EDF confirms Hinkley Point B to be shut down earlier than planned

Cracks in reactor’s graphite core leads to decision to begin process no later than July 2022

Jillian Ambrose www.theguardian.com

Hinkley Point B and Hinkley Point A nuclear power stations in Somerset.

  Hinkley Point B and Hinkley Point A nuclear power stations in Somerset. Photograph: Matt Cardy/Getty Images

EDF Energy has confirmed it will begin shutting down the 45-year-old reactors at Hinkley Point B nuclear power plant in Somerset within the next two years, earlier than scheduled.

The “defuelling” will begin no later than July 2022, according to the French energy group.

The shutdown was scheduled for 2023, but cracks were discovered in the graphite core of the reactor.

Matt Sykes, the managing director of EDF Generation, said an inspection of Hinkley Point B’s graphite blocks revealed they were “in exactly the sort of condition” expected after 40 years of generating electricity.

The power plant, which has been Britain’s most productive and whose operational life was extended, is offline for further inspections and is scheduled to return to service next year, pending approval from Britain’s nuclear safety watchdog.

“As a responsible operator we feel it is now the right thing to do to give clarity to our staff, partners and community about the future life of the station,” Sykes said.

Tom Greatrex, the chief executive of the UK’s Nuclear Industry Association (NIA), said the Hinkley Point B shutdown was “a reminder of the urgency of investing in new nuclear capacity to hit net zero”.

EDF had expected the shutdown to take place after the start-up of Hinkley Point C, the first new nuclear power plant being built in the UK in a generation, which was originally due to begin generating electricity “well before 2020”.

However, the scheduled start date has been delayed to between 2025 and 2026 owing to slow progress in agreeing with the government a guaranteed price for the electricity produced.

Greatrex said: “Hinkley Point B has produced more clean electricity and saved more emissions, 105m tonnes, than any other single power station in British history. It can only be replaced by new nuclear stations that produce the same reliable, always-on, emissions-free power that Hinkley has provided for more than 40 years.”

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Boris Johnson’s 10-point climate plan, which was revealed on Tuesday, promised to advance large-scale nuclear projects and the developments of so-called “mini nuclear reactors” with a £525m support package.

But the plan failed to give the greenlight to EDF Energy’s planned followup to the Hinkley Point C project at the Sizewell site, which the firm hopes to build alongside a Chinese nuclear company.

The NIA said it hoped the government provided a clear path towards new nuclear capacity in an energy white paper, which is expected before Christmas.

Matt Hancock wrong to say no NHS staff pay for hospital parking

Prime Minister Boris Johnson faces demands to make hospital parking free permanently for NHS staff – after his Health Secretary made a false claim they don’t have to pay.

Mike Kelly www.chroniclelive.co.uk

Matt Hancock this week said: “We don’t have parking charges for English hospitals, and we’re not going to for the course of the pandemic”.

But he was slammed after it was discovered at least two NHS trusts have brought back staff parking fees already, The Mirror reports.

And NHS Providers, which represents hospital chiefs, said many more are under pressure to bring back charges due to a lack of guaranteed funds.

Deputy chief executive Saffron Cordery said: “If the Government wants to abolish charges, they’re going to have to give us the money.

“Otherwise you’ll be creating a funding gap which will ultimately impact patients.”

She added: “It is not clear that free car parking for staff is still being funded, because the Government hasn’t been clear how much lost non NHS income will be reimbursed or for what. We would like clarity on that.”

Parking charges for hospital staff in England were suspended in March “during this unprecedented time”.

But in July the Government said the subsidy “cannot continue indefinitely” and would end “when the pandemic begins to ease”.

The NHS People Plan says hospitals “should” keep staff parking free “for the duration of the pandemic” but appears to have no legal force.

Forty-two MPs have now written to Boris Johnson demanding he “step in” and ensure free staff parking is not only guaranteed now – but made permanent.

In the letter 38 left-wing Labour MPs, four Lib Dems, and officers from GMB, Unite and Nurses United write: “NHS staff should not face what is effectively an extra tax on them doing their jobs.”

They add: “Now with the second lockdown and the dramatic rise in cases and hospitalisations, we write to call on the Government to again step in to ensure that all NHS staff in England are provided with free parking.

“And this time, to make it permanent – in line with longstanding commitments in Scotland and Wales.”

Mr Hancock was asked about parking charges for hospital staff in an interview on Monday.

He told ITV’s Good Morning Britain : “We don’t have parking charges in English hospitals and we’re not going to for the course of this pandemic.”

He added: “There are not those charges now and there will not be during this pandemic. Once the pandemic is over, we will no doubt return to this question.”

Yet staff have been charged for parking since the end of June at University Hospitals Coventry and Warwickshire NHS Trust.

Local Labour MP Zarah Sultana, who arranged the letter to the PM, told the Mirror: “The Health Secretary seems so out of touch that he doesn’t even know this has happened.

“It’s disgraceful. Instead of empty gestures, NHS staff deserve a fair pay rise and the end to these parking charges.”

The Trust said it brought back staff parking charges “to accommodate rising numbers of patients” but plans to build 1,600 extra spaces in future.

Harrogate District Hospital has also brought back staff parking charges since September. A spokeswoman said: “This is to protect parking for patients and service users as normal services resumed.”

A survey by NursingNotes earlier this month claimed 58% of NHS trusts reintroduced parking charges for staff between June and August. The trusts were not named and there was no breakdown at the time.

The Government insisted it is reimbursing NHS Trusts for any lost car parking income through “financial envelopes that are in place for the second half of the year”.

A Department of Health spokesman said: “During this ongoing global pandemic we are providing the funding for NHS staff to get free hospital parking, meaning staff should not be charged to park.”

Was the scientific advice for lockdown flawed?

As coronavirus began spreading around the world at the start of 2020, in the UK there were weaknesses in the expert analysis of its likely impact, according to a BBC documentary.

This confirms Owl’s long held view that the scientific advice was too reliant on the blinkered use of opaque theoretical models (algorithms if you like) by individuals working in isolation. 

See, for example, the section on care homes. “The failure of those models, I guess, was that we didn’t know how connected the social care settings were with the community,” he says.” 

Where was the application of common sense in all this?

By Richard Cookson www.bbc.co.uk

“There is going to be a lot of criticism of the scientists – because it’s easy to have hindsight.

“It’s easy to say if only we’d done this a week earlier we’d have saved 5,000, 10,000, 15,000, 20,000 lives. But if you look at where we were in February, would you really have made these decisions any differently? I don’t think you would have.”

Those are the words of Prof Calum Semple of the University of Liverpool, one of the key scientists advising the government on Covid-19.

Ever since the novel coronavirus arrived in the UK, ministers have repeatedly said they were “following the science”.

But the UK has ended up with one of the worst death rates in the world – coronavirus has killed more than 50,000 people so far.

So how good was the scientific evidence provided in the run-up to lockdown?

Virus got a headstart

On 23 January 2020, a woman unknowingly infected with coronavirus flew to the UK from Wuhan and passed through the airport undetected. Eight days later she, and a family member, became the first confirmed UK cases.

But what wasn’t understood was how many others then followed in their footsteps through February and March – not just from China, but from across Europe.

“What we hadn’t realised was that the virus had already moved into Italy, France and Spain, and was in the ski resorts,” says Prof Semple, who is on Sage, the government’s scientific advisory group.

“It turns out that we had probably 1,500 cases that came in during that period, and that’s why Britain was hit so hard. We were given a really bad dose at a very early stage in a large number.”

Prof Graham Medley, who chairs the Scientific Pandemic Influenza Group on Modelling (SPI-M), which feeds in to Sage, agrees.

“If I could have known one thing, it would have been the number of imports coming in from mainland Europe.

“I should have thought that if northern Italy has got an epidemic then it’s quite likely that other places in Europe have probably got an epidemic as well, and I didn’t think that.”

Prof Gabriel Scally, a public health expert and former health adviser to Labour, said: “There was a steady flow of people coming in from various countries as the virus spread.

“We left our borders open, we left our door open to the virus, and that contributed substantially to the very rapid growth in the virus that we subsequently saw.”

Poor early data

Information about those early cases was fed into a database called the First Few Hundred (FF100), which was closely studied by modellers for clues about how the virus might spread .

But there was a problem. “Unfortunately the First Few Hundred data was not as good as we expected,” says another SPI-M member, Dr Thibaut Jombart, from Imperial College London.

“There were clearly quite a few mistakes: basic information, basic epidemiological information, was missing.

“At the time I was coming back from the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), where I spent six months as part of the response to an Ebola outbreak – a very, very messy situation in a warzone, you expect messy data there. It felt like the data situation was less good in the UK than it was in the DRC.”

But Prof Medley, who is based at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, defends the FF100 data. “Modellers always want more and better data. Yes, you could always want it more complete, you could always want it more accurate, but nonetheless the data that we had fulfilled our purpose.

“We were in quite a good position to understand what might happen in the United Kingdom.”

Data was not just key to understanding where coronavirus was coming from, but who was worst affected.

Care home flaws

By mid-February, evidence from China showed older people were particularly at risk.

In the UK, modellers warned government that the virus could kill tens of thousands, and advised “cocooning” would reduce deaths.

But Dr Ian Hall, of SPI-M, admits models did not reflect how care homes actually work, or identify the serious risk posed by agency staff working in different homes.

“The failure of those models, I guess, was that we didn’t know how connected the social care settings were with the community,” he says.

“As modellers we didn’t know – I’m sure there are lots of academics and policy-makers out there, that could have told us this, if we’d asked them.”

Coronavirus would go on to kill more than 20,000 people in care homes.

Timing the peak

The modellers were also trying to predict when the UK would see the peak of cases.

In early March, SPI-M was still estimating it was 12 to 14 weeks away. “We were planning for a pandemic that was fairly slowly growing, on the basis that we had kind of a ramping up of social distancing, over a period of time,” says Dr Hall.

But one member of the committee, Prof Steven Riley, from Imperial College, believed the government’s strategy was seriously flawed and would leave intensive care units overwhelmed for a long period of time.

On 10 March, when official figures suggested there had been a total of 913 cases – but experts now estimate there were 75,000 – he submitted a paper calling for an immediate lockdown.

He says: “Based only on my knowledge of the epidemiological situation, I did think, at that point, there was an argument for stringent social distancing, for lockdown, as soon as possible.

“The point that I thought needed to be addressed as a matter of urgency, was that initially we should lock down in order to have time to formulate a more precise strategy.”

SPI-M’s Prof Mark Jit was asked to investigate what the true numbers might be.

“I think everyone knew that they were not picking up all the cases. The big question was by how much were they underestimating the number.

“We decided to look at the number of cases in intensive care units. We knew for each of these cases there will probably be many hundreds of thousands of people who have Covid but didn’t have it that seriously.”

