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Tuesday, 29 January 2019

Devon: taxing second homes fairly

'Second homes' are not generally politically popular in many parts of the world:
Futures Forum: The New Zealand 'experiment' comes to an end with banning non-residents from buying housing 
Futures Forum: Sidmouth has the largest number of second home sales in East Devon

Because they are seen as pushing up the price of housing for locals:
Futures Forum: A solution to our housing problems: do something about second homes

There have been pushes to end the tax system around second homes for some time:
Futures Forum: Devon: taxing second homes 
Futures Forum: The West Country: taxing second homes

And now a District Council in Devon is asking for action to be taken:
South Hams Councillors Demand Second Home Owners Pay Their Fair Share - South Hams District Council 

As reported in the press:

Loophole that allows second home owners to 'contribute nothing to local economy' must be closed, says council

South Hams District Council say it cannot be right that second home owners can let out their properties for hundreds of pounds a week, or even more, and pay absolutely nothing into the local economy


Daniel Clark Local Democracy Reporter
25 JAN 2019


South Hams District Council is demanding the Government to close a tax loophole which allows second home owners to avoid paying any tax on their properties.

The loophole means that currently owners of second homes can decide whether to register their properties for council tax or business rates. To qualify for business rates, the property must be available for let for a minimum of 140 days per year, but by applying for Small Business Rate Relief, the charge is in most cases removed completely.

Cllr John Tucker, Leader of the Council, said: “It cannot be right that second home owners can let out their properties for hundreds of pounds a week, or even more, and pay absolutely nothing into the local economy. They are using local services and infrastructure like roads, and contributing nothing towards it.”

At a full council meeting in December, the council agreed to write to the Government urging them to consider the removal of 100 per cent Business Rate Relief on the letting of self-catering holiday homes as the current loophole has serious financial impact on local authorities with a high volume of Holiday Home Lettings.

Records show that there are 1,358 business rated properties in the South Hams which are second homes or holiday lets. If each property paid their fair share, an extra £2.47m would be available for South Hams District Council, Devon County Council and the Emergency Services. The share of this to South Hams District Council would be about £223,000.

Cllr Tucker added: “At a time when local authorities are struggling to maintain public services and our emergency services are under increasing pressures, the current system is fundamentally unfair. Small business rate relief was implemented to support our small businesses, village halls and local shops, not to allow people to dodge their responsibilities.”

In a letter sent to the Government, the council gave the example of how the loophole affects some of its parishes.

In Salcombe, because of a rise in the number of properties assessed as ‘Apartment Houses’, in this year’s Taxbase calculation, the taxbase has decreased from 1,974 to 1,930 (a 2.2 per cent reduction).

The 2018 Council Tax base for Salcombe has therefore reduced and resulted in a Council Tax increase for all remaining Council Tax payers of over two per cent (due to properties moving across to business rates), just to keep the Town Council spending the same and maintaining their precept at the same level as the previous year.

The letter also gave the example of East Portlemouth, a small parish with 153 homes, of which 60 are recorded on Council Tax records as second homes, with 25 properties are currently assessed for Business Rates.

It says: “Even a small number of second home owners taking advantage of the current system, or the proposed changes will make a massive difference on the tax base and local residents.”

The letter adds: “The Council Tax Base form submitted to the Government by the Council, showed that at October 2018, the Council had 3,835 second homes out of 44,338 properties in the District. This equates to just under nine per cent and means that one in every twelve homes in the District is a second home. The South Hams figures are more than seven times higher than the national average and therefore the issue in South Hams is one of the most acute in the country.

“In December 2017 the Council had 1,410 properties assessed as ‘Apartment House’ on the Business Rates system. In November 2018, this number had increased to 1,455. In the same period, the number of second homes registered for Council Tax reduced from 3,835 to 3,751. Of these properties, Business Rates of approximately £3.37 million is charged and £2.35 million in small Business Rates Relief is awarded.

“Should these properties be domestically banded (instead of being business rated), an estimated £2.47m more in Council Tax would be raised for the District (whose share would be around £223,000), Devon County and the Emergency Services.”

