Where's Nikki?
So, come the first Waverley Local Committee since the County election, ergo the first local committee to be held since Nikki Barton became the county councilor for Haslemere, and one tweep asks:
So, come the first Waverley Local Committee since the County election, ergo the first local committee to be held since Nikki Barton became the county councilor for Haslemere, and one tweep asks:
Not
attending the Local Committee, at any rate.
Apparently,
when the committee chair asked the officers to advise which members they had
received apologies from, the response was that Mrs Barton “may be late”.
So late, in
fact, that when the meeting finished she had not been sighted. Perhaps the Ladies’ Final at Wimbledon went
on longer than she had anticipated?
Anyway,
consider this statement quoted in the Surrey Advertiser (on-line edition) at
the end of January this year:
Nikki Barton, of
Scotland Lane, who heads the campaign group, said: “….. anyone who witnessed
the shambolic meeting can only conclude that the LAC structure is not fit for
purpose.”
Mrs Barton evidently believes that there are problems with
this committee. Who's to say that she is
wrong? If so though you’d think she would
want to get to work straight away on trying to reform it.
So, I’ll ask again: where’s
Nikki?
Many residents will now have seen evidence of the arrival of
the new parking restrictions. I had
wondered when the one closest to my heart, Bunch Lane, would be done but even
as I pondered this Surrey’s Finest were painting the double-yellows from St
Christopher’s Green northwards to just beyond “Coniston”. At time of writing the white-line marking of
the parking bays was yet to be done but the road was coned off to permit the
liners to work.
Having seen it on the ground I do have one technical
reservation about the northernmost group of parking bays – the sightlines are
not especially good and the road is rather narrower here than it is a few
metres to either side. I’ll have to go
down there at the weekend with a camera and a tape measure to gather some
measurements.
This week’s Herald has a piece about the Haslemere Vision. HV has put up an online questionnaire on its website here. I would urge you to complete it – it is really quite good, even if it does conflate traffic calming with the “holistic parking solution” chimera. I have linked to the on-line survey but there is also a means of downloading the survey in print form here. If you want to have your say about the issues which face Haslemere - and make your own suggestions for what to do about them - now is your chance.
Also on the front page of the Herald, a piece on the outcome
of a planning enquiry for Dunsfold Aerodrome.
Well, not exactly.
Waverley Borough Council won the planning appeal against its refusal to
grant permission for housebuilding on the site, on the grounds that the
development was unsustainable. (I have
been here before. 1,000 homes on fields –
and forget the “brownfield” tag, the vast majority of the site is covered by
virgin grass – some miles from the nearest settlements with shops and schools,
even further from decent transport links and with below-mediocre road links, is
not “sustainable” whatever the “Flying Scotsman” Jim McAllister, owner of the
site, may say) The owners then said “OK,
in that case we want to use it as an airfield, so we’ll ask for unrestricted
movements permission” to replace the current consent for a maximum of 5,000
movements (take-offs or landings) per annum.
What they got – and not before 2018 – is confirmation that
the original 1951 planning consent could be relied on. That permits unrestricted movements for the manufacture, repair, maintenance and
flight testing of aircraft. It does
not permit the aerodrome to be operated as an airport, or a “Business Aviation”
(ie private jet) terminal, or a cargo terminal, or anything like that. It
permits aircraft to arrive and leave for the purposes of undergoing maintenance
and repair, and to be flight-tested during such maintenance and repair. (As commented on in the article, the third
aspect of use, ie manufacture, can be seen separately. They don’t have to include manufacture, and
it is unlikely that there would be any demand for it).
I was sad to see that the local Friends of the Earth have
spouted so much guff about this issue, although I will give them credit for
making at least one sensible suggestion.
Exactly – I am no expert on the aviation industry, although
as a former pilot I perhaps know a little more than most, but I suspect that a
serious commercial operation to repair and maintain airliners and business jets
could not actually use the 5,000 movements per annum envisaged in the current
temporary permission. Take a look at
Lasham, in Hampshire, where an airliner maintenance facility shares an aerodrome
with the gliding cub.
