COMMISSION ON THE POWERS AND ELECTORAL
ARRANGEMENTS OF THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY FOR WALES
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MINUTES OF PROCEEDINGS
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of the
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EVIDENCE OF:
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COUNTRYSIDE COUNCIL FOR WALES
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held at
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Committee Rooms
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County Hall, Haverfordwest
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on
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Thursday, 10 April 2003
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LORD RICHARD: Good morning. Thank you
very much for coming. I wonder whether you would be
kind enough to do two things to start off. The first
is to introduce yourselves for the sake of the transcript;
and, secondly, can you give us five or ten minutes about
the issues, and then we can pursue the ones that the
Commission might like to pursue.
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MR LLOYD JONES: I am John Lloyd Jones,
and I am the Chairman of the Countryside Council for
Wales. I have on my left Roger Thomas, my Chief Executive.
You have asked us for a short presentation. First of
all, it is important that we all understand the purposes
of CCW. We have almost three functions. One is that
we act as an agency for the Welsh Assembly. We deliver
Tir Gofal, Tir Cymen, the All-Wales Agri-Environment
Scheme, on their behalf. Secondly, we advise and help
to implement legislation, including the Countryside
& Rights of Way Act, the CROW Act, where we are
charged with mapping open access land; and the other
one would be the Habitats Directive, where we are charged
in designating and identifying candidates for Sites
of Special Importance. Our third function is as independent
advisors to the Welsh Assembly, based on science.
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There are three functions, and obviously
there are sometimes tensions between those three functions.
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Perhaps I can quickly open up the discussion
by telling you how we are tackling some of the issues
that you have put in front of us. The first issue is
whether the powers of the National Assembly are sufficient
to meet the needs of Wales. We see great merit in the
ability of the Welsh Assembly to adopt what is called
the Sewel provision in Scotland, where the Welsh Assembly
would have the ability to adopt Westminster legislation
without going through the whole consultation process,
albeit with a back-out provision. We are mindful that
at the moment there is a Hedgerow Regulation Order going
through Westminster. It has a Defra consultation. The
same problems would be applicable to Wales as to England.
In the same way, under the Habitats Directive, we note
that sites of scientific importance are protected by
law in England, but they only come under policy guidance
in Wales because the statutory instrument has not yet
been created by the Welsh Assembly.
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The second point under that heading is
that we are concerned that in some instances the Assemblys
ability to carry out the sustainable development functions
sometimes can be compromised. An obvious example of
this is the Cefn Croes Wind-Farm where, because the
wind-farm was over 50 MW the decision lay within the
DTI rather than the Welsh Assembly. The same would also
apply to marine issues, because the definition of Wales
is out to the 12-mile nautical limit. Given that basis,
40 per cent of Wales legally is the sea. Who is responsible
for various functions within the marine environment
is distinctly murky waters!
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The second issue you ask about is scrutiny.
I have great pleasure in saying, as Chairman of a quango
or ASPBs, as we are now called, that the more open and
transparent our working methods, the better the system,
without a shadow of doubt. We have seen that with our
own internal workings. All our council meetings are
held in public. We have now moved to have confirmations
of Sites of Special Scientific Interest in public, and
that has made the system more robust; and there is no
question at all about that.
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We are seeing that resources towards
scrutiny committees is an important element in their
work. There is also a clearer understanding within committees
of their roles of scrutiny. To give you one short example,
we operate on the remit letters that we receive from
the Minister. The scrutiny of the contents of the remit
letter should be the committee scrutinising the Minister.
How that delivery of the remit letter quite rightly,
that is for us to be scrutinised on our ability to deliver.
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The third element you have asked about
the role of the Assembly in scrutinising Westminster
legislation. There needs to be clarification on that,
especially now that the same political party is in power
in the Welsh Assembly and within Westminster. There
needs to be clear protocols established. We found ourselves
in a strange situation when the Countryside Rights of
Way Bill was going through the parliamentary procedure
because we were advising on behalf of the Welsh Assembly;
but, obviously, within a fast-moving situation, especially
when the Bill was at committee stage, things were moving
so quickly that we did not have time to go through the
entire consultation process; and we are having to try
to second-guess what the Assembly wanted us to say.
Again, those protocols need to be sorted.
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The relationship between the Secretary
of State ----
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LORD RICHARD: Can you spell out the sort
of protocols you want?
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MR LLOYD JONES: To make sure that if
we are advising within the Westminster process, are
we advising -----
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LORD RICHARD: Doing what the Assembly
asks you to do.
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MR LLOYD JONES: Exactly or even
clarification.
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LORD RICHARD: Why can you not do that
now?
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MR LLOYD JONES: There is uncertainty
as to whether we are engaging on behalf of the Welsh
Assembly or whether we are part of the process because
we are independent scientific advisors to the Welsh
Assembly.
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LORD RICHARD: Both, I would have thought.
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MR LLOYD JONES: Yes, exactly. Sometimes
we are having to second-guess what the Assembly would
wish us to say.
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MR THOMAS: If I can interject, that uncertainty
extends to sometimes us getting contacted by Westminster,
and the Assembly not knowing about it; so we let the
Assembly know that there is contact.
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LORD RICHARD: Can you not just tell them?
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MR THOMAS: We do, but it does not seem
particularly clear how it is all intended to happen.
