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COMMISSION ON THE POWERS AND ELECTORAL
ARRANGEMENTS OF THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY FOR WALES
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MINUTES OF PROCEEDINGS
of the
EVIDENCE OF:
WELSH ASSEMBLY GOVERNMENT MINISTER FOR
ENVIRONMENT
SUE ESSEX
held at National Museum & Gallery,
Cardiff on 21st November 2002
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LORD RICHARD: Minister,
thank you very much for coming. We are much obliged.
What we seem to have established as a general working
procedure is if you would be kind enough to open the
session for perhaps ten minutes and then the members
of the Commission can pursue what issues they might
be interested in. For the sake of the record, could
you introduce yourself and your two colleagues.
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MS ESSEX: Thank you
very much. My name is Sue Essex, Minister for the Environment
at the National Assembly for Wales. On my right is Martin
Evans, who is Director of the Division for Planning,
Environment and Transport. On my left is Bob Macey,
who is responsible for environmental protection.
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LORD RICHARD: Thank
you very much.
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MS ESSEX: First of all,
thank you very much for the invitation. I want to start
off by saying I am not a constitutional expert, as some
of you in this room well know, but I have tried to respond
to the questions and the points in the evidence in the
way that you have posed the questions. I thought I would
just try and give an overall description of what this
portfolio covers and where I see the main issues really
over the last couple of years. As you will appreciate,
it is a wide portfolio covering a whole range of activities.
I will come back in a minute as to what that means.
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One of the key issues for me has been
the thrust of policy development and I suppose that
is where my interest and expertise lies. If you look
at an area such as transport, I think it would be fair
to say that prior to devolution there was not an awful
lot of attention given to transport policy, unlike an
area like planning where we had had quite a deal of
responsibility and perhaps that was more widely developed.
Across this portfolio and all its different areas we
have tried to push the issue of getting a strong policy
base on which to develop programmes and certainly develop
funding in association with that and action on the ground.
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In addition to that policy, the style
which I followed, which I think had been very much the
theme of the National Assembly since its inception,
has been trying to work in collaboration, so a lot of
my work has not been questioning powers that I have,
it is using the powers I have got, using the ability
to communicate and work together. I think that is a
particular factor with the Committee and with a whole
host of other organisations. In terms of delivery of
our programmes Welsh local government is clearly crucial
to us, but in many other areas - key voluntary sector
organisations looking at the countryside and habitats
- that is very important, as indeed is working with
the ASPBs. So that has been very significant. In an
area like sustainable development, which is incredibly
new in the globe - there are only two other governments
that have a duty similar to the duty we have - it is
trying to interpret that, looking at that power but
looking at that in a very positive way of how we can
use the section in the Government of Wales Act to work
with others to get key messages out and to get key arrangements
out. That has been the approach.
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In terms of the portfolio, as I said
earlier, it is a wide one. To an outsider they might
ask, A Does all this hang together?@ I think it does.
I am very pleased, for example, that I have got planning
and transport powers because bringing those responsibilities
and those portfolios together really does think about
integration in terms of development. Obviously issues
of environmental protection, issues of the countryside
and national parks, they all come together and that
is why we have got the umbrella title of environment
because so much of that coalesces under that heading.
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Sustainable development is a mainstream
issue right across the board. There is a sub-Cabinet
group that the First Minister chairs, but I have been
given the responsibility for leading on this issue which
means obviously I look within my own portfolio to try
to provide a good role model, I guess. It means me again
working with my colleagues in other portfolio areas
to try and make sure that that issue is mainstreamed
in the same way that equal opportunities are. That has
been a very interesting issue over the last couple of
years. Clearly we are learning where we go on that but
that, again, is very much a question of collaboration,
working with others in terms of what powers and what
abilities they may have to make a contribution to the
whole of the sustainable debate, both within Wales and
across the whole of the globe. I do not know if that
is helpful but I thought my portfolio might strike you
as being somewhat different and perhaps my evidence
has been somewhat different from my colleagues= evidence.
It has not evolved so much, in my experience, around
issues like powers, although that is important, it is
very much the style of trying to develop policy and
deliver on the ground which I think has been the hallmark
of the last couple of years. Perhaps that is all I need
to say as an introduction.
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LORD RICHARD:
Thank you very much. The impression I get from what
you have just said is that within the framework that
you have been given by the Government of Wales Act you
have a wide responsibility. Are there areas that you
would like to be responsible for that at the moment
you are not?
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MS ESSEX:
That is a good question. I do not think I would be able
to sleep if that were true! It is an immensely wide
brief. As I said, I think there is a logic as to why
they are together. I cannot think of any area where
I would say that has got to come within my portfolio
because if we are getting our working arrangements right,
if we are getting integrated development policy at strategic
level within the Cabinet right (and I think we have)
you will see that many of the topics in my portfolio
overlap with virtually all my colleagues. This is why
I think the style of working with Cabinet sub-groups
is very important. If I could take some examples, for
instance, on transport where we are developing policies
on community transport, that clearly impacts.
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LORD RICHARD: We?
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MS ESSEX: We the Assembly.
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LORD RICHARD: What do
you mean by community transport?
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MS ESSEX: As an Assembly
government but, as I say, it is on a very collaborative
approach. In developing a wider brief for community
transport in Wales I will clearly have to work in connection
with Jane Hutt as Minister of Health because so much
of community transport has traditionally come from the
social services base, but also, in addition, with my
colleague Edwina Hart because a lot of the work relies
on local government organisation and to a certain extent
on education. So many of the aspects I deal with I cannot
deal with in isolation, I have to develop that further.
If you look at the issue of sustainability, as we pursue
that, an area I am very interested in is sustainable
design and construction. Part of that falls within Edwina
Hart's brief because she is leading on social housing
and construction. I am leading on design sustainability
but there is also an issue there for Andrew Davies as
Minister for Economic Development because so many of
the conclusions we can make on sustainability have an
economic impact and an economic opportunity.
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LORD RICHARD: How do
you resolve the problem? Cabinet committees or informally?
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MS ESSEX: We have got
quite a few Cabinet committees. We had one on children's
issues which brings all those key issues on children
together. We have had one dealing with Corus and the
closures in Llanwern and Ebbw Vale and North Wales and
West Wales. The way we decided to deal with that (because
again that goes across a whole range of briefs, transport
in my particular case but learning from Jane Davidson's
situation and Andrew Davies= situation, with the First
Minister's interest) was to pool those together in a
sub-Cabinet working group. It may not mean that every
meeting we all have to be there because it depends what
is on the agenda but it does work at that level.
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LORD RICHARD: Presumably
it is much the same as it is in [Whitehall?]. You have
got a lead minister there who produces papers and then
everybody discusses them and you try and produce policies.
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MS ESSEX: Because we
are physically together as well it makes it easier to
have those ad hoc meetings on particular areas,
even if you do not have a sub-Cabinet group, if you
have got a particular issue that you want to discuss.
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LORD RICHARD: Not to
be indelicate, but what about wind farms?
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MS ESSEX: Energy is
an example. A considerable amount of the angst comes
at the planning end but it is an issue that also hits
the whole point of sustainable development where in
many cases there are no easy answers. We have got to
work these things through. There is a good argument
for and many people feel there is a good argument against.
Often it hits the public at the planning level. Where
we have to start is on energy policies, and renewable
energy in particular in this case, and then look at
what other policies we need to complement where we want
to be in renewable energy.
