Thursday, July 30, 2020

CAMPAIGN: Vote Them Out! County Councillors Ignore Somerset Residents (Again!)

Putting Somerset Residents First

UPDATE (16/8/20): As reported by the BBC's Local Democracy Reporting Service, Somerset Independents has applied to become a local political party

Leader Andrew Pope says this morning:

"We have been forced into doing this by the failure of the Westminster parties - Lib Dems, Tories, Labour and Greens - to back our call for a Referendum and Citizens Assembly to ask Somerset people how they are governed - not to have it imposed on them by local politicians who are party political puppets of Westminster."
"We will communicate again, if we decide to stand candidates in any elections, including next year's 2021 County Council elections."

For more information about Somerset Independents, please see our FAQs and the rest of this website. 


---

 

Somerset Independents Calls on Residents to Vote Councillors Out Who Don’t Back A Referendum and Citizens Assembly


Yesterday, 29th July 2020, we listened very carefully to all Somerset County Councillors speak at the virtual Full Council meeting where a majority of councillors voted through the “business case” for One Somerset – a proposal to scrap all four district councils and the County Council - and to replace them with one "Unitary Authority" with misleading and disingenuous arguments to rob Somerset residents of local representation.

It was good to hear from the members of the public that spoke against the proposal. Disgracefully, only one councillor out of around fifty present spoke up for a Referendum.

In June, our Leader Andrew Pope already spoke at Somerset County Council, calling for a Referendum and Citizens Assembly so that Somerset residents decide how they are governed – not politicians.

And we’ve written to every single district and county councillor on those five councils - some more than once. Since then, we have received positive responses to our proposal from some Independent and Liberal Democrat councillors, but nothing positive from Labour, Green or Conservative councillors - BREAKING (30/7/20) - one Sedgemoor Conservative District Councillor has now written in support of a Referendum.

Leader of Somerset Independents, Andrew Pope, said:

"Councillors from the Liberal Democrats and more Independent councillors in other districts have been in touch to support our campaign. But still, nothing from Labour, the Greens or Conservatives.

Why don't Somerset’s Labour, Green and Conservative councillors trust the residents to decide how they are governed? Are they only interested in what happens in Westminster?
Since yesterday, we now know that even some Conservative councillors DO NOT SUPPORT the proposal, because one has broken ranks and written to us in support of a Referendum. We are sure that there are other Conservatives who are not yet brave enough to speak.

Because of the vast majority of County Councillors' abject surrender yesterday, Somerset Independents is now considering whether to stand candidates against these councillors at the next elections, if they do not support a Referendum."

Deputy Leader of Somerset Independents, Denise Wyatt, said:

“Residents voted by 82% against a Unitary Authority in 2007*. Yet County Council Leader Fothergill is disgracefully trying to railroad this through, proposing only a sham ‘consultation’ instead of a Referendum. Somerset Independents stands up for what Somerset residents want and now we think the next elections should be about that Referendum.”

* BBC, “County votes against one council

19 Jun 07 14:38

Most people in Somerset are against having a unitary authority, a poll has shown.”

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/mobile/england/somerset/6766837.stm, Retrieved 30th July 2020



Saturday, July 25, 2020

What Is An "Independent" Councillor?


Fiercely Independent


We have regularly referred to the concept of "independence" or "Independents".

It's referred to in our name - Somerset Independents.

We are fiercely independent of Westminster parties: Labour, Conservative, Liberal Democrats and Greens. However, we will work with them on a case-by-case basis, if necessary, to achieve the wishes of Somerset residents.

In that case, what does "Independent" mean?

But what does it mean in terms of what we expect of an elected representative - a councillor or a Member of Parliament?

It means that the elected representative:

  1. Is NOT in the above Westminster parties. Why? Because the Westminster parties do not care about Somerset. They care about London and what they are told to do by their political masters in London. We have shown this in several examples on this website and the evidence is overwhelming, going back decades, if not centuries. They put themselves and their parties first. Somerset residents come a long way down their priorities. A true Independent puts Somerset residents first.
  2. CAN be in a political group  - just not in one of the Westminster parties' groups. They could be in an Independent group.
  3. CAN be in a local political party that puts local people first, instead of the Westminster parties.
  4. While they may be in a political group, that group does NOT operate under a political "WHIP". A "whip" is where all members of the group are obliged to follow the collectively-agreed view - usually with minority views excluded, and there is punishment for them, if they do not follow the whip. If there is a genuine consensus, then the members of the group will obviously agree to take the same course of action. This is not the same as a whip, where alternative views are not allowed to be expressed and if they are, mean punishment which can include expulsion.
  5. LISTENS to, and ACTS upon, the concerns and wishes of their constituents. They may well have their own personal view - we encourage independent thinking - but their view must be informed by the views of their constituents. They are NOT there to represent only their own view - being independently-minded does NOT mean independent of those you are there to represent. This was in evidence to the great shame of MPs who thought that they knew better than their constituents on one of the biggest issues - Brexit. Representatives should take the majority view and represent it, especially where the majority was either significantly for Brexit or significantly for Remain. Direct democracy - the Referendum result in their area - showed the majority view. It was their job to implement it. To LISTEN and to ACT.
  6. They should ACTIVELY pursue greater public participation and democratic decision-making, for the benefit of their constituents. Party politicians prefer to keep their residents out of decisions.
  7. Be PRAGMATIC. The system is broken. But it is the system as it is. They should be willing to actively work cross-party and with those like them who are in no party, to achieve the wishes of their constituents. For example, Somerset Independents is working in this way to achieve the Referendum and Citizens Assembly on changes to how Somerset residents are governed locally. However, this must be on a case-by-case basis, with no binding agreements on other issues. We were asked by Taunton Deane Liberal Democrats to work together on the Referendum. The boundaries were made absolutely crystal clear to them - we were the ones to start the campaign and we were pleased they joined the campaign - but we are not tied to them on any other issue, nor will we resile from criticising them.


