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Cornwall Council’s Budget 30 November, 2011

Posted by Jeremy Rowe in News, Politics.
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While George Osborne was standing up in Parliament outlining the misery which lies in store for (nearly) everyone in Britain over the next six years, Cornwall Council was staging its own equivalent at New County Hall – the Tory-led administration’s budget.

To be fair to him, the Leader of the Council did attempt to sound a little more upbeat than the Chancellor but he was working with pretty thin gruel. It’s hard to make a package which includes losing half the bus routes, closing half the toilets and accelerating the decline of the road network sound attractive, but he was keen to try.

We heard much about how “bold” and “brave” the administration had been in “going deep and going early” (although not a great deal about how the switch to unitary status had saved them from slashing public services even further) and there was a fairly shameless attempt to take credit for a number of schemes which had been put in place by Cornwall Council’s predecessor authorities. The problem was that we learned very little about what the Council’s coalition (or “shared administration” as one Indie Cabinet Member was at pains to point out) actually plans to do over the coming months.

We shouldn’t be surprised about that. There has never been a meaningful policy statement from the administration, no matter how many times we’ve asked. Some months ago I asked the Leader if there was a ‘big idea’ at the heart of the Tory-led Cabinet. All he was able to do was shrug his shoulders and mutter something about “managing the crisis”.

And there lies the beating heart of this administration. They are managers, and not especially gifted ones at that. The “go early, go deep” plan didn’t come from them, it came from the senior directors who spend so much of their time spoon-feeding the Cabinet (to recycle a phrase from one of their leading lights). The drive for a Stadium for Cornwall (whether you like the idea or not) is an officer project, as is the Cornish EMA plan.

All the Cabinet have to do is make sure they are asking the right questions of the officers. Unfortunately part of the backdrop of this year’s budget has been their failure to do even that. Car parking revenue was a disaster they were collectively unable to prevent – despite warnings from us and others – as was the situation with the bus routes; they made a mistake with last year’s Adult Care budget which had to be hastily corrected this time around (they even had the brass neck to try to put a positive spin on this); and two weeks ago the Leader was unable to answer my simple question about the level of Council Tax for the coming year. Nothing especially “bold” or “brave” in any of that.

To help out we put forward four amendments. Firstly, we proposed that the Council accepts the grant from central government designed to deliver a Council Tax freeze this year. Secondly, we proposed a grant pot to help set up community bus projects when we find out the full scale of the administration’s calamity on this. Thirdly, we called for a scheme to protect and enhance Cornwall’s harbours. Finally, we proposed that any material changes to the budget should be examined by the Council’s Scrutiny Committees rather than simply being nodded through by someone in the top floor bunker.

Happily the administration accepted all of these points, although it turns out that it was only because senior officers recommended that they did. Nevertheless, we were at least able to put some clarity into a budget which otherwise asks more questions than it answers.

Of course, the budget was passed. The Tories were whipped into line and the Indies, in spite of their earlier rumblings of discontent, largely fell into line when the vote was called. Nevertheless, it remains a budget of unknowns. There are still far too many unanswered questions contained within – let’s just hope that when the answers come, they aren’t as disastrous as this year’s were for the buses, the public toilets, the car parks, the road network and Cornwall’s forgotten rural communities.

Budget Scrutiny – a wasted day full of jargon and spin 4 November, 2011

Posted by Jeremy Rowe in News.
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Today and yesterday were ‘Budget Scrutiny’ days at Cornwall Council. The idea is that Councillors have the chance to ask questions about the budget proposals of each directorate, and that part of the bargain was certainly fulfilled. Many Councillors, from all parties, asked many questions of the assembled officers and Cabinet Members from the Tory-led administration.

The trouble was, there didn’t seem to be any answers. Time and again Councillors asked for detail, usually receiving a bland reply about “operational integration” or “disinvestment” or “reablement-type activity” or – my personal favourite in the management jargon bingo game – “transformational change”. (What on Earth does that vacuous phrase mean? Changey change? Different differences? Please just make it stop…)

Mercifully I had a local meeting yesterday so I was spared most of Thursday’s pain (although I foolishly put the webcast on when I arrived home) but today felt like one of those days you know you’ll never get back, the sort of day when you find yourself wanting to make certain people eat the management manuals they’ve clearly spent too much time reading.

But of course, amid my frustration with the language, it would be wrong to lose sight of the real issue. Cornwall Council have made much of their decision to ‘go early’ with the budget this year, but as a result of that there is a serious “technical information deficit”, to put it into words the Cabinet might understand. The Budget Scrutiny days have simply been an exercise in window dressing. Representatives from various departments have given PowerPoint presentations (‘killing you Microsoftly’ as someone once said) and presented the administration’s spin, but the whole thing is desperately short on detail.