There is always the danger, of course, that something
could be missed.
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TED ROWLANDS: The Countryside Bill was
one that crossed over the pre post-devolution period,
was it not? It was an earlier bill.
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MR THOMAS: Yes, it was.
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TED ROWLANDS: Have we had a bill since
that starts and finishes within the post-devolution
period?
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MR LLOYD JONES: Not one that we were
so intimately involved with.
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MR THOMAS: The Marine Bill might be the
nearest. That foundered. It was a private members
bill which foundered in the Lords in the end, and there
was confusion, and the view in Wales was different to
the view from England.
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LORD RICHARD: Badgers?
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: A private
members bill from the Commons that foundered in
the Lords. That is very, very unusual. Why did it happen?
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MR THOMAS: I do not know the full details,
to be honest. Might it have run out of time?
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: You can rush
bills through, and that is what normally happens, and
if most people wanted the Bill -----
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MR THOMAS: I think the Bill was strongly
supported initially, and then it became clear that the
proposed legislation was flawed, and maybe that is what
saw it off. Certainly, we saw it as flawed from the
outset, but it was not seen as flawed in England. Ultimately,
it fell. We could do some research on it and let you
know.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: It is just
such a very unusual circumstance. Normally, if it is
the second House getting a private members
bill through the Commons is quite difficult. The opportunities
for objectors are so large.
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MR THOMAS: Yes. It was strongly supported
initially. It had some big NGOs behind it like the RSPB.
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MR LLOYD JONES: We were advising against
it; it was to set up Sites of Special Scientific Interest
within the marine environment. If you think about it,
if you are going to designate parts of the sea because
of the fish that are there, you cannot guarantee that
those fish are going to stay within the same area; they
tend to move around a bit, by the very nature of fish!
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The other element you have asked to look
at is the relationship between the Assembly and Whitehall.
I hope you do not lose sight, when doing that, of the
European dimension. Much of our work is driven by European
directives. The Habitat Directive is the classic example
of delivering on behalf of the Welsh Assembly. The other
countryside agencies within Scottish National Heritage
and English Nature are also delivering that directive
on behalf of their constituent parts. Within that process,
it is very important that there is consistency of approach
and common standards. That is dealt with through the
Joint Nature Conservancy Council. That body is owned
by the countryside agencies and it therefore tries to
ensure commonality and consistency of approach and common
standards. If we did not do that, you would leave yourself
open to judicial review.
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It raises another interesting point.
It is very important that the Welsh Assembly is involved
with European directives when they are being constructed,
in order to get their viewpoint in. Increasingly now,
when you go to Brussels, it is seen more and more as
Europe of the regions. That is becoming clearer and
clearer within the 15 Member States. Therefore,
it is important that we clarify this. When we are talking
about European regions, are they administrative regions
or are they political regions? The whole point of having
devolution is to address the separate emphasis or requirements
of the devolved administrations. It is therefore very
important that the devolved administrations have an
input into the construction of European directives,
because it will affect them.
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LORD RICHARD: Why shouldnt they?
In my day in the Commission, if somebody wanted to come
along and talk, they came along and talked.
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MR LLOYD JONES: Was that on an ad
hoc basis?
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LORD RICHARD: Yes.
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MR LLOYD JONES: Did that work?
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LORD RICHARD: Yes, very well
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MR LLOYD JONES: You find no merit in
having a more formal way of doing it?
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LORD RICHARD: I think you might destroy
some of the immediacy effects if you do that.
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MR LLOYD JONES: I bow to your experience,
Chairman. You have far greater experience of that then
I do.
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LORD RICHARD: I do not see any reason
why Cardiff should not in effect go over to Brussels
and say, "look here, we have got wind of this particular
proposal; can we come and talk to you about it?" I would
be very surprised if the Commission said "no". It is
not a formal representation as such, but it is an informal
expression of views. In my experience, the Commission
was one of the most open bodies that you could find
when it was in the process of deciding what it wanted
to do. After it had decided what it wanted to do, it
was very much more difficult. I am not quite sure what
sort of mechanism you want.
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PETER PRICE: But the informal approaches
do not preclude a more formal one existing alongside.
You seem to be pressing for some more formal structure,
as I understood the distinction you are now drawing.
What are you actually urging should be in place?
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MR LLOYD JONES: I am urging that there
should be a realisation that the Welsh Assembly has
a legitimate part in the debate. Lord Richard, if you
are saying that that could easily be accommodated on
an ad hoc basis, then I am quite happy to accept
that advice.
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LORD RICHARD: Unless there is something
in the concordats between the Welsh Assembly and Whitehall
so that their representations are no longer made in
that way. The Brussels end and Peter will know
as well as I do it is always pretty open.
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MR THOMAS: I suspect what we are really
thinking that this lack of clarity in the process may
mean that the Assembly might not take the opportunity
to speak out on something sometimes, and we might see
that as a loss from where we sit.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: A week ago
we had evidence from somebody on behalf of the European
Committee in the Assembly, and the impression that he
gave was very truthful and rather disarmingly so, that
there had been very little work done on the specifics
of EU proposals; in other words, something on the environment
or on agriculture policy was very much on a higher basis.
They had done something about the grand re-doing of
the constitution, but they had not got down to the nitty-gritty.
