Friday, September 28, 2007

Burma: please take action

Just got home this evening and found an invite to appear on World Have Your Say programme on BBC World Service re Burma - however the programme was 18.00 today.

A pity I missed it - although not sure how good I would have been at putting across all the complex issues - one point I would have made was the $83 million level of EU trade (2005) when the regime should be high on the list for sanctions. The Burma Campaign UK have long called for targeted economic sanctions, including an investment ban, a ban on financial transactions, an asset freeze, and a ban on imports of timber and gems.

The news today from Burma is not good - even Brown acknowledged that the death toll is suspected to be much higher than the official figures - but at last he calls for sanctions - but when will there be action? There are also reports of soldiers' mutineering - how many is unknown.

"China is the puppet-master of Burma. The Olympics is the only real lever we have to make China act. The civilised world must seriously consider shunning China by using the Beijing Olympics to send the clear message that such abuses of human rights are not acceptable."
Edward McMillan-Scott, vice-president of the European Parliament

"We still believe that the processes under way in Myanmar do not threaten international and regional peace and security. We expect the country's authorities, as well as the participants in protest marches, to exercise mutual constraint not to allow further destabilisation of the situation."
Russian Foreign Ministry statement

"I extend my support and solidarity with the recent peaceful movement for democracy in Burma. I fully support their call for freedom and democracy and take this opportunity to appeal to freedom-loving people all over the world to support such non-violent movements. Moreover, I wish to convey my sincere appreciation and admiration to the large number of fellow Buddhists monks for advocating democracy and freedom in Burma. As a Buddhist monk, I am appealing to the members of the military regime who believe in Buddhism to act in accordance with the sacred dharma in the spirit of compassion and non-violence. I pray for the success of this peaceful movement and the early release of fellow Nobel Peace laureate Aung San Suu Kyi."
Dalai Lama - Message to Burma

Take action here (and see previous blog entries on Burma):
http://www.burmacampaign.org.uk/crackdown.php

Thursday, September 27, 2007

Don't forget West Papua

On the 14th November a Green party colleague is organising an event at the Space in Stroud to raise awareness about West Papua for the local Amnesty group - it will include one of the key West Papuan leaders, Benny Wenda.

Last time Benny was in Stroud was in 2005 when a local film maker showed some film of West Papua - it was a good evening - at this November meeting there will also be a film - anyhow Benny is a great green radical - I last heard him speak at the Green party Spring conference - we are very fortunate to have the chance again to hear this extraordinary man talk about his extraordinary fight...

At the moment the situation is bad in West Papua - the Free West Papua campaign are getting messages from inside West Papua every day about ordinary Papuan women, men and children being killed, tortured, intimidated and imprisoned by the forces of the Indonesian military occupation. Think Burma (see previous posts on situation there and actions you can take) and that's West Papua under Indonesian colonial rule.

But whilst the US & UK governments are starting to speak out about Burma, they stay silent about Indonesian oppression in West Papua. Why? The simple answer is that they seek to protect Western multi-nationals like BP and Rio Tinto's commercial interests in Indonesian-occupied West Papua.

For the moment it's impossible for the people inside West Papua to campaign peacefully for independence from Indonesia.....unless they want to sign their own death certificate. That's why they need us to speak out on their behalf - to let the leaders of the US & UK know that you're not prepared to stand by and witness the Indonesian military wipe out the indigenous West Papuans from the face of their own Land.

This week I already mentioned Gordon Brown's speech at the Labour Party Conference in Bournemouth - he said: "There is a golden thread of common humanity that across nations and faiths binds us together and it can light the darkest corners of the world. And the message should go out to anyone facing persecution anywhere from Burma to Zimbabwe: human rights are universal and no injustice can last forever."

Please E-MAIL Gordon Brown a message (including your name & address) so that he will listen to the cry of the West Papuans. Go to:
http://www.number10.gov.uk/output/Page821.asp

And you could also send it to the UK Foreign Secretary, David Miliband MP:
milibandd@parliament.uk

And the Foreign Office Minister, Meg Munn MP:
munnm@parliament.uk

And finally if you're a UK citizen or resident in the UK please sign your name to the Free West Papuan political prisoners PETITION on the 10, Downing Street website:
http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/FREEWESTPAPUA/

A46: Wades Lane lorries ignore restrictions

More photos from residents of Wades Lane - I sent the note below to Highways and Community Police - this is a dire problem - there do not seem to be any easy answers - I can wholly understand residents deep frustration. I have heard some residents (not in that road) threaten to block the road. Ideas about best ways forward welcomed?

Many thanks for your swift response - especially good re news of Puckshole reopening. However I am not happy that all is being done that could be done regarding Wades Lane area. I have received further photos this morning (taken Wednesday) of a lorry, motorhomes and an accident along the lane - plus reports from two residents who remain very concerned.

The extra slow signs are up but the dire problems persist: motorists are clearly ignoring the signage and travelling too fast and lorries also still use the route. The weight restriction on the bridge appears to be being ignored: is this dangerous?
Have traffic lights been considered? A long wait might deter people? However one of the residents who has contacted me considers that traffic lights will simply make this an official rat run? Closure of the road I am sure is not possible or perhaps desirable as other communities would face traffic increases? It seems signage is being ignored but maybe a 'Long Delays' sign could reduce impatience?

Residents do appreciate that this is a nightmare for everybody including the Highways Dept . The road is 60 mph and the quantity of impatient traffic makes this a very dangerous stretch of road. Is there any way of putting in an emergency 20 mph in view of the situation? Please could you also request more police for the busy periods in morning and evening? I hope it will be possible to at least alleviate a little some of the problems here.

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Mail centre saved but no Sunday post

pomailcentreGreat news - the city's mail centre has been saved from the proposed move to Swindon - am convinced people power won the day - all political colours rose against the proposal and a constant flow of letters to papers, a march and various other moves mean it is now under review. Workers will understandably still have a sense of uncertainty - it looks like common sense has won but we should not lower our guard just yet. See Green campaign letter here and scroll down to my previous blog entry on this on 8th November here. The campaigns website also has news here.

On October 28th, Sunday and bank holiday post collections from boxes will be cut - that is some 288 boxes in Gloucestershire - another erosion of a once great service - Royal Mail say they have to make the cuts to compete with rivals - all in the name of competition....

Should District support local post offices?

The Government plans to close 2,500 post offices by 2009 - a fifth of those left in the UK - this means many post offices in Gloucestershire are under threat. One look at the Government's criteria for closure shows that according to them we have way too many post offices. It is certainly clear many post offices are in trouble:
Here's a quote from a Sub-postmaster to the District Council: "For every 200 pensioners we serve, we make only £15!!"
Last night at a Stroud District Council Policy panel in the Council Chamber at Ebley Mill (pictured above), a presentation of the current situation re post offices was made to councilors - sadly only only 5 0r 6 out of 51 councilors were there. I don't think that reflects the feelings about post offices but rather the frustration at having few powers to change the situation.

As regular readers of this blog will know post offices closures or threats to their closures have been an important local issue - locally Cashes Green Post Office and Whiteshill PO closed despite demonstrations and petitions while Paganhill remained open only due to massive community action and public funds - the other remaining post offices in Cainscross and Ebley have also been threatened with closure and some in the Parish fear they will not survive under this new review. Put 'post office' into search facility above to see previous entries or to see my submission to the Governments consultation click here.

The District Council has given small grants of £500 to village shops and post offices in the past however this scheme ended as £500 was really too little. The Council has also provided professional advice and support - even tried to help set up a forum for village shops and post offices - understandably if you are running one of those you are too tired to then attend an evening meeting - the forum closed but I do wonder if something online maybe possible instead?

Anyhow the Government is set to make an announcement in February and have another 6 week consultation - there is really little that can be done before then. I've written lots before on the flawed nature of the post office closures - the Government seems set on seeing them only as businesses - a complete failure to recognise the social importance they play - and indeed the importance of retaining local services in our challenge to reduce CO2 emissions.

So that leaves us locally with questions to ask - an interesting debate developed at last nights meeting around these issues. Wish I could summarise all but here is a taster...

Why do we want a Post Office? What should a PO provide? What should SDC's role be?

These are not such obvious questions? There is a romance attached to local post offices and retaining them however there is still no question in my mind about the important role they play - over 200 services including many types of banking. Yet local shops also play an important role in communities - too many communities no longer have access to fresh vegetables - or indeed any local food supplies.

Clearly there is a need for wider actions by Government to support local services but to what extent should SDC help local 'businesses'? I asked if there was a way of assessing 'social' or 'environmental' benefits and perhaps on those grounds looking at support - but the whole area is fraught with difficult issues, national policies and more. Certainly SDC should have a role in supporting post offices and village shops to diversify. I want to write lots more on this but have an appointment - will no doubt return in a future blog.

Shameful - Government and EU failing on Burma

Yesterday I wrote a post re the importance of action NOW on Burma - our Government now agrees there needs to be action but they still have not yet taken any. Meanwhile the EU is appearing extraordinarly ‘weak and ineffective’ over the ongoing human rights abuses, ethnic cleansing and violent persecution in Burma.

Here's a quote today from Green Party MEP Caroline Lucas said: “The time for weak words of solidarity is over: and we need some real action now if we are to prevent bloodshed on the scale of 1988, when over 3,000 pro-democracy protestors were killed by the military junta. The reality is the EU has been weak and ineffective on Burma: it hasn’t adopted any measures likely to cause the regime any real hardship, and it has been cutting funding for projects to support human rights and democracy in the country. The EU needs to act – with a complete ban on all new investment, a ban on imports into EU of gems, fossil fuels and timber (the lucrative industries whose revenues fund the military regime), by putting pressure on China to withdraw its financial support for the regime and sponsoring a regional conference on Burma’s future."

The bravery of the thousands of protesters in Burma is incredible - their actions signal that there is deep desire and desperate need for change. For far too long the Burmese people have lived under an appalling regime with no respect for human rights nor human dignity. The companies and countries that are currently trading with Burma should use this time to exert pressure on the Junta regime to stop the oppression and the inhumane treatment of its citizens.

See the previous post for action to Email UN Security Council and here for Burma Campaign who are launching later today a new email campaign. Please make sure you let our Government know they need to take action. Arrests and the first deaths have occurred - see here - we cannot leave it any longer - the international community must lend full support now.

Support for village halls in Stroud

Last night District councilors had a Policy Panel meeting at Ebley Mill to look at Stroud's "Village Hall and Community Buildings Scheme" - this is a grants programme which allocates about £100,000 per year to help halls refurbish.

Photo: Whiteshill Village Hall

Only a handful of councilors attended - disappointing as village halls are the heart of many communities - indeed we should not underestimate their social worth - I applaud the Councils support for these buildings which has led to matched funding coming from many other bodies - indeed SDC has spent £400,000 and this has helped village hall committees pull in matched funds of £2.5 million.

Whitminster and Oakridge village halls were sited as successful schemes - 23 halls have so far received help. A picture of Whiteshill Village Hall during the recent floods was used in the presentation to illustrate the importance of village halls in other community activities like the emergency distribution of water. They haven't received a grant as the hall is in pretty good shape - however Randwick Village Hall are currently in discussions with SDC over a possible grant.

One discussion during the evening was whether SDC should continue funds for refurbishing halls - no one voted against that, a couple wanted more info but the other three (including myself) fully supported the scheme - 2 of those had had money already from the scheme so no advantage to them voting in favour. Clearly this will go through proper channels for a formal vote but I hope the administration continues this support.

It is vital to my mind that halls are pleasant and comfortable places to be - we've all been in halls where are feet freeze and heads burn from overhead heaters - halls that fail loose community groups and revenue - and could end up closing.


I did raise issues of energy efficiency - there is already a scheme - Community Hall Energy Efficiency and Renewables Scheme (CHEERS ) - that aims to give advice and support re this - to me this is a crucial issue - many halls are expensive on energy use and with oil prices forecast to potentially double we need to tackle this - and of course climate change - SDC is committed to tackling this area but I consider that grants should be conditional on insuring the highest efficiency standards.

Another issue raised was about how many village halls are struggling - committees are getting older with no new blood - a village hall network is being set up to help re this - maybe halls could share treasurers or come to other joint solutions?

One point was made that many Parishes only had a revenue of a few thousand pounds so are in a difficult position to start helping village hall committees - worse still they often proudly declared no rise in their precept on the Council tax - while others spend their money on local projects that benefit the community - to me that is how it should be spent.

A46: Wades Lane, Wicks Street and Slad also suffering

The photos here are from a resident in Pitchcombe - she contacted me after the press coverage we have been getting regarding Whiteshill. The traffic problems in Wades Lane and Wicks Street do appear to be very dire -I've added a paragraph to my email today to County - see below.

Meanwhile front page of The Citizen today covers the madness in Slad Road caused by the A46 closure - Green Cllr Lunnon pictured on cover and inside by the road - see here and photo below (although Citizen seem to remove articles quicker now).

See also various previous posts on A46 by putting A46 into search facility above. Updated at 14.30 today with initial response from Highways - more info to follow when available.

Re A46 closure - several issues:

1. Thank you. As I noted to the press and at Saturday's meeting in Whiteshill we have welcomed the efforts of Highways and police to provide relief for residents from the additional extra traffic. The support and thorough interviewing of residents by the Community Police Support Officers at that meeting was also very welcomed. The situation is still dire at times with queues of impatient drivers and cars travelling too fast but the situation has improved since the initial closure - the various measures you have taken like the leaflet to householders, traffic lights at Edge and police presence have been particularly helpful. Please pass on thanks to all involved: it is clear we need to remain aware of this blight on Whiteshill and continue to work to reduce the problem. Just this week the Parish are seeking to have the waste collection time changed to ease flows. Highways response: Thank you, it's good to hear that our efforts are appreciated, even though it sometimes doesn't seem so. We'll keep working at the problems.

2. Wades Lane. I understand some residents have been in touch with Highways over the problems in this Lane and Wicks Street. Some have sent photos to you which I have now also seen. It does appear to be a dire situation making walking dangerous - apparently one older person no longer risks walking up the lane to the bus stop. Incidents of road rage have also been reported, lorries have ignored the HGV signs and residents are very concerned that as the nights draw in, these lanes without lighting will become even more dangerous. This is clearly another challenge with no easy answers. However as a matter of priority I do consider that police presence in this Lane would help: residents report that they have not seen any police there yet. Have other measures also been considered like traffic lights and signs warning of delays to discourage traffic? Highways response: Some extra slow signs have already gone up, and there will be more to follow.

3. Puckshole landslip. Is there an update on when repairs will be completed? Highways response: I'm expecting a start in the next 2 weeks, and completion in about another 2-3 weeks.

4. Carshare and train travel. I initially had helpful responses from First Great Western but it has now gone quiet: to me this remains a perfect opportunity to publicise rail travel and carshare more vigourously to reduce traffic. I am disappointed that the County has not been able to capitalise on this.

5. Longer-term. The meeting last Saturday in Whiteshill re traffic problems was planned before the A46 collapse: residents have been deeply concerned by the speed of traffic and how the road divides the village - particularly children unable to cross the road to use the playground and discouraged from walking to school. You will probably be aware the village was exploring ways with Katie Griffiths and others to slow traffic. They still want to work towards a 20 mph but realise much is needed before that can be achieved. A big concerns is that even when the A46 reopens, Whiteshill and indeed other lanes will continue to have heavier traffic as people learn new routes and sometimes find them easier. We look forward to continued support to tackle the problems in this community.

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Easyjet go green?

I was asked yesterday about Easyjet's national campaign last week - their demands for "a more intelligent approach to aviation" - which included scrapping air passenger duty and instead levying tax on the "oldest, dirtiest" aircraft. I wonder if that also means an end to the absurdity of free flights and ridiculously priced flights?

In fact these measures
proposed by Easyjet would clearly be in their interests - meeting these demands will mean yet more flights and continued airport expansion. Budget airlines are already fuelling demand, creating new routes and getting people on to those planes - it's also mainly the middle classes who are flying.

The resulting increase in CO2 emissions cannot be mitigated by the improved technology implied by newer, "cleaner" aircraft. Indeed this is yet another case of 'greenwash' by aviation companies.
A recent IPCC report confirms this saying that although there was some medium-term potential to mitigate aviation CO2 emissions by tinkering with operations and technology to increase fuel efficiency, any such improvements are "expected to only partially offset the growth of aviation emissions".

The most important question should really be whether the flight would otherwise have been taken. Low-cost airlines may be in their own terms more efficient, you can't claim to be more environmental if you're increasing flights.

Stop Bristol Airport Expansion note that Easyjet's second largest base after Gatwick is at Bristol International Airport and ask that we respond by writing to MPs and local councillors. The Green party here in Gloucestershire have already made several submissions against the airport expansion (see for example here) and would fully support the moves by Stop Bristol Airport Expansion.

They suggest making the following points:
- Environmental taxation needs be increased to suppress demand and should be continued on all flights (including freight and private jets) in the UK;
- The oldest and most polluting aircraft should be banned;
- There must be a halt to all airport expansion plans due to increased noise, road congestion, air and light pollution and loss of green fields to car parking, all of which seriously affect our communities;
- Call for immediate commencement of the EU Emissions Trading Scheme;
- Call for an aviation fuel tax and VAT on air tickets;
- Call for advertisements for air travel to show how much environmental damage is carried out when flying;
- Technological improvements to aircraft will result in a small improvement to efficiency, but will not be delivered soon enough to cut the level of emissions needed to avert dangerous climate change due to the increased demand to fly.

If your MP is Liam Fox or John Penrose, then ask them to support the recently published Conservative Party report "Blueprint for a Green Economy", which calls for a halt to airport expansion in the UK and for greater environmental taxation on all flights, including freight and private jets, among other initiatives.

It is interesting that lots of sectors are now starting to complain about being disproportionately villainised for their carbon emissions. But as one local Green said recently: "this all arises from the mentality that emissions simply need to be reduced "a bit", that everyone only needs to do "their bit". If we look to the science and the actual targets, a UK with a 90% cut in carbon emissions will look drastically different; no sector or lifestyle will be unchanged. At that point, with those reductions, the aviation sector could suddenly find itself responsible for 50% or more of our UK emissions. This whole issue is the flip-side of that saying "There is no silver bullet for Climate Change, only silver buckshot." It would be so much easier if there was a silver bullet, but as green councillors we have to face up to the fact that each green initiative we work for might decrease our local emissions by only a few percent, but if we keep going and tackle all sectors, eventually we'll get to that magic 90%."

Mozzie invasion in Gloucestershire

After the wet, then warm, summer, Britain has faced a mosquito explosion. I've never seen so many in the house - reminds me of some tropical exotic place the way they buzz my ears at night - now I can cope with the biggest of spiders, slugs, slow worms, beatles, wasps - indeed whatever but Mozzies no. They do something to me and I can't rest until I catch every last one of them - whatever the time of the night I'm up and out of bed ready to swat - if I know there is one there I will wait them out.

Thankfully times are not what they used to be - Chaucer and Shakespeare are full of references to mosquitos and their related diseases - apparently in Kent and Essex areas when things got really bad, the hostelries created a spectacularly potent opium-laced beer to help.

The Guardian also recounts that during the closing months of the Great War, a Dr Ronald Ross, winner of the 1902 Nobel prize for medicine for finally demonstrating the link between mosquitoes and malaria, diagnosed the disease in British troops he was tending in Greece and recommended they all be packed off home to Blighty to recuperate. Whoever did the packing failed to follow the good doctor's second recommendation, which was that the soldiers should on no account be billeted in any part of Britain where mosquitoes flourished. Since the marshes of north Kent were positively humming with several million potentially malaria-transmitting mozzies, more than 500 locals duly succumbed to the fevers (though none, happily, died of them).

It seems it is not just here in Gloucestershire the blood-sucking whining beasts are over-running homes - the NHS Direct reports nationwide that phone calls from people inquiring about mosquito bites have soared. Of course things are likely to get worse....

Tony Irwin, curator of natural history at the Castle museum in Norwich and an acknowledged expert on Norfolk's fenland and Broads mosquitoes has said: "It depends how the climate actually changes, but if we are going to be having more wet, warm summers, more pools of stagnant water, that will favour breeding conditions, no question. Likewise, if our winters are going to continue to get milder, then more mosquitoes will survive to breed the following year. The weather could be coming round to favour mosquitoes in a big way, and if we have more mosquitoes, we can probably expect an increase in the diseases they carry."

Apparently there are up to 33 species of mosquito currently indigenous to Britain, 20 of which bite and just five of which are potential transmitters of malaria. Indeed malaria remains one of the world's deadliest diseases, affecting up to 650 million people every year and killing between one and three million, mostly young children. There is no vaccine currently available, and the preventative drugs that must be taken continuously to ward it off - as well as the treatments to cure it - are beyond the budget of almost everyone who lives in the afflicted areas - and I have to say can have nasty side-effects as well as personal experience will attest to.