His calculations predicted that by mid-March there would soon be close to 100,000 new cases each day. “That was extremely worrying because 100,000 new cases would mean that about a week later we would get 20,000 new hospital patients a day.

“There was the sense that, OK. we really need to get this information to Sage to make decisions about what we’re going to do in the UK.”

At the same time, other modellers realised that the NHS data they were relying on for their modelling was out of date.

“The data coming in from the UK which we thought was up to the minute was in fact in some cases up to a week old, and so really we weren’t looking at a snapshot of how the epidemic was developing now, but how it was in the past,” says Dr Nick Davies, who is also on SPI-M.

“That was the first time when I started to feel like things really were not under control.”

In a TV address the previous evening, Prime Minister Boris Johnson had told the nation: “Now is the time for everyone to stop non-essential contact with others and to stop all unnecessary travel. We need people to start working from home where they possibly can. And you should avoid pubs, clubs, theatres and other such social venues. Without drastic action, cases could double every five or six days.”

But at the University of Manchester, SPI-M’s Dr Lorenzo Pellis was looking at data from Italy, and realising that the virus was spreading in Britain at almost twice the speed that had previously been thought.

“I got really concerned,” said Dr Pellis. “I was coming out with really short times between that day and potentially breaching hospital capacity.”

It meant the NHS was just days away from being swamped by coronavirus patients.

The analysis was fed back to Sage. “And that led to the cascade to full lockdown,” said his SPI-M collegue Dr Hall.

Lockdown too slow

So do the scientists believe they should have acted earlier?

“I obviously feel that it’s incredibly tragic what has happened in the UK and of course I wish that interventions had been brought in earlier”, says Dr Davies.

“Our own modelling suggests that had lockdown been imposed a week earlier, we may have avoided about half or slightly more than half the number of deaths.”

“I think we got ourselves into a mess by relying on modelling and allowing modelling to drive the whole response,” says Prof Scally. “I think the failure of the science, so to speak, will be seen as one of the most important features in what has been a very, very poor response to this global health tragedy.”

A Department of Health and Social Care spokeswoman said: “This is a new virus and an unprecedented global pandemic and our priority from the outset has been to save lives. We have been guided by the advice of experts from Sage and its sub-committees and our response helped to ensure the NHS was not overwhelmed.”

‘Lockdown 1.0 – Following The Science?’ is on BBC2 at 21:00 GMT on Thursday 19 November and on the BBC iPlayer afterwards.

Change better managed than panic reaction

Letter in this week’s Exmouth Journal sets out local amenity society’s position on LORP:

The Otter Valley Association has been involved since the inception of the Lower Otter Restoration Project (LORP) and is a member of the technical steering group, trying to give a local flavour and input to the proposals.

In general the OVA is supportive of the project, based on the understanding that change is inevitable with climate change, higher sea levels and more violent storm events.

We consider that change would be far better as a managed process, and not as panic response to a disaster.

The managed process of LORP has attracted the necessary funding to make a proper scheme, whereas major storm damage – tomorrow, next week… – would not be repaired the latest Coastal Management Plan policy.

During the process the OVA representatives have been keen to emphasise the continuation of public access and enjoyment of the area. Particularly the retention of the footpath from the Lime Kiln car park to White Bridge.

We will be continuing to liaise during the construction phase to try and ensure that the necessarily disruptive works cause minimum effects to the use by the public, though for site safety reasons there will inevitably be diversions and/or temporary closures.

If funds were unlimited, there are undoubtedly other things the OVA would like to have seen included. But we are realists in recognising that the proposed scheme is the best available, and far better than the ‘do nothing’ option’.

The changes will be difficult for a number of our members who know, love and enjoy this very special area of the local countryside.

However, we have come to understand that the alternative of doing nothing is not sustainable.

Change is inevitable and we consider that change would be far better as a managed process, and not as panic response to a disaster.

In the longer term, the project will bring significant wider ecological benefits through the re-creation of a more naturalised estuary that enables a more dynamic transition from a fresh water to a brackish system. This should greatly add to the value and integrity of the existing Otter Estuary Site of Special Scientific Interest and the vulnerable wildlife that depends on it, including wintering waterbirds.

It should also increase the area’s resilience to our changing climate through restoration of natural processes and provision of the natural flood risk management benefits that saltmarsh and mudflat are known to provide.

HAYLOR LASS

Vice Chair Otter Valley Assocation on behalf of the OVA executive committee

Flash News: Dr Cathy Gardner wins right to take Government to a Judicial Review

Virologist whose father, 88, died of Covid in a care home sues the government 

expressdigest.com

A judicial review will probe whether the Government failed to protect care home residents from Covid-19 following a legal challenge by two bereft daughters.

A High Court judge today ruled in favour of Dr Cathy Gardner and Fay Harris, who are taking action against Matt Hancock, the NHS and Public Health England for their handling of the crisis. 

Dr Gardner argues that the lack of ‘adequate’ measures to protect residents was ‘one of the most egregious and devastating policy failures of recent times’. 

She accused the Government of breaching the human rights of thousands of vulnerable people, including her 88-year-old father Michael Gibson, a retired registrar who passed away at the Cherwood House Care Centre in Oxfordshire on April 3.

Ms Harris, 57, also joined the legal fight after her 89-year-old father Don, an ex-Royal Marine, died in May along with 24 residents of his Hampshire care home. 

The Government and related health bodies oppose the legal challenge and asked the judge to throw out the case.

But Mr Justice Linden told a remote hearing this afternoon: ‘I consider it interests of justice for the claim to be heard.’   

The first-stage victory for the women paves the way for a judicial review that could have huge ramifications for the families of at least 30,000 people who died in care homes with Covid this year

Dr Cathy Gardner with her father Michael, a former registrar, who died in a care home after a resident was brought in with coronavirus after being discharged with coronavirus

Fay Harris, 57, whose father Don, a former Royal Marine, was one of 24 residents of a Hampshire care home who died in May after a Covid-19 outbreak, has also joined the legal action

Mr Justice Linden said that the daughters should be given permission to pursue their case on all grounds, saying it ‘crossed the threshold of arguability’.   

Both women are ‘appalled’ by Health Secretary Mr Hancock’s insistence that a ‘protective ring’ had been placed around care homes to shield them during the first wave of the pandemic. 

Dr Gardner’s lawyers claimed that prior to her father’s death the care home was pressured into accepting a hospital patient who had tested positive but ‘had no temperature for 72 hours’. 

Mr Gibson, a retired superintendent registrar of birth marriages and deaths, was primed to catch the illness despite never leaving the home, they said. 

Health Secretary Matt Hancock claimed that a ‘protective ring’ was placed around care homes

Dr Gardner was so upset that she was forced to say goodbye to her octogenarian father through a care home window and the circumstances before his death that she is suing the government.

Her case accuses the government of unlawfully exposing countless care home residents to substantial risk during the pandemic – and was filed at the High Court in June.

Dr Gardner, also chair of East Devon District Council, believes her father’s death was part of a ‘national disgrace’. 

The case will be for the benefit of every individual, including care home residents, staff and family members, affected by the government’s course of action, she says.

Dr Gardner says the government opted for a ‘casual approach’ to protecting care home residents, adding: ‘At worst, the government have adopted a policy that has caused the death of the most vulnerable in our society.

‘It is completely unacceptable that this happened and that responsibility has been avoided.’

On her father’s death certificate it said ‘Covid probable’, because he perished before widespread-testing became widespread in care homes. 

The government has been met with staunch criticism in relation to its handling of care homes throughout the health crisis, with particular policies allowing patients to be discharged from hospitals into care homes without being tested coming under fire.

Dr Gardner’s case, which will be filed at the High Court on Friday, accuses the government of having exposed care home residents to substantial risk during the pandemic

A letter sent to Mr Hancock in June said Dr Gardner believed that the controversial policies adopted by the Health Secretary, NHS England and Public Health England ‘manifestly failed to protect the health, wellbeing and right to life of those residing and working in care homes’.

The letter also claimed: ‘Their failings have led to large numbers of unnecessary deaths and serious illnesses.

‘In addition, the failings of Government have been aggravated by the making of wholly disingenuous, misleading and – in some cases – plainly false statements suggesting that everything necessary has been done to protect care homes during the pandemic.’ 

Ms Harris, who has joined the court action, had planned to treat her father Don, a former Royal Marine, to a special sailing trip in his beloved Portsmouth Harbour to celebrate his 90th birthday last month.

She had found a boat adapted to carry people in wheelchairs so he could see the harbour where he was stationed from the sea again.

But days later on May 1 Mr Harris died at Marlfield care home in Alton after an outbreak of coronavirus. Hampshire Court Council said later that a quarter of the 24 deaths there around this period were Covid-related but could have been higher.

His bereft daughter told The Times: ‘Physically my dad was fit and he was well. He always had a smile on his face. When we left him he was mobile. He was strong and he was a fighter. He had Alzheimer’s and had had care problems but he came through them all. He should not have died, he should have been on that birthday trip.’

The Department of Health has said it cannot comment on legal proceedings. 

Government’s care home Covid response ‘devastating policy failure’, court told

Press association report of proceedings from the High Court on Cathy Gardner’s case – no judgement yet

Press Association 2020 www.swindonadvertiser.co.uk 

A “failure” to introduce “adequate” measures to protect care home residents from the “ravages” of Covid-19 is “one of the most egregious and devastating policy failures of recent times”,  the High Court has been told.

Dr Cathy Gardner is pursuing a legal challenge against the Government and others over decisions and measures taken in relation to care homes during the coronavirus pandemic.

She claims certain key policies and decisions led to a “shocking death toll” of care home residents – which she puts at more than 20,000 people between March and June – particularly an alleged policy of discharging patients from hospital into care homes without testing and suitable isolation arrangements.

The defendants’ failure to implement timely, adequate measures to protect vulnerable care home residents from the ravages of Covid represents one of the most egregious and devastating policy failures of recent times

Jason Coppel QC

Dr Gardner, who is bringing her case with another individual, Fay Harris, alleges the measures breached human rights and equality laws.

Her father, Michael Gibson, died in an Oxfordshire care home on April 3 after it readmitted without Covid testing a former resident who had been in hospital. Mr Gibson’s death was recorded as “probable Covid”, according to documents before the court.

Ms Harris’s father “died of Covid” after his care home accepted hospital discharges of patients who may have been infected with the virus, it adds.

At a remote hearing on Thursday, lawyers for Dr Gardner asked Mr Justice Linden to grant permission for a full hearing of her challenge.

The Government and others oppose the challenge and ask the judge to dismiss the case.

In written documents before the court, Jason Coppel QC alleged: “Between March and June 2020, more than 20,000 vulnerable care home residents in England and Wales, including the fathers of both of the claimants, died from Covid-19.

