Remove rural tourism red tape = more holiday lets for farmers!

Isn’t it just predictable that the givernment would think that tourism can only be improved by more holiday lets!

What about removing VAT on ALL tourist accommodation – as is the case in most of – you would never believe it! – Europe! What about not concreting over our green fields? What about not building houses on our beauty spots and AONBs? No – just let farmers (and other developers) build more!

Rural campaigners have called for the abolition of planning red tape to help turn round a decline in the number of visitors to Devon and Cornwall’s glorious countryside.

The Environment, Food and Rural Affairs (EFRA) Committee has announced that it will examine the reasons behind a national wane in visitors to the countryside.

Sarah Lee, head of policy at the Countryside Alliance, said tourism was vital to the economy of rural areas in the region and the Government needed to take action.

“Tourism is of enormous financial importance to rural areas like the Westcountry and it is alarming to see the market decline in this way,” she said.

“We welcome the Efra Select Committee inquiry into the problem and urge parliament to do everything it can to boost and support rural tourism.”

Ms Lee said the Government could act to “remove the red tape” that surrounds planning permission to make it easier for redundant farm buildings to get a new lease of life as holiday lets…. ”

http://www.plymouthherald.co.uk/remove-red-tape-call-to-boost-rural-tourism/story-29484249-detail/story.html

Rural roads need more money

“… A report published today by the Federation of Small Businesses (FSB) shows that half of all small firms believe this country’s road and public transport system has got worse over last few years.

The three biggest issues highlighted in the report by small companies operating in rural areas are congestion on local roads, potholes and the cost of fuel.

It also warns a lack of regional planning is hampering business growth, particularly in rural area and FSB has also called on the newly-formed combined authorities around the country to commit to spending more on rural transport infrastructure and give the matter a higher priority.

The FSB’s national chairman, Mike Cherry, said while the Government is investing in transport, the ‘lion’s share’ is being spent on ‘big flagship projects’.

‘Most small businesses mainly rely on their local roads and public transport, so there is a strong case to prioritise investment in these smaller projects which will help to alleviate congestion and bottlenecks,’ said Mr Cherry.

‘The current devolution agenda in England presents a real opportunity to make a positive difference to rural communities. Small businesses want to see more resources earmarked for rural transport.

‘This will help support rural small businesses as well as the UK tourism industry, which are both disproportionately affected when local bus networks and roads are left to deteriorate,’ he added.”

http://www.localgov.co.uk/Small-firms-demand-more-money-for-countryside-roads/40935

Tourism Minister on visit gets name of Seaton Jurassic wrong!

Heritage and Tourism Minister David Evennett was in Seaton on Friday to see East Devon’s newest tourist attraction – its Jurassic’s wildlife garden. [Note: No mention here of “Seaton JURRASIC” of which the garden is a part]

While the resort’s main £4 million visitor centre [again no name] was formally opened in April by The Princess Royal, its outdoor interpretation areas were delayed by the exceptionally wet weather in the winter and early spring.

As part of his visit, Mr Evennett was also given a tour of Seaton beach to see the UNESCO World Heritage site where he heard how the area is being managed and protected.

He was then shown around the Beer Quarry Caves and discussed the future plans for the site.

Mr Evenett said: “The Jurassic Coast is one of the world’s most important landscapes and one of our country’s natural gems.

“It is wonderful to see how well this unique coastline is being looked after so that it continues to attract vital tourism to the region, while ensuring it is protected for generations to come.

“Seaton Centre [JURASSIC! wrong name again] is a fantastic example of a tourist attraction that is fun but educational too.”

http://www.midweekherald.co.uk/news/heritage_and_tourism_minister_visits_seaton_and_beer_1_4573843

Anyone wanting to find Seaton JURASSIC on Tripadvisor from this press release will need some lateral thinking.

Obviously put together by a press officer in London who probably has no idea where Seaton is!

Regenerate, degenerate, exterminate …

Regeneration and Economic Development?

The Watch has already blogged (26 Dec) “East Devon Economy Booming? Not according to cabinet agenda data.” But we now have had time to explore the latest “Regeneration” proposals in greater depth.

A special item in the pack of papers for the 6 Jan 2016 EDDC Cabinet Meeting (page 107) proposes an additional £287,000 be spent in 2016/17 (with similar costs for 3 years) to add three more staff to the three full time and three part time members of the Regeneration and Economic Development Team.

Context – Central government grants are being cut severely and will disappear completely by the end of the current parliament in 2019/20. The Council core funding will then come from business rates, council tax and fee income (eg car parking). The Institute for Fiscal Studies (IFS) predicts the 30% loss from central government funding will be made up from an increase in retained business rates, from the current level of around 25% to around 55% in 2019/20, rather than by other measures such as efficiency savings.

