One post office box, two mobiles, an 0300 number and a “promise” ….

This page of last week’s Sidmouth Herald is SO entertaining!

image

Swire says we shouldn’t be worried that devolution deals are being done behind closed doors and that power is being devolved from politicians in Whitehall.

But he neglects to say that it is being devolved to … er … a bunch of anonymous, unelected businessmen in … er … well, they have a post office box number in Exeter, two mobile phone numbers and an 0300 numbers on their contact us webpage:

http://www.heartofswlep.co.uk/contact-us

so they could be anywhere!  Running their businesses, perhaps …..

and as a bonus we get a” Buy one, get one free” offer from Diviani promising us those missing relocation documents (the ones he was ordered to produce last May) ” soon”. Was the “Sale, amazing offers” advert a coincidence or a subliminal message to us all?

BOGOF indeed.

When privatisation of council services goes wrong

“Since the 1st December, BT Cornwall (BTC) and Cornwall Council have been locked in a legal battle in the High Court over the BT contract. The reason is because the Council believes it has the right to terminate the agreement for breaches in that contract by BTC. Of course, BTC disagrees with this.

To recap, BTC filed an application with the High Court in order to seek an injunction on 12 August 2015, preventing the Council from terminating the agreement. This resulted in a hearing which took place on 12 August 2015 in the High Court (Commercial Courts). The outcome was that the Court agreed to the request to have an expedited trial set for December.

As for the reasons why, please read the previous blog post HERE.

Anyone who has been reading this blog, will know I have written a lot (all blog posts HERE) about this subject. Reading back through them reminds me how the Council was in open warfare against the Cabinet. There were petitions; the Portfolio Holder for Finance, Jim Currie resigning and the no-confidence motion which saw the disposing of the Leader of Cornwall Council. It was a bloody and costly war that saw the BT-light deal being signed on the 27th March 2012. I finished off that post with the line of: ‘Lets hope the Council does not regret this day’.

Today, the Judge gave his judgement after hearing the evidence from both sides. I am very pleased the judgement was in favour of the Council. This judgment which confirms our argument that BT Cornwall had been in material breach of the contract due to their failure to carry out services to the required contractual standards and, therefore, that the Council was justified in reaching the decision to terminate the contract.

The ruling also means that the Council will be seeking payment of its costs from BT Cornwall in connection with this legal action. From this, the Council intends to hold discussions with BT Cornwall to agree the level of damages the Council will receive. This could run into the millions.

I would also like to say well done to the Council’s legal team who took on the might of an international corporation – and won.

Has the Council regretted that day? I have thought about this and it would be easy to say ‘I told you so’ but that would serve no purpose. However, it is clear the principle of outsourcing great swathes of public sector to commercial companies who have little, if any, understanding of the public sector is flawed.

I feel the reason why so many council’s took the outsourcing route is because they thought it was an easy way of saving money. The commercial companies were quick to whisper sweet nothings into any local government ear promising to solve their funding problems. The truth be told, local governments, are better at knowing how to save money. They do this without thinking of how it will affect the profit margin. Local government do not think about profit margins, but how changes will affect the service user.

Following this legal ruling the Council intends to provide notice of termination of the contract before Christmas, but there will be no immediate change in the arrangements as termination will not take effect until January. The process of transferring staff and services from BT Cornwall to the Council and our Public Sector Partners will begin in January and will be completed as quickly and smoothly as possible. This will involve approximately 250 members of staff.

The following services will transfer back to the authority: HR Transactional Services including Payroll, HR Employment Support, First Point Helpdesk, Financial Processing, ICT, Despatch, Printing and Telecare. My thoughts are with the staff who will yet again be affected with this judgement.

I will now wait till the judgement is released to give a further viewpoint……”

http://www.cllrandrewwallis.co.uk/bt-cornwall-verses-cornwall-council-judgement-goes-in-favour-of-the-council/

Margaret Thatcher’s maiden speech in 1960 to Parliament on press freedom and council secrecy

This speech was made when only the press was allowed into council meetings:

This is a maiden speech, but I know that the constituency of Finchley which I have the honour to represent would not wish me to do other than come straight to the point and address myself to the matter before the House.

I cannot do better than begin by stating the objects of the Bill in the words used by Mr. Arthur Henderson when he introduced the Bill which became the Local Authorities (Admission of the Press to Meetings) Act, 1908, which was also a Private Member’s Measure. He specified the object and purpose as that of guarding the rights of members of the public by enabling the fullest information to be obtained for them in regard to the actions of their representatives upon local authorities.

It is appropriate at this stage to mention that the public does not have a right of admission, either at common law or by statute, to the meetings of local authorities. Members of the public are compelled, therefore, to rely upon the local Press for information on what their elected representatives are doing. The original Measure was brought as a result of a case in which the representatives of a particular paper were excluded from a particular meeting.