“The defendants’ failure to implement timely, adequate measures to protect vulnerable care home residents from the ravages of Covid represents one of the most egregious and devastating policy failures of recent times.”

The defendants implemented policies which exposed vulnerable care home residents, including the claimants’ fathers, to the risk of death or serious illness from Covid

Jason Coppel QC

He said: “This claim is a legal challenge to certain key policies and decisions of the defendants which led to the shocking death toll, notably the policy of discharging patients from hospital into care homes without Covid testing and without ensuring that suitable isolation arrangements were in place.”

Mr Coppel argued these proceedings raise legal issues of “substantial public importance and interest regarding the duties owed by the State to a particularly vulnerable, and in significant respects marginalised, constituency, namely vulnerable care home residents.”

He claimed: “The defendants implemented policies which exposed vulnerable care home residents, including the claimants’ fathers, to the risk of death or serious illness from Covid.

“In particular, during March 2020 the defendants formulated and applied a national policy of discharging patients from hospitals directly into care homes, without Covid testing or quarantine arrangements being applied and in circumstances where care homes lacked suitable infection control regimes including personal protective equipment (PPE).

“This, inevitably, resulted in the transferred patients seeding Covid infection within the vulnerable care home populations into which they were transferred.”

The legal action is being brought by Dr Gardner and Ms Harris against the Department for Health and Social Care (DHSC) and NHS England.

At Thursday’s hearing, Sir James Eadie QC, barrister for the Government, said the challenge was “unarguable”.

He said that in the early weeks of the pandemic, the focus was on ensuring the NHS was not overwhelmed and “that means at the sharpest point that was ensuring capacity in intensive care units to deal with the most severely affected cases”.

This was important for older people as they were particularly at risk of the virus, Sir James said, and there was “no question of protecting the NHS at the expense of older people”.

He noted that in the early days of the pandemic, the virus was new, and information and understanding about it, how it was transmitted, the symptoms and effects was developing, with steps needing to be taken to protect the population.

He said the aim of a “discharge requirement” introduced in March was “to ensure those who were medically fit to be discharged were being discharged to avoid that overwhelming”.

This involved returning people from hospital to their homes, including care homes if that was where they lived.

He added it was moving people from an environment where space was being “freed up to take the worst affected cases, those nearest death’s door”.

Sir James argued this measure was also taking people “out of an environment where, on any sensible view, it could be said they were at greater transmission risk”.

“It is wrong to suggest it was being done without a care for the risk in care homes,” he said.

“These risks were being subjected to continuing care and consideration.”

Sir James also claimed that care homes had already been given guidance about safeguarding at that point, including around issues such as isolation.

Dr Gardner is pursuing her case on the grounds that the defendants breached duties under the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), including the right to life and protection from discrimination.

It is also argued that the defendants failed in their public law duties to “act rationally, with due enquiry, with regard to relevant considerations and disregarding irrelevant considerations”, and that the measures indirectly discriminated against elderly and disabled people.

Ottery St Mary Hospital to become new ‘cancer hub’ – East Devon News

Ottery St Mary Hospital is to become a new ‘cancer hub’ in a bid to boost services for patients and their families in East Devon.

Just how easy is it to get to Ottery by public transport e.g. from Newton Poppleford, remind me? – Owl

East Devon Reporter eastdevonnews.co.uk 

Specialists from the Royal Devon and Exeter Hospital’s (RD&E) oncology department and charity FORCE will be working together within a dedicated unit at the Keegan Road site.

Access to potentially life-saving treatments will be among the new services available – with chemotherapy sessions held in the town for the first time.

It means the service will move from Honiton Hospital.

Consultants and nurse specialists will also hold cancer clinics and FORCE will offer a variety of support services in Ottery.

The new cancer unit will open for one day a week from Friday, November 20.

It is planned this will increase to five days – Monday to Friday – when staffing levels allow.

Chemotherapy has been available at Honiton Hospital at least once a week since October 2018 as part of an  outreach programme from the Exeter-based FORCE Cancer Charity.

It says the switch to Ottery means the service can ‘increase significantly’.

“While Honiton has proved popular with our patients, we have outgrown the facilities,” said the Royal Devon and Exeter Hospital’s lead cancer nurse Tina Grose.

“The decision was therefore made to consolidate existing outreach into one location, which allowed us to expand, bringing alongside key services such as clinics, FORCE, the Living with and Beyond Cancer programme and enhanced supportive care.”

FORCE chief executive Meriel Fishwick added: “’We are so very grateful to the people of Honiton, especially our wonderful volunteers, for their support of FORCE and the outreach chemotherapy service since it started in October 2018.

“The accommodation in Ottery St Mary Hospital will allow the range of cancer services to expand and FORCE is now planning how it will offer support and information services alongside patients’ vital cancer treatment.”


The benefits of services in Ottery St Mary to people affected by cancer

  • Expert advice and treatment closer to home so less travelling time and expense;
  • Easier parking;
  • Quieter location and treatment area;
  • Reduced waiting time for treatment, both in Ottery and Exeter;
  • Experienced oncology staff from the hospital to deliver services;
  • Access to additional FORCE support for patients and families.

The Covid-19 pandemic has brought some disruption to the RD&E’s delivery of chemotherapy in the wider community.

The service, which uses experienced nurses from the hospital’s Cherrybrook chemotherapy unit paid for by FORCE, continued in Okehampton and temporarily increased to two days a week in Honiton.

A short-term suspension of chemo sessions in Tiverton is due to end this month.

FORCE has worked closely with the RD&E to help with the transition from Honiton to Ottery.

The charity hopes to mirror many of the services it offers at its main centre in Exeter at the new East Devon hub.

These could include counselling, complementary therapies, advice and information sessions, physiotherapy and exercise clinics.

It is hoped that volunteers from FORCE will also be involved when COVID-19 restrictions allow.

FORCE says it has adapted its services during the coronavirus pandemic to ensure it continued to offer unparalleled support for local people impacted by cancer.

Counsellors, information nurses, a dedicated benefits advisor and oncology physiotherapist helped hundreds dealing with a cancer diagnosis via phone and video calls.

The FORCE Support and Information Centre in the grounds of the RD&E is now open again with COVID secure measures in place.

New national parks and thousands of green jobs under plans to build back greener

Warm words, re-announcement of previous pledges or does this signal real change? Are we about to get an East Devon and Dorset National Park? – Owl

Prime Minister’s Office, 10 Downing Street www.gov.uk 

  • Thousands of new jobs to be created and retained as part of Prime Minister’s Ten Point Plan to drive UK’s green ambitions
  • New national parks and greater protections for England’s iconic landscapes
  • Plans come ahead of publication next week of wider blueprint for UK green industrial revolution, creating thousands of jobs and making progress on net zero targets

Even more new jobs will be created and retained under new plans to kickstart a green economic recovery, the government announced today (Sunday 15 November), alongside greater protections for England’s iconic landscapes and the creation of new national parks.

Following the initial success of the first round, £40 million additional investment into the government’s Green Recovery Challenge Fund will go towards creating and retaining thousands of jobs, with funding being awarded to environmental charities and partners across England to restore the natural environment and help make progress on the UK’s ongoing work to address the twin challenges of biodiversity loss and climate change, as part of our green recovery from Covid-19.

After a competitive process, a wide range of projects to be announced shortly will receive funding to enhance our natural environment and create and support thousands of jobs. These may include action towards the creation or restoration of priority habitats, preventing or cleaning up pollution, woodland creation, peatland and wetland restoration and actions to help people connect with nature. This will in turn create and retain a range of skilled and unskilled jobs, such as ecologists, project managers, tree planters and teams to carry out nature restoration.

The government has also announced today that more of England’s beautiful and iconic landscapes will be turned into National Parks and Areas of Natural Beauty, in order to increase access to nature for communities and better protect the country’s rich wildlife and biodiversity.

10 “Landscape Recovery” projects will also be launched across England over the next four years to restore peatlands, woodlands and create wilder landscapes. These projects will help restore the equivalent of over 30,000 football pitches of wildlife rich habitat.

The commitments come ahead of the publication of the Prime Minister’s Ten Point Plan next week, which will set out his steps for a green industrial revolution to boost green jobs whilst invigorating plans to achieve net zero by 2050.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson said:

As we build back greener we’re taking new steps to expand and enhance our landscapes – creating and retaining thousands of green jobs in the process which will be crucial to my Ten Point Plan for delivering a green recovery.

Britain’s iconic landscapes are part of the fabric of our national identity – sustaining our communities, driving local economies and inspiring people across the ages. That’s why with the natural world under threat, it’s more important than ever that we act now to enhance our natural environment and protect our precious wildlife and biodiversity.

These measures mark the next steps in delivering on the government’s 25 Year Environment Plan commitments and its pledge to protect 30% of the UK’s land by 2030.

Combined, the new plans to safeguard the natural environment will extend protections of land by 150,000ha in England towards the government’s goal of protecting and enhancing an additional area of over 400,000ha.

Environment Secretary George Eustice said:

As we build back greener from the coronavirus pandemic, we are committed to shaping a cleaner and more resilient society to protect and restore our natural environment and diverse ecosystems.

Today’s announcement illustrates how we are leading the world in protecting the natural environment and combating climate change.

By starting the process for designating more of our beautiful and iconic landscapes as National Parks and AONBs, and through the new Landscape Recovery projects, we will help expand and protect precious wildlife habitats and, vitally, increase people’s access to our treasured landscapes.

The new Landscape Recovery projects will help expand wildlife habitats in England, restoring wilder landscapes and taking forward our ambition to establish a Nature Recovery Network, which will bring together representatives from across England to drive forward the restoration of protected sites and landscapes. These projects could give a home to species that we have seen flourish in similar initiatives across the country, which include the curlew, nightingale, horseshoe bat, pine marten, red squirrel and wild orchids.

The projects will be established over the next four years through the Government’s Environmental Land Management scheme, which will be centred around support aimed at incentivising sustainable farming practices, creating habitats for nature recovery and supporting the establishment of new woodland and other ecosystem services to help tackle challenges like climate change. This follows the landmark Agriculture Bill passing into law this week.

The plans will also help protect the country’s natural infrastructure by expanding a variety of habitats, such as trees, peat and grassland which are central to capturing and removing CO2 from the atmosphere, helping to improve air quality for our communities.

Three more coronavirus clusters recorded across Devon

Three new clusters have been recorded in Devon, according to the Goverment’s latest coronavirus data.

Chloe Parkman www.devonlive.com 

The new clusters are in Ashburton and Buckfastleigh, Sidbury, Offwell and Beer, Heathfield and Liverton.

The latest data comes after three more coronavirus clusters were recorded yesterday (November 17).