It seemed to me that this is perhaps a problem, because
if you do not get down to the nitty-gritty, you do not
have much influence. As our Chairman has been saying,
it is by going to or making representations to the Commission,
or indeed to our Government or whoever is going to the
Council, as the two Houses at Westminster do; and they
produce very elaborate reports on agricultural and environmental
matters in both Houses. Some of them are highly argued.
In a way, it is because there are a lot of opportunities
that are not being taken.
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MR THOMAS: I think we would agree with
that. We are worried that opportunities are not being
taken. I do not know how many opportunities there, but
some opportunities are lost.
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TED ROWLANDS: Excuse my ignorance, but
what date was the Habitat Directive? Is that a post
devolution directive?
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MR LLOYD JONES: Early nineties.
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TED ROWLANDS: It is quite an old one.
Is there a directive in the pipeline, or has there been
one since devolution, where we could trace the processes
through which things did or did not happen?
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MR LLOYD JONES: The one that is going
through the European parliamentary processes at the
moment is to do with environmental liability. I am not
certain what our engagement is within that potential
piece of legislation.
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TED ROWLANDS: You, as a commission, have
not seen drafts or early papers on it?
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MR THOMAS: The only papers we have seen
on it we got from Brussels anyway: we happened to be
out there, and that was by chance.
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PETER PRICE: I know a little about that
directive. It strikes me as being one with virtually
no distinctively Welsh content about it. Am I right
in that assumption? There are very big principles at
stake, and they would have their application throughout
the European Union, but I do not see anything in it
that would have a distinctively Welsh viewpoint as compared
with the UK viewpoint.
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MR LLOYD JONES: I think this merely highlights
our concern. We know this legislation is going through
the European process; we are not involved in it, and
we do not know what the Welsh Assembly role is in it.
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TED ROWLANDS: Have you asked them?
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MR LLOYD JONES: That is a good question.
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LORD RICHARD: Is there any mechanism
for that? In this case, for example, where you have
a view that you think the Assembly ought to be listening
to, can you ring up the chairman of the committee and
say, "we want to come and give evidence" or write a
letter or ring Rhodri or the Minister?
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MR LLOYD JONES: The whole process is
very open, so there is no barrier there.
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PETER PRICE: I feel drawn into contributing
views rather than putting questions, but I put it to
you that in the European context the danger is that
if you do not select the right subjects which do have
a very strongly distinctive Welsh interest, then pursue
them with the various European institutions, not just
the Commission but the Committee of the Regions, the
European Parliament and through HMG vis-à-vis
the Council. Instead of having a big impact on the things
that you have a distinctively Welsh position on, you
try and follow a whole lot of issues on which you have
no distinctively Welsh position, and therefore the net
product is not to have any real influence. The Environmental
Liability Directive strikes me as being the kind of
thing that you can get bogged down in, and it is just
simply a distraction. In this Commission, we are getting
much more at your relationship with the Assembly, and
in the selection of what is pursued at the European
level, do you have some kind of process that is joint
with the Assembly to identify what it is that ought
to be pursued, and a mechanism for pursuing it thereafter
in some effective joint way?
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MR LLOYD JONES: I suppose an example
of that now would be the Mid-Term Review of the Common
Agricultural Policy, where we are quite heavily engaged
with the Welsh Assembly on giving them advice about
that process, when there are distinct elements about
the Mid-Term Review and the Fischler proposals that
would not work within Wales. Just to give you an example,
Fischler, as part of the Mid-Term Review, is against
the ploughing of any more grass and converting it to
arable areas simply because they see that as a loss
of biodiversity. Within the Welsh context, we are actively
encouraging farmers through the Tir Gofal mechanism,
to plough up grassland for spring cereals in order to
get more diversity into the countryside. That is a small
example. It is a very clear example about how a European
dimension is at variance to the Welsh dimension.
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TED ROWLANDS: How consistent is the Welsh
view with the UK view?
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MR LLOYD JONES: I think that is more
at variance in Wales and is not so much applicable to
England because they are not in great -----
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TED ROWLANDS: So they might not go into
battle on this issue with the same intensity.
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MR LLOYD JONES: They do not see it as
such an important factor as we would.
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LORD RICHARD: But this is within the
Council now, is it not?
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MR LLOYD JONES: Yes.
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LORD RICHARD: Surely there are mechanisms
for the Assembly having an input into HMGs position?
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MR LLOYD JONES: Yes. We drew the Assemblys
attention to that. I know it is a small bit of detail,
but actually it is quite important as far as we are
concerned.
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LORD RICHARD: I can see that.
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MR THOMAS: That is an aspect where it
is working because we and the Assembly work closely
together to get our views known. I guess the point that
you are making, Mr Price, is that it is almost
akin to the comment we made about having a Sewel type
provision: leave well alone; it is good enough to introduce
in Wales, but make sure you focus on the things where
you need a difference. What we do not have at the moment
is a filtering mechanism, so that we know what is going
on and we can say "yes, it is that, but it is not that".
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: You have referred
more than once to the Sewel type provision. That is
applied in Scottish procedures to primary legislation
on which the National Assembly has no role. So you cannot
just apply Sewel to Wales because it is not relevant.
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MR THOMAS: That is why we said "Sewel
type" provision provision for secondary legislation.
