Today: Swire asks a question at Prime Minister’s Question Time (no, not about East Devon)
Hugo Swire, a Conservative, asks if May has a message for the people of Hong Kong.
May says people were marching peacefully in Hong Kong. It is vital that Hong Kong’s high degree of autonomy is respected. She has raised this with Chinese leaders, she says.
Run by family members (Owl seems to recall cousin Barnaby runs the Hong Kong end:
“Swire Group is a Hong Kong- and London-based diversified conglomerate. Many of its core businesses can be found within the Asia Pacific region, where traditionally Swire’s operations have centred on Hong Kong and mainland China. Within Asia, Swire’s activities come under the group’s publicly quoted arm, Swire Pacific Limited.[1] Elsewhere in the world, many businesses are held directly by parent company, John Swire & Sons Limited, in Australia, Papua New Guinea, East Africa, Sri Lanka, the USA and UK. Swire controls a large property empire in Asia – mainly Hong Kong. The current chairman is Barnaby Swire. Taikoo (太古) is the Chinese name of Swire. It serves as the brand name for businesses such as Taikoo Sugar and Taikoo Shing.”
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swire
Here’s some info about the family:
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Swire_family
and here’s some history of the Swire Group in China and Hong Kong:
https://www.scmp.com/business/article/1941580/history-swire-group-hong-kong-began-146-years-ago
Boris Johnson: another “pants on fire” moment
Boris says today he is against a sugar tax as there is no evidence it works and may hit “the poor” hardest.
Compare and contrast with his time as Mayor of London:


Fire station closures – list of public exhibitions, including Colyton
… Colyton
Tuesday, July 16 – 3pm to 7pm – Colyton Town Hall, Market Place
Local authority finance officers “lose confidence in ability to deliver services”
“The majority of local government finance officers have lost confidence in their future financial positions over the last year, a CIPFA survey has revealed.
Seventy per cent of respondents said they were either slightly less or much less confident in their financial position this year compared to 2018-19, according to the CIPFA’s confidence survey out today.
It also found that 68% said they were either slightly less or much less confident in their ability to deliver services in 2020-21. Sixty-two per cent expressed equal confidence in their financial position for 2019-20 as they had last year, the survey revealed.
CIPFA found that the area of greatest pressure for top tier authorities was children’s social care, with the number of authorities rating it as the biggest pressure rising by six percentage points.
For districts the greatest pressures were housing, cultural services and environmental services.
Rob Whiteman, CIPFA chief executive, said: “Local government is facing greater demand pressures than ever before, with particularly pressures in adults’ and children’s social care and housing. Local authorities also lack certainty about their future financial positions, so it’s unsurprising to see confidence on the decline.
“We have repeatedly pointed out that local government is in need of a sustainable funding solution, but meeting this demand requires more than pennies and pounds. The sector as a whole must come together to address the challenges of effective service delivery.”
CIPFA’s survey received a total of 119 responses from authorities in the UK – 56 top tier authorities, 47 English districts, 12 Scottish authorities, and 4 Welsh authorities.
The LGA yesterday released a survey, two-thirds of councils believed they would not be able to fund statutory services by 2024-25.
https://www.publicfinance.co.uk/news/2019/07/cfos-lose-confidence-ability-deliver-services
Now we are being told to pay (again) for austerity
Owl says: Wasn’t austerity meant to balance the books, after which we would then be rewarded for making do while it happened? Apparently not.
“Let councils charge higher taxes to pay for austerity, says LGA chair
Local authorities should be given the freedom to impose higher council taxes to help cope with the unprecedented funding crisis facing social care services after a near decade of austerity, the Tory chair of the Local Government Association has said.
James Jamieson urged ministers to inject billions of pounds into adult social care and give councils more control of local health services to protect elderly and disabled people and give them the support they needed. “It is a measure of a good society how well it treats it most vulnerable,” said the councillor.
Reflecting increasing concern over the impact of the reductions, he called for major extra investment in children’s social care, a reversal of cuts to Sure Start-style early-years family support services and a review of special educational needs services funding.
His comments reflect a growing cross-party consensus at local level that national government has little grasp how continuing austerity cuts are hurting local communities and putting people at risk. Last month, Jamieson’s Tory predecessor, Lord Porter, warned that vulnerable people would die because of social care cuts.
There is little confidence that the government will be in a position to deliver its promised three-year spending review this autumn, effectively imposing a further year of austerity on town halls and forcing them to plan for service cuts and staff redundancies they had hoped would be unnecessary.