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LORD RICHARD: Is there
what one could call an Assembly view on wind farms?
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MS ESSEX: There is a
commitment to produce renewable energy, whatever form
that comes from. There has been a real degree of controversy
on the ground on individual planning applications for
wind farms (and you cannot constrain individual planning
applications, there is no policy saying all planning
applications will be called in or will not be called
in and every application on a legal basis has to be
treated on its own merit) and we are in the process
of producing a technical note which will inform both
potential developers and planning authorities to try
and see if there is compatibility between achieving
targets on renewable energy, of which wind farms is
one but not the only one, and try to work with local
authorities when it comes to development planning so
they can see whether they can accommodate wind power
within their communities, which then forms the basis
for each application to be treated and to be decided.
Certainly in planning you have to try and relate what
the overall objectives of the Assembly are, whether
it is wind power or other things, and then in terms
of the technical advice you would give you cannot override
the legal basis because every planning application has
to be treated on its own merits.
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LORD RICHARD: How much
of this depends upon decisions taken in Whitehall or
Westminster as opposed to Cardiff?
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MS ESSEX: It depends
on what electricity megawatt level the application is
- this is not just wind farms - and over a certain level
the power still rests with Whitehall, and Ceridigion
was one of those cases. It depends on the level and
at the moment we are discussing whether that could be
further devolved to the Assembly.
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LORD RICHARD: What is
the mechanism at the moment for feeding your views into
the planning machinery in Whitehall?
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MS ESSEX: We did. We
were consulted and we gave our views in a fairly, I
would not say lengthy document but it was several pages
long, which was drawing together conclusions and views
and we submitted that to Brian Wilson at the time who
was Energy Minister.
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LORD RICHARD: Was there
a planning appeal or not?
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MS ESSEX: No, there
was a view from Ceridigion.
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LORD RICHARD: There
was not an appeal with an inspector and all the rest
of it?
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MS ESSEX: No, there
was not. The final decision by Brian Wilson, if my memory
serves me right, was that there was not a need for a
public inquiry on that particular application. That
is right, is it not?
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MR EVANS: It is.
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TOM JONES: Can I first
of all declare an interest as a member of one of your
ASPBs, although not for very long C
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MS ESSEX: --- And a
very valuable service you have given Tom as well.
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TOM JONES: On wind farms,
I suppose the issue in public perception terms with
devolution is what powers the Assembly has and does
not have. The impression amongst some of the public
is that it was a planning issue and suddenly it became
an energy issue and then suddenly it became a Whitehall
rather than a Cardiff decision because it was over a
certain level. It is that confusion which the public
finds frustrating in coming to terms with whether we
have got devolved government or two layers of government,
and sometimes it is difficult to understand the difference
between them. We are looking for how the process works.
You are saying it is seeking to negotiate some transfer
of that energy decision-making to complement the planning
powers that you have and we would be interested to know
how you would expect that to happen. Will it happen
fairly easily? If it does so, will it happen because
of a good understanding between yourself and your counterpart
ministers or will it happen with difficulty and will
you need primary powers?
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I have two other associated questions.
One concerns national parks which you also referred
to where you have not quite got the power to vary the
composition of membership of the National Parks Authority.
Would you be able to create your own national park if
you wanted to or would that also depend on an England
and Wales decision-making process?
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MS ESSEX: On the first
one, the powers that we have obviously come from the
devolution settlement and I think it would be fair to
say that there are, as the chair indicated, overall
national objectives in various areas. It does not have
to be just on energy matters, it could be on primary
extraction materials, etcetera, and you have to reconcile
how that is then interpreted and how it is delivered
at the local level. There is an inevitable tension;
it just does not have to be about renewable energy on
that issue.
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On the wind farm side, I think you are
quite right to say that in the public perception they
could not understand the difference as to why this should
be either decided at a local level or at an Assembly
level if it was called in because it suddenly came over
a certain level. Clearly, as you know, we have argued
that we think the prime responsibility should come to
us. We are in negotiation and I do not know where that
will lead us.
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We feel the argument is a strong one
here and it is the very one you alluded to, Tom, that
it still has an implication in terms of location for
communities. Whatever the quantity of electricity that
is going to be produced, at the end of the day, as I
know on planning, the location and the impact on the
ground is something that people they feel strongly about
and feel that decision should be made as locally as
possible to their community.
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I think, though, the other side of that
is a transparency of decision and certainly the viewpoint
that we put forward to Brian Wilson was made public
so people could see what we had written, but I think
we are persuaded overall that powers should come to
us because we feel the issue on local accountability
and accountability at the Wales level is compatible
with the national targets that are set.
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LORD RICHARD: You said
you were in negotiation; with whom?
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MS ESSEX: With the DTI.
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LORD RICHARD: With the
Secretary of State or ---?
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MS ESSEX: I think the
Secretary of State is involved, in my understanding.
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LORD RICHARD: What you
want out of the Secretary of State presumably is that
that power should be devolved and taken away from the
DTI and passed down to the Assembly?
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MS ESSEX: Yes.
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LORD RICHARD: Would
that need primary legislation?
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MS ESSEX: No.
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LORD RICHARD: It would
not?
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MS ESSEX: No.
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LORD RICHARD: Would
it need a statutory instrument?
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MR MACEY:
I think it would need a transfer of functions order.
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LORD RICHARD:
That would be enough?
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MR MACEY: I think so.
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MS ESSEX: On national
parks, as you again know, Tom, we are doing a review
of national parks and one of the areas we will clearly
be looking at is this issue of representation and whether
there should be a change in terms of the make-up of
the representation on national parks. I am sure people
know, but at the moment there are members there that
are nominated, from me in this case, and it is open
in terms of public advertisement, but they are essentially
put in in terms of the level of the national parks.
There is also a quota of members that are on national
parks that come through local authorities. There has
been a debate as to whether that second part in the
way that members come on to national parks is the best
way of having that local representation. We wait to
see what the outcome of that review is. I am not sure
whether that needs primary legislation to do that.
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MR EVANS: It would require
primary legislation to change the business of representation,
yes, but not to create a new national park.
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TOM JONES: Would you
wish that? If there is a group which is reviewing setting
up a national park in Wales, if they came back to you
and said, A We want to change the composition@ , would
you be able to say or would you have go to colleagues
in Whitehall, go to your colleagues in England and Wales
and if they said, A No, we do not want to change the
national parks in England@ , how do you deal with that
issue?
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MS ESSEX: In Scotland
the new parks that are set up there have a different
basis of membership to ours. We are going through a
review so I cannot pre-empt what will come out of that
and what decision will be taken but if the decision
is that there should be a change in the structure and
nature of the membership, then the way forward would
be for us to log in a bid in terms of the programme
that goes forward, bearing in mind that I have got colleagues
all of whom have got bids for legislation, we would
put that on the list as something we would want to go
forward with and then it is up to us to do the work
on that. We would wait and see whether there was any
difficulty on that. I have to say up to now in terms
of working through something like the Countryside and
Rights of Way Act there has not been any difficulty
at all. We are ended up with slightly different regulations
in Wales but that has been completely accepted.
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On national parks we have already got
the situation in Scotland where there is a different
make-up so I cannot pre-empt that but as long as there
is a rationale for what we do and a logical basis following
consultation, I would expect to have fairly productive
discussions on that.