John gave the example of the hedgerow regulation. Before
that is the Article 10 statutory instrument for candidates:
special areas of conservation, which does not apply
in Wales but could do if we had that sort of provision.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: That depends
on the Welsh Assembly Government adopting things and
just saying, "good, right".
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MR THOMAS: Yes.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: "We will have
a translation and we will do it."
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MR THOMAS: Yes.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: You do not
need Sewel. Sewel is, in a way, rather a red herring.
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MR LLOYD JONES: We said "Sewel type".
What we are saying is that when you get situations like
the hedgerow regulations and like the ones for protection
of special areas of conservation, is there a need to
go through the whole consultation process within Wales
if that process is happening in England? It goes back
to your point, Mr Price, about the filtering mechanism.
Do we need to do everything twice?
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PAUL VALERIO: To take that a step further,
is there any legislation in Scotland that you think
would be more relevant to Wales than England perhaps,
so that you can take advantage of that? Part of the
terms of reference of the Commission is the different
types of governmental regulations throughout. One of
the questions that some of us ask ourselves is this,
is devolution really appropriate in certain cases? In
the environment that we are talking about, you want
to take the best of legislation that is available. There
are different types in different areas, as you have
distinguished; so how far would you want to go?
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MR THOMAS: If there was something in
Scotland that is applicable I am not aware of
anything.
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MR LLOYD JONES: It is an interesting
example. When you look at the primary legislation going
through Scotland now, with the Land Reform Act, in all
probability land reform within the Welsh Assembly would
be very low down, simply because the land ownership
pattern in Wales is so different to Scotland. Primarily,
Wales is a country of small family farm owner-occupiers,
whereas in Scotland absentee landlords are, in Scottish
terms, a problem. That is an example of primary legislation
that is importance in Scotland, but it would have very
little relevance for Wales. It is a good example of
how the devolutionary process should be working.
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LORD RICHARD: Can I come back to Sewel?
As I understand it, you want a situation in which, if
there is a proposal at Westminster, or a statutory instrument
that you think is sensible and ought to be applied in
Britain that there should be some mechanism whereby
if it is done at Westminster, it has dual application.
That can be done as in the Scottish case: the National
Assembly requests Westminster to do it for them. Is
that the sort of thing you have in mind?
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MR LLOYD JONES: Yes.
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LORD RICHARD: What is the jurisdictional
position? The responsibility for statutory regulations
has been devolved to the Assembly. Are they going to
pass it back?
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MR THOMAS: Do they have to pass it back,
or could there be a provision? You will understand far
better than we do, I guess, how these things work in
law. It is a Sewel type provision, I think, where the
Assembly simply says on this occasion, "we will follow
England" without passing a formal statutory regulation
and just take the SI and pass it in Wales without going
to consultation.
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LORD RICHARD: They will have to pass
it.
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MR THOMAS: Yes, they could pass it, but
without having to have the debate and consultation.
We do not have, as John said, the protection of our
specialised conservation -----
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LAURA McALLISTER: Is there not a political
issue here as well? I am struggling to get my head round
the comments you have made about the Sewel type approach
because when we were in Scotland the extent of use of
Sewel was heavily criticised by some groups, because
it is being internalised as a fairly frequent device
now; and some would argue that that undermines some
of the basic principles of devolution. If this was to
extend to a secondary legislative situation, then you
are circumventing some of the basic accountability and
consultation loops that are inherent within the political
scheme of devolution. Many people would argue that that
would be a very dangerous route to go down.
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MR LLOYD JONES: We have given two specific
examples, and there is always a danger that you generalise
on the specifics. The Hedgerow Regulations, because
they are non-contentious are merely wanting to update
the existing legislation. This is a time factor, if
you like. On the candidate special areas of conservation,
this is a European directive and it has a member state
responsibility; yet at the moment the legal status of
these candidate special areas of conservation is different
in England in Wales, though it is a member state responsibility.
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LAURA McALLISTER: You have mentioned
a less contentious issue there, but there would be a
danger, because of political circumstances, of more
contentious issues being used in this way, which one
could argue would be a threat to democracy.
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TED ROWLANDS: Suppose there is a Sewel
issue in some ways, because it does require the Scottish
Parliament to pass a motion saying, "we will allow Westminster
to do this". I cannot see the point of it because the
simplest way to do it would be for the National Assembly
to endorse the statutory instrument with its own powers,
without an elaborate consultation process.
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When I read your paper and the paper
we had from the Environment Agency, perhaps the word
"schizophrenic" is a bit strong, but certainly you are
ambivalent about the nature of devolution in some respects,
are you not? You want devolution, but if it starts to
create inconsistency of standards or of application
of some of these environmental agreed norms, then you
do not like that. That is why you do not want them.
Devolution does assume that people are going to do things
differently and go in different directions. You feel
there is a limit to how much difference there should
be.
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MR THOMAS: We were saying that in Wales
there may well be a case for doing things differently
and doing more than the minimum because of the special
situation we have in Wales. We have far more specially
protected areas as a proportion of Wales, than either
England or Scotland has; so we might want to do more
in Wales, surely? That would be the point. Where there
is something coming through which, in Wales, can simply
be adopted and the example given might be protection
of the candidate sites it is simply to protect
them as soon as they were notified, because there is
a period between notification when we can legally designate
it, when otherwise there was no protection. In Wales,
that could have been applied immediately but instead
it was done by planning guidance, which is not as robust.