The LGA warned earlier on Tuesday that the deteriorating outlook for council finances would see a fifth of authorities forced to impose drastic controls on spending this year to avoid insolvency, while a third of councils would struggle to deliver statutory services within three years.
Jamieson, in his inaugural speech at the LGA annual conference in Bournemouth, said the council tax referendum cap, introduced by the Tory-Liberal Democrat coalition in 2012 and currently set at 2.99%, ought to be abolished. “Residents should be given the choice; if they want to pay more for extra services, why can’t they?”
He said that councils in England had lost 60p out of every £1 of central government funding since 2010, while the number of new child protection investigations had doubled, there had been a 56% increase in homelessness and the number of older people aged over 85 had increased by a third.
The communities secretary, James Brokenshire, said in his speech to the LGA that he recognised councils’ uncertainty over future funding, adding: “It is right that we look at the challenges and opportunities you face, and the funding you are currently relying on, including for social care, when we consider what a sustainable settlement looks like for local government for the coming years.”
Meanwhile, a survey of council chiefs found nearly half expect that Brexit will damage their local economies by reducing exports and overseas investment. This would critically reduce council income from business rates at a time when they were already struggling to maintain the quality and breadth of core services.
PWC’s annual survey of council leaders, chief executives and finance directors revealed that more than half believed that some authorities would get into serious financial difficulty or fail to deliver core services at some point over the next year.
A PWC survey of 2,000 UK users of council services found that 67% were concerned about cuts on their community, up from 61% a year ago; 77% said they or their family had been impacted by cuts; and 51% opposed the need for cuts, up from 48% in 2018.
Councils must hold a referendum if they wish to raise council tax beyond the 2.99% limit. No local authority has taken up the option. In January, Northamptonshire county council was given special dispensation by ministers to raise council tax by an extra 2%, raising £6m, to aid its recovery from insolvency. Similar requests from other councils have been turned down.
Local authority directors of adult social care warned last week that the escalating financial crisis in social care had put tens of thousands of older and disabled people at risk of being denied basic support such as help with washing and dressing.”
Devon school likely to close on Friday afternoons to save money says councilor
“Devon’s schools could soon be forced to shut on Friday afternoons due to budget pressures, a leading councillor is predicting, while a headteacher has warned: “It’s not going to be long before a school goes bankrupt.”
Cllr Rob Hannaford, the chairman of Devon County Councils Children’s Scrutiny Committee, said he is convinced a school in Devon will soon join schools nationwide closing on Friday afternoons to give teachers the preparation and planning time required, because they cannot afford to pay for an additional teacher to cover those sessions.
A group of more than 80 cross-party MPs who have written to Chancellor Philip Hammond urging him to increase school and special needs funding before permanent damage is done to the education of children across England. …”
https://www.devonlive.com/news/school-could-soon-go-bankrupt-3045143
11 housing associations reject affordable homes as far too small
“New-build “affordable” homes are standing empty after nearly a dozen housing associations rejected them for being too small.
The five properties were deemed to be lacking the square footage required to meet “modern standards of social housing.”
Developer Monument Two Ltd is currently building 42 homes at Derby’s former Calder Aluminium site in Repton Road, reports DerbyshireLive.
South Derbyshire District Counciil signed off on the scheme in 2010 but it has not yet been completed.
Now the firm has told the council that the affordable homes built on the site have been seen as too small by 11 housing associations that were offered them.
The housing associations also said that there were not enough affordable homes on the site – with just five built due to the cost of developing the site.
Of the five homes, two are three-bed homes and three are two-bed homes.
The council says that the square footage of the homes does not meet modern standards of social housing – which have been upgraded since 2010 when the homes were approved. …”
https://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/uk-news/developer-built-new-homes-small-16515537
“UK builders suffer worst monthly decline in a decade”
Owl says: time to stimulate sales with price drops, perhaps? Bringing that profit-per-house at Persimmon down from £77,000 to, say, £27,000 would certainly bring a lot of buyers in! Of course, then there would be no masdive director bonuses, so guess that’s a non-starter (home).
“Britain’s construction sector suffered as “sharp drop in momentum” last month, says data firm Markit.
In a very worrying healthcheck on the construction sector, Markit has found that business activity and incoming new work both fell at the fastest pace for just over 10 years.
Housebuilding, commercial construction and big civil engineering work all contracted during the month — a bad sign for the whole construction sector.