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TOM JONES: You have
got a grant-in-aid for the Environment Agency now and
that seems an interesting development in the sense that
that is an England and Wales body which was in existence
before the Assembly and therefore had grant-in-aid from
another department, and still has presumably, so suddenly
you have been able to find your own funds. If that is
not a reduction of the existing budget given to Wales,
it is a separate budget, could you explain how that
came about and how you have been able to give funds
directly to an England and Wales body to deliver services
that you are required to and how that process has worked?
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MS ESSEX: I will ask
Bob because he was pre-devolution --- I am not saying
he was old or anything but he has some very valuable
experience!
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TOM JONES: He was last
century, yes!
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MR MACEY: Before devolution
the Environment Agency was an England and Wales body.
It was in those days responsible to the Secretary of
State for Wales for the discharge of its functions in
Wales but the mechanism was provided from two government
departments, DETR as was and MAFF as was. There was
no grant-in-aid provided by theWelsh Office. The concerns
in Whitehall were very much in line with aspirations
from here that with devolution there should be greater
ownership from Wales and indeed responsibility from
Wales for what the Environment Agency did and that could
be achieved if the Environment Agency was funded by
the Assembly for its activities in Wales. So a transfer
of funds was agreed, reflecting the expenditure by the
Agency in Wales.
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TED ROWLANDS: Over and
above the grant?
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MR MACEY: There was
a quite specific transfer of function from one department
to another for funding the Environment Agency's activities
in Wales. So we worked with the DETR and with Environment
Agency clearly providing much of the supporting data.
It was what we called in those days a PES transfer of
resources from one government department to another,
so the Assembly then inherited the resource base that
was funding the Agency's activities in Wales. Any changes
since that time have been for the Assembly to fund,
financed from its own block resources which are provided
in accordance with the Barnett Formula. The Minister
has on a number of occasions provided funds for specific
activities over and above those undertaken in England
and those have come from block resources.
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TOM JONES:
Financial responsibility for those funds is with the
core of the Environment Agency, there is not a Welsh
or Wales Office from which there is accountability to
you for that bit of funding.
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MR MACEY:
It is the Environment Agency corporately which is responsible
to the Assembly. Clearly the Environment Agency is split
into regions and the Environment Agency Wales is the
main day-to-day link. In terms of the accountability,
the Chairman is accountable to the Minister and the
Chief Executive is accountable to our Permanent Secretary.
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MS ESSEX:
As Bob says, there were additional sums of money we
put in last year. It was in particular to deal with
environmental protection work, identifying problems
at waste tips, identifying illegal transportation of
waste, etcetera, which was an area of considerable concern
to me, and indeed I think right across Wales. So in
that way we were able to direct the additional funding
and say these were the kind of activities we were carrying
out on the ground. I think that has worked very well.
The one other thing I would say about the Environment
Agency is it did come up for quinquennial review (a
strange animal to me) which looks at the Assembly-sponsored
bodies. Clearly we did debate this whole issue of England
and Wales. It is one of those areas where it is very
difficult and joint arrangements are there because obviously
the administrative boundary between Wales and England
does not reflect the geographical boundaries of river
catchment areas, etcetera. The view was - and this was
the Committee's view as well and I work very closely
with the Committee - that an England and Wales basis
as we have it now was probably the sensible way forward
to go, particularly in view of the fact that the Environment
Agency had just been in the process of undergoing a
huge restructuring internally, known as the BRITE restructuring,
and everyone right across the Committee and ourselves
thought it was not the right time to look at a separate
agency for Wales. Further down the line in a few year's
time when we have perhaps had time to reflect (this
certainly goes for the Assembly) there might be a rationale
for that. I cannot pre-empt what anyone would say. As
I say, it is a rather unusual body in that there are
many of its functions that go across administrative
boundaries for very obvious reasons.
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LAURA McALLISTER: I
wanted to ask you about the variations and scope of
your portfolio. You said in your paper that in some
of your portfolio areas you have very extensive delegated
powers, others less so. How do you manage that as an
integrated brief? In some cases the origins of power
are quite different and the location of retained power
is quite different, in terms of Europe for example,
and environmental matters I imagine, protection matters
particularly. How do you operate various mechanisms
for policy development when the structures are quite
different in each case?
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MS ESSEX: I think you
are right to say we have inherited a lot of different
powers depending on what had gone before. On top of
that you have got the layer of European Directives and
Regulations that are coming post-devolution that would
not have been there pre-devolution. I suppose you might
think there is a problem. It does not automatically
per se cause problems because if you are looking
at it in terms of outcomes then you use the powers that
you have in terms of what you want to achieve and use
those to the best opportunities that are flagged up
in the report. One area where we felt we needed more
powers post-devolution is in the transport area. Much
of the stuff that is coming through, say, from the European
side is absolutely compatible with what we want to do.
It is not easy always to translate into action on the
ground but the fact it has been driven from Europe does
not cause us a problem because in effect it is compatible
with our policies. The key question would be whether
this stuff coming out is incompatible with our policies,
and that is a different issue. As it stands at the moment,
that is not the case and going back to the CROW legislation
that again was completely compatible with where we wanted
to go.
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Going back to my first statement about
achieving better delivery and integration of policy
on the ground, I would always say that the question
of whether that is working or not does not always rely
on powers. So much of what we do in this portfolio relies
on collaboration with others. This is why I want to
get it in perspective. In terms of taking forward planning
issues, clearly we have got a Planning Bill that has
been highlighted in the Queen's Speech but taking forward
many of the issues that we want to on planning, a lot
of issues of primary legislation about collaboration
with local government, about making sure the resources
are there, the cultures are there and the training is
there to get the outcomes that we want to achieve. So
the fact that it is varied does not automatically give
me a problem. We should be mature and able enough to
cope with that variation. The issue post-devolution
in one area, in particular in transport, has been one
where I would say, yes, we have made it clear that we
felt there are extra powers that could deliver - could
deliver - outcomes where in fact we are not able to
achieve those outcomes through the means that we have
now.
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LORD RICHARD:
Can you spell out the things you can do on transport,
what you would like to do and what stops you doing it?
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MS ESSEX:
What we did first of all was to put a policy base in
the way I have described and that is the Transport Framework.
The Transport Framework recognises that there are things
that we can do because we have the powers to do that,
such as on trunk roads in particular, and on motorways.
The powers that have traditionally been there in the
old Welsh Office were transferred to us so we can make
investment on the trunk roads and the trunk road programme
was the result. In many other areas where we would want
to achieve integration of transport, which is a very
important issue, we do not necessarily have the powers
there. The way we have gone forward on that is to work
again with local government in terms of their consortia
which operate on the ground in Wales, and which operate
very well. If you live in Wales you will know in North
Wales you have got TAITH which is the local authorities
coming together with transport operators. In this particular
area we have got an organisation called SWIFT which
is a collaboration between local authorities. The issue
is will those voluntary collaborations achieve the outcomes
and the integration we want to see. As things stand
at the moment we have not got powers. Should we wish
to - and I want to make it clear I am not saying we
wish to - strengthen that because we feel the outcomes
are not being achieved, bearing in mind as an Assembly
Government we have put quite a lot of money through
to consortia and local government to deliver that integration,
then it would be rather nice to have a power here that
could really produce a better integration on the ground[Cant
think what this might have been. Delete?], in the way
that we have not got.