The public has the right, in the first instance, to know what its elected representatives are doing. That right extends in a number of directions. I do not know whether hon. Members generally appreciate the total amount of money spent by local authorities. In England and Wales, local authorities spend £1,400 million a year and, in Scotland, just over £200 million a year. Those sums are not insignificant, even in terms of national budgets. Less than half is raised by ratepayers’ money and the rest by taxpayers’ money, and the first purpose in admitting the Press is that we may know how those moneys are being spent. 1351 In the second place, I quote from the Report of the Franks Committee: Publicity is the greatest and most effective check against any arbitrary action. That is one of the fundamental rights of the subject. Further, publicity stimulates the interest of local persons in local government. That is also very important. But if there is a case for publicity, there is also a case for a certain amount of private conference when personal matters are being discussed and when questions are in a preliminary stage. It is in trying to find a point of balance between these two aspects—the public right of knowledge and the necessity on occasion for private conference—that the difficulty arises.

An attempt was made by the 1908 Act to meet this difficulty, and I now turn to the history of the Measure which I am about to present. Provision was made by the 1908 Act for Press representatives to attend meetings of local councils and meetings of education committees in so far as they had delegated powers, and, also a number of other bodies which have now ceased to exist because successive Parliaments have substituted new bodies to carry out the powers which the 1908 Act formerly permitted the Press to publicise.

Long before the events of the past summer, there was a very good case for amending the 1908 Act. The first good case arose when the Local Government Act, 1929, abolished boards of guardians, to whose meetings the Act admitted the Press. Boards of Guardians were responsible for the administration of hospitals and many other matters. The first attempt to bring the law of 1908 up-to-date came in 1930, when the right hon. Member for South Shields (Mr. Ede) introduced a Private Member’s Measure, which I am happy and relieved to learn received a Second Reading. It did not get any further because of a rather precipitate change of Government, which I do not think even the most optimistic hon. Member opposite would believe was imminent at the moment. The case for the Bill then was that boards of guardians no longer existed and the Act needed amending, firstly, by reference to its past performance, and secondly, by reference to the new legislation of 1929.

1352 Then came another major local government Measure, the Local Government Act, 1933. That Act has very considerable significance, because in Section 85 local authorities were empowered to appoint any committees they chose. As a result, many authorities began to go into committee of the full council, not merely for the purpose which is in the spirit of the 1908 Act—that is to say, in order to discuss something which was truly of a confidential nature—but in order merely to exclude the Press, without addressing their minds to whether such exclusion was justified by reference to the matter to be discussed. That began to provide the first major legal loophole in the Act. Where previously local authorities had to deliberate in open council, with the exception of circumstances arising from the business which justified the exclusion of the Press, after that Act they were enabled to resolve themselves into committee merely as a matter of administrative convenience.

Two more Private Members’ Measures attempted to bring the 1908 Act up-todate—one introduced in 1949 by the hon. Member for Westbury (Sir R. Grimston), and the other introduced in 1950 by the hon. Member for Solihull (Mr. M. Lindsay). In the meantime, the need was becoming even greater, because in 1944 came the Education Act, which removed from the sharp light of publicity education committees which had been within purview of the 1908 Act. So we find that the purpose of this Act which governs the position now is no longer effective, because its provisions have become greatly out-dated. This is one of the major grounds for attempting now to bring the 1908 Act up-to-date and make its purpose effective by means of a new Act.

I now turn to the Bill before the House and will try to deduce its general principle from the Clauses there set down. There are six points I should like to make. The first point is, on what occasions in local authority work will this Bill entitle the Press to be present? I use the word “entitled” because there are many authorities which already practise the admission of the Press to a far greater extent than the Bill would necessitate their doing if it became law. This is meant to establish a minimum legislative code of practice for the local 1353 authorities. Therefore, the first question is to which meetings of local authorities would the Press be entitled to be admitted by virtue of the Bill. I would refer hon. Members to Clause 2 (2), which contains the major point with reference to committees, and I will try to put the point in fairly simple language —rather simpler than the complicated drafting we find here.

May I point out that committees of local authorities whose only power is to recommend a course of action to the council—a course of action which must be taken by the council and which cannot be taken by the committee without reference back—are not included at all in the Bill? Therefore, any committee of a local authority whose only task is to recommend a course of action to the council is not within the purview of the Bill.

I am well aware that a number of committees of local authorities have two different kinds of power—power to recommend and power to discharge the function of the local authority itself because that local authority has specifically delegated that task to the committee. Where the committee has both of these functions, it comes within the realm of the Bill if, and only if, a substantial Dart of its functions consists in discharging delegated powers. Where a committee only has the odd delegated power referred to it, it will not come within the Bill. Where local authorities have made a practice, as some have, of delegating their own functions to committees, these committees have substantial delegated powers, and therefore come within this Clause.

The Press will be admitted to the main council meetings of local authorities and to those meetings which effectively discharge the functions of the council; that is the committees with substantial delegated powers, but others are not included. I know that some authorities include them, and I would like to see more authorities include them, because I think it would be in the interests of local government, but they are not entitled to be included under this Bill.