Builders across the country blamed “risk aversion among clients in response to heightened political and economic uncertainty.”
That suggests people are simply unwilling to take risks while they don’t know how the Brexit crisis will be resolved.
This has dragged the IHS Markit/CIPS UK Construction Total Activity Index down to just 43.1 in June, down sharply from 48.6 in May. Any reading below 50 shows a contraction, and this shows the steepest reduction in overall construction output since April 2009.” …
UK builders also reported that new orders dropped at the fastest rate in over 10 years, while demand for construction products and materials fell at the sharpest pace since the start of 2010.”
Water, water everywhere, but ne’er a drop to drink …
“The owners of Britain’s water companies received almost £5 billion in dividends over the past five years, according to analysis by a union campaigning for renationalisation.
The GMB union said shareholders had “pocketed eye-watering sums” from the privatised water industry, which it called an “abject failure”, including a further £1.4 billion in the form of interest on loans.
Industry returns are in the spotlight after Labour vowed to renationalise the industry and after Southern Water was fined a record £126 million in penalties last week after systematically covering up sewage leaks over seven years.
There are 17 water companies in England and Wales. Three are listed — Severn Trent, United Utilities and South West Water, part of Pennon Group — and the rest privately owned.
The GMB analysis calculates £4.7 billion in dividends were paid out to shareholders between 2014 and 2018, including more than £800 million last year. It counted a further £264 million in other payouts such as share buybacks. It said owners of the water companies had also received £1.4 billion in interest on loans and had accrued a further £520 million in interest, giving a total of almost £6.9 billion it said shareholders had made.
Tim Roache, general secretary of the GMB, said: “If you needed a poster child for abject failure, the privatisation of the water industry is it. Bills up 40 per cent above inflation, billions of litres of water lost in leaks as families face hose-pipe bans and all the while shareholders are trousering billions in profit.”
A spokesman for Water UK, the industry’s representative body, said: “Privatisation of the water and sewerage industry has achieved a great deal over the last 30 years — nearly £160 billion of investment, a healthier environment, better water quality and improved service to customers.
“Customers are now five times less likely to suffer from supply interruptions, eight times less likely to suffer from sewer flooding and 100 times less likely to have low water pressure than when the industry was in government hands. Nationalisation would risk turning back the clock to the days when service and quality failures were far more common, and cash-strapped governments wouldn’t pay for the improvements needed.”
Mr Roache called it a “complete disgrace” and urged the government to do “something about it”.”
Source: The Times (pay wall)
“Councils ‘in the dark’ over future funding amid cash warnings”
“Councils in England and Wales have warned they are “completely in the dark” about how much money they will get from central government next year.
The Local Government Association says councils need “urgent guarantees” they will get enough to provide key services like child protection and social care.
More than 90 of its members fear they will run out of money to meet their legal obligations within five years.
Ministers said councils had been given extra funding for vulnerable residents.
The Department for Housing, Communities and Local Government said total funding for local authorities had gone up by nearly 3% this year to £46.4bn, with an extra £650m to help councils provide care for the elderly….”
Want to hear what Clinton Devon Estates CEO thinks about the company’s future opportunities?
You may have to travel a bit … and pay for the privilege! He doesn’t go in for many meetings with locals!

“You can expel an MP for fiddling expenses – but not violence or misogyny. Why?”
” … Under the Recall of MPs Act 2015 constituents can recall their MP if they receive a custodial sentence, if they are banned from the House of Commons for 10 sitting days (which only happens if they’ve previously been banned for a shorter period) or if they are convicted of providing a misleading expenses claim.
That means that so far this year, the public has been able to recall one MP for lying to avoid a speeding ticket and another for fiddling his expenses claim for two landscape photographs. But even if an MP admits to aggressive or violent behaviour, without a custodial sentence they are untouchable until the next election. That’s why the Women’s Equality party has written an open letter calling on parliament to amend the Recall Act 2015, to give the public the power to recall their representatives in cases where they have been found guilty of violence or harassment by the independent parliamentary commissioner for standards.
We live in a country where violence against women and girls is endemic yet rarely prosecuted. An astonishing 98.3% of rapes reported to the police in England and Wales do not lead to a conviction. Nor does assault always result in a prison sentence, with many perpetrators getting off with a fine. These problems urgently need to be addressed, but we should not have to wait for an improvement in conviction rates to ensure that MPs are held accountable for their actions.