Cllr Tucker in the letter added: “South Hams District Council is firmly of the view that domestic properties should pay council tax on their properties, irrespective of whether they are let out or not. The banding of the property would be the responsibility of the Valuation Office Agency, and there would be no need for enforcement as the approach outlined would require.

“The council supports the District Council Network view that an alternative should be implemented, where self-catering accommodation is taxed solely through the council tax system, with legislation changed as necessary to deliver this.

“Should the Government not be open to change its approach, consideration should also be given to the ability for a Local Authority to be allowed to levy a Tourist Tax on these assessments that remain in the Business Rates system. This would assist the local community and economy where these properties are still allowed to avoid paying any form of local taxation.”

The Government is consulting on a number of proposals to ensure fairer funding for local authorities in the coming years, but councillors from across the board at South Hams District Council feel that the proposals do not go far enough and do not support the Government view.

How the political fringes became part of the mainstream

Peter Pomerantsev, author of "Nothing is True and Everything is Possible: Adventures in Modern Russia" suggests that we are entering a new model of how things happen in politics:
Futures Forum: A healthy democracy and a free press
Futures Forum: "Political technologists" - is this the future of democracy?
Futures Forum: Brexit: and "Nothing is True and Everything is Possible"
Futures Forum: Moving beyond the ideological boundaries and "empowering people to find the solutions to their problems themselves"
Futures Forum: Managed democracy: "The deliberate undermining of people's perception of the world, by creating confusion and contradiction ... undermining any opposition to existing power structures ... which leaves us feeling helpless and depressed and to which the only response is: 'Oh dear'." 


The new series of Analysis on Radio 4 opens with his look at how the political fringe has now become mainstream: 

The War for Normal

Analysis

We live in a world where everyone is trying to manipulate everyone else, where social media has opened up the floodgates for a mayhem of influence. And the one thing all the new propagandists have in common is the idea that to really get to someone you have to not just spin or nudge or persuade them, but transform the way they think about the world, the language and concepts they have to make sense of things.

Peter Pomerantsev, author of an acclaimed book on the media in Putin's Russia, examines where this strategy began, how it is being exploited, the people caught in the middle, and the researchers trying to combat it. Because it is no longer just at the ‘fringes’ where this is happening – it is now a part of mainstream political life.


BBC Radio 4 - Analysis, The War for Normal

Much of this goes back to the notion of 'common sense':
Common sense was his only method – TheTLS
Why Trump Invokes ‘Common Sense’ - The Atlantic
Brexit: Common sense or just scare tactics? - BBC News

Compare 1997:
What Is Mainstream Politics And What Is Fringe? - The New York Times

And now:
It’s easy to sneer at US fringe politics, but the crackpots are gaining ground in the UK too | Rafael Behr | Opinion | The Guardian
Conspiracy theories used to be a fringe obsession. Now they're mainstream | Jason Wilson | Opinion | The Guardian
A 'new India' where fringe is the mainstream | Politics | Al Jazeera
From Political Fringe to Political Mainstream : French Politics, Culture & Society
Europe’s populists are waltzing into the mainstream - Dancing with danger - The Economist
2017: When the Fringe Became Mainstream - The Wire
Awakening of Spain’s far-right fringe unsettles mainstream parties | Financial Times
In Pak, Once-Fringe Islamist Radicals Are Entering Mainstream Politics - NDTV
Bolsonaro’s Brazil win and Merkel’s Germany fall due to rise of fringe politics - Vox
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Monday, 28 January 2019

Knowle relocation project: challenging the official line that "staying in Sidmouth was not an option"

The Herald carries the headline of the cost of the District Council's new HQ in Honiton - and yet this was only half of the actual cost of relocation:
Futures Forum: Knowle relocation project > a spanking new HQ for £5.6 million... or for £10.6 million?