Having got the Press in to these meetings, or having entitled them to be in, there must inevitably be occasions, such as personal circumstances coming under discussion, matters preliminary to legal proceedings, matters with regard to the 1354 acquisition of land, or such matters which would inevitably come up, when the Press were entitled to be present, unless some effective provision was made to exclude the Press on these occasions.

My second point, therefore, is: having got the Press in, upon what grounds is a local authority entitled to exclude it? There must inevitably be some occasions. We have had great difficulty in drafting the Clause to fit all cases. I had hoped to draw up a schedule of circumstances in which local authorities would be entitled to exclude the Press. That was not possible, and we have had to go back to a kind of omnibus Clause. I refer hon. Members to Clause 1 (2), which is the operative Clause for this purpose. I suggest most earnestly that when the Press is excluded it must be because of some particular reason arising from the proceedings of the local authority at the time, and there must be very good reason for the exclusion. The real reason for excluding the Press is that publicity of the matter to be discussed would be prejudicial to the public interest.

There are two prongs to this Clause. Publicity would be prejudicial for two main groups of reasons. The first group is where the matters under discussion are of a confidential nature. They may relate to personal circumstances of individual electors. They may relate to a confidential communication from a Government Department asking local authorities for their opinion on a subject which the Minister would not like to be discussed in open session until he is a good deal further on and has received the views of local authorities.

There is another group of subjects which perhaps could not be strictly termed confidential but where it would be clearly prejudicial to the public interest to discuss them in open session. They may relate to staff matters, to legal proceedings, to contracts, the discussion of which tender to accept and other such matters. On this prong the Press has to be excluded for a special reason which would need to be stated in the resolution for exclusion. Where the matter is confidential it would not need to be specified further in the resolution for exclusion. Where it was for a special reason, that reason would need to be specified in broad general terms in the resolution for exclusion. This subsection is effective 1355 and wide enough in its drafting to cover all occasions upon which a local authority could possibly have good grounds for going into private session. Those are the two main operative Clauses of the Bill.

My third point relates to documents. I understand that there is a very wide variation in practice between the number of documents which different local authorities give to the Press. I do not know how many hon. Members have tried to obtain information about a local authority of which they are not a member but happen to be a ratepayer. One sometimes goes to a council meeting without any idea of what is to be discussed. One sits there for about 15 minutes and all one hears is numbers being counted up to about twenty and starting all over again. Unless the Press, which is to report to the public, has some idea from the documents before it what is to be discussed, the business of allowing the Press in becomes wholly abortive. Therefore, Clause 1 (3, b) makes provision for a limited number of documents to be supplied to the Press at its request in advance of the meeting. It specifies that the agenda must be supplied to the Press if it so requests and is prepared to pay for it.

Agendas vary very much. Some are couched in terms which do not betray for one moment the subject which is to be discussed. One sees such items as “To discuss the proposal of Mr. Smith” and, “To receive the recommendation of Mr. Jones”. As distinct from the supporting accompanying documents, the agenda itself is usually a comparatively brief document. I have, therefore, thought fit to put into the subsection a provision that the agenda shall be supplied to the Press together with such further statement or particulars as are necessary to convey to an outside person the nature of the subject to be discussed. Therefore, the Press must have some idea from the documents what is the true subject to be discussed at meetings to which its representatives are entitled to be admitted.

If the whole agenda was supplied, it might include some things which would be likely to be taken when the Press was excluded. I understand that the practice in many councils is to have Part I and Part II, to take subjects in public session 1356 first, and then have a resolution and go into camera for the next group of subjects which come up in private. The corporation, acting through its proper officer, to whom it would have to give instructions, is entitled to exclude from the agenda matters which are likely to be taken in camera so that no confidential matters will leak out by that process. Another provision in the Clause is that the corporation may, if it thinks fit—not must—include supporting committee reports or documents, but it would have to exercise its mind to include them. The Press would not be able to demand such documents as of right.

Fourthly, I have been approached and asked about the question of qualified privilege for local councillors and people who serve on local authorities. I have been approached by people who suggest that the privilege should be made absolute. I could not possibly accede to that, as I think that absolute privilege should be given very rarely indeed. However, there is a consequential provision in the Bill which means that where qualified privilege at present exists for statements made by people serving on local authorities that qualified privilege shall not cease to exist merely because the Press is present. That retains the present position and removes one of the reasons why people can object to the Press being present, because unless there were a consequential provision it might serve to remove the qualified privilege.

