Sidmouth’s new councillor spotted campaigning in London with Greg Hands.

Owl sees that newly elected Cllr. Sophie Richards was campaigning hard in Greg Hands’ constituency in London on Wednesday for more capacity on the District Line.

Doesn’t seem to have much relevance to the lives of the good people of Sidmouth.

On the other hand it could make a lot of sense to a wannabe Tory parliamentary candidate.

Campaigning with the Chairman of the Party must have certain attractions over campaigning with Simon Jupp.

As Owl has already remarked, Sophie has a  track record of campaigning hither and thither. 

Owl doesn’t expect to see her in Simouth very often.

Twitter link can be found here

Join us and help us kick these out of touch Conservatives out – Richard Foord MP

Last week people across our part of Devon saw their livelihoods swept away as thunderstorms and heavy rainfall resulted in a series of flash floods that turned our roads into waterways. The flooding was particularly heavy along the banks the River Otter, especially in and around Newton Poppleford – a small village which is in the East Devon Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB).

Richard Foord www.devonlive.com 

The damage of flooding takes a long time to clean up. Indeed, several days after the waters receded, we still saw pictures of people’s living rooms and business places still under water. It’s clear that the work to rebuild has only just began. The work of both emergency service workers, who initially responded to the floods, and the local people, who have rallied together to support each other, has been hugely inspiring. Their swift and resilience has really shown us at our best.

Now the focus turns to the clean-up operation and arduous task of repairing the damage caused by water, mud, and silt. I have spoken to several community leaders, including the local District Councillor, about what help they need to properly rebuild their lives.

We must ensure that this work is properly supported by Devon County Council and the Government in Westminster, both in the immediate aftermath – but also in the long-term too. There is real concern that while help is often forthcoming in the days after the flooding takes place, this tends to peter out as the weeks go by.

Flooding is not something we can avoid, but it is something that we can prepare for. We know that cases like this are only going to get worse as we see the effects of climate change continue to shape our world. It is now incumbent on the Government to set out exactly how they plan to help those affected.

Local Councils have seen their budgets repeatedly hollowed out by the current Conservative Government, forcing many to make cutbacks to vital frontline services. This means they are unable to properly respond to events like this in the scale that is needed.

That’s why we need clarity on what package of support is being given to Devon authorities to help kickstart repair work. I recently wrote to the Flooding Minister Rebecca Pow to ask this very question, but also to try and understand what the formal process was for triggering extra help for areas affected by flooding.

We need to have confidence that these decisions are being made fairly and quickly, not on an ad-hoc basis at the whim of Ministers. This is the only way we can ensure that our communities get the support they need to properly rebuild and repair the damage done by environmental events like these.

Last week’s Council elections showed that things are changing. People are fed up with being taken for granted by the Conservatives and are will not allow the neglect of rural areas like ours to continue. Now we wait to see whether the Government has finally got the message and is going to listen.

Liberal Democrats are the main challengers across Devon and are fighting to get a fair deal for our county. If that’s what you want to see too, then join us and help us kick these out of touch Conservatives out.

East Devon MP backs Devon farmers at Westminster meeting

This meeting is the one that has been dubbed a “PR Stunt”

Our Simon knows a lot about PR so he should have been in his element.

He backs farmers, but since he is a PPS he is obliged to back the government.

Only a few days ago, NFU President Minette Batters, was highly critical of the government’s trade deals with Australia and New Zealand which come into force on May 31.

These post-Brexit trade deals have done no favours to British farmers and threaten to undermine welfare standards. – Owl

honiton.nub.news 

Simon Jupp, the MP for East Devon, has been in Westminster today ahead of this week’s Devon County Show and the UK’s Farm to Fork Summit.

Mr Jupp welcomed new investments, announced today, which the government say will help support British farmers. It is hoped the measures will strengthen food security and grow the economy. 

The MP, who lives in Sidmouth, also provided feedback from the most recent farmers roundtable in Sidford to the Prime Minister about the need to keep focused on food security, reducing red tape, and improving access to advice and support.

Both the Farm to Fork Summit and the Devon County Show will take place this week at Westpoint, with Mr Jupp attending both events and speaking to farmers, visitors and producers. 

The pledges announced today include putting farmer’s interests at the heart of trade policy through a new framework for trade negotiations, committing to protect the UK’s high food an welfare standards and prioritising new export opportunities. 

New measures announced by the government today include: 

  • Farmers’ interests will be put at the heart of trade policy through a new framework for trade negotiations, committing to protect the UK’s high food and welfare standards and prioritise new export opportunities. The Prime Minister has written an open letter to farmers today setting out how these new principles will help the industry benefit from the trade opportunities available to us outside the EU.
  • Investing £2m to boost our programme of global trade shows and missions, as well as providing £1.6m for the GREAT food and drink campaign.
  • Extending funding to promote seafood exports around the world with an extra £1 million between 2025 and 2028 and create a new bespoke £1m programme to help dairy businesses, particularly SMEs, to seize export opportunities, particularly in the Asia pacific region.
  • Confirming the government will improve future support for horticulture by replacing the retained EU Fruit and Vegetable Producer Organisation Scheme when it closes in 2026 with an expanded offer as part of new farming payment schemes.
  • New reviews into fairness in the horticulture and egg supply chains, in light of the impact of global challenges on these sectors in particular.
  • Recognising the unique role and needs of the sector, and listening to the calls from the NFU, FDF and others, the Grocery Code Adjudicator will not be merged with the Competition and Markets Authority, in recognition of its importance in ensuring our food supply chains function.
  • Plans to cut the red tape currently holding farmers back from delivering projects on their land to diversify their incomes, such as repurposing farm buildings to use as shops, with a call for evidence later this year.
  • Increasing water security by accelerating work on water supply infrastructure, so that farmers can count on steady access to water, including in periods of intense dry weather.

You can read the full list here

Simon Jupp, MP for East Devon, said: “The new investment and support for farmers announced today is great news for the agricultural sector. 

“East Devon’s farmers work hard around the clock to keep great quality food on our plates, so it’s good to see the Prime Minister hosting this important summit today. 