In the UK with the exception of up to 2,000 cases each year brought back by returning travellers, the disease has been eradicated, thanks partly to aggressive marshland draining and larvae-clearing operations in the past century, but mainly to the fortunate fact that mosquitoes are not actually born with malaria. So with climate change could Britain once again become malarial? In recent years Georgia, Turkey and Azerbaijan have all seen the return of malaria.

Certainly species that are not native could start breeding here - some also carry other nice diseases like Dengue fever, encephalitis and yellow fever. However at present it seems doctors are confident they can stop them getting a hold here - having said that I read 'Plague's Progress' a while ago and I'm less sure after the arguments in that book....

How to avoid getting bitten - some thoughts from Guardian article

- Heat some citronella oil, if you're sitting outside.
- Eat lots of garlic and take a vitamin B complex works too
- they hate the yeasty smell which is why some recommend eating Marmite

- Soothe the bites by rubbing a little lavender oil on them.

- Crush the leaves of elder trees or yarrow

- Sleep with a mosquito net
- Sit in windy areas
- Peat fires

- Mush up big tobacco leaves in water and then rub it on

The time is now for Burma: act to bring change

After decades of military dictatorship, the people of Burma are rising. Marches begun by monks and nuns are snowballing: today 100,000 have taken to the streets of Rangoon.

When the Burmese last marched in 1988, the military massacred thousands. But if the world stands up for the protesters, this time it could be different. Below are some actions you can take and more background info.

Photo Monks demonstrating

Send email to EU President and Gordon Brown here and sign petition to United Nations Security Council members here.

For decades the Burmese dictatorship fought off pressure - imprisoning elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi and democracy activists, wiping out thousands of villages in the provinces, bringing miseries from forced labour to refugee camps. One-third of children under 5 now suffer malnutrition; millions are down to one meal a day.

But last Tuesday Buddhist monks and nuns, overwhelmingly respected in Burma, began marching and chanting prayers. The protests spread - now they're growing by tens of thousands every day, as ordinary people, even celebrities and comedians join in. They've broken the chains of fear and given hope to 52 million Burmese. However, this hope is hanging by a thread. While hesitating to attack the respected monks, the regime is reported to be organising violence. Demonstrators have already been beaten, shots have been fired.

This is one of those moments where the world can make the difference: standing shoulder to shoulder with the Burmese people, helping to shine a dissolving light on tyranny. Let the demonstrators know the world is with them. Send email to EU President and Gordon Brown here and sign petition to United Nations Security Council members here.

Many years ago before the tourist boycott I was fortunate enough to visit the country and met many of the people there. Since then I have
joined the various campaigns to help the Burmese people - put Burma into search facility above to find previous blog entries on Burma from this last year. I hope very much readers of this blog will be able to support this important action .

Monday, September 24, 2007

Iraq: death toll reaches million

I've just read the latest copy of SchNEWS and their item on Iraq - the death toll in Iraq has now passed the one million mark. Somehow that news was lost in all the hype of the 'surge' and democracy being just around the corner. Here's the bulk of the SchNEWS report:

Opinion Research Business (ORB), BBC Newsnight's chosen pollsters, conducted a survey of 1,500 Iraqi households in August in which people were asked if anyone in the household had died as a result of the conflict since 2003. This is the usual method for assessing the number of deaths in a warzone, and has been used in Darfur and the former Yugoslavia. ORB concludes "Given that from the 2005 census there are a total of 4,050,597 households, this data suggests a total of 1,220,580 deaths since the invasion in 2003. Calculating the affect from the margin of error we believe that the range is a minimum of 733,158 to a maximum of 1,446,063."

Detailed assessments such as those conducted by Iraq Body Count, which rely on deaths being recorded in at least two media sources, typically offer a statistic of around 20% of actual fatalities. In sheer numbers, what is happening in Iraq has now surpassed the horrors of the massacres in Rwanda and is in the same order of magnitude as the great crimes of the twentieth century. And the government response to this is... nothing. The same cynical silence which greeted last year's Lancet report estimating Iraqi deaths at around 600,000.

DOGMAS OF WAR

These figures should be provoking howls of outrage from the liberal press at the bloody mess into which the Iraqi people have been hurled by Bush and the UK government. But as the number of deaths reaches the limits of human imagining, the sheer scale of the carnage prevents understanding. Perhaps the mainstream press over here have given this survey so little attention because the real implication of its horrific contents is that our leaders are out and out war criminals.

The poll also questioned the surviving relatives on the way in which their loved ones were killed. It broke down as 48% gunshot wounds, 20% car bomb, 9% aerial bombardment, 6% accidents and 6% another blast/ordnance. This poll didn't attempt to apportion blame for individual deaths but the earlier Lancet poll showed that 56% of deaths were directly attributable to Coalition forces i.e. that 350,000 were identifiably killed by US or UK armed forces. There's no reason to think that that proportion has changed and, with the 'surge', there's every reason to think it has gone up.

BULLET POINTS

How then is the Coalition accomplishing this carnage? The fact that deaths by shooting are so prevalent demonstrates the close-up nature of the coalition/insurgency conflict. For the past four years, the American military has sent around 1,000 patrols each day into hostile neighbourhoods, looking to capture or kill insurgents. (Since February 2007, this has increased to nearly 5,000 patrols a day, if Iraqi troops participating in the American surge are included).

These patrols are operating in areas where anyone could be an insurgent. If you were patrolling downtown Baghdad, would you take any chances? Their orders are to break down doors, shoot at anything suspicious, and throw grenades into rooms or homes where there is any chance of resistance. If they encounter tangible resistance, they call in artillery and/or air power rather than try to invade a building. If a patrol is ambushed or comes under attack from a roadside bomb, soldiers rely on their superior fire-power to extricate themselves from the situation. According to US military statistics, these patrols currently result in around 3,000 firefights every month, an average of just under 100 per day. The US army is currently firing more bullets than can be manufactured - with that amount of lead flying around, such high levels of civilian casualties seem not implausible but inevitable.

As Coalition troops find it harder to operate on the ground in Iraq, the US are massively expanding their aerial attack capacity. There was a fivefold increase in the amount of munitions dropped on the country in the first six months of 2007 compared to the same period in 2006. Squadrons of attack planes have been added to the in-country fleet. The air reconnaissance arm has almost doubled since last year, with the powerful B1-B bomber recalled to action over the country. The stage is set for an increase in civilian casualties as notoriously indiscriminate US air power is unleashed on the Iraqi people. Air Force planes have struck "factories" producing makeshift bombs, weapons caches uncovered by ground troops and, in one instance, "several houses insurgents were using as fire positions".

Iraq has already become a testing ground for a new breed of remote control or robot aircraft. The MQ-9 "Reaper", already being deployed, is a pilotless aircraft, capable of carrying four Hellfire missiles, plus two 500lb bombs. "It is possible that in our lifetime we will be able to run a war without ever leaving the US," said one colonel in the US Air Force. Hey presto! Remote controlled genocide.


See my recent comment to press on Iraq and Afghanistan here. Is Gordon Brown really just going to keep troops in Iraq to keep Bush happy? What other reason?

'NOT ONE MORE DEATH' - central London demonstration on 8 October - assemble Trafalgar Square, 1pm. See www.stopthewar.org for more.

Whiteshill and Ruscombe street lights off?

Switching off Parish lights after 12.oo midnight to 6 in the morning has been shown in many areas to be popular - saves money and light pollution plus helps reduce CO2 emissions.

See previous blog entries on this for much discussion (some here) - we are now getting closer locally to when we might see action - in the next WaRbler newsletter there will be a plea from the Parish for comments about lights that might need to stay on - the plans looks set to only effect 25 to 30 percent of street lighting as lights near road bumps and at other points need to be on.

Cam village have already got further down the line - switching off lights there is expected to save £4,650 per year and 24 tonnes of CO2 per year.

From talking with local councillors from the Cam area a couple of residents have raised concerns that it could put their safety at risk - each of these cases is being investigated and adjustments may be needed - in fact most crime takes place in day although the public perceives it takes place at night. Apparently a couple of complaints have been from people who are upset they cannot see to go to the loo in the night! Are they serious?

The county council's street-lighting manager Barry Greenaway has said street-lighting accounted for 25% of the total electrical energy consumed by the authority. The County have apparently written to all 160 town and parish councils and to date they've received 50 responses and almost 40 support the project - including Randwick.

It is starnge what you find on the web - here is a site dedicated to street lighting with pics like the one above.

Front page of Citizen: traffic in Whiteshill

Thanks again to The Citizen for highlighting residents concerns - here is their report below - would add link but they seem to be removing older items from their web pages. For more background info put A46 into search facility on this blog.

Indeed yesterday I had another phone call re a dangerous driver locally - told them to contact the police who are usually v good on such matters.

Anyhow v good news is that Government has come up with £10 million towards the £25 m needed for Glos roads after the flood damage - apparently more might be on it's way - David Drew had said this would happen but never sure until it does - too often been disappointed.

RAT-RUN DRIVERS HIT BY SPEED WARNING

Speeding motorists who are using Whiteshill as a rat run have been slapped with warning notices.Altogether 60 drivers have had warning notices after they broke the 30mph limit while using Whiteshill as a short cut around the closed A46 near Stroud.

Police say the notices are the drivers last chance before legal action is taken. Whiteshill residents are furious at the fast moving, heavy traffic through their village. And police spokeswoman Annabel Brittain said: "People have been warned that speeding will not be tolerated through the notices that are now being sent out. Some of the recipients were exceeding 40mph."

She said the roads policing unit had been asked to be at the location to assist with enforcement. "Fines and licence points can be expected by those who don't heed the warning," Ms Brittain said. "Speed causes death on the roads and we will be continuing to focus on this area to ensure the safety of pedestrians, motorists and other road users."

The A46 was shut between Salmon Springs and Pitchcombe after the carriageway subsided following the summer floods. Officially the diversion is along the A419 and the A38 and to Gloucester and Cheltenham. But commuters who know the area are travelling via Whiteshill, prompting angry householders to call for solutions.

Whiteshill and Ruscombe Parish Council had already been looking into the idea of "shared spaces" to slow down traffic when the A46 collapsed. The council arranged a "traffic coffee morning" on Saturday to look at the issues. Council chairman John Rogers said: "About 20 to 30 people came. Everybody had their opinion recorded. People have to realise they are driving through a community."

Philip Booth, Stroud district councillor for the area, agreed. "This road divides the community. It is a transport corridor. We want to have our village back," Coun Booth added.

Ideas at the coffee morning included improving the margins of the road and using planters to bring back a village feel. Police Community Support Officers also attended with the parish councillors and also noted residents' views. When Whiteshill Primary School resumed after the summer holidays parents became concerned for the pupils' safety. Parents told The Citizen how dangerous the tailbacks of commuters' vehicles were. The A46 repairs are expected to cost up to £1 million and to take months to complete.

Sunday, September 23, 2007

Join the Carnival of Green!

I never thought 16 months ago when I started this blog that I would end up mixing with the likes of Blogfish, The Christian Environmentalist, Miss Malaprop, the Evangelical Ecologist, Eco Worrier, City Hippy and the Naked Vegetarian....but well hear I am a fully registered member of the Carnival of Green.

The Carnival of the Green is a weekly blog phenomenon concieved of over pints of beer in London between Al and Nick Aster of TriplePundit almost three years ago.... CityHippy's Al Tepper stepped down after a year of organising and then last November the baton passed to TreeHugger.

It travels from blog to blog every Monday. Green bloggers are signed up to review the week - I'm booked for 29th December 2008! Will I really still be blogging then?? To see who hosts which week go to:
www.treehugger.com/files/2006/11/treehugger_to_b.php

Last weeks summary was the 95th week and hosted by Green Style - see it here. The week before was at Camphor's - see it here. It works by the host picking up good reads but mainly by the bloggers sending stuff in - I've not really got around to that yet - not enough hours in cyberspace.

Saturday, September 22, 2007

Hunts Grove latest

Leaders of three political groups on the council have criticised Stroud MP David Drew and Gloucester MP Parmjit Dhanda for mounting a campaign against the Hunts Grove plans to build 1,750 new homes between Gloucester and Stroud. The Citizen quoted myself and the Tories and Lib Dems.

Photo: Randwick woods

The MPs believe the infrastructure does not exist to support a community of that size in Hardwicke and that Stroud's housing allocation is being "dumped" on Gloucester. They have campaigned so that now the proposals have been called in by the Government.


This call-in could cost council taxpayers over £100,000 in staff time, legal costs etc - and is, I consider, highly unlikely to be successful - it does seem to be largely a political move. See news release here with more info about the plans and my full comments - as an aside it was an interesting process getting the joint statement out into the press....anyhow...the Local Plan was agreed and passed unanimously at a meeting of Stroud District Council in 2005. The Hunts Grove allocation has been accepted by the County Council and through the SW Regional Spatial Strategy, after full consultation with all councils and all relevant bodies. To call in now is trampling over local democracy.

It is just crazy to now go over all that again especially as the alternative does not bear thinking about - where in Stroud would we put all those houses???

David Drew is right that dispersal is good to restore local communities - keeping post offices and community shops alive (where they haven't already been shut) to ensure schools and local services keep going etc - however this quantity is not sustainable - 1750 homes - in reality it would mean the Painswick Valley being filled with homes and every village taking many more homes.

Apart from the costs to taxpayers the delay in bringing properties to the market will only serve to boost house-builder’s profits, as fewer homes on the market mean that they can get higher house prices. It will also delay the availability of affordable houses on the site as some 525 were destined to be affordable.

The fault must lie with national policies towards housing - we are still following a ‘predict and provide’ approach to population growth and housing provision instead of addressing strategies required to achieve a stable and sustainable population and affordable housing.

Annual population growth here in the SW is above the English average. By 2028, the South West’s population will have grown by 16%, the second highest increase in the English regions. We need an urgent debate about suitable population levels for different regions of the UK which also considers levels of consumption, material comfort and sustainability, including the UK’s impact on the rest of the world.

Development in the country is skewed towards the South East, and to a lesser extent towards the South West. We need to review this and develop policies for more balance across the whole country - it is madness to be pulling down thousands of houses in one part of the country and building them where there isn't room - or in the case of the SE where there isn't even enough water.

We also forget to consider good designs in helping to encourage people to live in urban areas and accept higher housing density levels. High density can be highly desirable, but it does require good design. This is crucially important not only for the housing itself, but also the public space around and between the high density housing, such as local shopping areas, playspace, parks, green pockets, attractive streets, allotments and accessible countryside. Indeed Cornish villages are among some of the highest density homes and are very popular. See more re Glos Green party views on housing submitted to the RSS here.

Of course there are also issues re second homes, the lack of social housing and more - but I'll save those discussions for another time - Hunts Grove is by no means ideal but it has been through full consultation and was agreed unanimously - the alternatives would be worse.

Coffee morning on Whiteshill traffic

This morning I joined the coffee morning in Whiteshill Village Hall organised by the Parish Council - it was about talking with residents about the local traffic - must have been about 40 people in all - the meeting was arranged before the A46 collapse - but all the more timely due to all the info in the news.

Photos: Coffee Morning, Parish councillors Gerri Kimber (now Dr and also the Parish's Snow Warden with Rebecca Charley, Community Police talking with people

Put A46 into search above for many previous posts on that topic - including an update yesterday (and also use search for other traffic issues - plus see 'labels' below) - the Parish will be putting on their website a summary of residents views plus other info - it was very good to hear at first hand how the A46 is effecting people.

It was also good to hear that while the situation remains dire it is slightly better recently due to measures taken by police and Highways - in terms of traffic the letters sent to residents warning about bad parking does seem to have had an effect in allowing the traffic travel more smoothly - the lights at Edge also mean traffic comes in 'lumps' or waves allowing residents time to get out of their drives and also traffic coming up the hill a chance to move in places where it is single file. Other measures Highways and police have taken have been mentioned in earlier blogs. Infact 2 Police Community Support Officers were there to talk to us about issues - one was particularly good at ensuring she spoke to everyone about the current measures and recorded that info.

Still sadly no action on advertising trains and carshare but I tried to make those points again.

60 people caught speeding

Amazingly some 60 people have been caught so far - exact details available Monday - most will only get warning letters as they were only a little over the speed limit - but it shows the traffic when it moves goes much too fast.

Anyhow I must now take a 7 year old swimming now so no more to write here other than to mention that it is World Car Free Day today - stall in Stroud - see more here. I would have liked to see more re this - one town even turfed several roads temporarily.

Christian Aid tea afternoon

Yesterday I went along to Randwick village Hall where tea, coffee and a wide selection of home-made cakes were being served in aid of Christian Aid. This was one of more than 5,000 tea parties taking place across the UK, and plenty of others further afield - apparently parties are also planned in Sri Lanka and Burundi - also many would be having the same cakes as recipes were supplied.

Photos: Tea Time

I
t was good to catch up with some people I hadn't seen for a while and hear more about the Parish meeting I missed where residents raised the issue of the Randwick bus - see blog yesterday. Thanks to the organisers Mary and co for the event.

Village Shop break-in

Last night at 2.45am staff were called when the alarm went off - an attempted break-in at the village shop (see photo) - not sure what they were after - no money, DVDs or drink on the site - maybe a craving for a banana and tin of beans - mind those chocolate cakes are good....anyhow repairs are being done and metal reinforcements are planned.

Good news is though that the repairs to the playground are going ahead - indeed new equipment (see photo) - this was after the car careared over the edge from the carpark and into the play equipment earlier in the year.

Friday, September 21, 2007

Green conference last weekend

I wasn't at the Green party conference in Liverpool this last weekend - in fact had a weekend camping in Devon - but have been catching up on conference discussions - read here more re local Greens experience of the conference - had wanted to write lots but time has caught up with me.

Photo: Sunflower in slate

First a good intro are the two speechs by the Principal Speakers - read Derek Walls' speech here and read Sian Berry's speech here (or see her speech on youtube here).

There was of course lots more - especially re updating climate change policies - and also of particular interest to me was a motion passing wide-ranging proposals to restore the strength of Parliament and return the Prime Minister's role to its historical position of primus inter pares (first among equals). The Prime Minister, whose new status would be indicated by a change of name to First Minister, would be elected by a committee with representation from all parties in Parliament. The same system would appoint the Cabinet and exercise key Royal Prerogative powers such as the ability to declare war. This new 'Public Administration and Government' policy pulls together and extends other policies to also hand more power from central government to local authorities, increase the use of directly democratic mechanisms such as referenda, create an elected second chamber to replace the House of Lords.

Dr Derek Wall, Principal Speaker of the Green Party, commented: “We need to restore faith in the democratic system, and to do that we need to break the Presidential stranglehold recent Prime Minister's have acquired over Parliament. These policies are about moving from a top-down approach to a bottom-up one, where democracy is paramount and no vote is wasted.”

A46: open again in New Year?

BBC Glos phoned yesterday for an interview re my suggestion that First Great Western should consider cut price tickets to encourage people off the roads in Whiteshill - I had a favourable response from Customer Services but when the BBC followed up it sounded like the guy who gave that response wasn't authorised to do that - how deeply sad - the BBC decided not to use the interview - see my email to FGW below after other responses to my emails re A46 - which update us a little on where we are with works (use search facility to pick up many previous items re A46).

Photo: Diversion sign

Barry Dare, Leader of the County Council says: "I share your concerns over the difficulties this closure has caused to the local communities concerned. Our officers are continually dealing with the problems caused by the extra traffic, and will be installing some extra traffic calming outside the School, but realistically it will be virtually impossible to change driver habits. With regards to timescale, work is already underway on repairing the road, initial site surveys have been completed, and we have 3 specialist companies to provide solutions and costing for the works. I am hopeful that we will be able to start as soon as November, and weather permitting, be completed shortly in the New Year. I appreciate this may seem a long time to those suffering as a result of the closure, but I can assure you this is a very technically demanding site and we are giving it the utmost priority."

Stan Waddington, Cabinet member at County: "I am well aware of the problems in Whiteshill and last week requested additional policing to curb driver behaviour particularly during school opening and closing times. You will know that County resources are severely stretched this year by the costs incurred in dealing with the floods and the aftermath. So far we have had little or no grant relief from the Government for any of this work and in these circumstances I don't think it appropriate for remaining County budget to be used for cut price rail passes. It might be a suggestion that you could address to David Drew who could attempt to secure central government funds for this."

At the recent meeting re the A46 meeting David Drew made a strong statement to the effect that the speed of traffic through Whiteshill was a major safety concern and nothing should be done that would increase it. John Roberts from Highways supported this and noted that he has had a lot of correspondence on the subject. However in an email to me David Drew disagrees re more money but notes: "When the money is needed it will be there but it is now about prioritising efforts." Not sure what that means as it seems to me money is needed?

Confusion over Flashing speed sign

There is now confusion from Highways over whether Whiteshill might have a flashing speed sign - on my blog on 21st Aug it was noted we did not qualify. However recent communications are not clear about if the Parish purchase one or rent one as planned then are we still allowed to put it up? The Parish are investigating.