Fifthly, I understand from various sources that my proposals are under some criticism because they contain no sanctions or penalties upon local authorities. I should therefore like to state briefly what I am advised the position is when any statute is breached. There are general sanctions available at law for this purpose. Where a public right is infringed, as it would be in the event of the Bill becoming law and local authorities wrongfully excluding the Press, any person can apply to either the Attorney-General or the Solicitor-General for what is known as a relator action. He must state on the application the grounds and enclose counsel’s opinion that there is a good cause of action, that is to say, that it is probable that the council wrongfully excluded under particular circumstances. The person must supply also—I have no doubt that this is very important—a 1357 solicitor’s certificate to the effect that the person to take action and to go to the courts is a person who is likely to be able to meet the costs, because the Attorney-General will not foot the bill. He only lends his name to the action.

When that is done, the courts can adjudicate on whether that exclusion was legal or illegal. In the event of the litigant getting a declaration that the exclusion was illegal, he would get costs, and the district auditor already has power to surcharge those costs upon the members of the local authority whose misconduct was responsible for the illegal action occurring. I submit that those sanctions that are available by the ordinary law are sufficient to enable this Measure to be enforced.

My sixth point relates to the Schedule. I shall not go through the Schedule in any great detail, except to point out that a considerable number of the bodies referred to in it are the successors in title to those mentioned in the 1908 Act—the divisional executives established under the Education Act, the regional hospital boards and so on. Hon. Members will note that some committees of authorities are specifically excluded—those whose functions consist solely of determining matters of a confidential nature.

For example, committees of regional hospitals boards are specifically excluded. Committees of executive councils are specifically excluded, which means that any disciplinary matter relating to doctors, nurses, and so on, would not come before the public eye because the committee discharging the function does not come within this Measure.

I hope it is evident from what I have said that we are trying very hard to put into the form of legislation a code of practice that will safeguard the rights of the public. There was, last summer, one instance of the letter of the 1908 Act being contravened, and in a number of instances certainly the spirit of that Act was contravened. It is not, therefore, only a matter of bringing the 1908 Act up to date; because of the abuse of the law, there is a case for safeguarding the rights of the citizen. I hope that hon. Members will think fit to give this Bill a Second Reading, and to consider that the paramount function of this distin- 1358 guished House is to safeguard civil liberties rather than to think that administrative convenience should take first place in law.

Finally, Mr. Speaker, I should like to acknowledge the help given to me by my right hon. Friend and his Department which, I understand, has been as great as any Government Department could give to a private Member. I want also to acknowledge the help of those who have been good enough to subscribe their names to the Bill, and I should like to thank the House for its very kind indulgence to a new Member.

http://hansard.millbanksystems.com/commons/1960/feb/05/public-bodies-admission-of-the-press-to#S5CV0616P0_19600205_HOC_8

East Devon Alliance on devolution bid secrecy

“A district council decision to discuss a ‘multi-billion-pound’ transfer of cash and powers to the South West in private has been branded ‘disgraceful’ by the independent East Devon Alliance (EDA). … ”

http://www.sidmouthherald.co.uk/news/council_s_devolution_talks_criticised_1_4356888

Exmouth: EDDC gives masterclass in how to alienate residents

Extract from Save Exmouth Seafront facebook page:

This evening (Dec 16th) a number of SES supporters (abt 30 of us) went to EDDC’s Full Council meeting.

Following a demo outside, five questions were asked of the council on the plans, and Richard Cohen, EDDC Deputy Chief Executive answered these. A precis of his responses is in brackets.

First question was the need for the release of plans into the public domain (answer: apparently there are not yet any to release).

Second question was about the need to take seriously the findings of the seafront survey (recognised a ‘range of views’ but no commitment to act on the findings beyond making them available to developers).

The third question was about how the EDDC portion of the consultation was totally misleading to the students who were at the consultation and in the use of this exercise as justification for the plans (very little to say in answer to this, except that others had been consulted too).

The fourth question was about the issue of the earlier consultation stating ‘no permanent residential’ and yet plans shown over the summer included a large amount of residential therefore further consultation should be undertaken (dismissal that these plans were simply ‘one version’ and patronising comment that people have ‘extrapolated from this’, [I suggest that this is what will happen when you do not tell people what you intend to do to their town], and

finally a question was asked about whose responsibility it will be to clear sand from any development given the large amounts blown across the Queen’s Drive in the recent bad weather (after a moment looking slightly panicked, he answered that this is what will happen on a seafront!).

Further questions were then asked by a number of independent councillors around the proposed development, the need for a consultation, and the secrecy around meetings that are held on this. Unfortunately the answers given were lacking, and the public at one point had to be asked to be quiet as we felt the need to express our general outrage that important questions about the future of Exmouth were not being addressed. The lack of democracy this evening was pretty depressing.

Earlier EDW post on the same meeting here: https://eastdevonwatch.org/2015/12/17/as-a-young-person-of-exmouth-i-feel-misled-and-horrified/

“As a young person of Exmouth, I feel misled and horrified …”

image

So said the Exmouth College student who questioned EDDC leaders last night (16 Dec,2015), about the process behind the seafront development proposals in her town. But Deputy CEO Richard Cohen’s answer skirted around her main point (“I feel misled”), in a Full Council meeting that showed EDDC manipulative management at its very worst.

