Relocation: ‘We’ve fallen flat on our face,’ says Tory councillor
Zorro is trying
hard to keep up with all of the political events in East
Devon. With so many newsworthy stories at the moment the posting of some
of them gets delayed as others take prominence. However, as part of the local
challenge on 7 May will be linked to the bulldozing through of the sale of the Knowle.
Zorro
hat tip's the Sidmouth Herald for this article –
11:20
04 February 2015
The district
council has ‘fallen flat on its face’ over its proposed move away from Sidmouth
and ‘owes it to the people of East Devon to face up to the situation’.
That was the
message from Tory Councillor Peter Halse, who urged council colleagues to
reconsider their stance on the authority’s controversial relocation project.
He said falling
energy costs meant that East Devon District Council (EDDC) was unlikely to see
the savings predicted.
Council officers
have based the case for moving on a 10 per cent increase in energy prices each
year for the next two decades.
EDDC is
proposing to move from its existing HQ at Knowle to a purpose-built facilities
at Honiton’s Heathpark and vacant offices in Exmouth Town Hall.
Speaking at an
overview scrutiny committee meeting last week, Sidmouth-born Honiton
representative Cllr Halse said: “Quite honestly, we have fallen flat on our
face.
“We have got to
face up to the situation we are in. If you actually look at the reasons why we
are going to move, it is all about energy costs. Therefore, we have got it
completely wrong. It’s not just the leadership that is responsible, we are all
responsible for the mess we are in.”
Mr Halse said
that urgent repairs required for the council to stay at Knowle had been quoted
at £1.5million - and that the authority had ‘already spent half of that’ on its
relocation plans to date.
“And that’s what
worries a lot of people,” he added. “Fortunately, this council has been so good
at financial management - and still is - so we can get out of this. We do need
to look at this full in the face. I think we owe it to the people of East
Devon.”
The meeting also
heard from EDDC deputy chief executive Richard Cohen, who told the committee
the relocation team had used official energy price figures from previous years,
then extrapolated them to look to the future
But he admitted
that the prediction of energy costs was ‘notoriously difficult’.
Mr Cohen said:
“Experts will tell you that within two or three years you cannot, with any
certainty, predict energy costs. It is a very difficult process to engage in.”
But he said that
while moving to more energy efficient offices would save the authority money in
the long run, it was not the ‘be all and end all’ of reasons for the proposed
move away from Knowle.
It’s
time for a change! It’s time for challenge!
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