“Our farmers are at the heart of our rural economy, bringing jobs and opportunity to East Devon. I regularly hold farming roundtables across East Devon with local farmers and I always share the feedback with government. 

“East Devon produces some of the best food and drink in the country, and I will continue to work with producers and ministers to support a productive and thriving agricultural sector, which I look forward to seeing in all its glory at the Devon County Show later this week.”

Rishi Sunak MP, Prime Minister, said: “I will always back British farmers, and I pay tribute to their hard work and dedication all year round which keeps shelves stocked and food on our tables. 

“Supporting our farmers and food producers must, and always will be, at the heart of our plans to grow the economy and build a more prosperous country. That’s why I’m proud to host this summit, and working together, I’m determined to build resilience, strengthen our food security and champion the best of British at home and overseas.” 

Don’t make cheese sandwiches if you can’t afford them, Ann Widdecombe tells struggling families

Ann Widdecombe has told people to not make cheese sandwiches if they cannot afford to buy the ingredients as a way to deal with the ongoing cost of living crisis.

Tara Cobham www.independent.co.uk 

The politician, who is a member of the Reform UK party, was asked what she would advise people faced with the spiralling costs of basic food items on a panel discussing BBC research that showed the price of a homemade cheese sandwich has shot up by a third in the past year to 40p.

On the Politics Live programme, the former Brexit Party MEP said: “You don’t do the cheese sandwich.”

She added there was no “given right” to low food prices and spoke of how farmers would “constantly” complain to her about supermarket pricing when she was Conservative MP for Maidstone.

“The only way this is going to be tackled is if inflation is going to come down,” Ms Widdecombe said. “You will not get inflation coming down if you continue to have inflationary wage rises.

“We just have to be as grown-up about this as we can and stop thinking it’s solely a UK problem, because it isn’t.”

New Statesman journalist Rachel Cunliffe said the situation is so dire for some families that they “cannot afford to feed their children” as a result of the increasing price of basic items. But Ms Widdecombe shot back: “None of it’s new. We’ve been through this before.

“The problem is we’ve been decades now without inflation, we’ve come to regard it as some kind of given right…”

Separately, Ms Widdecombe has suggested those claiming unemployment benefits should be made to fill labour shortages by picking fruit.

Speaking on Jeremy Vine on 5, she said: “I ask why it is that we’ve got 1.2 million people on the dole, and I do mean on the dole, on unemployment benefit. Some of them obviously wouldn’t be fit enough to work at fruit picking. But 1.2 million?

“And the word that is always used is that our people aren’t ‘willing’ to pick. Now ‘willing’ doesn’t matter if you’re drawing public money – I think you should be made to pick.”

UK water companies offer apology and £10bn investment for sewage spills

Shareholders in water companies will initially fund the investments. However, the costs will be recouped from customers through unspecified increases in their bills determined by regulators, in a move which threatens to add further pressure to household costs.

Shareholders have been creaming profits for nearly a quarter of a century, time for a haircut! – Owl

Alex Lawson www.theguardian.com 

Water companies have apologised for repeated sewage spills and pledged to invest £10bn this decade in an attempt to quell public anger over pollution in seas and rivers.

The companies will triple their existing investment plans to plough funds into the biggest modernisation of sewers “since the Victorian era” to reduce spills of overflowing sewage into England’s waterways.

Industry body Water UK said the plans will cut the number of overflow incidents by up to 140,000 each year by 2030, compared with 2020.

Environment Agency figures earlier this year showed there were a total of 301,091 sewage spills in 2022, an average of 824 a day.

The spending on more than 350,000 miles of sewer comes on top of the current £3.1bn being spent between 2020 and 2025.

Shareholders in water companies will initially fund the investments. However, the costs will be recouped from customers through unspecified increases in their bills determined by regulators, in a move which threatens to add further pressure to household costs.

The investment will see new facilities built to hold surges in rainwater, increased capacity for sewage treatment works, measures to reduce rainfall entering sewers and fixing misconnected pipes from properties.

An online hub will launch next year, giving the public almost live information on overflows and the state of rivers and coastal waters. The companies also pledged to support up to 100 communities in creating new protected water for swimming.

The move comes after intense criticism of water companies from politicians and campaigners.

Water UK, which represents 25 companies across the UK, issued an apology and said the public was “right to be upset about the current quality of our rivers and beaches”.

There have been calls for greater fines for breaching environmental laws and The Environment Agency has even suggested that water company bosses should be jailed for serious pollution.

Ruth Kelly, the chair of Water UK, said: “The message from the water and sewage industry today is clear: we are sorry. More should have been done to address the issue of spillages sooner and the public is right to be upset about the current quality of our rivers and beaches.

“We have listened and have an unprecedented plan to start to put it right. This problem cannot be fixed overnight, but we are determined to do everything we can to transform our rivers and seas in the way we all want to see.”

Britain’s privatised water and sewage companies paid £1.4bn in dividends in 2022, up from £540m the previous year. Annual bonuses paid to water company executives rose by 20% in 2021, as water bosses paid themselves £24.8m, including £14.7m in bonuses, benefits and incentives, in 2021-2022.

Last week the chief executives of Yorkshire Water and Thames Water and owner of South West Water declined their bonuses in an acknowledgment of the public anger over companies’ dumping of sewage in Britain’s rivers.

Liberal Democrat leader Ed Davey said: “This apology and plan just don’t go far enough. For years water companies have arrogantly dismissed the public’s fears of rivers, lakes and coastlines being damaged by sewage discharges.

“This announcement does nothing to match the billions water firms have paid out in dividends to overseas investors, or stop their CEOs being handed multimillion pound bonuses.”

Davey also called on the environment secretary, Thérèse Coffey, to apologise.

In a letter apologising to its customers, Yorkshire Water said it is investing £180m in reducing discharges from storm overflows over the next two years.

Its chief executive, Nicola Shaw, said: “Tackling overflows, which were designed into the system as a relief valve, is a priority for us, but it is also a significant task … further investment from our shareholders is helping us tackle this issue.”

Last month, Coffey said the government would introduce legislation to put plans to reduce storm overflows on a “new legal footing”.

