The result was:
Richard Comotto 99
Anna Hargreaves 133
So the latter is elected until 2015. The turnour was 57%.
Friday, 6 September 2013
Thursday, 5 September 2013
Winchelsea by-election
I have been asked today what I will do if not re-elected. Interestingly, in considering whether to stand again, I had weighed up the option of returning to reporting on Council meetings as a member of the public, as I used to do for the Village Voice. With the unelected Peter Turner back at the helm of the ship of fools, that would seem a promising opportunity to amuse residents.
The by-election itself will offer lots of good stories, eg the offer of a free meal for votes by a former mayor.
The by-election itself will offer lots of good stories, eg the offer of a free meal for votes by a former mayor.
Labels:
Icklesham Parish Council,
Winchelsea
Wednesday, 15 May 2013
Parking in Pear Tree Marsh
On Monday 13 May, Icklesham Parish Council considered a request from a lady buying a house in Tanyard Lane for permission to park in the open ground next to the Council-owned allotments in Pear Tree Marsh in Winchelsea. The person she is buying from has temporary permission to park here. This request re-ignited an issue that has been festering for years.
Pear Tree Marsh is sited off Tanyard Lane, which is part of the A259(T). Most houses on Tanyard Lane do not have off-street parking and their occupiers have to park in one of the lay-bys on that road, where they are subject to burglary and vandalism. Indeed, the lay-bys are the crime hotspot of Winchelsea.
Pear Tree Marsh was purchased many years ago by the Parish Council from the District Council, who applied a covenant to the sale that the site could only be used for allotments. However, in addition to several allotment plots, the site has a large area of open ground. Allotment-holders have always parked here. Indeed, many took on an allotment plot only to get access to parking. This resulted in derelict plots. The worst offenders included a couple of ward councillors and ex-councillors for Winchelsea, who invited friends to park in Pear Tree Marsh as well. Not unnaturally, this was seen as unfair by those without access.
Some years ago, I proposed to the Council that the situation should be regularised by opening up parking to all residents, possibly at a small charge. Should too many residents apply, priority would be given to those without off-street parking and, if necessary, places could be allotted fairly by ballot.
In the petty personality-driven politics of Icklesham Parish Council, the proposal was opposed by several councillors from other wards, ie not resident in Winchelsea, notably Cllrs Merricks, Stanford, Bronsdon and Sutton. There seems to be a fear that Winchelsea ward councillors might be allowed to do something for their electorate. Ostensible objections have centred around Rother's covenant. Of course, covenants can be varied and the Council succeeded in doing so in the case of Icklesham Recreation Ground.
Moreover, there are doubts as to whether the covenant does actually forbid parking, given that this does not interfer with the provision of allotment plots.
Eventually, the Council was persuaded to write to Rother to clarify the situation. And here, we came up against the Rother solicitor David Edwards. Those familar with the complaints under the Code of Conduct made against Winchelsea ward councillors will remember that Mr Edwards was legal adviser to the Rother Standards Committee. Mr Edwards advised the Committee that, once a parish council had made a decision, councillors were prohibited from criticising or campaigning against that decision. In the end, the judgements of the Standards Committee against the Winchelsea councillors were quashed by an Appeals Tribunal, to the profound embarrassment of the Committee (the Tribunal reasserted the democratic principle that councillors were free to engage in political activity, including campaigning against council decisions).
In the case of Pear Tree Marsh, Mr Edwards judged that, before the District Council could be asked to vary the covenant, the Parish Council would have to secure permission from the Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government to convert the site from use as allotments, even though we do not wish to convert any plots to parking, merely to use unused and unusuable land within the site for this purpose. On this quibble, the non-Winchelsea councillors have built their objections.
However, Mr Edwards' interpretation raises the issue of the legality of allowing any parking on Pear Tree Marsh. It cannot be claimed that the existing parking is pursuant to the use of allotment plots, as it takes place overnight, when allotments are not cultivated. And some of those with access to parking are not allotment-holders, but friends. Why is one group of residents still allowed to park?
The new Clerk has undertaken to research the history of issue. For the foreseeable future, the unfair and unsatisfactory situation in Tanyard Lane will continue, perpetuated by councillors from wards other than Winchelsea. Another telling reason for a separate Parish Council.
Pear Tree Marsh is sited off Tanyard Lane, which is part of the A259(T). Most houses on Tanyard Lane do not have off-street parking and their occupiers have to park in one of the lay-bys on that road, where they are subject to burglary and vandalism. Indeed, the lay-bys are the crime hotspot of Winchelsea.