This may seem like a lot of tests. But we will not accept fake "Independents", examples of which we will now describe.


What does "Independent" NOT mean?

A councillor that becomes "Independent" by default, for example the Brighton Labour councillors who are now under investigation for anti-semitism - is NOT an Independent. We prefer that they be labelled simply in the "Disgraced" group - of course, if they have been found guilty. If they are not found guilty, then the Independent label is fine, providing they pass the above tests.

A councillor that stands as an Independent, whilst still being an undeclared member of a political party - is NOT an Independent councillor.

A councillor that does not listen to the residents that they represent, and does not act on their concerns - is NOT an Independent councillor.

A councillor who claims to be "Independent" but actually gets paid extra allowance to work in the Cabinet or Executive of a Council with a Westminster party, is NOT an Independent councillor.

A councillor who fails any of the other tests we set above, is NOT an Independent councillor.

Sadly, we feel that there are several councillors in Somerset that fail the tests. We are not going to name names - at this stage. We call on them to be honest with residents and not call themselves "Independent".


Friday, July 24, 2020

UPDATED (20/5/23) - Pope's Pandemic Prediction on Flexible Working Comes To Pass - Work Is Necessary - Offices and Shops Are Not


UPDATE (20/5/23): Pope's Pandemic Prediction on Flexible Working Comes To Pass
 
Commenting on discussions on the future of work, and predictions that he made during the Pandemic, Andrew Pope says:
 
Andrew Pope
 "As predicted by me here on the Somerset Independents website, changes to the workplace were needed and wanted by workers across the country. Flexible working will become law and become the norm to be available from the start, as reported by ITV News.
 
What is so remarkable is that this did not happen before the Pandemic. It should not have taken employers to have a Global Pandemic to listen to their workers. That this was necessary tells us a lot about employers.
Almost twenty years ago, when I was a union representative, I was advocating for flexible working in the IT industry, in the jobs that I and my fellow workers were doing. We already had remote working, yet were expected to go into the office. It was totally unnecessary and literally a waste of our time and of the company's time. That travel time could also be spent working.
Yet as shown in the ITV report, we still see resistance from dinosaurs like Jacob Rees-Mogg and Alan Sugar that seem to put their own property portfolios first, or bad employers that do not assess their workers on their output, rather than being fixated on their location or being able to watch over them.
Why do they need to be so overbearing on their workers and have to physically watch them?
It is completely unnecessary if they train and motivate their workers, and the work is rewarding.

If employers really need their workers to be on site, it should be for productivity reasons and legitimate reasons - not just that they do not trust their workers.
 
As I said then:
 
"If employers don't trust their employees, why did they employ them in the first place and why are they still employing them? Avenues exist for sorting out low productivity employees, such as training, support and ultimately, disciplinary and grievance procedures."

I am delighted that workers will now get flexible working rights and that it will be the law to be able to ask for them from day one."

---
UPDATE (24/6/22): Our predictions have proved correct again. As the national BBC News has reported, train strikes have not caused as much chaos as was feared, because of the effects of the Pandemic. As we suggested in the article below two years ago, long-term changes to how people work would occur. And they have.
 "The pandemic has meant many firms are now geared up to switch to remote working.

According to official figures, 38% of workers now spend some of the week working from home."

But the impact of the strikes has still been significant. As Craig Beaumont of the Federation of Small Businesses said yesterday on BBC Breakfast, there is a split in two of the workforce - those that can do their job remotely have been able to adjust with the agreement of their employers, but those who cannot do their job remotely have been inconvenienced or cannot work at all. 
 
There is a different impact and this may mean that the already lower paid suffer even more, during the cost-of-living crisis and inflation at record levels. And so the strikes are not only affected passengers, but workers outside the rail industry too.

Unlike many other local media in Somerset, we have strived to report on the impact of the train strikes and the Pandemic on Somerset residents and Somerset workers. 
 
We have also given the Right of Reply to those on strike - the RMT union, and Conservative MPs as well as Somerset Labour and Somerset Lib Dems. So far, only the RMT union and local TUC have replied to our questions.
 
---
 

In the original Think Piece below, written by our Leader Andrew Pope and published in July 2020, Andrew suggested that there would be long-term impacts of the Pandemic on businesses and employment.
 
This has turned out to be the case.
 
Andrew says:
Andrew Pope

"I was right to predict long-term changes. These can't be wished away by the Government, which is responsible for disruption, poverty, death and illness on a massive scale. Their job is to protect British citizens and British workers but they failed. 
Instead, here in Somerset, the Somerset Tories and Tory Government have imposed an unnecessary and unwanted change to our local councils. And as we've shown on this website repeatedly, and when speaking at meetings, the local Tories at Somerset County Council failed to stand up against the Government.

