Celebration of East Devon’s Literature and Landscape, at launch of new book created for EDA

Launch poster Nov 2014  low
Many thanks to the large audience who supported the genial and entertaining preview of this unique publication at Friday’s book launch and performance evening (12th Dec 2014 in Sidmouth). EDA is especially grateful to the author,Peter Nasmyth, and to his co-researcher on East Devon Literature, Mike Temple, who also organised the performance. Peter’s landscape photographs were a stunning backdrop to renditions by such notables as John Betjeman,Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Jane Austen, Ron Delderfield, and Sir Walter Raleigh…all much admired!

If you missed the performance, here’s some more about the book:

A correspondent writes, “I think this book would make a good Christmas present, better still keep it as it has lots of literary walks and a map included.” . Copies (£15.99) available from bookshops in Ottery St Mary and in Sidmouth, or from the publisher (see below).

As a first, full literary companion to the East Devon area, A4 in size and full colour, this beautiful book combines large photographs with serious research, quotations, observations on literature and landscape. Included also is a map, information on the writers, an index and bibliography, plus directions as to where the authors walked in the area so readers can follow in their footsteps. The aim is both to celebrate and draw attention to this unique and threatened part of rural England. Birthplace of Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Sir Walter Raleigh, a setting for stories and poems by Jane Austen, H.G Wells, John Fowles, C. Day Lewis, John Betjeman, Beatrix Potter, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, and others, East Devon remains as attractive to writers today as ever. The publication of this book aims to help keep it this way.

For SEE INSIDE page (Green and pleasant land) go to http://www.mtapublications.co.uk

‘Tis the season to be …

… putting in those controversial planning applications. Unpopular ones traditionally go in next week so developers have two less weeks of consultation to be concerned about (not worried, they never worry in East Devon) as people are distracted.

Maybe a controversial one for Budleigh Salterton where rumours abound of a big 4 supermarket wanting a foothold …? Or perhaps one of our old friends wanting to increase their landbanked sites with planning?

EDDC kicks it off with the full council meeting where the shepherds tell their flock of sheep to vote through another fantastical idea for an HQ move.

No wise men there.

Neighbourhood Plans: now even having a Local Plan doesn’t help

“The research found that in eight of the targeted rural authorities local plans which set out where homes can be built for five years were challenged after house building rates fell in the recession. It cited examples in Devon, Norfolk and South Cambridgeshire.”

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/earth/greenpolitics/planning/11291259/Streetwise-builders-fighting-planning-protections-to-build-in-two-thirds-of-rural-areas-says-National-Trust.html

“Tories tearing apart the future of rural villages”

Article by Martin Hesp:

“…This, surely, is stark proof that this Government is only interested in lining the pockets of the already wealthy folk who help line the Tory campaign coffers. By which I mean the “flog-off-anything-and-everything-as-long-as-I-get-rich” brigade who care nothing for this country, its people or its landscapes. …”

“… Creating South Sea Bubbles to proclaim quick-fix economic recoveries might suit politicians thinking about forthcoming elections, but it does nothing to safeguard the nation’s growth or sustainability.

Lining the pockets of the few at the cost of communities and landscapes can only do lasting harm.”

http://www.westerndailypress.co.uk/Affordable-homes-nice-idea-lasted/story-25690937-detail/story.html

John Betjeman, Jane Austen, Coleridge and Walter Raleigh ‘appearing’ in Sidmouth tomorrow evening…

…And there’ll be live (!) performances by current East Devon writers, too, at tomorrow evening’s Book Launch (6-8pm, All Saints’ Hall, All Saints’ Rd, Sidmouth)
‘East Devon’s Literature and Landscape’ by Peter Nasmyth, has stunning original photographs and lots of new insights about East Devon’s links to writing by such diverse authors as H.G.Wells, Beatrix Potter, Jane Austen, and all-of-the-above, to name but a few! PLEASE NOTE: Performance starts at 6.30pm precisely.
Launch poster Nov 2014  low

More info here: https://eastdevonwatch.wordpress.com/2014/11/06/the-perfect-christmas-present-for-lovers-of-east-devons-literature-and-landscape/

For SEE INSIDE page, scroll down to Literature and Landscape in East Devon /strong> on HOME, at http://www.mtapublications.co.uk

Report: Not in my backyard: local people and the planning process

A useful and timely report from the Local Government Ombudsman:

Some interesting bits:

“… The government has recently introduced new legislation which requires council officers who grant permission under delegated powers to produce a written record of that decision. Councils must make the record available at their offices and on their websites. These written decision records must be kept for a period of six years and any background documents must be kept for four years. This only applies to decision made by officers with delegated powers however there is no reason why councils should not extend this to decisions made by committee. “

Ahmir’s Story:

Ahmir complained the council had given a local councillor planning permission for a house in an area of outstanding national beauty. The councillor was close friends with the Chairman of the Planning Committee. We found that both councillors had a close relationship as they and their families regularly attended the same social functions. The Chairman of the Planning Committee failed to declare this.

