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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Environment Agency Wales
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held at
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St Georges Hotel,
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Llandudno
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on
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Thursday, 27th March 2003
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LORD RICHARD: Thank you very much
for coming. You know what we are engaged upon. Would
you be kind enough to identify yourselves to the Commission,
and then open up the subject for us. We will then ask
limited questions. Would you like to proceed?
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: Thank you Lord
Richard. I am Helen Phillips, Director of the Environment
Agency Wales, and we thank you for the opportunity to
come and give evidence to the Commission this morning.
And on my right is my colleague Nigel Reader. Nigel
is Director of Finance in the Agency, and he is also
the Director with the lead responsibility for managing
the Agency's interface with Whitehall. This should add
some perspective to our discussion this morning.
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NIGEL READER: Good morning and
thank you for inviting us. Yes I am Director looking
after, as Helen says, Finance, Corporate Planning and
some of the national support services that provide services
to Agency Wales including ISIT. And as Helen said, I
have a custodial responsibility for relationships with
Whitehall. This is a fairly loose arrangement but it
is for me to keep an eye on so hopefully if you have
interest in the relationships I can talk about how it
works with Wales.
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LORD RICHARD: Where are
you based?
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: Environment
Agency Wales head office is in Cardiff and we have offices
in wider Wales. By way of opening remarks, there are
a couple of points I would like to make. The current
Devolution arrangements have allowed us to achieve real
environmental improvement and outcomes in both an expeditious
and cost-effective way. And we have benefited from the
underpinning UK and indeed EU legislative framework.
That has really enabled us in Wales to commit our energy
and resources to look at Wales priorities. And
indeed to ensuring that Wales priorities are effected
in the UK and EU agendas.
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| I think another feature of Devolution that is enormously
helpful is the more joined-up relationships we have in
Wales between ASPBs, the Assembly, and indeed Local Government.
It has brought a better kind of cross-fertilisation of
ideas and enabled us, I think, to get a sense of distribution
and allocation of resources. I think the importance of
that team Wales concept really has been underestimated. |
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER-BOOTH: Could
I interrupt you for one moment? This is a very important
point because one of the selling points about the 97/98
Devolution package was that there will be better oversight
of your sort of body, quangos this would have
better supervision and it would be more economic. So
if you had an example of the general proposition that
you have just made it would be very useful to have them
on the record.
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: I think there
are probably a number of examples. The kind of close-working
team Wales approach example that first comes to mind
is the Wales Waste Strategy. Where we have got, in terms
of Wales, a clear aim and priorities, as for other environmental
issues, within an EU and UK framework.
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| We have a situation in England where we have not really
yet had any successful waste strategy, and yet Wales has
identified this as a key environmental priority which
produced a strategy, and put in place arrangements to
ensure that we are working towards delivery of the strategy.
There is a special dedicated Assembly unit that supports
this very joined-up working. |
| Also by way of opening, I think it will be fair to say
that the environmental priorities in Wales are different
to those in England. |
| We have a reflection of this in the Section 4 guidance
the Assembly gives to the Environment Agency. That is
effectively the Assembly's articulation of the contribution
we expect Environment Agency Wales to make towards sustainable
development. What has been enormously refreshing is the
way in which the Assembly has welcomed our contribution
to the wider sustainable development agenda, not only
for advice or professional services in terms of our traditional
roles, but also our advice and support on issues such
as transport, energy and indeed spatial planning. |
| That has steered us towards a more joined-up and indeed
imaginative approach to making contributions as team Wales
players. There is further scope obviously for bodies in
Wales to get together effectively and to be supportive
of the Assembly. And again, so far, I think this has been
achieved with the support of the Assembly and the contributions
of other players. I think in the future we need to wait
to see how we get even more benefit from that. |
| Two final points. Whilst we have had the benefit of
being able to focus on Wales priorities, we have
also had the infrastructure and mechanisms to effectively
deal with cross-border issues without the complexities
experienced elsewhere. I think the example I give here
is Central Europe where they are in a process of preparing
for the Water Framework Directive. And because they have
traditionally not had the same degree of cross border
management of environmental issues with neighbouring countries,
they are having to make an enormous investment to get
that right. We currently have that right. It is important
we acknowledge the value of that. |
| And the other point I would make is the extent to which
we are focusing on Wales priorities, having the support
of a larger organisation. We fondly refer in Wales to
our back-room people, ie our colleagues in England from
whom we get quite a range of specialist advice and services.