Here's my reply today to the County below and below that the email to First Great Western. I've also replied to David Drew.

Email to County:

Stan/Barry - thanks for your replies to my concerns re Whiteshill and the traffic problems there - I have been impressed by the way Highways have taken this issue seriously and made considerable attempts to alleviate the problem. It has been good to see police on the site and good signage however, as I know you know, the situation is still dire. Even before this A46 closure, the traffic on that road divided the community: children cannot use the playground as there is not a safe place to cross. We need traffic calming measures to restore the village to a village and not just a transport corridor.

The rumour about the A46 taking 12 months came from a senior Conservative councillor - I hope that the reopening doesn't take longer than the New Year. I also still hope that there is more we can do in encouraging people to use the bus or train - see my email below to FGW after they seem to pull back from interest in reduced fares.

This to me, seems like it could be a good opportunity to promote public transport and carshare schemes? These are the very things that we must do if we are to tackle climate change. Could not the County also engage with FGW? At the very least signage advertising car share or trains?

Cllr. Philip Booth,
Stroud District councillor for the Randwick, Ruscombe and Whiteshill ward,

Email to FGW:

Re: suggestion of reduced fares on the Stroud to Gloucester route in an effort to alleviate traffic problems resulting from the A46 closure

Thank you for this positive response below from Paul Hoffman at your Customer Services Team. I have not had a reply from the fares and system manager or as yet any other response from you. BBC Radio Gloucestershire phoned me yesterday to interview me re this proposal and I understand from them that they have spoken with someone at FGW who said this Customer Services response was 'unauthorised'. I would welcome clarification.

I was ready to publicly welcome the fact that FGW was looking at this move. No commitment was made in the email I received below but it was good to see that FGW were considering helping. In my view it would be good for villages like Whiteshill who are faced with a massive increase in traffic but also good publicity for yourselves helping people out who are struggling to cope with the A46 closure. It could also hopefully result in more people using the train and of course help tackle climate change emissions.

Only this week you will be aware that the UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change says it is "very unlikely" we can avoid the 2 degree threshold for dangerous climate change. This is the point many natural systems that sustain life on earth start to die: the Greenland ice sheet melts, coastal cities are flooded, one third of species face extinction, millions face drought and famine and economic turmoil as financial systems react to uncertain times.

Getting more people to use public transport is part of the answer and we are failing on that front. Clearly this is an issue that needs actions by our Government but I would have thought that the A46 closure provided an opportunity to FGW to take more of a lead?

Cllr. Philip Booth,
Stroud District councillor for the Randwick, Ruscombe and Whiteshill ward,

Full Council: renewables, Severn barrage, Painswick and Triservice

Full Council last night and here's a brief summary of some of the issues:

Photo: Council Chamber

- Renewables - the meeting unanimously supported a recommendation regarding Renewable Energy Supplementary Planning Advice. The advice is along the lines of the 'Merton Rule' which requires a 10% reduction in CO2 emissions from on site renewables on new larger developments. This blog has much previous discussion about this - also sent out last night a press release saying why I was reluctant to sign - basically 10% is pathetic but I signed because it is a first step, there is an agreement to review and basically the Council's hands are tied by recent central government guidelines. Greens will be working to see this figure increase - see my press release here with more info.

- Severn barrage - Greens are opposed to the barrage - see recent letter here and also a report on our Glos Green party website - it was good to see that the proposal this evening had been adjusted to call for further investigations into impact of all ways of getting energy from the estuary. We were happy to support that as I am sure if done it will show up the advantages of tidal lagoons and other measures compared to the barrage.

- Painswick Gateway project - See my comments on 18th July blog entry re Painswick Gateway (scroll down) - Greens abstained as I am not convinced that we should be supporting the library service which is a County matter - could this lead to more library closures if teh County think the community and District will pick up the pieces? However it would be proper to support other elements of the project like community rooms etc. I would prefer to see this more explicitly laid out as I think it could lead to problems further down the line....

- Triservice - Last up was a motion re the Triservice -
Full Council passed a motion for the Government to scrap plans to close Gloucestershire's Fire Control. After a lively exchange Greens, Conservatives and Lib Dems councillors supported the motion and Labour councillors opposed. Green party policy is about maintaining local services and we were among the first to support retaining Gloucestershires' fire control centre at Quedgeley. I agree with the fire service representatives and experts that the regionalisation of fire control rooms will lead to a poorer service where potentially life-saving local knowledge is no longer available. It is crazy to have a Fire Chief seventy odd miles from his control staff. Plus there are dangers in relying on Satelitte Navigation Systems. This state-of-the-art TriService centre has proven it's worth in the recent floods why change to a centralised system where there is no evidence that it will lead to a better or indeed cheaper service? It was a shame this debate was politicised in the way it was as I am sure anyone watching the webcast would be put off politics altogether.

Update on Randwick bus

As blog readers will know when I first was elected May 2006 a big issue was the fact that the local bus service through the village was stopped. There are many blog entries on this - the reasons, hopes etc - finally all this time on last night the County Council sent a representatitive to the Parish meeting.

Photo: bus from a while back

I was at Full Council so couldn't be there but here is Pam Thorne, the Village Agent's notes (which she kindly let me copy here):

Last night was very worthwhile - 7 bus users turned up and I think Bill Carr from the transport department has got the message! The thing about the no. 37 coming up further (too large) was ruled out but I think he took on board:
• Dial a Ride is great for occasional journeys but they want a regular bus service they can rely on;

• The old route through the Lane would be preferred but the times need to revert to the original timetable - the current company changed it slightly so that the afternoon bus was trying to go through when the mothers were collecting children from school;
• the original bus company were superior in lots of ways (although current drivers are fine) - they were more reliable and had a system for sending alternatives if anything went wrong (the ladies reported lots of non-appearances of buses with the current company - Bill gave them the phone number to always report these 01452 426343;
• a smaller vehicle is needed, and one with easier access;
• any future meetings should be advertised on the bus itself so maximum no of people know about it.

The next step is to follow up and see what the County can come back with - but at least they heard from those bus users.

450 words on Climate Change for The Citizen

It is Climate Friendly Fortnight (15th to 30th September) and the South West Wildlife Trusts and others aim to share ways in which we can rise to the challenge of climate change. I've been asked to write a piece in this coming Saturdays' Citizen. Here's what I sent them:

Photo: Randwick woods

TIME FOR DECISIVE ACTION ON CLIMATE CHANGE

Future generations, those who survive, will look back at the early 21st century and wonder why we did so little to slow climate change. Never before has a species so minutely monitored its own demise. It's becoming clear with new reports every week that climate change is accelerating and will occur faster and in more unpredictable ways than previously thought.

The UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change this week says it is "very unlikely" we can avoid the 2 degree threshold for dangerous climate change. This is the point many natural systems that sustain life on earth start to die: the Greenland ice sheet melts, Pacific islands disappear, the Great Barrier Reef dies, coastal cities are flooded, one third of species face extinction and millions face drought and famine.

The effects in the 'developed' world will also be dramatic: increased storms and more serious flooding, food shortages as harvests fail and economic turmoil as financial systems react to uncertain times. At three degrees, the Amazon rainforest - the planet's lungs - will die along with much more.

Yet we can still avoid catastrophic change, and there's a chance we can avoid dangerous change. This is a time for heros, not cowards. It's a time to step forward and do your bit and what better time to start than Climate Friendly Fortnight.

There is plenty of advice available. It's possible for each of us to dramatically reduce the emissions for which we are responsible, without significantly reducing our quality of life. What's needed is for individuals and communities to decide to act on the advice that is available.

We also need politicians to act - or we must vote them out. Nine leading environmental organisations said last week that none of the three main parties are providing the leadership and action needed on the environment. We need emissions cuts of 90 per cent by 2030, yet our emissions are still rising, £30 billion is being spent on more roads, aviation subsidises continue and massive airport expansions are planned.

Locally there are signs of understanding but no urgency - still for example we see a failure to condemn Staverton Airport's plans to increase emissions or the Parkway scheme that will increase car use.

We can create a green, fairer future of greater employment, healthier food, stronger communities, warmer homes from better insulation and self-sufficiency in energy instead of fossil fuels from unstable countries. We must tackle climate change but also build resilient communities that will cope with the coming challenges. If enough people lead the way then the politicians will be forced to follow. So this fortnight decide to make a difference and change your life for the better.

Philip Booth, who writes a daily blog on green issues, local and national at:
http://ruscombegreen.blogspot.com/

Whiteshill beats Randwick

Some local bits of Whiteshill news:

- Whiteshill under 12s beat Randwick 4 nil - star player was Tom Parnell
- money is being raised for the vandalised Vestry window at St Paul's Church, Whiteshill - insurance covers the bulk but the excess is still needed and it is also Gift Week where they raise money to cover running costs for the year.
- the replacement swings installation at Whiteshill will begin on Monday 24th September.
- Winners in the North area of District Small Garden competition are Mr and Mrs Field in Victory Road - they also came third overall - I spoke to them today and they said they only decided to enter 2 weeks before the date - a great achievement.

Wednesday, September 19, 2007

Archbish puts earthly authority ahead of moral principle

Good on Green Party human rights campaigner Peter Tatchell who as hit out at the Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, following news that he is to attempt to force US bishops to backtrack on gay rights advances.

Photo: Flag flying on Sub Rooms in Stroud on recent Rainbow Day (see previous blogs for info)

Under pressure from conservative groups within the Anglican Communion, Williams is to ask the Americans to ban openly gay bishops and refuse to celebrate same-sex unions.

Peter Tatchell, who is the Green Party's prospective parliamentary candidate for the constituency of Oxford East, said: "The Archbishop of Canterbury has betrayed his own principles and betrayed the gay community by caving in to pressure from the extreme right-wing of his church. He would not appease a racist or an anti-Semite cleric, so why is he appeasing homophobes within the Anglican Communion? He is allowing the church's agenda to be dictated by the voices of unreason and intolerance. By letting his concern for the unity of the Anglican Communion lead him to reward homophobic tantrums, Williams is putting his own earthly authority ahead of moral principle."

Scientists warn we are now 'very unlikely' to avoid climate catastrophe

For months now it has become increasingly clear that a rise of two degrees centigrade in global temperatures - the point considered to be the threshold for catastrophic climate change which will expose millions to drought, hunger and flooding – is now "very unlikely" to be avoided.

Photo: Graphic from IPCC report

This week that has worryingly been confirmed by the world's leading climate scientists. I find all this deeply frustrating - when on earth are our politicians going to wake up to the urgency of all this?

The Independent today writes:

The latest study from the United Nation's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) put the inevitability of drastic global warming in the starkest terms yet, stating that major impacts on parts of the world – in particular Africa, Asian river deltas, low-lying islands and the Arctic – are unavoidable and the focus must be on adapting life to survive the most devastating changes.

For more than a decade, EU countries led by Britain have set a rise of two degrees centigrade or less in global temperatures above pre-industrial levels as the benchmark after which the effects of climate become devastating, with crop failures, water shortages, sea-level rises, species extinctions and increased disease.


Two years ago, an authoritative study predicted there could be as little as 10 years before this "tipping point" for global warming was reached, adding a rise of 0.8 degrees had already been reached with further rises already locked in because of the time lag in the way carbon dioxide – the principal greenhouse gas – is absorbed into the atmosphere.


The IPCC said yesterday that the effects of this rise are being felt sooner than anticipated with the poorest countries and the poorest people set to suffer the worst of shifts in rainfall patterns, temperature rises and the viability of agriculture across much of the developing world.
In its latest assessment of the progress of climate change, the body said: "If warming is not kept below two degrees centigrade, which will require the strongest mitigation efforts, and currently looks very unlikely to be achieved, the substantial global impacts will occur, such as species extinctions, and millions of people at risk from drought, hunger, flooding." Under the scale of risk used by IPCC, the words "very unlikely" mean there is just a one to 10 per cent chance of limiting the global temperature rise to two degrees centigrade or less.

Professor Martin Parry, a senior Met Office scientist and co-chairman of the IPCC committee which produced the report, said he believed it would now be "very difficult" to achieve the target and that governments need to combine efforts to "mitigate" climate change by reducing CO2 emissions with "adaptation" to tackle active consequences such as crop failure and flooding.
Speaking at the Royal Geographical Society, he said: "Ten years ago we were talking about these impacts affecting our children and our grandchildren. Now it is happening to us. Even if we achieve a cap at two degrees, there is a stock of major impacts out there already and that means adaptation. You cannot mitigate your way out of this problem... The choice is between a damaged world or a future with a severely damaged world."

The IPCC assessment states that up to two billion people worldwide will face water shortages and up to 30 per cent of plant and animal species would be put at risk of extinction if the average rise in temperature stabilises at 1.5C to 2.5C.
Professor Parry said developed countries needed to help the most affected regions, which include sub-Saharan Africa and major Asian river deltas with improved technology for irrigation, drought-resistant crop strains and building techniques.

Rajendra Pachauri, the chairman of the IPCC, said that 2015 was the last year in which the world could afford a net rise in greenhouse gas emissions, after which "very sharp reductions" are required.
Dr Pachauri said the ability of the world's most populous nations to feed themselves was already under pressure, citing a study in India which showed that peak production of wheat had already been reached in one region. Campaigners said the IPCC findings brought added urgency to the EU's efforts to slash emissions. John Sauven, executive director of Greenpeace, said: "The EU needs to adopt a science-based cap on emissions, ditch plans for dirty new coal plants and nuclear power stations that will give tiny emission cuts at enormous and dangerous cost, end aviation expansion and ban wasteful products like incandescent lightbulbs."

Meanwhile across the globe I, like many activists, get daily emails of the fight back and call for action. This morning news that the Canadian government is breaking its own environmental laws, has prompted an urgent last minute action internationally. Last June, their Parliament passed a law confirming a legal obligation to comply with the Kyoto Protocol. However the proposed plan meets Kyoto's targets 13 years too late and it clearly breaks the law. TOMORROW is the deadline for comments admissible in court. Please click below to send a quick message to Environment Minister Baird, and tell everyone you know to act right away:
http://www.avaaz.org/en/canadian_climate_crime/b.php/

Former Shell chair speaks up on Peak Oil

On Sunday I read The Independent's article on Lord Oxburgh, the former chair of Shell - one of the most respected names in the energy industry has issued a stark warning that the price of oil could hit $150 per barrel, with oil production peaking within the next 20 years. At last more are speaking up on this issue.

Lord Oxburgh accused the industry of having its head "in the sand" about the depletion of supplies, and warned: "We may be sleepwalking into a problem which is actually going to be very serious and it may be too late to do anything about it by the time we are fully aware."

The price of crude oil closed above $80 a barrel for the first time on Thursday, as a hurricane in Texas raised supply concerns. Oil prices have risen 30 per cent since the start of this year and are four times higher than their 2002 level. Meanwhile the latest figures from the US Energy Information Administration show that global liquid fuels production in August was almost a million barrels per day lower than the same period in 2006.

On Monday I had a meeting with fellow Transition Stroud folk about how we can raise this issue more locally - see my post re that meeting here. I've also brought it up in several other meetings this week including one today with Stroud District Councils' Chief Executive and the Head of Regeneration Department (who I learnt today swam the channel some years ago!) who I was meeting regarding a related matter about Council strategies.

More people are receptive to this issue than before - the Heinberg visit earlier this year has helped lots locally (see previous blog entries on that) - but the challenge is to act - and there are not easy ways forward - although having said that there are lots of things we can do and should be doing.....

Another sewage incident and brook meeting

Just back from a brook meeting and scribbled the minutes - here are the edited highlights....

Photo: Site of latest manhole discharge of sewage in Randwick

1. Slad Brook Action Group - see Citizen report here. It is not a great report as I counted over 60 people there - it doesn't mention Julian Jones' extended speech that was very inspiring and went down very well indeed - also doesn't mention that the event was organised by Cllr Lunnon, the local ward councillor or that I was the second speaker talking about the Ruscombe Brook Action Group experiences - or the passion and anger felt by some residents that more needed to be done by authorities - maybe SNJ will be better tomorrow?! Anyhow we discussed solutions that Julian had raised and SDC looked at in the past. SBAG have already sought advice re Memo of Cooperation, Constitution and more. One of our members offered to support them further re this if needed.

2. Other flooding issues - we had a useful general discussion re flooding in the 5 valleys - Bob Nightingale, the District Councils DRainage Officer was able to report news re District Councils activities to tackle problems. A special Cabinet meeting will look at flooding on 3rd Oct - I will attend. Issues we discussed included:
- concern that debris had not been removed yet from Slad/Painswick brooks - assessment urgently needed to know if some of the debris could be collapsed culverts? I will email SDC to support urgent action.
- concern re local road drains being blocked by leaves
- County are proposing flood wardens as one way forward
- Defra consultation is over - see my submission here
- County Council Scrutiny met today and are launching a consultation process on their website in next few days
- A46 updates here
- EA are clearly under-resourced in April 2006 they took over all minor rivers/brooks ie a 40% increase in river length with v little extra funds.

3. Randwick sewage incidents: two weeks ago a householder (Ryelands area of Randwick) had sewage leak in their home, last Friday sewage erupted from a manhole in field in Randwick (see previous blog entries). Severn Trent and rodding contractors were on scene and acted quickly but still large quantities of sewage got into brook. Yesterday afternoon another incident was reported in Randwick in a manhole further down in the field (incident number 2447303 - photos available soon). We are unclear of details at this point. I will write to Severn Trent raising concerns re condition of pipes (roots?) and that two 6 inch pipes join together near there and lead into just one 6 inch pipe. The incidents do not appear to be storm related. The landowner will also write as a bowser was promised for cattle and does not appear to have been provided despite cattle being in that field.

4. Root cutting last week: Severn Trent discovered further root growth in the sewer pipes and had a contractor cut them last week in stretch from Charley's lake down to Puckshole and maybe other sections. Philip spoke with contractors who confirmed that in places the CCTV camera in the sewers had reported root growth in 40% of the pipe circumference and along other sections 15% (see my previous blog entry on this).

5. Memo of Cooperation update - all signed including Severn Trent with the exception of Environment Agency who have changed staff and Stroud District Council who look set to sign at their Cabinet meeting on 3rd Oct. Highways are also still considering the document but are too busy at the moment. It was noted that to come this far with all parties on board was a huge achievement.

6. Ismaila's report - Ismaila has been doing his MSc on the brook and he will report proposals/findings at our next meeting (see previous blog entries for info on this). We had a discussion about how best to proceed re funding after that - need to prioritise especially Hamwell Leaze as good to work with Stroud Valleys Project - but also need to identify estimated costs in order to seek grants. Philip to check with Water 21. Other issues like smaller reed bed areas, tackling flooding at Puckshole, water separation etc will also all need discussion and prioritising.

7. Leaflet distribution - while noting the leaflet has some faults it is still a great way forward and a huge achievement - the first community leaflet ever produced by Severn Trent. Leaflets to go out over next month or so - most to be delivered by RBAG members but also support from Whiteshill and Ruscombe Parish.

8. Next meeting: We hope to have MSc student Ismaila Emahi come to our October meeting to present draft proposals for brook - provisionally booked for 16th October. Anyone interested please let me know.

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Go for surface mail for Christmas

Yeh I know we need mega changes from Government but little actions can help - for a slightly lower-carbon Christmas we could send cards & pressies around the world by surface mail - the last posting dates for some destinations is 1st October. Check it out here.

Thursday, September 13, 2007

Sewage leak in Randwick

Last night I was talking at the Slad Brook Action Group's first public meeting - see below - I was able to say we had not had an incident re the brook since February - sadly that was wrong!

Photos: View across to Severn Trent Water van this afternoon and brook running cloudy

In August I have learnt there was a sewer problem near Ryelands area of Randwick which included sewage in a house - today there is a larger leak in that same area in the fields - I've just been down and the smell of sewage is strong in the brook which is also discoloured. Severn Trent were on the site pretty quick and the local farmer was being contacted - hopefully have more info soon.

More nuclear nonsense

The government's public consultation on the future of nuclear power in this country - part of its shambolic energy review - was held on Saturday. Stroud District Green party withdrew from it - we have in the past made effort at our own expense to attend these consultations on nuclear power and submit detailed reports. However this consultation is about promoting the arguments for nuclear power. See our news release here. Local press sadly didn't see this issue important enough to cover.

Photo: Climate Change march

Our view seems to have been confirmed by the Greenpeace website where they quote Meg - 35 and a sales assistant from Cardiff - who posted a comment re the meetings: "We were told numerous times that we didn't need to know anything before we came to the event. It became quickly clear that the intention was to provide us with very limited, biased information in order to lead the participants to a predetermined conclusion".

The consultation documents are themselves misleading saying for example, that the nuclear waste problem is solved. It clearly is not (see Guardian letter here - and House of Lords brands policy as 'incoherent' and 'flawed'). They also say nuclear power is cheaper than wind even though the government's own published documents show the exact opposite is true.

