Saturday 4 August 2012

Perfect Day..Olympics and Local Heritage

Brilliant performance from Team GB http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/olympics/2012/

Wonderful day at Pontefract Castle https://www.facebook.com/Pontefractcastle

This month just gets better and better.

Wednesday 1 August 2012

Hello Yorkshire

For all those from around England's biggest County who are up for a bit of a celebration.

Have a great Yorkshire Day.

Yorkshire Society Members and Civic Heads. See you in Scarborough, complete with White Rose!

UPDATE: Having just had a brilliant Yorkshire Day, be my guest and accept the gift of Yorkshire. Look at http://www.yorkshire.com/

Goodbye July.. A stunning month of parts.

Blimey, who would have thought it..

Tuesday 17 July 2012

I Object!


For your information

Objection to 12/01159/OUT 

Can you please register my objection against  12/01159/OUT  Outline application for upto 250 residential dwellings including means of access | Ackworth Road And Hardwick Road (Land Adjacent To) Pontefract West Yorkshire WF8 4NH

I and former colleagues have previously objected to the principle of development for the application site through the LDF.

I now wish to place on record my objections to this outline application.

My objections are based on the sustainability of the proposed development, its acceptability to the community and the broader pressures that it will put on to the local highways network, its potential impact on the quality of life of local residents, pedestrian safety, increased traffic problems to adjacent roads and environmental impact  by adding to existing congestion and pollution/air quality issues to local residents and inhabitants of Mill Hill, and pedestrians and motorists who use the A639 to access the Town Centre and Kings School at peak periods.

I further wish to object to the use of agricultural land for development and by the nature of the development its impact on adjacent green belt land.

Whilst I accept that a significant amount of time and effort has been put into delivering the LDF and that it gives a basis to move forward in a number of areas, there is a need to re-look at sustainability of development and environmental impact of the LDF in its current form and on this site in particular in the light national planning policy.

In addition to the usual environmental assessment, I believe there should also be opportunities for the newly appointed Director of Public Health to assess the proposal and to put forward measures to mitigate higher levels of pollution caused in the EM Zone on Mill Hill.

As with all the larger scale applications and land releases that the LDF facilitates there should also be specific parallel measures put in place to improve or enhance infrastructure and these need to be instigated prior to giving permissions and releasing land for development.

Can you log my objection and can you also note my wish to address the Planning Committee on this application when it comes forward.

Yours sincerely

Cllr Geoff Walsh
Councillor - Pontefract South

Monday 16 July 2012

A Motion in Council - Labours something for nothing culture.

On Wednesday the controlling Labour Group proposes to pass a motion criticising the Coalition Governments proposed welfare reforms. This type of action is a regular occurrence since Labour lost control in the 2010 General Election. Labour in Wakefield have been in control since 1974 and they really do not welcome change or at any stage acknowledge the damage that they caused whilst in government, quite the contrary they seem to have conveniently mislaid 13 years of Labour government.


Labour left Britain in a mess and we need to clear it up. Labour left us spending £120 million every day just paying the interest on the debt – and that bill is getting bigger. (The interest bill on the Mid Yorks Hospital Trust PFI for instance is about £100,000 pounds a day or just about a billion pounds over the next 30 years and our MPs are blaming government cutbacks).

The banks and a soft touch regime of controls made a bad situation worse, but what really got Britain into this mess was years of Labour spending money we didn’t have.

It would have been much easier not to deal with the debt problem. But everyone knows that, as when someone runs up a massive credit card bill, the longer you put off dealing with debt, the worse it gets and the more it costs.

Delay would just pass this generation’s debt onto our children, stall any chance of economic recovery and cost even more.

Labour created a something for nothing culture. Labour’s something for nothing culture was about more than just the Government borrowing money that we did not have.

They failed to tackle welfare reform so that it was easier to sit at home rather than going out to work, but then, unbelievably, they voted against our plans to cap benefits.

Under Labour, housing benefit soared out of control and rents for those on housing benefit rose more than market rents. As a result, the Labour government ended up spending £192 billion a year of taxpayers money on welfare payments, which was more than the combined spending on defence, education and health.

If the Labour Group in Wakefield had their way nothing would change and the borrowing bill would continue to grow.

They simply do not acknowledge the wishes of the many people of Wakefield who are sick and tired of paying the bill for their dogmatic determination to go back.


Mid Yorkshire Hospital Trust...continued

Over recent weeks there have been a number of developments including the resignation of the Trusts Non Executive Directors because they could not see how to make ends meet. We now know more about what that meant and it looks like with the Trust losing £100,000 pounds each and every day or about £36.5 million a year.   Curiously enough that is a similar amount to the interest bill that our MPs have forced the Trust into with their PFI means that the Trust is in danger of being put into special measures.

The thing is the costs that the Trust has incurred in opening up its spiffy new buildings is such that they have to cut back delivered services to cover the debt FOR THE NEXT 30 YEARS. Our MPs blame government cuts but this is a foul up they managed all by themselves during their time in government.

