Greenpeace “too political” but UKIP is OK!

There are some really daft things going on prior to this General Election, for example Greenpeace, which wants politicians of ALL parties to hear its views has been banned from Sutton Harbour in Plymouth for being “too political” whereas UKIP, which also plans to be there, has been allowed:

http://www.plymouthherald.co.uk/Greenpeace-banned-Sutton-Harbour-political-UKIP/story-26140530-detail/story.html

But it isn’t quite as daft as calling housing figures in a draft local plan “politically sensitive” as EDDC just did. Still, a sensible Planning Inspector put them right and they are due out this week.

Watch this space.

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

Real Zorro

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

have an agenda that would:

RESPECT RURAL PEOPLE

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

They said that they would

EMPOWER RURAL COMMUNITIES

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

THEY SAID THEY WOULD

PROTECT RURAL SERVICES

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

They said that they would

REVIVE THE RURAL ECONOMY:

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

THESE ARE THE PROMISES THEY MADE TO YOU IN 2010

WILL YOU STILL VOTE FOR THEM IN 2015?

 

About – turn! And when is an instruction not an instruction in EDDC-land?

So, the housing figures ARE to be published because our Planning Inspector says they are NOT politically sensitive:

http://new.eastdevon.gov.uk/news/2015/03/strategic-housing-market-assessment-shma-report-to-be-published-prior-to-local-elections/

In yesterday’s Express and Echo Leader of EDDC Paul Diviani is quoted as saying: “Mr Thickett [the Planning Inspector in charge of our Local Plan – the man who threw the last version out] did not specifically instruct the council to publish the figures before the election but, in response to a suggestion that the matter might end up being delayed by the elections, he said he expected the council to get on with it at the earliest opportunity.

Just a few words were missing there. What Mr Thickett said was: “I will need to see evidence of any proposed changes [to the Local Plan, which includes the new housing figures] as soon as they have been agreed AND BY MID APRIL AT THE LATEST. Yours, etc …

Now, that sounds very much like an instruction to us!

Planning Inspector tells it as it is to EDDC: no ” political sensitivity” – get on with it!

EDDC tried to pull the wool over our eyes by saying that they could not deal with public consultation on the (second) draft of the Local Plan because it would be “politically sensitive” before district council elections in May 2015 and Leader Diviani sent out a long press release giving his reasons:

We reported this here:

https://eastdevonwatch.org/2015/02/16/why-are-the-consultants-reports-on-housing-to-remain-secret-until-after-district-elections/

We noted that Mid Devon was consulting on its Local Plan (albeit without important housing figures) so it was “politically sensitive” in East Devon but not in Mid Devon:

https://eastdevonwatch.org/2015/02/18/something-doesnt-add-up-mid-devons-draft-local-plan-out-for-consultation-when-its-supposed-to-be-tied-to-our-secret-consultants-reports/

Then we heard that East Devon had done a complete about-turn and now WOULD be releasing consultants’ figures AND putting the Local Plan out to consultation after all – with a subtle mention that the Planning Inspector had forced them to change their minds:

https://eastdevonwatch.org/2015/02/27/eddc-making-a-complete-u-turn-on-housing-figures-before-elections/

We found EDDC’s letter of 6 February 2015 to the Planning Inspector attempting to justify their first move on file in the EDDC website:

Click to access lettertolocalplaninspector060215.pdf

But, oddly, not the letter FROM the Planning Inspector which led to the U-turn. Thanks to reader who requested this information, we now have Mr Thickett’s response to EDDC’s letter of 6 February which our reader tells us was not on their website yesterday but, after the request for a copy, IS on EDDC’s website today:

Click to access letter-no-11-to-east-devon-090215.pdf

Interestingly, the reply from Mr Thickett was dated 9 February 2015 but never made it on to the Local Plan website until today, nearly a month late.

Mr Thickett’s brusque response makes it clear that he will have no truck with “political sensitivity” and he wants this out there and sorted. He says (again) that he had anticipated re-hearing the Local Plan in October 2014 and appears less than happy with how things have turned out.

Same here, Mr Thickett, same here.