On top of all that we hear today that Tories are now to support nuclear as long as it doesn't get subsidies - that policy in my view has clearly been shown to fail - each time nuclear companies get into difficulties who bails them out? No insurance company will touch them with a barge poll - yet another example of double standards with renewables which have to obtain insurance for all sorts of risks.

Meanwhile yesterday the latest radioactive fragment found on Sandside Beach near the Dounreay nuclear plant in Caithness is among the "hottest" yet detected.

Cafe Maitreya success

Hey, I can't not mention here in this blog, that the cafe my brother established in Bristol was listed amongst the top 5 organic cafes in the country by The Guardian - it has already won awards for best Vegetarian in the country several years running - see more about Cafe Maitreya here:
www.cafemaitreya.co.uk

Slad Brook Action Group meeting

An Emergency meeting was called to look at Slad Road and the floods last night. Cllr Sarah Lunnon along with other residents and local businesses have formed an action group to campaign for improvements to prevent a recurrence of the disaster. Some 60 people turned up.

Photo: People arriving at meeting

Some 8 feet of water flowing down the road filled ground-floor rooms and cellars completely - doing hundreds of thousands of pounds worth of damage to around 20 homes and 15 businesses - many residents were forced into rented accommodation - some are still there.

The evening started with a great introduction to water from Julian Jones, a Director with Water 21 who has been very supportive to the Ruscombe Brook Action Group. He reminded us of the water cycle we learnt at school and described how and why areas flood (and drought) plus solutions, the health risks of sewage and much more.

I then followed with a talk and slide show about our experiences with the Ruscombe Brook Action Group (RBAG) - this was all followed by questions and a discussion about ways forward - the need for urgent action to sort culvert now, then to look at other solutions like creating areas to hold water further upstream and also wider issues like the need to adopt Sustainable Urban Drainage systems in new developments.

There were many people who contributed to the debate including an Environment Agency representative, senior District Council figures, a former Environment Agency Officer, David Drew who had met with British Waterways yesterday, a couple of Town councillors incl Chas Townley who has written an excellent report on the Slad Road floods - plus a look historically at previous floods in the area - there were also some very passionate pleas made by residents - indeed at one point the chair had to call for order - I can totally understand the residents frustration - why can't at the very least the culvert be sorted now?

In RBAG one of the reasons why it has taken us 2 years to draw up plans is that it took so long to get to grips with who is responsible for what - riparian landowners, EA, water companies, District Council - all have different bits - our memo of cooperation is part of trying to find a way forward (see 6th June 2007 blog).

I've been invited to come back to the Slad Brook Action Group to talk more about what we've learnt - but no doubt will also learn more.

In some ways, as flood modeling of the Slad valley has already been done, they are in a good position to move forward - Water 21 have also offered them some money to proceed. To me the answers are pretty straightforward - the challenges are getting everyone to pull in the same direction - it is vital we do if we want to ensure we look after our water supplies and, as Julian pointed out in his talk, that is something we need to do here even in the Cotswolds where it can appear we are alright.

Anyhow apols for haste in this post - do use search facility to seek out previous posts re RBAG or floods.

No water again: root cutters to blame

Yesterday and today the root cutters are out - we in the Ruscombe Brook Action Group have been wanting to see them - Severn Trent earlier this year did more CCTV work in the local sewers and discovered more roots had grown since last year into the pipes.

When they cut the roots afterwards they flush it clean with water - their monster tank takes a while to fill so for the last couple of days we keep loosing water for 40 mins or more at a time here in Bread Street - usually just when you would have loved to have done the washing up?

At first we couldn't work out what was happening with the water - a phone call to Severn Trent produced disbelief that water really wasn't running - then apparently 5 people from Bread Street phoned - still they had no answer - it was only when we relaised the root cutters were there that we put two and two together....

Photo: Fox I virtually tripped over as I walked down - he was as startled as I was - woken from his sleep in the sun

Anyhow I scrambled down to find the workmen and was able to see water running clear in some of the drains - great stuff - I also was shown their schedule - they will be cutting a lot of the way up to the fire station - or at least where they can gain access - a lot is only minor growth ie in places 15% of the circumference - but there are also several places with 40% growth - most of this will grow on the upper half of the inside of the pipe so water can still flow but clearly if not removed then we get a storm and pressures build - it is probably this that led to manholes blowing and the old sewer pipe bridge collapsing.

A46 - police are acting

As noted in the last post on A46 we are being 'reassured' that it wont take 12 months - see all previous posts here - below is a note from police - and at last the 'No HGV' sign has gone up - and a train company are looking at cheaper fares maybe (see below) and another plug for carshare.

Photo: One of the redirection signs

I thought I would send you an email to update you on the action we are taking with regards the numerous complaints received about the increased traffic through the village due to the A46 being closed.

We have been in touch with the school and a letter should be sent out next week, from the police to all parents, with regards parking etc at picking up/dropping off times. We have increased mobile patrols along the main roads in order to deter speeders and have carried out speed checks at the top of the village and out up to Edge.
We have been in touch with Gloucestershire Highways and there is a temporary weight restriction ( 7.5 tonne) through the village which is signposted at the Maypole in Paganhill and at Edge church. Highways are sending out an assessor to check that these signs are adequate and will replace if necessary.

Letters have been posted though local residents doors asking them to be mindful of where they park on the main highway and in side streets.

Plus an answer from First Great Western:

Thank you for your email dated 10 September 2007, refering to your suggestion about cut train fares between Gloucester and Stroud. I agree that cutting the prices of train tickets in order to encourage people onto the trains more is an excellent idea. I can fully understand the anger and frustration that yourself and others must feel with the closure of the A46. I have logged the email you sent us and have forwarded it onto the fares and system manager for his consideration. Thank you once again fro your email, we are always happy to receive feedback from our customers, especially when it is so contructive as yours.

Plus here again is the carshare email website:
www.carsharegloucestershire.com

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Ban additives to reduce Asbos?

Last week research commissioned by the Food Standards Agency (FSA) confirmed what was already a virtual certainty - that the cocktails of artificial additives used in many non-organic processed foods are a threat to children. Indeed scientists have been saying that additives are a threat to children and a cause of hyper-activity for more than 30 years.

Most of these additives are derived from industrial textile dyes and are used entirely for cosmetic purposes; to make junk food appealing - and are completely unnecessary and banned under organic standards.

This is a blow to the Food Standards Agency, as it approved the use of such additives - and their response has been totally inadequate. This is the time for them to take a lead role in addressing this issue through new policies to prevent the use of these unnecessary food additives.

As with the issues of pesticide residues and genetically modified food, the FSA is still giving the benefit of the doubt to the food industry over artificial food ingredients, even when there are rising public health concerns. As one letter writer in the Guardian put it if the UN provided food to refugees in Africa knowing that it would be harmful to 5% of the children eating it there would be a justified outcry. That the government can allow shops to sell products to children knowing that 5% of the children will suffer harmful effects is beyond belief.

There seems no justification for inaction - is it really true as reported that the British Soft Drink Association said "All additives ... are included ... to enhance the choices that are available to them [the public]"? As another commentator said presumably they were including the choice to have hyperactive children or not buy their members' products? Why should anyone have to make this choice?

Mind when they do get to ban additives - sense must surely prevail sometime - I think I might miss Butylated hydroxyanisole and Polyvinylpolypyrrolidone - then again a dash of Diacetyltartaric esters of glycerol is also pretty yumsy? If you can't pronounce it, don't stick it in your mouth. In fact that reminds me of one of the first Green party letters I ever wrote to local press back in 2001:

A McDonalds' strawberry milkshake on average contains; amyl acetate, amyl butyrate, amyl valerate, anethol, anisyl formate, benzyl acetate, benzyl isobutyrate, butyric acid, cinnamyl isobutyrate, cinnamyl valerate, cognac essential oil, diacetyl, dipropyl ketone, ethyl acetate, ethyl amyl ketone, ethyl butyrate, ethyl cinnamate, ethyl heptanoate, ethyl heptylate, ethlyl lactate, ethyl methylphenylglycidate, ethyl nitrate, ethyl propionate, ethyl valerate, heliotropin, hydroxyphenyl-2-butonone (10% solution in alcohol), a-isonone, isobutyl, anthranilate, isobutyl butyrate lemon essential oil, maltl....and that's just A to Mc.

Those who want the complete list of ingredients could read Eric Schlosser's, 'Fast Food Nation'. It now makes more sense why some people want a Stroud McDonalds. After all, with such a complex recipe it must be hard to make one of those milkshakes up at home.


Greens locally have over the years campaigned on this issue - see some of the items like a news release re toxic chemicals and cancer last year, lobby of MEPs here and here, campaign against aspartame, additives in school meals, as part of preventing ill-health and more.

I wonder how many Asbos would be saved per year if these additives were banned?

Meanwhile today it is reported that there is a U-turn re providing more healthier drinks in schools. Children will now still be able to drink additive-laden "combination" drinks - which combine water, fruit juice and/or milk - in school canteens, rather than restricting them to the nutritionally superior "pure" drinks initially proposed.

Read Peter Melchett on what he calls "The double-standards agency?"

More Scrutiny

I left home at 3.30 for Ebley Mill (HQ of Stroud District Council) and got home 10.30pm after rather too much meeting time - first a 'Leaders' meeting (that's leaders of the various political groups) which looked at a range of issues then a pre-Scrutiny meeting then a Scrutiny meeting...

Photo: Ebley Mill from air

....here's some of the 'highlights' what were discussed in those meetings - would love to write more but too late - and am not sure folk will be that interested in the Housing Revenue Account and other reverting reports that were discussed at some length - however do contact me if you want further info:

- Housing Revenue - having mentioned this I should perhaps note that while I support redistribution of wealth between Councils - ie richer areas supporting poorer the Housing Revenue means that some £4.5 million collected from Council Housing goes into the pocket of central government - and is not invested in Council housing - this is outrageous but not a lot we can do about it - the figure looks set to increase year on year - and talking of Council housing - with each sale of a Council house Stroud only keeps 25% - again the rest goes back to Government. It really is time we had proper investment in Social housing - it is impossible for many to get on housing ladder and rented options are very limited - out society is growing more and more divided.
- Feedback re floods and A46 - the latter looks set to be 6 months rather than 12 as my letter pointed in The Citizen today feared could be the case.
- Stroud District Parking enforcement officers look set to take over from police on 5th November.
- Update on canal
- Trees - one councillor raised the issue that in the light of this years unusual weather there have been more damage to trees - need an assessment re what liabilities/needs to be done - I agree and did note National Trusts notes in Randwick woods re not walkng there in bad weather or v hot weather.
- Implications on Planning Department following Huntsgrove being called in - more staff needed to tackle the legal issues resulting from what basically looks like a political call in by David Drew and Parmjit Dhanda - while Hunts Grove is not in my a great place to put 1,750 houses it has at least been through all the various hurdles of consulation and meets most of the criteria - indeed better than many other plans like north of Tewkesbury where they want to build on flood plains.
- Weavers Croft - good on John Marjoram for getting front page in Citizen on this outrageous closure of beds - see more re Green party view here - situation does indeed look bleak.
- The Stanleys recycling pilot scheme - over 100 people expressed interest in leading on this - but only 12 places - shows peoples interest in wanting to get stuff done - shame it is all taking so long - need it across whole district - but at least Stroud is tackling it the right way when compared to other Councils who are trying to meet ridiculously damaging Government recycling targets rather than trying to reduce waste collected.
- Performance target reports of departments were discussed - I raised several issues re Planning.
- Customer Services responded to my question re the lack of child-friendly activities in the enterance to Ebley Mill with an agreement to look at it - I had sent email below earlier - to be fair they do have crayons and a computer terminal but still think we need a better child area. Email I sent: "I understand that staff have requested a child play area or at the very least provision of some activities for children waiting in the foyer at Ebley Mill. I would wholly support this move. I recently had cause to wait in the foyer with a 6 year old and while the wait was not long (15 minutes) it could have been made much easier for myself, the child, other customers and indeed staff if some provision of toys had been made. Banks, GP surgeries, cafes and indeed many other places now have child-friendly areas. I find it surprising that in the refit of the foyer this was not prioritised. I would welcome news on when provision can be made."

That's enough - time for bed long ago!

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Big cats in Randwick?

There are reported sightings of big cats being seen across the Stroud District, and apparently especially in Standish and Randwick area - possibly given the woodland cover and the deer, rabbits and other prey available. The sightings go back many years, and in 2007 there have been regular sightings of a big black cat in the area, and of lynx.

Photo: Randwick woods

I've been asked that people who have any sightings and wish to discuss the issues can contact Frank Tunbridge, who has been investigating big cats in Glos for over 20 years: 077303 88492

Frank Tunbridge and Rick Minter give regular talks on the subject, the next of which is at Ruskin Mill on Tuesday 16 October at 7.30pm Ruskin Mill entitled "Big Cats here - you'd better believe it!" The talk will set out the evidence for large wild cats in Gloucestershire, such as black leopards, puma and lynx, explain how these cats got here, and consider the implications. It's also an opportunity to hear local people's own experiences. £2 suggested donation in aid of the Gloucestershire Wildlife Trust

Bike film night

On the fringe of the fringe last night was....Bicycology Stroud (see photo). They presented their second film night in the cafe at the Sub Rooms in Stroud - showing a collection of films to some 30 people starting with a 1950s look at cycling - great old footage of cyclists putting their bikes on the train to Rugby to then cycle around that area...

...this was followed by a £500,000 minute long film made by the Government to promote cycling...."Cycle Hero" - see it here: www.cyclehero.com

I have to say I agreed with people last night who expressed some dissatisfaction with this attempt to promote cycling using this American model, Genevieve Lake. The film has been played in cinemas across the country - some 5 million people have already seen the film but I am not sure how much it will persuade people to get into the saddle.

"Bicycology uses creative methods to encourage environmental responsibility.
Its aim is to promoting cycling as a healthy, practical and enjoyable alternative to high-carbon lifestyles, and to challenge the politics and economics that have led us down the road to environmental destruction and massive global injustice"





Next up was the pedal powered washing machine (pictured) - I saw it last year at the Ragged Hedge Fair (see previous blog items for more on that) - then a film about Critical Mass - a moving bit where cyclists gathered on a site where a guy had been killed by a 4x4 - in the discussion there was talk of a Critical Mass cycle ride in Stroud possibly on a regular basis.

Then a film with Mark Lynas talking about climate change. I sadly couldn't stay for all the other films but lined up were: "Reclaim Power" from Summer 2006 where 600 people convinced that there is no time to waste set up a Camp for Climate Action. In the shadow of Drax coal-fired power station in Yorkshire - one of the biggest CO2 emitters in Europe - they held a 10 day space of collective learning, sustainable living and direct action. Plus "Reach for the Sky" about this years Camp for Climate Action at Heathrow Airport, which is responsible for more climate harming greenhouse gas emissions than any other site in the UK. This film gives some background, explaining the problems with aviation, and it’s massive growth in recent decades.

James, the organiser of the event (see photo) kindly gave me a couple of minutes to talk to the 30 or so people re Staverton airport and the hopes of some people to set up a Camp there to raise awareness about climate change and more.

Monday, September 10, 2007

Arctic - ice-free in 23 years

News in The Guardian last week that levels of sea ice around the North Pole now stand at their lowest ever levels. Since satellite measurements began thirty years ago, arctic ice cover has decreased by about a third, with a rapid decline setting in after 2002 - it is estimated the arctic could be ice-free in 23 years!

Photo: Certainly no climate control yet outside this Hair saloon

Mark Serreze, a scientist with the US National Snow and Ice Data Centre at Colorado University, said that he was 'amazed':
'If you asked me a couple of years ago when the Arctic could lost all of its ice, then I would have said 2100, or 2070 maybe. But now I think that 2030 is a reasonable estimate. It seems that the Arctic is going to be a very different place within our lifetimes, and certainly within our childrens' lifetimes.'
The lowest recorded figure before this year for sea ice cover was 5.3 million square kilometres. This year, the cover has receded to a mere 4.4 million square kilometres. Although changes in wind and ocean currents have helped the decline, Dr Serreze said that anthropogenic global warming was the main culprit. There is also news that the Greenland ice cap is melting so quickly that it is triggering earthquakes as pieces of ice several cubic kilometres in size break off.

Flood Action Group meeting and latest on sewers

Last week The Citizen gave front page to the Slad Action Group meeting on Wednesday 12th September - they will be looking at how to tackle their problems of flooding - I will be one of the speakers talking about our experiences in Ruscombe.

It is an open meeting so anyone interested is welcomed to attend - it will be at the Science and Arts Building in Lansdown - apparently senior District Council staff and David Drew MP will also all be attending.

Plus I had a call last week from Severn Trent who confirm they have discovered further root growth in the sewer pipes up from Puckshole so they will be contacting land owners to do some root cutting - also heard they have now signed the memo of cooperation to work with all parties to tackle the problems with the Ruscombe brook.

Don't forget next Ruscombe Brook Action Group meeting at 7.30 on Tuesday 18th Sept - contact me for details.

Boosey at Prema

Yesterday after another dip into Stroud Fringe Festival I joined the Preview of Ruscombe photographer James Boosey at Prema arts centre (see previous post about the exhibition here - scroll down - and Gazette write-up here).

Photos of exhibition, James and me outside Prema playing the pipe thing - great sound.

This is his first solo exhibition - entitles "deconstructing chameleons" - the chameleon uses its camouflage to safeguard against predators, to hide vulnerabilities - this exhibition of 6 pieces looks at humans use camouflage - good stuff to make you think and some impressive photos displayed in different ways.

Hey and it's been too long since I've been to Prema - it really isn't so far from Stroud and has an extraordinary programme of events - no wonder it has such a good national reputation - anyhow good luck to James.

Perhaps when James is a famous photographer researchers will come across this entry as the first review of his first solo exhibition.....

Answers re recent floods

There is a Government consultation regarding the recent floods - yes the ones that left many thousands of homes across the country uninhabitable and left more than a quarter of a million people without clean drinking water supplies including this blog author. Here is my submission below that I've been working on over last week or so - hope it encourages others to also write.

Photo: Photo I was sent recently of a development still going ahead

The House of Commons Environment, Food and Rural Affairs Committee will hold an inquiry into flooding starting on 10 October and the Committee wants comments by 13 September 2007. Further info re consultation here. I'll also put a copy of report on Glos Green party website.

Submission regarding the recent floods

By Cllr. Philip Booth, on behalf of Stroud District Green Party and in consultation with the Ruscombe Brook Action Group, Lark Rise, Bread Street, Ruscombe, Stroud, Glos. GL6 6EL Telephone 01453 755451 E-mail: press@glosgreenparty.org.uk

Contents

1. Executive Summary 2. Climate change: need for honesty 2.1. Cause of floods 2.2. Need for clearer message re climate change 3. Sustainable Urban Drainage systems 3.1. What are SUDs? 3.2. Advantages of SUDs 3.3. Ignorance and resistance 3.4. Adoption problems 3.5. Lack of urgency worrying 3.6. National guidance needed 4. Other key measures to reduce floods 4.1. Prioritise upstream flood defences 4.2. Develop a proper water resources strategy 4.3. Stricter rules about housebuilding on flood plains. 4.4. Reduce impermeable surfaces 4.5. Important role of agriculture. 5. Crisis management 6. Other wider issues 6.1. A robust carbon emissions reduction programme 6.2. Build community resilience 6.3. Restore water companies to public ownership and ensure proper regulation. 6.4. Consume less water. 6.5. Decentralising energy. 6.6. Rethink sewage

1. Executive Summary

Gloucestershire was one of the worst hit regions with the recent floods and all the indications are that such events will increase in the future. Our main recommendations are that we urgently need to adopt a mandatory and comprehensive national SUDs policy and significantly improve public awareness about the realities of climate change. We need to develop a comprehensive strategy towards water: this would include prioritising upstream flood defences, stricter rules about housebuilding on flood plains, reducing impermeable surfaces and a re-looking at the role of agriculture.

We also need to look at how we can improve our crisis management, seriously tackle the causes on climate change with a robust programme of carbon reduction, restore water companies to public ownership, build community resilience, rethink our sewage systems, decentralise energy and consume less water.

2. Climate change: need for honesty

2.1. Cause of floods. Let us be clear from the start the amounts of rainfall have been so extreme that any measure of preparation would have been bound to fail: dredging rivers, better sand bag organisation, inadequate contigency planning (bowsers and communication) and a host of other measures would have helped but it is clear we need to better acknowledge the climate-change-related nature of the floods. Recent joint research by several national climate research institutes, including the Hadley Centre of the UK Met Office, supports this view: it is not just the climate's natural variability which has caused the increases in rainfall and temperatures, but there is a detectable human cause ­ climate change, caused by our greenhouse gas emissions (i).