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I gave evidence to the Welsh Affairs
Committee on that when we were looking at transport
and said there are two areas we have highlighted to
deliver that. One is the fairly straightforward fact
that apparently the Mayor of London has a general power
to take action on transport, which would indeed be helpful
for us to have. The second one is the ability to set
up either a passenger transport authority or a passenger
transport executive which we do not have. The view of
the Assembly - and it is not just my view, there was
a report done in the committee which looked at public
transport that I accepted completely - is that it would
be useful to have those powers. Not to say that we would
instantly want to use them because we are very keen
to support the voluntary collaborations that are operating
now but should - and this is I suppose a political responsibility
to the people in Wales who desperately want to see practical
integration of transport happen on the ground - those
outcomes not be achieved then I think it is right and
proper as a strategic government that we have the power
to try and help that along.
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LAURA McALLISTER:
Are you not struggling against deregulation more broadly
in transport?
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MS ESSEX:
Clearly there is an issue of deregulation. Whether you
feel that is right or wrong that is there on that basis
but, having said that, I think we are making considerable
progress. If you look at the concessionary fares scheme
we have introduced, which is a Wales-only scheme, it
has not been introduced in the same way in Scotland
or England, then by using that power that we have on
concessionary fares we have made a very important input
both in terms of tackling social exclusion but very
importantly flagging up public transport/bus transport
in Wales. We are seeing that through the figures. I
do think there are powers that we have that we can use,
but the main issue for us has been one of integration
and that is the core of our policy. The way we can tackle
that is through voluntary collaboration but not on structural
arrangements.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
Can I ask a factual question about planning and how
planning cases have gone since the Government of Wales
Act has been on the statute book. As a background to
that I should just say I was on the Standing Orders
Commission and it was one of the areas in which we found
difficulty. There was a retired senior civil servant
who said in the old days with the Secretary of State
it worked perfectly well but the new procedure, which
is ordained by the Government of Wales Act and then
spelt out by the Standing Orders, will not work in practice
because calling in appeals is a very sensitive matter
and having more than one person at the end of the day
who is responsible is impractical. Can you tell us whether
there have been difficulties about planning appeals,
called in cases, since the Act was on the statute book?
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|
MS ESSEX: I am not 100
per cent au fait with the deliberations you had
earlier. If I can just explain how it works now. Applications
are either called in against one or more of the criteria
that we have for calling in applications or, secondly,
they are major recovered appeals, major appeals that
it is decided should be brought into the Assembly's
domain. Either of those would be decided by a planning
decision committee that is drawn up from essentially
the committee members that sit on the committee that
deals with my portfolio. I do not think necessarily
exclusively - it is on the basis whether members have
been trained. Clearly the membership of that committee
has chopped and changed quite a lot but the essential
qualification for sitting on the planning decision committee
is that you have had proper training. In terms of those
decisions it is not, as you referred to previously,
made by the Secretary of State who would have been one
person deciding on either recovered appeals or ordered
applications. It is decided by the planning decision
committee which is deliberately chosen to be cross-party
with three or four members and chaired either by myself,
if I am sitting, or the chair of the committee, Richard
Edwards or, if he is not available, someone else can
be nominated, as has happened in the past, to be the
chair. In terms of my opinion as to whether it has worked
or not, I personally think it has worked for two very
important reasons. Firstly, I have made a decision which
I do not have to make under Standing Orders that if
I call in an application I do not sit on that committee.
That has been my personal decision because it sends
out the message I have not been involved in looking
at that case at one stage and then looking at it in
another. I think the principle of members of the planning
decision committee looking at that case afresh and not
having been involved in that before is an important
one. I have established that by custom. Secondly, I
think the fact you have four members considering that
on the back of an inspector's report and on the back
of the work that our civil servants have done in evaluating
that sends a very reassuring message out to people.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
Have any of them been taken to law afterwards?
|
|
MS ESSEX: No, I do not
think so. There is always an issue in the public's mind
that if there is one person they could be - and perhaps
this is unfairly in the public's mind - prejudiced or
seen as partisan, etcetera, but when you have got four
people on that I think that kind of worry goes. I can
only say from my personal experience - and Richard Edwards
who chairs the committee is coming to give evidence
fairly soon and it is a question you might like to ask
him - that certainly in the committees I have been on
there have been extremely good, very thoughtful, people
who take their job very seriously. They probably, although
I cannot make any judgment on predecessors, spend considerably
more time over each application than the Secretary of
State in the past has done.
|
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LORD RICHARD: Do you
have planning appeals as in England where the inspector
comes down and produces a report?
|
|
MS ESSEX: Sure, yes.
|
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LORD RICHARD: The difference
is the report then goes to you and then goes to this
committee?
|
|
MS ESSEX: It depends
on the level of inquiry. If it is a household extension,
these are mine, no, and they do not come through. If
it is a major scheme and the decision is such that we
cover it, an inspector's inquiry will be held and we
will have an inspector's report but the decision is
taken at that top level. There is that level and, as
was mentioned before, there are call-ins. These are
applications where representations are made to the Government
in exactly the same way as it would have been for the
Secretary of State, to take these away from the hands
of local authorities, for whatever reason. We have set
criteria for call-ins which in simple terms is where
there are major applications that have cross boundary
implications, ie, implications for beyond the sphere
of one local authority. That criteria have been consulted
on, which has happened post-devolution, and then a call-in
application is judged according to those criteria. If
it is called in it comes in front of the planning decision
committee. If I decide, on advice, that that application
should be called in and taken off the hands of the local
authority, then that would have in many cases a public
inquiry in exactly the same way and then the decision
would be made by the planning decision committee.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
There were not any criteria before, it was entirely
from the Secretary of State's discretion, I believe.
|
|
MS ESSEX: I think there
were criteria.
|
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
But they were not public criteria, were they?
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: Yes, I
can remember a lot of issues on the question of open
cast.
|
|
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
Obviously I am wrong about that. The second question
I would like to ask you ---
|
|
MS ESSEX: If I could
just say on the planning decision committee, that would
not have been possible before devolution because you
did not have a base to draw members from.
|
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
My second question is much more about the future. There
is this famously trailed Government initiative for changing
planning procedures in England and perhaps Wales, I
do not know, but it is quite obvious that you as Minister
would have very strong views on these changes which
are already arousing great criticism and antagonism
in certain authorities, certainly within England. What
is the position on this? Have you made public representations
or private representations or what has happened?
|
|
MS ESSEX: We have produced
our own Green Paper on planning - it is called Planning
Delivering for Wales - because, as I alluded to
earlier, there are aspects in Wales which are dependent
on primary legislation, but we have a lot of other things
that we have the power to change ourselves. We produced
our own Green Paper which set out a whole range of questions
which were not just about primary legislation change
but clearly we had the possibility of primary legislation
to think about, and we raised lots of other questions
too. I personally gave evidence to the committee. They
were primarily looking into the English Green Paper,
but I did go along and there was a report of the proceedings.
|
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
This was a select committee of the Commons on the environment.
|
|
MS ESSEX: It was chaired
by Andrew Bennett.
|
|
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
The Environment Committee?
|
|
MS ESSEX: So I went
along to that and was really justifying why we were
suggesting doing things differently in Wales. In terms
of the Queen's Speech, when she announced the legislation,
I will be making a statement to the full Assembly in
Plenary Session next week of how we intend to follow
the Green Paper, but it also would be clear that there
will be clauses within the legislation when it comes
forward that will be Wales-only clauses to reflect our
responses to the legislation. I cannot say much more
than that because I quite rightly need to put that representation
in front of the Plenary first.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: Are all
the clauses drafted?
|
|
MS ESSEX:
Yes, I am reliably informed.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: You have
got a piece of paper with the clauses? Who does the
drafting?
|
|
MR EVANS: Parliamentary
Counsel.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: In London?
