Cranbrook – Community Forum – some highlights

Cranbrook Community Forum Steering Group

Meeting July 2014 – some highlights

… A discussion was held around roads and parking after a resident asked if KS/EDDC is happy with the strategy as the roads are too narrow. CW advised that the Forum have reviewed the plans for Phase 2. The Planning Group (including AB and AN) spent a fair bit of time looking over the plans and provided comments to EDDC regarding car parking allocation and lack of open spaces. CW added that AN spent a weekend reviewing the parking allocation to each of the 580+ properties and even reported that a couple of properties didn’t have any form of parking allocated. Although nothing can be done with regards to the parking allocation in phase 1, the Forum has had some influence over phase 2.

… Future Planning Application

DS informed the Forum that EDDC have been advised by the Consortium to expect a planning application for the expansion of Cranbrook in October of this year. The Consortium has confirmed that this application will include areas to the East and West of the existing plans approved, along with an area to the South of the old A30.

DS advised that EDDC do not know the exact location that the application will cover, the likely number of homes, what facilities or infrastructure will be included, or what plans there may be for the Consortium to engage with
the Community on this matter. DS added that EDDC have no further information relating to the detail and can confirm that EDDC have not
been involved in any pre-application discussions or negotiations. East Devon and the Consortium agree that a thorough assessment of Cranbrook is required and that a comprehensive and joined up approach to planning the next phase is essential.

Q from the floor –

How many houses are meant to be built in Cranbrook?

AB – Not entirely sure how many homes were in the first application, however the second application is 587. Therefore we would assume that the first application was similar possibly around 700 homes.

The original plan was to have 2,800 homes , but then this increased to
3,500. There is also an eastern and western expansion area, which would take the number of homes to around 6,000. The 3,500 homes have got outline planning approval.

Click to access community_forum_meeting_minutes_8th_july_2014_-_final.pdf

Sidmouth beach management plan delay to amass more historical information

http://www.middevonstar.co.uk/news/devon_news/11405533.Beach_Management_project_delayed_to_ensure_vital_information_from_25_years_ago_is_tracked_down/?ref=rss

Cranbrook wins award but …

Cranbrook appears to have won some sort of award for “planning excellence” from the Royal Town Planning Institute.

However, in its monthly newspaper, four couples who have moved to the town are asked what they would like to see there and their answers are all the same: shops and a pub. Many mention that they have to go to Sainsbury stores in Exeter or Ottery St Mary to do their daily, weekly or monthly shops.

How can you get an award for “planning excellence” when you design a town that doesn’t start off with shops?

There are towns smaller than Cranbrook with massive superstores put in because EDDC planners said they were “essential”. Planning excellence? Hmmm.

Oh, and they don’t have dog bins either it seems according to locals, though it does have quite a few dogs.

Cornwall Council outsources legal services and makes them available to other public bodies in south west

The contract will be let in six lots: property, planning and highways; commercial (excluding PFI); criminal and civil litigation; social welfare; employment, equalities and pensions; governance, parliamentary agency and electoral law.

Does this include tracing 6,000 missing voters under “Parliamentary Agency and Electoral Law” – and “criminal litigation” is interesting!

http://localgovernmentlawyer.co.uk/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=19589:cornwall-to-set-up-p15-3m-external-legal-panel-for-south-west-public-bodies&catid=51:management-articles&q=

Filming of council meetings is “major advance”

Here’s today’s press release from EDA:

EAST DEVON ALLIANCE WELCOMES RIGHT OF PUBLIC TO FILM COUNCIL MEETINGS

“Transparency and openness should be the fundamental principle behind everything councils and other local government bodies do.” That, according to EDA chairman Paul Arnott, has been one of the fundamental objectives of the organisation. However, these words come not from EDA but the Department for Communities and Local Government.

Journalists and members of the public are now allowed to use “modern technology and communications methods such as filming, audio recording, blogs and tweeting, to record the proceedings of the meetings of the councils and other local government bodies”.

There are no restrictions and the right to record such meetings is already in effect.

The EDA is delighted with this major advance. “This means that East Devon District Council’s inadequate and even hostile replies to questions raised legitimately can be exposed to wider public scrutiny by council tax payers. Similarly, as open debates will be recorded by the public, councillors may decide to adopt a mature and courteous approach to each other and to the public. We hope that this overdue reform will serve to encourage democracy at district, town and parish councils across the district. ”

12.8.14

But the plans were on display …

“But the plans were on display…”
“On display? I eventually had to go down to the cellar to find them.”
“That’s the display department.”
“With a flashlight.”
“Ah, well, the lights had probably gone.”
“So had the stairs.”
“But look, you found the notice, didn’t you?”
“Yes,” said Arthur, “yes I did. It was on display in the bottom of a locked filing cabinet stuck in a disused lavatory with a sign on the door saying ‘Beware of the Leopard.”