Stuart Singleton-White, head of campaigns at the Angling Trust, said, “This must be only the beginning. The problems our rivers face will not be solved by sorting out overflow spills, chucking in some money for swimming, and putting nature-based solutions on the end of pipes.”

A spokesperson for Ofwat, the water regulator, said: “We welcome the apology from water companies and this now needs to be turned into action.

“We have been pushing water companies to do more, faster, for their customers and for our waterways and beaches. We look forward to seeing the plans and how companies will step up performance.”

Devon’s 14 best beaches given famous Blue Flag status for 2023

[Even when it’s raining and the flood gates are opened, because you can get a warning to stay away! – Owl]

Devon is known for it’s stunning coastlines and beautiful beaches. Many of those beaches are now proud owners of the prestigious Blue Flag, an internationally recognised award for beaches and marinas.

www.devonlive.com (Extract)

The Blue Flag is only presented to well-managed beaches with high standards of cleanliness, safety and environmental management. Oddicombe in Torbay has scooped the award every year for 36 years, making it one of the best beaches in the world.

Elsewhere Seaton has retained the Blue Flag it won for the first time last year. Exmouth has now won the accolade for the fifth year in a row, while this is the fourth year for Sidmouth.

Beer features in the list this year, having not made the cut in 2022.

[Budleigh only gets the “seaside award” – see below]

 Blue Flag Water Quality criteria

  • The beach must fully comply with the water quality sampling and frequency requirements
  • The beach must fully comply with the standards and requirements for water quality analysis
  • No industrial, waste-water or sewage-related discharges should affect the beach area
  • The beach must achieve ‘excellent’ water quality as set out in the Bathing Water Directive.  

Seaside Award Water Quality criteria

  • The beach must fully comply with the water quality sampling and frequency requirements 
  • The beach must fully comply with the standards and requirements for water quality analysis  
  • No industrial, waste-water or sewage-related discharges should affect the beach area 
  • At designated bathing waters from 2016 the water quality should be graded as ‘sufficient’ as set out in the Bathing Water Directive. (In 2015, bathing beaches should of mandatory standard.) 

So the difference lies in water quality: “excellent” versus “sufficient”.

Plymouth shootings: Frustration grows at delayed response

Kicking it into the long grass, where is the selfie commissioner? – Owl

Campaigners for changes to gun laws in response to the 2021 Plymouth shootings are frustrated at delays in responses to recommendations from the coroner.

BBC News www.bbc.co.uk

The government had been due to respond to an extended deadline on Tuesday.

But the Home Office said it was still considering the findings and wanted a “short extension”.

Jake Davison, 22, used a legally-held shotgun to kill his mother Maxine Davison, 51, and four others before shooting himself.

Three-year-old Sophie Martyn, her father, Lee, 43, Stephen Washington, 59, and Kate Shepherd, 66, were all killed.

Gill Marshall-Andrews, chair of the Gun Control Network, told the BBC: “I think the delay is indicative of a reluctance to grasp the issues.

“What we worry about is that the whole thing is going to be put out to some sort of consultation and will be kicked into the long grass until everybody’s forgotten about it.”

Analysis: Ben Woolvin, BBC Spotlight Home Affairs Correspondent

The Home Office has at this stage been unable to give us any information about the reason for the delay.

In a very short statement a spokesperson says the government is “still giving careful consideration to the recommendations made by the coroner”.

Luke Pollard, Labour MP for Plymouth Sutton and Devonport, said he had not been told the reason for the delay.

He said it was possible there was an administrative issue which would delay things only by a few days, but he also said he was concerned this could be an indication that the government was no longer as committed to gun law reform as it previously said it was.

After the inquest in February, senior coroner for Plymouth, Torbay and South Devon, Ian Arrow, wrote a series of prevention of future deaths reports, saying current gun laws were “at odds with public safety”.

He wrote to Home Secretary Suella Braverman, Policing Minister Chris Philp, the Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales Sir Ian Burnett, the National Police Chiefs’ Council (NPCC), every chief constable in England and Wales and the College of Policing, identifying areas of concern.

The recipients were legally required to respond within 56 days.

A Home Office spokesperson said: “We are still giving careful consideration to the recommendations made by the coroner in the Keyham inquest, and are currently seeking a short extension from him.”

No 10 food summit ‘no more than a PR stunt’ and failed to tackle key issues

Another day, another PR stunt! – Owl

Rishi Sunak’s Downing Street food summit has been described as “empty” by food and farming industry representatives, who rounded on the prime minister for failing to discuss soaring inflation or set out measures to safeguard British food production.

Joanna Partridge www.theguardian.com 

The Farm to Fork summit, the first meeting of its kind, brought together farmers, food producers and some of Britain’s largest supermarkets.

One representative of a trade body that attended the summit described it as an “empty meeting” with no action on price or inflation discussed. “It was there for the Tories to show they are supporting farmers,” they said.

Another attender said the summit elicited a “low-key response” from those present because it “did not touch the fundamental problems of food price inflation”.

“If you are not doing something about the cost of living, cost of production, access to labour and affordability of food then you are never going to fix the overall problem,” the attender said.

The summit had been expected to tackle topics such as food price inflation, fairness within the supply chain and helping farmers to invest in domestic production, but there was no subsequent announcement on those issues. Ministers offered no commitments in response to a call by the National Farmers’ Union (NFU) to stop Britain’s self-sufficiency in food slipping below its current level of 60%.

The summit took place against a backdrop of stubbornly high inflation, partly driven by food and drink prices, which rose 19.1% in the year to March, according to official figures.

In advance, consumer groups had called on ministers to ask grocery bosses to commit to holding down prices to help squeezed consumers, after an agreement by supermarkets in France to cap prices on key food items and a move by the French government to support food producers.

Hours before the meeting, Sunak published an open letter to farmers, promising to put UK farming at the heart of future trade deals and vowing that chlorinated chicken and hormone-fed beef would not be allowed on to the UK market.

Sunak’s pledges were welcomed by the NFU, which had repeatedly asked the prime minister to hold a food summit.