Pity DMC’s concerns aren’t consistent

The agenda for today’s meeting of the Development Management Committee at EDDC includes an officer recommendation for a representation to the Mid Devon Local Plan consultation:

5. That potential commuting patterns, especially for work
purposes, of the future residents of Cullompton are
accurately assessed. This is especially significant noting the
ease of car travel from Cullompton to the strategic
employment sites in the West End of East Devon (e.g. a drive
time of 11 minutes from M5 Junction 28 to the Science Park).

There is quite a lot more including a reference to the A373 Cullompton to Honiton road being ‘narrow in places’.

An EDWatcher comments, “It’s intriguing that EDDC are so concerned about the traffic implications of commuting from Cullompton, and yet no similar concern was expressed for the impact of our 1400 job industrial estate between Sidford and Sidbury, where the road through the village is much narrower than the A373.”

EDWatch says, “We’d burst out laughing, if this were a laughing matter!”

Two tier home ownership: green for the rich and brown for the poor

Green = executive-style homes in lovely surroundings and in beautiful countryside or coastal areas – you choise – where, if you fancy a change or a trade up or downsize or you get a job elsewhere, you sell for something else of your choice

Brown = little boxes on brownfield sites, no planned infrastructure, forced to keep the “starter home for 5 years before selling, so if you get a job elsewhere or your family size increases beyond your number of (small) bedrooms, before 5 years is up, tough luck, you have to pay the 20% discount back if you need to move.

And what if your Local Plan doesn’t accommodate the “200,000 starter homes” but instead relied on affordable housing? Tough luck again, affordable housing is thrown out in this plan.

Can you work out how the “starter homes” are funded from this press release:

“The 20% discount will be paid for by waiving the fees homebuilders have to pay to local authorities under so-called Section 106 agreements, amounting to at least £45,000 per dwelling on brownfield sites.

The Conservatives say homes worth £250,000 outside London – or £450,000 in London – would be eligible for the scheme and that first-time buyers would have to repay the 20% price advantage if they sold within five years.”

Anyone else thinks there are more holes in this scheme than in a pair of fishnet tights?

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-31683974

Visions of East Devon

Great news for those who enjoyed the preview launch (Sidmouth, December 2014) of Peter Nasmyth’s  new book on ‘East Devon’s Literature and Landcape’, AND for those who missed it. A follow up performance will take place in May, in Coleridge’s home town, Ottery St Mary. Special dispensation has been given for pixies in the church! Here’s the poster, with another of Peter’s stunning photos (Click to enlarge).

Visions of Childhood poster rgb

Meanwhile, this poem, by co-organiser of the event, Mike Temple, has just been published in the Express and Echo. It’s called simply, ‘A Vision’.

(with apologies to Coleridge)

In Honiton E.D.D.C.
Says its new offices shall be –
Far from the town where, as we know,
The office workers like to go.
No longer all Knowle’s greenery
But superstore and factory.
An Exmouth office, too, a place
Where few will find a parking space –
The building looks like an old barn,
Not like the “dome” in “Kubla Khan”.

But, Oh, the waste of public money –
The ratepayers don’t think it funny:
To build a glass and concrete shed
And trash the park and Knowle instead,
For “Our Great Leader” and his crew
Have no care for the public’s view;
Nor badger-setts, nor many a tree;
Nor office blocks, built ’83;
Nor Chambers, used by you and me;
Nor weekend tourist-parking, free;
Nor jobs and trade Sidmouth will lose;
Nor all the lovely parkland views –
All sold to builders for a fee –
And all for what? For vanity?
This Council, with no Local Plan,
Lets builders build where’er they can.

Yet in my crystal ball I see
A new look for E.D.D.C.:
Independents there will be
As councillors for you and me,
Come from every town and shire
With the Wright One to remove Swire,
Who all will cry: Please be aware:
We will not relocate somewhere
Based on false claims that there will be
“Big”(?) savings made in energy.
We come to bring Democracy,
And Probity, Transparency.
You all know there’s a better way –
It’s signposted by E.D.A.* ,
So, all you readers, lend a hand
And save our green and pleasant land.

(*EDA is East Devon Alliance)

Has the Planning Inspector forced EDDC to reveal housing figures before the election?