David Fothergill and his Tory cronies are lickspittles of the worst kind - of the failure that is Boris Johnson.

Boris Johnson's Government seems to want to wish away the Pandemic, all the deaths and illnesses and disruption to businesses that happened when Johnson was supposed to be in charge as Prime Minister, and to forget that it ever happened. Johnson has no authority.
 
Johnson wants us to pretend that Covid-19 is just like the common cold. But it isn't. The Pandemic is not over, but Johnson wants to pretend that it is. I've heard it this week from Conservative councillors here in Somerset - and a Tory on Question Time - claiming that "Partygate" should be "got over". No, it should not. The audience at Question Time laughed, but they were angry at Boris Johnson's lies when he misled Parliament.
 
We know that Johnson's own staff at Downing Street, ignored the rules - ignored the law - that Johnson's own Government set and which MPs across the House of Commons supported. Then Boris Johnson lied about his own Downing Street staff and his own Government. 
This is why Somerset Tories don't want to comment when I have challenged them to. They put their Party first and residents last.

Johnson does not seem to have any authority, even amongst his own staff. And he certainly has no authority amongst Somerset people.

So going back to my predictions... 
The Think Piece that I wrote nearly two years ago, suggested that office work would reduce. It has massively reduced. I suggested that shops would close. As shown below, they have closed on a huge scale.

Now that infections are at record levels, the Financial Times is reporting "offices emptying fast". When will the Government help employers to make the changes that are permanent? Our country has been saddled with crippling debts for future generations to pay off but employment is struggling to adapt. The latest P & O Ferries debacle is just one example.
Some employers are taking the initiative, but this is no thanks to the Government who it is clear, are controlled by special interests instead of the national interest.

Whether Government wants to pretend or not, it is the British public and British employers, that have to try to adjust to long-term and permanent changes to employment in Britain that were caused by the Pandemic and the Government's slow response to the Pandemic. 
Government should help, but it was more of a hindrance than a help. And it is still a hindrance by operating wishful thinking instead of dealing with reality.

This Government has shown that with Covid-19, as with pretty much anything else, the British Government is largely impotent or incompetent at dealing with the things that matter to British people. 
Did Labour offer any realistic alternative nationally? No, it did not.

Did the Somerset Lib Dems offer any realistic alternative locally? No, it did not.

Once again, it's another case or Labour, Lib Dem or Tory, same old story."
 
--- 

UPDATE (19/2/22): The BBC's Business Correspondent Emma Simpson has written an article showing that "more than 17,000 chain store shops closed last year". 
 
As our Leader Andrew Pope suggested in the below article from July 2020, existing trends of closures have been continued and magnified during the Pandemic. The trends in Andrew's article have turned out to be correct. 
 
The research mentioned in the BBC article was conducted by Price Waterhouse Coopers (PwC) and these results "reflect the rise of online shopping and the impact of the pandemic."
 
Andrew says:
 

 
"Somerset Independents wants to see Somerset thrive and if Somerset is to thrive, it is important that trends are recognised and opportunities for business are supported by local authorities and national Government.
 
We will continue to try to identify these opportunities so that we can meet the aims of Somerset Independents to stand up for residents and workers, and to promote businesses in Somerset.
 
We don't just say that we do this. It is written in our Constitution and we listen to act for residents, workers and businesses."

---
 
UPDATE (6/5/21): The BBC reports huge changes to how and where people work, as predicted by the Think Piece below, which Andrew Pope wrote and we published in July 2020.
 
People want to work from home more, and it seems that companies are responding to the requests. In the piece, employers say that they will allow their employees to choose, and a hybrid model of office and home working will allow this.
 
--- 
 
UPDATE (16/8/20): The BBC reports on more research that shows that people want to work from home.
 

Coronavirus: Appetite grows for home working and local lockdowns

"King's College London (KCL) has been tracking attitudes during the pandemic.

Results from a survey reveal that 86% believe that, until a vaccine is found, workers should be able to decide whether they returned to the office.

Experts said the results show people are prioritising public health over the economy and their social lives."

 
---
 
UPDATE (31/7/20): The BBC reports on a range of people who want to carry on working from home, and more survey research supporting it. Meanwhile, the workplace advisory service ACAS are still advising that:

"Staff should continue to work from home if they can."

Andrew Pope says:

"From anecdotal reports and survey evidence, it is clear that people want to carry on working from home. What will be interesting to see is how many of them continue to do so, and how many of them will return to offices. A lot of this will be to do with employment law and the power relationships between employers and employees. Employers and employees may tray to argue that there has been a variation of the employment contract through "custom and practice". And both sides may try specious arguments to make their case.
 
We will see how it pans out, but I believe that this is a pivotal moment that needs to be grasped to make positive lasting change that should have happened years ago."
---

UPDATE (25/7/20): The i reports latest research showing that employers and employees agree with our suggestions that changes are needed and wanted.

---

Co-Founder of Somerset Independents Andrew Pope writes...

Somerset Independents has already written about the changes to education that have been brought about by the Covid-19 virus, in our piece "Education Is Compulsory - School Is Not". Somerset residents have responded positively to our reminder that parents have the choice as to how to educate their children.