So you send instructions up and he does it up there?
|
|
MR EVANS: Yes.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: It then
forms part of the normal procedure?
|
|
MR EVANS: That is how
Welsh legislation was done in the past. Obviously now
we have a Secretary of State for Wales so in terms of
the parliamentary responsibility for that then that
would be with the Secretary of State but all the work
on instructions and so on would be done by the Parliamentary
Counsel.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: Why is
it the responsibility of the Secretary of State?
|
|
MR EVANS: When he comes
to introducing legislation then ---
|
|
LORD RICHARD: It is
tagged on the back.
|
|
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
It is part of the Concordat, is it not? It is laid down
in terms that is request for Welsh forms is passed through
the Secretary of State on its way to Parliamentary Counsel
and the Parliamentary Counsel cannot, for example, take
directions from the head of department here, it has
to go through. I do not remember the exact terms of
what is said in the Concordat but it is quite clear.
|
|
MR EVANS: In practical
terms you have to put your bid in for legislation and
it would be the Secretary of State for Wales who would
have to argue the case with his Cabinet colleagues for
getting some Welsh legislation, for example if they
were in competition with other government departments
and departments are always competing for the opportunity
to legislate. Once that is established then it is for
agreement with the relevant Whitehall department in
terms of any Welsh clauses that would go into that.
They would lead the Bill, they would have a Bill team
to take the work forward, but the instructing on any
Welsh clauses would have to be done from the Assembly
with the lawyers writing instructions to Parliamentary
Counsel.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: You would
have agreed policy with Whitehall before you get to
that stage?
|
|
MR EVANS: That is right.
You might have different policies but it would be agreed
our policies would be incorporated.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: In getting
that agreement you would deal with the department, not
the Secretary of State?
|
|
MR EVANS: That is right.
|
|
MS ESSEX: Then obviously
the junior minister to see the Bill?
|
|
LORD RICHARD: Yes, of
course.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: Could
I pursue the transport stuff. Have we done the planning
stuff?
|
|
MS ESSEX: We have never
done with planning stuff!
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: The strategic
transport side of things, particularly rail - rail policy,
rail investment - stretches right across the border.
First of all, what concurrent powers do you have with
the Secretary of State for Transport in transport matters?
Have you got concurrent powers where you share the powers
with the Secretary of State for Transport?
|
|
MS ESSEX: Not on rail,
no.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: On what
do you have them? Do you have them on many?
|
|
MS ESSEX: It depends
on the interpretation of the word A concurrent@ .
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: It requires
a joint decision.
|
|
MS ESSEX: No, on joint
decisions we do not, do we?
|
|
MR EVANS: There is a
difference between joint powers and concurrent powers.
Concurrent powers would mean that both we and the Secretary
of State could separately use those powers to do things
whereas joint would require both powers to sign up to
a single action. Road safety is the example we have
where under the same powers the Department for Transport
does road safety advertisements and so on and we use
the same powers to do things ourselves promoting road
safety. That would be the main example.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: That is
concurrent?
|
|
MR EVANS: That is concurrent.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: Do you
and the Secretary of State for Transport have any joint
powers?
|
|
MR EVANS: Not in transport.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: Or anything
else.
|
|
MS ESSEX: There might
be one or two minor things but certainly nothing significant.
|
|
MR ROWLANDS: You mentioned
at various times in your own submission the relationship
with the Strategic Rail Authority, for example, and
of course, although you do not mention it at all, the
successor to Railtrack. How do you relate to those strategic
decisions made by the SRA, or now by the new successor
to Railtrack? What leverage do you have on these bodies?
|
|
MS ESSEX: With Railtrack
very little but I do not think I was alone in that at
all. It clearly is one where we do not have powers as
such. It goes back to the point on collaboration earlier
on. We do try and influence. We have made decisions
on supporting investment in rail in Wales, quite significant
decisions, where we have said we are prepared to put
money into schemes and to see them happen on the ground.
The Vale of Glamorgan passenger transport is one and
I am sure you are familiar with the Ebbw Vale line.
It is a question of joint working not in the legal sense
but in the practical sense. The SRA is a fairly new
organisation and we have worked very closely with it
because of my wish and my colleagues' wish that we do
see a great improvement in rail travel in the future
in Wales. It is partly down to the issues of integration
that I talked about earlier. It has been very much one
of dialogue but again, going back to where we have not
got powers, we have looked at the situation in Scotland
and there are pluses and minuses in having that.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: Tell us
about the Scottish powers that you do not have?
|
|
MS ESSEX: On direction
over the SRA?
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: Yes.
|
|
MS ESSEX: Certainly
in terms of budget and in the franchise Scotrail is
their franchise north of the border. We have got a Wales
and Border franchise. It is slightly more difficult
for Wales because we are looking at Wales and Border
and many of our lines run through England as well; in
Scotland there is a geographical distinction. We have
looked at the powers of direction that Scotland has
and on balance we have said we think it would be a good
idea for us to have them.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: What type
of power do they have?
|
|
MS ESSEX: They are still
in negotiation in terms of how that will span out but
certainly in terms of priority of spending on the franchise
I understand - and I do not know if Martin has looked
at it in more detail - that is an area we would consider
important.
|
|
MR EVANS: The basic
thing is the power of direction of the Strategic Rail
Authority.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: The Scottish
equivalent has the power to direct the SRA to do certain
things in Scotland.
|
|
MR EVANS: That is right.
What goes with that is the money to do those things
and the responsibility that goes with the money.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: You have
got the scheme and the money for scheme round Cardiff
and then you go and negotiate with whom?
|
|
MS ESSEX: What we have
said here is as the Government has shown no willingness
to put additional funding in for infrastructure improvements,
particularly in terms of the links and that is something
that is to do with infrastructure, clearly the SRA has
a role as well in funding on network enhancement. As
I say, there is a plus and a minus. The money for Scotland
comes under the Barnett Formula. Anything that comes
under the Barnett Formula you have to argue against
competing pressures so you can put that as a question
mark as to whether that is better. In terms of being
able to state your priorities and match your priorities
with your other objectives on integrating transport
and other directives of spatial planning, it is a big
plus and that is where we are persuaded on balance it
seems like a good idea.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: Who would
you go and argue with?
|
|
MS ESSEX: [?]
|
|
LORD RICHARD: If you
have got a scheme, the Valley Railway for example, or
you were talking about the Ebbw Vale railway; if you
have an idea to do something like that?
|
|
MS ESSEX: You do not
argue with anyone, I guess, because you would not have
to then go and persuade the SRA that was a good scheme,
you would have that power if it is within Wales.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: I am not
clear, I am a bit lost too. In Scotland if we had the
equivalent power and you decided you wanted an investment
in some aspect of the railway system, and you had the
powers of the Scottish Minister, you could direct the
SRA to undertake a scheme of some kind to develop? Is
that right?
|
|
MS ESSEX: I think it
is a bit more complicated than that because there is
a difference between the franchise and the running of
the train operating company and infrastructure and investment.