2.2. Need for clearer message re climate change. The public are not being given the facts about climate change or the urgency with which we need to tackle it. Numerous local examples like a County newspaper confusing ozone layer and climate change in their editorial last month, local Drainage Boards not having the implications of climate change as part of their policy and the local airport issuing a statement that climate change is a myth. Similarly nationally some papers rarely mention climate change (The Sun mentioned it about 6 times in 6 years) and even the Government's Chief Scientist goes against international scientific agreement that the stabilisation target should be 430ppm CO2e. While he doesn't deny the catastrophic effects of climate change or that the number of people at high risk from flooding will more than double to 3.5 million by 2080, he suggests 550ppm CO2e is a realistic goal. As Tony Juniper (Executive Director of Friends of the Earth) said: "That might well be an arguably realistic perspective, building on one set of political and economic judgements, but that is not what the science says we should aim to achieve; nor is it the role of scientists to propose such compromises."

We would fully support Mark Lynas view when he writes (ii): "Admitting our own culpability in this emerging crisis is a recipe not for despair, but for hope: we can still stop the situation deteriorating beyond the point of no control, but only if we act fast to cut back on greenhouse-gas emissions. And that means politicians in particular need to sell the climate mitigation message better, making explicit links, for example, between the misery of people in Tewkesbury and the determination of BAA to expand Heathrow and Gatwick. Polls show that the general public is still not convinced about the reality of climate change, even as the flood waters rise towards people’s front doors."

3. Sustainable Urban Drainage systems

3.1. What are SUDs? The SUDs philosophy is an integrated approach to managing water on site by minimising run off, attenuating discharge rates, detaining water for passive treatment, improving water quality and creating amenity space for people and wildlife. The overriding concept of SUDS is that drainage design for development sites should mimic, wherever possible, the existing drainage characteristics of the area and seek to minimise the effects of development on the hydrology of the site and the surrounding environment: water will be dealt with as close to where it falls as possible (iii). SUDS can be achieved by utilising a series of porous hard surfaces, swales (broad open ditches), ponds and wetlands. These all ensure that water seeps slowly away in to ground water (as would happen naturally pre-development) or is discharged to the drainage system at a low controlled rate.

3.2. Advantages of SUDs. SUDs systems offer solutions that are often at a lower cost and lower maintenance costs to traditional systems and are more sustainable than convention methods because they:

- reduce runoff flow rates which reduces the resulting pollution from run-off
- reduce flooding and subsequent damage to water courses and more
- protect or enhance water quality
- improve habitat for wildlife
- provide a public/functional space (good examples in Sheffield and Lewisham where SUDs have been integrated into local parks) or for willow, biofuel or aquaculture
- reduce depletion of ground water flow which in turn impacts upon water resources

3.3. Ignorance and resistance. Take up in England and Wales is very poor indeed even with support from Government through PPG25 and other policy documents, and from the Environment Agency. Forward thinking councils like Gloucester City are attempting to develope ways to encourage more SUDs schemes. However they and indeed most Councils, even where they have SUDs policies as part of their planning process, are not seeing SUDs schemes delivered. Ignorance and resistance within the construction industry means that drainage proposals that have been called SUDs schemes have not always delivered easily maintained, visually attractive and functional solutions. Similarly even where Local Plans have called for culverts to be opened up this has not occurred despite new developments. It is critical that greater guidance and support is provided before a Detail Planning Submission is made.

3.4. Adoption problems. One key excuse that developers use to not submit a SUDS scheme is 'adoption'. However if structures are designed correctly in the first place then maintenance costs should not be prohibitive and structures can be adopted as long as appropriate commuted sum payments are made. In traditional systems pipes are adopted by Severn Trent, for which they are allowed to charge through the water rate: typically 10 – 15% of a water bill will be for this service. If the pipe discharges into a balancing pond then it is the local authority, who, with a commuted sum will take on the maintenance of this area in a similar way to public open space. Currently Severn Trent are obliged to adopt pipes typically used in traditional systems, but refuse to adopt many of the features associated with SUDs such as swales, filter strips or French drains even though they convey water from one place to another. It is not clear why this is the case, however, it has been suggested that the current system suits them well and there is no commercial benefit to change it. Local authorities have also been reluctant to take them on board as they are unfamiliar with them, and they have no long term revenue stream to pay for their maintenance even though SUDs usually have lower maintenance costs than traditional systems.

3.5. Lack of urgency worrying. The Interim report on SUDS was published in July 2004 and there is not even an estimated date for the final report. Furthermore that Interim report did not go far enough in making use of the advantages of SUDS. Apparently a group led by the Environment Agency, including representatives of major stakeholders, is considering both the technical standards and legal issues required to underpin the future adoption of SUDS. Again this appears to lack any sense of urgency.

3.6. National guidance needed. We urgently need clearer guidance and a stronger lead from bodies like the Environment Agency. A move to adopt a mandatory and comprehensive national SUDs policy in all new developments like in Ireland and Scotland would be a significant step towards managing our water better, but in the meantime individual Councils can considerably improve their current provision of SUDs through LDFs and more.

4. Other key measures to reduce floods

4.1. Prioritise upstream flood defences. It was reported last month that only 46% of flood defence systems in high-risk areas are adequate. This clearly needs addressing. The importance of measures like dredging of some water channels and ensuring culverts do not become blocked has also been underestimated. However the key cause of our flooding (and regular droughts) is the inability of our land to properly store and infiltrate rainwater, together with the increased evaporation this causes. Further expenditure on downstream flood defences and increased drainage will be little help. Upstream storage and infiltration is a much cheaper and safer alternative (amongst a range of options), which will boost agricultural and local economies in a variety of ways.

4.2. Develop a proper water resources strategy. This is currently part of another consultation by the Environment Agency which starts with the welcomed acknowledgement that water companies should not be continuing to meet unconstrained demand. There are many aspects here that need consideration including many of the points already mentioned in this report. There is also a huge potential to better model the possibility for flooding within each catchment, but also to improve our analysis of potential flooding and provide proper protection for key sites like Mythe water treatment plant and Walham substation.

4.3. Stricter rules about housebuilding on flood plains. New properties must be expressly designed to cope with flood risk and still allow the land to soak up the water so that the problem is not transferred elsewhere. There are a whole host of designs available from what are effectively houseboats that rise and fall with water levels to others homes designed to cope with flooding. In the last year 21 major developments have been built on flood-plains despite explicit appeals by the Environment Agency and in direct contravention of national policy.

4.4. Reduce impermeable surfaces. National awareness campaign to reject concrete in favour of “porous” townscapes which allow rain more easily to refill the aquifers and reduce run-off and flooding (iv). Severn Trent Water report a 4% increase in their regions impermeable hard surfaces area each year. Councils need to be enabled to take action to manage and protect more effectively all green spaces including front gardens.

4.5. Important role of agriculture. Instead of civil engineers we need agriculture to be restored to it's role of helping manage our water resources. This will require changes in farming practice in catchment areas prone to flooding such as reducing over stocking which compacts the soil and run-off, turning more arable areas into pasture land (which retains water better), expanding flood plains, planting more trees (woodlands are up to 60 times more effective at infiltration than bare arable land) and supporting organic farming which manages water better.

Water companies spend up to £313 million a year dealing with nitrates, pesticides and other contaminants (10% of the costs of supplying drinking water): chemicals and energy-intensive ultra-violet treatment make the water-industry the most energy-intensive utility (2.6% of UK carbon emissions). Instead we should tackle pollution at source, reduce chemical farming and use critical upland sites to allow water to soak away naturally. Defra should pay farmers to produce food in a way that works for water, wildlife and landscape.

5. Crisis management

Various measures like better preparation but also:
- stronger measures to stop people making unnecessary journeys, which contributes to congestion and stops the emergency services being able to reach affected areas: despite extreme weather warnings people still streamed onto 'their' roads as if on autopilot
- clearer warnings about the health risks of contaminated flood waters
- improved communication over issues like siting of bowsers

6. Other wider issues

6.1. A robust carbon emissions reduction programme. This is critical to lessen the risk of freak weather events in the first place.

6.2. Build community resilience. The cheering news from the flooding is the way people have supported each other in the face of crisis. We are increasingly going to have to learn to rely on ourselves and each other more and more in the coming years. Building up resilient local economies and strengthening our communities is the most positive route we can take to protect ourselves from future crisis. Government can and must facilitate such moves (v).

6.3. Restore water companies to public ownership and ensure proper regulation. Ownership matters profoundly: rather than companies that seek to exploit loopholes in the regulatory regime, sell off "surplus" assets and fail to make improvements we want water companies back in public ownership and properly accountable to the electorate. In the first 9 years of privatisation pre-tax profits of the water companies rose by almost 150%. OFWAT, the sector's regulatory body, found that operating expenditure as a proportion of bills had shrunk; the capital charges rose; but operating profits, which have more than doubled, account for virtually the entire increase in customers' bills. The Environment Agency, Health Protection Agency, OFWAT and Defra all need to play a more significant role in improving and enforcing regulations.

6.4. Consume less water. The Germans consume a third less water than the English so it is possible to reduce consumption and still be comfortable. Measures needed include dual-flush loos, water butts, drip irrigation rather than sprinkler, grey-water harvesting and water metering to encourage conservation of water.

6.5. Decentralising energy. Power station cooling accounts for 39% of national water consumption: ironically drought orders could shut power stations like Didcot as flows of the Thames become too low. Decentralised energy could include using existing technology to siphon methane off sewage plants to sell as energy and using the dry wastes as fertiliser.

6.6. Rethink sewage. Flood waters are highly contaminated with sewage and virtually every river in the country faces regular sewage contamination. Even in normal rainfall, sewers regularly surcharge into rivers and onto land (50 times a year in Thames area, typically 20 times a year in Gloucestershire). These surcharges, often through 'consented outflows' (ie with consent from the Environment Agency), comprise of the biggest single source of pathogenic (disease causing) material. Over the years these discharges have in many cases worsened. We urgently need a rethink of the Victorian model of urban sewerage infrastructure. Embedded, decentralised wastewater treament within the urban context using SUDS appears the only cost effective method of reducing these health risks, and could in many cases also reduce sewerage charges.

We need a whole host of measures to address this issue, including:
- Breaking up present unnatural sewage disposal infrastructure
- Investigation into the health risks of sewage in our water courses
- Determine appropriate public health (microbial) standards for watercourses and the discharges into them
- Cease local development (new sewer connections) until appropriate sewer (microbial) standards for watercourses and the discharges into them are achieved
- Transfer of private sewers into the hands of the water companies (a Defra consultation is currently looking at this)
- Promotion of cheaper and more sustainable solutions like reed beds


Notes:

(i) The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) confirms, in its February report: “The frequency of heavy precipitation events has increased over most land areas, consistent with warming and observed increases in atmospheric water vapour.” As the IPCC states, there is an identifiable global trend towards more intense precipitation – in all regions, and in all seasons. Even where the climate overall is becoming drier, as in Australia, when rain does arrive, it falls with undreamt-of ferocity. That means flash floods, even in places far away from rivers that may never have experienced flooding before. None of this on its own “proves” climate change, but it clearly fits the prevailing trend. There is more energy in the system, driving a more vigorous hydrological cycle. (ii) See article in New Statesman here (iii) The basic underlying concept of SUDs is referred to as the 'management train' and this generally mimics, by a series of drainage techniques what happens in the natural world. The management train has 4 components: 1. Prevention. This may mean reducing the area of hard standing or simply including water butts in roof down pipes. 2. Source Control. This is the control of runoff at or as near the source where it falls and could include permeable porous paving for vehicular hard standing. 3. Site Control. This deals with the actual runoff and may include swales that transport water around the site and balancing structures that allow water to stand to infiltrate into ground water or discharge slowly into a water course. 4. Regional control. This is beyond the confines of the individual site and would include an integrated approach involving a number of developments. (iv) Carlo Laurenzi, Director of the London Wildlife Trust notes the increase in run-off from an impermeable surface such as concrete can be as much as three times greater than the run-off from porous surfaces. This impacts significantly on drains when flash floods occur. The Royal Horticultural Society notes that an average suburban garden on a typical rainy day will absorb 10 litres of rainwater a minute: this is about 10% of water that will fall in a storm. Although this may not seem a lot it plays a part in preventing thousands of litres contributing to localised flooding or causing rivers to burst. See the London Assembly's report (September 2005), "Crazy Paving: The environmental importance of London's front gardens." (v) There are many examples on how we rely too much on growing centralised provision and control. In the fuel blockade protests (September 2000) supermarkets confirmed that we came within a couple of days of the whole food industry coming to a halt. Similarly if Gloucester's Walham substation had been flooded 250,000 would have lost power (and water as electricity is used to pump water). Local food and decentralised energy are clearly more robust in the face of crises.

Should we permanently close Water Lane, Puckshole?

Richard Vick, a local resident wrote to the Randwick Runner (yesterdays issue) suggesting Water Lane stay closed to traffic - he writes "Life has improved for those living between Paganhill and Townsend". He is not alone I've had a couple of others also contact me.

Photos: A46 diversion signs and Puckshole landslide

To be fair the road has only closed to through traffic as residents still use it to get out at each end but it remains blocked in the middle. Not all residents agree it would be good to leave it closed - I've also had calls from those impatient to get it reopened. In fact as it was a landslip from private land most of the job I understand will be on insurance.

I certainly agree it is wonderful with such a reduced traffic but I sadly can't support closure for various reasons. Not least because the A46 closure has led to dangerous traffic on many of the other roads in the Parish (see previous post and others).

I don't consider for example that other roads are safer for traffic than Water Lane as has been suggested - the Main Road through Whiteshill for example has traffic speeds that are higher and therefore if an accident occurs it will do more damage - speeds in Puckshole are too fast but most don't exceed 20mph on the dangerous bits.

As regular blog readers will know I have been campaigning for 20 mph on all residential roads - we need to change the culture - other places are doing it but Gloucestershire County is resistant - similarly I have been pushing for a Shared Space approach which has cut speeds and accidents.

One of the key issues is the cause of all the traffic - I've written before on thsi about our failures re public transport compared to other countries, our planning policies that mean reliance on the car etc - and of course our schools selection process damages the environment - choice is a nonsense in most cases - why on earth do we have a system where many have to travel to school unnecessarily long distances - at Randwick school there are parents living in Stroud and Stonehouse - why not their local schools?

Also our failure to make 'liveable' safer streets (with 20 mph and other measures like Shared Spaces) means we have discouraged walking and cycling to school - Whiteshill at least are now exploring a Walk to School project. Not all parents have a choice re driving - I am aware of disabled parents or parents with poor health.

Times are changing and in the next few years fuel prices are expected to rise very significantly - all this will reduce traffic - see my blog entry re Richard Heinberg on 1st June (think third entry on that day).

It is certainly clear that we need tougher and bolder measures now to support a move away from allowing the car to be King - to me the answer lies in part with the Shared Spaces approach.

Anyway for now I've just emailed the County Council Leader re A46 and also David Drew MP - we need to continue to make people aware of the consequences of the A46 closure and urge action on repairs. A friend was saying that in Spain following floods a whole road was washed away yet within a couple of months it was being used again. I've also written to see if reduced train tickets could be introduced to encourage more people on the train between Gloucester and Stroud.

Saturday, September 08, 2007

12 months to reopen A46?!!

As regular readers of this blog will know the A46 is impacting badly on our villages - news that it may now be 12 months before it is fixed is shocking. Here's my letter to The Citizen in response to their front page story this week (see photo) about Whiteshill:

Dear Sir,

Many of us are grateful for The Citizen highlighting the A46 closure and the dire effects the additional traffic is having on Whiteshill and the surrounding villages (7/09/07). Many of the roads were already carrying too much traffic before this closure but it is now truly dreadful, particularly with the added closure of the road at Puckshole due to a landslip.

Residents have reported that there is a constant flow of impatient traffic through the village and when there are not continuous queues drivers are reported traveling dangerously fast and putting pedestrians at risk in an area where there is not always a proper pavement. Indeed one resident said she didn't feel it was now safe to walk to school, another emailed to say it took over 15 minutes just to get out of her drive while another reported a minor accident outside their home.

The latest unconfirmed report that the A46 will now take 12 months to fix will I am sure be greeted with despair and anger. As The Citizen editorial noted 6 months is "unacceptable for commuters, local business and for the wellbeing of people living in surrounding villages."

Even before the A46 closure we have tried in Whiteshill to get flashing speed signs, 20 mph limits, other speed reduction measures and a crossing but all these have been refused due to either national guidelines or County Council funding priorities.

Highways have put up diversion signs and a new 7.5 tonne weight limit (with an exception for buses) but these are clearly not enough. This is a difficult situation, but clearly we need more speed enforcement measures, more people to use the train between Gloucester and Stroud, drivers to take more care and urgent action to fix the A46.

Cllr. Philip Booth,
Stroud District councillor for the Randwick, Ruscombe and Whiteshill ward,

2 The Laurels, Bread Street, Ruscombe, Stroud, Glos. GL6 6EL
Tel: 01453 755451
E-mail: philip.booth2@virgin.net

Biggest free music festival in UK

Stroud Fringe - an amazing event with over 100 bands - still going on now and tomorrow - see more here: www.stroudfringe.co.uk

The photos here have been rather hurriedly taken to give a flavour of some of the events this afternoon and people enjoying the sun - have to give a special mention to Smoothie (see last photo) - lead singer Green party Cainscross Parish councillor Helen Royal belting out a Beetles number - brilliant stuff - her daughter Ruth Royall is playing tomorrow and is also great. Also caught The Crowd (photo bottom middle set of photos below) and several other bands plus it was good to browse the stalls and soak up the sun.

It hots up in the evening with more dance and rock - plus Soul Destroyers on later this evening - other bands playing tonight are local band Celidh Jo, UXL, Morph, Loman, and more.

After the wonders of the Ragged Hedge Fair last weekend (see blog entry for more) it was good to have an even more local festival - great to bump into people and chat, watch the passres-by and more.

And don't forget to tune into Stroud FM Community Radio on 106.8FM on 7th, 8th and 9th September during Stroud Fringe Festival. See more here: www.stroudfm.co.uk

Friday, September 07, 2007

Stroud Fringe is starting now

Stroud Fringe - an amazing event with over 100 bands is starting now - see more here: www.stroudfringe.co.uk

A post with pics to follow soon but meanwhile Stroud FM Community Radio is broadcasting on 106.8FM on 7th, 8th and 9th September during Stroud Fringe Festival – don’t forget to tune in! See more here: www.stroudfm.co.uk

Travellers and Gypsies in Stroud

Meetings over the last 2 days - too many to scribble here - a Safe Water Campaign meeting, a meeting with Greens to discuss a major proposal to the District Council, a meeting with Staverton airport campaigners (see my press release today to Guardian and Independent), a Green party District councillors meeting, a meeting re the brook and a Policy Panel at the District Council on Travellers and Gypsies.....

Photo: Traditional Gypsy caravan at a horse fair

When I was qualifying to be a Social Worker back in 1985 I had a research placement in Southampton looking at issues around Travellers and Gypsies and was fortunate to meet many traveller families. I've had an interest in this area ever since - see for example a letter from 2002.

As I said at the Policy Panel one of the issues that came out then was the lack of authorised sites....22 years on that is exactly what we are still hearing. The conservatives abolished Councils duty to provide sites and Labour have also utterly failed both the traveller population and indeed residents - as many unauthorised sites only cause problems to all.

There are clearly not enough satisfactory sites for travellers which over the years has fostered a deterioration in relations between travellers and local house-dwellers. Indeed Travellers have been more likely to be living next to motorways, landfill sites, rubbish tips or even sewage farms than to be invading green belt. If we were to seek the real culprits of our planning laws we need look no further than many of the big developers. For example planning conditions to protect trees have been blatently ignored as it is cheaper for developers to pay any fines that are rarely imposed than lose valuable building land - councils don't have the staff to do much about such breaches.

However the good news is that at last the Government has recognised the lack of sites - and is taking action - why now? I'm not sure - maybe EU legislation but various policy documents are being pushed forward - the County has employed two lots of consultants to look at the current site provision - one of yesterday evenings presentations was from Colin Davis from Ark consultancy. In Stroud we have no local authority sites and 29 private authorised sites - plus about 24 unauthorised encampments which include people travelling through. The research shows we need to provide 17 pitches more - a lot less than Tewkesbury where many Gypsy and Traveller communities stay - they a have some 122 pitches to find.

Anyhow the Government advice is to seek innovative solutions which may mean a different type of solution for different groups - a more eco-friendly setting for travellers and a more established type site for Gypsies. It will not mean that all 17 pitches are on one site - indeed often the solutions can mean one or two on much smaller sites.

Out of those questioned 63% had lived in the county more than 5 years, 89% had a strong connection to the area and63% didn't want to move from their current site.

It is disappointing that this group of people still face considerable prejudice - the consultant noted 25% felt hostility to their children at local schools. I remember interviewing a senior police officer when I was in Southampton who said he cursed the travellers arriving on one particular unauthorised site as they did regularly - when I asked more he said that they were model citizens and left the site clean - the problem was that every criminal in the region descended on the local homes in the hope that their activities would be blamed on the travellers.