Digging through the almost impenetrable new EDDC website throws up this letter from EDDC to the Planning Inspector, Mr Thickett:

Click to access lettertolocalplaninspector060215.pdf

in which EDDC states:

“Given the timetable for SHMA completion, and under normal circumstances, I would have envisaged that the earliest we would have been able to take a report with proposed changes to the Plan to our members, seeking authority to consult, would be in March (or early April) 2015. I would envisage a six week consultation period.

However because of the forthcoming local and national elections this would not appear to be a viable programme to follow with concern of risks that the process could been seen as becoming politically motivated rather than being based on the soundness of the plan. While mindful of the need to progress quickly I would appreciate your views on the significance to the process of Members consideration and consultation not taking place until shortly after the election.”

EDDC appears to have assumed the Inspector would concur and sent out a press release saying that figures would not be released until after the election due yo “political sensitivity”. Today they backtracked and said they WILL be released?

There is no record of Mr Thickett’s reply (he has in the past replied almost immediately to letters from EDDC).

Where is it? What did it say?

EDDC making a complete U-turn on housing figures before elections?

First they had to be concealed until after the election because they were “politically sensitive” and now news that they might be published within the next 10 days according to this blog:

https://susiebond.wordpress.com/

What on earth is going on at the Fawlty Towers known as Knowle? How can they be ” politically sensitive” one week and not politically sensitive the next week? Is panic mode the default mode at EDDC these days with no-one knowing what is going on?

Is it a case that Mid-Devon jumped the gun on consultation – putting their new draft Local Plan out to consultation without the Strategic Housing Market Assessment (SHMA)figures and saying they would be available to the public by the end of February? Mid Devon has relied on the same consultants’ reports that East Devon is relying on. How could they put a draft plan out for consultation without the figures? Surely you cannot consult on incomplete information?

So, EDDC do we get the figures AND the consultants reports behind them before the elections or after? If before, what was the justification for trying to conceal them until after?

And if we get only your figures and not the reports, why?

And how come you are “tweaking” the reports anyway if Mid Devon has already used the information?

What’s that smell?

Progress update on Village Plan and EDDC Plan

From Save Clyst St Mary organiser, Gaeron Kayley:

‘A big thank you to everyone that attended the meeting with Hugo Swire last week. A number of questions came up regarding our neighbourhood plan and our local plan.

Please See the update from Mike Howe regarding our local Plan below*.

Please also see our poster advertising the neighbourhood plan, where you can view and have your say on our Parish. Click here to open Exhibition poster (1) . (Saturday 7th March at Clyst St Mary School 10am- 4pm, 10th March Cat and Fiddle Inn 10am-Noon & Sowton Village Hall 6pm-9pm)’

*email fromMike Howe:

The production of the SHMA has unfortunately been a long and drawn out process. There are 6 key stages to the production of the SHMA. These are:

Definition of the housingmarket area

Understanding household projections

Addressing Market Signals

Addressing Housing Backlog

Measuring Affordable Housing Need

Future Employment and Economic Growth Assumptions and Aspirations

A so-called draft SHMA was sent through from the consultants in August 2014 after they had completed only the first two stages of the process. This information was communicated to Members via a report to Development Management Committee on the 26th August 2014 and an all Members briefing note on the 27th August 2014. This report and briefing note made it clear that the information available so far simply

modelled housing numbers based on historic trends and that without taking account of factors such as the backlog of affordable housing need and projecting future employment and economic growth the information was largely meaningless. No further draft SHMA information has been made available to any Members since that time indeed until the SHMA process is complete and all factors have been taken into account any data would have been misleading. I appreciate that this delay has been highly frustrating for all of us but we have been entirely dependent on consultants to carry out this work. Given the expertise required and the need to consider data from all of the authorities within the housing area there was no other option than to use external consultants on this work. Unfortunately, it has taken them much longer than envisaged.

In advance of receipt of the final SHMA Mid-Devon District Council have proceeded with production and consultation on their Local Plan. It is understood that their work is based on the draft SHMA data that all of the participating authorities received in August 2014 and some subsequent employment projections. Mid-Devon do not have any additional data than we do, however their position is slightly more straight forward as they do not have a growth point and therefore it is easier to predict factors such as future job growth in Mid-Devon than it is here in East Devon. Clearly there are risks associated with Mid-Devon’s approach however this is not our concern as we must focus on delivering our own Local Plan.