The areas with 30 cases or more, are Pennsylvania and University (Exeter), Brixham Town, Braunton, Wellswood and Wonford and St Loye’s.

Those with 20 cases or more are, Higher Brixham, Ottery St Mary & West Hill, Shiphay & the Willows, Exmouth Littleham and Exmouth Town and Paignton Central.

The Government’s coronavirus cluster map splits the country into areas of roughly 7,500 people, based on the 2011 census, known as Middle Super Output Areas (MSOAs).

The map highlights areas where three or more coronavirus cases have been reported for a week period, with the numbers coming off of the map a week after being confirmed positive.

Areas not highlighted do not necessarily have no coronavirus cases in them, as the data does not highlight or count areas with less than three cases in order to protect individuals privacy – meaning that if an area has one or two cases, it will display as 0 to 2 cases.

82 cases were reported in Devon for today, November 18 and the areas which these cases occurred will appear in the update for November 23, as there is a five-day delay between cases and being added to the daily coronavirus cluster report.

Areas not listed are classified as “data suppressed” in the Government data, meaning that those areas have between zero and two cases and the data isn’t published in order to protect the privacy of individuals involved.

Today’s update covers the week from November 7 to November 13, meaning positive tests reported on November 6 no longer appear in the statistics.

Coronavirus Cases in Devon- November 7 to November 13

(Note: the numbers in the third column are the difference between today’s reported coronavirus cases for the week of November 7 to November 13 and yesterday’s which covered the week of November 6 to November 12. Cases indicated in red represent an increase, Green represents a decrease)

Cluster NameTotalDifference with previous day
Pennsylvania & University431
Braunton383
Brixham Town34-2
Wellswood300
Wonford & St Loye’s300
Shiphay & the Willows272
Exmouth Littleham251
Paignton Central25-5
Exmouth Town231
Exmouth Brixington224
Higher Brixham22-6
Ottery St Mary & West Hill20-5
St Leonard’s201
Cranbrook, Broadclyst & Stoke Canon191
Ivybridge182
Blatchcombe & Blagdon171
Goodrington & Roselands17-2
Middlemoor & Sowton174
Barnstaple South161
Barnstaple Sticklepath163
Bratton Fleming, Goodleigh & Kings Heanton161
Pinhoe & Whipton North15-2
St Thomas East155
Torquay Central151
Chelston, Cockington & Livermead143
Holsworthy, Bradworthy & Welcombe142
Honiton South & West140
Churston & Galmpton132
Exmouth Withycombe Raleigh13-2
Feniton & Whimple13-1
Roundswell & Landkey13-1
Central Exeter120
Clifton & Maidenway120
Clyst, Exton & Lympstone120
Exmouth Halsdon120
Honiton North & East122
Barnstaple Pilton111
Dawlish North113
Mincinglake & Beacon Heath11-3
Upton & Hele11-2
Watcombe110
Exwick & Foxhayes101
Heavitree West & Polsloe101
Kingsbridge100
Kingskerswell10-1
Okehampton10-1
Shebbear, Cookworthy & Broadheath100
Barnstaple Central92
Bideford South & East9-1
Bradninch, Silverton & Thorverton93
Countess Wear & Topsham90
Ellacombe91
Heavitree East & Whipton South9-3
Newton Abbot, Highweek92
Preston & Shorton9-2
Salcombe, Malborough & Thurlestone90
Sidmouth Sidford90
St James’s Park & Hoopern91
Tiverton North & Outer91
Wembury, Brixton & Newton Ferrers90
Bideford North82
Chudleigh & Bovey Tracey8-1
Hatherleigh, Exbourne & North Tawton8-4
Horrabridge & Mary Tavy8-1
Lynton & Combe Martin81
Seaton8-2
Tavistock82
Teignmouth South80
Woolwell & Lee Mill8-2
Yealmpton, Modbury & Aveton Gifford82
Alphington & Marsh Barton70
Appledore & Northam North71
Babbacombe & Plainmoor70
Bampton, Holcombe & Westleigh70
Bere Alston, Buckland Monachorum & Yelverton73
Crediton71
Cullompton70
Dunkesewell, Upottery & Stockland70
Kingsteignton70
Lifton, Lamerton & Bridestowe70
Loddiswell & Dartington7-1
Marldon, Stoke Gabriel & Kingswear72
Ogwell, Mile End & Teigngrace7-3
South Molton70
Willand, Sampford Peverell & Halberton70
Bow, Lapford & Yeoford60
Dartmouth60
Great Torrington61
Hartland Coast63
Ilfracombe East62
Morchard Bishop, Copplestone & Newton St Cyres6-2
Starcross & Exminster60
Teignmouth North60
Budleigh Salterton50
Chagford, Princetown & Dartmoor50
Dawlish South50
Fremington & Instow50
Newton Abbot, Broadlands & Wolborough51
Newton Abbot, Milber & Buckland50
Sidmouth Town50
South Brent & Cornwood51
St Marychurch & Maidencombe51
St Thomas West50
Winkleigh & High Bickington51
Woolacombe, Georgeham & Croyde55
Ashburton & Buckfastleigh41
Bishop’s Nympton, Witheridge & Chulmleigh4-2
Poppleford, Otterton & Woodbury41
Sidbury, Offwell & Beer44
Tiverton West4-1
Totnes Town40
Axminster30
Bishopsteignton & Shaldon30
Chillington, Torcross & Stoke Fleming30
Heathfield & Liverton33
Kilmington, Colyton & Uplyme3-1
Moretonhampstead, Lustleigh & East Dartmoor30

New Clusters

Ashburton and Buckfastleigh

Sidbury, Offwell and Beer

Heathfield and Liverton

Previously reported cluster now under 3 cases (data suppressed)

Ilfracombe West

Westward Ho! and Northam South

Westward Ho! and Northam South

Right to scrap First Past the Post won for Welsh councils

Imagine just for a second that local government could be reformed to ensure people are more engaged, their votes matter and their voices are properly heard. That rather than putting up barriers to participating in democracy, those barriers were stripped away.

[See below for link to petition to extend this to local elections in England]

Jessica Blair http://www.electoral-reform.org.uk 

That is what has happened tonight in Wales as the Welsh Parliament/Senedd voted 39-16 to pass the Local Government and Elections (Wales) Bill, a significant piece of legislation which transforms local elections and revolutionises the way councils operate. 

The bill includes several ways to improve and expand Welsh democracy, changes that ERS Cymru have been fighting hard to achieve.

The Single Transferable Vote comes to Wales

This legislation is the first in Wales to introduce the Single Transferable Vote (STV) into Welsh elections. For the first time councils will have the chance to move to a system that gives voters more choice, ensures their vote counts and delivers greater representation. A huge victory for campaigners of electoral reform in Wales. Because of this Bill individual councils will now get to vote on whether to move from the ineffective First Past the Post System to STV, potentially ending years of uncontested seats and disproportionate results. Across the border in England, all local authorities will remain stuck with a system that doesn’t effectively deliver for voters.

Votes for 16 and 17 year olds in local elections

The bill will also open up our democracy to those previously shut out, extending the franchise to 16 and 17 year olds and to all foreign citizens legally resident in Wales. The franchise, which was previously extended for next year’s Senedd elections, will mean a whole new generation of voters will now have a say on the future of their local area. It leaves England and Northern Ireland as the only two nations in the United Kingdom that systematically denies the right to young people to have their say on critical issues which affect their day to day lives.

Automatic Voter Registration

The bill also paves the way for an overhaul of our outdated and ineffective system of voter registration. The bill could lead to a new system where registration officers can identify people missing from the register and let them know they’ll be added. This will go a long way in addressing the problems caused by the lack of integration between council services and ensure that everyone has the opportunity to vote come election day.

Changes will now also come into effect for the 2022 elections that put the emphasis on councils to better engage people living in their community. Councils will soon be required to publish strategies boosting participation in their area as well as develop and run petitions schemes allowing constituents to call for change on an issue affecting them.

The bill will also go some way to addressing issues with diversity. At the last elections in 2017 just 28% of those elected as councillors were women. While further work will need to be done here measures are being put in place to allow for job sharing in cabinet roles and greater training around diversity for members.

A victory for voters

All of this will see fundamental changes to the way local democracy works in Wales. We’ve been calling for these changes for a long time and now, thanks to this legislation, we’ve got them. Over the next few years we should see local authorities being brought into the modern era and making voters their priority and see our local democracy begin to thrive.

All of this change in Wales leaves us to ask ‘Why can’t England do the same?’ 

Urgent reform is required to deliver a fairer and more representative local government in England. With Scotland already leading the way on proportional representation and now Wales joining the cause for fairer votes surely England must be next. Eyes should be on Westminster to follow suit with a string of reforms to our local democracy and make sure voters all across the UK are fairly represented.

All local elections should be via STV – sign our petition today

The Hugh Kay Lecture: Are we in a post-Nolan age?

Nolan principles: selflessness, integrity, objectivity, accountability, openness, honesty and leadership.

The post-Nolan accusation is that our public culture is changing for the worse. Quite simply, the perception is taking root that too many in public life, including some in our political leadership, are choosing to disregard the norms of ethics and propriety that have explicitly governed public life for the last 25 years, and that, when contraventions of ethical standards occur, nothing happens.

www.gov.uk 

Lord Evans, Chair of the Committee on Standards in Public Life, gave the Hugh Kay Lecture at the Institute of Business Ethics.

Thank you, I am very pleased to be doing this – there is a long relationship between CSPL and IBE, we operate in different spheres but have a lot of interests in common.

Today I am going to ask whether we are in a post Nolan age.

In recent months we’ve heard a new phrase used by academics, commentators, and members of the public who have an interest in public standards. That phrase is a “post-Nolan age”.

Similar sentiments appear in messages received by my Committee over the past few months in our public mailbox:

“I feel a great sadness that the moral framework which has guided British public life for the past quarter century appears to be well and truly over”, said one email.

“I am not a member of any political party but very concerned at the erosion of democracy and honesty. I fear for my children and their children having to live with the consequences of the lack of public accountability”.

These members of the public are concerned by the perception that those in public life no longer feel obliged to follow the so-called Nolan principles of selflessness, integrity, objectivity, accountability, openness, honesty and leadership – otherwise known as the Seven Principles of Public Life.

These principles have long underpinned the spirit of public service in this country, and were first formally articulated in Lord Nolan’s seminal 1995 report – the first from the Committee on Standards in Public Life, of which I now am the Chairman.

In this lecture I would like to talk about why the Nolan principles are still relevant, indeed critical, for the health of our public life – both for those in public office and others, who run businesses, why we we need effective arrangements to underpin the Principles, why some feel that those arrangements are under pressure and what can be done about it.