The union’s president has previously criticised the government for making farmers “a pawn in trade deals”, including those struck with Australia and New Zealand by Sunak’s predecessor, Liz Truss, during her time as international trade secretary.

Tom Bradshaw, the NFU’s deputy president, said the union believed the government had “put food security on a par with energy security” at the summit, which he called “a big step forwards”.

He added that farmers had battled to get ministers to “deliver resilience to the food supply chain”, which he hoped would help reverse recent falls in domestic production, as farmers have quit the industry amid soaring costs.

However, the government did not immediately answer the NFU’s calls to make the summit an annual event.

The meeting, which according to one person present was attended by between 60 and 70 people and lasted all morning, began with a welcome from the prime minister, before participants took part into four separate discussion groups.

Richard Griffiths, the chief executive of the British Poultry Council, who attended the summit, believed the meeting represented only “a little step forward” for the food industry.

He welcomed the government’s promises regarding future trade deals, but said “there needs to be more attention on how we and the government promote British food”.

He said promising to support producers in international trade deals without making plan on how to tackle food inflation “was like taking one corner of a big problem and trying to fix it without reference to the rest”.

Lee Stiles, the secretary of the Lea Valley Growers’ Association, a trade body for glasshouse growers, described the food summit as “no more than a PR stunt” with “nothing of substance” to help growers.

Stiles, who was not at the meeting, called on the government to take action to help with labour shortages.

He described the current seasonal agricultural workers scheme as “not fit for purpose” because it only enables holders to work for six months, although workers are needed for almost twice that period, meaning that multiple groups had to be trained each year to keep production flowing.

Stiles added: “The idea you can fill these roles with local workers is ridiculous and has been since the 1950s.”

Fresh election for Sidmouth Town Council seats after no candidates stand

A fresh election will be held for four seats on Sidmouth Town Council after no candidates stood for them in the local elections.

sidmouth.nub.news 

All of the local authority’s current councillors were automatically elected as too few people competed for the positions.

It is likely that if anyone stands for election this time, they will also be immediately appointed.

Nomination papers must be submitted by 25 May, and if any election is contested the poll will take place on 22 June.

One councillor is to be elected for the Sidmouth East ward, two for Sidmouth Sidford Village, and one for Sidmouth West.

What is: “the one overarching threat to British conservatism” ?

(Greater even than the climate emergency!)

The answer according to Miriam Cates MP, one of the rising stars of Tory MPs when she gave the warmup speech at the, mostly male, National Conservatism gathering on Monday, is the UK’s low birthrate.

She also said: “Spending so much time and money on education also makes it much more difficult, particularly for women, to decide when is a good time to pause and have children.”

And concluded by saying “Conservatism is always common sense.”

Owl wonders what Simon Jupp and his local conservatives make of all this.

Will they embrace the problem with enthusiasm?

Time is running out before the general election to make much headway on tackling this threat to conservatism.

The other snag is that the younger generations are less likely to vote Tory, so we are talking long term. – Owl

Three in four pothole claims rejected by councils

Motorists are being denied millions of pounds in compensation for damage and injuries caused by potholes.

(Cyclists are at the greatest risk of serious injury from potholes, with 425 killed or injured because of poor or defective road surfaces since 2016, according to government figures.)

Ben Clatworthy www.thetimes.co.uk

Local authorities are rejecting on average 75 per cent of claims, although one in five councils reject at least 90 per cent.

It was found that Dundee city council rejected 96 per cent of claims over a three-year period. Each year at least 45 of 50 highway authorities rejected more claims than they paid out on.

Councils have been accused of trying to “wriggle out of responsibility” for defective road surfaces which shred tyres, damage car suspension and injure cyclists.

Rod Dennis, of the RAC, told the Daily Mail: “Drivers may not be aware that their chances of claiming any pothole damage costs back from a local authority is virtually zero if the council can say it wasn’t aware of a problem with the road in the first place.”

The newspaper analysed claims data from a sample of 50 highway authorities obtained via freedom of information requests, looking at the three financial years from April 2019 to March last year.

Overall about £3 million was paid out in compensation by the same group each year.

However, with about 75 per cent of claims being rejected each year, it could mean up to £9 million was denied by these 50 councils alone.

Gloucestershire county council settled only 93 of the 1,667 claims it received. Transport for London closed 93 per cent of claims without compensation and has so far paid out on only 24 of the total 776.

Lincolnshire had one of the best payout rates of the group, approving 48 per cent of claims.

Cyclists are at the greatest risk of serious injury from potholes, with 425 killed or injured because of poor or defective road surfaces since 2016, according to government figures.

Keir Gallagher, Cycling UK’s campaigns manager, said: “One pothole can cause an experienced cyclist to suffer a life-changing collision.”

A Local Government Association spokesman said councils “prefer to use their budgets to keep our roads in good condition” rather than paying out for compensation claims, while a spokesman for Gloucestershire county council said “almost 5,000” potholes were filled in April alone.

A Dundee city council spokesman said: “Each claim is dealt with on its individual merits.”

The UK has a PR plan masquerading as an industrial strategy

It’s “just industrial-strength bullshit”, like all the ” economic growth plans” announced locally , which seem to have had no impact.

These have included: Heart of the South West LEP; the “Golden Triangle” LEP (Exeter, Plymouth, Torquay) and the latest unelected, unaccountable and non-transparent quango – The Great South West (GSW), the LEP for LEPs

Who is the power behind the GSW economic strategy? None other than Pennon, the South West’s biggest employer and parent company of South West Water! – Owl

UK Needs an industrial strategy to compete in manufacturing

Larry Elliott www.theguardian.com

Who is the power behind the GSW economic strategy? None other than Pennon, the South West’s biggest employer and parent company of South West Water! – Owl

Countries that are serious about manufacturing have industrial strategies. The US and China have one. So do Germany and France.

Britain does not have an industrial strategy. Rishi Sunak talks about turning the UK into a “science and technology superpower” but that’s all it is: talk. It is a PR strategy masquerading as an industrial strategy.

Faced with the challenge presented by Joe Biden’s inflation reduction act (IRA), the government says it has no need to respond to the package of green subsidies being provided by Washington because Britain has already established a thriving renewables sector and the Americans are playing catch-up. The complacency is staggering.