Indeed, if it could, I can’t imagine that Gatwick Airport or
the Civil Aviation Authority would tolerate it.
It is far too close to published arrival and departure routes for
Gatwick’s traffic.
Other front page features relate to the Haslemere Food-bank,
and to Fracking in Fernhurst. It is
shaming to think that in a town like Haslemere, there are people whose
circumstances are such that they have to rely on a foodbank, but hats off to
the local churches and generous residents who have supported this. On fracking, the management of our Haslemere
Hall could do something useful, and offer to show the documentary film “Drill, Baby, Drill” which is to be
shown in the Fernhurst village hall this weekend, for we are not unaffected by
this even if it is five miles away.
Meanwhile, on the letters page, we have this response to Graeme Spratley’s letter published last week.
OKaaaay – Graeme and I must have been smoking something
then, when we could have sworn we saw and heard a group of individuals representing themselves as from Haslemere Vision
gave a presentation to Haslemere Town Council, observed by (since) Councillor
Barton and Robert Serman, on their proposals for the Fairground site back in March!
Then, eventually, after a lengthy holiday from parking letters,
we have this:
Generally a thoughtful letter, which is more than can be
said of all correspodents to the Herald, but I think it contains some
misconceptions:
·
Neither Waverley, nor Surrey, nor the Town
Council, have any control over business rates.
Rateable values are determined by the valuation office of HM Revenue
& Customs, and the “multiplier” is set nationally, by national
government. Local authorities collect
the money but they have to hand it over to the Treasury, which then doles it
out across local authorities – and you can be sure that what gets doled out to
Waverley etc is considerably less than what gets collected by them. Our local authorities don’t really have any
financial interest in business rates
·
References are made to the “cost” to WBC of the
afternoon tickets, but they know full well, as the proceedings of the committee
meeting show, that this cost is entirely theoretical. It implies users would have parked for 2 ½ hours
each day Monday – Wednesday and paid the standard charge, which of course they would
not. Nor does it really represent much
of a loss to users – the point is to encourage them to park in the High St car
park at less busy times of the shopping day by offering them a flat fee and
escape from the current bind of rummaging around for loose change.
·
Of course the offer is for a small proportion of
people – 0.3% or whatever – but it is a pilot.
As Councillor King said in committee, “I intend to retain the trial to 50 permits initially but propose to review this each quarter
throughout the year and adjust it as appropriate”. The point is, if it works, ie if it increases
footfall in the nearby shops by improving the utilisation of parking spaces at
otherwise quieter times of day and week, and also thus increasing availability
of free spaces at the busiest times through displacement effect, then it may be
offered more widely and more permanently
There
are plenty of people – and one prominent town centre retailer is among them –
who believe that the real issue for declining footfall relates more to the
quality and variety of the retail offerings we currently have. Some, such as Cockerills Shoes, have clearly
sussed it, and whatever it is they have, they should bottle it and sell it to
their neighbours. Others do less
well. As Michael Clayton says, we have –
for example - no mobile phone shop, and that would be a helpful additional to
our retail mix.
And finally – pondering what has happened to our local county
councillor, whose photo or quotes seem to have featured in virtually every
edition of the Herald for the last several months, I made a search – not manually
of course, I used a search engine on the on-line edition – with this result:
So, where’s Nikki?
Perhaps there’s a clue in her current Twitter profile page:
Could she be hibernating?

Intersting to note her Twitter followership. For a public figure it is hardly very large is it? And it is fewer than the people she follows.
ReplyDelete(For the non-cognoscenti, when you follow someone they tend to follow you back, which evidently is not always happening here.)
Interesting point. I hadn't really spotted that, but now you mention it, I have more followers (and far fewer followees) and I'm not a councillor!
DeleteMaybe all it means is that her friends are not really social-media types, but her ratio does look the wrong way around.
NB has finally released a "what I did on my holidays" for the last three weeks on her website.
ReplyDeleteCuriously, the Local Committee and her non-attendance doesn't get a mention!