Feb 2015

EDDC: Are we seeing a “scorched earth” policy as the old guard anticipates defeat?

Wiki:

“A scorched earth policy is a military strategy which involves destroying anything that might be useful to the enemy while advancing through or withdrawing from an area. It is a military strategy where all of the assets that are used or can be used by the enemy are targeted, such as food sources, transportation, communications, industrial resources, and even the people in the area.”

Information Commissioner v EDDC: decision two days after rushed Knowle meetings!

Ah, now we understand! Clever Mr Cohen!

… After months of wrangling it appears that the issue will come to a head next month, with a judgement set to be handed down on Friday 27 March.

BUT conveniently, EDDC has set its extraordinary meeting on the office relocation for Wednesday 25 March – just TWO DAYS before the judgement is set to be published.

So, members of the public are set to be kept in the dark about these reports until after the decision has been made – which one might think, was the aim of these EDDC induced delays all the way along. They have managed to limp it along until two days after the decision is made.

http://www.claire-wright.org/index.php/post/eddc_legal_fees_spent_on_fighting_information_commissioner_now_over_10000

That smell … it’s getting stronger and stronger …

Improvements to be considered at Rotherham Council: change to committee system?


… “It has also been suggested that the governance of the authority could be improved – made more transparent and accountable – if it were changed to the committee system. Before taking any steps to implement such a change, I will be inviting the commissioners views as to what they see would be the most effective and efficient form of governance for the authority. I am also open to representations from the public.”

https://www.gov.uk/government/speeches/intervention-in-rotherham-metropolitan-district-council%20

Independents day, not just for Sid Valley. Watch this movement spread!!

Full text of the Sidmouth Herald report is here: http://www.eastdevonalliance.org.uk/in-the-press/20150227/sidmouth-herald-independents-day-for-valley/ and here: http://www.eastdevonalliance.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/sidmouth_herald_20150227_page_5_charter.jpg?56fb72

And/ or/ click on the pics below to zoom in:

EPSON MFP image

EPSON MFP image

EPSON MFP image

EPSON MFP image

Did full council reject a proposal that relocation decision should be postponed until after elections in May? Decide for yourself

In an article in the Express and Echo, a “council spokesperson said: “At full council in December, Members rejected a proposal that the decision should be postponed until after the election and tasked the deputy chief executive with continuing to progress the project.”

This is not strictly true. The minutes of that meeting included a proposal (below) that set out the steps that needed to be taken to progress a possible relocation but no mention whatsoever was made in those minutes of the need to settle the matter before the district council elections in May 2015.

In December 2014, EDDC Tories were presumably confident that they would continue to be the majority party after May 2015. It is only since developments AFTER that date (significantly the formation of the East Devon Alliance support network for a large number of independent candidates for district council) that the Executive body appears to have taken the decision (when?, where?) to accelerate and merge meetings to try to force this decision through before the cut-off date of the end of March 2015.

Here are the specific minutes:

RESOLVED:
1. that the emerging changes to the relocation project be recognised and the

following be agreed:

The marketing exercise for Knowle and Manstone has resulted in a range of offers and, following a detailed assessment process, price, form and quality of development propositions have been received that merit further detailed negotiation towards selection of a preferred developer.

Leading offers for Knowle do not include options to sell Manstone in which case EDDC can choose to retain Manstone for the foreseeable future as a depot function and continued employment use.

The reduced offer for EDDC’s Heathpark site no longer represents a sufficiently persuasive level of capital receipt and will not be pursued further.

The retention of Heathpark in EDDC ownership means that this now represents the most cost effective and straightforward location to develop a new headquarters building for the Council.

Relocation to Skypark is no longer a viable proposition based on the reduced offer for Heathpark and combination of Knowle market value and prudential borrowing.

The East Devon Business Centre (EDBC) should preferably be retained and could potentially be combined within a new EDDC HQ development.

In the interim,Exmouth Town Hall has been vacated by Devon County.

A new HQ in Honiton can be restricted in size and cost to a 170 desk equivalent

scale with an improved Exmouth Town Hall for 80 EDDC staff as a main satellite office in the district’s largest community.

As part of its commitment to more mobile working and accessibility, the Council will offer a service presence as customers require in future at locations elsewhere in the district.