Since 1995 it has been increasingly accepted that anyone in public service should act in accordance with the Seven Principles. The Principles apply to Ministers and MPs, all civil servants, local government officials, public bodies, the NHS, agencies as well as private companies and charities delivering services on behalf of the taxpayer.

To a sceptical eye the Principles may appear to be little more than a list of moral generalities that serve no practical purpose.

But this is to miss the scale and scope of their impact. These Principles are not a rulebook. They are a guide to institutional administration and personal conduct, and are given a hard edge when they inform law, policy, procedure and Codes of Conduct.

In their essence, the Seven Principles are there to govern the legitimate use of entrusted power in public life. All of us in public life, whether through democratic election or public appointment, have some degree of power afforded to us on the public’s behalf, whether it is the power to make decisions on benefits, to spend money on schools, to legislate to protect public health or to influence debate. This power is lent to us to be used for the good of the public.

This is where the principles take effect. It is a norm in UK democracy that, for example, we expect office-holders to use public funds for the common good, and not to enrich themselves or their families. We expect elected representatives to work for their vision of the common good, rather than acting for their own personal advantage. And we take for granted, that there should be fairness in the decision-making processes – in areas such as policy, planning, and procurement – that will shape our future.

Imagine a democracy without ethical standards. A political system where there are free elections, but where those elected make decisions solely in the interests of their supporters or paymasters; where public funds are systematically diverted to private purses; or where policy is sold to the highest bidder. Such a corrupt system is not democracy in any real sense. Democracy means more than just an elected dictatorship.

To be elected or appointed and to receive a publicly funded salary may place an individual in public office. But fulfilling the requirements of that office means recognising and upholding the ethical requirements that underpin it.

The Seven Principles, tested regularly through research over the last 25 years, outline this implicit contract between those that govern and the governed, setting the terms for the acceptable exercise of power. And at no other time in our post-war history has this contract been more important, when our government is asking its citizens to live with major restrictions and changes to their daily lives.

Elections and institutions give us a constitutional framework, but the Seven Principles of Public Life define the character of our political system. Lord Nolan’s Principles remain as essential to the functioning of our democracy now as they did 25 years ago. They articulate a long-standing model of public life in this country.

At the time of Lord Nolan’s report, business had just begun to work in the public sector. Public service delivery models have moved on since then, and even before this pandemic the government spent around a third of public expenditure – over £280 billion a year – on goods or services provided by private companies. Today, in many areas, private companies deliver public services directly, and so in 2013 the government made clear that any organisation delivering services on behalf of the taxpayer is also subject to the Seven Principles of Public Life.

Outsourcing services like healthcare, prisons, transport, education does not mean outsourcing this ethical contract with the public. It does not mean that the Nolan Principles are set aside. Our own research with the public on this issue came back with a really clear message – they did not particularly care whether it was the public or private sector providing the service, what they wanted was common standards.

The Committee has reported twice on public service providers in recent years. We recognise that the application of public sector norms to private sector companies is not without its difficulties. Where does the obligation to the public good sit against a company’s legal obligation to its shareholders? Where does the principle of selflessness fit in?

Nevertheless, business leaders increasingly recognise that they have responsibilities that go beyond mere shareholder value alone. Public standards and business ethics are rarely if ever in conflict. Both form the basis of sound decision-making and good corporate governance. Governments and businesses that assess evidence objectively, that make decisions on the basis of long-term goals, and those that are not swayed by the temptations of personal advantage at the expense of collective gain, are more likely to succeed in the longer term than those who do not.

Our reports pressed government to do more to clarify and demand high standards of conduct for businesses operating in the public sector and set out how businesses aiming to supply government could demonstrate that they are living up to those standards.

High profile contract failures – and the subsequent impact on the public – continue to make the case for shared ethical standards.

And as government demands these standards from business, business should also ask the same of government. High standards are mutually beneficial. Public standards make the UK a more attractive commercial environment. Where the Seven Principles underpin proper process and procedure, government decisions are predictable and trustworthy. Businesses can plan long-term investment in the knowledge that government decision-making rests on sound ethical foundations and can, if necessary, be challenged in strong and independent courts. An issue of central importance in my view.

Low public standards should, therefore, be as worrying to business as they are to my Committee. I noted with interest very recently – and this adds weight to the post-Nolan argument – that Moody’s downgraded the UK’s credit rating and I think in part due to “the weakening in the UK’s institutions and governance”.

So what are those structures and institutions that constitute the British standards regime?

The Guardian’s breaking of the ‘cash-for-questions’ scandal prompted then Prime Minister Sir John Major to ask Lord Nolan to examine the arrangements that govern standards of propriety in public life. Nolan concluded that although a vast majority of those in political life and public office were of exemplary moral standing, it was not enough to rely on personal character, and that procedures for enforcing standards needed strengthening.

And so began what Professors David Hine and Gillian Peele have called quote the “long march of the Committee on Standards in Public Life”. Over the past 25 years, the following regulatory mechanisms have been established and evolved:

The House of Commons and House of Lords Commissioners for Standards, to set and oversee published Codes of Conduct;

A Ministerial Code, owned and published by the Prime Minister, supported by the Independent Adviser on Ministerial Interests;

The Independent Parliamentary Standards Authority, which separated expenses from the House Authorities to support MPs and protect the taxpayer;

The Electoral Commission, which ensures the fairness of our elections, and aspects of whose work are currently being reviewed by my Committee;

An independent Commissioner for Public Appointments, to ensure that ministerial appointments to public boards are made fairly and on the basis of merit, rather than patronage;

A statutory Civil Service Commission, to regulate appointments and act as an appeal mechanism for civil servants who want to raise concerns against the Civil Service Code.

And a number of significant reforms have been made to address lobbying and improve standards in local government, accompanied by a necessary revolution in the transparency of party funding, ministers’ appointments on leaving office, and MPs’ expenses and second jobs.

Cumulatively, there is no doubt that Hine and Peele were correct to call these changes a “profound transformation of the landscape of British government” over the last 25 years.

I would also like to recognise the role of the free media in all this. While there may be concerns about some excesses, their role in uncovering and highlighting standards issues is vital for scrutiny and helping to ensure ethical conduct. I can recall myself when I first became the head of MI5 a wise colleague advising not to do anything I would be embarrassed to see in the Sunday papers. A free media is a useful safeguard.

But if this process of institutional innovation has succeeded in implementing Lord Nolan’s vision, why are there voices today who worry that we are living in a post-Nolan world?

It was the renowned business theorist Peter Drucker who coined the famous aphorism that “culture eats strategy for breakfast”. The business world has long been aware that in organisations, behaviour is shaped by culture at least as much by codified structure as by policy.

Lord Nolan would have agreed. His wise report advocated greater education about standards recognising that though formal regulation was essential, high public standards were ultimately a question of organisational culture and, critically, of personal responsibility.

“Culture” is not easy to define. On a personal note over the past 7 or so years, since I have been working in the private sector, I have lost count of the number of meetings that discussed culture programmes and their complexities. But we can recognise it when we see it. High ethical principles will be integrated into everyday decision-making processes. Innovation will seek to translate the principles into new contexts, rather than leave them behind. There will be adherence to norms, procedures, and processes of good governance with trusted outcomes. And of course, visible ethical leadership – the right tone from the top is an essential element of any culture transformation.

The post-Nolan accusation is that our public culture is changing for the worse. Quite simply, the perception is taking root that too many in public life, including some in our political leadership, are choosing to disregard the norms of ethics and propriety that have explicitly governed public life for the last 25 years, and that, when contraventions of ethical standards occur, nothing happens.

But if someone acts in ways that breaks the rules or violates the principles, they should be answerable for their conduct. Many are questioning if this is still the case today. In fact the Nolan principles are there in part to underline that those in office have ethical responsibilities which they should comply with, even if they can get away with not doing so – ‘doing the right thing even if no one is watching’. However, the nature of partisan Parliamentary politics can mean that the issue becomes not whether someone acted correctly or not, but whether there is the political will to deal with it.

It would be remiss at this stage not to mention – as again Lord Nolan noted 25 years ago – the commitment of the vast majority of public servants to the highest standards of conduct. Our public sector culture is a positive one. This pandemic has caused some concerns, but it has also demonstrated the overwhelming dedication of our nurses, our doctors, police, local government officials, civil servants and MPs to a public service ethos, often under intense stress and strains. And I would add that many in the private sector have shown similar dedication.

And having taken a step back, it’s unrealistic to think there has never been a scandal-free ‘golden age’ of British politics. Winston Churchill’s financial arrangements as a Member of Parliament would today raise many questions. “Cash for questions’ and “sleaze” dominated in the 90s, party funding and expenses were the standards issues of the 00s, and lobbying concerns in the 2010s. Governments of all stripes have faced accusations that they are bending the rules to their advantage. Research carried out by my Committee from 2002 to 2014 revealed that the British public perceived standards in public life as low and declining. But then again research in the 1940s found the same.

The “post-Nolan” analysis also ignores some of the considerable successes of the last 25 years. The Principles are embedded in most public sector institutions, and there are now well-established regulators able to consider standards issues in a particular context. MPs’ expenses are now transparent. Parliamentary commissioners of standards in the Commons and the Lords have considerable powers of investigation and a range of sanctions. The public appointments regime is hugely developed in comparison to 25 years ago when a ‘tap on the shoulder’ was the norm. The National Audit Office is scrutinising government Coronavirus contracts as we speak. The Principles themselves have been consistent since 1995 while practice has been flexible and has changed and developed. In many areas of public life, those seeking to act that breach the Principles of Public Life will come up against formidable institutional obstacles.

Nevertheless, there are reasons for real concern. And I’d like to give some examples.

There can be little doubt that the handling of Richard Desmond’s proposed scheme to redevelop the Westferry Printworks knocked public confidence in the fairness of the planning system and as far as I am aware there has been no independent investigation into conduct concerns that the Ministerial Code had been breached.

The bullying allegations made against the Home Secretary were investigated by the Cabinet Office but the outcome of that investigation has not been published, though completed some months ago. There may be legal complexities underlying this but those have not been made clear and this does not build confidence in the accountability of government.

In both cases, it is not necessarily the outcome of the investigation that is the problem. Rather, it is the fact that the process for dealing with allegations of ministerial impropriety are not transparent or independent, so accountability is limited. In its current state, there is little reason for the public to trust this process and its outcomes.

And other parts of our standards regulation are under pressure too – namely our public appointments regime, as the independent Public Appointments Commissioner recently made clear in his evidence to the Public and Constitutional Affairs Committee. Lord Nolan was clear that Ministers should retain the final say on who to appoint but that it is not “necessary or desirable to make affiliation a criterion for appointment”. It is not unusual or wrong for governments to want to appoint people who share their views; and political activity is not a bar but cannot be a reason for appointment. Merit must be at the heart of the system, not cronyism or patronage. A fair and open appointment process for leaders of organisations and public bodies is necessary for public trust in our institutions – and also to attract talented people to these important roles.