In contrast, vested interests such as national Government, local councils, headteachers, teachers and unions are struggling to cope with the realisation that they have to adjust or they will soon be redundant. They are desperately asserting that "school is best", even when responsible parents have seen from their own experiences that home education is the best for their children and for the bonding of their family. The limitations of schools pre-existed Covid-19 and they have been exposed and exacerbated by the National Emergency.

We believe that permanent changes to the workplace, and to retail, have also occurred. With reports of London's Oxford Street and Bond Street being as "dead as a dodo" today (a Friday), it is a fact that existing trends have been exacerbated.

Again, vested interests such as the British Retail Consortium, the Confederation of British Industry (CBI) and the Trades Union Congress (TUC) are struggling to cope with the realisation that times have changed. Like in education, they regularly try to justify their own existence by carping on about their members being under threat. They are definitely right to be unsure about the health and safety of their members - at schools, in shops or in the workplace. But the problems with workplaces and retail have pre-existed Covid-19. Consumers have been ripped off for too long. Better ways exist.

For many years, employers and employees have had the ability to agree "flexible working". These changes were originally only for parents, but more and more workers have agreed to change their working practises. Done properly and working it out together, it can be a great situation for employer and employee - as long as higher productivity is the result. Workers feel that they are more productive, the latest surveys have shown, as reported by The i. Workers have suffered for too long. Productivity has struggled to reach the levels in other countries. Better ways exist.

With the advent of the Coronavirus and the lockdown, it has been essential for workers to use remote digital technologies and broadband to be able to carry on their work. As the New Statesman has pointed out, office-working has become home-working. And workers want it to continue. Yet there are vested interests that want to stop them - the Government thinks that they should travel to work, just to prop up cafes, restaurants and pubs that service workers. No, we say - the economy can change to be more efficient and productive.

For some, this has led to home-shirking, with employers not able to "supervise" them at home.

Others have been furloughed by their employers to be paid with Government money, but still forced to work. There has been fraud of the Government bailouts. More unintended consequences occur when legislation is rushed - despite the virus being known about for at least three months before the legislation. And then law enforcers get over-run. That is for another article...

Yet workers have realised that the commute is unnecessary. Commuting for hours every day can be better spent with loved ones, or being more productive. And travel money can be saved.

Workers have realised that the office is redundant. Not only is it unnecessary, it is unsafe and unhealthy.

Some employers worry that too much home-working leads to home-shirking, but shouldn't they evaluate their employees on productivity, not on the number of hours spent in the office? Surely productivity is better than presenteeism?

If employers don't trust their employees, why did they employ them in the first place and why are they still employing them? Avenues exist for sorting out low productivity employees, such as training, support and ultimately, disciplinary and grievance procedures.

Or do some unscrupulous employers know that their jobs are so unsatisfying, so unworthy of human attentions, that the only way to sustain them is to use a form of Jeremy Bentham's Panopticon to surveil their workers? That is, the office as a Panopticon? If they do, it needs to stop and they need to think again.

Obviously, not all jobs can be done remotely. Farming, manufacturing, construction, hairdressing and more, have to be done in-person.

But with modern Information and Communications Technology (ICT), so many jobs can be done remotely. Hybrid arrangements such as hot-desking, and only essential in-person meetings, are possible and we would argue, desirable.

And as for shops being necessary? Are they really? Not any more.

E-commerce has grown year-on-year. Now, with the lockdown, it has boomed. In-person retail was already struggling, but the lockdown has meant that people have flocked online to buy. Only today, the ONS has confirmed that 30% of sales are online.

The ONS said via the BBC:
"But the real growth has been in online sales. Online sales continue to go from strength to strength."
Delivery companies are recruiting massively. eBay even bailed out the Government who had massively failed to protect health and care workers by providing enough PPE to the NHS, with its eBay NHS Portal.

People are realising that it is not necessary to use transport to live their lives, or to buy stuff. Cars, trains, planes and buses are unnecessary for so many things.

With better planning, decent broadband - especially in rural areas, the right delivery networks and home delivery with safe working practices for customers and staff, a new, more efficient and safer way of buying and selling is possible.

Not only is it possible, it is desirable for the reduction of energy usage, slashing the use of carbon fuels (e.g. as delivery company DPD are doing with their increased rollout of electric vehicles) and the reduction in natural resources.

There are better ways to live. The virus has forced them on us to a certain extent. But those existing malaises have been exposed and now the existing trends have been exacerbated.

And if there is a silver lining to the monstrous Covid-19 clouds, it is that the future of work and retail can change for the better. It's a massive opportunity, but it needs to be taken.

It requires Government to invest in making those changes, instead of artificially propping up already dying sectors of our economy, and their old and failed working practises.

Our country has been there before, in the 1970s and 1980s and it took decades of pain for our country to adjust. Let's learn from those mistakes NOW, with gradual adjustment and radical thinking.

Andrew Pope, M.Sc. Social Sciences (Soton)


Our Co-Founders



Denise Wyatt and Andrew Pope co-founded Somerset Independents during the Covid-19 National Emergency in 2020, due to the appalling behaviour and failures of local councils and the Government.

Denise Wyatt
 
Denise Wyatt

 
Denise Wyatt worked for over twenty years in several councils across the South of England, specialising in governance.

Denise strongly believes that councils are there to serve local residents and to involve local residents.

She was Andrew's Election Agent when he stood for Labour in New Forest East at the 2015 General Election, and when Andrew stood for Southampton Independents in Southampton Test at the 2017 General Election.