As I understand it, it is an evolving process - and
I have not spoken to my colleagues, they keep changing
in Scotland, I am not sure why - and they have quite
a strong influence over the franchise.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: Over the
actual franchise itself, so we could say, A We do not
want you to have a franchise because you have got a
track record of failure.@
|
|
MR EVANS: They have
got the equivalent power to the power that the Secretary
of State for Transport has in relation to England so
what happens on franchising is that it basically gives
the power to the SRA to do all that business. The SRA
advertises the franchise and so on but in a framework
of policy direction from the Secretary of State for
Transport. So they are given some criteria.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: In England
and Wales you do not have the equivalent to that which
the Scottish Minister has in influencing the franchise
decisions in Wales? Is that right? Is that what you
are saying?
|
|
MR EVANS: At the end
of the Scotrail franchising process the SRA will have
to go back to the Scottish Minister and say, A Here
are our conclusions. What do you say?@ and the Scottish
Minister will say yea or nay to that. In the case of
England and the Wales and Border franchise, the SRA
will go back to the Secretary of State for Transport
and say, A These are the conclusions we have come to.
Is that alright?@ Equally, they are conducting a process
within a framework agreed by the Secretary of State
for Transport who is in practice consulted about how
that process works.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: When we
come to the decision over the franchise he or she is
not obliged to get your agreement to that decision?
|
|
MR EVANS: No.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: So they
talk to you?
|
|
MS ESSEX: We are acting
on goodwill and influence and I would not under-estimate
that because the fact that we have got a Wales and Border
franchise to start with, quite honestly, has resulted
from the fact there has been respect for the wishes
of Wales that we have a Wales and Border franchise.
I think that indicates that that goodwill has been taken
a very long way.
|
|
SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH:
But does money not come into it?
|
|
MS ESSEX: Money will
come in and that is the part that I mentioned before.
As I understand it, in Scotland this is the issue, the
allocation to Scotland will be done on the Barnett Formula
rather than any other calculation. I am not 100 per
cent sure of this and I think we do need to look into
it. That is right, is it?
|
|
MR EVANS: The Barnett
Formula only really affects the change from year-to-year.
What you start with is a baseline and basically transferring
responsibility for rail services in Scotland to the
Scottish Executive means transferring an amount of money,
rather like Bob described for the Environment Agency,
that gets transferred to Scotland and that is the baseline.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: We have
not done that in England and Wales. They have done it
in Scotland and transferred ---
|
|
MR EVANS: That process
of transferring and putting it into the main block has
not finished yet, that finishes in 2004.
|
|
PAUL VALERIO: You are
saying you are satisfied with the status quo
at the moment?
|
|
MS ESSEX: No, I am saying
that on balance we would like to have the same powers
as Scotland.
|
|
PAUL VALERIO: With the
financial implications as well?
|
|
MS ESSEX: As I said,
there is a question mark over the financial allocation
and whether it would put us in a plus or a minus situation.
The plus is that at the end of the day we can be sure
that the priorities made in the franchise decision will
be our priorities. I would not want to misrepresent
it. We have very good relationships and we have put
together things like a bidders' pack and clearly they
have tried to involve us at every stage of the process.
It will be a commercial decision as to which of four
bidders and we will not be party to which company wins
that. We have tried to influence what we consider are
the priorities in investment. That is at the end of
the day, as I indicated, done on the basis of good will
and influence rather than the actual powers.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: The Secretary
of State for Transport takes the decision in the end.
It is his or her decision and not a joint one in any
sense of the word. If you had felt that one of these
four bidders with the evidence you had received would
have been a better bet, while you could make a case
to your opposite number you could not say you really
should not do that?
|
|
MS ESSEX: In the Transport
Act 2000 we got inserted this issue of consultation
between the SRA and us, so they have a duty to consult
but the final decision will be theirs and not ours.
As I said, it is slightly different from Scotland because
it is a Wales and Borders franchise and we do have to
take into account the fact we have got colleagues over
the border who quite rightly need a voice on transport
issues.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: It will
always be a statutory joint decision, do you not think?
You said it is across the border but a very large percentage
of it is in Wales.
|
|
MS ESSEX: It is whether
you work with the regional Assembly or whether you work
with the local authorities. Up to now I have to say
in terms of working across the border with colleagues
on developing Wales and Border, which was not going
to be the preferred option of reletting the franchise,
it was a reconstituted franchise taking in various elements
of other franchises and you could at that stage have
anticipated that there could be a wish from colleagues
across the border not to have that along the border,
but they have come along and been supportive. I take
the point about how that accountability could be put
in place.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: Investment
in the railways themselves, in the tracks, this is Railtrack
or the successor, which is now going to be a non-profit
making body; what is your relationship or what power
do you have with son of Railtrack or the successor to
Railtrack?
|
|
MS ESSEX: Very much
on the Glas Cymru model in the water industry. We have
no powers other than providing funding to the process,
as I have said, in the Vale of Glamorgan and obviously
trying to influence the SRA in terms of what it considers
are its priorities in terms of enhancement. Network
Rail will be financed by money coming from the train
operating companies, TOCs, and it will be money coming
from the SRA in terms of the Strategic Rail Authority
in terms of enhancements. We are also trying to put
our money into where we think that is the priority,
just down the road in Queen Street with the enhancement
of the station. We have no powers to require the Secretary
of State.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: Does the
Secretary of State for Transport have any such powers?
|
|
MS ESSEX: That is a
good question. I do not know.
|
|
MR EVANS: He has indirectly
in the sense of the power of direction over the SRA
so he could give the SRA money and direct them to give
it to Railtrack for certain purposes, but that is the
only difference.
|
|
EIRA DAVIES: As I understand
it, Minister, you had initially hoped for a Welsh Strategic
Rail Authority but those aspirations were blocked by
Whitehall. What happened in those negotiations?
|
|
MS ESSEX: We never asked
for a Welsh Strategic Rail Authority.
|
|
EIRA DAVIES: Thank you
for correcting me.
|
|
MS ESSEX: That is not
my memory but my memory is getting really quite poor.
I have gone through so many elements, certainly on the
rail industry. The argument has always been from ---
|
|
EIRA DAVIES: You mentioned
goodwill and collaboration.
|
|
MS ESSEX: Yes. We have
always accepted that railways are a UK-wide issue and
certainly in terms of many of their strategic roles
if you look at inter-city lines, they connect from Edinburgh
to Cardiff and from London to Cardiff, so about half
our rail usage is on those strategic roots that are
let through a variety of franchises. What we were really
referring to is the internal operation of the Wales
and Border franchise which crosses the English border
and that is where we would look to having a strategic
direction to influence the delivery of that franchise.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: I am sure
it is my fault that I am not entirely following. Can
the SRA take a decision about what they do to the track,
say, in Pembrokeshire over and above the Assembly's
views?
|
|
MS ESSEX: The franchise
delivers the rights to the train operating companies
so the Strategic Rail Authority in making that decision
to the franchise holder is where the rights exist. We
have not got a right to say to a company, A You must
deliver this service@ , or to Network Rail, A You must
create this rail station.@ It is all a question of influence.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: As far
as Railtrack is concerned, could Railtrack take those
decisions for Pembrokeshire without reference to you?
|
|
MS ESSEX: It could but
it would be unlikely in practice now because so many
of the decisions that are taken require infrastructure
improvements as well, for example a new station, for
which funding is coming through local authorities and
us in partnership. It is in practice a much more collaborative
effort now and I think that is true. In terms of our
legal basis, our powers to make changes are non-existent.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: In section
6 of your paper to us we asked: A Are there areas of
policy where responsibilities are divided between the
Assembly and Whitehall in ways which (a) have have worked
well or (b) presented practical problems?@ I found the
last couple of sentences of that page and the top of
next page rather cryptic. I do not understand.
|
|
MS ESSEX: The multi-modal
studies?