I am pleased to say that the SHMA work is now complete and only yesterday a draft report was provided by the consultants to officers of the commissioning authorities. The work now needs to be considered by officers and any queries raised with the consultants before the report can be finalized and published. This will happen in the next week to 10 days. We envisage publishing the SHMA in a co-ordinated way between the authorities and their respective Members with the report being sent to Members slightly in advance of wider publication.

The SHMA was the remaining key piece of evidence that enables us to produce an objectively assessed housing need for the district and move forward with the Local Plan. We had previously envisaged that the upcoming election would prevent progress being made until May however the Inspector has made it clear that he expects to see the proposed changes to the Local Plan by mid-April and we must adhere to the timescale that he has set as the process moving forward is led by the inspector.

Our time line now looks like this:

 Early March – Publication of the SHMA

 By end of March (pre-purdah) – DMC and full council meeting to consider

revisions to the Local Plan including proposed housing numbers

 Submission of revisions to Inspector immediately following incorporation of

any changes following full council

 Inspector provides questions upon which to seek views through consultation

 Consultation commences (mid-April)

 Consultation ends (end May)

 Oral examination sessions reconvene (August/September)

 Local Plan adoption by end of year

“The Myth of the Housing Crisis” – Sir Simon Jenkins (Chair, National Trust)

Article in “The Spectator” by Sir Simon Jenkins, quoted in full:

“We’re destroying green belts and despoiling villages for the sake of a moral crusade based on developers’ propaganda:
g
There is no such thing as the English countryside. There is my countryside, your countryside and everyone else’s. Most people fight just for theirs. When David Cameron told the BBC’s Countryfile he would defend the countryside ‘as I would my own family’, many of its defenders wondered which one he meant. In the past five years a national asset that public opinion ranks with the royal family, Shakespeare and the NHS, has slid into trench warfare. Parish churches fill with protest groups. Websites seethe with fury. Planning lawyers have never been busier. The culprit has been planning reform.

My files burst with reports from the front, each local but collectively a systematic assault on the appearance of rural England. In Gloucestershire, Berkeley Castle gazes across the vale of the Severn to the Cotswolds as it has since the middle ages. It is now to face fields of executive homes. Thamesside Cookham is to be flooded not by the river but by 3,750 houses. The walls of Warwick Castle are to look out over 900 houses. The ancient town of Sherborne must take 800.

So-called ‘volume estates’ — hundreds of uniform properties rather than piecemeal growth — are to suburbanise towns and villages such as Tewkesbury, Tetbury, Malmesbury, Thaxted, Newmarket, Great Coxwell, Uffington, Kemble, Penshurst, Hook Norton, Stow-on-the-Wold, Mevagissey, Formby. Every village in Oxfordshire has been told to add a third more buildings. Needless to say there is no local option.

Developer lobbyists and coalition ministers jeer at those who defend what they regard as ‘chocolate-box England’. But did Cameron mean so radically to change the character of the English village and country town? These are not just chocolate boxes. The list embraces the country round Durham, Gateshead, Rotherham, Salford, Redditch, Lincoln and Sandbach. Such building will ‘hollow out’ town centres. Three-quarters of hypermarket approvals are now out of town, even as this market collapses. The green belt is near meaningless. The Campaign to Protect Rural England estimates some 80,000 units are now proposed for greenbelt land.

The coalition’s planning policy was drafted in 2011 by Local Government Secretary Eric Pickles’s ‘practitioner advisory group’. This group is a builders’ ramp, composed of Taylor Wimpey and others. Councils were told that either they could plan for more building or it would proceed anyway. Brownfield preference was ended. Journey-to-work times were disregarded. Fields could sprout unregulated billboards. ‘Sustainable’ development was defined as economic, then profitable.

The draft proved so bad it had to be amended. But the disregard of local wishes and bias against rural conservation remained. As with siting of wind and solar installations, the centre knew best. Whereas 80 per cent of new building before 2010 had been on serviced land within settlements, this has now shrunk to half.

The most successful tactic of the rural developers was the hijacking of ‘the housing crisis’. They claimed the crisis could only be ended by building in open country, even when their wish was for ‘executive homes’. This ideal of land lying enticingly ‘free’ for homeless people acquired the moral potency of the NHS.