Public expenditure is back in the spotlight. The suspension of normal procurement rules has exposed the public purse to an unprecedented level of risk. Process-free procurement creates the opportunity for cronyism and distrust. It is no surprise that allegations are rife that contracts are awarded to those with political ties to the government. These may be unfounded, but without proper process the public won’t know. I am therefore pleased that the National Audit Office is, quite rightly, looking at Coronavirus procurement.

And finally, governments past and present have been too easily tempted to disregard the norms of democratic accountability. Proper scrutiny and debate may be perceived as a hindrance but our parliamentary processes undoubtedly improve the quality of government decision-making and the laws that are passed. The principle of ministerial accountability underpins the legitimacy of office and cannot be substituted for the firing and hiring of senior civil servants. Mounting public disquiet is not without foundation.

It’s not the role of my Committee to investigate alleged breaches of the rules, and I’m not drawing conclusions in any of the cases alluded to in this list – but nor is this list exhaustive. Taken together, these issues lead some to believe there is a culture of impunity seeping into British governance.

It’s possible for politicians to say that the judge of whether they have acted appropriately is the electorate – ‘let them judge, and if they don’t like what we’ve done, they can kick us out.’ That populist reading of the character of the constitution and its system of accountability effectively claims impunity for government actions from anything other than the ballot-box. The accountability of ministers to Parliament, the regulations governing the use of special advisors, the clarity about who is taking which decisions on the basis of what judgments about the evidence, adherence to the normal rules of political practice – all that can fall by the wayside in the name of electoral mandate.

If that is the world we are in, then we really would be ‘post-Nolan’. But we should recognize how much of our public life would also have changed. This affects not only those in politics: it remodels the framework within which civil servants and a whole range of public officials operate and leaves them without grounds for questioning the basis on which decisions are made, policies developed or contracts awarded. A populist reading of government responsibility erodes the independence of the administration and the quality of public service delivery – and often does so intentionally. It makes them wholly subordinate to politics.

This is like turning football into a game where the rules are set by the crowd. While the crowd is certainly sometimes right, giving it direct authority over the game and its rules changes the game fundamentally. It also raises questions as to how far the crowd is being manipulated in ways they do not themselves recognize, by whom, and for what purposes. And it obscures the distinction between those who can make most noise, and the interests of the public at large.

So if there are genuine and valid concerns underlying the post-Nolan allegation, what is to be done?

Maintaining standards in public life – like maintaining standards in business – takes sustained work. Sorry to say that there is no silver bullet. But nor am I shaking my head in despair.

An expectation of adherence to high standards of conduct applies, in the UK, both to public officials and to those in elected office. For public officials, standards of conduct can be laid down as a condition of employment and thus are more readily enforceable. In this way the system for officials is analogous to arrangements in the private sector. But it’s more complex for those in elected office who owe their positions to the democratic choice of their electors. (And I suppose I should add that it is even more complex for Members of the House of Lords like me who are neither employed nor elected, but let us not stray into that particular thicket!)

It remains the case, however – in politics, public service, and business – that ethical standards are first and foremost a matter of personal responsibility. Everyone – from ministers and Chief Executives to junior staff and officials – must choose to uphold in their everyday work the ethical values their organisations proclaim. Culture programmes can encourage good practice, and regulators can encourage compliance, but ultimately high public standards are a decision for the individual. Few systems are sufficiently robust to constrain those who would deliberately undermine them.

The position for the government itself is more problematic. Ministers have a responsibility to abide by the Ministerial Code, which is partly a guide to standards and partly an instruction manual on Cabinet government. The Prime Minister specifically mentions standards in public life in the Code’s foreword. But enforcement of the Code lies ultimately with the Prime Minister. This can leave the Prime Minister in an invidious position, faced with the dilemma of how to avoid political damage on the one hand, and how to maintain standards of conduct on the other.

The Prime Minister has an Independent Adviser on Ministers’ Interests but the Adviser currently has no independent power to initiate investigations and, even when an investigation is undertaken, no ability to publish the outcome. My Committee has previously called for more independence to be afforded to the Adviser and I continue to believe that this may be a necessary step. Current arrangements quite clearly fall short of the normal processes of standards regulation. In no other area – including parliament – is the investigatory process so limited and politicised. Whilst sanctions must remain in the hands of the Prime Minister, as ministers are exclusively political appointments, there is no reason for the investigatory process to be so. We will be looking at these arrangements as part of our latest review in order to ensure high standards of transparency and accountability, and such a change would also free Prime Ministers from their current uncomfortable dilemma while still leaving them with the power to take action, or not, as they judge necessary.

There are weaknesses and unfinished business in the standards structures which is why my Committee is keen to hear from business, the public and those who work for the public, in our current landscape review, Standards Matters 2. The strength of the Committee – and probably why it has lasted as a rather strange quirk of the constitution – is in hearing from all sides on tricky issues, assessing the evidence and suggesting improvements.

CSPL is not a regulator. We are part of a complex machinery of checks and balances where our role is to monitor that machinery, improve it and identify areas where it’s deficient. But the spate of concerns expressed about adherence to our standards framework and the Seven Principles of Public Life should not be ignored.

The government’s ability to lead the country through the Coronavirus crisis will be strengthened, rather than undermined, by an adherence to high standards. You can’t fight a pandemic if people do not trust the government. A clear commitment to Honesty, Objectivity and Accountability, and Leadership as outlined in the Nolan Principles, would seem to me a good place to start if you want to maintain public trust.

There are many reasons to doubt that we are truly post-Nolan. We are not at a point where we have lost trust in nurses, teachers, council officers or benefits staff. We may be cynical about politics, but few people believe their own MP to be corrupt.

This turbulent and divisive time in our national life – and overseas – will eventually have to come to an end. Politicians of all colours will need to focus on ways to bring a divided public with them. This will undeniably involve looking for the common ground and common standards.

The Nolan Principles, far from being a thing of the past, provide the standards and tools we need to find a clear route through.

Thank you.

Inside celeb chef’s stunning new seafront venue

A sneak peek inside Exmouth’s new seafront casual seafront bar, restaurant and café has been revealed.

It has attracted mixed comments on the devonlive web-site including: 

“Looks like school dinner hall which I did my best to avoid”

A brave experiment, but will it regenerate Exmouth? – Owl

Anita Merritt www.devonlive.com

Exeter celebrity chef Michael Caines will open Mickeys Beach Bar and Restaurant alongside Sylvain Peltier and Michael’s Café Patisserie Glacerie in March 2021 as part of the Exmouth seafront regeneration project.

The project will incorporate a casual bar complete with resident weekend DJs, first floor destination restaurant with a glasshouse and outdoor terraces alongside neighbouring Café Patisserie Glacerie which will serve serve artisan pastries and ice-creams.

The opening hours will change with the seasons. Summer will see Mickeys Beach Bar and Restaurant serve breakfast, lunch and dinner seven days a week across each of the various outlets.

Mickeys Beach Bar and Restaurant in Exmouth

During the cooler months, breakfast will be served on weekends only with lunch and dinner available daily throughout the week.

Michael said: “Mickeys has been in development for five years and I am so excited to see the building finally come to life.

“The interior space, designed with Design Command, is fun, vibrant and in-tune with its surrounds and has the most remarkable views across the bay of Lyme.

Mickeys Beach Bar in Exmouth

“Mickeys will be a place to celebrate, to unwind, to pop-in for a takeaway or stay late into the night, underpinned by warm hospitality and excellent food.

“It is a space for the local community and beyond, above all its place of fun. I’m incredibly excited to be able to share more over the coming months as we approach the opening.”

The restaurant will offer a relaxed dining experience inspired by its maritime location and produce sourced from the South West. The ground floor bar is complimented by a seascape colour palette and large rough-stone statement bar.

It offers family and dog friendly spaces, delicious foods to eat in or takeaway or a place to simply relax and enjoy cocktails.

Café Patisserie Glacerie in Exmouth

The scheme at the waterfront has been developed by Grenadier Estates. The building itself has used sustainable materials and harnesses renewable energy technologies.

In keeping with Michael’s ethos of local and seasonal produce, Mickeys Beach Bar and Restaurant will source local produce to support the local community of food producers and farmers, reduce food miles and promote biodiversity.

The café, bar and restaurant will each operate in keeping with the green ethos of the project with a commitment not to use single-use plastics.

Adjacent to Mickeys Beach Bar and Restaurant will be Michael and Sylvain Peltier’s first Café Patisserie Glacerie franchise.

It will showcase the creations of Sylvain and Michael, including fresh French patisseries, house-made gelato ice-cream, artisan coffee, milk-shakes and available for grab and go hot pies and Cornish pasties, sandwiches and salads.

Patisserie chef Sylvain Peltier, who spent 10 years working as head pastry chef with Michael Caines at Michelin-starred restaurant Gidleigh Park, said: “I am proud and excited to be opening with Michael our first Café Patisserie Glacerie on the beautiful Exmouth seafront.

“This has been a dream of ours for the past 15 years and seeing the project come together is mind blowing. Being able to share your passion with others is an invaluable gift and we cannot wait to soon share it with you all.”

For further information including booking enquiries and project updates, please visit www.mickeybeach.co.uk [appears not yet operational – Owl]

Britain’s biggest businesses have a vision for the South West

Britain’s biggest business organisation has demanded an end to the “inequalities” which hold back the Westcountry when the nation rebounds from the coronavirus crisis.

Yawn – the needle’s got stuck in the same groove again by the same old voices. We need new blood with a much wider economic experience and a bit of political fervour. 

Susan Davy, the chief executive of one of the South West’s biggest businesses, South West Water owner Pennon, is also the CBI South West chair.  Says it all. – Owl

William Telford www.cornwalllive.com

The CBI echoes calls made by the Back the Great South West campaign – supported by CornwallLive, DevonLive, PlymouthLive and our print sister titles including the Western Morning News – when it calls today for targeted action to boost skills and develop physical and digital infrastructure in the Westcountry.

The campaign has been supported by the Local Enterprises Partnerships, local authority leaders and MPs across the South West.

The CBI warns that without investment there are grave risks that disparities across the regions of Britain could widen, damaging the recovery and the long-promised levelling up of those parts of the country left behind.

In its report, Reviving Regions, the CBI says: “For the South West, improvements to infrastructure – ranging from enhanced digital connectivity to rail and road projects such as long-awaited upgrades to the A303, M5 and M4 – have the potential to be transformational.”

Last week the Department for Transport gave the go-ahead for a crucial part of the A303 upgrades when it backed major improvements to ease the bottleneck around Stonehenge.

