UK not doing enough to adapt to climate change, including flood defence

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-28214685

No cheering words for places like Feniton or for our coastal communities.

Governance and accountability for town and parish councils

http://www.slcc.co.uk/news-item/governance-and-accountability-for-local-councils/768/

A few of our town and parish councillors and clerks might need a refresher here – Ottery, Talaton and Newton Poppleford spring to mind.

Flooding to become more common in Devon

Following on from the post below:

 

http://www.westerndailypress.co.uk/Boscastles-future-Met-Office-admit-underestimated/story-21175814-detail/story.html

“Flood schemes a disaster for South West Communities

“Councillor Stuart Hughes, Devon County Council cabinet member for flood prevention, said the council has not been successful in securing funding through the “partnership” model.

He said: “We have submitted further bids for more than £2.5 million to be considered for the next six year programme. We reported to Defra during the consultation process that there is a difficulty in obtaining funding for rural communities where there are low numbers of properties and little opportunity for large-scale contributions. This is a real issue for Devon which we feel needs to be addressed.”

http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/Flood-scheme-disaster-South-West-communities/story-21172775-detail/story.html

Launch of photo competition for new book on East Devon

The sheer variety and volume of writing inspired by our local area  is behind the idea for a new book, Literature and Landscape in East Devon, to be published later this year.

As announced at last Friday’s hugely entertaining East Devon Writing event, original, relevant, high quality photographs are now being sought for inclusion in the book. Please see PHOTO COMPETITION on the EDA Home page, for precise information.

For a flavour of the forthcoming book, see the following list compiled by Mike Temple of Sidmouth (N.B. only some examples from the list will be included!) the-literature-of-east-devon-by-location . Another ‘taster’ is Robert Crick’s sharply humorous view on the Napoli shipwreck, Cargoes

 

 

East Devon Literature: from Exmouth to Axmouth

Although not an East Devon Alliance event, many members attended Michael Temple’s fascinating evening on the literature of our district last Friday in Ottery St Mary.

Many great writers have been inspired by our area: Coleridge, Conan Doyle, Defoe, Tennyson, C Day Lewis, Wells, Raleigh and Patricia Beer. In an hour and a half of readings, we heard from all of them, and from living local authors too.

Beautifully narrated by Michael, this ninety minute feast reminded us that our part of the world – from Exmouth to Axmouth – has as distinct an identity and a place in literature as any other part of the country.

Thanks were given to all who helped, including local libraries, bookshops and newspapers. Prizes were generously funded by the Sidmouth/ Ottery Herald. The prizewinners were warmly applauded. They were Philip Smith, for  Beer Beach in January: ; and budding author Libby Dean (aged 12), for A Scene from Sidmouth Folk Festival .

(Please note that contrary to an earlier report,Harry Guest did not win a prize in the writing competition – his excellent poem, the Boyhood of Raleigh,pointing to things today which would be unfamiliar to a child of that time, was published back in 1997).

Organiser Michael Temple has added: “I should like to warmly thanks all the readers and living authors who read the extracts and poems so well. (I was the link-man.)”

EDDC to administer flood relief grants

Flood resilience support given approval
Measures designed to help home and business owners protect their properties from future flood events have been approved by the council.
Last week, members agreed to give delegated authority to the chief executive to administer the East Devon elements of a scheme that forms part of a nationwide Government initiative prompted by the devastating storms and floods experienced during the past winter.The Government has launched a number of initiatives to assist householders and businesses recover from flooding and make their premises more resilient to future bad weather.

Councils have been invited to administer several schemes to:
• provide grants to householders and business owners to protect their properties
• offer Council Tax and Business Rate relief
• provide small ‘one-off’ grants called the Business Support Scheme.

The offers are available to owners of properties actually flooded between 1December 2013 and 31 March 2014 and for work designed to prevent future flooding as opposed to work that should be covered by insurance.

Guidance issued by the Department for Communities and Local Government working with Defra means councils can administer the scheme on behalf of the Coalition.

EDDC’s local scheme is based on guidance issued in March and is mostly concerned with administration of the Repair and Renew Grant, which councils can award and then claim back from Westminster.