Pear Tree Marsh was purchased many years ago by the Parish Council from the District Council, who applied a covenant to the sale that the site could only be used for allotments. However, in addition to several allotment plots, the site has a large area of open ground. Allotment-holders have always parked here. Indeed, many took on an allotment plot only to get access to parking. This resulted in derelict plots. The worst offenders included a couple of ward councillors and ex-councillors for Winchelsea, who invited friends to park in Pear Tree Marsh as well. Not unnaturally, this was seen as unfair by those without access.
Some years ago, I proposed to the Council that the situation should be regularised by opening up parking to all residents, possibly at a small charge. Should too many residents apply, priority would be given to those without off-street parking and, if necessary, places could be allotted fairly by ballot.
In the petty personality-driven politics of Icklesham Parish Council, the proposal was opposed by several councillors from other wards, ie not resident in Winchelsea, notably Cllrs Merricks, Stanford, Bronsdon and Sutton. There seems to be a fear that Winchelsea ward councillors might be allowed to do something for their electorate. Ostensible objections have centred around Rother's covenant. Of course, covenants can be varied and the Council succeeded in doing so in the case of Icklesham Recreation Ground.
Moreover, there are doubts as to whether the covenant does actually forbid parking, given that this does not interfer with the provision of allotment plots.
Eventually, the Council was persuaded to write to Rother to clarify the situation. And here, we came up against the Rother solicitor David Edwards. Those familar with the complaints under the Code of Conduct made against Winchelsea ward councillors will remember that Mr Edwards was legal adviser to the Rother Standards Committee. Mr Edwards advised the Committee that, once a parish council had made a decision, councillors were prohibited from criticising or campaigning against that decision. In the end, the judgements of the Standards Committee against the Winchelsea councillors were quashed by an Appeals Tribunal, to the profound embarrassment of the Committee (the Tribunal reasserted the democratic principle that councillors were free to engage in political activity, including campaigning against council decisions).
In the case of Pear Tree Marsh, Mr Edwards judged that, before the District Council could be asked to vary the covenant, the Parish Council would have to secure permission from the Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government to convert the site from use as allotments, even though we do not wish to convert any plots to parking, merely to use unused and unusuable land within the site for this purpose. On this quibble, the non-Winchelsea councillors have built their objections.
However, Mr Edwards' interpretation raises the issue of the legality of allowing any parking on Pear Tree Marsh. It cannot be claimed that the existing parking is pursuant to the use of allotment plots, as it takes place overnight, when allotments are not cultivated. And some of those with access to parking are not allotment-holders, but friends. Why is one group of residents still allowed to park?
The new Clerk has undertaken to research the history of issue. For the foreseeable future, the unfair and unsatisfactory situation in Tanyard Lane will continue, perpetuated by councillors from wards other than Winchelsea. Another telling reason for a separate Parish Council.
Icklesham Annual Parish Assembly 2013
The notice for the Annual
Parish Assembly went up in Winchelsea yesterday (Tuesday). There should have been
seven days’ notice, so it was outside the statutory notice period here, but I
am told a notice went up within the time limit elsewhere in the Parish.
However, the late notice is just a symptom of a chronic problem at Icklesham
Parish Council when it comes to the Annual Parish Assembly.
Icklesham Parish Council has always treated Annual Parish Assemblies as just an extra Council meeting. In fact, they are supposed to meetings of the parish, ie residents (the statutory name is Annual Parish Meeting). This is made clear in NALC and other guidance. Residents are supposed to be given the opportunity to bring items to the agenda. While the Chairman of the Parish Council reports to the meeting on the activities of the Council, the main business is supposed to be about non-Council activities in the parish.
To be fair, Icklesham face a fundamental problem with Annual Parish Assemblies. Being composed of four disparate and very different villages, it will always be a struggle to find items that will get residents to come out on a Monday evening, even in the village where the meeting is being held. And residents from other villages have to travel up to two miles for the pleasure of attending. Not even outrageous expenditure on refreshments has been able to tempt more than a handful. Winchelsea Town Meetings were able to get 60-80 residents to attend because they could focus of issues of relevance to residents.
However, it often appears that Icklesham do not want residents to turn up to Annual Parish Assemblies, in case they try to get involved, particularly if they are Winchelsea residents. Too many members of the public make the Council nervous. Thus, in 2010, when 14-15 Winchelsea residents turned up in response to the Council’s declared wish to consult on a proposal to turn off the streetlights in Winchelsea at midnight, the meeting rapidly fell apart. See the report on this meeting below.
