Things have gone quite at the District Council over its relocation project, following the refusal of planning permission for Pegasus:
Futures Forum: Knowle relocation project: planning application REFUSED by District Council >>> further reports
... and the publication of the contract with Pegasus:
Futures Forum: Knowle relocation project: full Pegasus contract published
Meanwhile, more questions are being asked about the viability of the project:
Futures Forum: Knowle relocation project: time for some number crunching >>> a £17 million cost ... or even £30 million?
Futures Forum: Knowle relocation project: further hidden costs and out-of-date documentation
Futures Forum: Knowle relocation project: throwing good money after bad >>> How the Honiton and Exmouth HQs will not improve on the current HQ
Futures Forum: Knowle relocation project: What are the costs to date and what are the projected costs?
And new FOI requests have been posted:
Costs to date of Knowle, Honiton and Exmouth relocation exercise - a Freedom of Information request to East Devon District Council - WhatDoTheyKnow
C2 and C3 land use classification for Knowle development - a Freedom of Information request to East Devon District Council - WhatDoTheyKnow
Business case for Knowle relocation project – 1st February 2017 - a Freedom of Information request to East Devon District Council - WhatDoTheyKnow
The Cabinet has been reconsidering its position:
Futures Forum: Knowle relocation project: latest report to Cabinet >>> the District Council’s 'commitment' to sell its HQ has been 'stymied' by a decision of the planning committee
And will be doing so again:
eastdevon.gov.uk/media/1990083/combinedcabagenda080217final.pdf
As noted by the EDW blog:
RELOCATION AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT REORGANISATION – A CHANCE TO SAVE MONEY!
2 FEB 2017
What is currently more important in local government? Saving money, saving money by merger or being profligate? These seem to be the stark choices facing our district, with its reliance on the Local Enterprise Partnership for strategy, direction and funding.
Closer examination of the agenda for the next Cabinet meeting reveals that there are two references to local government reorganisation: at the bottom of page 111 and on page 115:
“Identify opportunities for rationalising/improving existing public sector governance arrangements and make recommendations to the constituent authorities/partners”
This appears to be a clear reference, as it not only refers to reform, but also says that the recommendations will go to ‘constituent authorities’. In other words we are not talking just about the LEP. The new Joint Committee clearly has mergers in mind. Add “Greater Exeter” into the mix and we come out with even more likelihood of massive changes. THEN add a mooted “Golden Triangle LEP” and we have a truly chaotic situation.
Owl wonders if these are circumstances in which to pursue a new HQ for EDDC at Honiton. Any proposal involving EDDC and avoiding building at Honiton can immediately claim to have made a minimum saving of £10 million plus interest payments, plus many associated costs – savings now being the mantra nowadays.
The relocation from Knowle could, in the above circumstances prove to be most expensive suicide note in the history of our district. And those EDDC members who waved through the move to Honiton, without the slightest idea of the cost, could in these circumstances be likened to turkeys voting for Christmas.
We have seen with the reorganisation in Dorset, that the reform and merger of local government authorities is very much in the air, and Dorset has been suggesting that the creation of two unitaries will lead to annual savings of many millions of pounds.
So it’s not surprising that things have gone very quiet with EDDC relocation. Firstly, there is local government reorganisation all around us and within our nearby city and the county. Secondly, the Pegasus deal for Knowle has seemingly gone very much on the back burner.
We have recently seen the formal separation – ‘decoupling’ – of the Exmouth Town Hall work from the Honiton proposal which seems to have had more to do with mothballing Honiton than it had to do with allowing Exmouth to proceed more quickly.
Work to refurbish Knowle is almost certainly millions of pounds cheaper than relocating. Plus, a new building in Honiton would immediately depreciate enormously on day one of occupation – 50% plus has been suggested.
Of course, PegasusLife could always put in a planning application for the Honiton site!
Relocation and local government reorganisation – a chance to save money! | East Devon Watch
.
.
.
No comments:
Post a Comment