There is still much work but I hope that Stroud now gives this issue some urgency and finds suitable sites - not an easy task - without the sites it will just mean more unauthorised sites and problems for travellers and local residents.

Wednesday, September 05, 2007

Scrutiny: quarterly service plan checklists

Hey now that's a groovy title for a blog entry - can see you all wanting to read this one - I am just back from a Stroud Green party meeting in Star Anise followed by pub and have to say I regret having slept earlier in the evening and having an espresso - I'm wide awake now! So well what better way than to share a little of the role of sitting on Scrutiny committee....

Photo: Randwick woods in the rain

Well you can read previous posts to get a jist of what it is about in terms of the Committee meeting regularly at Ebley Mill - here I want to talk a bit about the mini-meetings councillors have with heads of service... each councillor pairs up with another and has 2 heads to interview re their service 4 times a year - as a guide there are some questions like do the Service Objectives give a clear understanding of what the service is about and are there a good range of meaningful Key Performance Indicators and is performance on target? Part of the idea behind this is to look at ways to improve the service.

Last month I met with the Regeneration head and last week head of Planning. As this is my first time it is hard to get a full understanding of the role and how best to tackle it - having said that the other councillor I was with, Sarah Lunnon, another Green, was very helpful as she has been on scrutiny before - also both heads were great, very supportive and seemed very open to look at the issues we raised.

To give some idea of what we covered in last weeks meeting here are some of the notes which will go to the Scrutiny committee....

In terms of Service Achievements 2006/07 last year in planning there were particular achievements in customer satisfaction survey, gaining Planning Delivery Grant, dealing with several complex applications and improvements to electronic consultation/website. However I did question the annual design award which went to Stroud College - while it is by all accounts a great space to work it is nowhere near the standards of sustainability that we should be expecting.

In terms of Key Performance Indicators - otherwise known by the catchy titles of BVPI’s and LPI’s...well it was noted that national targets like BV109 for applications to be determined within 8 or 13 weeks do not seem to recognise that full consultation with community and Development Control Committee mean that targets can be missed but the results are usually better for the community. I would wholly endorse this point having been on the Development Control Committee last year.

The performance on targets is looking good with the exception of BV109(a) and one other. The Ist Qtr of that target shows 28.57% reaching target when the requirement by the Government is 60%. The reasons for this are numerous and relate to the longer consultation taken on some key sites and 106 arrangements (more about those another time). A choice will be needed as to whether huge resources are used now to try and meet the target or accept that this will mean the loss of the Planning Delivery Grant (£50,000). The loss of the grant could jeopardise crucial improvements to 106.

Many other additional points were discussed like staffing, the Services Action Plan and complaints procedures plus here are some of my other notes from the meeting:

- SPD: concern expressed that current draft does not go as far as lead Councils in terms of CO2 reduction - see previous blog discussions for much more on this.
- PR/Press releases: noted improvements in recent years by the District Council but concern that there is still a significant challenge in making public aware of what is and is not possible in planning terms for local Councils. Too often the public think we have very many more powers than we do in reality.
- Access group for on-site inspections: question raised about the social impact of disability. The Access group does by all accounts do an excellent job looking at physical disability issues, but I asked whether wider issues re the Social Model of Disability were being addressed?
- Staff/Member communication: Concern raised about how and what officers can say to members: officers views can be given but need to be balanced.
- Enforcement: has improved in recent months with several prosecution cases.
- Conservation areas: this has stood still for a long time but plans are now coming through.
- SUDS: yes I know this is one of my favorites as any one who reads this blog will know - it was noted that even when a condition is applied SUDS schemes are not taking place to the extent that is necessary or possible. SUDS is now mandatory in Scotland and Ireland but we lag behind in this country as many planners and developers are not familiar with the possibilities or the cost savings. Key to success seems to be discussion at pre-application stages. Many Councils are now looking to address this issue. A Policy Panel was suggested as one way forward. I'm also trying to put together a submission to Defra re the flooding - one of the key issues to mention will be SUDS.

Anyhow I hope this gives a flavour to anyone interested - clearly as time goes by and I get to know the services more it will hopefully be easier to find the best ways forward.

Tuesday, September 04, 2007

Some very local news

As schools return it looks like we might get some better summer weather - can't quite believe how quickly the summer has passed - and with a couple of weeks ill and the floods I feel I haven't managed to get out as much as usual - missed both 'Sense and Sensibility' and 'Peter Pan' local shows although my partner saw Peter Pan - anyhow heres a few bits of news....

Photo: another view of Randwick woods

- Bus shelter at Tesco, Stratford Park Road - click on 'Bus shelter' label below for background and photos of folk waiting at that bus stop - I had a phone call from Robert Miller, Manager of Tesco yesterday in response to yet another of my emails about the possibility of a bus shelter outside the store. He was very receptive to my passionate pleas for a shelter. I fully accept it is not the responsibility for the store to provide a shelter but it is great they are now considering provision as a goodwill gesture to the community. We should hear more in autumn - in the meantime I phoned to update the 82 year old woman - she says she is now 83 - who along with an anonymous message writer on this blog set the ball rolling on this.

- Whiteshill Coracle maker
- Harry Pizzey, 12, from Whiteshill,
has rediscovered the ancient craft of coracle building - he made his own one-man boat to the 1,000-year-old design after going on a two-day workshop in Somerset. Read article in The Citizen here.

- Traffic calming measures - Randwick Parish Council are appealing for residents views on calming and road safety - send to John Taylor while Whiteshill and Ruscombe Parish have a coffee morning to seek residents views on traffic on Saturday 22nd September (I'll be there).

- Cream Tea in Randwick - missed it due to other commitments but 75 people enjoyed themselves and it raised £140 for church.

- Randwick school trees to be felled - several trees on the bank area of the playground are to be removed - the poplar is diseased and an ash has grown through the wall. The walk through the playground will be closed on 7th, 8th and 9th Sept - chippings will be available for folk to collect with a donation to the school.

- Randwick Directory - the new one is being produced - call Pam Thorne on 751915 if you want an entry - or for an advert Brian Stanley on 750207.

- A46 closure - see previous posts on this - not so many comments as I would have expected from this week so far with schools going back - although journey times are clearly much longer and one Whiteshill resident reported last week: "Just to say that this morning at 9.15, the traffic was queuing all the way up the hill, and it took 15 mins to turn out of our house and get as far as the Woodcutters on our way into Gloucester. Just sheer volume of traffic."

Iraq/Afghanistan: Brown spins untruths

Yesterday I tried to leave a letter re Iraq and Afghanistan on the Citizen website - see it here - I don't know whether it is censorship or not but their website repeatedly fails to accept my comments - I have complained in past and had a comment restored to site - it looks like I'll have to try that again.

Photo: Randwick woods last week (and I'm using as a screen saver at the moment!)

I have to say I have just read that Gordon Brown says the British withdrawal from Basra is part of a successful strategic plan to hand over control of the city to Iraqi forces. What????!!! This goes beyond spin - the truth is, a few thousand British troops never had any control of Basra – a city of two million people – and the attempted occupation was resisted by the Iraqi people
from the start. The British withdrawal to a single base on Basra airport is a retreat from a city which is too dangerous for the occupying forces.

The Independent calls it: "one of the most futile campaigns ever fought by the British army." It wasn't so futile to George Bush, who needed the political cover of a British presence to justify his illegal war. Gordon Brown seems intent on maintaining that presence to help a president a whose popularity ratings are amongst the lowest ever recorded.

Afghanistan is in a similar situation - Tony Blair said in 2001, "We will not walk away from Afghanistan." He promised prosperity and liberation for the Afghan people. What they got was the slaughter of thousands, displacement of many thousands more and the total destruction of the infrastructure. Even the puppet president Karzai has been protesting against the NATO bombardments, which have killed hundreds of innocent civilians this year, making a growing number of people join the active opposition to the occupation. The more observant commentators say Afghanistan has the potential to become "Britain’s Vietnam", yet Gordon Brown is likely to use his October statement to confirm an escalation of British deployment in Afghanistan and prove once again to George Bush that the British government will remain subservient to US foreign policy.

PM Brown is due to make a statement to the Commons in early October. As Greens called recently in the press - see letter Citizen did print here - we would urge people to write to him and call for the complete withdrawal of British troops from Iraq (an apology to the Iraqi people and a promise of reparation payments is too much to hope for) and a complete ceding of British troop command to the United Nations in Afghanistan.

Stop the War has called a demonstration outside the House of Commons on Monday 8 October, the day Parliament reassembles, to represent the anger felt by the antiwar majority in this country over Britain’s continuing participation in one of the worst war crimes in recent history – an anger which MPs have refused to reflect in parliament. In the words of Andrew Murray, national chair of Stop the War, writing in The Guardian: "Overwhelming that gap between popular outrage and parliamentary apathy is the key to ensuring the full and final withdrawal of the troops from Iraq, where they serve no purpose beyond covering George Bush's imperial nudity. That is why we are organising a demonstration in London on October 8, the day Parliament reassembles, to demand troop withdrawal from Iraq." (Read the full
article here: http://tinyurl.com/yqn53k).

This post adapted from Stop the War Coalition info - Green MEP Caroline Lucas is a Vice President of the group. See more on their website.

Staverton airport: last organisation in world denying climate change?

The Citizen/Echo's recent article on "New Air Services" from Staverton confirms the worst fears about the airport expansion, and totally discredits the airports claims that the expansion is simply safety related which will have no environmental impact.

Plus the airport have released an extraordinary document that basically denies climate change is man made!! Lastly I finish this post in an appropriate green coloured text with some actions to take.


As Kevin Lister writes: "If the airport's claim that the runway extension is simply safety related is true, then it would imply that the airport has introduced a service that is dangerous to operate as the service is being introduced before the runway has been extended. In this case, the management should be reconsidering their position for putting their customer’s lives in danger. Clearly, no rational manager would knowingly put himself in this position. Their argument about safety being the issue only works because the management want to run additional larger planes that cannot be safely operated from the existing runway. Running additional larger planes from the airport is service expansion, what ever way you look at it. No sane and rational person could come to any other conclusion."

Why on earth has the airport continually tried to claim that the runway extension is simply safety related - they have tried to ridicule comments by me and others in the press - at least the article does now confirm that a significant increase in plane movements from the airport is the true intention of the runway extension works - and it eliminates any doubt that it is simply safety related. It further demonstrates the complete contempt that the airport and its backers have to the environmental impacts that their proposals will cause.

Mr Filleul from Manx2.com further confirms the position when he states: "the services will compete with Bristol and Birmingham airports." This again is an unbelievable statement as it is completely counter to airport's claims on its own web site where they say "We will never be competing with the major, 24-hour Airports like Bristol and Birmingham," when they were assuaging local concern on the environmental impact.

On top of that the airport has planned increases in helicopter flights and it was reported that Cheltenham Chamber of Commerce chief executive Michael Ratcliffe said he hoped the new twice-daily service to Jersey would give added focus to the county as a business destination and put pressure on local authorities to release land around the Staverton site for business development.

Major of Gloucester, Councillor Harjit Gill, seems to be convinced by the airports argument that expansion will be good for us, when he says, "taxi drivers will get more jobs and the economy will benefit. I think it is wonderful." It has perhaps not occurred to him that virtually all the roads in the area are already at grid lock for most of the time - let alone issues of climate change even after he witnessed the flooding of his city.

If service growth is allowed we will see the combined effects of additional traffic and aircraft pollution forcing NO2 levels beyond safety limits. The airport could then like other airports in the country become an asthma and respiratory problem hot spot. Unlike the airport’s recent claims that house prices in the area would rise, it is more likely that they would collapse as the quality of the local environment is destroyed by extra traffic, new businesses, noise and pollution - indeed I would be interested if there was a single case the airport could site where an airport expansion has led to a rise in house prices!!

Sadly as we've seen already the Echo has been particularly poor at getting the facts out about this - and seem reluctant to print all but a few letters of opposition - see previous post on Staverton by clicking the 'Label' below.

Climate change is a myth

It is extraordinary the lengths the airport has gone to - the airport recently issued a confidential report to MPs and Councillors claiming global warming is a myth. The report was leaked to some of us. Even George Bush and Exxon/Mobil have now accepted global warming is the most serious threat to us, Staverton Airport must be the last organisation in the world still seriously trying to dismiss the science!!!

David Drew MP has joined the Lid Dem MP for Cheltenham to come out against Staverton airport's expansion. Mayor of Cheltenham, John Rawson, on seeing the report by the airport has also said he can be quoted saying: “I am utterly shocked that the Airport should be promoting the idea that climate change is a hoax and that the world's scientists and governments are systematically pulling the wool over people's eyes. This is lunatic stuff, and they ought to be ashamed of themselves. The fact is that the world's most eminent scientists are overwhelmingly convinced that human behaviour is contributing to climate change. It won't do the Airport any good to associate itself with mad conspiracy theories."

Richard Conibere, of Cheltenham Friends of the Earth, pointed out that the Airport's report contradicts the statement on their web site where they claim to be concerned about global warming. Indeed if they are prepared to fudge the truth about something as important as this, then should we believe them on anything else? As Richard said: "From the airports own figures it would seem they need many more planes using the airport than they have publicly claimed to make the investment pay off.”

It is surely clear that the airport should start taking a more mature approach to understanding the environmental impacts of their proposals. We are all being told that we must reduce our emissions. It is galling to see others ignoring the science and abusing their positions.

Lib Dem contradictions

At present too many councillors from all three parties appear to be behind the airport expansion - below is a campaigner's letter to a Lib Dem councillor who supports airport expansions - the Lib Dem policy is to oppose expansions but a brief wider look shows Lib Dems supporting airport expansions across the country in Exeter, Glasgow, Sheffield, Manchester and Liverpool. They have also voted against tough noise limitation laws, argued that air travel should be made "more affordable" (presumably to encourage people to fly), and their fourth biggest donor in recent years has been the British Airports Authority. Anyhow they are perhaps marginally better than the other two who support airport expansions - anyhow here's that letter which covers some useful points:

Thank you for your reply and the time that you have put in to making your argument, however I would suggest that it is worth more fully reconsidering some of the points that you have made, and I trust that you will bear with me whilst I try and answer them. I apologise in advance for the length of the reply.

You have said that that the information I have provided is well known to you. I therefore trust that you also appreciate the ultimate and over riding urgency of taking action. No matter how optimistically we hope, global warming will not go away and it is absolutely certain to become an overwhelming problem in the very near future. The problem is so immense that it will not be resolved by simply putting up a few windmills and hoping for the best.

The government, and even Staverton Airport, have said we need to take action at local, national and international levels. First consider each of these levels. Effective action at an international level that results in CO2 and other greenhouse gas reductions has been none existent. As you have pointed out China, India and the USA have not signed the Kyoto Protocol and have little intention of doing so. In fact China’s position is that they are concerned about global warming, but do not intend to reduce emissions. Even those countries that have signed the Kyoto agreement have signed targets that are either easy to achieve or require no actual cuts in CO2 emissions to be made. At a national level, little progress is being made. Alternative solutions for energy supply such as wind power are consistently being proven to be ineffective in terms of consistently meeting the energy demands of a energy hungry country with 60 million people, and other ideas such as bio fuels are actually far worse for the environment than burning fossil fuels. That leaves us with no option but to take robust action at the local level, and this means taking action in all areas. It ultimately means completely changing our expectations and life style. Whilst persuading people to cut down on car journies and reduce heating will help, it will be far too small to be effective, and will do nothing more than provide false hope.

It is precisely because action in all other areas is failing that makes the necessity for taking local action imperative. Solving global warming will not come about by us all determining that we should have an equal slice of CO2 emissions as there is not enough time to reach such a complicated agreement. Global warming will only be resolved by the masses recognising that the earth is saturated with CO2 and nearing the point of catastrophic climate change and then taking urgent action to reduce our emissions and avoid creating any new emissions in all areas.

I accept your point that vehicle emissions and power emissions are large, but at least their rate of increase is relatively steady. Aviation by contrast is the most rapidly growing source of emissions. It makes absolutely no sense that we allow something as dangerous to the environment as this to expand when we actually need everything else to contract. By allowing Staverton Airport to expand, it sends out the loud and clear message that the environment is actually not important. If you allow the airport to expand, you will certainly face the car owners arguing that there is no point in them cutting back their journeys if you do not have the courage to oppose a relatively small airport expansion.

It is also worth taking a lesson from road transport. We now know the environmental damage from road traffic is enormous and potentially catastrophic, yet we are virtually powerless to do anything to stop it, so addicted have we become as a society to it. It is clear from the experience of the road, that it is easier to stop a bad thing from starting than to stop a bad thing from continuing. Staverton Airport is no different. Once new services start, it would be virtually impossible to stop them as various vested interests would argue that their businesses or life styles had become dependent on the new services, or contractual obligations prevents them from being stopped.

Further more, the total green house effect from aircraft is considerably more that the CO2 emissions alone. The exhaust from planes is a cocktail of gases; in particular there are large amounts of NO2. As well as this being a dangerous gas at ground level that causes asthma and respiratory ailments around airports, it is an extremely powerful greenhouse gas which is in the region of 300 times more potent that CO2 alone. The high altitude that this is emitted at further increases the global warming impact. The result is that the additional radiative forcing increases the global warming impact of aviation by a factor of 4 to 6 over the actual CO2 emissions alone.

When evaluating total CO2 emissions from planes, you also need to consider that international travel is not counted, despite this being the largest source of emissions. With international emissions counted, aviation accounts for 6% of the UK’s total emissions. With the radiative forcing, this suggests that aviation is potentially contributing about 20% of our total global warming impact. This is not insignificant.

I further believe that your point about Britain’s contribution to the world CO2 emissions being negligible also needs further consideration. Firstly, Britain is the 7th biggest contributor of CO2 emissions in the world. One of the reasons why our emissions have been able to stay stable recently is that we have simply exported much heavy industry abroad to countries such as China. Even still, on a per capita basis, China’s emissions are still only 30% of ours and India’s are 10%. It therefore completely destroys our position in trying to persuade these countries to make cuts in their emissions when we are not prepared to stop even a relatively small airport.

Bring the debate fully home to Staverton. We have calculated that approximately 1.5 million trees would be required to absorb the CO2 from the new services outlined in their business plan. For Staverton to make their investment viable, they would need many more services than publicly admitted, thus many more trees would be required than my estimate. So whilst Staverton, may be small in relation to Heathrow, it is only small because the other airports are so large. Trying to argue that it is acceptable to expand Staverton because it is smaller is akin to arguing that it is okay to rob the corner shop because it is smaller than the Great Train Robbery.

Given your initial point of your deep interest in environmental matters, and hence I would suppose your recognition of the risk that we face, you must appreciate that the idea of supporting an airport expansion is not logical. You must recognise that if we were to actually build the airport it is likely to become a white elephant very soon as the economic impacts of climate change will bite and reduce any utility for an airport. From your interest in environemental matters you must be aware that we face the risk of world temperatures rises being in excess of 4 deg C. At this point, the few survivors on the planet would not be interested in flying off for holiday weekends. The recent falls in the stock market are the first global warming economic impacts, as poor weather around the world and demand for bio fuels has pushed basic food prices up, with corresponding impacts in inflation and interest rates. This is a situation that it only going to become much worse, and potentially very quickly. Gloucester tax payers will simply be left trying to support a financial liability at the time when they are least able to do so.

I note with interest that you are in the Liberal Democrats. I had been highly impressed with their public position on opposing all airport expansions. Ultimately stopping airport’s and other instruments of ecomomic development are painful decisions, but often the correct decisions are the most difficult to make and not making them will be far worse in the long run.

You must finally recognise that many of the flights from the airport will be made for ultimately frivolous reasons, such as holidays and weekend’s away. As you may be aware, Staverton see business jets as being one of their main growth areas following the expansion. However, European Air Traffic data shows that amongst the top 20 destinations for business jets are Cannes, Nice and Mallorca. For those of us who are concerned parents with children who are trying to make reductions in our emissions we find it galling that a few elitist people are prepared to completely ignore the science and negate any reductions in CO2 that thousands of us will make.

Staverton airport’s publicly owned status offers a unique position where the council, as the representatives of the people, can take a real lead on this issue and put the environement above short term profit motives. You have the opportunity to stop this development and potentially form a coalition of other willing organisations that would be prepared to make cut backs in their output to safe guard the future. I would offer this as a vision of what you can achieve rather than contributing to the biggest disaster that mankind will see. The alternative is that your hope"that the major international polluters act in unison before the debate becomes irrelevant" will simply remain an unfulfilled hope unless people at the local level are prepared to take leadership positions where they can.

What actions can I take??