 

Measures designed to help home and business owners protect their properties from future flood events have been approved by the council.
Last week, members agreed to give delegated authority to the chief executive to administer the East Devon elements of a scheme that forms part of a nationwide Government initiative prompted by the devastating storms and floods experienced during the past winter.

The Government has launched a number of initiatives to assist householders and businesses recover from flooding and make their premises more resilient to future bad weather.

Councils have been invited to administer several schemes to:
• provide grants to householders and business owners to protect their properties
• offer Council Tax and Business Rate relief
• provide small ‘one-off’ grants called the Business Support Scheme.

The offers are available to owners of properties actually flooded between 1December 2013 and 31 March 2014 and for work designed to prevent future flooding as opposed to work that should be covered by insurance.

Guidance issued by the Department for Communities and Local Government working with Defra means councils can administer the scheme on behalf of the Coalition.

EDDC’s local scheme is based on guidance issued in March and is mostly concerned with administration of the Repair and Renew Grant, which councils can award and then claim back from Westminster.

Good job Hugo Swire doesn’t live in Feniton

Though perhaps if he did things might move more quickly:

http://www.sidmouthherald.co.uk/news/news/sewage_shock_for_parading_sidmouth_scouts_1_3583348

Two out of three Feniton appeals dismissed! Only the smaller appeal for 32 homes allowed, 200 extra dismissed!

Well done everyone who put up such a strong case to the Planning Inspector at Feniton – you all deserve pats on the back – and more.  A victory for common sense!

http://www.claire-wright.org/index.php/post/fantastic_news_for_feniton_as_all_appeals_dismissed_except_32_at_acland_par

Particular thanks should go to the two councillors for the wards affected:  Councillor Claire Wright and Councillor Susie Bond who kept everyone informed of what was going on and rallied support time and time again.  Special thanks to Susie who, with no previous council experience, took on the mantle of councillor for Feniton late in the day with such verve and vigour!

As Martin Luther King said: The arc of the moral universe is long, but it bends towards justice!

Talaton – unsustainable developments turned down

Update from a local correspondent.

Applications for 10 and 25 houses at Weeks Farm, Talaton went before the DMC on 1st April, supported by the Parish Council and Ward Councillor Martin Gammell in spite of strong local opposition. Residents were very pleased to see that Planning Officers had recommended refusal for both applications as being unsustainable for such a small village as Talaton and commended the Officers for the thoroughness of their report.

Speakers pointed to the pressure on existing services, with oversubscribed primary and secondary schools, poor transport provision and sewage systems near capacity. After some discussion, the Committee voted to refuse both applications. One of the Councillors commented that if they allowed these applications to go through it would set a precedent, giving a ‘green light’ for small villages to be swamped by developments that were not sustainable.

Common sense rules for Talaton – at least today

From a correspondent (the view expressed is personal):

Both applications were refused 10:2 & 11:1.

Malcolm was brilliant.  Councillor Gammell spoke as ward member then took part & voted, but kept coming back & speaking

Doubtless they will appeal …..

More East Devon farmland to be lost to development? No joking matter, as DMC decides tomorrow, April 1st.

Please note that the Weeks Farm application is up before EDDC’s Development Management Committee tomorrow morning ,Tuesday 1st April, from 9.30 am, at Knowle.
EDDC officers have recommended this application be refused on the grounds that the development will not be sustainable, given the lack of employment opportunities, access to schools, lack of adequate sewerage capacity, etc. But one local Councillor and DMC member has already declared his support for the application, despite a public consultation which shows the majority of his constituents do not.
The Talaton group would be most grateful if you can spare the time to attend in support of their objections, in their efforts to prevent yet another bad planning decision going ahead in the face of local opposition.

Agenda here: http://www.eastdevon.gov.uk/combined_dmc_agenda_010414.pdf

 

“Community Control or Countryside Chaos?” asks new CPRE report

A revealing document called  “Community Control or Countryside Chaos?” , has been published today by the Campaign to Protect Rural England.