Devon Live and the Express & Echo reiterate the District Council's line that 'there was no alternative' to moving from Knowle - and yet analysis proves otherwise:

FINANCIAL PROFLIGACY 

EDDC has chosen to divert funds it does not have to the building of new headquarters – as indeed have other councils, to their cost. As such, EDDC’s commitment to spending well over £10million can only be described “as a ‘milestone’ for debt – taken on by council tax payers in East Devon. No matter how you spin this project, it is not residents who will benefit. And few if any of the councillors making these decisions will be around in 20 years when the true costs and ‘savings’ are known.” 

There has been a huge lack of confidence in these figures throughout the project. The campaign group Save Our Sidmouth has opposed the move, believing “that EDDC has not done its sums correctly, has not properly assessed the cost of renovations to part of the existing Knowle buildings and that the risk in building a new office – borrowing up to £4.8 m and paying for the ‘savings’ over a 20 year period – is far too risky in the current economic climate”. 

Energy use: As for their initial promises of large energy savings, EDDC claim they will save £5.55m over 20 years by moving from Knowle; again, these figures have been proven to be wildly inaccurate and so extremely contentious. Moreover, EDDC has refused to provide detailed energy figures to verify their cost calculations; they will not countenance considering alternative costings, such as remaining at Knowle; and they have ignored their own scrutiny committee’s instruction to allow the commissioning of an independent survey on the state of Knowle. 

Over-development: It was rather different in the 1960s, when the District Council sought a more modest proposal in purchasing the Knowle hotel: “It is the intention that part of the building should be used for housing (the major part of the purchase price is for this purpose) and the remainder for improved council accommodation...” However, today, EDDC refuses to consider alternative options to relocation. 

In fact, it has been proven that its declared wish to reduce its office-space could easily be accommodated if it retrenched to the purpose-built 1970s offices, thereby leaving a saleable asset in the original Knowle (once again suitable for conversion back to flats) to cover their refurbishment costs.

Conflicts of interest: Perhaps the most serious charge, however, is that EDDC will profit directly from its granting of any planning applications at Knowle. Furthermore, EDDC has a clear incentive to flout its own Local Plan’s demands for affordable housing provision: analysis of ‘alternative schemes’ for Knowle shows that there would be a substantial difference in value of the site – of between £3.2 and £6.8 million – depending on the affordable housing requirement.


Here is the official guide to the relocation project:

First look around inside new East Devon District Council offices

Staying at their current headquarters in Knowle was 'not an option'


COMMENTS

Daniel Clark

Local Democracy Reporter
25 JAN 2019


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CLICK TO PLAY
FIRST LOOK AROUND EAST DEVON DISTRICT COUNCIL'S NEW HQ

East Devon District Council’s new headquarters at Blackdown House in Honiton will be open for business of Monday, February 11 - and this is what it looks like.

The new HQ, which replaces the council’s existing HQ at The Knowle in Sidmouth, has cost the council £8.7m, while an additional £1.5m was spent on upgrading Exmouth town hall where one third of the council staff are to be based.

The controversial decision to relocate offices was taken back in March 2015 as it was decided the council needed to relocate into buildings that are affordable, cost efficient, and would significantly reduce the overheads of the council.

The new HQ is less than half the floor space used by the Knowle, office space is more efficient, and a new council chamber will have improved audio/visual equipment for councillors and the public.



The new East Devon District Council offices in Honiton

Savings of £1.4m over 20 years will be generated by the relocation, while from day 1, energy costs to the council will halve.

The council added that staying in Sidmouth was ‘not an option’, as the maintenance bill to bring the Knowle officers into good repair was £4.5m and they would still have been faced with much higher energy bills than the council needed to pay, even after replacing the boilers, rewiring, and a new roof.

A council spokesman added: “The Sidmouth offices, as well as being outdated and expensive to run, are too large. We need much less space and an old Victorian hotel with extensions was no longer fit for purpose nor affordable.



The new East Devon District Council offices in Honiton

“Our new HQ at Blackdown House will provide face-to-face services to our residents and both buildings (as well as Exmouth town hall) will have a bright and welcoming reception area to meet customers and clients. There are self-service computer facilities and interview spaces as well as that are vastly superior to what we are able to offer at Sidmouth.