1. Write to Cheltenham councillors.

As one of the two joint owners of the airport, Cheltenham Borough Council is considering whether to support the airports expansion plans. A working group has been set up by the "Economy and Business Improvement Overview and Scrutiny" committee to examine the airport's business plan and make a recommendation to the Council Cabinet who will ultimately make the decision.

The working group consists of the following councillors:
Steve Jordan (chair) cllr.steve.jordan@cheltenham.gov.uk
Les Godwin cllr.les.godwin@cheltenham.gov.uk
Jacky Fletcher cllr.jacky.fletcher@cheltenham.gov.uk

The working group can be contacted by email or at the council offices: Municipal Offices, Promenade, Cheltenham Glos. GL50 9SA. Please consider writing to them and letting them know what you think about the proposed expansion.

2. Planning applications.

The planning applications submitted by the airport have still not been considered by the Tewkesbury Borough Council planning committee. Many of us have already put in objections. We now expect the four planning applications made by the airport to be considered by the Tewkesbury Borough Council planning committee at their meeting on September 18th 2007. Make your views known. More details from CASE (Concerned residents Against Staverton Expansion
) at: www.case-online.org.uk

3. Write to your MP or local councillor.

See here Kevin Lister's letter to Cllr Gill with 5 things he needs to know about climate change. Meanwhile I wrote a letter to him based on previous letters to the press outlining some of the reasons why the airport should not expand (see here and here).

BBC radio wind documentary is seriously mischievous

BBC Radio 4s' recent "Costing The Earth" was described by one Green as "the most mischievous piece of documentary-making since Channel 4's 'The Great Global Warming Swindle'." The programmed certainly did well to confuse the UK public about the benefits of wind farms. Here's how one Green wrote it up:

For all of us who are likely to hear the misinformation repeated back to us on the doorstep, I thought I'd put together some notes:

The two key critics featured on the programme were Michael Jefferson, a former SHELL chief economist and now chairman of a committee of the World Renewable Energy Network, and Jim Oswald, an independent engineering consultant. Jim Oswald was commissioned by Noel Edmond's anti-wind propoganda machine "The Renewable Energy Foundation (REF)" to write his report, which criticised wind farms for their variable output and for sometimes being built in less windy areas of the country. The World Renewable Energy Network are reportedly "disowning" Michael Jefferson and his comments, dismissing him as an "oil and gas" expert not a wind energy expert. In the programme Jefferson tried to argue that many wind farms in England were "badly sited" with insufficient wind speeds to make them economic.

The British Wind Energy Association has dismissed the views expressed in the programme as "absolute nonsense" and "bizarre psuedo-science".

The presenter Miriam O'Reilly claimed in her programme "a wind farm should have a 30% load factor", that anything less than this would would render them not "effective enough to be of any use"!?!? This is blatant nonsense. Even her consultant Jim Oswald contradicted her, saying of lower load factors: "it means you make a bit less return on your money, if you've paid for the wind farm, but it doesn't matter too much to the national grid, it just means you've got to build a few more wind farms."

Additional note: "Load Factor" or "Capacity Factor" refers to the average output of an power plant expressed as a percentage of its peak output. Example: A 3MW wind turbine will produce power proportional to the speed the wind is blowing, up to a maximum of 3MW. The average output over a year might be 1MW, in which case the turbine would be said to have a 33% load factor.

Jefferson hyped up the "underperforming" accusations, giving an example wind turbine in Hertfordshire with a load factor of 7.6 percent. The Scotsman newspaper have chased up this claim, and found it's actually a single turbine at a renewable energy company's offices - not an example of a typical UK wind farm.

One of the programme's opening quotes was: "We as electricity consumers are paying very very heavily for the subsidies which go to developers." The truth behind government funding of renewable energy is that there are no capital grants for building onshore wind farms - it's all funded by private investment to the tune of £1-2m per turbine. What the government does provide is a market-based incentive scheme called the Renewables Obligation. This works by setting an increasing target for the percentage of renewable energy in the electricity mix each year, and "fining" electricity supply companies for every unit of renewable electricity they fall short by. Each year these fines are collected up and handed out to each producer of renewable energy, proportional to the units of electricity they've generated. This year the target is 6.7%. If the targets were met, there would be no "fine", and no extra income for the renewable energy producers. The supply companies are passing the cost of the fines on to the consumers. Overall this is a mechanism which incentivises the development of the most cost-effective renewable energy.

Another claim in the programme was that the "Renewables Obligation" is costing the average consumer £90 per year, which is massively overhyped - the real cost is about £8.

The fact that the UK is due to miss its target by miles is now mainly the fault of the planning system, with each renewable energy planning application costing the developer hundreds of thousands of pounds, taking an average of nearly two years to get a decision from the planning system (when it should be within 16 weeks) and with two thirds of all applications still being turned down. Download more here.

The BWEA confirms that wind supplies 1.5% of UK electricity needs, which makes the presenter's claimed figure of 0.5% a clear fiction. The presenter also claims that the Government have put half a billion pounds of subsidy into the wind industry to reach this point. Even if this is true (I haven't checked), it's only a quarter of the £2bn which the BWEA say the private sector have invested in the industry, and for perspective, a sixth of the £3bn which the government have wasted on pre-school learning initiatives since 2001 which have had "no effect" according to a study released this month.

Although the programme presenter never mentions "visual impact", "giant bird blenders" or "industrialised landscape", she does give away her affiliation to the anti-wind lobby by the misuse of one term: "efficiency". Antis just love to refer to the capacity factor of a wind turbine as its "efficiency", thus a 25% capacity factor is translated as "only 25% efficient" - which is clearly an eco-crime as we're all good greens striving for more efficiency! Isn't it a shocking waste that the wind doesn't blow at a constant gale force in the UK - in which case we could have nearer a 100% capacity factor!! Likewise that the sun doesn't shine all the time - those stupid solar panels are just so wasteful at night!! In fact it is now a proven breach of advertising standards to call wind farms "inefficient" because of their capacity factor (see note below).

Additional note: In June 2007 Advertising Standards Authority ruling that referring to "Capacity or Load Factor" as "Efficiency" is misleading and a breach of advertising standards: " We understood, however, that efficiency normally referred to the actual amount of energy extracted as a fraction of the total energy available. By contrast, we noted the CF referred to the amount of energy extracted as a fraction of the theoretical maximum amount of energy and not the amount of energy actually available to a turbine in the course of a year. We considered that the CF was not an appropriate method of assessing the actual efficiency or inefficiency of a wind turbine. We concluded that the claim was likely to mislead."

Here's another perhaps simpler refutation from another Green:

Yes, the public subsidy is directly proportional to the amount of renewable energy that is generated, so it's obvious nonsense to suggest that we are paying for non-production. Actually, far from preventing windfarms on relatively lower windspeed sites I'd actually pay them (per KWh generated) at a slightly higher rate, like they do in Germany. Wind power even from relatively lower windspeed commercial sites is still a cheap resource compared to other renewable technologies, including wave power, tidal stream and even offshore windfarms that we must also be supporting. So we need to maximise production from as much commercial windfarms as possible on financial grounds, especially given the various other limitations on windfarms.

If you applied the 'high windspeed' only rule to Germany, where windspeeds are usually lower even than the 'lower' windspeed' commercial windfarms in the UK then there would actually be virtually no wind power at all in Germany!

Perhaps should compare to Oldbury nuke?

Lastly what are they comparing these figures with? Oldbury has had one reactor closed for 2 years and the other 11 months but for 8 days. And it's not just here there have been problems - across the UK nuclear reactors have closed for problems and for their regular downtime - often 2 months or more - plus Japan, Sweden, Germany, France and more have all had serious problems.

Monday, September 03, 2007

What's happening to our weather?

The Independent had a good article about the weather a few days ago by Michael McCarthy - see it in full here - or read on for highlights...

Photo: Pond earlier this year

While this summer is set to be the wettest ever, it is only the latest in a series of broken records which suggest climate change is here already. All of the smashed records are to do with temperature and rainfall - the two aspects of the climate most likely to be intensified by the advent of global warming.

While no specific event can be ascribed directly to climate change, the sequence of events is strongly suggestive of a climate that is now unmistakably altering before our eyes - and the pattern of increasing heat and wet weather has been visible all around the globe, with temperature and rainfall records broken in many other countries, from Australia (record drought) and India (record monsoon rains) to Greece (record forest fires).

Here in the UK alone, in the past 14 months we have experienced the hottest July, the hottest April and the wettest June since records began. We have seen the hottest autumn and the hottest spring, and the second-hottest winter. We have also seen the hottest single month, and - by a considerable margin - the hottest single 12-month period. Now we are on the brink of seeing the soggiest British summer as a whole since records were first kept for the United Kingdom in 1914.

The evidence is becoming totally overwhelming - in recent years, extreme and record-breaking real events, entirely consistent with global warming predictions, have started to mount up - beginning with the remarkable heatwave of August 2003, which caused 35,000 excess deaths in France and northern central Europe. That was the first event whose severity was ascribed by scientists directly to climate change.

As any gardener will know this is playing havoc with wildlife... earlier this year hedgehogs have been fooled by the warmth into having extra litters, thinking it was still early autumn; the young then died when the cold finally did arrive because they had had insufficient time to put on weight for hibernation. Swifts arrived back from Africa in the middle of April, when they would normally get here at about the end of May's first week. Meanwhile the summer floods have led to catastrophe for many ground nesting birds (see more at Glos Wildlife Trust here). Last year holly berries were fruiting in mid-October, six weeks early.....

Government to stop Councils from pushing renewables

Hey I'm blogging crazy today - truth is I'm catching up on a large number of emails from while I was ill - this blog entry is full of anger as I really cannot understand this Government on this one - they are preparing to torpedo a local authority policy which has been one of the few genuine drivers of renewable energy technologies in Britain.

Photo: Nympsfield turbine viewed from Thistledown Environmental Centre

The Department for Communities and Local Government is to in effect abolish the so-called "Merton rule"- apparently under pressure from housebuilders who do not want to bear the cost of adding things like solar panels to the buildings they construct or the effort of marketing them as "green" (it is estimated 'green' homes cost 3 to 4% more). Don't they know surveys show the majority of people are prepared to pay extra for homes with such measures - in any case they pay back in only a few years - and that's before we get onto climate change.....

I did write to local press on this one but no one published - see my letter here. The Merton rule is named after the London borough that established it in 2003 - an interesting fact is that I used to be a Social Worker for Merton in 1987/8. Anyhow the rule requires any new building to reduce its carbon emissions by 10% through the use of renewables. More than 150 local authorities have either introduced it or are about to - indeed Stroud is discussing it next week - and don't get me on that either - why have they taken so *************** long to get to that stage (see many previous blog entries) - and now the Government could scupper the whole lot!

Basically in the absence of a proper interest in renewables from central government, the Merton rule has become central to tentative steps towards a low carbon future. Now housing minister Yvette Cooper, who last year wanted all local authorities to adopt a Merton rule, is drafting a planning policy statement which outlines the abolition of the rule.

Apart from taking yet more powers away from local authorities this makes no sense at all. The government at least still has it's plan for new homes to be zero carbon from 2016 - but I now fear that may also face pressures - could they drop that as well - in any case renewable industry folk say the Merton Rule is many times more important to them than the government's low carbon buildings programme, which provides grants but has repeatedly run out of money
and had its rules changed.

The U-turn on the Merton rule makes a mockery of the consultation: half of all respondents supported the Merton rule and only three of 324 objected to it on grounds of cost. Here's my letter to Yvette Cooper below, plus a comment re the Lib Dems recent announcement re going Zero-Carbon and here's a link to the petition - please sign:
http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/LOWcarbonfuture/

Yvette Cooper Housing Minister
Department for Communities and Local Government
Eland House, Bressenden Place, London, SW1E 5DU

Dear Yvette Cooper,

Re: "Merton Rule"

It is reported that your new draft planning policy statement will outline the abolition of this rule. This is crazy. More than 150 local authorities have introduced this rule or are about to including Stroud District Council of which I am a member.

Climate change could wipe out most of life on earth if it is not checked. We have a responsibility to do as much as possible, as quickly as possible. If local authorities consider that they can introduce planning policies to increase the amount of micro-generation, they should be encouraged, not prevented.

In any case, PPG 1 already states: (19) "Significant adverse impacts on the environment should be avoided and alternative options which might reduce or eliminate those impacts pursued". And (20) notes: "Development plan policies should take account of environmental issues such as: Mitigation of the effects of, and adaptation to, climate change through the reduction of greenhouse gas emissions and the use of renewable energy"

Any new building constitutes a significant impact on the environment as it will lead to more emissions unless it is genuinely a zero-carbon building, so according to the above it would be perfectly justifiable to require a percentage of energy generation from renewables. If you prevent councils from doing this, you will be taking a step backwards. You will also be discouraging people such as myself from taking part in politics, if we cannot actually have an effect at local level.

Furthermore, climate change is not the only pressing reason for encouraging local, renewable energy generation. "Peak Oil" will soon be upon us, with the resultant price rises. Our gas and oil supplies increasingly depend on unstable or undependable sources abroad. And disruption caused by climate change or other reasons will be less severe if energy generation is local - a recent example of the threat was seen in the flooding in Gloucestershire.

Please, please reconsider and allow local planning authorities the freedom to be trailblazers in the establishment of renewable energy generation on buildings.

Yours sincerely, Cllr Philip Booth

It was good to hear the Lib Dems declare support for a zero-carbon Britain by 2050, as this has usefully raised the stakes in the other parties’ policy poker of outbidding each other over climate change targets. Here's what Green MEP Dr Caroline Lucas had to say:

"While I'm delighted that both Tories and Lib Dems have decided to make climate change a key policy battle-ground in the next election, I remain a little under-whelmed at their
proposals and lack of commitment to the issue. While the Lib Dems have opted for unrealistic optimism over the reality of experience, calling for a zero-carbon Britain by 2050 when their record in power at all levels is one of supporting both airport expansion and more road-building, the Tories have already insisted any leaked proposals from them ‘do not represent party policy’. The truth is that we can’t cut emissions sufficiently by tinkering around the edges of society. We will only reach a zero carbon society – as we must if we are to avert the worst impacts of climate change – by changing the very ways we do business, live our lives and measure progress: now that would be a truly radical proposition. As long as the other parties remain committed to economic growth at all costs and ever-freer international trade, this necessary radicalism seems far from their thinking, whatever their leaders are saying this week. Only the Green Party recognises that if policies to address climate change require a different economic paradigm, then that's to be welcomed, since the kind of materialism that is currently driven by contemporary consumer capitalism is leaving people unfulfilled as well as destroying the planet. Far from being a sacrifice, a zero- carbon society will be a healthier, happier, society, with warmer homes, better public transport, stronger local communities, more green jobs – and more free time. Put simply, the policies we need to live good lives are precisely the policies we need to tackle climate change - and that is what we need to articulate if we are to have any chance of achieving a zero-carbon Britain."

Gloucestershire still not signed up to campaign on disability

Here's my letter below to the Cabinet member responsible at Glos County Council. You can also get involved in campaign here:
http://www.edcm.org.uk

Photo: Randwick trees

Atten: Cllr Jacqueline Hall

As a resident of your local authority and a District councillor, I am writing to ask you to support the Every Disabled Child Matters campaign. In particular, as the councillor with lead responsibility for children's services, I am asking you to sign up on behalf of our authority to the campaign's Local Authority Charter.

Every Disabled Child Matters is the campaign to get rights and justice for every disabled child. It has been set up by four national organisations working with disabled children - the Council for Disabled Children, Contact a Family, Mencap and the Special Education Consortium.

I have worked for many years with people who have a disability and also experienced disability personally so I have a strong interest in this campaign. Already 20% of Councils are signed up to the campaign but Gloucestershire is not yet amongst them.

This campaign is very much needed because too many disabled children and their families are struggling to get the support they need - and that should be theirs by right. Indeed figures show that only 6% of families with disabled children are provided with special support from the state - no wonder eight in ten families with severely disabled children say that are at breaking point.

The campaign has published two briefings, showing that childcare services are failing to meet the needs of disabled children and that local authorities are not making disabled children a priority in their strategic plans.

You can find the Local Authority Charter at http://www.edcm.org.uk. I would ask you, if you haven't already, to discuss the charter with your officers who are responsible for services for disabled children and their families, and reply to me as soon as possible to let me know if you are able to sign up.

If you are able to sign up to the Charter, please download and print a copy from www.edcm.org.uk, sign it and post it to: Every Disabled Child Matters Council for Disabled Children 8 Wakley Street London EC1V 7QE. If you need any information about Every Disabled Child Matters, you can call 020 7843 6448 or email info@edcm.org.uk

Many thanks – I look forward to your reply.

Yours sincerely, Mr Philip Booth

Will this blog be closed because of GM article?

The GM Watch website is back after being shut down for nearly a week for printing an article which I have reproduced below - will that mean I now also face closure?

Photo: Severn Vale - no GM contamination yet

More of that in a moment but first another petition - to declare the UK a GM free zone. The address below will take you there: http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/gmfreeuk/

On 12/6/2007 the European Commission, with the support of the UK Government proposed to permit 0.9% unlabelled contamination of organic food with genetically engineered organisms. This decision will effectively bring organic standards down in line with conventional foods, which can already contain GM contamination of up to 0.9% - almost one in a hundred mouthfuls - without any necessary labelling. If this regulation is implemented by January 2009, it will have permanent and devastating implications for organic food.

The right to choose what we and our children eat will be denied. Currently GM food can be avoided by eating organic (Certified organic foods prohibit the use of GM ingredients). The survival of organic farming and food production would be threatened, even though the organic food sector is thriving. Here in the South West we have the highest concentration of Organic farmers and growers in the Country. The retail market for organic products in the UK is currently at £1.9 billion and growing. It is easy to see how this could wipe out an entire successful and sustainable farming community.

In a recent poll 79% of the public rejected Genetically Engineered food. It has to be remembered that no independent research on the long term effects of GM foods fed to animals or humans has ever been carried out. At the very least the precautionary principle should be applied to such untested technology. Please sign that petition:
http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/gmfreeuk/

You can also write to the supermarkets and any other food retailer or manufacturer whose food you buy asking them to reassure you that they will oppose the proposed 0.9% contamination of organic food and continue to strengthen and maintain their non-GM food policy. Plus write to your local MP urging them to sign the all-party Early Day Motion (EDM) number 48 to show their support for keeping organic food GM Free and protect your right to choose GM Free food. Plus write to the Secretary of State for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, Rt. Hon Hilary Benn MP and demand that Britain should remain GM Free.

Why was the website closed?

In an attack on free speech a Canadian Government bureaucrat succeeded in censoring a UK public interest website which serves a global audience on the GM issue - but according to GM watch his goal went still further than that.

The concern was over their expose of how a group of researchers deliberately skewed research to favour GM corn. Shane Morris initially focused his legal threats on the use of the word "fraud" in the title of our article, but once the GM Watch website had been forced down, his real goal became clear. In a legal threat against GM-free Ireland, he stated: "You will note that the GM Watch website in the UK has been disabled. As a matter of urgency please remove the [sic] all the GM Watch material on GM FREE IRELAND's website that you have reproduced in connection with me." (emphasis added)

It's vital that this aggressive attempt at web censorship is totally defeated. As part of the response GM Watch are asking people to publicise this news, and the following article, as widely as possible. If you know a website where this could be posted, please ask them to reproduce this message and the following GM Watch article, in order to expose just how far some people will go to try and fix public debate.

The article they didn't want you to read is enclosed below:
http://www.gmwatch.org/p1temp.asp?pid=72&page=1

The British Food Journal's Award for Excellence for Most Outstanding Paper in 2004 went to research that should never have been published. What the reviewers mistook for an impressive piece of scientific enquiry was a carefully crafted propaganda exercise that could only have one outcome. Both the award and the paper now need to be retracted. Since this article was published a leading researcher into scientific ethics has called for the paper to be retracted.
New Scientist's report
http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=mg19025533.300&feedId=gm-food_rss20


It was late September 1999. The scene was a news conference outside a Loblaws grocery store in downtown Toronto. Greenpeace and the Council of Canadians were launching a public awareness campaign urging customers to ask the chain to remove all genetically modified foods from their shelves.

"The food is safe," shouted someone on the edge of the crowd. Jeff Wilson, who farms about 250 hectares northwest of Toronto, was part of a small group of hecklers. He had come to the store with Jim Fischer, the head of a lobby group called AgCare which supports GM foods. Doug Powell, an assistant professor at the University of Guelph, was also there. And they had come prepared. Holding aloft a bug-ravaged cabbage, Wilson demanded, "Would you buy that?" Wilson claimed the cabbage could have been saved by genetic engineering.

According to a report in the Toronto Star, Doug Powell ended up in a shouting match with a shopper - 71-year old Evan John Evans, who told him, "I resent you putting stuff in my food I don't want." A year later and Powell and Wilson's street theatrics had given way to a much more carefully choreographed exercise in persuading people that GM foods were what they wanted.