― Douglas Adams, The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy

EDDC has been digging a hole for itself!

Thanks to Matt Cobley for illustrating the point!
EDDC digs itself a large hole

More sketches needed for EDA website, on our hot topics (see blogpost headlines..e.g. from Aug 6th 2014, public can film & record all open Council meetings).
Please send your cartoons, pics, etc, to EDA via Contact Us.

The “Exeter and East Devon Growth Point”

Anyone who wants a lesson in the triumph of hype over reality should see this “fly over the Exeter and East Devon Growth Point” video here:

http://www.iviewer3d.co.uk/eed/flythrough.htm

and note:

how many times the commentary includes the word “sustainable”

and

how many times the benefits of the area mention Exeter rather than East Devon.

Oh, and someone needs to edit out the section on the ” inter modal freight terminal” as that has just been ditched by Sainsbury’s.

And maybe tone down the bit about how improvements to junctions 29 and 30 of the M5 will “improve traffic flow”!

District councillors can pull out all the stops when objecting to a planning application – albeit in another district!

http://www.trinitymatters.co.uk/index.php/uplyme-east-devon/item/960-dorset-cc-lyme-regis-landfill-site-can-anything-still-be-done

Would that EDDC AONB sites in other areas (within our own district) received such support.

Town centre parking

Letter in the Driving section of today’s Sunday Times:

“Drivers suffering from parking fatigue or road rage should make a beeline for Northampton town centre … In four of its main car parks the first two hours are free on weekdays, and weekends are free all day. The effect is nothing short of dramatic: the town is buzzing with activity and businesses are booming, quite unlike in much of the country. Parking authorities take not.”

Indeed.

Open and accountable local government from now on

As confirmation,please find below a link to the latest Government proposals for changes to the planning regulations:

https://www.gov.uk/government/news/cutting-red-tape-to-breathe-new-life-into-local-communities

Also, here’s a link to the “Government’s Open and accountable local government” information released in August 2014. This is a guide for the press and public on attending and reporting meetings of local government:

Click to access 140805_Openness_Guide.pdf

Many thanks to our Community Voice on Planning (CoVoP) colleagues for keeping EDA updated. More information here http://www.covop.org/

The missing 6,000 voters: electoral registration for dummies

No, we haven’t forgotten that missing 6,000 voters in the East Devon area.

Last week, in answer to a question from a member of the public about how EDDC had failed to follow legal requirements to canvass homes where there had been no registration for the last three years, Chief Executive and Electoral Registration Officer Mark Williams said that we should not worry about it as we (i.e. he) will get there in the end. No mention of his failing to follow legal requirements, no mention of whether or not the 10 canvasssers have been appointed to try to catch up, no mention of how many of the (more than) 6,000 missing voters are now registered, no mention of the effect that the missing voters had on the recent European elections – just the statement that the end justifies the means. And we all know where that has got politicians in the past (though, of course, Mr Williams is not meant to be a politician he is meant to be a neutral civil servant).

Anyway, for Mr Williams and anyone else out there who wants to know how it SHOULD be done, the Electoral Commission has produced a handy guide as to when and how registration should be undertaken. Any chance anyone at EDDC will read it?

Here it is, so no excuses

http://www.electoralcommission.org.uk/__data/assets/pdf_file/0011/165656/IER-Guidance-on-use-of-resources-English.

Note: “The end justifies the means” was appropriately coined by the in(famous) Niccolo Machiavelli. Perhaps a few of his other sayings might be topical here:

“When you disarm the people, you commence to offend them and show that you distrust them either through cowardice or lack of confidence, and both of these opinions generate hatred.”

“Men rise from one ambition to another: first, they seek to secure themselves against attack, and then they attack others.”

“The first method for estimating the intelligence of a ruler is to look at the men he has around him.”

EDDC informs its officers and councillors that they cannot stop filming, tweeting, blogging and recording of public council meetings

THIS ARTICLE appears in this week’s EDDC e-edition of the Knowledge weekly newspaper sent out to all councillors and many others.