The council’s constitution and Code of Conduct said councillors must not take part in a meeting if they had a ‘prejudicial interest’ in what was being discussed. We found the chairman was at fault for not declaring an interest and that he should not have taken part in the meeting.

The council’s officer report recommended the committee refuse planning permission for the house because it was contrary to national and local policies and could set a precedent for inappropriate development in an area of outstanding natural beauty. The vote in favour of granting planning permission was finely balanced. If the chairman had not taken part in the meeting planning permission would have been refused.

Following our investigations the Leader of the Council applied to court to have the committee’s decision overturned. The judge overturned the decision and said “any fair-minded and informed observer would conclude that there was indeed a real possibility of bias in the decision to grant planning permission”. The Council incurred significant costs in dealing with the complaint and subsequent court action. The applicant wasn’t able to recover the cost of building the house or any of their legal fees. …”

Click to access 2093-Planning-Focus-report-final.pdf

Sidmouth: open meeting tonight, Knowle and Local Plan

Open Public Meeting 7.00 pm Tuesday 9th December, Old Unitarian Chapel, All Saints Road Sidmouth.

Knowle and Local Plan

The seven District Councilors for Sidmouth have been invited to outline their views and answer questions from the public.

Arranged by Sid Vale Association

Sneak preview of ‘East Devon’s Literature and Landscape’, & Book Launch event

SEE INSIDE pages at http://www.mtapublications.co.uk/dev.html
The date for your diary is Friday 12th December: Details here: Lit and Land Sid event

“Build on those sites that have already felt the hand of man”

Martin Hesp, writing in the Western Morning News yesterday, gives a clear case for choosing brownfield sites. See http://www.facebook.com/eastdevonalliance

And about that Local Plan….

An EDA correspondent writes, “Don’t forget that EDDC have been co-operating with Exeter and Teignbridge regarding the SHMA! Which has been delayed and delayed again, largely because EDDC, Teignbridge and Exeter cannot agree upon the methodology and outcome. Thus leaving us high and dry without a Local Plan. So much for cooperation, and saving money by acting together.”

For EDDC’s announcement yesterday, see https://eastdevonwatch.org/2014/11/25/greater-exeter-a-profoundly-undemocratic-decision/

Developers offering farmers “no win, no fee” for planning applications

….. “Gladman Developments, which has a turnover of £200million a year, targets councils that cannot demonstrate a five-year housing supply.

It offers to pay all the costs of obtaining planning permission – including the fees for lawyers and experts in the event of any appeal – which can exceed £300,000.

If the attempt to win permission is unsuccessful, the farmer does not have to pay anything. The firm recently took out adverts in the farming press calling for sites of up to 50 acres on the edge of a towns or villages. Its adverts boast: ‘We aim to never lose and have won 90 per cent of our housing planning applications.

‘You pay nothing, win or lose. We only get our percentage after you have sold your land to the highest bidding housebuilder.’

The firm has an astonishing success rate, having secured planning permission for rural sites in 41 out of its last 43 cases, despite substantial local opposition. …

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2846629/No-win-no-free-lawyers-ruining-countryside-bankroll-farmers-seeking-permission-build-fields.html

Another unsatisfactory ‘public consultation’ in Exmouth.

See recent entries and comments about the Marley Road planning application, on the EDA facebook page https://www.facebook.com/eastdevonalliance?hc_location=timeline

Landbanking sites with planning permission to keep lack of 5 year land supply

A new wheeze on the part of developers which a Conservative MP is annoyed about and which explains a lot. Oddly, the government has never plugged this loophole:

“… I do not pretend Test Valley is unique in facing the challenge of a five year housing land supply which appears to be a somewhat movable target, and I have noticed how successive developers seek to demonstrate their rivals’ schemes are, for whatever reason, undeliverable, only to then appear to struggle to deliver their own when it is granted permission, usually on appeal. Of course, there will always be some planning reasons why schemes are not developed at the rate initially predicted, but these should not be commercial reasons, where sites are delayed or developed only painfully slowly. In many cases these tactics can simply be a ploy to prove the local authority does not have a five year supply, thus improving the chances of yet another speculative site being granted on appeal.