That relocation continues to make financial and operational sense on a whole life cost basis, specifically 20-year projections combining capital receipt and repayment of prudential borrowing versus existing office running cost and unfunded expenditure on existing building repair, maintenance and improvement.

that the Deputy Chief Executive, in consultation with the Office Accommodation Executive Group, be authorised to take forward further actions in pursuit of the above recommendations and Project Plan,

that further reports be produced for Cabinet and Council on project progress and to seek formal approval for any disposal of Knowle;

that a thorough examination of all facts and figures in respect of the relocation be carried out by:

a) The Audit and Governance Committee

b) The Overview and Scrutiny Committee

c) The internal auditors

d) The independent external auditors

Sources:
http://www.exeterexpressandecho.co.uk/East-Devon-District-Council-accused-8220-forcing/story-26080434-detail/story.html

http://new.eastdevon.gov.uk/council-and-democracy/committees-and-meetings/council/minutes/17-december-2014/

The Tory “access for influence” buddy system that pairs high-ranking MPs (including our own Hugo Swire) with multinational corporation executives

We must not forget that, in addition to “cash for influence” there coexists another system of “access for influence” created by this government and in which our current MP plays his part.

This buddy system (posh name: strategic relationships) pairs high-ranking MPs with up to 80 multi-national companies and gives the top executives of those companies fast-track and frequent contact to those MPs, as explained here:

http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2013/jan/18/buddy-scheme-multinationals-access-ministers

… Analysis of official registers reveals the 38 companies in the first wave of the initiative – more than two-thirds of which are based overseas – have collectively had 698 face-to-face meetings with ministers under the current government, prompting accusations of an over-cosy relationship between corporations and ministers.

The full degree of contact between the chosen companies and the government is not known as telephone calls, emails, and meetings with officials are not recorded on the registers. …”

…”Among the first wave of “buddied” firms were some which have been targeted by campaigners for paying little or no UK tax, or making “sweetheart” deals with tax authorities, including Google and Vodafone. A spokeswoman for UK Uncut, which campaigns against tax avoidance and spending cuts, said the regularity of government access for big business was drowning out other voices.

There are hundreds of thousands, if not millions, of people who have marched, written to MPs, gone on strike, protested and occupied over the cuts and privatisation which are devastating our lives,” she said.

“These demands by ordinary people have been ignored by a cabinet of millionaires which is choosing to only take the calls, the meetings and the dinners with big business and the banks to introduce policies which benefit them and the wealthy minority in this country.”

The new companies to be given ministerial buddies – but not yet publicly disclosed – include the property firms Atkins and Balfour Beatty, which have been paired with climate change minister Greg Barker, who is overseeing work on the government’s green deal and zero-carbon homes programmes.

David Heath of the Department of Agriculture is paired with food businesses Nestlé, Unilever, Mondeléz (formerly part of Kraft, and includes Cadbury) and Associated British Foods (owner of Primark and Kingsmill). Statoil is added to the oil companies already in touch with Vince Cable; foreign office minister Hugo Swire has been buddied with Procter and Gamble, and David Willetts with Cisco. The culture minister Ed Vaizey is paired with Telefonica (O2) and Everything Everywhere (Orange and T-Mobile), while Green adds engineering firm GKN to his list.”

Only three days ago, this appeared in an article in “Tribune”

http://www.tribunemagazine.org/2015/02/mind-the-tax-gap-avoidance-is-an-election-issue/

entitled

Mind the tax gap – avoidance is an election issue”

“…The resulting loss of tax revenues is hard to quantify. Tax dodgers don’t own up to it. HMRC reluctantly admits to a tax gap (tax avoidance, evasion and arrears) in the United Kingdom of £34 billion a year. But other more serious investigations estimate it to be around £120 billion a year. A large part of this is due to organised tax avoidance. Major corporations, such as Amazon, Pepsi, Deutsche Bank, Ikea, Heinz, Accenture, Procter & Gamble, Microsoft, Dyson, Google, eBay, Starbucks and others, have become expert at avoiding taxes on their profits.

and here are some more articles on how Procter and Gamble avoids tax:

http://connection.ebscohost.com/c/articles/66936437/procter-gamble-dark-art-tax-avoidance

http://www.consumerwatchdog.org/newsrelease/out-state-corporations-fighting-keep-tax-loophole-are-top-us-tax-dodgers-says-consumer-w

http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/economy/procter-and-gamble-and-the-art-of-tax-avoidance/2011/10/18/gIQA627kyL_story.html

EDDC changing meeting dates to force through Knowle relocation and land grab days before ” the period of heightened sensitivity” would require delay till next council

What a terrible indictment of a council that its one “achievement” will be voting itself a new building in Honiton and its most dreadful lack of achievement will be the lack of a Local Plan which has left us all at the mercy of greedy developers (many of whom were members of the East Devon Business Forum – chaired by disgraced ex- councillor Graham Brown).