Nigel has already mentioned some, for example I S I T,
but we have economies of scale, for example delivered
through England and Wales Laboratory Services, and a critical
mass of skills, for example in specialist centres for
nuclear regulation to salmonid fisheries and indeed a
wide range of things in between. I think by way of introduction
that is all we want to say. |
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TED ROWLANDS: Can I ask you to
give an idea of budgetary arrangements for Environment
Wales? Please tell us for the record.
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NIGEL READER: Yes there is a separate
budget for Environment Agency Wales. The funding for
part of the work done in Agency Wales, comes from the
National Assembly. Grant aid probably represents only
about a quarter in total funding. Other funding comes
from charges on, those that we regulate in England and
Wales. The charges schemes operate on a national basis.
So there will be an allocation of budget from that income
to Agency Wales and according with need and priority.
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PETER PRICE: When you say national?
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NIGEL READER: To England and Wales
yes.
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LORD RICHARD: Can I ask
please who does that?
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NIGEL READER: Allocation in terms
of the it is done. ?
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LORD RICHARD: Wales and
England.
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NIGEL READER: By the Environment
Agency nationally as regards the resources that it's
collecting from charges. As regards the grant aid allocation
to Agency Wales that is direct funding out of National
Assembly.
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HUW VAUGHAN THOMAS: The budget
the UK budget. What are the charges and what
is the need?
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NIGEL READER: The England/Wales
budget is about £800 million annually, and the
Agency Wales proportion of that is about £60 million.
In addition to shared services which are enjoyed by
Agency Wales over and above that. Of the total £800 million
in England and Wales, nearly half of that is spent on
flood defence and risk management .
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| PAUL VALERIO: They are entirely on the remit? |
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NIGEL READER: The Scottish Environmental
Protection Agency is a creature or a body sponsored
by the Scottish Executive. - Not sure this fits??
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HUW VAUGHAN THOMAS: The charges
cover a proportion of the budget.
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NIGEL READER: Charges cover about
30% of total, that is the regulatory charges that have
been raised perhaps a bit more, 35 per cent of
total. I am talking England and Wales now. Grant in
total accounts for between 20 and 25 per cent. [I will
get my percentage wrongs when I add this up at the minute
always risky for a Director of Finance]. But
the balance and the biggest chunk of funding comes from
levies for flood defence that we raise upon Local Authorities
for flood risk management activity. So the balance about
35% - 40% . That adds up roughly. The main regulatory
charges are for environmental protection, and for abstraction
of water from the water environment.
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LORD RICHARD: Is it all
sorry one more question. Is there any sort of
set format it might be coming to Wales out of total?
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NIGEL READER: Well, it's not as
simple as a single allocation. The grant in aid comes
from the National Assembly and will be determined on
the basis of the National Assembly's determination.
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LORD RICHARD: I was thinking
about the
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NIGEL READER: In terms of the
allocation out of the funding that is raised through
charges, through environmental protection charges. It
will be based on assessed needs of regulatory effort
required.
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: I think perhaps
the shorthand figure I keep in my mind is that there
is a net subsidy at the moment from England to Wales
of around £2 million in terms of the environmental protection
responsibility. In terms of our defence, flood defence
responsibilities, if they were to be for example reorganised
on a political basis there will be a need for the order
of an additional £1.7 million per year.
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TED ROWLANDS: 1 7.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER-BOOTH: Do
you have the comparable figure for Scotland?
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: I am sorry
I don't.
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NIGEL READER: No. We don't. Scotland
is again a mixture of some charging income, and
some grant from the Scottish Executive.
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LORD RICHARD: Is this structure
of finance, is it something that you have inherited
or something that has emerged recently?
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NIGEL READER: Flood defence funding
has been unchanged for a long time; that is therefore
an inherited situation of money raised.
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Dr LAURA McALLISTER: That is pre-Devolution.