Blind block-voting without debate; and a Chair who allowed 5 serious questions from Exmouth residents to be rolled into one by the responding officer, thus enabling central points made by the speakers to be glossed over or, (as with the offer by Louise McAllister, specialist in surveys, to meet EDDC), simply ignored.

Not a single question was asked by any Majority Party councillor: only one of the 9 questions put, all from Independents, had a satisfactory answer (given thoroughly by Environment Portfolio holder, Cllr Iain Chubb).

Corporate Services portfolio holder, Cllr Phil Twiss, was unavailable to answer embarrassing questions about broadband, leaving Cllr Ian Thomas apologetically unable to provide informed replies.

The meeting reached a crescendo of ‘confidentiality’, when the critical information needed by councillors before deciding whether to give Leader Paul Diviani ‘delegated powers’ regarding the multi-million pound Heart of the South West (HotSW) devolution bid, was declared (without debate) too sensitive for press and public. So the devolution item was dealt with in private, at the end of the session.

Just a few minutes into this part of the agenda, the Chair, Cllr Stuart Hughes, closed the meeting, somewhat prematurely perhaps. There had been no discussion by councillors, and the whole point of this session had been missed: there was no vote on delegated powers for the Leader.

“Taking out the trash: how spin doctors wrangle the news”

“The final day the Commons sits before a Christmas or summer recess is always a busy day for political journalists – because of the large number of government announcements that are made at those times. But on Thursday there were 36 written statements from ministers. And, according to the gov.uk website, departments put out 424 publications on this day.

There were two important announcements, on local government spending and Lords reform, accompanied by oral statements to the Commons. And the Social Mobility and Child Poverty Commission, an important government quango, published its annual report, among plenty more reports and documents issued.

At Westminster this is known as “burying bad news” or, after the same practice featured in an episode of West Wing “taking out the trash” day.

Government spin doctors know that if they release a vast amount of potentially embarrassing news on the same day they will limit negative publicity. In an ideal world the No 10 communications chief would also arrange for someone like José Mourinho to get sacked, but there are limits to the powers of Craig Oliver and so it’s best to put that one down to luck.

Some of the information released today came under the heading of “transparency” and Matthew Hancock, the Cabinet Office minister, said in a statement that “enhancing transparency and accountability continues to be at the heart of our approach to government”.

That is hard to square with an approach to news management that seems intended to minimise scrutiny. The prime minister’s spokesman claimed the government was having to put out so much news today because it had “a big agenda”.

Announcements are made on the day before recess because many ministerial declarations have to be made to parliament. Many of the items released today are genuinely awkward or embarrassing for ministers. But others are more innocuous, and they may have been held back not as part of a cover-up but simply through inertia and Whitehall’s ingrained reluctance to release information.

We have not read all 424 documents published today. But here are 30 of the announcements that have appeared, which the government seem to want you to overlook.

1 – A local government spending settlement involving cuts worth billions

2 – A report from the Social Mobility and Child Poverty Commission saying Britain is on track to becoming ever more divided

3 – A long-delayed report into the Muslim Brotherhood whose conclusions may disappoint allies like Saudi Arabia

4 – The list of government special advisers, and figures showing how much they are paid

5- The list of ministerial interests

6 – Information about David Cameron’s ministerial gifts, hospitality, travel and meetings

7 – A list of receptions held at Downing Street

8 – A list of government officials earning more than £150,000

9 – A report from the independent chief inspector of borders and immigration saying the authorities have lost contact with around 10,000 asylum seekers

10 – A plan to curb the powers of the House of Lords that has been criticised by opposition parties and by constitutional reformers

11 – Cuts to solar panel subsidies

12 – Homelessness figures showing a 45% increase in the number of families living in emergency B&Bs

13 – An official Department for Work and Pensions report on the bedroom tax saying that three-quarters of those affected have cut back on food and that the impact on downsizing has been limited

14 – A Home Office review saying the government should abandon its policy of having tied visas for overseas domestic workers

15 – An air quality action plan that has been criticised as too lax by environmental campaigners

16 – A report into failings at the Southern Health NHS foundation trust

17 – A range of court fee increases

18 – A statement saying 177 service personnel are embedded with other nations’ armed forces

19 – Police funding figures for 2016-17

20 – Charts setting out how much money is spent on ministerial cars

21 – Suspension of a badger vaccination programme

22 – The allocation of onshore gas and oil exploration licences that would pave the way for fracking

23 – An evaluation of a pilot relating to the use of independent child trafficking advocates

24 – Data about the number of quangos funded by the government

25 – The government’s response to the Harris review on self-inflicted deaths in custody

26 – A report on the needs of ex-service personnel in the criminal justice system

27 – The government’s sports strategy

28 – A long-term walking and cycling investment strategy

29 – A consultation on reform on the Independent Police Complaints Commission

30 – A list of guests who have visited Chequers”

http://gu.com/p/4f797

Ethical standards in public life

Owl would add some of the comments from this report, but its blood pressure can’t cope … well, ok, maybe just one:

Question:
Evidence of internal control and accountability measures – what is the internal control environment for maintaining ethical behaviour and standards in the organisation?