We are not anti-devolution; we are very strongly in
favour of devolution.
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TED ROWLANDS: There is ambivalence running
through your document for this understandable reason,
that the environment is not easily bordered.
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MR LLOYD JONES: It does not respect political
boundaries. Let us be perfectly clear about this. We
are finding the devolutionary process extremely beneficial
to the work that we do. We have a Minister who is directly
responsible for environmental matters. We have far greater
access to civil servants, and we are in constant contact
with the Welsh Assembly and the scrutiny committees.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: One of the
clarion calls in A Voice for Wales, the White
Paper preceding devolution, was that there was going
to be more efficient and cheaper supervision of quangos
or ASPBs post the Government for Wales Act than before.
Are you in practice more accountable now?
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MR THOMAS: Yes.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: Are you accountable
for the Assembly and its committee or to the Minister
in practice?
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MR LLOYD JONES: Both because it is an
inclusive system.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: How many times
has the committee heard you? How much real dialogue
has there been? It is not a question of bossing around;
it is dialogue and having to answer questions.
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MR THOMAS: Twice a year formally, and
then we get called in for specific subject areas.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: So quite a
lot.
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MR THOMAS: Yes; and there are informal
meetings as well. For our formal meetings outside of
the Assembly, the Minister will come and talk to us
about particular issues.
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MR LLOYD JONES: It is not only the Chief
Executive and myself that get called in front of the
committees, but some of our specialist staff will get
pulled in as well to explain things like biodiversity
action plans and agri-environment schemes, so there
is a lot of dialogue, not only at Chairman/Chief Executive
level, but also at the specialist advisor level.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: Does the Countryside
Council see itself as having environmental issues and
improving the quality of the countryside as its main
aim? How far does it see itself as having to consider
the interests of farmers or indeed of fishermen, as
you have mentioned. That is always a very difficult
area because people say you want open access or something,
and the farmer says, "you come and leave gates open
and the sheep get out", which is the point. How do you
see yourself? Where is your objective?
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MR LLOYD JONES: Our objective is
and this is in very general terms. We have to carry
out what the legislation instructs us to carry out,
so the CROW Act would be one, and the Habitats Directive
and the SSSIs would be another. Generally, we would
much prefer to concentrate on raising the general standards
of the Welsh countryside, rather than protecting specific
areas. That is why we have been heavily engaged in and
advocates -----
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LORD RICHARD: I am sorry to interrupt
you, but what do you mean by "raise the standards of
the Welsh countryside"?
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MR LLOYD JONES: We would like to roll
out the Welsh Agri-Environment Scheme, Tir Gofal,
to as many farmers as possible, because that is raising
the general standards rather than protecting specific
areas. It does raise the point that if you are trying
to conserve species and habitats in situ, which
we are under the legislation, given the fact that global
warming means that habitats and species will tend to
migrate, then there is a fundamental dilemma of trying
to conserve them in situ, because in fact you
want to make sure that they have the mechanisms to migrate.
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LAURA McALLISTER: Coming back to Michaels
question on scrutiny, you make a very significant point
in paragraph 7, where you say that scrutiny may not
always be effective. Then you suggest some ways in which
it might be improved. I have to say that those two points
you make there strike me as being a little bit difficult
to achieve in that politics intervenes, and one of the
reasons why the subject committee composition has changed
is because of political developments, as we all know.
In a sense, politicians should be able to scrutinise,
regardless of the depth of their knowledge on this particular
subject, and I would suggest anyway that most of the
members have sufficient understanding of your responsibilities
to be able to scrutinise you effectively. Can you give
examples of where you think the scrutiny has not been
sufficiently stringent and robust, and why? What was
the atmosphere like, so that we can get a sense of it?
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MR THOMAS: I suppose the point we are
trying to make there is that the members sometimes are
not as well briefed. You say they understand what we
do, but sometimes that understanding is not there. We
have put seminars on for members to help them understand
what we are trying to do because a lot of people assume
that they understand what we do. Many people confuse
us and the Environment Agency, for example. I would
say we look after habitat, species, landscape, but the
Environment Agency looks after environmental practice.
I used to run the Agency in Wales as well, and I can
see a very clear distinction, but that distinction is
not seen by many people. There is that, and I think
the back-up facilities they have sometimes may therefore
be deficient in terms of being able to access information
by organisations and understand where they should be
programmed. I know that researchers are being put in
place for committees to help that process, and that
from our perspective is a very welcome point. In terms
of specific inquiries, I suppose at the agri-environment
inquiry we felt that it spent time looking at other
organisations and we did not really get an opportunity
to put our points across. In our paper we did but at
the actual hearing we felt we did not have the opportunity
to get our points in.
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MR LLOYD JONES: Parliamentary select
committees have the ability to call in specific expertise,
depending on the topics that they are dealing with.
It just shows you how far we have gone, that an ASPB
is actually calling for greater scrutiny!
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LAURA McALLISTER: Do you think the presence
of the Minister on the Committee is one factor in terms
of the weaker scrutiny role? Is it problematic to be
able to scrutinise effectively when the Minister is
part of the Committee and is involved in his or her
own relationship with you via their remit?
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MR LLOYD JONES: It must be a factor.