“Honiton as a site for our new HQ is much more central to East Devon than Sidmouth, and while we are working to encourage people to use our online services more, if they want to visit our offices or attend council meetings, then Honiton is a central location and the facilities of the building are very accessible.”



The new East Devon District Council offices in Honiton

In a phased approach, staff will be leaving the existing offices at the Knowle over the next two weeks. The Sidmouth offices will close at 5pm on Friday, February 8, and Blackdown House will be open for business on Monday, February 11, at 8.30am.

Richard Cohen, deputy chief executive, said: “We have been waiting for years for this to happen and the staff are looking forward to it and it is the work of a 21 century council.”



The new East Devon District Council offices in Honiton

KEY FACTS

  • 97,000 bricks were used on the project
  • 600 people worked on site
  • The building is roughly 17m tall and the total floor area is 2,760m2
  • 216 shared desks including reception desks and booths are provided
  • The council chamber has 69 public seats with a further 40 seats available in a public gallery overlooking the chamber, and with a hearing loop provided
  • 130 car parking spaces, seven of which are disabled, and there are two electric vehicle charging points
  • Renewable energy generation with 112 phot voltaic panels on the south facing roof slope, with an anticipated yield of 32,000 kWa pa.
  • Constant lux levels will be provided in the offices by a smart and intelligent lightings system that reacts to levels of natural light in the offices and either dims or brightens the light



The new East Devon District Council offices in Honiton

The Knowle has been sold to Pegasus Life Ltd for £7.5m, and they have been granted planning permission to convert the building into a 113-apartment assisted-living community for older people.


First look around inside new East Devon District Council offices - Devon Live
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How to revive the health of Sidmouth's high street > businesses form action group to promote town centre

There have been several initiatives of late to 'boost the town':

Including from the local MP:
Futures Forum: How to revive the health of Sidmouth's high street > East Devon MP's survey results
Futures Forum: How to revive the health of Sidmouth's high street > "MP vows to take town's high street woes to Government - and calls for future vision"

And local businesses:
Futures Forum: New Woolbrook tearoom 'to provide a community hot spot'
Futures Forum: How to revive the health of high streets > businesses thriving on Temple Street

There are lots of ideas out there:
Futures Forum: How to revive the health of high streets > focus on bringing back jobs and leisure activity to town centres
Futures Forum: Street trading, street markets and the High Street
Futures Forum: An idea for improving Sidmouth: making the town more pedestrian friendly: press report
Futures Forum: Is turning shops into homes the best way to save our high streets?
Futures Forum: Restoring vibrancy to our High Streets > thinking the unthinkable
Futures Forum: Is turning shops into homes the best way to save our high streets? >>> "Deregulation in pursuit of numbers"
Futures Forum: "Use libraries to revitalise high streets"

Sidmouth businesses have been meeting to look at some of these:




Sidmouth and Ottery breaking news and sport - Sidmouth Herald
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Brexit: and the 'hungry gap': by March 29th we'll be supplying very little of our own fruit and veg

Retailers have been reluctant to get involved in Project Fear, but... 

Food retailers warn MPs on risks of no-deal Brexit

Major stores issue red flag over maintaining choice, quality and durability of supplies

'There will be inevitable pressure on food prices from higher transport costs, currency devaluation and tariffs' © Getty

Jonathan Eley 48 MINUTES AGO

A no-deal Brexit would quickly trigger a jump in food prices and a reduction in choice of products, British retailers have warned in the latest plea by big business against leaving the EU without an agreement.

A letter from bosses of some of the country’s leading retail chains to MPs urged parliament “to find a solution that avoids the shock of a no deal Brexit on March 29”.

“While we have been working closely with our suppliers on contingency plans, it is not possible to mitigate all the risks to our supply chains and we fear significant disruption in the short term as a result if there is no Brexit deal,” said the executives, who included the bosses of J Sainsbury, Asda, Waitrose, Marks and Spencer and Lidl, along with convenience chains Costcutter and the Co-op.