Andy Haldane, once chief economist of the Bank of England and now chief executive of the Royal Society of Arts, had this to say last week. “The world is facing right now an arms race in re-industrialisation. And I think we’re at risk of falling behind in that arms race unless we give it the giddy-up.”

China, Haldane added, has been focusing on green technology for many, many years and had forged ahead in tech such as solar and batteries. “The west has belatedly woken up. The IRA is throwing cash to the wall on that. The cost of that [is] almost certainly north of half a trillion dollars. Possibly north of a trillion. The EU is now playing catch-up, [and] the UK currently is not really in the race at any kind of scale.”

A quick glance at the latest trade figures shows that Britain has some way to go before it can be considered a manufacturing “superpower”. That was true once, but no longer. Manufacturing’s share of the economy shrunk from more than 30% to less than 10% of national output during Queen Elizabeth II’s reign. The goods deficit, which has not been in surplus since the early 1980s, stood at £55bn in the first three months of 2023, with imports more than 50% higher than exports. A £40bn quarterly surplus in services was not enough to close the trade gap.

Those who supported Brexit say the UK now has the freedom to export more to those parts of the world economy that are growing faster. Those who opposed Brexit say exporting to the EU has become more burdensome. Both are right, but both are missing the point. Before Britain can take advantage of export opportunities, it has to have stuff to export. The fact is the UK is no longer a first-rank manufacturing economy and hasn’t been for decades.

The recent announcement by Dyson that it will build a new battery factory in Singapore is a perfect illustration of the challenge facing the UK. There was never the remotest possibility that the plant would be in the UK, owing to what its founder James Dyson, a prominent supporter of Brexit, called in a letter to the Times the “scandalous neglect” of science and technology businesses.

Only part of the company’s reluctance to manufacture in the UK is due to the recent jump in corporation tax, although the increase in the budget wipes out any benefit from tax breaks for research and development. It is also the planning system, the lack of enough trained engineers, the disdain shown for science and technology, and government interference in the way businesses are run.

Dyson is unhappy about plans to make it possible for new recruits to request to work from home from day one of their employment, something which is incompatible with the hands-on, learning-on-the-job approach required by a high-end manufacturing business.

The company says the UK will remain a key centre for R&D, and will invest £100m in a new tech centre in Bristol for software and AI research. But the idea that Britain can do all the clever, high-value-added, brainpower stuff while other countries do the production is an illusion. Increasingly, Dyson’s R&D is happening in Singapore – where it has its global HQ – and in the Philippines.

Dyson is by no means alone. A report by the lobby group Make UK found that six in 10 manufacturers thought government had never had a long-term vision for manufacturing, while eight in 10 considered the absence of a strategy put their company at a competitive disadvantage compared with other manufacturing countries.

Stephen Phipson, Make UK’s CEO, said last week the US was spending 1.5% of national output on the IRA. The equivalent sum in the UK would be £33bn. It is not just the money, though.

“A lack of a proper, planned, industrial strategy is the UK’s achilles heel,” Phipson added. “Every other major economy, from Germany, to China, to the US, has a long-term national manufacturing plan, underlying the importance of an industrial base to the success of its wider economy. The UK is the only country to not have one. If we are to not only tackle our regional inequality, but also compete on a global stage, we need a national industrial strategy as a matter of urgency.”

One option is to treat manufacturing as a niche sector and concentrate instead on sectors where it does have global clout: financial and business services, for example. In that case, the pretence has to stop that levelling up will be delivered by spanking new factories turning out world-beating products. The government can either make Britain an attractive place for manufacturing companies to invest or it can decide not to compete. Judged by its actions rather than by its rhetoric, it seems to have chosen the latter option.

Haldane, Dyson and Phipson are right. There is no plan and there is no strategy. There is just industrial-strength bullshit.

‘Progressives’ continue as Exeter’s official opposition

And now they’re nine-strong

Exeter’s Green Party and Liberal Democrats are to continue their opposition partnership on the city council.

Ollie Heptinstall, local democracy reporter www.radioexe.co.uk

The parties, together with an independent who is no longer a councillor, formed the ‘Progressive Group’ in 2019 in solidarity against the ruling Labour group.

Last year it overtook the Conservatives as the council’s main opposition and added a further two councillors – one each for the Greens and Lib Dems – at this month’s local elections.

The group is now nine strong, with six members from the Greens and three Liberal Democrats – after Andy Ketchin won the Green Party’s first ever seat in Newtown and St Leonard’s and Adrian Fullam took a seat for the Lib Dems in St Thomas.

Cllr Fullam returns as a councillor having previously served as city council leader between 2008-10, before Labour became Exeter’s dominant party.

The group has pledged to work “cooperatively together” and bring “balance and scrutiny” to Labour, which won and lost a seat earlier this month to remain on 25 councillors.

Co-leader, Green councillor Diana Moore, who was re-elected in St David’s, said: “The Progressive Group has demonstrated that a different type of politics is possible and that working cooperatively together is in the interests of local people and the environment.

“People repeatedly tell us they really like this cooperative approach.”

Fellow co-leader, Lib Dem councillor Michael Mitchell, who was re-elected in Duryard & St James, added: “We intend to ensure that the Labour-dominated council’s proposals and actions are subject to full public scrutiny.”

“Exeter is set to see some major changes and developments in the coming years. A strong opposition is going to be vital to challenge and suggest improvements to these plans. The Progressive Group will provide that challenge and, if needed, strong opposition.”

Mr Mitchell was previously co-leader of the group but is set to become the 2023-24 lord mayor of Exeter; a politically neutral, ceremonial role which is shared between the parties.

He said: “Four years ago I helped set up the Progressive Group on the city council. It was the first time individuals from different political parties and none had come together in Exeter in such a way. We developed a close bond, which is based on mutual respect.

“I am delighted to see that this group, which started as four councillors, is now nine-strong. I am hugely proud of every member in the group and of what we have achieved together. I know the group will go from strength to strength.”

Martin Shaw – My column in the local press has been cancelled

Where are the local media heading?