Icklesham Parish Council has always treated Annual Parish Assemblies as just an extra Council meeting. In fact, they are supposed to meetings of the parish, ie residents (the statutory name is Annual Parish Meeting). This is made clear in NALC and other guidance. Residents are supposed to be given the opportunity to bring items to the agenda. While the Chairman of the Parish Council reports to the meeting on the activities of the Council, the main business is supposed to be about non-Council activities in the parish.
It is not easy to get this
meeting right, but many parishes try and some succeed (Sedlescombe is a local model).
Icklesham have made half-hearted and unimaginative attempts in recent years but
have now reverted to type.
The next Annual Parish
Assembly will feature just one external speaker (from social housing
association Amicus) and three councillors --- parish councillors Warren and
Stanford, and County Councillor Glazier. The audience will largely be other
councillors and the occasional bored spouse (plus both parish clerks, despite
the fact that this is not a Parish Council meeting). Apart from listening to
other councillors, they will be treated to the Chairman reading out a dull and
heavily sanitised version of events over the previous year.To be fair, Icklesham face a fundamental problem with Annual Parish Assemblies. Being composed of four disparate and very different villages, it will always be a struggle to find items that will get residents to come out on a Monday evening, even in the village where the meeting is being held. And residents from other villages have to travel up to two miles for the pleasure of attending. Not even outrageous expenditure on refreshments has been able to tempt more than a handful. Winchelsea Town Meetings were able to get 60-80 residents to attend because they could focus of issues of relevance to residents.
However, it often appears that Icklesham do not want residents to turn up to Annual Parish Assemblies, in case they try to get involved, particularly if they are Winchelsea residents. Too many members of the public make the Council nervous. Thus, in 2010, when 14-15 Winchelsea residents turned up in response to the Council’s declared wish to consult on a proposal to turn off the streetlights in Winchelsea at midnight, the meeting rapidly fell apart. See the report on this meeting below.
Extract the blog on the Annual
Parish Assembly of May 2010
'The high points of the evening were the discussions of the Council’s
decision to ignore the results of a consultation on turning off the footlights
in Winchelsea at midnight and its proposal to borrow up to £100,000, on top of
the £40,000 that they have already borrowed.
On the question of turning off the footlights at midnight, the
background is that, in November 2011, Icklesham Parish Council sent out
consultation forms to all households in Winchelsea asking whether they would
support, for economic and environmental reasons, turning off the 17 footlights
at midnight. The cost of fitting timers
would be recouped in less than 18 months and then there would be an annual
saving of some £750 a year (rising with electricity prices). Responses were
received from 66 households (ie about 24% of the village). The result was 2:1
in favour of turning off the lights at midnight. However, at a subsequent
Council meeting, one resident opposed to turning off the lights early attacked
the consultation on the grounds that it may have been fiddled because residents
had been given the option of returning their forms via ward councillors. The
resident also argued that the consultation was not valid because it did not ask
whether residents wanted more lights.
Councillors from other wards joined in, complaining that the
consultation forms had given too much information to residents! The Chairman
judged the rate of response to be too low. The Council therefore decided to
ignore the results of their own consultation and bring the question to the
Annual Parish Assembly.
When pressed about this decision, the Chairman simply repeated the
excuse that the turnout was too low and that some residents were unhappy about
the result. When he was asked whether the Council had a policy setting a threshold
on the level of responses to consultations, he simply would not answer. He just
kept repeating that the response was judged too low and that some residents
were unhappy with the proposal. He continued in the same vein when it was
pointed out to him that the response to the Local Action Plan, on which the
Council are basing much of their spending, had responses from Icklesham, Rye
Harbour and Winchelsea Beach of less than half the response rate to the
footlights question! Nor was the Chairman any more forthcoming when the
absurdity was highlighted of ignoring a consultation of all households
in favour of the Annual Parish Assembly where less than a dozen residents
usually turn up.
By the time the Chairman was questioned on whether it was appropriate to
ignore a clear vote in favour of a proposal because the losers objected to the
result, he was sinking fast and proposed that the Council be asked to
reconsider its decision to defer the question back to the Annual Parish
Assembly! It had to be pointed out that, as the question had already come to
the Assembly, this particular course of action could not be reconsidered.
A vote was taken and the result was 10:7 in favour of turning off the
lights. At this point, I requisitioned a Parish Poll in order to ensure that
the Council could not again ignore the balance of opinion among residents. Cllr Stanford complained that this would mean
that residents of other wards would have a vote on the Winchelsea lights --- putting
her finger on the problem of having a parish composed of four separate
villages. Cllr Bronsdon weighed in to express amazement that I was willing to
have the Council spend money on a matter of principle and, for the first of
many occasions during the evening, said how “sad” he was at my action.