The scene this time was not Loblaws but Jeff Wilson's farm store, just outside the village of Hillsburgh. Here Powell and Wilson were running an experiment that had been conceived following the Loblaws encounter. During summer 2000 Wilson grew both GM and conventional sweet corn on his farm. And following the first harvest in late August, both types of corn were put on sale amidst much publicity. The aim was to see which type would appeal most to Wilson's customers.

According to an award winning paper published in the British Food Journal, a sizeable majority opted to buy the GM corn. In the paper, authored by Wilson and Powell, and Powell's two research assistants - Katija Blaine and Shane Morris, the choice appears simple - the bins were "fully labeled" - either "genetically engineered Bt sweet corn" or "Regular sweet-corn". The only other written information mentioned in the paper that might have influenced the preference of customers was lists of the chemicals used on each type of corn, and pamphlets "with background information on the project."

What Powell and his co-authors failed to report was that the information on the chemicals came with a variation on the bug-eaten cabbage stunt Wilson pulled outside Loblaws. There Wilson had demanded of shoppers "Would you buy that?" In Wilson's store the sign above the non-GM corn bin asked, "Would You Eat Wormy Sweet Corn?" Above the the Bt-corn bin, by contrast, the equivalent sign was headed: "Here's What Went into Producing Quality Sweet Corn".

Toronto Star reporter Stuart Laidlaw, who visited Wilson's farm several times during the research, says, "It is the only time I have seen a store label its own corn 'wormy'". In his book Secret Ingredients , Laidlaw includes a photograph of the "wormy" corn sign, and drily notes, "when one bin was marked 'wormy corn' and another 'quality sweet corn,' it was hardly surprising which sold more." Laidlaw also notes that any mention of the corn being labelled as "wormy" or "quality" was omitted in presentations and writings about the experiment. This is certainly the case with the paper in the British Food Journal. Yet the paper describes in some detail the care that the researchers took to avoid biasing consumer choice - by having, for example, both corn-bins kept filled to the same level throughout the day; and by selling the two different types of corn for exactly the same amount. We are even told the precise purchase price: Cnd$3.99/dozen.

The emotively worded signs are not the only instance of glaring experimenter bias that went unmentioned in the award winning paper. During his visits to the store, Laidlaw noted that an information table contained, as well as press releases and pamphlets on the experiments, a number of pro-GM fact sheets - some authored by industry lobby groups, but no balancing information from critics of genetic engineering.

And the bias didn't stop there. The lead researcher, Doug Powell, actually demonstrated to the journalist his ability to influence customer responses to questions about Bt corn and their future purchasing preferences. Laidlaw describes how when a customer who'd bought non-Bt corn was walking to his truck, "Powell talked to him about Bt corn - describing how it did not need insecticides because it produced its own and that it had been approved as safe by the federal government. Powell then told me I should talk to the man again. I did, and he said he would buy GM corn the next time he was at the store. Powell stood nearby with his arms crossed and a smile on his face."

Outside Loblaws the previous Fall, Powell had ended up in an unsuccessful slanging match. Now Powell and his associates had engineered a setting in which customer responses could be influenced far more successfully. Seeing Powell in action convinced Laidlaw that the only conclusion which could safely be drawn from these "experiments" was that, "fed a lot of pro-biotech sales pitches, shoppers could be convinced to buy GM products."

But none of the "pro-biotech sales pitches" made their way into the paper for which Powell and his associates were commended. Instead, research that was little more than pro-GM propaganda was presented as providing a meticulous scientific evaluation of consumer purchasing preferences.

Attempts to defend the research

One of the paper's co-authors, Shane Morris has made a number of attempts to defend the research and his role in it. On examination, however, these turn out to be as misleading as the research itself.

Morris says it's all "FAKE information and Lies!!!"

When we first drew attention to the evidence in Stuart Laidlaw's book, Morris replied on his blog with a piece entitled "More Spin, FAKE information and Lies!!!" in which he denied ever seeing any "misleading 'signs'". So where does the photo on page 89 of Stuart Laidlaw's book come from?

The copyright belongs to the Toronto Star, the largest-circulation newspaper in Canada. It was one of several photographs taken at Wilson's farm store by one of the Star's top photographers, Bernard Weil. Weil is something of a hero in journalistic circles. Less than two years later, he was injured in Afghanistan when a grenade was thrown into his car. Last Fall, he was one of the first photographers into New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. It would clearly be more than surprising if either Weil or the Toronto Star were complicit in "FAKE information and Lies!!!"

Morris says no "misleading signs during the data collection period"

Bernard Weil's photo of the "wormy" corn sign was one of several shot at Wilson's store during a media day held by Doug Powell and Jeff Wilson on 30 August 2000 to publicise their study. The corn in the bins below the signs had just been harvested and was on sale as part of the study. This is something that their press release for the event confirms.

"The first sweet corn and table potatoes of the season, including genetically engineered varieties, were available for consumers at Birkbank Farms today. The crops are part of an experiment comparing different pest management technologies coupled with consumer buying preference in a complete farm-to-fork approach." (HARVEST OF GENETICALLY ENGINEERED SWEET CORN AND POTATOES BEGINS AT BIRKBANK FARMS, 30.Aug.00)

The British Food Journal paper also confirms that August 30 was when the two types of corn were put on sale to customers at the store.

"Sales of both types of corn were recorded from August 30, when the corn was first harvested, to October 6..."

There's even a table in the paper where you can see how many dozen cobs of corn were sold on August 30. So when Morris claims, "No data from any such "signs" were included in publication data", it is simply untrue. The "wormy" sign was photographed above the non-GM corn bin during the data collection period.

What Morris denies, Powell confirms

Curiously, although Morris claims the misleading signs were never there while the research was going on, the lead researcher, Doug Powell, has never made any attempt to disassociate himself from the signs. Powell's young daughter was photographed by Weil at the media day in front of the signs and in his book Laidlaw reports asking Powell explicitly about the "wormy" corn wording, and Powell's reply is included on page 118.

Powell told Laidlaw that the "wormy" question was simply rhetorical. He did not suggest that the wording or the sign were not part of the research.

Morris says he has photographic evidence of no misleading signs

Morris has also sought to dismiss the photographic evidence by producing his own. His photographs, he says, confirm there were no such "misleading signs during the data collection period".

But in the photograph of the signs that Morris has put on his blog, the resolution is so low that the wording on the relevant sign above the non-GM sweet corn bin simply cannot be read. However, from what can be seen - in terms of the number and position of words and the style of lettering - the sign would seem remarkably similar to the "wormy" corn sign in Bernard Weil's photograph!

The only differences in Morris's photograph appears to be the addition of the big sign in the middle of the picture (apparently, added shortly after August 30), and when Weil took his photographs the hand-written signs, including the "wormy" corn sign, were lower, resting on the back of the sweet corn bins.

Morris says Greenpeace Canada had no problem with his work

The other image Morris has put on his blog, and repeatedly drawn attention to, is styled, "Greenpeace Canada review of work." This text links to a photograph of Greenpeace Canada's former National Biotechnology Campaigner, Michael Khoo, looking at a sign in Wilson's store. Morris implies that if the Greenpeace campaigner wasn't happy with what he saw, he would hardly have kept quiet about it.

So we asked Michael Khoo about this. He told us that, contrary to what Morris claimed, it had been apparent in every way that he and Greenpeace disapproved of pretty much everything Morris and his co-researchers were up to.Khoo said, "I well remember when I visited the experimental farm, which was a bit of a propaganda lab. Jeff [Wilson] and he [Shane Morris] took me around for a while, they were friendly, I took some pictures and spoke to their intern who had been conducting the "study".

Shane himself well knows that I thought his consumer testing booth had no validity, I told him so. I certainly never endorsed anything there and he is self-delusional if he says he remembers otherwise. I formally request that my photo be removed from his website, as it only serves to blatantly misinform the public." Khoo also said he remembered discussing with the Star's Stuart Laidlaw "how their 'study' lacked basic methodological integrity, principally because there were leading elements like the 'wormy' corn sign." Khoo was subsequently quoted by Laidlaw in an article in the Star as saying, "It's junk science." The article said that in Khoo's view, "the study was deliberately skewed to favour Bt corn, out of fear that consumers would reject the controversial technology." (Altered food tested at the market, Toronto Star, October 8, 2000)

Morris seeks to attack Laidlaw's credibility

Morris has also sought to undermine Stuart Laidlaw's credibility. Laidlaw is a leading journalist at the Toronto Star - at one time serving on the paper's editorial board before choosing to go back to reporting. He was invited to join the Star's board as a direct result of the articles on food and farming that formed the basis of his book.

Shane Morris, however, implies on his blog that journalistic peers give Laidlaw a doubtful rating. To this end he quotes extensively from a review critical of Laidlaw's book. The piece was published in a farming paper, the Manitoba Co-operator.

What Morris doesn't tell his readers is that the piece by Jim Romahn was about the only bad review the book received. Laidlaw's book was widely praised in major papers across Canada, even to a surprising extent in the pro-business Globe and Mail. The book has also, incidentally, been on reading lists at Queen's and Wilfrid Laurier universities, the University of Manitoba and, we understand, Doug Powell's own University of Guelph.

There were also positive reviews in the farm press, and even the Manitoba Co-operator, which ran Romahn's review, later ran a favourable column about Laidlaw and the book. It's also ironic that Shane Morris sets such store by a piece in the Co-operator, given that the same paper also ran a damning editorial about an article by Morris and Doug Powell that it chracterised as "offensive" propaganda marked by "irrational views" and "virulent attacks on respected scientists." (Rude Science, John W. Morris, The Manitoba Co-operator, June 21 2001)

Morris claims he wasn't there

In his initial response to the information from Stuart Laidlaw's book, Shane Morris claimed on his blog, "I wasn't even in the Country for your alledged (sic) 'sign' fraud!!"

Morris said he only arrived in Canada in mid-September 2000. Even if this were true, his own paper shows the consumer preference part of the study as running till October 6, so for several weeks of the study Morris cannot claim to have been out of the country. Michael Khoo, of course, says that he was shown around the study by Morris. And any absence cuts both ways. How can Morris declare there were no misleading signs during the data collection period when, according to his own testimony, he was not even there for a significant part of the time?

Conclusion

The pro-biotech sales pitches Laidlaw documented at Wilson's farm store are consistent with the origins of this research. The editor of The Manitoba Co-operator, describes the lead researcher, Doug Powell, as someone who "morphed into a full-blown apologist for biotechnology, while still operating under his 'food safety' umbrella" at the University of Guelph. Powell is widely seen like this - as an aggressive biotech propagandist operating from within an academic setting.

Initially, in their search for publicity, Powell and his co-researchers seem to have felt little need to disguise their lack of experimenter neutrality. After all, nobody engaged with these issues in their locality would have been in any doubt about where Powell et al were coming from. The extensive funding of Powell's "food safety" activities by the biotech industry and big agribiz corporations was also widely known.

This is how the Toronto Star reported on the research at the time:

“the study, a subject of intense criticism from organic farmers and activists opposed to GM foods, seems more likely to inflame the debate over biotechnology than settle any arguments... For supporters, it will be taken as proof of consumer acceptance of GM foods. For critics, it will be proof the biotech industry cannot be trusted to conduct a proper study of the issue."

It's revealing that the researchers were considered so partisan as to be synonymous with the industry. Such a perception is perhaps unsurprising. The biotech industry-funded Council for Biotechnology Information was amongst the study's backers, as was the Crop Protection Institute of Canada (the trade body of the agro-chem/biotech corporations - now known as Croplife Canada). And even in their press release for the media day the researchers had no qualms about devoting significant space to Wilson's assertions that reduced pesticide use is what his customers really wanted, and that Bt corn was already helping to meet this consumer demand. Their findings would later precisely mirror these assertions.

As they presented their research more widely, however, and sought to have it published, the researchers seem to have realised that, in order to have an impact, the propagandist origins and character of what they had been doing would have to be written out of the story. Six years on, at least one of the researchers seems prepared to engage in a brazenly Orwellian effort to deny what actually happened and to present the study and the researchers as entirely non-partisan.

Whether reviewers and editors will continue to collude with such behaviour remains to be seen. Either way, important questions need to be posed about a culture of science and the academy that allows scientists who raise questions about GM, and other corporate interests, to suffer a barrage of criticism and abuse, and even terminal damage to their careers; while those whose opinions and findings support GM are validated and affirmed, regardless of whether their claims stand up to critical scrutiny.

This is the context within which a publicity showcase came to be rewarded as exemplary science.

Free legal phone line for environmental groups

Friends of the Earth's Rights & Justice Centre offers free legal advice on environmental issues to anyone (not just FoE groups) concerned about the impact of public authority decisions; to people who don't feel they have been properly consulted; or to people who are simply unsure about their rights.

Photo: Climate Change march

Contact FREEPHONE 0808 801 0405, 6.30-8.30pm on Wednesdays. The service is staffed by Friends of the Earth's legal staff and by volunteer lawyers. Individuals who contact the advice line will be given preliminary advice. Cases will then be either taken up by the Rights and Justice Centre or passed to an organisation that can help.

Burma: join the 24 hour hunger strike tomorrow

At last action on Burma - Gordon Brown has issued a statement backing Security Council discussions and for EU foreign ministers to discuss Burma when they meet later this week. He has also pledged to personally raise Burma with his counterparts around the world.

Photo pinched from Burma Campaign website where you can read more about this issue

This is a major breakthrough - many of us including Burma Campaign UK have been calling for this for many years. Tony Blair never raised Burma in meetings with world leaders. Let us hope this is the first step in a much more proactive approach to Burma by the UK government.

The move follows the first protest by Burma Campaign UK at the UK foreign office in more than a decade, as the foreign office had seemed content to merely issue statements of concern. On Friday campaigners in 15 countries also took part in a day of action calling for EU ministers to discuss Burma when they meet on 7th September.

More than 150 peaceful protestors have been detained in the past two weeks in Burma. Tomorrow there will be an international 24 hour hunger strike in solidarity with 41 detainees who are on hunger strike in an attempt to force the regime in Burma to allow medical care for one of their number, whose leg was broken when he was attacked by a regime militia. Activists from almost twenty countries on four continents are expected to take part.

My health prevents me from a 24 hour hunger strike but I will make a gesture of participation by having rice for my main meal - I also urge support for the the online petition thanking the Prime Minister for his support, and calling on him to set benchmarks and timelines for change in Burma, after which, if no progress has been made, steps will be taken to increase political and economic pressure on the regime. See: http://petitions.pm.gov.uk/Burmacrackdown/

Use search facility on this blog for previous posts on Burma.

Biofuel expansion threatens Europe’s wildlife

Biofuelwatch raised concerns that millions of farm birds could be left without enough food and
breeding sites next spring if plans to scrap Europe’s agricultural land set-aside targets for next year go ahead, warn environmental groups.

Photo: Moss in my garden


Plans to set a zero set-aside targets from October this year have been announced by the EU Commissioner for Agriculture, Mariann Fischer-Boel, as a response to rising food prices. Those plans are to be ratified by ministers this autumn.

Several studies confirm that set-asides have become a vital habitat for many of Europe’s endangered birds and insects, and that farm birds have declined by nearly 50% on average since 1980. Many thousands of people have written to European politicians these last weeks including me (see more here), asking for the plans to be dropped and supporting a moratorium on biofuel targets. More intensively farmed monocultures cannot be part of the solution.

Almuth Ernsting from Biofuelwatch said in their news release: “There is no doubt that the expansion in biofuels is pushing up food prices. The European Union are committed to stopping biodiversity losses by 2010 but those plans will almost certainly make this impossible. Our birds and insects must not be sacrificed for biofuel expansion. We need a moratorium on EU biofuel targets and incentives now – and we need to keep our set asides until they can be replaced with better environmental safeguards.”

Few regard the current set-aside system, as being the ideal instrument for protecting farmland biodiversity, although it provides a safety net for many species. We can hope that a ‘health check’ of the Common Agricultural Policy in 2008 will lead to more targeted environmental safeguards - but we cannot have a sudden scrapping of all set-aside targets without any replacement or reform will devastate bird and insect populations.

Biofuel expansion is already causing rainforest destruction and the displacement of large numbers of communities in the global South. At the same time, poor people are hit hardest by rising food prices whilst Europe burns more and more food in cars. The only logical solution is to suspend biofuel targets, whilst drastically reducing our overall fuel use. As I've said before on this blog we need to be much more careful about support for biofuels - see 9th May 2007 blog entry - our District Council is looking to expand use of these fuels but unless they focus on recycled oils or at the very least local sources we could be seriously adding to problems.

Meanwhile a study, by Dr Righelato, with Dominick Spracklen from the University of Leeds, is the first to calculate the impact of biofuel carbon emissions across the whole cycle of planting, extraction and conversion into fuel. They report in the journal Science that you could save between two and nine times more carbon emissions if you trapped carbon in trees and forest soil rather than replace fossil fuels with biofuels.

Biofuels are presented as an environmentally friendly alternative to fossil fuels but there is growing evidence they would actually make climate change worse. The Government is heavily pushing biofuels as the way to tackle road transport emissions (rather than reducing the need to travel) making a commitment (under the Renewable Transport Fuels Obligation – RTFO) for 5% of Britain’s fuels to have a biofuel component. Meanwhile the EU commits all member states to substitute 10% of transport fuel with biofuels by 2020.

Ragged Hedge Fair: colour, music, food, learning and fun

The Ragged Hedge Fair this weekend at Abbey Home Farm near Cirencester was a great event - and as colourful and welcoming as last year. The photos here are to give some idea of the colour and flavour - a wonderful friendly gathering bringing us together for fun, learning, great food, music and more.

The Fair is 100% powered by sun and wind, zero landfill, a kidzone full of fun, panto, magic, crazy bikes, circus skills, juggling and more, a Healing tent area with everything from massage to homeopathy, a meditation tent, the forum with talks on permaculture and more plus great live music including Souljacker (rock) to Seize the Day (frontline folk) plus flamenco, country, blues plus plus plus.

Then theres the great food, licensed organic bar and cafes plus shopping - handmade, recycled, fair trade and more - a wild collection of colourful clothes - and as I said last year - and was quoted on the Ragged Hedge Fair website, the event was "completely free of corporate commercialism."

Hey I haven't even mentioned the walks around the farm, the stalls from groups like One Tonners and Vision 21 or the camping areas or the loos....


Sunday, September 02, 2007

Planning White paper, monitoring children and more

Yesterday, a few days late, I put together the monthly summary of Gloucestershire Green party news - it is only a taster but gives an idea of the issues we covered over the last month - it also covers quite a number of news items I've not had time to do blog items on...examples include:

Photo: From the Planning Disaster coalition

The Government's White Paper on planning - this is a serious erosion of democracy, more centralisation of powers in Westminister and a removal of our right to consultation. We don't need this proposed unelected, unaccountable new body to make decisions for us. It is no wonder so many organisations like RSPB, Friends of the Earth, CPRE, the National Trust and others including the Green party are objecting to it. It is very worrying as this White Paper could have a catastrophic impact on communities, the countryside and the wider environment. It basically gives the green light to massive developments and seems to be more about helping Labour's friends in the supermarket and nuclear industries, rather than giving local people a real say in planning. What we need instead is a planning system which allows people an effective say in how their area is developed.

Plans to monitor every child in Britain - from 2008 the government will be monitoring every child from birth. The go-ahead for ContactPoint which will contain significant amounts of personal information ON EVERY CHILD IN THE UK was buried in the rush of announcements and over 40 written statements put out in the final days of the Parliamentary session. Over 300,000 people will have access to the inevitably insecure system, which is intended to be up and running by next year. Read what I had to say here.

There is plenty more including Green letters on Iraq/Afghanistan, the attack on the gay couple in Stroud and Son of Star Wars being Labours most undemocratic decision yet. See full August edition here. If you want a monthly news summary free then go to the left hand column of the website www.glosgreenparty.org.uk and sign up for GNN - the Green News Network.

Weavers Croft closure - a shameful decision

Weavers Croft, the inpatient centre for older people with mental health problems in Stroud is set to close along with units in Cinderford and Gloucester - read full Green press release here - this is a shameful decision which needs the strongest protest.

Labour have put more money into the health service than ever the Tories would have done - but the problem is not so much a question of how much money, but where it goes - the ever accelerating privatisation of our health service is destroying our NHS from within. Examples include Primary Care Trusts being forced to spend at least 10% of their budgets on private providers and the out-sourcing of NHS deliveries alone means privatising a 20th of the NHS in one go! Private companies have become more deeply entrenched in the health service than ever before, on a level that would have been unimaginable even under the Tories.

It is more expensive to deliver public services through the private sector because the private sector must make a profit for shareholders. Money is being sucked out of our NHS. The Green party is the only party to support the national campaign ‘Keep Our NHS Public’. Please sign their national online petition.

Cartoon: Reproduced by kind permission of Private Eye for the 'Keep Our NHS Public' campaign website. (www.private-eye.co.uk).