Denise also stood as an Independent candidate for Southampton City Council in 2016 and 2018. Andrew was her Election Agent on both occasions.

Because of her experience, Denise has seen over the years that the Westminster parties let people down, and that all councils should consist of only Independent councillors.


 

Andrew Pope

Andrew Pope


Andrew Pope (B.Sc (Hons) Computer Science Leeds, M.Sc Global Politics and International Relations Southampton) worked in the IT industry for over twenty years as a contractor and employee for the Australian Department of Defence, South Australian State Housing Department, Honeywell, Mitsubishi Motors, AXA and B & Q. His first paid job was as a paperboy in North London.

Andrew became a union representative and then negotiator with the UNIFI (later AMICUS) financial services union and joined The RSPB, campaigning to protect wildlife and the countryside.

He interned at the pressure group Compass in London and was also Chair of the Hampshire Co-operative Party and Secretary of Southampton Fabian Society. He co-founded Labour Friends of Football, successfully campaigning  for the Living Wage to be paid to all staff at professional football clubs.

As a mature student, Andrew completed a Masters degree in Global Politics at Southampton University in 2010, 18 years after his Bachelors degree in Computer Science at Leeds University in 1992.

Andrew was a Southampton City Councillor between 2011 and 2019 - first for Labour - having previously stood as Labour Candidate and working for Southampton Labour Party and Alan Whitehead MP in 2010, meeting his Star Trek hero Patrick Stewart when out campaigning with students.

After giving it great thought, and consulting with those he trusted most, Andrew made the very difficult decision to resign from Labour in disgust at Ed Miliband's Labour Leadership and the failing Labour Administration of Southampton City Council one week after the 2015 General Election and local elections, despite trying to ensure the Labour Council's manifesto pledges that he had co-ordinated were met, and despite being offered a position in the Council Cabinet.

He was therefore, with great regret, forced to resign from all of the above Labour-related positions.

Andrew chose to become an Independent councillor and to continue to stand up for his local residents against the appalling ideas of the Labour-run Council's Leader and Cabinet and instead, to provide loud opposition in spite of the weak Conservative Opposition.

Like Denise, Andrew strongly believes that councils and governments are there to serve local residents, to listen to and to involve local residents. They formed Southampton Independents with other local residents.

Andrew stood for Parliament for Southampton Independents in the Southampton Test Constituency at the 2017 General Election. Two years before, he was the Labour Candidate in the New Forest East Constituency at the 2015 General Election.

Andrew was the Election Agent for Denise when she stood as an Independent candidate for Southampton City Council in 2016 and for Southampton Independents in 2018.

From his experience and beliefs, Andrew coined the phrase "Labour, Lib Dem, Green or Tory, it's the same old story". He knows that that Westminster parties let people down too much, and that all councils should consist of only Independent councillors that serve their local residents, not their political masters in London.

Andrew also believes that councillors should, like MPs, be subject to "recall" by their constituents, if sufficient people sign a petition that they should face an election. He is working on this campaign in the light of fake "independent" councillors in Somerset and across England. Andrew is also continuing to campaign for Safe Standing at football grounds in England.

Andrew runs a small e-commerce business and is a technical consultant and political consultant.

Saturday, July 18, 2020

UPDATE (2/7/22): Appeal Allowed - Development To Go Ahead - Wyke Farms Castle Cary Monstrosity REFUSED TWICE


UPDATE (2/7/22)
 
We have asked Wyke Farms to respond to our articles about them and the advocacy done by David Warburton MP, who is under investigation as reported on this website and in the national news.
 
The appeal was allowed by the Planning Inspector, as reported here.
 
Wyke Farms and Hopkins have got their development approved, despite local residents not wanting it. The Inspector noted that "Local opposition to the development has been considerable", with it previously being refused twice, but approved it anyway.
 
---
 
UPDATE (10/11/21): The Public Inquiry by the Planning Inspectorate was adjourned, after "IT issues". Castle Cary Town Council said:
 
"Due to IT issues at Caryford Hall that cannot be resolved by SSDC,  the Inspector has announced that the Public Inquiry will be adjourned and will reconvene as a virtual event on 24th November, 1st, 2nd & 3rd December. More details to follow."
 
SSDC is South Somerset District Council - the same Council that tried to cover up the councillors who did not pay their council tax, as revealed by the investigations by Somerset Independents.
 
---
 
UPDATE (10/10/21) Our investigations into Wyke Farms questionable "100% Green" claims are now reported in a new article on our website, here.
 
---
 
Councillors on committees at South Somerset District Council have TWICE refused the hugely unpopular and unsightly Wyke Farm Ltd and Andrew Hopkins Concrete Ltd development next to Castle Cary Railway Station.

There were 68 written comments from the public, with 67 objecting and only 1 supporting. This is a large number of objections and shows how unpopular the proposal was with local people and the parish councils.

To give just two examples, Ansford Parish Council called it "opportunistic" in their objection and "a highly conspicuous scar upon our countryside". It was also described by a member of Castle Cary Town Council as "mad in planning terms that one small market town should be swamped just because land has become available thanks to greedy local landowners".

