CITY COUNCIL ELECTIONS: MAY 5th 2022

RESULTS: CLLR DUNCAN WOOD RETAINS PINHOE BY 400 VOTES


Difficult times may be coming but you can use your vote to play a positive part in shaping the future. Council services affect every aspect of our lives – from collecting our rubbish to making decisions which affect the air we all breathe.
Voting is one of the most impactful things we can do as residents; it sends a clear message about our priorities and our values. Votes empower local councillors: each party counts every single one as part of their future strategies for Pinhoe, so we do need to speak up for our priorities.
All candidates are putting themselves on the line, ready to work hard for Pinhoe. Typically it’s a close call in Pinhoe between Labour and Conservatives. But in this year’s election, the Progressive group of Liberal Democrats and the Green Party are campaigning hard across the city, to challenge Exeter City Council on some of its decisions. It’s a welcome sign of healthy democratic process and underlines how much your vote counts.
Don’t ever be persuaded there’s no point – all parties are looking at Pinhoe to understand our priorities. You don’t need ID, polling stations are within walking distance and they’re open until 10pm.  It’s time to have your say” ❤️💚💛💙 #LovePinhoe

CANDIDATE LIST >

• CHRISTINE ANNE CAMPION – Liberal Democrats
The LibDem manifesto emphasises the importance of community-led priorities and the need to end the centralised ‘top-down’ approach of the current Labour-led city council. They note imbalanced investment in city centre ‘vanity projects’ and “share the belief that Councillors should be led by the residents they represent and our taxes should be spent wisely to enhance the areas where we live.”

• CARYL T. E. ROWLINSON – Green Party
“Exeter Greens are working hard in local areas to make Exeter a greener, fairer city and were the only party to gain councillors last year. Unlike Labour, Green councillors are free to act (and vote) in the interests of their local community.”

• CYNTHIA THOMPSON – Conservative and Unionist Party
Pinhoe Councillor 2008-12, 2015-16, 2016-19; Lord Mayor 2016-17 / “I am standing for election because over the past few years Pinhoe has seen development without the infrastructure needed to support the growing Community. What has Pinhoe got to show for our huge contribution?”

DUNCAN WOOD – Labour and Cooperative Party
Pinhoe Councillor 2016-18, 2018-22 > Duncan is a Trustee of Pinhoe’s America Hall and the Community Hub charities. Working with fellow Labour councillors, “we have secured the resurfacing of the Playing Fields car park, completely rebuilt the Arena Skate Park, installed a new ChatShak, created the new play area and re-laid two pitches on the Station Road Playing Fields”

Exeter Observer‘s typically well-researched article:

“Were it not for the Conservative party’s current national public opinion nadir, the local party would have had higher hopes in Pinhoe, where Cynthia Thompson is standing. A former Lord Mayor, she represented the ward from 2008 to 2012 then again from 2015 to 2019.
There has been a close two-way race between Labour and the Conservatives in Pinhoe for over a decade. In 2010 Labour won the seat by just four votes. In 2016, when all three seats were elected at the same time, Labour took two and the Conservatives one, with less than a hundred votes separating all three winning candidates.
Having beaten Labour’s David Harvey by just six votes to win the seat in a by-election in 2015, Cynthia Thompson lost to the current Labour Lord Mayor, Trish Oliver, in 2019 by just fifteen votes, a margin of 0.6%.
This year Duncan Wood is defending the seat for Labour, following a council decision to approve £100,000 of funding for a project – in which he was directly involved – outside the community grants budget.
The decision got the council into hot water with its auditor and nearly landed it in court.
Cynthia Thompson’s assiduous pursuit of the issue prompted a full investigation by the external auditor which found that while the council might have broken the law, the cost of taking it to court to clarify the matter would not have been justified in the circumstances.
The council has nevertheless since formally floated the idea of giving the project another £1.3 million outside the community grants procedure despite its business plan still being incomplete more than five years after the council funded its development.”

LOCAL PLAN: QUESTION 5

Ideas to shape the future QUALITY OF DEVELOPMENT

This is an interesting one and important. Many of the ideas proposed are “Garden City Principles” and are broadly positive ambitions. The detail lies in the LANGUAGE used. Please use the following suggestions to guide your comments >

“Distinctive development” must ensure the protection of local identity and character. Strict penalties for damage, degradation, encroachment and endangerment of green
infrastructure, wildlife habitats and biodiversity should be rigorously enforced
. We’ve learnt the hard way from the Home Farm development in Pinhoe that a ‘distinctive’ development must be required to respect the landscape of its setting.

Exeter’s natural and historic environment should be formally protected and its locally distinct heritage formally evaluated by a process of consultation with communities and experts before enhancement Again, an emphasis on community engagement to underpin development decisions with local democracy – not just optional Neighbourhood Planning which requires tremendous investment from community members, but policy protection from the Local Plan

Communities must be consulted regarding opportunities for infrastructure development. Want to have a say about infrastructure investment in your community? This one’s for you!

Provision of green spaces should be underpinned by the following:
> Enhanced developer contributions to support the city’s green infrastructure network should be written into the Local Plan’s ideas for future development, underlining their value as core assets and integral to the Net Zero vision
> Green spaces should remain in public ownership and not ceded to developer management companies; development should be conditional on sustainable funding models
> Management of green spaces should be sustainably funded and the successful partnership with the Devon Wildlife Trust extended as part of developing resilience to future change
> Exeter’s green spaces should be audited and mapped to ensure and maintain high standards of wildlife habitats and biodiverse environments

Some important clarification which takes the Plan’s intentions beyond “provision”. Please include this one if you can