It depends on the character of the Minister as much
as anything else. Some Ministers have a very consensus-driven
relationship with their committees, and others have
less so.
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PETER PRICE: There is a theme of capacity
behind some of your answers. I would like to loop back
on this issue of capacity to the reasoning behind your
urging a Sewel type approach to secondary legislation.
We have been talking about what you were wanting, and
now I would like to get at the reason why you are going
down that road. I am implying two reasons, and I would
like to see whether I have got this right. The first
reason that I am implying from what you said was that
it would avoid the need for consultation on some of
those issues. That suggests that whilst you have welcomed
the scope for consultation on some key issues, the capacity
of the organisations being consulted and the capacity
of the Assembly itself to handle it all, is too restrictive
to be able to handle it across the waterfront, and you
are urging that there ought to be more selectivity,
and you are finding a mechanism whereby you do not have
to get involved in all the secondary legislation; it
can be done elsewhere as part of a bigger package, where
there is nothing distinctively Welsh.
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The second reason that I am deducing
from what you are saying may be to do with capacity
of the Civil Service. You have talked a couple of times
about SSIs adopted in England that had not been adopted
in Wales. Are you suggesting that the capacity of the
Civil Service, both in policy and in drafting terms,
is not there to be able to do the job properly and effectively
across, again, the whole waterfront, and it needs therefore
to reverse devolve some of the legislation to London
in order to deal with that capacity point in the Civil
Service?
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MR THOMAS: I think both of those are
points we are making, but reverse devolve we
said earlier that there are opportunities to simply
take what is being developed. It is non-contentious
in Wales: everybody agrees that it is the way forward,
and why can we not simply take it? I am sure that we
could even consult as well, if we needed to, because
as things develop in Westminster we can still consult
in Wales, if there is a need, but take it to the point
where it is ready for consultation and not go through
the whole process ourselves.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: The Welsh
lawyers have told us that the numbers of SSIs applied
by the Assembly to Wales since devolution are something
like nine out of ten passed without amendment; and very
often, where they have been amended, the date of commencement
is one of the issues, which is an obvious point. If
that is true, that means that what you are asking for
should apply; and it is the process of deciding whether
you want to have Assembly scrutiny or a variation that
is just too slow, which may be a reflection of the resources
available or it may reflect other, more human issues.
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MR THOMAS: It is largely a reflection
of resources available. If you compare the Civil Service
in Wales with that in Westminster, obviously it is only
about a tenth of the size and much smaller than the
Civil Services in Scotland. Whilst the Assembly does
use ASPBs and may be involved in working with the Assembly
on the agricultural front, for example, there is not
sufficient capacity to do everything. You have to be
selective about what you do the same point that
you made about European legislation.
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TED ROWLANDS: Where the protection directive
has not been implemented in Wales, has that been a policy
decision, or is it just an inability to get round to
it?
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MR THOMAS: My understanding of the Assemblys
decision was that they did not have time to do the consultation.
Therefore, it went through on policy guidance instead,
because they wanted to have something there but could
not do it in the other way.
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TED ROWLANDS: So they used policy guidance
as a shortcut through the consultation process.
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MR THOMAS: Yes. By doing it by policy
guidance, there has not been consultation either. One
of you made a point earlier that we should not reverse
devolve, and therefore deny Wales its opportunity to
consult, because that is anti-devolutionary. In fact,
if you put it in policy guidance anyway, you are short-cutting.
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TED ROWLANDS: You mentioned the whole
marine issue. I do not know what the issue is and how
it impacts upon powers.
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MR THOMAS: The marine issue is pretty
messy, as John said in his introduction.
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TED ROWLANDS: Describe the mess!
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MR THOMAS: It is UK-wide because the
various bodies have powers with different nautical limits.
When I was in the Environment Agency, I used to carry
a diagram round with me to show all the different responsibilities,
because they overlap and then there are gaps. It is
very difficult to understand. I suppose our main point
is that Wales includes the seas of Wales. There are
2 million hectares of land area in Wales and 1.5 million
hectares of sea, so we have a huge sea area.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: That is the
12 miles.
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MR THOMAS: Yes.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: That comes
up to 1.5 million hectares.
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MR LLOYD JONES: Yes, 40 per cent of legal
Wales is marine.
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PAUL VALERIO: I think everybody agrees
there is a problem, but it seems nobody wants to grasp
it.
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TED ROWLANDS: I do not even understand
what the problem is yet. Tell us what it is that rouses
you to make a statement to us, and what we should concentrate
on.
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MR THOMAS: Off-shore renewable projects
would be one. Again, projects above 50 MW are consented
via the Assembly if they go through the Transport &
Works Act. If they go through the Electricity Act, they
go via DTi.
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TED ROWLANDS: We understand that.
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MR THOMAS: We have three in Wales at
the moment, one of which is going via the Transport
& Works Act, so the Assembly will take the decision,
and two of which the proposal is put the other way.
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MR LLOYD JONES: The fundamental problem
here is that under section 121 of the Government of
Wales Act, the Welsh Assembly has to base its decisions
on the whole principle of sustainable development
sustainability. The DTi do not have the same obligation,
and that is the difficulty. It may not arise, but you
may well have decisions taken within the Welsh environment
by DTi that may not take into account the sustainable
development/legal issues. That is the potential.