Answer:
A suitable code of conduct – typically a series of Do’s and Don’ts, publicly available and adherence to the code monitored.

Identification of key indicators or measures of an ethical culture within the organisation and periodic reviews of their effectiveness.

Existence of and adherence to whistleblowing policy or speak up mechanisms, gifts and hospitality registers, anti-bribery and corruption, declarations of interests requirements, procedures for dealing with conflicts of interest, which are regularly reviewed.

Ethical risks captured and controlled in the risk management process and evidence they have been identified, assessed and where required mitigated.

Transparency and reporting arrangements which encourages “intelligent accountability” putting out good quality information in intelligible and adaptable formats creating a genuine dialogue with stakeholders.”

Click to access 6.1291_CO_LAL_Ethical_standards_of_public_life_report_Interactive__2_.pdf

Devolution: our fate decided in secret

Upgraded from comment to post:

What a pity that press and public were excluded from the Devolution debate at this evening’s Council meeting. This way of behaving by the majority Party really leads one to assume something nefarious is going on. Why oh why can’t the Tories have the courage to debate things openly? If they have to muzzle press comment and keep their electorate in ignorance of what they are deciding, is it any wonder that we doubt them?

Claire Wright calls for public scrutiny at DCC

It’s hard to see an argument AGAINST the public being able to speak at Scrutiny Committee meetings, but DCC seems to be afraid of it.

Transparency is something that all councils SAY they have but time and again they show that this is just meaningless.

Is DCC up to this? We shall see.

http://www.sidmouthherald.co.uk/news/ottery_st_mary_representative_calls_for_public_speaking_at_county_scrutiny_talks_1_4345549

MPs want to keep secret the names of MPs if they are arrested

MPs plan to use human rights laws [the ones Conservatives wish to axe] to keep secret the names of any MPs who are arrested, they revealed today. They want to hide from the public the identities of any of their colleagues held by police to protect MPs’ reputations.

Currently, police chiefs must write to the Commons Speaker telling them if a Member has been held. The Speaker must then alert the House of Commons in official documents – meaning the name will become public.

But the little-known Procedure Committee – a body of MPs which regulates how Westminster works – wants to scrap the practice.

It comes after two Tory MPs in the last Parliament were arrested on suspicion of sex offences. One was charged and later cleared by a jury, while another was not charged. Both were named following their arrests.

An inquiry which started in January today recommended shielding the information from the public. Its report says: “We conclude that the House should continue to instruct police forces to provide notification of the arrest of any Member.

“We also conclude that the present practice of the House in requiring the Speaker to publish the fact of a Member’s arrest regardless of circumstance is, in its generalised and non-discretionary application, incompatible with the right to privacy.”

http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/mps-want-keep-secret-names-7017490

Government spends £30,000 to keep official diary of former Health Secretary secret

Health campaigners have been fighting for years for the release of the Ministerial diaries of Lord Lansley, who was finally sacked in July 2012 and is now a Tory peer.

They want to see which lobbyists and private health firms he met with in the run-up to his hated Health and Social Care Act 2012, which opened the NHS up to further privatisation.

A landmark ruling at a Freedom of Information tribunal in April found the public have every right to see his and other Ministerial diaries.

But the Government has now taken the case to the Court of Appeal.

Mr Frankel said it was ironic that Ministers claim FoI laws are too expensive to administer and must be scaled back – while at the same time blowing vast sums of taxpayers’ cash on court cases to keep information private.

“(They) talk about the ‘burden of FoI’ – some of the burden is caused by authorities trying to resist disclosure beyond the point at which they should simply accept the decision,” Mr Frankel said

http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/ministers-blow-30000-trying-keep-7012284

MPs gifts and hospitality remain secret

David Cameron’s promise of a “revolutionary” new era in political transparency that would “open up Whitehall” and give voters the “power of information” has failed to materialise.

An examination of official data by The Independent on Sunday, which looked at every government department’s most recent disclosure of meetings, gifts, hospitality and overseas travel accepted by ministers, has found that since March this year, not a single department has met Mr Cameron’s 2011 promise to provide full quarterly information.

The poor performance on disclosure is most pronounced at three ministries, the departments of Health, Justice and Northern Ireland, which have failed to publish any information this year. The Department of Health last released information in December 2014; the Justice Ministry last published any details in July last year and the Northern Ireland Office lodged its last cache of information almost 18 months ago.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/whitehall-failing-to-disclose-gifts-and-trips-accepted-by-ministers-despite-david-camerons-pledge-a6770896.html

Devolution: Independent DCC Councillor Claire Wright and East Devon Alliance express grave concerns on the process

Councils across Devon and Somerset are on the verge of submitting a bid to government on devolving control and funding for some services to a local level.