Test Valley currently has granted as much as seven years of planning permissions, yet slow build rates, or in some cases no building at all, mean that each and every speculative application can point to the rate of delivery and suggest there is not a 5 year supply. In some cases we have even seen developers arguing against themselves, that a site they previously had demonstrated would be more deliverable than a rival’s, now for whatever reason is not, so they need to bring forward yet another one.”

https://uk.news.yahoo.com/caroline-nokes-mp-getting-balance-between-house-building-000429054.html#7Z9Gx6u

Exmouth: yet another questionable “consultation”

It seems the word “consultation” has a different meaning in East Devon compared to other areas.

Yesterday, 18th November 2014, a ‘public consultation’ about a proposal to build 150 houses in land off Marley Road, took place in Brixington Community Church Exmouth.

We are told that anyone going there expecting to learn much about the proposals was likely to have been disappointed. The exhibition consisted of around six display boards and there were a number of representatves of Nathaniel Lichfield and Partners Ltd who had laid on the event.

Their event did not get off to a good start when it was learned that
an oak (?) tree situated at what is to be the site entrance had been felled very recently. None of the representatives present could offer any explanation, or say who was responsible. Local comment was to the effect that the tree, with a diameter of around seven feet, was in a healthy condition prior to felling. Many present felt that this showed contempt for local opinion and the local ecology.

Many residents raised the issue of flooding,and drainage. This is already a problem resulting in run off coming down from the area and across Dinan Way at times. We were told that this would be dealt with by the use of attenuation tanks, devices that collect water and then release it gradually. The suggestion was that EDDC would ensure that no flooding or drainage problems were generated. Comment was made that the same promises were made to the residents of Feniton but have proved pretty worthless.

It transpires that this site, and an adjacent one to the north, were put forward to EDDC a couple of years ago as land to be included in the Local Plan for housing. Neither made it to any form of the provisional local plan.

Many will be aware that because EDDC have failed so miserably to produce a local plan that the Inspector will approve, that this has left a gap in planning practice which has, and continues to be exploited by developers. Many at the exhibition were left in no doubt that this proposal sought to exploit the mess that local planning is in. It was suggested that one of the exhibition team admitted as much.

That another plot, north of the one subject to this plan, was seen as having development potential, leads one to suspect that if this is approved a further one may follow. This would mean that The Eagle development for 350 houses at Goodmore Farm might be followed by another 150 here, and then an unknown number above.

In answer to a question about the likely price of ‘affordable houses’, the agents could not give an answer.

The exhibition provided no information to take away and digest. The consultants have provided no website though comments can be submitted to marleyroad@nlpplanning.com

More development between Exeter and Cranbrook – when will it stop?

More development planned in the EDDC district:

The plans for 900 homes on fields north of Tithebarn Lane and west of Mosshayne Lane, have been submitted by land owners Mr and Mrs Gent and developers, Eagle One Homes Ltd.

The plans also include a primary school.

Building is already under way on a 450-home development, including shops, a primary school and a 250-space park-and-ride on fields at Old Park Farm, Pinn Hill, submitted by AE Stuart & Sons.

And in April, permission was granted for a 350-house development for phase two of Old Park Farm at Pinn Hill, submitted by AE Stuart & Sons.

Another 430-house development, including retail space of up to 240sqm and a 60-bed care home at Pinn Court Farm, Pinncourt Lane, submitted by Millwood Homes Devon Ltd, was also approved at the same meeting.

At the time, residents and councillors voiced concerns that the two developments were considered a few days before a Government inspector made his ruling on the Local Plan public.

But a spokesperson for the council previously explained that it “made sense” for the applications to be heard together.

He said that whereas before, the “limiting factor” on the sites has been the surrounding highway infrastructure, the applications have “overcome” that restraint and proposed alterations to the Pinhoe roundabouts “have freed up greater capacity on the highway network to accommodate additional dwellings”.

At the meeting Liberal Democrat East Devon district ward member for Broadclyst Councillor Derek Button said: “This land is the lungs of Exeter and should never be built on.”

Source: http://www.exeterexpressandecho.co.uk/Plans-submitted-900-homes-outskirts-Exeter-add-1/story-24561037-detail/story.html

Housing minister says councils can forget local plans

Extracted from ‘InsideHousing.co.uk”

14 November 2014 | By Martin Hilditch

Change of approach from government takes pressure off councils to comply with national planning framework.
The housing minister is happy to allow councils to ignore the government’s requirement for them to adopt local plans setting out how they will meet housing need.