The letter, co-ordinated by the British Retail Consortium, said they anticipated “significant risks to maintaining the choice, quality and durability of food that our customers have come to expect in our stores,” adding: “There will be inevitable pressure on food prices from higher transport costs, currency devaluation and tariffs.”


Food retailers warn MPs on risks of no-deal Brexit | Financial Times

A lot of our food comes from the EU: 



No-deal Brexit 'to leave shelves empty' warn retailers - BBC News

In the week after the 2016 referendum, the Food Programme on Radio 4 looked at the issues:
BBC Radio 4 - The Food Programme, Brexit and Food: A Food Programme Special

The latest edition returned to the issues: 

What does a no-deal Brexit mean for our food?

The Food Programme

With just over 60 days before we're set to leave the EU Dan Saladino gathers thoughts along the food supply chain, from farmers and retailers to exporters and so called "preppers", on the prospects of a no deal Brexit.

The likes of the British Retail Consortium, which represents the major supermarkets, and the Food and Drink Federation, which speaks on behalf of the biggest processors and producers in the UK have voiced their concerns that a "no deal" and more disruptive Brexit could mean significant delays importing food into the UK. For this reason their members have been stockpiling supplies to prevent disruption for customers.

However, as farmer Guy Watson explains, we are entering the so called hungry gap, meaning that by March 29th we'll be supplying very little of our own fruit and veg. Businesses such as his, the Riverford box scheme, will instead be depending on fresh produce brought in from Italy and Spain. He believes more than four days of disruption could wipe out his profits, and two weeks of delays could bankrupt the business.

Meanwhile other members of the farming community believe we should stay focused on the idea that food benefits will come from Brexit, whilst others are convinced trading under World Trade Organisation terms will provide us with plenty of new options for imports.

Dan travels along the supply chain to hear a range of different views on what the next few weeks might hold as farmers, food producers and retailers wait for the stalemate in Westminster to end.


BBC Radio 4 - The Food Programme, What does a no-deal Brexit mean for our food?
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Sunday, 27 January 2019

Sid Valley Neighbourhood Plan > fortnight left to respond

The Sid Valley Neighbourhood Plan was formally submitted last month:
Futures Forum: Sid Valley Neighbourhood Plan now submitted to District Council for final examination

The are just a couple of weeks left to send in a submission:


Sid Valley Neighbourhood Plan Submission


Town Council have now submitted a Neighbourhood Plan which reflects the aspirations of local people for the future of Sidmouth and the Sid Valley (Sidmouth, Sidford, Sidbury and Salcombe Regis).

Sidmouth Town Council as the qualifying body have prepared a Neighbourhood Development Plan for the parish of Sidmouth with the help of the local community. The plan sets out a vision for the future of the parish and planning policies which will be used to determine planning applications locally.
WHERE THE PLAN CAN BE INSPECTED 
Copies of the Neighbourhood Development Plan and supporting documentation are available to view on the EDDC website: http://eastdevon.gov.uk/planning/neighbourhood-and-community-plans/neighbourhood-plans/neighbourhood-plans-being-produced-in-east-devon/sidmouth/
Hard copies of the Neighbourhood Plan are available for inspection at:
East Devon District Council, Knowle, Station Road, Sidmouth EX10 8HL
HOW TO MAKE REPRESENTATIONS
If you would like to make a representation on this Neighbourhood Plan, then please send your comments by email to planningpolicy@eastdevon.gov.uk or in writing to Phil Twamley, Planning Policy Section, East Devon District Council, Knowle, Station Road, Sidmouth, Devon, EX10 8HL.
We encourage those responding to use the prescribed response form which is available on our website, by contacting the Planning Policy Section on 01395 571533 and at those locations where copies may be inspected. The consultation runs from 21 December until 15 February 2019.
NOTIFICATION
Any representations may include a request to be notified regarding East Devon District Council’s decision under Regulation 19 whether to make Sid Valley Neighbourhood Plan.






