Wednesday 30 August 2023

Homelessness cases in Borders continue to rise

by EWAN LAMB

The number of Scottish Borders residents presenting with issues linked to homelessness has increased by more than 20 per cent in the space of a year while there was a 35 per cent rise in cases of children affected, according to figures published by the SNP Government.

Homelessness and threatened homelessness across the Borders region has reached their highest levels since well before the Covid pandemic, including the numbers in temporary accommodation.

A recently published Scottish Borders Council draft local housing strategy [LHS] declares at its strategic outcome five: "Homelessness is prevented wherever possible and a range of housing options are provided so people can secure a suitable and sustainable housing outcome as quickly as possible".

The LHS says everyone should be able to have their right to an adequate home realised. This includes everyone having access to a settled home that meets their needs and homelessness is prevented.

The document adds: "Key Actions for Delivery · Continue to Implement Rapid Rehousing · Improve access to housing for homeless or potentially homeless households across all tenures · People who experience homelessness reach a settled housing outcome as quickly as possible · Ensure homeless households can access the right support at the right time · All partners actively contribute to preventing homelessness."

However, the brand new statistics covering 2022/23 appear to show that current local policies are failing to reverse the upward trend.

These are the figures for people associated with applications to Borders agencies which were assessed as homeless or threatened with homelessness: 2019 - 1,170; 2020 - 1,139; 2021 - 979; 2022 - 1,071; 2023 1,310. The 22 per cent increase between the 2022 and 2023 totals compares to a Scotland-wide rise of 11 per cent.

The corresponding data for Borders children impacted by homelessness or potential homelessness is: 2019 - 407; 2020 - 384; 2021 - 325; 2022 - 361; 2023 - 486. The 35 per cent hike in the figure from 2022 to 2023 is considerably above the Scottish average of 10 per cent.

There were 117 Borders households in temporary accommodation in 2023, nine more than in the previous year, and considerably above the figure of 81 in both 2019 and 2020. The total of 60 children in temporary accommodation represents a 20 per cent increase on 2022.

Here are the number of so-called homeless applications in Scottish Borders over the last five years: 2019 - 768; 2020 - 770; 2021 - 686; 2022 - 691; 2023 - 772. And the number of 'live' cases recorded were: 2019 - 256; 2020 - 244; 2021 - 277; 2022 - 332; 2023 - 366.

Average number of days spent in temporary accommodation for cases that closed: 2019 - 152; 2020 - 135; 2021 - 136; 2022 - 163; 2023 - 175.

The draft LHS lists key issues and challenges facing those tasked with tackling Borders homelessness.

It states: "Supply and demand for a range of properties including one beds and housing for larger families – high demand in Eildon and low supply in Tweeddale.

"There was an increasing reliance on temporary accommodation throughout the pandemic which has continued beyond. Implementing Prevention Duties – public bodies will have a legal duty to identify anyone at risk of homelessness and take action or refer for help.

"Local connect suspension – potential for unintended negative impacts on risk management, multi-agency public protection arrangements, complexity of case management continuity of support etc. The complex support needs, beyond housing support, of the homeless population and difficulties in accessing support. Demand on services due to support for Ukrainian Crisis and the Resettlement Programme. Impact of Covid and the lasting implications which includes implementing the RRTP [Rapid Rehousing Transition Programme]. Accessibility and affordability of the private rented sector particularly for single people and/or people on low incomes."


Monday 28 August 2023

Not so NEAT plant to be bulldozed

by DOUGLAS SHEPHERD

The research centre where a 'ground-breaking' gasification technology was being developed for use in the treatment of Scottish Borders domestic refuse is set to be demolished after the company promoting the process was dissolved with reported liabilities of £3.5 million.

Borders councillors and senior officers heralded their multi-million pounds deal with New Earth Solutions Group as a partnership which would revolutionise waste disposal in Scotland using so-called New Earth Advanced Thermal technology or (NEAT) to turn garbage into electricity.

The flagship scheme was to involve construction of a £23 million treatment facility at Easter Langlee, on the outskirts of Galashiels capable of dealing with 40,000 tonnes of rubbish from Borders households, thereby removing the need for landfill.

But although those involved at the local authority repeatedly claimed they had undertaken 'due diligence' before and during their dealings with New Earth, as our regular readers will know the venture proved disastrous when the NEAT system would not function properly, and money to pay for the Galashiels plant could not be sourced. 

Elected members pulled the plug in 2015 after being told development of the NEAT system being worked on at Canford, Dorset, faced further delays of "up to two years". By this time the high-risk alliance with New Earth had cost Borders taxpayers at least £2.4 million.

Local councillors had also been impressed after a site visit to another New Earth plant at Avonmouth, near Bristol in 2014 to see their contractor's machinery in action.

However, a review of Advanced Gasification Technologies commissioned by the UK Government which was published last year had harsh words for the Avonmouth centre.