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TED ROWLANDS: We have taken quite a lot
of evidence on the question of power stations, so we
can put that aside, but let us go back to the marine
issue. What is it that tells us something about the
powers of the Welsh Assembly Government and the Welsh
Assembly in relation to the marine issue that you have
brought to our attention.
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MR THOMAS: The other issues outside of
renewables are cables oil and gas developments.
These are all different and can impact on the Assemblys
other requirements, for example marine special areas
of conservation under the Habitats Directive; so there
are difficulties there. From our point of view, it is
the delivery of a sustainable development duty.
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TED ROWLANDS: Does the Scottish Parliament,
the Scottish Executive, have other powers than the Welsh
Assembly in connection with marine issues?
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MR THOMAS: I have no idea, but I suspect
not because marine waters throughout the UK generally
have so many different authorities involved and different
limits that the whole thing is a bit of a dogs
breakfast.
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MR LLOYD JONES: We are looking for greater
clarity here. Who is responsible for what?
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LORD RICHARD: That is a good question,
and I entirely agree with you. I think it is extremely
fuzzy, and we have heard a lot of evidence about that.
Can I turn to another function of your Council, as it
appears from the paper you have put in, which is your
role in lobbying at Westminster in respect of primary
legislation which will apply in Wales. Why do you do
that; how do you do that; and do you go to the Assembly
and say, "hey, this is going through in Westminster;
you ought to have an eye on it"; or do they come to
you and, if so, do you liaise with your equivalents
in England and possibly Scotland, if it is a reserve
power? How does this work and why are you doing it?
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MR THOMAS: I go back to the example of
the Marine Bill. There, we spoke to the Assembly, which
agreed with our views. We took the views to Westminster.
Our views, of course, disagreed with the views within
England this was the private members bill
that was withdrawn.
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LORD RICHARD: Who did you argue with
at Westminster?
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MR THOMAS: We put written evidence in
at Committee stages in the House of Commons.
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LORD RICHARD: To whom?
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MR THOMAS: To various Welsh MPs.
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LORD RICHARD: In other words, you lobbied
Welsh MPs in the hope that they would do something.
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MR THOMAS: Yes. Well, we had two Welsh
MPs on the committee.
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LORD RICHARD: But your instructions basically
came from the Assembly and not from you.
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MR THOMAS: No, we spotted that the Bill
was going through that had important issues for Wales,
and so we took it to the Assembly.
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LORD RICHARD: The Assembly had not spotted
that.
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MR THOMAS: They certainly had not come
to us.
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PAUL VALERIO: What is the mechanism for
becoming aware of these development issues?
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MR THOMAS: For us it is having an Assembly
liaison officer and then we have a link through to Westminster,
so we have somebody in our organisation who is charged
with keeping an eye on developing legislation. Then
we have an organisation called the JNCC (Joint Nature
Conservation Committee), which is an organisation that
is effectively responsible to the countryside agencies
within Great Britain and Ireland, and plays a semi-detached
role.
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EIRA DAVIES: How often does that committee
meet?
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MR LLOYD JONES: Four times a year.
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TED ROWLANDS: In paragraph 12 you raise
an interesting question about procedural understanding
between the two legislatures, including clarification
of the ability of a select committee at Westminster
to call someone like yourself to account. This is obviously
based on recent experience of some kind, is it? What
has happened that prompted you to write paragraph 12?
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MR THOMAS: We have not been called recently
to give evidence.
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TED ROWLANDS: Post devolution you have
not.
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MR LLOYD JONES: No, not to my knowledge.
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MR THOMAS: It certainly has not happened
in the last year.
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MR LLOYD JONES: If we appear before a
House of Commons or House of Lords select committee,
in what capacity are we there? Are we there in the capacity
of independent advisors to the Welsh Assembly, or are
we there, in some of our functions, as their agents.
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LORD RICHARD: That is a matter for you
and the Assembly to sort that out; it is not a matter
for Westminster to sort out.
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MR LLOYD JONES: No, I do not think it
is.
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LORD RICHARD: Why is it an issue that
we should be concerned with?
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MR LLOYD JONES: Because it is important
that the role of ASPBs at what level or in what
context should they be engaging with the Westminster
debate?
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LORD RICHARD: Do they not differ? Some
do and some do not; some are more active, and some are
less active.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: From the point
of view of the Westminster select committee, they would
regard you as experts advising them, and as you referred
to having expert ad hoc advisors, in the same
way. Very often it is the evidence given to the committee,
which is the single most valuable thing that they do,
or that is the product of the inquiries. Once it is
down there in writing or verbally on the record, there
it is and people have to take account of it or
should take account of it.
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TED ROWLANDS: We had evidence from a
chairman of another ASPB that it required the permission
as it were of clearance from Welsh Assembly officials
before the chairman could go and talk to officials of
people in the English department. Have you had a similar
restriction placed upon you?
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MR LLOYD JONES: Not personally, no, but
I believe that was an issue four or five years ago with
the previous chairman with evidence given in front of
the House of Lords.
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TED ROWLANDS: You, as Chairman, and you
as Chief Executive, can go to Defra as and when you
feel, and you do not feel obligated to have to say to
Assembly officials "I am going up to see them about
this, this and this".