The £287,000 pa will be used directly to promote economic growth and increased business rate income outside the Growth Point and across the district.

The East Devon Growth Point is set to become an Enterprise Zone, where businesses can get up to 100% business rate discount worth up to £275,000 per business over 5 years but we gather that ALL business rates in enterprise zones go direct to the (you guessed it) Local Enterprise Partnership.

So what chance has this team got in succeeding? Aren’t businesses simply going to transfer to the growth point?

We are sure everyone wants to see a vibrant local economy, especially one attracting high value jobs. But why are we so underwhelmed by this proposal that we think this money could be spent in better ways?

It all gets off to a bad start. The proposal itself spells out the lacklustre performance to date of the three full time and three part time Regeneration and Economic Development Team. The economic profile for East Devon (Grant Thornton, Feb 2015) highlights:

•The average gross weekly earnings in East Devon are low at £409 compared with £503 nationally.

•The knowledge economy in East Devon accounted for just 13.5% of total employment in 2013, compared with 18.13% for the SW and 21.75% nationally.

•The self employment rate in East Devon is high and stable by national standards but new business formation rate is very low, ranking in the bottom 20%.

According to the Economics page of the EDDC web site the services industry accounts for 85.7% of the employment in East Devon with a large section of this being in the retail, hospitality and health sectors, all of which it admits are predominantly lower-paid sectors.

The South West Regional Tourist Board data (2011) shows a fall in visitors to East Devon from 800,000 visitor trips per annum in 2005 to 472,000 visitor trips in 2011. The income from overnight stays also fell from £3.7m to £1.8m in the same period. Tourism, according to EDDC’s Cabinet proposal is a key driver!

(The Watch has repeatedly drawn attention to the way EDDC has ignored Tourism and to its deficiencies in rolling out high speed broadband.)

In the proposal the Council claims it is adept at using its assets to “de-risk locations” and attract private sector interest. Two examples cited: the delivery of the new Premier Inn in Exmouth and the commercial success around Exmouth Strand, where the Council has used its land and property assets to achieve this aim.

But none of this is really relevant to realising the stated aim that: “our ambitions lie in high tech growth and an improved knowledge economy, exploiting the opportunities now emerging through our Growth Point and Enterprise Zone”. (It should be noted here that the growth Point was not successful in making Exeter the “Internet of Things” lead demonstrator city – which Manchester won).

According to the proposal, the draft local plan retains a target of 1 job per new house and predicts 18,500 new homes over the 18 year Plan period i.e. delivery of the plan requires the creation of 1,000 jobs every year. The only quantified successes claimed in job creation by the Regeneration and Economic Development Team, 44 jobs at the Exmouth Premier Inn and a projected 45 next year from Seaton Jurassic, represent only 4.5% of what is needed annually. Not much of an achievement is it? It begs the question of whether 1,000 jobs per year are remotely achievable.

The demographic trend in East Devon requires the creation of between 160 and 190 jobs per year. This should be achievable as it assumes average economic growth. In EDDC’s chosen metric this equates to delivering four Premier Inns across the district every year (not just the one held up as an example of success). However, to this total, in their wisdom, EDDC has added in the draft Plan a “policy on” job led growth scenario with a target of an additional 549 jobs a year.

The actual annual target in the draft Plan is still a large figure, and one that is clearly way beyond the Team’s ability to deliver, but is only about 70% of the astronomical 1,000 quoted to the Cabinet. So this is another example of EDDC playing fast and loose with numbers, ratcheting up the growth agenda at every opportunity.

Job creation on this scale should be easy to spot. We are already 2 years into the new Plan period so it should now be possible to review the Team’s progress to date in creating 2,000 jobs. Such a review would form a much better basis for judging the success of past measures and on deciding the direction of future expenditure on the best way to promote growth.

The “aims and objectives moving forward” of EDDC’s proposal contains nothing but platitudes such as: “delivering an economy which stimulates start ups and new businesses to grow to bring better paid jobs and increased wealth into East Devon”. There is no concrete plan, no: how to do it. It is an example of the poverty of ideas that results from Cabinet decisions made in secret.

The people of East Devon are not bereft of ideas or talent but they are never consulted. So here’s a radical idea. Consult the people of East Devon. They are the potential customers for these businesses, and isn’t the customer is always right?

Here’s another: with regions across the country all putting forward their own enterprise plans for devolution the priority might be to put more emphasis on winning the publicity war, though that might be difficult with the whole district a giant building site.