South West business leader Tim Jones said that project alone could give the South West region a lift worth around £4bn once it comes on stream.

The CBI says targeted action to boost skills and develop physical and digital infrastructure is vital if the South West is to attract the inward investment needed to build back better from the economic ravages of coronavirus. 

The business organisation’s paper, sponsored by Lloyds Banking Group, highlights long-standing regional inequalities across England which inhibit growth, opportunity and productivity.

It says the disparities in economic performance are large, both across England and within regions, and warns they are at risk of widening further if Government levelling-up ambitions falter in the wake of Covid-19.

The paper calls for a long-term strategic vision to guide the country through a vital post-Covid recovery and towards long-term prosperity.

For the South West, improvements to infrastructure – ranging from enhanced digital connectivity to rail and road projects such as long-awaited upgrades to the A303, M5 and M4 – have the potential to be transformational, the CBI predicts.

Increased spending on training and retraining is another regional priority. The pandemic has undermined the South West’s traditionally-strong levels of employment, and large numbers of workers, especially in hospitality and related tourism sectors, remain furloughed.

The CBI report says equipping them with new skills can protect individual livelihoods and support communities. It adds that “action on skills is essential in a region containing some of England’s areas of lowest productivity.” And it says underpinning all of this is a need to empower the South West’s local and regional leaders.  They must be able to “create a culture where businesses can operate, invest and grow with confidence.”

The report’s recommendations include: 

  • Building vibrant local labour markets
  • Transforming local infrastructure to facilitate new ways of working
  • Inspiring world-class, innovative businesses to invest in the regions
  • Intervening to close the gap in regional research and development funding

Susan Davy, the chief executive of one of the South West’s biggest business, South West Water owner Pennon, is also the CBI South West chair. She welcomed the report.

“The South West is a region with many examples of excellence, ranging from thriving cities like Bristol and Exeter to outstanding strength in sectors like advanced engineering, digital innovation and green industries,” she said.

“Yet these successes are not spread evenly, even within the region. Skills gaps and pockets of low productivity restrict opportunity and prosperity in parts of the South West, and challenges around connectivity – both physical and digital – have seen slow progress.

“Action on these issues is vital if the region is to enjoy a fair and sustainable recovery. We must attract the investment needed to enable South West businesses to enjoy success not just regionally or nationally, but globally too.”

The CBI believes the actions outlined can mitigate the regional impact of the pandemic as the nation rebuilds.

Devon gets £1.3 million for ‘active travel’

Devon County Council has been awarded almost £1.3 million for what’s called ‘active travel’ – which means cycling and walking whilst cutting car use.

Radio Exe News www.radioexe.co.uk 

Active travel filters in Heavitree, Exeter (courtesy: Exeter University)

Expect pop-up measures to become permanent

Devon County Council has been awarded almost £1.3 million for what’s called ‘active travel’ – which means cycling and walking whilst cutting car use.

The Department for Transport is giving the county £1,283,450 from its Emergency Active Travel Funding scheme. It’s the second wodge of government money to change travel habits since the start of the health crisis. The first lot went on“pop-up” temporary measures in Exeter, Barnstaple, Bideford and Newton Abbot to reduce the number of cars of the road.

Some of those temporary measures are likely to be made permanent. Last month, the Exeter Highways and Traffic Orders Committee (HATOC) said it backed making the pop-up stay popped up, while a public consultation is to be carried out on some other arrangements in the city. Other measures will also be progressed in Newton Abbot and Barnstaple.

Three Devon schools (Redhills Primary School in Exeter, Bradley Barton Primary in Newton Abbot and the Whipton Barton Federation in Exeter) have also introduced “School Streets” measures to restrict traffic outside their schools during drop off and pick up times.

Councillor Stuart Hughes, Devon County Council’s cabinet member for highway management, said: “Clearly we welcome this additional funding, although we will need to look closely at the small print. The Exeter HATOC has already set out that we’ll be carrying out consultation with local communities, which is something the government wants to see in awarding this second round of funding.

“We’re keen to encourage active travel in order to help tackle congestion, cut carbon emissions, and improve health. We will be working with local communities across Devon to ensure this funding is used to make it easier for people to walk and cycle.”

A study commissioned by the government has revealed that 65 per cent of people across England support reallocating road space to cycling and walking in their local area. Nearly eight out of 10 people (78 per cent) also support measures to reduce traffic in their neighbourhood.

As part of the DfT’s plan to ensure councils develop schemes that work for their communities, it has set out that they must:

  • -publish plans to show how they will consult their communities, including residents, businesses and emergency services, among others; 
  • show evidence of appropriate consultation prior to schemes being implemented;
  • submit monitoring reports on the implementation of schemes 6-12 months after their opening, highlighting how schemes have been modified based on local feedback to ensure they work for communities.

The funding will have to be spent or committed by March 2021.

Will Dominic Cummings seek revenge?

How Cummings chooses to throw the grenade of hard truth into the blancmange of Johnson’s Downing Street remains to be seen.

This looks very promising, can’t wait! – Owl

www.independent.co.uk 

Reports suggest it is in his mind. Asked about future plans, the prime minister’s former chief adviser makes a mime of pulling the safety pin out of a grenade and lobbing it with intent at some unspecified but easily identified object. He seems to be the sort of personality who likes to have the last word, and does not let go easily.  

When, for example, in 2014 he was special adviser to Michael Gove at education, the prime minister David Cameron fired Cummings, so troublesome was he. Yet he still turned up at the department and made no secret of his contempt for Cameron and most of his party (Cummings has never been a Tory member). Cummings detailed and lengthy blogs, and the equally meticulous briefings he sometimes offers journalists also point to his taste for explication and analysis, often through the prism of military or managerial strategy. 

Cummings has the great distinction of being sacked by three Tory leaders (he was also briefly and unhappily Iain Duncan Smith’s chief of staff) and banned by a fourth, Theresa May, who banished him and Gove from her sight for a while. Cummings has also made enemies of the likes of Sajid Javid (who tried to resist a takeover of the Treasury), Bernard Jenkin and Nigel Farage and has been held in contempt of parliament for effectively refusing to turn up to a select committee hearing to give evidence on the Vote Leave campaign.  

There is now plainly no love lost either with Carrie Symonds, the prime minister’s fiancee and known as “Princess Nut Nuts” to Cummings and his associates. Nor with Allegra Stratton, newly appointed spokesperson for No 10. It’s in fact tricky to find anyone to put on the list of Cummings’s allies.  

Despite some vague talk from Johnson about a return for Cummings and the ex-press secretary Lee Cain in time for the 2024 election, Cummings has little to lose from telling his side of the story. In truth it would be much more than gossip and score settling – though that might add to the gaiety of the nation in rough times. Indeed Cummings has something of a duty to report on the dysfunctionality of the Johnson administration and No 10 as it has faced and mismanaged the two overwhelming challenges of the Covid crisis and Brexit. Since the referendum campaign of 2016, and especially since Johnson became premier, Cummings has had a unique vantage point from which to observe and analyse what went wrong and what, if anything, went right. Has the PM lost his powers of communication since he had Covid? Does Carrie distract him with text messages and trivial media stories? Could Britain have made Brexit work? Would herd immunity ever have been the answer to covid? Is the Treasury too powerful? Is most of the civil service useless? How does Johnson make policy? Why did Johnson expend so much political capital on retaining him after the Barnard Castle incident, but ditched him so easily now? Is Gove running the country? Or Rishi Sunak? Or anyone?  

You’d suspect that, despite some temporary confluence of personal career and political interests, these men are not natural soulmates, in style or outlook or values. Cummings is constant in his beliefs, industrious, decisive and analytical. He has remarked publicly that he has no time for the public school bluffers so often found around Westminster and Whitehall. Johnson, by contrast, has wobbled around like a three-wheel supermarket trolley on Europe, likes his leisure time, dithers, and runs on instinct. He is a public school bluffer; some would attribute the classical references and long words to an Eton education and a gift for saying whatever it takes to get himself out of a tight spot. Both, arguably, though, are better campaigners than administrators.  

How Cummings chooses to throw the grenade of hard truth into the blancmange of Johnson’s Downing Street remains to be seen. There may be a very “hard rain” of multiple bombardments – the blog, interviews, columns, briefings… He might even, belatedly, accept the invitation to visit the House of Commons to give evidence on the role of the prime minister’s office. Funnily enough, the Public Administration and Constitutional Affairs Committee is taking evidence currently. It would make a fine sequel to the show he gave in the Downing Street garden last summer. If he doesn’t then what is left of his reputation will be shredded by the new gang. Always remember the night time is the right time to fight crime. 

Dominic Cummings writes slogans, networks, blogs! Give this man a job

The 48-year-old may well find, as many others have, that the jobs market is an unforgiving place for a middle-aged man with a mixed CV.

How will he pay the bills? – Owl

Matt Chorley www.thetimes.co.uk

Dominic Cummings is a man for hire. Cast out of Downing Street after just over a year as the prime minister’s top adviser, he joins the nation’s growing dole queue. The 48-year-old may well find, as many others have, that the jobs market is an unforgiving place for a middle-aged man with a mixed CV.

The best indicator of what “Dom” will do next is probably to examine what he did before. He has spent much of the past decade terrorising the occupant of No 10: first David Cameron over education reforms and later Brexit; then Theresa May during her three years in charge.

No doubt Cummings will consider critiquing Boris Johnson a full-time job, but how to pay the bills?

Blogger

This is a man who likes the sound of his own keyboard. He could go into newspaper columnising, following Nick Timothy, who moved seamlessly from overseeing May’s disastrous election campaign to telling grateful readers of The Daily Telegraph what the Tories need to do to win. But Cummings would probably struggle with the concept of a word count. When you are a free thinker, you need the space to expound your clever thoughts.

A book, perhaps? Kate Fall, who was deputy chief of staff to David Cameron, argues that it is “good therapy” and a way of drawing a line under a spell in power. “The solidarity of purpose of working in No 10 is difficult to replicate, so best not to try,” she adds.

Yet a book is a bit 18th-century for everyone’s favourite algorithm-muncher. You don’t need to be a superforecaster to know that a return to his blog is inevitable. It is already a vast archive of posts about critical thinking, prediction, physics, economics, war gaming and artificial intelligence. There are a lot of italics and CAPITALS so you know the bits to really focus on.

His last full post was in January, when he appealed for “weirdos and misfits” to work in No 10 — an initiative that led to the hiring and prompt firing of a guru called Andrew Sabisky, who turned out to be rather too keen on eugenics for the prime minister’s tastes.