According to the study: "NEAT had a single operational plant at Avonmouth which was closed in 2016. CONCLUSION: New Earth became insolvent in 2016 and the NEAT gasifier was discontinued. The NEAT process has not been proven and will not be considered in any further detail in this study".

SBC's deal with New Earth, amended in 2012, meant that in effect SBC had signed up to the NEAT technology even before it had been trialled at Canford.

A confidential report to SBC by consultants - later made public on the orders of the Scottish Information Commissioner - explained that a revised programme meant the detailed design of the Canford project would be completed by April 2014, and construction of the Canford demonstration facility would commence in July 2014.

 "The facility itself will, on this programme, only become operational in July 2015, and revised schedule for the Easter Langlee facility – i.e. start on site in June 2016 – implicitly assumes that there will be no significant problems at Canford. If there are, then one could anticipate further delays, or even cancellation, of the Easter Langlee ATT facility.

 "This could leave us hanging on the outcome of the Canford trials, over which we have no control, and if those were to fail or (more likely) take longer than anticipated to succeed, then we would still potentially be exposed to the risk of having no treatment solution in place for the Council’s residual waste."

Following the Borders debacle, New Earth Advanced Thermal Technologies Ltd. became Syngas Products Ltd., and work continued at their Canford base. But according to the last published accounts, covering 2020, the business had outstanding liabilities totalling £3.5 million. Syngas Products Ltd. was finally dissolved in January of this year. 

The proposed demolition of the Canford "research" centre is a key element in a planning application recently submitted to the local council in Poole which seeks permission to construct a different form of incinerator on site.

German-based MVV Environment Limited (the applicant) has submitted a full planning application for a Carbon Capture Retrofit Ready (CCRR) Energy from Waste Combined Heat and Power (EfW CHP) Facility.

The primary purpose of the plant will be to treat council collected household residual waste and  commercial and industrial waste from Bournemouth, Christchurch, Poole and surrounding areas, that cannot be recycled, reused or composted and that would otherwise be landfilled or exported to alternative energy from waste [EfW] facilities further afield, either in the UK or Europe. 

According to the applicants: "The proposed development would recover useful energy in the form of electricity and hot water from up to 260,000 tonnes of non-recyclable (residual), non-hazardous municipal, commercial and industrial waste each year." It would represent an investment of £290 million.

The planning papers in support of the scheme which is already attracting local opposition state: "A partially constructed and commissioned but no longer operational low carbon gasification and pyrolysis energy from waste facility occupies much of the site. This will be removed as part of the proposed development. It comprises a building, external plant and 35m high chimney."


Thursday 24 August 2023

How planners rode to Scottish Borders' rescue

by OUR LOCAL GOVERNMENT EDITOR

If it is possible to have a glittering career in town and country planning, then Dr Douglas Hope would certainly fit into that category, much of his life spent either tackling the persistent issues which were stifling the Scottish Borders economy or settling often controversial disputes in his role as a Scottish Government reporter.

While many of the nation's planning officers may have tended to operate within their own professional 'bubble', Douglas Hope was adept at 'selling' the product to the rest of society, including journalists he encountered and helped during countless launches of new policies, or bringing his measured views when strong feelings emerged over contentious developments.

Now, after years of research, he has used his 50 years of experience at the planning coalface to produce a fascinating history of the evolution of his trade in the four Borders counties between 1946 and 1996.

Dr Hope's work, entitled Scottish Borders: from Planning Backwater to Centre of the Maelstrom, shows how town and country planning in the counties of Peeblesshire, Selkirkshire, Roxburghshire and Berwickshire was transformed in the post-war decades to become "a beacon for rural regeneration and development policy."

Publishers Edinburgh University Press explain in their media release to mark the launch: "The book compares and contrasts the different ways in which the four counties attempted to deal with the decline in the regions traditional industries, woven textiles and agriculture, and the loss of population since 1891. 

"It explores the origins of the Tweedbank development, the plan for a controversial new settlement at Newtown St. Boswells and the closure of the Waverley line. It explains how planning and economic development became inexorably linked in an effort to stem depopulation."

Dr Hope describes how, in partnership with a range of organisations, the Borders Regional Council, established in 1975, met the challenges of the 1980s and 1990s and secured investment and implemented proposals across the whole spectrum of development planning. 

"The book details how environmental issues came to the fore and, with the reorganisation of local government in 1996 and the establishment of the Scottish Parliament in 1999 looming, examines the role of the Planning and Development Department in preparing for the challenges of the twenty-first century."

It was all so different in the early decades after World War Two. Most local authorities did not have qualified planners on their payrolls let alone strategies for dealing with the problems blighting their communities.

The Borders was fortunate in the 1960s and 1970s to have individuals like Basil Knowles, Frank Constable and David Douglas who all played their part in promoting the role of planning, raising its profile and making sure the public knew what they were trying to achieve.