Eventually, the Chairman agreed that the Council would be asked to
accept the result of the consultation and the vote at the Annual Parish
Assembly [they did not]. I therefore withdrew the requisition for a Parish Poll
on the understanding that, if the Council once again tried to ignore the
balance of opinion among residents, that I would convene a special Parish
Meeting and requisition a Parish Poll again.’
Friday, 3 May 2013
2013 County Council election results --- Glazier scrapes it
The result for Rye and Easter Rother (which includes Winchelsea) is in.
So Cllr Glazier is re-elected but with his majority slashed from 572 to 79 and his share of the electorate down to 13%. He will at least be grateful that he did not down as much as the LibDems, whose vote collapsed from 1,000 to 171.
In the County as a whole, the Conservatives have lost overall control, although they remain the largest single party. UKIP made the best showing and Labour did well in Hastings.
Unfortunately, the whole election has been marred by a very low turnout.
candidate
|
party
|
2013
| |
2009
| |
votes
|
share
|
votes
|
share
| ||
Keith Glazier
|
Con.
|
963
|
36.1%
|
1,572
|
52.8%
|
Mike MacKenzie
|
UKIP
|
884
|
33.2%
|
n/a
| |
Nick Warren
|
Lab.
|
647
|
24.3%
|
407
|
13.7%
|
Peter Hillier-Palmer
|
LibDem.
|
171
|
6.4%
|
1,000
|
33.6%
|
turnout
| | |
36.0%
| |
42.0%
|
So Cllr Glazier is re-elected but with his majority slashed from 572 to 79 and his share of the electorate down to 13%. He will at least be grateful that he did not down as much as the LibDems, whose vote collapsed from 1,000 to 171.
In the County as a whole, the Conservatives have lost overall control, although they remain the largest single party. UKIP made the best showing and Labour did well in Hastings.
party
|
2013
|
2009
|
Con.
|
20
|
29
|
LibDem.
|
10
|
13
|
Lab.
|
7
|
4
|
UKIP
|
7
|
n/a
|
independents
|
5
|
3
|
Unfortunately, the whole election has been marred by a very low turnout.
Tuesday, 16 April 2013
Not conserving Winchelsea
Icklesham Parish Council's Planning Committee has always shown a contempt for Winchelsea's Conservation Area status. Cllr Bronsdon (Rye Harbour) famously dismissed it as 'simply' about visual appearance. Cllr Sutton (Winchelsea Beach) argued that, as far as he was concerned, Winchelsea Beach was a conservation area.
However, the current Planning Committee broke new ground recently by supporting an application (RR/2013/433/P) by JC Leisure, the motorhome sales unit near Strand Bridge, to breach the Development Boundary --- ie build in open countryside --- by extending across the Brede. If accepted, this would be a major shift in local planning policy.
The application itself may appear innocuous: a change of use to parking. But once a change of use to a business purpose has been allowed, it is simple to get further changes all the way to allowing building. This is was happened at Ferryfields Caravan Park and, more recently, at the old gasometer site. All of these developments have helped to erode the medieval landscape setting of Winchelsea --- a hilltop 'bastide' surrounded by flat marshland, with little peripheral development.
A secondary role in this little story has been played by East Sussex County Council. They owned the land. When they sold it, they were asked by Winchelsea councillors to place a covenant to stop development. They refused, apparently as it might reduce the value to them.
However, the current Planning Committee broke new ground recently by supporting an application (RR/2013/433/P) by JC Leisure, the motorhome sales unit near Strand Bridge, to breach the Development Boundary --- ie build in open countryside --- by extending across the Brede. If accepted, this would be a major shift in local planning policy.
The application itself may appear innocuous: a change of use to parking. But once a change of use to a business purpose has been allowed, it is simple to get further changes all the way to allowing building. This is was happened at Ferryfields Caravan Park and, more recently, at the old gasometer site. All of these developments have helped to erode the medieval landscape setting of Winchelsea --- a hilltop 'bastide' surrounded by flat marshland, with little peripheral development.
A secondary role in this little story has been played by East Sussex County Council. They owned the land. When they sold it, they were asked by Winchelsea councillors to place a covenant to stop development. They refused, apparently as it might reduce the value to them.
Labels:
Bronsdon,
ESCC,
Icklesham Parish Council,
planning,
Sutton
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