Anyone want to take bets that there will be some councillor or officer who will try to fudge this issue!

New government guidance on planning reform and on public access to decision making.

Two pieces of news from the Government this week:

1. A new planning reform package has been unveiled for consultation. Local residents will have a greater say over the future development of their area, under plans announced by Housing and Planning Minister Brandon Lewis (according to the press release) – what do you think?

2. Wide ranging new government guidance on public access to local authority decision making. Worth reading for planning! According to this, Councils and other local government bodies are required to allow any member of the public to take photographs, film and audio-record the proceedings, and report on all public meetings.

Links to both are available on the home page of Community Voice on Planning (CoVoP), of which EDA is an active member http://www.covop.org/

Knowle relocation: interesting case law on disclosure

Recently we reported on a case where the London Borough of Southwark was forced to disclose contract information in a planning matter. Below is a lawyer’s summary of the points raised by the judgment.

Of great interest is the section where it states clearly that a viability forecast comes under Environmental Information Regulations and not Freedom of Information. This may have implications for the case of EDDC v Information Commissioner where EDDC is refusing to disclose information about Knowle relication. EIR requires far more disclosure than FOI. Note also the remarks about transparency

The ICO heard the challenge to LB Southwark’s decision to refuse disclosure last year:

It accepted that disclosure of redacted elements of the reports would be commercially harmful. Nonetheless, applying the public interest test under the EIR regime, it decided that the interest in disclosure outweighed the harm. LB Southwark appealed the decision to the First Tier Tribunal, which has now held that:

The viability assessment is “environmental information” under the Environmental Information Regulations 2004.

The EIR regime operates with a presumption of disclosure, unlike the Freedom of Information Act 2000 regime.

Publication of viability forecast data relating to deals to be done with other businesses should not be disclosed, because the commercial harm was not in the public interest, but private sales and registered provider deals should be.

The ICO was wrong to refuse to treat Lend Lease’s development model as a “trade secret” and there was no need to show monetary loss arising from disclosure.

The Council’s suggestion of absolute confidentiality in relation to the activities of its staff was wrong. Likewise, there is not always a public interest in maintaining secrecy around public private partnership negotiations – the law on information disclosure is drawn to ensure transparency where it matters.

Disclosure of the starting point in negotiations (i.e. the initial viability reports) is not the same as the disclosure of the full continuum of those negotiations – the likelihood of a chilling effect on other deals should be viewed in that light. The public interest warranted disclosure of much of the information – given “the importance, in this particular project, of local people having access to information to allow them to participate in the planning process”. That factor was held to outweigh the public interest in maintaining the remaining rights of Lend Lease and those subcontractors who contributed to the document. –

See more at: http://www.planninglawblog.com/#sthash.UeaDHxAP.dpuf

Next meeting of the (non) Overview and (none) Scrutiny Committee

The Overview and Scrutiny agenda for 14 August 2014 at 6.30 pm is published here:

Click to access 140814_combined_os_agenda.pdf

and, of course, yet again the fate of the Task and Finish group looking into the influence of the East Devon Business Forum has not been included – nor is it given a scheduled date to be reconvened in the committee’s Forward Plan.

There is an interesting research paper on how meetings should be conducted. Summary: allow the CEO to re-word motions or kick them into the long grass of the Overview and Scrutiny Committee, make it harder for anyone to speak out about anything but make it easier for “partners” to make presentations.

Also of interest is that, what IS in the Forward Plan, is that Knowle relocation is scheduled for discussion on 18 December 2014 in the confidential section of its meeting (Part B).

Question: how can you know in August 2014 if something scheduled for discussion in December 2014 will be confidential? Or is confidential the default for this subject?

If so, the judge in EDDC v Information Commissioner at Exeter Magistrates Court on 28 August 2014 may be interested!

MP Neil Parish gets controversial Gittisham decision “called in”

Good to see Honiton and Tiverton MP Neil Parish giving the same support to Gittisham that he gave to Feniton but also raises some questions:

… “Neil Parish MP wrote to the Minister on behalf of Gittisham Parish Council and the local residents on the 10th June to ask that the Department for Communities and Local Government review how the decision was made to grant planning permission and whether the correct procedures were carried out.”

Given the worryingly strange behaviour of the Development Management Committee in Newton Poppleford recently one wonders if a review should be much wider and more far-reaching. And definitely one for the Overview and Scrutiny Committee.

http://www.neilparish.co.uk/news/neil-parish-mp-calls-minister-gittisham-development