Douglas Hope became part of that process and carried it on right up to 1996 when Borders Regional Council was abolished to make way for the one-stop-shop local authority Scottish Borders Council.

These days, following a 20-year stint with the Scottish Government as a Reporter for the Directorate for Planning and Environmental Appeals, Douglas publishes articles on his own website, scottishbordersplanning.co.uk. Here you can read Douglas's own description of his new, major work.

He writes: "The book provides a comprehensive appraisal of the changing role of planning in the Scottish Borders during this time [1946-1996] and describes how planning evolved from simply a system of land use control to a dynamic, pro-active, multi-disciplined collaboration encompassing not only spatial planning but also economic development and promotion, project design and implementation, urban conservation, rural heritage and countryside management, and environmental planning."

He points out how the book describes the principal characteristics of the Scottish Borders in terms of its development prior to the twentieth century. It traces the origins of town and country planning in Britain and the establishment of the planning system in the region. 

"It compares and contrasts the different ways in which the four counties implemented the Town and Country Planning (Scotland) Act 1947 and details the principal policies and proposals in the first county development plans. It describes how planning in the Scottish Borders broadened its horizons in the 1960s as “Planning” in its widest sense took centre stage and more attention was paid by Central Government to the plight of rural areas such as the Scottish Borders with the preparation of the Central Borders Study and the Tweedbank initiative. It details how planning and economic development in the region became inexorably linked."

 


Sunday 20 August 2023

"Brains" behind Avocet Group sued for 'significant sum'

EXCLUSIVE by OUR BUSINESS STAFF

The administrator of insolvent Berwickshire-based business Orrdone Farms Ltd. - its bosses once claimed it was set to revolutionise agricultural production - has instructed solicitors to pursue a claim against company director Dr Robert Jennings who is said to be due the firm "a significant sum".

Confirmation of the legal action comes in a progress report on the insolvency by administrator Emma Porter which is published on the Companies House website today.

Only a few days ago Martin Frost, the bankrupt former chairman of the Avocet Group of companies, including Orrdone, informed shareholders: "You need to be aware that Bob [Jennings] is being sued upon allegations conceived by Begbies (Begbies Traynor are liquidators of the Avocet parent company), Aver (Ms Porter's employers), and their lawyers that all Avocet and Genfro intellectual property never had any value and was nothing more than a ruse originated by me".

And he added: "These 'Bad Bugger' allegations are a fabrication which are a deflection in a vain attempt by these people to diminish the colossal damages that US Genfro is seeking..."

The collapse of Orrdone in 2020 marked the beginning of the end for the Avocet Group. Since then, Ms Porter has been attempting to build up a picture of the company's financial affairs.

But, as she states in her latest report: "The non-cooperation of all of the directors [they include Mr Frost and Dr Jennings] has continued during the period. The administrator's work has been severely curtailed throughout the administration by the directors' failure to provide any satisfactory explanations as to the state of the company's affairs as at the date of the administration appointment".

Ms Porter repeats her previous statements that she continues to be made aware of extensive correspondence issued to a wide variety of parties commenting directly on the administration procedure or the administrator personally.

"The extensive correspondence continues to be at best, often inaccurate and in many instances inappropriate. It remains my view that the primary purpose of these communications is to deflect away from the matters in hand in order to cause unnecessary delay in the administration".

The sum due to Orrdone's secured lenders, UK Agricultural Lending Ltd., at the outset of the administration was £3.25 million plus interest and charges. The latest statement provided by UKALL shows the sum of £5.438 million remains outstanding. Interest will continue to run on the outstanding debt until it has been settled.

Ms Porter's report indicates that legal action is being considered in conjunction with claims against Orrdone's directors.

In a specific reference to Dr Jennings she writes: "The administrator considers a significant sum is due to the company by Dr Jennings. Solicitors have been instructed to pursue this matter. In order to avoid prejudicing any action, further details have not been disclosed within the report".

Unsecured creditors' claims now total £11.35 million, including a claim for £10.39 million from Omega Infinite, Orrdone's parent. At the time of administration there was just £1,291 in the Orrdone bank account, according to the progress report. Meanwhile, the time costs associated with the administration so far exceed £600,000.

In his recent correspondence to Avocet investors, Mr Frost included a witness statement he plans to submit in evidence if he is allowed to appeal a court ruling which decided he had used over £400,000 of Omega company cash to purchase two apartments in Scarborough.

The statement claims: "Bluntly, Janet (his wife) and I, the Jennings family and Omega shareholders generally are being stitched up by professional white collar thieves".

And in a reference to the Frosts' bankruptcy orders, handed down in October 2021, the witness statement says: "Judge Geddes, a (sic) earnest lady judge, though by common agreement not the brightest tool in the box, bankrupted Janet and I upon the assumption that Janet and I while not being insolvent were likely to become so..."