Housing makes politicians go soft in the head. An old Whitehall saw holds that England ‘needs’ 250,000 new houses a year, because that is how many households are ‘formed’. The figure, a hangover from wartime predict-and-provide, takes no account of occupancy rates, geography of demand, migration or housing subsidy, let alone price. Everyone thinks they ‘need’ a better house.

Yet this figure has come to drive a thousand bulldozers and give macho force to ideologues of left and right, whose ‘own’ countryside is somewhere in France or Italy. Few Britons are homeless. Most enjoy living space of which the Japanese can only dream. Yet the Economist magazine cites the 250,000 figure at every turn. The Institute of Economic Affairs wails that housing has become ‘unaffordable for young people’. A recent FT article declared, ‘The solution to the housing crisis lies in the green belt.’

This is all nonsense. The chief determinant of house prices is wealth, subsidy and the supply of money. During the credit boom, prices soared in America and Australia, where supply was unconstrained. Less than 10 per cent of Britain’s housing market is in new building. Although clearly it is a good thing if more houses are available, there is no historical correlation between new builds and price.

Neil Monnery’s Safe as Houses is one of the few sane books on housing economics. It points out that German house prices have actually fallen over half a century of steady economic boom. The reason is that just 43 per cent of Germans own their own homes, and rarely do so under the age of 40. The British figure hovers between 60 and 80 per cent. Germans are content to rent, a more efficient way of allocating living space. They invest their life savings elsewhere, much to the benefit of their economy.

The curse of British housing, as another economist, Danny Dorling, has written, is not under-supply but under-occupancy. In half a century, Britons have gone from ‘needing’ 1.5 rooms each to needing 2.5 rooms each. This is partly caused by tax inducements to use houses as pension funds, partly by low property taxes and high stamp duty on transfers. Britain, Dorling says, has plenty of houses. It just uses them inefficiently, though high prices are now at last shifting the market back to renting.

London’s housing has been ‘in crisis’ for as long as I can remember. Yet its under-occupancy is remarkable. Famously its annual growth could fit into the borough of Ealing if it was developed at the density of inner Paris. The agents Stirling Ackroyd have identified space in the capital for 500,000 new houses without encroaching on its green belt. The reality is that housing ‘need’ (that is, demand) is never met in booming cities, only in declining ones.

This has nothing to do with building in the countryside. Past policies aimed at ‘out-of-town’ new towns and garden cities merely depopulated cities and duplicated infrastructure. Central Liverpool and Manchester (like Shoreditch) numbered their voters in hundreds rather than tens of thousands. A rare architect wise to these things, Lord Rogers, recently wrote that this led to ‘new town blues, lifeless dormitories, hollowed-out towns and unnecessary encroachment on green sites’. Sprawl was about profit, not planning.

The answer to housing a rising population has to lie in towns and cities, in reducing the pressure on commuting and raising the efficiency of infrastructure. Cities are where people and jobs are, and where services can be efficiently supplied. England’s urban population per acre is low by world standards, half that of New York or Paris, yet even so its housing occupancy is low. A boost to urban densities — not just empty towers along the Thames — is a sensible ‘green’ policy.

England’s countryside will clearly change over time. Its occupants no longer farm it, and are more often retired or commuters. Yet its amenity is clearly loved by the mass of people who visit, enjoy, walk and play in it. Its beauty in all weathers remains a delight of living and moving about in this country. England made a mess of its cities after the war. The rural landscape is its finest environmental asset.

Any civilised society regulates the market in scarce resources, including those of beauty. It guards old paintings, fine buildings, picturesque villages, mountains and coasts. England is the most crowded of Europe’s big countries, yet a past genius for policing the boundary between town and country has kept 80 per cent of its surface area still visually rural in character. This has been crucially assisted by the 14 urban green belts created in the 1950s by a Conservative, Duncan Sandys.

I am sure the way forward is to treat the countryside as we do urban land. It should be listed and conserved for its scenic value — as it is for its quality as farmland. I would guess this would render sacrosanct a ‘grade one’ list of roughly three quarters of rural England, to be built on only in extremity. The remaining grades would enjoy the protection of a ‘presumption against development’, but a protection that would dwindle down the grades to ‘of limited local value’.