We know Cornwall will lose buses, toilets will close and potholes will remain unfixed, but what are the other hidden horrors? Last year the brave new budget process failed to see the gaping hole in car park revenue or the funding disaster which threatens to destroy Cornwall’s rural bus network. What will this year’s disaster be?

Who can say? I suspect there is no end of devilry in this budget – the trouble is, there’s so little detail.

(I wasn’t the only one to find the whole thing massively frustrating – have a read of the views of Alex Folkes, Jude Robinson and Andrew Wallis.)

Cornwall Council seemingly unconcerned about ragwort 19 August, 2011

Posted by Jeremy Rowe in Local Matters.
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I took the photo above at New County Hall earlier today. As a snapshot I think it tells a tale about Cornwall Council’s approach to ragwort this year. The St Issey Division, which stretches from St Eval across to St Tudy, seems to be awash with the weed this summer. There is a difference of opinion as to how harmful ragwort actually is, but the authority nevertheless has a duty to remove it, particularly given the efforts most landowners go to to ensure that their land is cleared before the weed goes to seed.

Tollgate Roundabout – Update 8 February, 2011

Posted by Jeremy Rowe in Local Matters, News.
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I posted recently about Member Highway Schemes for the St Issey & St Tudy Division and mentioned the three improvements I was keen to progress – improved signage at Hal’s Grave, safety measures at Porthcothan and road markings at the Tollgate Roundabout. While there were unlikely to be any problems with the first two, there were suggestions that there might be the odd technical hitch with the Tollgate scheme.

I am happy to report that the Highways people have now cleared the addition of some paint and – providing there are no material objections – it shouldn’t be too long before the improvements are made. This relatively simple solution should help to avoid any number of near misses at the roundabout as two lanes of traffic often try to squeeze into one. Those who have been approaching the junction in the left lane while continuing on the A39 haven’t been doing anything wrong by the Highway Code, but equally there are many who feel that the left lane should be for Wadebridge traffic and the right lane for Padstow, Truro etc.

Hopefully these simple splashes of paint will help make this junction safer for everyone.

Highway schemes, Tollgate Roundabout and white paint 18 January, 2011

Posted by Jeremy Rowe in Local Matters, News.
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Today I met with Highways staff to discuss some (relatively) minor improvement schemes in various parts of the St Issey & St Tudy Division. As you may be aware, Cornwall Councillors have a small budget (£8,000) available to them to progress schemes which fall outside the standard Highway Maintenance budget and, within the clearly limited finances, we settled on three to be tackled in this financial year.

The first two should be reasonably straightforward and uncontroversial: improved signage at Hal’s Grave to try to prevent heavy goods vehicles heading through the narrow roads of St Issey and Little Petherick, and some safety improvements to the road through Porthcothan in St Eval Parish. The third could yet prove a little trickier.

Few would argue that the new(ish) roundabout at Tollgate is anything other than a dramatic improvement on the deadly junction it replaced, but I still receive a large number of complaints about the two-lane approach to it coming up the hill from the bypass bridge. Locals will be aware that these two lanes feed in to a roundabout with, effectively, two options on the other side – one takes you into Wadebridge, the other carries on along the A39. Logic perhaps dictates that Wadebridge-bound traffic takes the left lane while those going straight on take the right hand lane. However this is not necessarily clear to those who don’t know the area as well and there have been quite a number of near misses on the exit for the A39 as two into one don’t tend to fit very well.

I have once again asked Highways to either paint directional arrows on the road surface or provide better signage on the approach to the roundabout as it is probably only a matter of time before there is a more serious accident than the minor scrapes which have occurred so far. (Indeed, last week there was quite a serious-looking accident where a car appeared to take off completely, although at this stage it is impossible to say exactly what caused it.) I am fully aware that the excellent staff at Highways have to work within a tight regulatory framework and that there may be any number of reasons why they can’t solve the problem with a simple lick of white paint on the road. However, this seemingly minor niggle is causing no end of problems for motorists in the area and I hope that every possibility will be explored in order to iron this issue out.

Each of these three schemes will still have a number of hoops to jump through before any work can start and we may yet find ourselves back to the drawing board with any or all of them. However, the improvements with regard to Little Petherick and Porthcothan should hopefully be fairly straightforward. Tollgate, on the other hand, may well be another matter altogether.

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