East Devon Watch continues! – Owl

seatonmatters.org /

My fortnightly column in the Midweek Herald, Sidmouth Herald and Exmouth Journal has been discontinued. The editors have told me that they have too many political columns – but regular contributions by three Conservative politicians, Simon Jupp MP, Cllr John Hart and police commissioner Alison Hernandez, will continue, while on the other side only Cllr Paul Arnott and occasionally Richard Foord MP remain.

I’m not complaining, but it seems to me that with a General Election approaching where the East Devon seats will be more closely fought than they have been for a generation, the press should be scrupulously maintaining political balance.

I’d like to thank all the readers who’ve given me such positive feedback over the last three years – it’s made it all worthwhile. My apologies to those who thought I wasn’t outspoken enough, and to the gentleman who told me last year that I was too anti-Tory – perhaps now you understand why!

Planning applications validated by EDDC for week beginning 1 May

Westminster forgot its promises to ‘coastal communities’, and left them to rot 

This article by John Harris starts from issues raised ten years ago.

Owl believes “official” recognition of the problem of coastal communities can be traced much further back.

Before reading the article below consider this conclusion from a Government and Local Communities Committee report of 2006 which featured a visit  to consult “Stakeholders” in Exmouth (Annex A). 

“Our analysis has identified a number of common characteristics shared by many coastal towns. These include: their physical isolation, deprivation levels, the inward migration of older people, the high levels of transience, the outward migration of young people, poor quality housing and the nature of the coastal economy. Excluding their physical location, none of these characteristics are unique to coastal towns. The combination of these characteristics, however, with the environmental challenges that coastal towns face, does lead to a conclusion that they are in need of focused, specific Government attention. 

We were particularly struck by the demography of many coastal towns, where there is a combination of trends occurring, including the outward movement of young people and the inward migration of older people. One of the impacts of this phenomenon is that there tends to be a high proportion of elderly in coastal towns, many of whom have moved away from family support resulting in a significant financial burden on the local public sector in these areas.”

[Those “Stakeholders” consulted included: Ms Jill Elson (EDDC Communities portfolio holder and Exmouth member) Mr Paul Diviani (EDDC Portfolio holder and Exmouth member) Cllr Eileen Wragg (Mayor of Exmouth Town Council)]. 

John Harris www.theguardian.com 

About a decade ago, politicians and journalists were suddenly confronted with an issue that had always festered at the edge of the national conversation: the dire state of England’s seaside towns, and their deep social problems.

The referendum that would pull us out of the EU was a couple of years away, but one of the key things that made it happen was already plain to see: the rise of the UK Independence party, and a surge of grievance and complaint that had particularly strong roots on the East coast. In 2014, the faded Essex resort of Clacton held the byelection that resulted in the Tory turncoat Douglas Carswell becoming the first of Ukip’s two elected MPs. His new party was doing equally brisk political business in coastal towns clustered in Norfolk and Lincolnshire.

When the vote for Brexit came, such places as Blackpool, Great Yarmouth, Canvey Island and Margate were among the leave side’s enthusiastic sources of support. As Nigel Farage and his friends endlessly said, many people in those towns were anxious and angry about immigration. But as I well knew from repeated reporting trips, what they tended to talk about most passionately was stuff that Ukip rarely mentioned: dreadful public transport, poor housing, nonexistent opportunities for young people, and local economies that effectively died for half the year.

In the wake of the result, politicians and journalists maintained a sort of guilt-stricken interest in the kind of “left-behind” places that looked out to sea. But then, as the 2019 election came into view, there was a shift. The most vivid political stories suddenly seemed to centre on the old coalfields and former factory towns grouped into the so-called “red wall”. That continuing story has since been joined by that of the supposed “blue wall”: Tory-held seats in the south of England where disgruntled remainers are looking to other parties. There have been a few rather laboured attempts to conceptualise a “sea wall” centred on coastal constituencies, but they have failed to catch on: the plight of seaside towns remains as clear as ever, but they have once again fallen back to the political margins.

Among plenty of others, this is one of the stories that runs through a brilliant new book titled The Seaside: England’s Love Affair, by the former Guardian writer Madeleine Bunting. It is a travelogue, an impressive work of social history, an affectionate celebration and much more besides. But a grim English irony burns through almost every page: the fact that the places many of us still associate with leisure, noisy enjoyment and the health-giving wonders of sea air are also full of isolation, misery and poor health.

Each chapter has a sobering passage that recounts basic facts. “Over 80% of the residents of Skegness and Mablethorpe live in areas categorised as the 20% most deprived in England. Around a third of residents have no or low qualifications … Scarborough’s quaint streets translate into a tragic set of health statistics on the diseases of despair: suicide in the town is 61% higher than the national average, and hospital admissions are 60% higher … Despite the success of Margate’s regeneration, parts of the centre of the town are still among the most deprived in the country; it has three areas in the top half per cent on the index of multiple deprivation.”

What all these numbers reflect is the reality of living on the edge, in every sense. Coastal towns are often not just distant from Westminster, but also on the periphery of local government districts, and therefore neglected even by their own councils. They tend not to have any institutions of higher education. And their public transport is largely terrible: this week’s story about the nationalisation of the failing train operator TransPennine Express, for example, is not only about Leeds, Sheffield and Manchester, but places where dire rail transport compounds glaring economic problems: Redcar, Scarborough, Cleethorpes, Hull, Grimsby.

Such are the results of a neglect that is evident even when people in positions of power are in a mood to help. One of the most telling features of last year’s levelling up white paper was a seemingly reflex tendency to fold coastal areas into generalised descriptions of places with problems – “Urban areas and coastal towns”, “former industrial centres and many coastal communities” – and thereby underplay their very specific issues. The same sense of condescension surrounds the government’s £229m coastal communities fund. As one of the most damning parts of Bunting’s book explains, it has been spread pathetically thinly: £1.6m to renovate the centre of Bognor Regis, £1.4m for “a visitor centre at Walton-on-the-Naze”, £1.2m for Hastings’ new “food court”.