Finally, how does the Regeneration and Economic Development Team reconcile the conflicts between maximising fee income from car parking, and saving the High Street and encouraging Tourism?

East Devon economy booming? Not according to Cabinet agenda data

And just one more from the Cabinet agenda papers for 6 January 2016:

“Local Economic Challenges are identified in the District Profile for East Devon (Grant Thornton, Feb 2015). They include:

The average gross weekly earnings in East Devon are low at £409 compared with £503 nationally

The knowledge economy in East Devon accounted for just 13.5% of total employment in 2013, compared with 18.13% for the SW and 21.75% nationally

The self employment rate in East Devon is high and stable by national standards but new business formation rate is very low, ranking in the bottom 20%.

A key role for the Economic Development team is to create the conditions for more businesses to develop across East Devon and to retain the workforce in the District (Draft Council Plan, 2015). The benefit will be more jobs, money in circulation and business rates income to the Council. The towns to the east of the District have seen less growth than the west end and this presents an opportunity to the Council to assist in delivering this growth.

A key driver behind our regeneration interventions is the improvement of the visitor economy in visibility and mix of facilities and infrastructure. East Devon has much to offer tourists with its world heritage status coastline, beaches, AONBs, attractive towns and villages and numerous attractions that bring people to the district. However, tourism numbers have been in decline in recent years as evidenced in the South West Regional Tourist Board data (2011). This indicated a fall in visitors to East Devon from 800,000 visitor trips per annum in 2005 to 472,000 visitor trips in 2011. The income from overnight stays also fell from 3.7m to 1.8m in the same period.

Click to access combined-final-cabinet-agenda-060116.pdf

Successful coastal fund projects – none in East Devon

Many in Devon, many in Dorset, none in East Devon.

So, all our coastal communities must be thriving, then ….

Seaton in better nick than Lyme Regis?

Click to access Coastal_Revival_Fund_-SW_and_West.pdf

Coastal Revival Fund – but not for us ….

£1m for the South West
Brixham, Lynmouth, Plymouth and Paignton in Devon got £250k
£250k for ten projects in Dorset
ZERO for EAST DEVON

Once again our political and bureaucratic representatives have ensured that we maintain our self-sufficiency.

Click to access Coastal_Revival_Fund_-SW_and_West.pdf

Mystic Owl predicts …

… that the environment will be a big loser in this afternoon’s budget and, along with massive house building targets, will be the death knell for East Devon tourism.

What happens when tourism declines and properties become “houses in multiple occupation”

It happened in Hastings some years ago, when London boroughs “decanted” their people with housing and mental health issues to south coast towns such as Hastings. Now it is happening on a grand scale in Blackpool.

When a seaside town (and any town that loses its main economic driver) loses its economic and/or tourism base, bed and breakfast businesses and hotels are ripe for conversion into “houses in multiple occupation”.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-34571608

Tourism is a money spinner, but EDDC ignores it!

“Sightseers spend £499million a year in the South West, more than anywhere else in the UK, new figures show.

Even more (£547million) is spent on visitor attractions in the region – second only to London, a survey of domestic tourism has revealed.”

http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/West-sightseers-outspend-London-Scotland-study/story-27997609-detail/story.html

And still East Devon District Council ignores tourism. The more incursions of housing and industrial units into our beautiful coastal and countryside areas, the fewer tourists we get.

Coastal towns have a week to apply for £3 m funding pot

http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/Coastal-towns-urged-bid-3-million-revive-fading/story-27751288-detail/story.html

“WESTCOUNTRY TOURISM IS THE BIGGEST SECTOR FOR JOB GROWTH”

And what does East Devon District Council do? Sells its tourism assets to the highest bidder who inevitably develops “clone tourism” of the type you can get anywhere. And gives a councillor the title “Tourism Champion” when said champion then becomes invisible.

And do you think Hugo Swire (busy jetting off all over the world) or Neil Parish (who devotes himself to farming and roads) have the necessary “spine” required in the article.

And recall that EDDC slated former Independent Councillor Claire Wright when she had the temerity to suggest a cut in VAT for tourism!

Non-tourism, big business, preferably with massive development, has always been EDDC’s choice. What will they do now that our local economy is showing that isn’t working?