There was a slogan much bandied about during the 2005 General Election about the NHS being safe in Labours hands.  Well in our part of the world that has a ghastly hollow ring to it.

There are campaigns running to protect Dewsbury A&E and the Pontefract A&E is to re-open with GP led service from September. However it looks as if the three hospitals may be reallocated or partner with other Trusts that are better at financial management.

UPDATE 17th July 2012

The Executive Leader of the Council came out with his concerns about this situation and the need for the Labour controlled Council to see over the future direction of the Trust in the interests of the people of the district. (NHS safe in Labour Hands?) I don't think so.

I am writing to the Secretary of State, asking for an intervention so that the people of the districts health will not become hostage to financial or management incompetence and to question the basis and setting up the PFI (if the MYHT management were involved in negotiating the PFI their capability or lack of it must put the original PFI negotiation in doubt). My next question is who signed that off in the Treasury and the NHS and what provision was made for funding it.

Local Development - Framework?


Sustainable and appropriate development for Wakefield and the District?


The WMDC Local Development Framework (LDF), came about as a response to a Government Call for local authorities to show a plan to support and deliver the Regional Spatial Strategy (RSS) and its housing and planning elements.

In spring 2006 a team was set up to deliver the LDF and they have been working through a lengthy process to identify locations to be made available for development so that the housing targets of the RSS could be met. Desk surveys have been conducted; different aspects of strategy have been reviewed. There have been a variety of communications made and interested parties have been given the opportunities to make representations and the process has been reviewed at different points by inspectors appointed by various Secretaries of State.

We are now at a point where final recommendations are being made by the most recent Government Inspector that will make the Wakefield Local Development Framework acceptable to Central Government. There are a number of the identified sites which are now attracting interest from potential developers, with developments ranging from hundreds to potentially thousands of houses to be built across the district. Developers are putting in Outline Applications based on the LDF confirming the principle that land is available for development.

As already stated, the LDF was originally developed to deliver Wakefield's requirement to meet the RSS, which was a strategic statement of availability. There has been considerable desk based work done and there is much reliance on general statistical information to support the strategy.

On a number of occasions since 2006 I have asked what specific improvements to infrastructure will be made to facilitate proposals for development and have had no concrete examples, suggestions or proposals. In the council chamber I have asked for reassurances that there will be specific plans to improve infrastructure so as to allow sustainable development in the areas proposed and had general agreement from the Leader of the Council about the importance of infrastructure in sustainable development.  The Inspector in her most recent report has commented that "whilst she sees no deal breakers in the LDF" she also wants reassurance and evidence about infrastructural and environmental improvements.

DCLG planning guidance

Central government have struck down the RSS and have simplified national planning policy and guidance, supporting the principle of sustainable development that has community approval. They have upheld the need for Planning Authorities to take account of the viability of sites and locations for developments. They have further upheld the requirement to lead with brownfield locations and a presumption against use of green belt and urban extension.

The issues that face the WMDC Planning Authority with the LDF are that, whilst it releases sites and confirms the principle of development, it does not seem to put forward any significant proposals to improve infrastructure. Taking Pontefract as an example, there are potentially 2000 extra properties being added as “infill” or “urban extension” without significant improvements to the existing road network, schools, GP services, dentists, other health facilities and limited green space or green infrastructure. There has also been a steadfast reluctance to accept the population’s contention that the road network at Town End is over congested.  It is only with determined lobbying by local councillors since 2006 that we see proposals to reconfigure the junction to ease capacity and even with that easing process, additional build will quickly return matters to a regular grid lock.

Town End has been the subject of monitoring by WMDC Environmental Health Officers since 2006/7 when it was first identified as an environmental hot spot with pollution exceeding UK safe limits for nox gases and this situation and has identified the location as an Air Quality Management Area which has only got worse with time.

Environmental Health sees potential health problems with the roads leading to the junction. Highways say there is no capacity problem, even though traffic is slow and heavy at busy periods and there can be tailbacks of several miles from the lights if there is a diversion off the A1.   Meanwhile, Planning is happily proposing to approve further housing, boosting the population thus adding extra vehicular movement in the area which can only increase congestion and pollution levels. This situation is not unique to Pontefract and there are other locations across the district where similar problems exist.

At various points in the LDF process I have asked Highways Officers to what degree they have been consulted about the proposals set out. Because of its desktop nature there are few examples of consultation on specifics. I have also asked Environmental Health Officers if they have been consulted or supported by Planning or Highways Officers in their attempts to mitigate or address the pollution which is proven to increase hazards to health.  There are few examples if any, where specific actions have been proposed.

Action Required

Whilst I accept that a significant amount of time and effort has been put into delivering the LDF and that it gives a basis to move forward in a number of areas, there is a need to re-look at sustainability of development and environmental impact of the LDF in its current form. There should also be opportunities for the newly appointed Director of Public Health to make proposals or representations about measures to mitigate or improve health. There should also be specific measures in place to improve or enhance infrastructure and these need to be instigated prior to giving permissions and releasing land for development.