Sid Valley Neighbourhood Plan Submission – Sid Valley Neighbourhood Plan
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Sea Fest 2019 > getting ready

The Herald reports on plans for the Sea Fest this coming May:


Sidmouth and Ottery breaking news and sport - Sidmouth Herald

With a slightly different version of the same piece on-line: 

Choir rehearsal kick-starts preparations for this year’s Sidmouth Sea Fest

PUBLISHED: 17:00 26 January 2019
Sidmouth Sea Fest. Ref shs 20 18TI 3128. Picture: Terry Ife


Sidmouth Sea Fest. Ref shs 20 18TI 3128. Picture: Terry Ife


Anyone wanting to join the Sea Fest Community Choir can come to a first rehearsal in February, as preparations start for the festival in May

Dave French making a tradional East Devon willow crab pot at the Sidmouth Sea Fest. Ref shs 20 18TI 3100. Picture: Terry Ife
Dave French making a tradional East Devon willow crab pot at the Sidmouth Sea Fest. Ref shs 20 18TI 3100. Picture: Terry Ife
Sidmouth’s sixth annual Sea Fest – ‘a celebration of everything in, on or by the sea’ – takes place on Saturday, May 18 this year.
It is a free coastal community one-day event at The Ham, for people of all ages to come together and celebrate all things maritime. It also contributes to Sidmouth’s aim to become single-use plastic free.
This year there will also be a special focus is on the history of Sidmouth resident Stephen Reynolds, who died 100 years ago. He was an author, fisherman and social commentator. A plaque in his memory was unveiled at Sidmouth Museum in December, but his extraordinary life and connection with Sidmouth are not generally well known, and the festival organisers want to change that.
Louise Cole from Sidmouth Coastal Community Hub said: “We will be bringing to life and sharing his story, which is one of breaking down class and social barriers, supporting the fishing community of Sidmouth, and a personal one at a time of intolerance and discrimination based on sexual orientation.”
Sidmouth Sea Fest. Ref shs 20 18TI 3136. Picture: Terry Ife
Sidmouth Sea Fest. Ref shs 20 18TI 3136. Picture: Terry Ife
Sea Fest always features local musicians, artists, schools and community members. There will be sea shanties, live bands, cooking demonstrations, environmental awareness, art workshops, community play, games, dancing, authors, and even a sea-themed Cake Off competition. The theme of this year’s event is Celebrating Diversity Creatively.
The Sidmouth Sea Fest Community Choir will be performing, and anyone wishing to join the choir this year is welcome to come along to a first rehearsal on Saturday, February 23 at Sidmouth College, from 10am till 12 noon.
The Coastal Community Hub are delighted that this year, the festival has been chosen to benefit from the Co-op Local Community Fund.
Louise said: “At a time when funds for charitable organisations are becoming more difficult to access, we’re incredibly grateful for this opportunity to make a real difference in Sidmouth and the Sid Valley.
Sidmouth Sea Fest. Ref shs 20 18TI 3112. Picture: Terry Ife
Sidmouth Sea Fest. Ref shs 20 18TI 3112. Picture: Terry Ife
“To help us raise vital funds, we’ll be relying on Co-op shoppers. Every time they buy Co-op own-brand products they get a 5% reward for themselves, and a further 1% goes to local causes like ours. Co-op members can decide which local group they would like to back by going online www.coop.co.uk/membership.
“We really hope that people will visit the website and choose to support us.”
Sidmouth Sea Fest. Ref shs 20 18TI 3114. Picture: Terry Ife
Sidmouth Sea Fest. Ref shs 20 18TI 3114. Picture: Terry Ife
Sidmouth Sea Fest. Ref shs 20 18TI 3136. Picture: Terry Ife
Sidmouth Sea Fest. Ref shs 20 18TI 3136. Picture: Terry Ife

Choir rehearsal kick-starts preparations for this year’s Sidmouth Sea Fest | Latest Sidmouth and Ottery News - Sidmouth Herald
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