One feature of such listing is that green belts could be redefined. Those of minimal amenity value would be released in favour of belt extension elsewhere. It is stupid to guard a muddy suburban field while building over the flanks of the Pennines.

In making these judgments we need to rediscover the language of landscape beauty, fashioned by the sadly deceased Oliver Rackham and others. Without such language, argument is debased and money rules. The policy of ‘let rip’, adopted by both major parties at present, means that England’s countryside is having to fight for each wood and field alone. At which point I say, praise be for nimbys.”

This article first appeared in the print edition of The Spectator magazine, dated 28 February 2015

http://www.spectator.co.uk/features/9452952/the-myth-of-the-housing-crisis/

‘East Devon District Council accused of “forcing” a vote on controversial relocation project’ , reports Exeter Express and Echo

By Exeter Express and Echo | Posted: February 25, 2015
The Knowle in Sidmouth

A LEADING East Devon District Councillor has accused the council of “forcing” a vote on its controversial relocation project ahead of the local elections in May.

The council’s relocation project is set to be decided upon next month, because of the looming local elections.

Ward member for Ottery St Mary Councillor Claire Wright, criticised council officials for prematurely “forcing” a vote on the project “just days “ before the pre-election period known as purdah which prevents council’s from making any major decisions so as not avoid the risk of prejudice.

The council was pursuing plans to relocate to a purpose built office at SkyPark. However, at the end of November, the local authority announced a U-turn on its plans and instead the council backed the revised plan for the council to retain the council-owned East Devon Business Centre at Heathpark in Honiton where a new build will also be constructed – formerly earmarked for a supermarket – and to use existing space at Exmouth Town Hall.

Councillors have been informed that a meeting of the Cabinet has been brought forward a week to March 11, and will include a report on the office relocation.

A joint meeting of the Overview and Scrutiny and Audit and Governance committees is being held the day later to make recommendations on the relocation report.

And, at an additional meeting of the full council on March 25, a decision will be made on the relocation.

Cllr Wright, said: “It is a shocking indictment of the way that the Conservative leadership operates at the Knowle.

“This is the most controversial and costly project, apart from the local plan, which incidentally has been deliberately delayed until after the election, in years.

“There has been stacks of concern about the facts and figures, as well as the enormous cost and the millions that would need to be borrowed.

“So, instead of waiting to allow a new council to make up its own mind on the plans, the Conservatives force through a vote, just days before the election period starts.

“What a disrespectful way to run a council.”

A council spokesperson, said: “The special council meeting to decide on the proposed office move needs to take place before the end of March so that the proceedings do not fall inside the purdah period leading up to the local election on May 7, during which time no major decisions can be taken.

“The scheduled date for Cabinet was March 18, but there would not have been sufficient time for the council to receive the paperwork from Cabinet so as to discuss it on March 25.

“It was therefore agreed that the cabinet meeting would take place on March 11, to allow more time.

“It also followed that the cabinet reports and recommendation would need to be referred to Overview & Scrutiny and Audit & Governance Committees before full council.

“The chairs of those committees have therefore agreed to meet in a single session on March 12, with one item on the agenda – office relocation.

“That will allow time for all the documentation to be processed and available for councillors to make an informed decision at their meeting on March 25.”

he added: “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.

“In the interests of transparency, the cabinet deliberations must be scrutinised by both committees.”

Time to vote in new offices, no time for a Local Plan

From a correspondent:

… it’s interesting that they can manage to arrange all these special meetings before going into purdah, but they can’t possibly find the time to progress the Local Plan!

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.”

UK Food Security

Interestingly, one point not mentioned by the National Farmers Union is the amount of Grade 1 agricultural land lost to speculative building which leads to the land being worth up to £1 million per acre when planning permission is received – especially in areas such as ours where we have no Local Plan and no 6-year land supply. And where quite a few farmers are parish, town and/or district councillors (and even, in the past, running a plannung consultancy) and are sometimes developers themselves.

http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/WMN-OPINION-UK-blas-food-security-unstable-world/story-26070915-detail/story.html

Hugo Swire (Con) blames EDDC (Con) for Local Plan (Con) development free-for-all due to NPPF (Con!)

