The decision by the Tory Government to close Brecon Courts means there is no prospect of justice for many rural Wales residents,
This means the many hearings will now take place in Merthyr Tydfil of which Brecon was already a satellite. Merthyr is of course highly accessible. From Rhayader it is ONLY an hour an a quarter away by car. But what if you can't drive Travelline Cyrmu comes up with the solution.
To get to the bus station in the morning you need to leave Rhayader at 0645hrs. This gets you in by about 0945. On the way back the latest you can leave the bus station and get home the same day is 1515.
So just remember to hope the case before you is not delayed.
So what has our new Conservative MP got to say about this. Well, hmm, yes a look at his web site reveals, wait for it NOTHING. In all his debates, press releases and campaigns the courts don't appear once.
Of course some cases may end up closer to home in Llandrindod Wells but there is no guarantee for that at all.
Friday, 12 February 2016
Welsh Lib Dems respond to Flooding Challenge
No one can easily
forget the flooding experienced across the UK this winter and whilst
Wales has fared better than most there have been some problems.
However the height of the flooding coincided with the motions
deadline for Welsh Spring Conference and armed with personal
knowledge and a Facebook policy group I set out to write what I hope
is a reasonably comprehensive start point for our party to move
forward.
The motion in full
can be found within the conference guide but in keeping with all good
things political it comes with a 10 point call for action.
Conference calls for:
1. The Welsh Government to replace existing planning guidance with respect to development in the flood plain with a new robust strategy.
2. All future risk modelling be based on a "known record level extent model" for flood management.
3. The Welsh Government to introduce new Planning Design Notes and Building Regulations to improve the resilience of properties identified as being at risk of flooding and reduce the impact of surface water run off.
4. The Welsh Government to develop whole-catchment plans for Welsh rivers designed to reduce the flow rates of water through the catchment.
5. The Government in both Cardiff and Westminster to make grants available to householders in flood risk areas who want to put in place improvements to their properties that improve the resilience of the property to future flood events.
6. The Government in Westminster to work with the insurance industry to produce new renovation guidelines designed to increase the resilience of properties in the face of repeated flood events.
7. Local Authorities to immediately remove all housing allocations on areas identified to be at risk of flooding from their development plans except where planning permission has already been granted and work commenced.
8. The Government in Westminster to introduce a presumption against siting well heads for fracking in areas identified as falling within a flood risk zone.
9. The Welsh Liberal Democrats to actively participate in any review of flood management including making a submission for policy changes based on this debate.
10. The introduction of lowland farm management plans which promote the development of water meadows and the use of lower grade agricultural land for flood control measures.
These measures in
themselves will not provide the solution. Our weather patterns have
altered considerably in the past 20 years what once fell as snow in
autumn is now heavy rain. Water is not trapped in frozen ground as
upland bogs remain just that. Moreover one persons flood defences
have become someone else’s flood.
This motion has set
out a new approach, we need to consider the whole catchment in our
plans and far from speeding up flows we must seek to slow them down
keeping water in the hills for as long as possible. If we are to use
farmland for deliberate short term water storage it must be limited to under a week beyond that even pasture will begin to suffer and some of our most productive farmland will be lost.
However most
significant of all is our approach to the planning and reconstruction
process. We have already built where we shouldn't have so renovation
must also include resilience and the insurance industry should plan
that into any settlements made. We shouldn’t make matters worse
either, the 20 or 100 year return event is no longer a sustainable
model for prediction instead we should move to a known historic event
model for planning. We should also review all current allocations and
if they are in areas where there is an historic record of flooding
developers must show how that is to be managed or have the allocation
removed.
Finally we must
protect our environment at all costs. When a street floods the police
will tell you not to go into the water because of contamination
risks. So this motion takes that forward and states clearly that
Welsh Lib Dems would introduce a presumption against the development
of any well relating to fracking within a known flood extent or where
there is evidence of localised surface water flooding.
Elements of this
motion will feed into discussions we will have post May if we are in
a position to form a government in Wales.
Any local party wanting to adopt them or bring the motion to their own regional conference is more than welcome to use the full text.
Any local party wanting to adopt them or bring the motion to their own regional conference is more than welcome to use the full text.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)