On Thursday Devon County Council will debate a broadbrush bid that is set to be signed off by cabinet tomorrow.

This might sound like a very positive move, however, there are concerns. Mainly around transparency and consultation.

The government has decreed that the process must be “business led” which means that the Local Enterprise Partnership (LEP) has been heavily involved in discussions on what will be included in the bid to central government.

The LEP meets in private and does not publish its minutes or agendas.

Councillors have not been involved in the process, save for the forthcoming agenda item coming to full council on Thursday.

There has been no public consultation.

In the paper that goes to full council on Thursday, the list of topics to be included in the bid are:

– Health, care and wellbeing
– Connectivity and resilience
– Housing and planning
– Employment and skills
– Business support

What is always true in my experience is that the devil is in the detail.

The bid must be with central government by 18 December.

………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………….

Here’s a press release from the East Devon Alliance, which is also unhappy about the process.

• To most people ‘devolution’ implies greater local involvement: local democratic power

• The process being followed for the ‘Heart of the South West’ devolution bid has no democratic element at all:

o No public consultation

 Input has been sought from the business community but not the public or elected representatives

o No consultation with elected Councillors regarding the process or on the content of the bid

 The information submitted so far has the logos of the Councils and implies endorsement that has not been explicitly sought or given

 Nolan Principles not followed

o It has been suggested that government guidance is to keep devolution planning confidential

o The Heart of the South West LEP (Local Enterprise Partnership) meetings, including those on the devolution bid, are not open to the public or press; agendas and minutes are not published

o The Electoral Reform Society are concerned about the lack of democracy and public engagement in the devolution process of England

http://www.electoral-reform.org.uk/press-releases
• Timing is extremely tight, the final ‘bid’ is due to be submitted on Dec 18th with a deal expected to be agreed with central government in March 2016

• EDDC Joint Overview and Scrutiny committee and Cabinet on Dec 2nd are being asked to give delegated authority to the Leader to sign off on the bid – the draft of which has not been shown to Councillors

o EDDC full Council have not and will not get to debate the bid (or the benefits and risks of the proposal)

o Information suggests that this situation is being repeated in Devon County Council with limited information or opportunity for debate

• Past history of unelected bodies delivering services and economic benefits does not bode well: East Devon Business Forum

Click to access scaring-the-living-daylights-final.pdf

and Connecting Devon and Somerset (broadband)
https://eastdevonwatch.org/2015/11/23/broadband-for-devon-and-somerset-the-fantasy-saga-continues/

• EDA calls for:

o The Heart of the South West devolution planning process to be more open and democratic from now on

o The public and elected representatives to be regularly consulted

o Decisions involving the use of public funds (e.g. business rate revenue) to be made in public by accountable, elected representatives

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

“Parliament’s expenses watchdog hiding names of MPs being investigated for misusing public money”

“Rules dictate that MPs under investigation for unjustified or fraudulent expense claims must be publicly identified.

…Under rules set by the Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority (Ipsa), MPs under investigation for unjustified or fraudulent expense claims must be publicly identified.

But the organisation’s compliance officer, Peter Davis, has avoided naming individuals by carrying out detailed “assessments” of the complaints, denying they amount to formal “investigations”.

The loophole last week allowed Mr Davis to refer two MPs to the police over expenses fraud without ever launching a formal investigation, which would have triggered a public announcement.

It has also allowed other MPs to avoid publicity about using taxpayer-funded websites for party-political material by paying back website domain fees to Ipsa, or simply removing content from sites.

Ipsa previously proposed conducting probes in secret to prevent “reputational damage” to MPs – but the idea was dropped after criticism from the Commons Standards Committee and Committee for Standards in Public Life. It now appears that Ipsa is using “assessments” to get around calls for transparency.

According to a breakdown of cases, released by Mr Davis’s office in response to a Freedom of Information request, 40 “assessments” of allegations against politicians were carried out in 2014-15. But just one – relating to Conservative MP Bob Blackman’s mileage claims – was classified as a formal investigation and disclosed publicly.

Among those listed as “closed prior to an investigation” was a case in June last year where an unnamed MP claimed for a taxi journey that was not allowable. The compliance office concluded it had been a “legitimate error by a member of staff” and said it had been “repaid in full”.

In another case, an allegation was made that an MP’s staff had filed duplicate claims for a hotel. Mr Davis considered the matter closed after “the MP provided a valid explanation for why two separate hotels were claimed inadvertently for the same night and… repaid”.

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/politics/parliaments-expenses-watchdog-hiding-names-of-mps-being-investigated-for-misusing-public-money-a6764016.html

And also not a hood idea to be “wined and dined” by your ” independent” solicitors

(Continuation of post below):

“David Cameron is claiming the Conservative Party’s inquiry into the Tory bullying scandal is “independent”:

“There is an independent lawyer from Clifford Chance, who will oversee that process and make sure that it reaches clear conclusions from the evidence that comes through.”