Violent people do not belong in government. Let’s make that clear.”
Independent Group councillors getting flak about Exmouth regeneration
Contributors do appear somewhat confused about personal and prejudicial interests and predisposition. This might help:
Click to access members-interests-bias-an-533.pdf
But this is the problem with “social enterprises”, “joint working” and “contractual obligations” – so many grey areas where things can go wrong or be misinterpreted.

Bad news on fire service station cuts
And the bad news is: the chair of Devon and Somerset Fire and Rescue Service Authority is none other than our old pal and former Leader of EDDC, Sarah Randall-Johnson – you know, the person who consistently voted down any scrutiny of the Devon NHS Clinical Commissioning Group, and took her Tory committee members along with her.
Oh dear.
Crown Estates rented home? Beware – it could be sold from under you
Be warned, Axminster.
“Scores of complaints have been made about rented properties on royal land and tenants have faced more than 100 evictions, a Guardian investigation has found, prompting anger over how the Queen’s £14bn property portfolio is managed.
The crown estate, which helps bankroll the Queen by giving the monarch 25% of its profits, has sought to evict 113 tenants in the past five years so they can sell their homes for profit.
It comes after it has emerged on Tuesday that the taxpayer has footed a £2.4m bill to renovate Frogmore Cottage, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex’s official residence, according to royal accounts. While the royals have no direct oversight role in crown estate’s dealings, Prince William and Prince Charles have both spoken before about the importance of ensuring good quality housing is available for all.
Figures obtained by the Guardian show that the crown estate has received more than 100 complaints about its residential properties in just two years, including grievances over rent hikes, leaks, delays in repairs and faulty electrical goods. …
An investigation using data obtained through Freedom of Information laws reveals that:
The crown estate has made £1.1bn selling off more than 700 residential and commercial properties since 2014, with one private firm subsequently hiking rent well above inflation.
More than a quarter of a million pounds has been banked by the crown estate in housing benefit from just seven hard-up tenants.
Four tenants have sued the crown estate for breach of contract, including one claim worth half a million pounds. …
Prince Charles has also spoken out in the past in favour of affordable housing for low-paid workers. In 2003, he said in a speech that “the lack of affordable rural housing is one of the most important issues facing the countryside”. …
The crown estate issued 113 “notices to quit” to residential tenants from 2014 to 2018, including 97 in rural properties, nine in Windsor and seven in central London.
Other figures also reveal that the crown estate gained more than a quarter of a million pounds in housing benefit from just seven tenants. People renting in Camden, Runnymede and Windsor and Maidenhead have let property on royal land using housing benefit paid directly to the crown estate.
Since 2014, £253,092 has been paid to the crown estate in housing benefit. The majority of the payments were for five tenants in Camden, north London. …”
Another directorship for Swire … and an update on his business partner Lord Barker
Perhaps not his finest hour:
“From 12 April 2019, unpaid director of Fresh Voice and Vision Limited, which was set up to provide support to the leadership campaign of the Rt. Hon Dominic Raab MP. The campaign was launched on 10 June 2019. (Registered 12 June 2019)”
https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm/cmregmem/190617/swire_hugo.htm
Oh, and in case anyone is wondering about the still dormant company he set up with his mate Sir Greg Barker (supposedly to focus on “renewable energy projects”:
https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm/cmregmem/190617/swire_hugo.htm
here is an update on what Lord Barker has been getting up to:
https://members.tortoisemedia.com/2019/04/23/barker-19-04-23/content.html
“Tory MP used taxpayer-funded stationery for 250 birthday party invites”
“Andrew Rosindell has to repay £42.86 by the Parliamentary Standards Commissioner after arguing invites were for ‘community event’…”
https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/politics/tory-mp-used-taxpayer-funded-17278331
Almost as bad as when Hugo Swire charged us all for a Mulberry i-pad cover – £395:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/devon/8108027.stm
and £349 for a sat-nav:
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/mps-expenses/5581638/MPs-expenses-25-most-ludicrous-claims.html
Johnson wants to support developers – not buyers – with stamp duty changes
Owl says:
How much more support do developers need when, for example, Persimmon is making a profit of £77,000 on every house they build!

Source: Times (pay wall)
Persimmon hijacks Facebook customer complaints site, changes name, deletes negative posts
Sorry this isn’t a good photo but the headline to this post says it all. Just posting proof of source to show Owl didn’t make it up!