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MR THOMAS: No. As Chief Executive, the
agreement I have with my sponsorship division is that
if I am doing anything in Westminster, I will always
copy them in so they know what I am doing. They have
not asked to see it first to approve it anyway, and
seem quite content with that approach.
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MR LLOYD JONES: I do not think it would
cross any of our minds to get engaged in a conversation
with Defra without letting the Welsh Assembly know that
we are doing it. It is not part of our culture.
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TED ROWLANDS: But letting them know as
opposed to seeking their approval for it.
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MR LLOYD JONES: Well, seeking their guidance
certainly, yes.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: In paragraph
7 you put in a plea about enhanced understanding and
length of service of committee members, which seems
very reasonable. Years ago I was concerned in running
an EEC scrutiny committee that had a lot of sub-committees.
One of its sub-committees was on agriculture. At one
point, we had to displace a chairman who was a farmer
by a chairman who was an ex-Treasury mandarin because
no account had been paid to the interests of the taxpayer
in looking at European draft legislation. Do you get
the impression that in the Assembly there is a broad
spread and sufficient expertise in your own field? The
majority of Assembly Members, presumably, are slightly
more townie than country-dwellers, are they not?
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MR LLOYD JONES: Not really; there is
a broad spread. Obviously, sufficient expertise develops
over periods of time, and that is what we are saying.
All right, there are political reasons why membership
of committees gets changed, but the point that we are
making is that the ability of members to develop expertise
within select committees is completely proportional
to the amount of time that they spend on those select
committees.
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LORD RICHARD: Do you appear before a
number of committees?
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MR LLOYD JONES: The main ones are Environment,
Planning and Transport, which is our sponsoring division,
and the Agricultural Rural Affairs, although we do occasionally
appear in front of the Economics Development Committee
as well.
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MR THOMAS: And once the Culture Committee.
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MR LLOYD JONES: Yes. I was not there
at the time, which probably says something more about
me than the organisation!
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PAUL VALERIO: How do you compare your
performance compared to Scottish Heritage and your equivalent
in Northern Ireland, since devolution?
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MR THOMAS: The Irish body is a very different
body to ours because I think it has castles in its remit.
It is the Environmental Heritage Service.
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MR LLOYD JONES: I do not think we would
like to compare. I suppose in terms of delivery, then
certainly we have delivered the Habitats Directive in
Wales than a less traumatic way than Scottish National
Heritage, but that may be more to do with internal politics.
We have certainly not populated off-shore islands with
hedgehogs and the attendant problems either!
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LORD RICHARD: You have not de-populated
them either!
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PAUL VALERIO: You said in your remarks
that you felt your organisation to be a more robust
organisation because you are now open to the public.
Do you have any more success in attracting members of
the public to your meetings than perhaps we have done
today?
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MR LLOYD JONES: I think that once an
organisation is open, the members of the public can
sit in. In a peculiar way, that is a disincentive for
them to attend. However, the kind of situation that
has improved immensely we had a very large site
that we designated as an SSSI called the Midnight up
in Blaenau Ffestinniog. It was contentious: it was a
large, 20,000-hectare site, and there were lots and
lots of farmers who were vociferously against the whole
thing. We held a couple of open meetings in a pub
which may have been a tactical mistake in itself. However,
they were quite fiery meetings, and there are obviously
strong passions, but those farmers were allowed to come
in front of us when we were notifying the whole thing
each one was allowed a ten-minute oral representation.
We took all day, from half past nine to five oclock.
Their arguments were seen to be heard in public, and
we were listening to them and adjusting both the site
and the ways that we were going to manage that site
in the future, making it perfectly clear to them that
we were only going to approach the management of the
site, unless there were overwhelming reasons, on a voluntary
basis, with management agreements in place. That turned
the whole situation from a negative situation to a positive
situation. If we were confirming that behind closed
doors, then that problem would still be there now because
those people would not have thought they had had a fair
hearing.
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MR THOMAS: In terms of attracting the
public in general meetings, in the standard council
meeting that precedes or follows the protection meeting,
we generally have no more than about half a dozen people
there and sometimes more. We always have representatives
there.
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MR LLOYD JONES: Wind farms are always
a good subject for attracting audiences.
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EIRA DAVIES: Can you comment on paragraph
13 of your paper about the role of the Secretary of
State and the mechanism you suggest for scrutinising
the Secretary of State?
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MR THOMAS: All we are saying there is
that the Secretary of State for Wales comes to the Assembly
once a year to talk about the Queens Speech, but
does not present himself for scrutiny about the primary
legislation that is being developed in Westminster.
I suppose it is back to our point about not really understanding
how Wales gets primary legislation on the statute books
any more and how to propose things.
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LORD RICHARD: It takes its place in the
queue with the rest of them, fighting for parliamentary
time.
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MR THOMAS: What is the role of the Secretary
of State in that process?
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LORD RICHARD: He is the one doing the
fighting. All sorts of favourite sons and daughters
are strangled in that legislation committee.
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EIRA DAVIES: So you have no further experience
of working with the Secretary of State beyond -----
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MR THOMAS: No, our work is largely with
the Assembly these days.
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MR LLOYD JONES: That paragraph is there,
with respect, because you asked the question.
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LORD RICHARD: Thank you very much indeed
for coming. It has been very useful.
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MR LLOYD JONES: Thank you all very much
for your constructive questions.
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