“IT’S OFFICIAL –
…”Without doubt, those national figures hide a much bigger message for the Westcountry, where tourism is a huge contributor to the regional economy. This should provide all Westcountry politicians with the ‘spine’ to demand the things that this vital sector needs to deliver its potential for the region’s economy:

A reduction in VAT, in line with continental competitors;
A review of the Government’s cuts to funding tourism promotion;
A commitment to delivering the long-promised improvements to road access to the Westcountry”, said Mr Hanbury.
“Right now, the Westcountry’s tourism providers are coping with the need for a total rethink of our traditional seaside product, and many providers are coming up with magnificent solutions. But those providers are competing on unfair terms with Continental rivals, who have far better transport links and lower VAT rates”, said Bishop Fleming’s Will Hanbury.”
http://www.exeterchamber.co.uk/its-official-westcountry-tourism-is-the-biggest-sector-for-job-growth/news/

Bad news for coastal tourism

Particularly that young people feel less connected to the coast than over 55’s and that, according to the National Trust, coastal tourism is down 20% overall:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-33870056

Local Tory MPs agree with Claire Wright on tourism funding

We can recall not long ago Claire Wright being savaged by Leader Diviani and many of his cronies for daring to put forward a motion at EDDC for a cut in tourism VAT to bring it in line with other European countries:

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

As she wrote:

“I also asked for a recorded vote to take place. The conservatives voted against a recorded vote. … To much chuntering and heckling, the final vote was 23 votes against to 14 in favour. The conservatives voted largely as a block, with a few abstentions. Cllr Mike Howe DID vote in favour, however.”

Now it appears that South West Tory MPs agree with her:

http://www.westernmorningnews.co.uk/Westcountry-MPs-challenge-Government-tourism/story-27456110-detail/story.html

Which just leaves East Devon District Council out of step … again.

Service industries such as tourism are providing the only growth in the economy

But still the old guard at EDDC totally ignore it (except at election time when they lead out Councillor Kerridge for one of her very rare appearances to flog the dead horse of water-based transport or if it involves ex East Devon Business Forum members who are coincidentally housing developers):

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-32497158

Purdah?

How can the Midweek Herald announce that it entered a voluntary period of purdah until after the General Election and then run (again) an item on the so-called EDDC Tourism Champion on the “possibility” of Jurassic Coast water- borne transport – a project ruled out last year by ALL partners involved because of the prohibitive cost and the difficulty of constructing appropriate jetties?

Where were the balanced comments of other potential town councillors on this already-buried project?

Happy East Devon Easter!

Shaping East Devon’s future……Keith Owen’s inspirational legacy (thanks to the Sid Vale Association’s work!) is bringing much more than just spectacular swathes of Spring flowers. It’s hit the national headlines….and the tourism trigger!
And community spirit has been raised to a new high: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/11514052/Millionaires-valley-of-a-million-bulbs-dying-dream-fulfilled.html

Job opportunity with the Jurassic Coast Trust.

Coincidentally, after EDWatch’s recent post ‘Marketing the Jurassic Coast’, this relevant job advertisement has today been circulated.

31 March 2015
Are you an experienced administrator who can make a big difference to the Jurassic Coast?

The Jurassic Coast Trust funds and inspires education and conservation projects along the 95 miles of World Heritage Coastline. We’re looking for someone to help us make sure we run our projects and activities more efficiently, to keep an eye on the details and to provide support to our growing numbers of volunteers.

From organising events to keeping tabs on the finances, we need a friendly and professional all-rounder with great communication skills who can work as part of our small team and help us do the very best job we can.

The position is part-time (15 hours per week), based in Dorchester, and paying circa £7.50/hour. A full job description can be downloaded from our website.

To apply, please submit a CV and a covering letter, explaining how your skills and experience match the role profile for this job, to Alexandra O’Dwyer at the Trust – a.odwyer@jurassiccoast.org.

The closing date for applications is Friday 10th April 2015.

Yours sincerely

Guy

Guy Kerr
Community Coordinator
Jurassic Coast Trust
g.kerr@jurassiccoast.org
077 6611 2724

Marketing the Jurassic Coast…

….is a complicated business.
Latest aerial views keep us up to date with what’s happening, with EDDC planners’ approval:
http://futuresforumvgs.blogspot.co.uk/2015/03/comparing-visions-for-development-of.html

And bodies such as the Environment Agency alert us to some of the problems..Has this one been solved?? : https://sidmouthindependentnews.wordpress.com/2013/07/16/east-devon-beaches-at-seaton-ladram-bay-and-budleigh-salterton-too-polluted-to-swim-at/

Coastal Community Teams

Get an initial £10,000 and ability to bid for a share of a further £3 million. None of our coastal towns are amongst the first 12 to be announced.

Teamworking amongst towns does not seem to be popular in East Devon, perhaps because they are often at loggerheads due to devisive political shenanigans at town and district council level.

https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/coastal-community-teams-bidding-prospectus