How will it do this: by changing the dates of scheduled meetings to force a (whipped?) vote as explained on Claire Wright’s blog (claire-wright.org):

“The Cabinet meeting scheduled for 18 March has been brought forward a week and will now be held on Wednesday 11 March 5.30 start

(The agenda will include a report on the Office relocation) Cabinet members, Chairman of the Council and Chairman of O/S, please note that the Cabinet briefing will now be held before Council on 25 February (tomorrow) before Council.

A joint meeting of Overview and Scrutiny Committee and Audit and Governance Committee will be held on Thursday 12 March at 5pm. This is an additional meeting. This will be a single issue meeting to discuss and make recommendations on the Office relocation report discussed by Cabinet the previous evening. The recommendations of Cabinet will be referred to that joint meeting. If members of the joint meeting are in agreement, the meeting will be chaired by Tim Wood, Chairman of the O/S Committee with Ken Potter as Vice Chairman. The internal and external auditors will attend.

An Extraordinary meeting of the Council will be held on Wednesday 25 March at 6.30 pm to make a decision on the Office relocation. This is an additional meeting. Recommendations from Cabinet and the joint O/S A&G committee will be reported to that meeting.”

Naughty, naughty EDDC

to take the schedule of meetings off your (new) website when you plan to push Knowle relocation and land grab through before the end of this council session and before the district council elections in May 2015.

Now, why would you do that?

This is the web page from which the information has been removed:

http://new.eastdevon.gov.uk/council-and-democracy/committees-and-meetings/

Council and Democracy – yet another oxymoron!

Where is the EDDC Audit and Governance Agenda for 5 March?

Surely the agenda should be in the public domain by now for a 5 March meeting?

And the calendar of meeting dates has also mysteriously disappeared from the “Council Meetings” web page too.

Hhhmm.

“Cash for influence”

“It is claimed that Mr Straw was recorded describing how he operated “under the radar” and had used his influence to change EU rules on behalf of a firm which paid him £60,000 a year.

On the subject of payment, Mr Straw is heard saying: “So normally, if I’m doing a speech or something, it’s £5,000 a day, that’s what I charge.”

Sir Malcolm is reported to have claimed he could arrange “useful access” to every British ambassador in the world.”

Ring any bells? Only the place, names and the numbers change!

AND they both say they did nothing wrong.

Even Tory councillors unhappy with Overview and Scrutiny function

Highlights from Agenda papers:

Key decisions were felt, despite the legislation permitting Cabinet to take the decision, to be better placed at full Council for final decision to allow full debate on the topic before the final decision was made.

Many comments were made about the changes to council structure following the LGA 2000 and felt that these changes had been to the detriment of the council.

Overview and Scrutiny functions

Many members felt that the overview function of the council was not as strong as under the previous committee setup, when there were separate committees for each function.

Many views were expressed on the need for the next elected council to operate a separate overview committee to work on formulating policy, perhaps encompassing another element – planning policy. A clear focus on overview would also permit the council to put more effort into forward planning, and to give officers a clear steer of the work required of them.

Separating the planning applications from planning policy was another common theme, with a view that the two elements should be separated out to be covered by two committees. The practicalities of a new overview committee covering such a wide area of work (in also covering planning policy) would need careful consideration and officer resource before implementing.

There was general agreement that planning applications were dealt with well and could continue to be so under the structure of a separate committee to that of planning policy.

Scrutiny could still maintain the ability to review decisions before taken, in order to prevent poor decisions being made, and was preferable over a call-in option.

Amendments to Task and Finish Forums

Recommendations were made to Overview and Scrutiny on 22 January on amendments to where the scope is agreed for a TaFF, and the number of councillors who should be on a TaFF.

Discussion reached an agreement on “normally seven” for the number on a Forum, with key aspects being to secure councillors with appropriate skills and/or enthusiasm for the task.

Agreeing a drafted scope at committee level was also felt helpful in order to set the task clear parameters for immediate start by the Forum, as well as help achieve a greater ownership by the committee on what they wanted the Forum to achieve.

Other issues

“To note” recommendations were not appreciated by members and took up valuable meeting time. Reports for information could be circulated separately. Efforts were made at draft agenda stage to seek clear recommendations; and members were reminded that a recommendation was just that – they had the option to change the wording based on the consensus reached. An alternative suggestion was “for the committee to debate and comment on”.

Possible recommendations from this meeting:

 Glossary of terms to be adopted for use as part of the member development programme.