The proposal was:

"APPLICATION NO 19/01840/OUT
APPLICANT Wyke Farm Ltd And Andrew Hopkins Concrete Ltd PARISH: Ansford
DESCRIPTION: Erection of 200 dwellings (70 affordable and 130 open market) with
associated highways, drainage, landscaping and public open space.
LOCATION: Land North Of Ansford Hill Ansford Castle Cary Somerset BA7 7PD
(GR:363280/133315)
"

The Council's Regulation Committee is what other councils call their Planning Committee. In June's virtual Regulation Committee, councillors refused the application. The planning officer's recommendation had been to refuse. So councillors agreed with the recommendation.

And at the preceding meeting, the Council's Area East Committee in May, the officer's recommendation had also been to refuse the application.

Due to the Council's Constitution, the Regulation Committee has the final say. It could have been overturned by that Committee, or the Chief Executive (due to the Council giving this officer more powers during the Coronavirus National Emergency). But it wasn't.

Somerset Independents applauds both Committees' refusal and congratulates the councillors that made the decision. This is the much-maligned planning system at its best - listening and acting on residents concerns. This is what Somerset Independents encourages.

However, Somerset Independents Spokesperson on Planning Denise Wyatt asks:


"How did the recommendation become a refusal recommendation?

Was the Council following its own policy?

Is it consistent with other decisions?

Will the applicants appeal?"


The official reason for refusal given to Wyke Farms and Hopkins Concrete was:

"The development, by reason of its scale and location, represents a visually obtrusive encroachment beyond the town's obvious physical and topographically informed limits and into the open countryside, to the detriment of local and landscape character. This harm would significantly and demonstrably outweigh the benefits of the proposal and would be contrary to policies SD1, SS1, SS5, EQ2, EQ3, LMT1 of the South Somerset Local Plan (2006-2028), policy DP1 and the aims and objectives of the Castle Cary and Ansford Neighbourhood Plan (2019), and the provisions of the NPPF."

Other questions are being raised about planning at South Somerset.

This week, at the virtual Full Council meeting South Somerset District Council, which Somerset Independents spoke at, we heard several party political rants from Liberal Democrat and Conservative councillors.

One such rant was from Conservative Councillor Sue Osborne, who sits on the Regulation Committee. She claimed that Simon Fox, Lead Specialist in Planning, had left the Council. Mr Fox's name appeared on the refusal letter sent to Wyke Farms. Councillor Osborne also claimed that 3 other planning officers had left and that the planning function was in disarray.

Leader of Somerset Independents Andrew Pope says:

"It could well be that Councillor Osborne was off on another party political rant. But if there is a problem in the planning function, and these departures have occurred as symptoms or a cause of these problems - and not due to the Council's  'transformation programme' that includes redundancies - the public need to know.
Somerset Independents is seeking the truth. Just like at Mendip District Council planning, we want to know what is happening in planning at South Somerset District Council. If they are reliant on temporary staff, that will cost local residents in terms of taxpayers money and suffer in the quality of work due to a lack of local knowledge and experience.
Local plans, neighbourhood plans, national policy - they all seem to be so open to interpretation that they might as well not exist!
Meanwhile, Somerset residents are suffering from bad decisions - at least the councillors intervened on the side of residents in this case. Other residents are not so lucky."
 

Thursday, July 16, 2020

Why Is Party Politics Bad For Our Country and County?



Putting Somerset Residents First


Across the Somerset Independents website, and elsewhere, we often state our shared belief:

"The Westminster parties almost always let you down. The local branches of the London parties - Conservatives, Labour, Liberal Democrats and Greens - always let you down. They are party political puppets that put themselves and their party first, and you and our County a very distant second."

There are so many examples of this, that we could not show them all on just one website.

One recent example is the pledge - on successive General Election manifestos - by the Conservative Party and the Labour Party - to keep the Free TV Licence for Over 75s.

They consistently promised to keep it, and to avoid a means-test.

But now it's gone - and the Tories are trying to blame the BBC for it. It was a political decision by Government, and the BBC has foolishly carried the can for the Conservative Government's con trick.

The Free TV Licence is just another promise broken and another example of General Election manifestos being a big con.

If you want another example - how about the following one?

The Conservative Party has withdrawn its support in Parliament ("The Whip") from a long-standing and highly-respected expert on defence, intelligence and related matters - Dr Julian Lewis, MP for New Forest East. Dr Lewis now becomes an "Independent" MP.

Why is this relevant to Somerset?


Because the audit of a Council that is at risk of suffering harshly from Covid-19 complications, is too important for party politics. Yesterday's article goes into more detail, but what matters more than being an apologist for a failing Minority Administration is having the right person for the job.

In Mendip District Council's case, we do not believe that the right person can be the Lib Dem Councillor, for many good reasons. An Independent councillor would be much better in that role.

In the Intelligence and Security Committee (ISC)'s case, that person is newly-Independent MP Dr Julian Lewis. He had been a Conservative MP for a long time and he was respected by his peers across parties, for his expertise on defence matters.

Former Tory MP Dominic Grieve and former Chair of the ISC, said in the BBC report:

"The committee can only exist, the committee can only be respected... if it is seen to be non-partisan, and independent."

We totally agree. Yet the Westminster parties still carry on, manipulating the system for their own gain, putting their puppets in positions, rather than putting the best people in, for the national interest. That is the case in Somerset and it is the case in Westminster too.

