Thursday, November 22, 2007

Who's behind the sell-offs at Craven?

Paakwa has commented many times on profligacy and waste by Craven District Council. To compensate for this ongoing misspending of public money, the council is desperately selling-off much of the property owned by the people of Craven.

CDC is apparently not content with wasting around £1 million on the 'Renaissance Affair', when it tried to convince us that we all wanted blocks of flats on the canal basin and multistorey car parks blotting the townscape, nor with granting planning permission to build a massive office block on a protected greenfield site at the behest of subprime money-lender HML. Now CDC now wants to build over 300 homes on yet more taxpayer-owned land in Skipton, presumably to top-up those empty council coffers.

But many people believe it is neither the council at large, nor the majority of elected councillors, who are trying to push mammoth development schemes – the latest of which would despoil an officially designated ancient monument and nature reserve – but merely a few individuals.

This may be true or not. But in defence of council staff Paakwa is pleased to present another side to the council, a truly artistic one.

Whilst some councillors may be happiest playing the pantomime dame, there are certain senior CDC officers who possess truly thespian souls and worship at the foot of the great bard Shakespeare. Paakwa has been sent proof of this, if such proof were needed, and is pleased to reveal to all the true nature of a great orator and actor.
Simply clicking HERE will reveal all you could wish to know concerning

Craven's Repertory Artistic Programme

Enjoy!

Sunday, November 18, 2007

How is a council like a condom?

If there's one thing guaranteed to increase Paakwa's nervousness rating, it's when councils start meddling with business. Let's face it, if they couldn't compulsorily increase their rate demands in excess of inflation every year they'd go bankrupt.

So would you trust them to run a business?

Craven District Council (CDC hereon) is an outstanding example of how to spend money in profligate ways.

It's now receiving around £7 million per annum in total from business rates and central government (our money), which together contributed £3.284 million plus a further £3.815 million from us council-tax payers.

Whilst CDC will no doubt be saying it's not enough in its coming annual demand, it amounts to around an 8% increase on the preceding year, a healthy increase by any yardstick.

CDC chooses to spend our money as it sees fit, and where it sees fittest is on staff, whose numbers have increased colossally over the last few years. Staff wages have increased in equal proportion, i.e. colossally.

But let's put a figure on 'colossally'.

In the financial year 2003/4 (council years run from April 1st to March 31st) CDC spent £5.62 million of our money on staff wages. Last year that increased to £7.3 million, an increase of 30% in three short years. That's efficiency CDC style!

It doesn't take a financial genius to notice that the council is paying virtually all its incoming council tax, business rates and government funding in staff wages – and this doesn't include the pension contributions for all those workers.

But while you and I might think that's appalling maths and management in equal measure, it seems that fact is lost on CDC. Perhaps unsurprising given that over the past few years it has shed its financial directors at the rate of around one a year, the last financial director now working for HML, the company which in partnership with CDC itself obtained planning consent for a new office development on supposedly protected greenfield site.

All of which brings us neatly back to the beginning, and CDC's meddling in private sector business matters.

The primary business of councils is not the welfare of business – but to look after the best interests of its electorate. CDC, however, doesn't see it that way.

So CDC's latest wheeze is to use our money to plan massive employment schemes in sensitive areas such as the unique and irreplaceable Hoffman kilns at Langcliffe. This publicly-owned site is rightly classified as an ancient monument and nature reserve, with rare orchids and peregrines. Even this scheme's begetter, CDC director of community services Jonathan Kerr, an officer with a track record of enthusiasm for business developments, admits it is a 'sensitive' location.

So what does Jonathan intend?

He intends the site to ‘move forward’ by allowing Craven College and Leeds Metropolitan University to build education centres there. In addition to this encroachment into a protected area he also proposes a business site, dormitory blocks, and car parks.

Well, what could be more 'sensitive' than that? Well done Jonathan!

And for those of you who fear that your own area might be left alone, unspoiled, and unblessed by all the treats Jonathan has in mind, he told the Craven Herald:

“If we can move this site forward in a positive way, then there is no site that we can’t deal with!"

Just one of the many innovative ways in which CDC can sell off our assets to cover its financial shortfalls. We must be forever grateful for its sensitivity and efficiency!

Oh yes! The answer to the question posed at the beginning, 'How is a council like a condom?'

Simple, they both claim sensitivity whilst stifling it, and their chief effect is to kill creativity.

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