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: It says
here: A The critical issue relates to the Public Service
requirement of subsidised services. The Assembly does
not receive funding to subsidise rail services and therefore
achieving its aspirations for modal shift in south east
Wales are subject to the judgements of the SRA.@
|
|
MS ESSEX: We are in
different places here.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: A The
absence of powers of direction over the SRA is a key
one@ - and that is what we have, with respect, been
trying to tease out of you to find out what could or
should be these powers - A in terms of developing a
fully integrated policy@ . You say strongly, this is
not just a thought, you seem to think it is essential
to the development of your policy but you have not got
this power of direction over the SRA. You did say earlier
on that you were not quite sure whether you wanted it
or not. Is this what the Scots have got that we have
not got?
|
|
MS ESSEX: At the moment
we rely on goodwill and influence, we would like it
to be stronger.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: You do
not have a funding arrangement to subsidise rail services?
MR EVANS: We provide individual bits of support. We
have powers to grant aid to transport in various forms
nearly all via local authorities.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: So you
can subsidise the rail?
|
|
MR EVANS: We can give
transport grants to local authorities to do various
things, hence the re-opening of the Vale of Glamorgan
line and the works on Queen Street station.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: You can
use some money in order to influence it. That is right?
|
|
MR EVANS: That is right.
These are for one-off particular developments. What
we do not have is statutory influence over the overall
shape of overall policy.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: Small
bribes rather than big ones?
|
|
MS ESSEX: Encouragements.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: You do
have funds if you wish to use them to subsidise rail
services?
|
|
MS ESSEX: We do not
receive funding from the government other than through
the Barnett Formula. What we do is use our own resources.
|
|
TOM JONES: Can I have
another bite of the cherry.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: Can I
just finish it off. A ... therefore achieving its aspirations
for a modal shift ...@ What is that? What do you want
to do? I cannot understand what a modal shift is.
|
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MS ESSEX: It is simply
getting people out of their cars and onto trains. It
is a major aspiration for South Wales Valleys because
that is a great opportunity where we have got a very
good structural train service in terms of routes there,
perhaps not so good in terms of frequency and quality,
but we have got major problems of congestion, traffic
coming from the valleys into Cardiff, in particular
along the M4 corridor, so prioritising that and trying
to get people out of cars to use park and ride and the
trains is not just our priority, it is also priority
of those local authorities that are part of the SWIFT
consortium. Clearly priorities in terms of the franchise,
in terms of frequency, etcetera, would be very important
to get that modal shift.
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TED ROWLANDS: The SRA
has the power to subsidise these services?
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MS ESSEX: Yes, the franchise
will have a sum of money allocated to it wherever the
commercial bidding comes in. It escapes everyone just
how far the rail system is still highly subsidised,
but they have a sum of money which they will use to
buy a franchise and buy service levels.
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TED ROWLANDS: What you
are saying here is if the SRA has not got much of an
interest in getting people out of their cars into Cardiff
and out into trains then you have no power of direction
over them to instruct them to do that?
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MS ESSEX: Precisely.
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TED ROWLANDS: A The
multi modal study of routes between London and South
Wales/the south west of England is an example of the
difficulties we face in joining up major infrastructure
initiatives across our boundaries.@ Can you elaborate
on that and on where your powers or lack of them prevent
this?
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MS ESSEX: I suppose
it is a fairly obvious thing really that in South Wales
decisions taken the other side of the bridge on the
eastern side of the bridge are going to have an enormous
impact, whether it is investment in the M4 corridor
or investment in the Great Western rail route. Multi
modal studies are a major look at those transport corridors
that the Department of Transport is now considering.
The western one is key for us in South Wales and so
decisions there will impact on us here and from our
point of view.
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TED ROWLANDS: What kind
of decisions have been made which have impacted already
and you would have liked not to have happened?
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MS ESSEX: It is not
necessarily what has not happened, it is in the future
what might not happen and that is clearly investment
on the west side of London and we are looking at major
connections between Reading and Heathrow to improve
that train corridor. I think that is just a reality
of life, not just with the border but the different
authorities down there. I think that sentence has been
put in just to say that because in the case of South
Wales you are at the end of line (or in fact you could
say Eire is at the end of the line) major investment
decisions or policies across the border can have an
impact on us here. That is why we are into the area
of joint working. It is not purely the aspect of powers
of legislation, it is the aspect of the way that we
work together.
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TOM JONES: I was trying
to give you some respite from Ted's probing questions.
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TED ROWLANDS: My thick
questions!
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TOM JONES: The first
is something I know nothing about. In your wish list
of things that you might want, you referred to a Traffic
Commissioner. You have got words like A potentially
there is a case for ...@ and you say there is no statutory
control over the Commissioner but the Assembly maintains
its formal links. You are not asking for statutory control
or extra powers and then you say A an office in Cardiff@
, you presumably mean an office in Wales, sustainable
development, etcetera. What are your wishes for a Traffic
Commissioner?
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I have two other questions. We were discussing
earlier on this morning with Jenny Randerson the powers
over the National Lottery. The Lottery has brought in
a lot of additional benefits to Wales for environmental
projects, through Heritage Lottery and also the New
Opportunities Fund. You have no control over Lottery
distribution. Would it be useful if you had as an Assembly
greater influence, control, powers in the way National
Lottery funding is distributed?
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The third point concerns Europe. As we
all know, lots of legislation these days - on the environment,
agriculture and rural areas - comes from Brussels and
is European based. Are you satisfied with the mechanisms
in place to make certain the National Assembly's views
on European environmental legislation is as you would
wish it and is the framework of the Joint Nature Conservation
Body the best framework for you to actually take advice
at a UK level and then have an input into European business?
Those are three separate questions.
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MS ESSEX: We still feel
very aggrieved that the Traffic Commissioner was taken
to Birmingham so Wales is served from the Birmingham
office. Whilst the Traffic Commissioner in regular meetings
assures us that that does not cause any practical problems
because he spends lots and lots of time here in Wales,
there is a general feeling that we could benefit from
our own Traffic Commissioner. However, I suspect there
is a price tag attached to that since traffic reorganisation
has taken the Traffic Commissioner into Birmingham.
As a first step we feel that there needs to be a physical
presence and an office. It goes back to your point on
public perception. There is a public perception that
the Traffic Commissioner is remote in terms of delivery.
He also deals with lorries and haulage but in the public's
view the main matter that the Traffic Commissioner deals
with is buses and the fact there is not an office here
and a presence here means they feel there is not an
action here. I feel there is an issue of perception.
Like most things that are happening post-devolution
--- for example Amnesty International have decided that
they are going to open an office in Wales. Voluntary
sector organisations and public sector funded organisations
see the logic of having an operational base in Wales
post-devolution because we can have that greater contact.
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In terms of the National Lottery, yes,
I think my view would be the same as Jenny expressed.
We do feel that the arguments for it having a Welsh
dimension are very strong because, as on anything else,
the priorities across the United Kingdom may not be
the same. That was particularly true for me in terms
of waste and the way the money is being built up through
that sector. I would agree with that.