Our Leader Andrew Pope stood against Dr Lewis in the 2015 General Election, before he became more enlightened and resigned from the Labour Party that same year to become an Independent campaigner and councillor. Andrew says:
"I disagreed then and still do, with Dr Lewis on very many issues. The issue that I agreed with him the most on, was defence. Like Julian, I too have a background in the defence industry, working for Government and private contractors.
Despite challenging Julian at the election and at the hustings events, one of the most hilarious situations that we shared was at one of the Election hustings.
Unbelievably, the Green candidate cited the education of Iraqis about birds and bees that would encourage peace - in response to a serious question from a member of the public about armed conflict, nuclear weapons and International Relations. Trying to keep a straight face on the stage was difficult for us as Parliamentary candidates!
What has happened with the ISC is that the Conservative Party has shown that it is willing to put serial failure 'Failing Chris Grayling' in such an important role for our Country. He would have been another party political puppet for the Tories. Who knows what peril he would have put our country in?

The Conservative Party wanted a puppet like Chris Grayling instead of the credible candidate Julian Lewis! What an absolute joke - I can't stop laughing about it, but it is deadly serious.
I am pleased that the members of the ISC voted Dr Lewis in. Let's hope that they keep him there. Bearing in mind that according to the legislation that created the ISC, the Leader of the Opposition has to be consulted for nominations, and presumably for their removal, I would love to hear such a conversation between Boris Johnson and Keir Starmer. Sir Starmer might even break a smile.
I wish Dr Lewis well in his new-found status as an Independent MP, although I would question how 'independent' he will be, considering his record and that he remains a member of the Conservative Party until he resigns or has his membership revoked by Party apparatchiks. But that's London parties for you.
We hope that Dr Lewis puts his Country before his former Party, and carries out his duties in the national interest and not in his former Party's interest. I would send him an e-mail wishing him well, but he doesn't respond to emails."
 

Wednesday, July 15, 2020

UPDATE (29/7/20): Mendip Chief Financial Officer Replaced




UPDATE (29/7/20): COUNCILLORS TOLD NOT TO ASK QUESTIONS ABOUT DEPARTED S151 OFFICER

At Mendip District's Council virtual Full Council meeting on Monday, the Chair of the Meeting Councillor Helen Sprawson-White was scripted (the Chair is given a script to read from) to tell councillors that they should not ask questions about the previous S151 Officer.

They were only there to consider the replacement officer, she told them. We quote:

"I'd really like to note for everybody that this item relates purely to endorsing the appointment of the new S151 Officer and it's not a time to be asking questions about our previous officer."

What was going on there?

---

Council documents reveal that Paul Deal, who was Mendip District Council's Chief Financial Officer - or in Council speak according to legislation - "S151 Officer" has left the Council.

The S151 Officer "is responsible for ensuring the financial probity of the Council’s business operations".

Somerset Independents is not aware of whether Mr Deal resigned or was dismissed. Further, we do not know whether additional budget was involved in any settlement. We could ask the Council but they would not tell us anyway, as it would be deemed confidential employment information - despite the fact that it is one of the highest-paid taxpayer-funded roles in the Council.

Based on the Council documents, it appears that Mr Deal was still in post on 9th July as he signed off documentation. Other Council documents were released in advance of the 20th July Full Council meeting. So it appears that Mr Deal left some time between those two dates.

During the Council's budget-setting process early in 2020, there were not one but two extra meetings that had to be scheduled due to mistakes in the original budget. This is highly unusual.

One extraordinary meeting took place on 5th March but the other that was scheduled for 30th March never took place. The Council says that it was due to Covid-19 but the arrangements to deal with the problem are unclear. Perhaps it will be dealt with at the next Full Council. At the time of writing, we are unable to confirm this.

Leader of Somerset Independents Andrew Pope observed the Council's Audit Committee earlier this year. He says:

"Members of Somerset Independents observed the virtual meeting. Alarm bells were ringing in our minds throughout the meeting, not least on how poorly the Chair, Councillor Joshua Burr, conducted events.

We were very concerned how the S151 Officer addressed the meeting, his grasp of the risks facing the Council and how poorly the S151 Officer was held to account by councillors.
There were clearly other recent issues with financial control, including issues raised in the External Audit by Ernst and Young and in the Internal Audit by the South West Audit Partnership. 
Somerset Independents was concerned about the finances of Mendip District Council before the Covid-19 Emergency. Bearing in mind that Mendip is continuing its "commercial investment" programme, and commercial property valuations will now be even more unstable - if they can be believed - we are now even more concerned."

Deputy Leader of Somerset Independents, Denise Wyatt, says:
"Somerset Independents believes that an Independent councillor should chair the Audit Committee, as such a role is too important for party politics.

How can it be right that a Liberal Democrat Councillor is 'auditing' a Liberal Democrat-led Administration and its finances?

Somerset Independents' view is that a councillor who is not in the same party as the Administration, or better - an Independent - should preside over the Audit Committee.

That should increase the chances of true audit occurring, and decrease the chances of soft questioning or cover-ups to protect the Party instead of auditing public funds.

A new Chair should be appointed, at the same time as the new S151 Officer.
The new S151 Officer should be instructed by the Leader of the Council to conduct an urgent review of finances when he is appointed."

The new S151 Officer is Richard Bates, who is due to be formally approved at the Council's Full Council on Monday 20th July. Mr Bates is former S151 Officer of Dorset County Council. His appointment is interim for six months.