And then there are the government’s much-hyped plans for so-called freeports, replete with promises of thousands of new jobs. These deregulated, low-tax zones – still shrouded in secrecy – are the cheapest kind of regeneration option, reflecting the old laissez-faire idea that if the state steps out of the way, it will somehow open the way to dynamism and innovation. But without huge improvements in transport, housing, training, education and all the rest, the kind of employers who might offer more than low-paid, precarious work will never pitch up. Besides, the plans are centred on a large handful of existing commercial ports, not coastal communities in general: even if their supposed miracles materialise, they will not touch most of the UK’s coastline.

Elsewhere, there are glimmers of hope. The annual £28bn the Labour party is still pledging to spend on new climate measures – which sits alongside other plans for government-led investment in deprived areas – will have clear benefits for coastal places, not least because of the centrality to the plans of offshore wind. Its promised “take back control” bill will at least increase the responsibilities of local councils, and thereby bring some decisions closer to the places they affect. But as ever, more radical thinking might be a good idea. Within central government, coastal communities should surely have their own dedicated minister. Clusters of seaside towns should perhaps be grouped into federations led by mayor-like figures, and given responsibility for collective regeneration plans, along with the kind of substantial spending power that Westminster politicians never like to talk about.

Last summer, I took a family holiday not far from Minehead, a coastal town on the edge of Somerset long associated with deprivation, scarce job opportunities and a sense of being woefully cut off. It is actually a gloriously located place, overlooked by a spectacular headland, with an elegantly wide main street and a lovely beach. It is 60 miles from Bristol and about 40 from Exeter: in the era of working from home, it could thrive.

But besides steam trains that slowly transport tourists across the nearby countryside, its 12,000 residents have no rail service: the town’s station closed in 1971. As with so many other places, choices were made in distant centres of power that condemned it to long years of stagnation and decay. Now, instead of fixating on coastal towns one day and forgetting them the next, could we not just give them what they need?

Thousands of pharmacies on brink of closure – just as Tories say we need them more

Thousands of pharmacies are on the brink of closure – just as the Tories seek to rely on them to bail out struggling GPs.

Mirror.co.uk

A report by the National Pharmacy Association predicts 3,000, almost one in four, could shut by next year following years of funding cuts.

The Government announced plans this week to let pharmacists give prescriptions for seven common ailments.

Tories hope the policy, starting in winter, will end the daily 8am scramble for GP appointments.

But pharmacists branded the move unachievable.

Anil Sharma, boss of nine ­pharmacies in Health Secretary Steve Barclay’s North East Cambridgeshire patch, said: “Our primary function – dispensing medicines – is underfunded. Pharmacies haven’t had a pay rise for eight years so we are really struggling financially.”

Mr Sharma, 49, in the business for 25 years, said the cuts are also causing a workforce shortage as staff tell him they can earn more at McDonald’s.

“Potholes ahead. Remove dentures. Fasten bra straps.” 

So read a sign recently erected by a farmer in Stockleigh, Mid Devon.

Cornwall seems to be experiencing the same problems as Devon.

There are also widespread reports across the country of people planting flowers in potholes. – Owl

Who filled Cornwall’s ‘biggest pothole’? No one’s telling the council

A phantom pothole filler has struck in the town of Lostwithiel after becoming fed up that the “biggest pothole in Cornwall” had not been fixed, even though the council closed the road for more than a month.

Will Humphries www.thetimes.co.uk

Highway officials are now calling for anyone with information about the identity of the unknown repairer to contact them.

The main route between Lostwithiel and Bodmin was closed by the council at the beginning of last month after residents complained for months about a 40cm deep pothole, measuring 2.5m by 3.2m.

Last Sunday someone filled it with concrete and reopened the road. Cornish Highways has since closed it again and says the hole will not be fixed until next month at the earliest, because of a backlog of potholes.

Geoff Barrett, 73, a retired journalist who lives locally, spotted someone with a pick-up truck parked by the closed road on Sunday afternoon. Four hours later the road was open. “It did surprise me that someone from the council would be working on a bank holiday weekend,” he said. “I didn’t realise it was someone taking things into their own hands.”

Kay Bevan, 78, who lives near the pothole, said her neighbours appeared to know who is responsible “but everyone is feigning ignorance”.

“Because it’s a B road it’s not a high priority for the council, but it’s a major road for locals getting to Bodmin,” she said.

Colin Martin, the Liberal Democrat councillor for the town, said the pothole filler represented the “shared frustration” of drivers across the country with the state of the nation’s crumbling road network. “The filled-in pothole isn’t perfect but it’s still better than most of the roads that the council are supposed to be maintaining at the moment,” he said.

Rishi Sunak promised a clampdown on potholes at the launch of the Conservative local election campaign last month, and posed for photographs on a crumbling road in Darlington, Co Durham. The prime minister said new powers would help to ensure firms repair roads properly after carrying out works, through more fines and inspections.

Martin said Cornwall had a good record of road maintenance until the Conservatives won control of the council two years ago and cut spending.

“A road maintenance inspector told me the other day they would normally be finding 300 potholes a week but now they are finding 1,000 a week,” Martin said.

“Previously if I reported a pothole within 24 hours the green paint would be painted around it and it would be filled in by the next day. We are now at the stage where green paint appears within 24 hours but the pothole stays there for weeks on end.”

A manager wrote: “If information regarding who carried out the works becomes known in the community, I would be grateful if details could be shared. At the present time, we have a significant backlog of pothole defects across the network and our resource is allocated to this as a priority over other planned works. The work at Tanhouse Road will be scheduled when the situation eases.”

Connor Donnithorne, the Conservative council portfolio holder for transport, told cabinet this week that the council had received an additional £5 million from the government towards its “pothole fund”. This is added to £12 million spent on mending potholes and other road repairs in Cornwall each year.

A council spokesman said: “There is an ongoing issue with drainage at this site which has led to the deterioration of the road surface. These drainage issues have meant that any surface repairs during the winter have been temporary.

“As we are now moving into warmer and drier weather, Cormac [the maintenance company] can programme in the permanent drainage and surfacing repairs needed at this site.”

Residents across the country have been taking action to draw attention to their deteriorating roads. Villagers fed up with a “nightmare” pothole in Blythe Bridge, Staffordshire, recently added rubber ducks to the crater after it flooded in rainfall.