Advertising copywriter

It’s a literary feast or famine with Cummings: a 20,000-word blog or a three-word slogan. The man who brought us Take Back Control, Get Brexit Done and Hands, Face, Space could be in demand in the advertising industry. There may not be huge demand, given that the advertising industry has been decimated by the pandemic and economic downturn, but Every Little Helps.

Policy wonk

The man who has been hugely critical of the Westminster bubble and its thinktankery inhabitants does know about something — data and artificial intelligence — and is genuinely passionate about the role of tech in changing the way the country is run, and how we live our lives.

Exasperated by the archaic structures of meetings in the fusty cabinet room and ministers making decisions based on printed reports in their red box, he tried to shake things up by creating a Nasa-style mission control in Whitehall, but it was little more than some widescreen TVs on the wall of a bare meeting room.

Having struggled to change things from the inside, he may have more success making the case from the outside. Anthony Seldon, the historian and political biographer, says Cummings should be put in charge of Britain’s national effort to embrace artificial intelligence. “He gets it, hardly anybody else does, he’ll shake everybody up — we need it, and he’ll make it happen. It’ll be our meal ticket post-Brexit.”

Craig Oliver, No 10’s director of communications under Cameron, agrees. “Dominic’s passion is preparing the UK for an AI/tech-driven future. He could do a lot worse than use his undoubted talent to set up a think tank focused on that.” Alternatively, Oliver suggests, not entirely seriously, “he could listen to his bad angel and create a future-gazing agency, calling it FarQ”.

Lobbyist

The natural path for someone ousted from government is to move out, then spend the time lobbying those still on the inside. Good lobbyists boast of having the numbers of all the key decision-makers, which Cummings does. Whether they will take his call is more doubtful.

His track record isn’t great, though. Even when in government he struggled to get his way. He opposed HS2 and was overruled. He backed Huawei and was overruled. He even tried to move Boris Johnson out of No 10 and got overruled.

It is also not totally clear that he would enjoy being a man for hire. Famously blunt about what does (and does not) interest him, he is unlikely to want to spend his days lobbying on behalf of Acme Inc, no matter how well it pays.

Academic

Maligned as a stupid person’s idea of a clever person, Cummings has played down his intellect, writing in The Spectator in 2017 with admirable honesty: “I am not clever, I have a hopeless memory, and have almost no proper ‘circle of competence’.”

He also once railed against “Oxbridge English graduates who chat about Lacan at dinner parties”, which was quite something for an Oxford history graduate. It might do him good to update his reading, though.

After a blogpost this year about the possible uses of artificial intelligence, Lord O’Donnell, the former cabinet secretary, said the future-thinker was actually stuck in the past. “When you look at the articles he goes to in science, I mean they’re like going back 30, 40 years as if behavioural [science] never existed.”

Media personality

Some of those who leave government “do”, others just “talk”. The best example of this is Steve Hilton, who was Cameron’s scruffily dressed blue-sky thinker who tried to smash up Whitehall, grew frustrated and then flounced out when it all got a bit tough. Sound familiar?

Hilton is now a host on Fox News in the US, where he has been an outspoken supporter of President Trump while railing against woke political correctness. Cummings could follow suit in the UK, but we’ve already got Piers Morgan.

Fashionista

For a man who appears to be permanently dressed for an autumnal morning spent rotavating the vegetable plot, it is perhaps fitting he has been put on gardening leave. In politics it is still women who have their appearance endlessly critiqued, but Cummings has waged a one-man fightback for fashion equality.

Normally, when people say cracks are appearing in Downing Street they mean political divisions, not the cleavage emerging over the slumping belt line of ill-fitting jeans. But Cummings often struck a bum note on his arrival at No 10.

The beanie, the gilet, the bovver boots, the straw hat, the Big Sur cap, the tote bag, all thrown over studiously unironed shirts or unsubtle slogan T-shirts, were carefully chosen to show just how little he cared.

It didn’t always work. Early in lockdown Johnson held a briefing to reassure the nation that the sharpest minds were at work, while at the back of the room Cummings was spotted with his jumper inside out.

Still, a fashion range aimed at the new dressed-down generation of lockdown home workers can’t be ruled out. Dom at Asda, anyone?

A proper job

He has prided himself on being in touch with the common working man, unlike all those effete elitists in Whitehall. This seems to be based on a spell as a doorman at Klute nightclub in Durham (owned by his uncle; meritocracy in action), which was once voted the second worst club in Europe by FHM magazine, until the one in first place burnt down, allowing it to take the top spot. His nightclub experience of telling people they were going to leave whether they liked it or not obviously made quite the impression on him politically.

Cummings has also boasted of his business experience, including starting businesses in Russia. This amounted to a spectacularly unsuccessful airline that once left without its only passenger.

If he is looking for a return to something customer-facing, an advertisement has gone online for an optical assistant apprenticeship at Specsavers in Barnard Castle. The successful applicant, the advert states, “must be happy to travel”.

Exeter sees highest rent increase in England

New research shows that Exeter has seen the highest increase in average rent across whole of England over the past five years.

Howard Lloyd www.devonlive.com

Average rent in the city has jumped an incredible 39 per cent in five years, according to findings from international rental marketplace Spotahome.

According to numbers from the Office for National Statistics, in 2015 the average monthly rent stood at £853. It has gone up now to an eye-watering £1,201 – a £337 difference.

Nowhere else in England has seen a rise of that magnitude.

Nadia Butt, UK and Ireland country manager of Spotahome, said: “While London remains the most expensive place to rent in the UK this causes many tenants to automatically assume that this cost has continued to increase over the last few years and this simply isn’t the case.

“When you consider the higher cost of renting within the capital is partially offset by the higher wages on offer, and that this wage growth has remained fairly consistent, it means that London tenants are actually much better off now than when compared to five years ago.”

Second on the list is Oxford, which has seen a 32 per cent rise. Rent there in 2015 averaged £1,204, but it now stands at £1,588 – an increase of £384.

Newcastle-under-Lyme is third, with rent increasing from £506 to £662 – a growth of £156 – while Bristol is joint-fourth with Newcastle upon Tyne, Leicester and Norwich.

The South West city has gone from averaging £915 to £1,175 – a £260 increase equating to 28 per cent.

Interestingly, three London boroughs are among the 10 areas to have seen the largest declines in the past five years – Hounslow, Richmond and Kingston.

The figures are also set against a backdrop of the South West seeing the biggest reduction in rental affordability year on year.

While the average net wage in the region has increased by +1.7 per cent to £1,890 in the last year, the average monthly rent has also jumped by +6.1 per cent to £892 today – the largest increase of all regions.

As a result, the cost of renting now requires 47.2 per cent of the average monthly earnings in the region, up +1.9 per cent from 45.2 per cent last year.

Founder and CEO of Howsy, Calum Brannan, added: “The cost of renting has continued to climb across much of the nation and as a result, many tenants are now paying more of their monthly earnings on rent despite a steady increase in income.

“The current impact of the pandemic is perhaps clearest within the capital where a severe fall in demand levels has seen rents tumble.

“However, while the topline figures show that London’s tenants are now paying less of their income on rent, this won’t be the reality for many who find themselves out of work or on furlough as a result of the current landscape.”

Go-between paid £21m in taxpayer funds for NHS PPE

A Spanish businessman who acted as a go-between to secure protective garments for NHS staff in the coronavirus pandemic was paid $28m (£21m) in UK taxpayer cash.

By Phil Kemp www.bbc.co.uk

The consultant had been in line for a further $20m of UK public funds, documents filed in a US court reveal.

The legal papers also reveal the American supplier of the PPE called the deals “lucrative”.

The Department of Health said proper checks are done for all contracts.

A legal dispute playing out in the courts in Miami has helped shine a light on the amount of money some companies have made supplying the NHS with equipment to protect staff from Covid infection.

Earlier this year, as the coronavirus pandemic was spreading rapidly around the world, Florida-based jewellery designer Michael Saiger set up a business to supply PPE to governments.

He used his experience of working with factories in China to land what are described as “a number of lucrative contracts” supplying protective gloves and gowns to the NHS.

Mr Saiger signed up a Spanish businessman, Gabriel Gonzalez Andersson, to help with “procurement, logistics, due diligence, product sourcing and quality control” of the PPE equipment. In effect, Mr Andersson was expected to find a manufacturer for deals that had already been done.

Further $20m pledged

Mr Andersson was paid more than $28m (£21m) for his work on two government contracts to supply the NHS. He was described in court documents as having done “very well under this arrangement”.

image captionEarlier in the year there was a shortage of protective equipment for NHS medics

In June, Mr Saiger signed three more agreements to supply the NHS with millions of gloves and surgical gowns.

When the UK government paid up, his go-between, Mr Andersson, would have been in line for a further $20m in consulting fees.

But the court documents allege that once the agreements had been signed, Mr Andersson stopped doing any work for Mr Saiger. It’s not clear whether Mr Andersson received any of the money for this second batch of deals.

This led to PPE deliveries being delayed to NHS frontline workers, Mr Saiger claims, and the company “scrambling” to fulfil the contracts by other means.

So far the UK’s Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) has published contracts with Mr Saiger’s company, Saiger LLC, totalling more than £200m. These were awarded without being opened to competition.

‘Huge profits’

Alongside the legal dispute in Florida, the deals are set to be challenged in UK courts, by campaign group the Good Law Project. It accuses government ministers of not paying “sufficient regard” to tax-payers’ money over a contract with the firm.

“We do not understand why, as late as June, government was still making direct awards of contracts sufficiently lucrative as to enable these sorts of profits to be made,” Jolyon Maugham, the project’s director told the BBC.

“The real criticism that is to be made here is of the huge profits that government allows to be generated.”

This is not the first time concerns have been raised about PPE contracts the DHSC signed during the first wave of the coronavirus pandemic.

Earlier this year, the BBC revealed that 50 million face masks the government bought could not be used in the NHS because of safety concerns. And last week, it exposed concerns that the government had leaned on safety officials to certify PPE which had been wrongly classified.

A DHSC spokesperson said the department had been “working tirelessly” to deliver PPE, with more than 4.9 billion items delivered to frontline health workers so far and nearly 32 billion items ordered “to provide a continuous supply”.

They added: “Proper due diligence is carried out for all government contracts, and we take these checks extremely seriously.”

The BBC asked Gabriel Gonzalez Andersson for comment but he has not so far responded.

Saiger LLC said: “At the height of the pandemic, and at a time when the NHS was in need of high-quality PPE that met the required safety standards, we delivered for Britain, on time and at value.

“At no time have we ever used any ‘middlemen’. We have few full-time staff so for large projects we bring in short-term contractors for additional expertise and capacity, allowing us to deliver what is needed.

“We are exceptionally proud to have played our part in providing frontline workers in the UK, including nurses, doctors and hospital staff, with the millions of pieces of PPE they need to stay safe and to save lives.”