Wednesday 16 May 2012

UPDATED Checks and Balances

Wakefield has a 63 member council. At the top of the pile is an Executive Leader elected by the members of the council. He selects an executive cabinet to carry through his aspirations and policies. His position is based on a block voting system and the 52 members of his political party vote through his policies and plans. This is a whipped process and his members conform to that. Meetings are chaired by a Mayor elected by members for the municipal year and the block vote means that Executive Leaders group select the Mayor and whilst in most other authorities Mayors only vote if there is a need for a casting vote the Labour Mayors of Wakefield have always tended to vote in line with the Labour Group and respond to the Executive Leaders prompts even when the controlling group have a clear majority.

The constitution of the council and its use is normally upheld by the Mayor and legal officers but the Executive Leader can and does call for votes to suspend the constitution when he has a situation that he wishes to focus on and the block vote delivers that suspension of council rules and at times because of the block vote it feels like the Executive Leaders very own executive sports car with the ability to stop on a whim.

The majority opposing group comprises 11 members just short of 20% of the total having lost 9 seats in the most recent local elections. Whilst it is possible to comment in council, the block vote effectively stops anything more than that.

In law and in the constitution of the council there is a system of overview and scrutiny which is designed to provide a mechanism to call in and scrutinise actions and activities of the council. These overview and scrutiny committees typically have been chaired by members of the Executive Leaders group and have a controlling group majority. The Chairs of committees very much decide the programme for their committees and what is looked at and the Executive Leader has those positions in his gift.

There are also quasi legal regulatory committees for elements such as planning, licensing, enforcement and appeals and whilst they should operate in an apolitical way again the Executive Leader also has them in his gift.

Since 2004 and in line with other best practice the Executive Leader has allocated at least one scrutiny Chair to the majority opposition and following a government recommendation the Audit Committee a free roaming independent committee that focuses on council probity, appropriate use of resources and financial performance has been chaired by the Leader of the majority opposition who then working with the committee and council officers has been able to develop a yearly programme to scrutinise finance and probity, feeding back a formal report of record to the Council and Government via the Audit Commission.

On Tuesday the Executive Leader decided (following a meeting of his group) that henceforth all scrutiny, regulatory and audit functions shall be chaired by paid members of his group, end of story.

Following the election other elected representatives may take part in committees but with a ratio restriction. One place on Audit, three on planning and highways, two on Licensing and two on each of the scrutiny committees.

Where are the checks and balances?

UPDATED
From the 13th of November 20013 it is now possible to tune in and see how your elected Local Councillors behave in the council chamber.  People viewing the webcast may think that they have stumbled into a parliamentary alternate universe where the Wakefield Labour group think that they control the country or that their local MPs are such light weights that they must do their parliamentary job for them.

For some this will confirm their suspicions, for others it will not really be  what they expect their elected representatives are getting up to, Local Councillors should focus on local issues and stop wasting precious time running down the government and debating  national issues which are more within the remit of local MPs . Before casting their vote, perhaps people need to check what their Local Councillors will do for them. 

Personally I was elected to support the people in my ward on the local issues that are important to them, they give authority to the MP for the national issues.

Clearly in Wakefield we need to unlock democracy so that individuals can really hold the administration to account on the matters that are important to them and uphold the council motto "Working for you"


Friday 4 May 2012

Queens Diamond Jubilee at Pontefract Castle

Local communities, the council and the district's attractions are in the process of planning celebrations to mark the Queen's Diamond Jubilee:
  • The council will be holding the district’s main celebration at Pontefract Castle on Monday, 4 June 2012. From 11.00 am there will be an event called “Picnic at the Castle” which is a family event with free entertainment, including a bouncy castle!  The daytime event closes at 4.00 pm.
  • The gates then re-open at 7.00 pm for “Proms at the Castle” (admission by ticket* only) which will feature a last night of the proms style concert performed by the West Yorkshire Symphony Orchestra! It will culminate in a firework display and lighting of the Jubilee beacon at approximately 10.30 pm.
    (*Free Tickets available from Pontefract Castle, Pontefract Museum, Wakefield Tourism information Centre but running out fast)
  • The council also plan to open a new garden named in honour of the Queens Diamond Jubilee close to County Hall, late summer 2012.
  • The Hepworth Wakefield is hosting a Jubilee Tea Party on Saturday, 2 June 11.00 am till 4.00 pm. The family drop in event is free of charge. For more information contact 01924 247360
  • Wakefield Cathedral is hosting a Big Lunch on Wakefield Cathedral Precinct. The BBQ style lunch will be one of hundreds of “Big Lunch” celebrations across the country. The event takes place on Sunday, 3 June 2012. More details about prices and tickets to follow. 
UPDATE: Well what a magical experience, but what weather.