Sunday, July 12, 2020

VICTORY: Mendip Council: Being A Councillor AND Development Agent is OK!


Update (4/8/20): We are declaring victory in our campaign (of sorts).

Mendip District Council has told us that they will be reviewing the rules.

And the only Mendip councillor that we are aware of who acts as an agent for planning applications - Conservative Group Leader Councillor Tom Killen (see below) - has told us, in response to our questions, that he would be "content" to follow the rules if they were changed to stop him and other councillors from acting as agents in the Mendip area. He even said that he was prepared to "restructure" his business.

But actions speak louder than words.

We won't believe that Mendip District Council will change the rules, until they actually confirmed that they have.

---

We don't think that it is OK for a Development Agent to be a Councillor in the same Council that makes planning decisions, so please read on to see why and to see that we want to hear your views, and why you hold those views.

Somerset Independents has been reporting on strange behaviour at Mendip District Council, particularly with planning and the development of land.

Sometimes we will say what we think.

Sometimes we will report on what other residents think.

And sometimes we will report the facts only and let you make up your own mind, and hopefully then you will tell us what you think.

This article is the latter type of article. We don't think it is OK, and this is based on sound practice and advice. Here are the facts.

It is a fact that the Local Government Association, which is a national association for local councils states in its "Probity in Planning" Guidance for councils that, and we quote:
"Officers and serving councillors must not
act as agents for people pursuing planning
matters within their authority, even if they are
not involved in the decision making on them."
This Guidance is:
"about ensuring that decisions on plan making and planning applications are undertaken, on behalf of communities, in a fair, impartial and transparent way. This guide has been written for officers and councillors involved in making planning decisions in their local authority.

It is also a fact that councillors at Mendip District Council have TWICE considered this advice in formal meetings since 2011. This is shown in the minutes of the September 2018 Standards Committee.

Instead of taking this advice, councillors have TWICE rejected making it a part of their rules, in their Constitution.

This is despite the fact that at other councils, this advice has been acted upon and included in those councils' constitutions.

Somerset Independents asks you to consider:

Why is Mendip District Council an exception?

Why would Mendip District Council not want to promote decisions on planning applications that are made in a fair, impartial and transparent way?

It is also a fact that we have raised this with current Mendip councillors.

And none of those that we contacted took action to ensure this advice was heeded.

Worse, councillors on the Planning Board actively encouraged it to continue to take place.

At the 10th June 2020 virtual meeting of the Mendip Planning Board, it can be seen on the online recording, that EVERY SINGLE COUNCILLOR on the Board supported planning application:

"
2020/0169/OTS | Erection of an agricultural workers dwelling. | Manor Farm Chapel Street Upton Noble Shepton Mallet BA4 6BA"

It is a fact that not a single councillor raised the application for discussion, despite the fact that the Application Form clearly stated that the Agent was Tom Killen, who is a serving councillor as can be seen on the Council website.

Instead of opposing the application because of this clear contravention of the LGA Guidance, every single councillor on the Planning Board supported the application going ahead by officer recommendation.

Councillor Killen is listed on the application form as having an address at Mendip Auction Rooms. The same Tom Killen is one of the two partners of  Killens LLP (Chartered Surveyors and Property Agents). The other partner is Sally Killen, who is also a director of Mendip Auction Rooms. All addresses match the address on Councillor Killen's councillor page. In addition, both companies which are "Disclosable Pecuniary Interests" are both stated on Councillor Killen's Declaration of Interest, also available on the Council's website.

It is also interesting to note that Councillor Killen declared an interest and left the Standards Committee in 2018, when this very issue was considered. So Cllr Killen left that meeting, but still the councillors present (John Carter, Shane Collins and John Greenhalgh) decided against amending the Constitution and that having agents that are councillors in the same council is OK!

At the same meeting, the councillors also decided against vetting councillors by the Disclosures and Barring Service (DBS). In our opinion, this was also unwise for many very important reasons such as the protection of children and vulnerable adults.

We re-state the Guidance:
"Officers and serving councillors must not
act as agents for people pursuing planning
matters within their authority, even if they are
not involved in the decision making on them."
and let you make your own mind up, based on the evidence that we have exposed and that we present to you here.



Tell your councillor.

Tell the councillors who voted for it - full list below*. Councillor contact details are on the Council website here.

Tell Mendip District Council.

---

* Full List of Mendip District councillors who voted the application through without discussion on 10th June 2020 at the Planning Board. It was a "full house" according to the Chair:

Councillor Eve Berry (Conservative)
Councillor Peter Goater (Liberal Democrat member of the Cabinet)
Councillor Francis Hayden (Green)
Councillor Nigel Hewitt-Cooper (Conservative and Vice-Chair of Planning Board)
Councillor Edric Hobbs (he was "Independent" but since the meeting has joined the Liberal Democrats)
Councillor Damon Hooton (Liberal Democrat and Chair of Planning Board)
Councillor Helen Kay (Green)
Councillor Lindsay MacDougall (Green)
Councillor Matt Martin (Liberal Democrat)
Councillor Mike Pullin (Conservative)
Councillor Heather Shearer (Liberal Democrat member of the Cabinet)
Councillor Laura Waters (Liberal Democrat)
Councillor Ros Wyke (Liberal Democrat, Leader of the Council and member of the Cabinet)