But if Clifford Chance is so independent of the Tories – how come the law firm has been dishing out cash for members of the party’s influential 1922 Committee to party at the prestigious and VERY expensive Marco Pierre White Rooftop Restaurant?

From Lord Ashcroft’s Party Conference Diary:

“How to win the majority we want will be a major theme for Conservative Home’s conference events – not least this evening’s joint party with the 1922 Committee, generously sponsored by Clifford Chance, at the Marco Pierre White Rooftop Restaurant”

So not actually all that independent then…”

https://tompride.wordpress.com/2015/11/30/tory-mps-wined-and-dined-at-restaurant-paid-for-by-independent-tory-bullying-inquiry-lawyers/

The perils of employing your mates

Lord Feldman is the latest person implicated in the bullying scandal and, after the resignation of Grant Shapps (aka Michael Green) there are calls for his resignation.

Another of Dav’s good friends is our MP Hugo Swire, who was at school with him at Eton.

It is probably not a good idea to put friends in positions of power and influence.

… “Feldman rarely gives interviews, has never stood for elected office and is virtually unknown outside Westminster. There is no biographical information about him on the parliament website. …

…2008 Feldman and George Osborne were guests for drinks on a yacht owned by the Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska, moored off Corfu. Both Feldman and Osborne insisted they had not discussed donations with the Russian, which would have been illegal. Feldman later said he had gone aboard merely because he was “fascinated” to see a boat of that size so close up.

When Feldman indicated before this year’s general election that he wanted to return to the family business, Cameron made him sole chairman of the party, with a seat in cabinet. He is the first Tory chairman to have his own office in 10 Downing Street. So close are the two, the barrister reportedly helped prepare Cameron for his appearance at the Leveson inquiry into press standards, firing likely questions at him.

Described as direct and easygoing, with a “sharp business brain”, Feldman is credited with helping to widen the party’s financial base. However, some believe he is not independently political enough. A party chairman should be able to deliver uncomfortable truths to a prime minister, which critics say he cannot do because he is completely David Cameron’s creation.”

http://www.theguardian.com/politics/2015/nov/30/andrew-feldman-david-cameron-mate-indispensable-ally-tory

Pigs, snouts, troughs, gravy trains …

He says it is OK because none of them are health-related.

One is with the Roche drug company,

One is with The US private equity firm Blackstone “which was criticised in 2011 after the collapse of Southern Cross care home group under a mountain of debt. The lives of 31,000 elderly residents were thrown into turmoil through the actions of Blackstone, which had bought Southern Cross in 2004 and sold out three years later at a huge profit having sold most of its property assets”.

and

one is with a company that receives funding from “fitness companies” and Coca Cola.

These are in addition to his two other jobs
with management consultants Bain & Company and a consultancy set up by his wife called Low Associates.

“Low Associates helps people prepare before they give evidence to committees of MPs, and Sally Low has given speeches on improving lobbying skills, in which she said that lobbyists should “establish positive relationships with decision-makers before you need their help”. Lobbyist clients of Low Associates personnel have previously worked for a variety of companies including those with an interest in health, such as SmithKline Beecham, Unilever and Procter & Gamble.”

“Until December 2009, Lansley received £134 an hour from a firm of advertisers that represents clients such as Walkers Crisps, McDonald’s, Unilever, Mars and Pizza Hut; Private Eye suggests a link between these activities and Lansley’s desire to see a more lightly regulated food industry.[38] The same publication suggested a similar link to a Department of Health report on red meat in which the only products listed in the report found to contain suitable amounts of red meat to merit a “Good” rating were a McDonald’s Big Mac, and a Peperami (manufactured by Unilever)”

“The three jobs were taken by the former health secretary despite David Cameron’s promise in 2010 to end the ‘revolving door’ between government and the private sector.”

Last night Lord Lansley told the Daily Mail that he expected the majority of the work he does for the companies to be unrelated to health.”

SO WHAT EXACTLY ARE THEY ALL PAYING HIM FOR?

He was recently made a Lord by David Cameron

Sources:

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Lansley

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3320858/Should-not-work-Ex-Health-Secretary-Andrew-Lansley-defends-private-sector-jobs-including-advising-drugs-firm.html

Power corrupts …

“Sneaky Tories have stopped publishing the names of big bucks donors to the party.

David Cameron pledged to reveal the names of his “Leaders Group” , who stump up more than £50,000 a year.

They get access to the PM and his Cabinet at dinners in Downing Street, Chequers or Tory HQ.

The first list was published in March 2012 and ­appeared quarterly on the official Tory website.

But there has been nothing since last summer’s list.

It revealed the Conservatives received £2.7million in the previous three months from people who attended dinners or meetings with the PM.

That represented 40% of the party’s total donations for the quarter.”

http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/tories-stop-naming-partys-big-6791018