Clear distinction of decision powers between Portfolio Holders/Cabinet and the full Councilcommunicated to councillors, including through the member development programme.

 Debate amending the constitution to permit the following:

o ReplacetheOverviewandScrutinyCommitteewithtwoseparatecommitteesofasmaller membership, overall involving more councillors

o SplitthecurrentresponsibilitiesoftheDevelopmentManagementCommittee,amendingto retain (as Development Control ) determination of planning applications, remain at 16 councillors, and retain a Planning Inspections Committee; the remaining responsibilities of developing planning policy to be undertaken either as a dedicated Development Policy Committee OR taken into the responsibilities of the Overview Committee.

The separate Overview committee to be chaired by a member of the majority party, with an invitation to the opposition to nominate the chairman of the Scrutiny committee. The Leader retains the right to fill the role of Scrutiny Chairman from the majority party if no suitable nomination is
made. The Housing Review Board to remain as chaired by a member of the majority party.

 Scoping for Task and Finish Forums be undertaken by the committee prior to the start of the Forum;

 A Task and Finish Forum to normally consist of seven councillors

 Strategic Management Team work to change the culture of “to note” recommendations and

encourage officers to make clear what decision is being recommended. Still to debate:

 Frequency of meetings for new committee structure suggested. Currently OS meets 10 times a year; DMC 13 times a year

 Chairman’s casting vote

 Chairman of Development Management Committee voting rights when = ward member of application

 Noting member absence when vote taken

 Electronic voting

 Quorum arrangements

 Planning delegation scheme – raising awareness

Click to access 260215-os-agenda-combined-public-version.pdf

Are newspapers shackled by commercial interests?

In the age of the internet, many people get their news for free. This puts enormous pressure on newspapers, which must charge for their paper editions, when circulation drops and they must then rely on advertising revenue to keep afloat. Upset an advertiser and risk your income is not a healthy situation to have to deal with.

All the more respect then to those newspapers which still campaign on important issues and still provide good journalism rather than recycled spin fodder.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-31529682

Very few UK and other European “think tanks” score highly for transparency

“Think tanks” highly influence government policies and many are politically- funded by influential donors. The UK scores particularly badly.

Click to access Transparify+2015+Think+Tanks+-+Report.pdf

In East Devon the Leader’s “think tanks” are secret and produce no minutes, agendas or notes.

Independent councillor Susie Bond (Feniton) slams EDDC for keeping housing numbers secret

“Working in the dark” she calls it. Absolutely spot on.

https://susiebond.wordpress.com/2015/02/14/working-in-the-dark-the-shma-report-is-out/

Two possible reasons for the secrecy:

1. The number suggested is low and would put a complete stop to current inappropriate development.

2. The number suggested is high and would lose the Tories thousands of votes at the forthcoming district council elections in May 2015.

Take your choice.

REMINDER: ‘Knowle landgrab’ objections DEADLINE NEXT FRIDAY 20 FEB

What is widely considered the secretive saga of EDDC’s bungled relocation plans, is reaching a costly crescendo…and not just in monetary terms. If the District Council’s plans go-ahead, this unique landmark parkland will have restricted access, and the Public Open Space will be much reduced.
P1030079

To have your say, see http://saveoursidmouth.com/2015/02/12/where-how-to-send-comments-on-appropriation-disposal-of-land-at-knowle/

Following EDA

As you will have noticed, the East Devon Alliance has grabbed the headlines, and been prominently featured in the local press and radio over the past week or so.
Now this invitation has come from EDA, for any EDWatchers who might like to follow EDA news for themselves:

There are 4 options:
a. Subscribe to emails on the site – http://www.eastdevonalliance.org.uk
b. Subscribe to RSS on the site – http://www.eastdevonalliance.org.uk
c. Like EDA on Facebook – EastDevonAlliance
d. Follow on Twitter – EDevonAlliance

And if anything specially grabs EDWatchers’ attention, it can be shared with neighbours and local friends by:

a. Forwarding the email
b. Clicking the share buttons on the EDA website
c. Sharing EDA posts with friends on facebook.
d. Re-tweeting.

……There seems to be lots going on!!

Three cheers for Save Clyst St Mary campaigners!

Congratulations to Gaeron Kayley of the Save Clyst St Mary campaign, who tells us, “I have been advised that the development at the Cat and Fiddle has been refused! This shows that a collaborative, fair and open approach does give us a true voice. Lets hope events continue to go this way and our village’s character preserved.” Full story, with reasons for refusal,  here: http://saveclyststmary.org.uk/2015/02/12/cat-and-fiddle-planning-application-refused/