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If we can look at Europe, there are two
elements to that. One is the consultation on potential
legislation and then there is the devolvement of regulations
and I will maybe ask Bob to come in on the second one
because it is a major part of our work - European Regulations
and delivery on those and delivering them to us.
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On consultation we have had extremely
good consultation. We are competent at doing it. Sometimes
the turnaround time is quite tight but that is just
a fact of life, that happens. But I am always getting
consultation on very, very complicated chemicals that
do all sorts of horrible things to people. I am not
the expert but I could not say we were not included
in that. Where we have got the capacity to respond we
do that and where it is obviously an area where we have
not got that detailed scientific capacity we are very
happy to use what they have in England.
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Before I ask Bob to come back on the
transposition of the regulations, on JNCC in particular
it is not one that I have spent a lot of time considering.
It has not been flagged up to me by CCW. Maybe you will
give your views on that to me at another time, Tom.
We have kept to the view that there are many areas -
going back to that point about specialist knowledge
- that can be shared across political boundaries and
it is silly to lose those on a point of principle and
the JMCC is one area where scientific advice, etcetera,
on biodiversity is in many cases at a strategic level.
If we can be part of that and if it makes sense to be
part of that, then we are. If anyone tells me any different
on JMCC I would be happy to have a look at it. Certainly
that is the view that has been coming to us up to now
and also from people within the Assembly.
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LORD RICHARD: I was
going to ask you something about the implementation
of European Directives. Has there yet been a case where
Cardiff says, A We will implement it this way@ , and
London says, A No you do not, you have got to implement
it another way@ ?
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MS ESSEX: Bob will tell
me otherwise but there are a lot of Waste Directives
that come through and we have got our own waste policy
here in Wales.
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LORD RICHARD: Does that
cause problems with London?
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MS ESSEX: No.
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LORD RICHARD: London
is happy that you should do it your way?
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MS ESSEX: We will be
going in more or less the same way. Where we have done
something differently is in terms of the targets that
we have set. We have produced our own strategy and obviously
we have transposed some of the Landfill Directives in
particular which have got to be transferred into ours.
If I can look at the policy base in terms of meeting
European targets which they have in terms of the Landfill
Directive, then we have not taken an overall different
approach to them but a slightly different attitude here
in Wales and that has caused no problem at all because
it is based on rationale, not on dogmatism. It is based
on what we think is the right approach here in terms
of delivery.
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EIRA DAVIES: Why are
the targets higher in Wales than in England?
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MS ESSEX: I think partly
because of our commitment to sustainable development
in terms that we feel that we could go further on waste
here, on recycling and composting, so because we are
having those other drivers as well, we feel there is
a potential for going further. It is also based on experience.
We have had a couple of good schemes operating in Wales
where we set up a Waste Forum which had the usual issue
of stakeholders from different ends of the spectrum
- the voluntary sector and Environment Agency etcetera
- we had a long discussion before we set those targets
and there was some experience in Wales that said we
could go to higher targets than that. We then consulted
on that in our first draft and that was generally supported.
We have pushed that target up. Time will tell whether
we can deliver. That was based on what we wanted to
do in terms of our commitment but secondly based on
the experience on the ground which said to us we think
we have got the opportunity to do this. What we have
done is support four examplar local authorities that
are pushing that target up even higher to see if we
can go even higher than that.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: That
produced a very lively university department on environmental
waste in South Wales who certainly supplied advisers,
all professors to a man or women, to the House of Lords
Committee on Europe, in particular the Environmental
Pollution Committee under Lord Ashby, who was the first
Chairman of the Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution.
They were very distinguished and they were leading the
field in those days. I am speaking about 25 years ago.
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MS ESSEX: I am sure
they still are. Can I ask Bob to come in on the Landfill
Directive which is going back to Tom Jones's original
point.
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MR MACEY: In general
most environment policy is made in Europe. There has
been a never-ending flow of Directives coming through
for many years on air, water, land, waste. In many cases
it makes little sense to implement them other than in
practice on a GB basis. Industry is not going to be
best pleased if there are different regulations even
if they are better regulations in Wales than England.
I am aware of no areas in the Minister's portfolio where
aspirations to do things differently have been thwarted
by Whitehall. There are two specific areas where we
have implementeddifferently, one quite large and one
quite small. The Minister has mentioned the waste issue
where essentially there are a lot of European Directives
which bear down on waste, and the Assembly in its early
days decided to take ownership of a waste strategy.
The European Directives in terms of driving waste from
landfill do not at the moment - I suspect this will
change - tell you where you must actually otherwise
manage or dispose of your waste. One route would be
that you would burn it in waste facilities or basic
incinerators. The clear rationale for the higher target
the Minister was keen on setting was to avoid the move
from landfill being replaced to a large extent by energy-from-
waste facilities. It was trying to maximise the contribution
that recycling and composting could make. We established
a team of a few people to take forward the policy. Where
we did it differently in the strategy, there were no
problems with Whitehall. Another area of difference
is much narrower and relates to nitrate vulnerable zones.
In Whitehall the preference (and indeed they consulted
on it) was to implement the Directive on nitrate vulnerable
zones by designating 80 or 100 per cent of England.
The relevant Directive gave you the option of identifying
areas or identifying the whole of the territory and
then having a plan covering the whole of the territory.
In Wales the science suggests only three per cent of
Wales actually suffers from the problems of nitrate
pollution as identified in the Directive and the Assembly
very early in the process made it quite clear that it
was going for a geographically localised approach, a
designated approach. England has subsequently followed
us to an extent by seeking to designate some 50 per
centof England. Potentially it was quite embarrassing
for DEFRA in having this fairly narrow approach in Wales
- and Tom will understand this from the farming side
- because DEFRA could foresee a lot of problems as a
result of that with the farming community in England,
but there was no pressure or problems in us pursuing
a different line in Wales.
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TED ROWLANDS: We have
received evidence from Mr German and his officials in
agriculture about quite a series of difficult problems
in implementing Directives because the transfer of functions
had been ragged. Not all the functions had been transferred
and sometimes they have to go back for some kind of
designation. We had quite a complicated discussion.
Have the areas for which you are responsible struck
the same problem? Do you know what I am talking about?
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MR MACEY: It has not
been a major problem for us in terms of the transfer
of functions having to be re-visited. What is a more
material issue, as I have mentioned, is there is a continual
flow of European Directives. If we do not have the domestic
power to implement those Directives then we need an
order under section 2.2 of the European Communities
Act and that is a continual process of having to refresh,
if I can put it in those terms, the powers the Assembly
has to implement the Directives.
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TED ROWLANDS: You can
do that yourself?
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MR MACEY: It is formally
confirmed by the Privy Council but we require Whitehall
agreement. For example, we were recently seeking powers
to implement a Hazardous Waste Directive. We did not
have the powers under the transfer of functions order.
It was not a deficiency of the transfer of functions
order, it was that domestic legislation did not provide
the powers that were necessary.
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TED ROWLANDS: So you
then went for the European Communities Act which allows
you to implement Directives where there is no domestic
legislation?
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MR MACEY: Yes. It is
not a transfer of functions order issue.
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LORD RICHARD: Minister,
can I thank you very much indeed. I know that you have
got to be away at 4 o'clock.
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MS ESSEX: If there is
anything else, I can stay.
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LORD RICHARD: You have
been very helpful, thank you very much. I have learnt
a lot this afternoon.
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