In it, the CPRE assesses the impact of the governments’ National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF) two years on. Feniton is featured on p 10, as one of a number of communities in England ‘under siege’ (with an excellent map!). There’s a good Case Study on East  Devon on p15, which again refers to Feniton, but also the Colyford decision.

The report made the front page of today’s Western Morning News http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/Towns-villages-siege-developers/story-20843419-detail/story.html – again referencing Feniton, and featuring an interview with Councillor Susie Bond *.The Express and Echo also has the story, as has the national press https://eastdevonwatch.org/2014/03/24/cpre-says-devon-villages-under-siege-by-developers/

The Daily Telegraph has a report, too. Link will follow.

*Note:  Independent Cllr Bond was elected in a landslide victory, replacing  former Councillor Graham Brown, who is the subject of a lengthy, on-going  police investigation .

 

CPRE says Devon villages under siege by developers

http://www.exeterexpressandecho.co.uk/Report-Devon-villages-8220-siege-8221-developers/story-20843687-detail/story.html

and this is how it was reported in the Daily Mail:

“Rural towns and villages are being placed under siege by the threat of 700,000 new homes in the countryside, according to a hard- hitting report.

Almost 200,000 of these are earmarked for supposedly protected Green Belt land thanks to the Government’s changes to planning laws, the Campaign to Protect Rural England warns today.

Its report reveals that just 84 local authorities – a quarter of those outside London – propose to prioritise building on brownfield sites.

A study of planning decisions also shows that 39 major housing developments in the year to March 2013, totalling 8,700 new houses on greenfield land, were given the green light after an appeal by developers – double the number the year before.

Some 17 appeals were granted personally by Communities Secretary Eric Pickles. In another 14 cases councils simply abandoned their objections because they feared losing on appeal.

The CPRE claims that the overall proportion of major appeals granted has risen to  46 per cent, up from 31.7 per cent in 2008-09.

The report has been written to coincide with the second anniversary this week of the Coalition’s National Planning Policy Framework, which established a presumption in favour of ‘sustainable development’ to kickstart house building.

But a third of all councils still do not have a Local Plan for development in place. These are supposed to give more power to residents and town hall chiefs to resist unwanted development.

The CPRE says the changes have led to an ‘unnecessary loss of countryside’ and have left some towns and villages facing the prospect of changing out of all recognition. At Kentford in Suffolk, proposals for 340 new homes are expected to double the size of the village.

At Warton in Lancashire, 1,365 homes are to be built in a town of just 3,573 houses – expected to lead to a population increase of up to 92 per cent.

The report says: ‘The most recent Government figures state that there is enough suitable brownfield land available for 1,500,000 new houses. Emerging and adopted Local Plans are, however, proposing significant amounts of building on greenfield land.

The CPRE says the changes have led to an ‘unnecessary loss of countryside’

‘We estimate that land has been allocated for 729,000 new houses, of which 190,000 are in the Green Belt. These sites are often on the edge of country towns and villages.’ It adds: ‘Many of these “villages under siege” are faced with planning applications proposing development well in excess of the amount envisaged in emerging or adopted Local Plans.’

Shaun Spiers, chief executive of the CPRE, said the report provided ‘firm evidence’ that the Government’s planning reforms were not achieving their stated aims.

He added: ‘Far from community control of local development, we are seeing councils under pressure to disregard local democracy to meet top-down targets.

‘Local authorities are having to agree fanciful housing numbers and allocate huge areas of greenfield land to meet them. Where they lack an up-to-date plan, the countryside is up for grabs and many villages feel under siege from developers.’

Planning Minister Nick Boles said the report was ‘inaccurate, exaggerated and based on a spurious analysis of the facts’, adding: ‘We have given councils the power to shape where the new homes our country needs should and shouldn’t go.’

“The beneficial effect of heavy rainfall….

…is that more people work from home”, says Wainhomes’ spokesman . For the context of this topical quote, go to Feniton Councillor, Susie Bond’s blog : http://susiebond.wordpress.com/2014/02/05/groundhog-day-in-room-101-super-inquiry-day-10/