Brandon Lewis told Inside Housing there would be no problem if councils made a conscious decision to rely instead on provisions in the National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF).

Inside Housing research revealed in October that fewer than one in five have adopted local plans.
Councils have a statutory duty to produce a local plan that complies with the planning framework. But if they do not have a local plan in place the NPPF states there will instead be a default ‘presumption in favour of sustainable development’ for house builders that submit plans to build new homes.

‘Somewhere could conceivably decide that they don’t want a local plan and they will rely on the NPPF,’ Mr Lewis stated. While this would not be ‘necessarily ideal’ there would be ‘no role for the government’ if such a decision was taken, he added.
The news could prove significant because 40% of councils don’t currently have a local plan in place, despite the NPPF’s requirement for them to do so – and fewer than one in five have a local plan that fully complies with the NPPF (because many were adopted before the NPPF came into force). Planning experts warned this could mean a ‘free-for-all’ for developers.

Elizabeth Boyd, associate director with planning consultancy Tetlow King, said Mr Lewis’ comments suggested a change of emphasis from the government.
She said some councils might ‘initially think “brilliant, we don’t need to go through all the pressure and resource implications of doing a local plan, particularly where it is politically sensitive”’.‘That [would] then mean it is a free for all for developers really,’ she added. ‘What’s being suggested is great for developers.’

Mike Kiely, chair of the Planning Officers’ Society board and head of planning and building control at Croydon Council, said that there are a number of councils that ‘haven’t got a plan in place and there is no obvious prospect that they are going to any time soon’. Sometimes this is because of resource problems in smaller councils and on other occasions because of political issues, he suggested.
However, he warned that Mr Lewis’ relaxed approach to the production of local plans could stymie the development of new housing in rural areas because of updated guidance published by the government in October. This stated green belt boundaries can only be altered in exceptional circumstances – and that meeting established housing need may not count as exceptional.
‘The minister should read his own guidance,’ Mr Kiely stated. ‘The position isn’t quite as the housing minister thinks. As a nation we are growing. And if we want to house our population that [recent] guidance is monumentally unhelpful.’

The news came in the week that a planning inspector suggested that the level of housing proposed in Cheshire East Council’s local plan strategy ‘seems inadequate’ and said there seemed to be ‘insufficient justification’ for plans to establish a new green belt in the south of the district.

COMMENTS (7):

Press Release from Paul Arnott Chair of East Devon Alliance, 12 November 2014

‘East Devon Alliance (EDA) notes the statement issued today by Devon and Cornwall Police that they have decided not to continue their inquiry into the activities of former councillor Graham Brown because of insufficient evidence.

Following the “Councillors for Hire” report in the Daily Telegraph of March 11 2013, EDA was contacted by several people who wished for information to be given to the police. EDA did this on a number of occasions between May 2013 and September 2014.

EDA has therefore followed the conduct of the inquiry with interest. It has been concerned by initial delays caused by an erroneous referral to Action Fraud following the Daily Telegraph revelations, slow progress once the inquiry was underway, and the apparently limited resources devoted to the investigation.

The Alliance is now considering what action it might take to express these concerns in the appropriate forum.

Whatever the result of the police inquiry, EDA agrees with the statement of the EDDC Majority Whip Phil Twiss, in a letter to councillors on 17 March 2013, that he was “hugely disappointed that the inappropriate actions of a former member of the EDDC Conservative group has brought (the council) into disrepute”.

Urgent questions remain concerning the role played by Mr Brown in determining planning policy at EDDC and shaping the failed Local Plan. It is vitally important that the Overview and Scrutiny Committee resumes its much-delayed investigation into the Council’s relations with business, particularly with the East Devon Business Forum of which Mr Brown was chairman.

However, we are very concerned that EDDC’s Chief Executive, Mark Williams, has responded to today’s announcement by writing to all councillors demanding the exclusion of a named councillor from this vital inquiry, and that its scope be limited. ‘

Notes for editors:
1.The Daily Telegraph article “Councillors for Hire” of 11 March 2013:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/9921344/Councillors-for-hire-who-give-firms-planning-advice.html
and follow-up article of 11th November 2013
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/investigations/10417451/Telegraph-undercover-planning-investigation-a-summary.html
2.https://eastdevonwatch.wordpress.com/2014/11/12/mark-williams-on-unfortunate-circumstances-arising-from-g-brown-case/

It’s election year part 600 …..

You know it’s election year when …..

your MP suddenly discovers your (lack of) a local plan

http://www.exeterexpressandecho.co.uk/Reader-8217-s-Letter-Time-action-protect-East/story-24513976-detail/story.html