A farmer in Stockleigh English, Devon, erected a sign last month warning motorists: “Potholes ahead. Remove dentures. Fasten bra straps.” Carol Perryman said: “I keep reporting it at Devon Highways but nothing gets done.”

Head of David Cameron’s legacy project paid £165,000 despite pay review pledge

The chief executive of David Cameron’s legacy project for young people has continued to be paid his £165,000 salary, despite committing to review his pay before the charity had more than 60 per cent of its funding cut.

David Cohen  www.independent.co.uk

Mark Gifford was appointed head of the National Citizen Service Trust in early 2020 when almost £160m of taxpayers’ money was lavished on the NCS by the Department of Culture, Media and Sport.

But a government review has since shrunk their budget to less than £60m a year following an investigation by The Independent that showed the charity was failing to provide value for money.

Mr Gifford had admitted that cuts were needed to make NCS pay for senior executives “better aligned to the third sector” and to “take into account market forces”.

His comments formed part of an investigation by The Independent that revealed that the senior NCS team were being handed six-figure salaries, despite dwindling youth participation in its activities and failing to meet government targets.

But Mr Gifford’s salary – which is set by the NCS Trust Remuneration Committee and on which a government representative sits with a veto – has remained at £150,000, or £165,000 including benefits. Other members of the senior leadership also do not appear to have had their salaries cut.

By way of comparison, the CEO of Oxfam received a salary of £120,000, £30,000 less than Mr Giffford, despite managing an annual income more than six times higher than the NCS and a staff of 3,886, 16 times that of the NCS.

Mr Gifford also earned more than Save the Children’s boss, who is on £143,000 and who manages a budget and staff four times larger. The Red Cross CEO earned more, and was paid £181,000, but that is to manage a budget four times the size of NCS and with a headcount 14 times the size.

The National Citizen Service was set up in 2011 by Cameron to run summer and autumn residential programmes for 16 and 17-year-olds to help them become better citizens.

The latest annual accounts reflect that no residentials were held during the year ending March 2022 and that the programme migrated online and to “non-residential face-to-face” experiences.

For the programmes that were held, the NCS failed to meet its basic “customer experience” target score of 55, achieving a disappointing “net promoter score” of 50, according to the annual accounts.

The Department of Culture, Media and Sport last year ripped up the NCS grant, cutting its budget to £57million a year for three years – less than one-third of its size when Cameron had “stuffed NCS’s mouth full of gold”, as one Whitehall whistleblower had put it.

The department criticised the scheme for being too middle-class and demanded it is more “cost-effective” and reach more young people from disadvantaged backgrounds. At the time, NCS swallowed up 90 per cent of the government’s youth budget.

A former board member had described the programme to The Independent as little more than “a holiday camp for mostly middle-class kids”.

But Mr Gifford’s salary has remained higher than that of the prime minister and of Lucy Frazer, the culture secretary responsible for the NCS grant, whose salary totals £121,326.

Five of the six other members of the NCS senior leadership team also have packages that exceed the minister’s, according to the latest annual accounts, with NCS public affairs advisor Miriam Jordan Keane on a hefty £155,000.

Her senior leader counterparts at charities such as Oxfam were on £98,000 to £100,000, showing just how excessive NCS senior team salaries are and raising questions as to whether the NCS Remuneration Committee is fit for purpose.

Brett Wigdortz, chair of the NCS Trust, defended their pay arrangements and pointed out that their CEO is responsible for [over] £50m of public money a year for delivering youth programmes.

He said: “We understand the challenges, skills and competencies needed to run NCS and we pay our brilliant CEO accordingly while offering the taxpayer outstanding value for money.”

A spokesperson for the NCS said: “The pay and reward policy of NCS Trust is set by the Remuneration Committee, which has a government representative on it with a veto. It was reviewed in May 2022 and November 2022 by senior HR officers.”

The Department of Culture, Media and Sport declined to address our questions as to whether NCS pay was value for taxpayers’ money but said it had robust processes in place to ensure salary decisions and changes “are proportionate and appropriate”. It added that the NCS has been “carrying out a cost optimisation strategy to reduce and reshape its cost base”.

Shadow culture secretary Lucy Powell MP said: “Ministers should not be playing favourites and the decision by DCMS to seemingly wave through remuneration packages despite reduced budgets without ensuring results and value for money is concerning.

“Ministers are fixating on one programme instead of ensuring the broad range of youth provision we need to open opportunity for young people everywhere.”

Mr Cameron, chair of the NCS Board of Patrons, failed to respond to our questions.

Simon Jupp is minding his pennies, but does he know who the real spendthrifts are?

Owl understands the need to watch the pennies.

Job security for Conservative MPs is not looking good.

In his last week’s media column under the title: ‘It’s been a difficult day for the conservatives’ Simon Jupp said of the local election result:

“It’s going to [be] an interesting time, I just want to make sure that our council is value for money. I pay my council tax to East Devon and I want to make sure every penny that I give to the council is spent wisely, so as one of the MPs, I’ll be scrutinising every penny.” 

Well Simon, you may pay your council tax to EDDC but they aren’t the big spenders.

For every pound you pay in your council tax, 73p are spent by Phil Twiss, cabinet member for finance, and the conservative controlled Devon County Council (DCC). 

DCC raised what they take from you by 5% this year but they are still teetering on the edge of bankruptcy.

Next up, 12 of your pennies are spent by the Crime and Police Commissioner, Alison Hernandez. She hiked her budget this year by a whopping 6% to help pay for the 20,000 “Boris Bobbies” Johnson vowed in 2019 would  reverse Tory police cuts.

The jury is out on this one, police numbers are still not keeping up with local population growth.

Only 7 of your pennies are spent by EDDC.

The coalition of last year was the only Devon council to balance its books without digging deep into reserves. It managed to do so by a serious overhaul of the budget, raising its part of your council tax by only 3%.

[4p in every pound goes to provide fire and rescue and another 4p to provide Town and Parish council amenities].

By all means scrutinise expenditure but do please keep a sense of proportion.