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

Mid-Devon Local Plan consultants reports to be published by the end of February

This is what it says in the Mid devon Local Plan consultation document:

” Strategic Housing Land Availability Assessments, Reports and Availability” –

” Strategic Housing Market Assessment (SHMA) – Anticipated to be published by the end of February 2015″

Presumably based on the same consultants’ reports that EDDC says must be kept secret because of “political sensitivity”.

So, it’s politically sensitive in East Devon and not politically sensitive in Mid Devon.

What a difference a few miles makes.

Local environmental and planning consultant Charlie Hopkins lambasts East Devon District Council over secrecy on consultants report on housing numbers

Charlie Hopkins, a local planning and environmental consultant,

http://www.charliehopkins.co.uk/

who represented Feniton at their super-inquiry and a founder member of the

Environmental Law Foundation:

http://elflaw.org/

(motto: Everyone has a Right to Participate in Decisions About their Environment: We Help the Voices of Ordinary People to be Heard and Respected),

has sent the following letter to East Devon District Council which is refusing to release the consultants’ reports on the number of houses required for the Local Plan because they may be “politically sensitive” during the run up to local elections.    This, of course, delays the Local Plan by several more months and does not allow the information into the public domain.

As we have covered before, there is a period before elections when local authorities go into what is called purdah.  There is an explanation of this HERE.  The legislation says:

“During the period between the notice of an election and the election itself, local authorities should not publish any publicity on controversial issues or report views or proposals in such a way that identifies them with any individual members or groups of members. Publicity relating to individuals involved directly in the election should not be published by local authorities during this period unless expressly authorised by or under statute. It is permissible for local authorities to publish factual information which identifies the names, wards and parties of candidates at elections.35. In general, local authorities should not issue any publicity which seeks to influence voters. However this general principle is subject to any statutory provision which authorises expenditure being incurred on the publication of material designed to influence the public as to whether to support or oppose a question put at a referendum. It is acceptable to publish material relating to the subject matter of a referendum, for example to correct any factual inaccuracies which have appeared in publicity produced by third parties, so long as this is even-handed and objective and does not support or oppose any of the options which are the subject of the vote.”

So, basically, EDDC Tories are saying that their reports would identify with individual members or groups of members.  This is crazy:  they are independent reports commissioned by East Devon District Council, not by individual members or groups of members.  The bills for the two reports will be paid by East Devon District Council NOT East Devon and Honiton and Tiverton Conservative Associations.

The reports are factual information only and, if it were seeking to influence voters, would be a serious impugning of the consultants’ reports and the reputation of the consultants themselves.

Here is the letter from Mr Hopkins:

The announcement of further delays to the Local Plan by EDDC’s leader, Paul Diviani, is quite incredible. We are told to believe that these delays are “inevitable”, because were the public to have sight of a housing needs report before the elections in May the process “could be seen” as being politically motivated.

Could be seen by whom Mr Diviani?

The report itself certainly won’t be seen by anyone except those select few in EDDC, who then take it upon themselves to decide what the public should know and what they shouldn’t. When EDDC presented the new Local Plan at the public inquiry a year ago, last February, they considered that it was in a form acceptable to the Inspector, who made it clear from Day 1 that it was anything but. A clearer case of incompetence would be hard to imagine. We were then assured that revised housing figures could be produced within a matter of weeks. A year later, still we wait, now to be told, with much hand wringing, that we must wait even longer because of the remote possibility that some unspecified, unidentified persons may see the process as “politically motivated”.

The only reason for withholding the housing needs report is that it is likely that housing needs will be shown to be higher than the figures presented by EDDC a year ago. The consequence of this is that villages and communities in East Devon will be allocated higher housing figures than previously. This is highly unlikely to go down to well with the vast majority of communities in East Devon, some of which have already seen proposals by developers to hugely increase housing on greenfield sites (think of Feniton, Gittisham, and more recently Clyst St Mary).

If there is political motivation behind delaying the release of these reports that can only come from the Tory majority on EDDC.

Finally, who benefits from this further delay?

An unholy trinity of landowners and developers, who stand to profit massively in the interim period before a new Local Plan is in place, and last, but not least, their chums on EDDC.

Charlie Hopkins

 

Local Plan delay “quite incredible”,says planning expert

See today’s post on http://www.saveoursidmouth.com