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NIGEL READER: Indeed. Charging
for regulatory activities, again it existed in our predecessor.
The National Rivers Authority used to charge for abstraction
from and for discharging to the water environment and
that has been inherited. Essentially it is an inherited
situation. I would say that we are trying to make it
more rational. I think that in the submission that came
to you there was reference to the complexity of our
funding sources which in an ideal world we would like
to see simplified.
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LORD RICHARD: You what -
if it is reinforced?
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NIGEL READER: Indeed.
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TOM JONES: You talked of the value
of the background back room providing extra expertise
as and when you required it. The alternative I suppose
is to us would have been the CW alternative where it
is Wales only body, wherein therefore all the
expertise it acquires is based within Wales and it is
a wider remit that you have.
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| And the advantage of having that coming from Wales -
but to what extent do you try to provide some centre of
excellence within Wales to England? Are you based on what
is particularly important for Welsh-based needs? Have
you got any conscious effort being made within the Environment
Agency to move resources out from head quarters to Wales,
in any particular field? |
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: I can give
you a few examples. As a principle we are very conscious
when we make decisions about how we organise the business
in England and Wales, that there needs to be a sensible
distribution of services, expertise and indeed jobs.
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| For example we have the national salmonid centre in
Wales - that is not surprising - but we also run the National
Air Quality Monitoring Centre in Wales. That is largely
to do with decisions on where we source our expertise.
We do endeavour to strike a balance. |
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Dr LAURA McALLISTER: Could you
explain to us how your loop of accountability has changed
post-Devolution in terms of your liaison with Assembly
and Subject Committee and so on?
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: Yes, perhaps
if I describe what our accountability looked like in
Wales then Nigel will be able to put it into an England
and Wales context.
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| We are accountable to the Assembly through our remit
letter which describes what the Assembly want us to deliver
in the coming year. And then we enjoy the scrutiny of
the EPT Committee once a year, describing how it
is we are progressing towards the targets that are set
for us. And then, in addition to that we have, for example,
quarterly sponsorship meetings of officials to make sure
that there is good progress towards these annual targets.
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| And perhaps that is not the most important feature of
why it is a good environment in which to be doing business.
We have unprecedented access, I would say, to Ministers,
which gives us a real opportunity to be responsible in
terms of some of the emerging policy requirements. It
gives us a lead time and remit to improving support at
the right time. |
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Dr LAURA McALLISTER: Before we
talk about England and Wales side, not that much of
a comparison you can probably make, but is there a comparison
to the situation pre-Devolution? What is your opinion
on that?
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: I used to support
Nigel in a previous life in our interface with Whitehall
and it is very, very different. I think that there is
a very clear articulation of what Welsh environmental
priorities are. There is a huge political will to make
progress on them and there is, going back to the earlier
comment, the opportunity for us to join in with regulatory
partners and other environmental bodies, from CCW to
RSPB Cymru and beyond. I think it really oils and speeds
up the extent to which we can deliver real outcomes
for the money that is available to us.
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TOM JONES: To what extent does
your Committee for Wales Chaired now by Gareth Wardell
say yes?
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: I can tell
you all in a moment.
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TOM JONES: To what extent does
that have a responsibility to the Assembly as opposed
to the Chair of the Environment Agency? How do you work
that out?
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: We have a number
of Committee arrangements. If I describe them briefly
to you that will be helpful. There is an Environment
Agency Board and there is a Chairman of that Board.
That is an England and Wales Board which is responsible
to Ministers, and that is the accountability route.
Within Wales, Gareth Gareth Wardell, who is a
member of the Environment Agency Board, has special
responsibilities for Wales. And in that capacity, for
example, chairs our Advisory Panel Wales which comprises
Gareth, myself and the Chairs of our three statutory
Welsh Committees. These are the Regional Flood Defence
Committee, the Fisheries, Ecology and Recreation Committee,
and the EPAC which is the Environmental Protection Advisory
Committee.
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| There will be close liaison between Gareth and Sue Essex
here for example, in describing how the Agency is progressing
against various targets, and indeed Gareth provides that
link back to Environment Agency Board Wales issues and
priorities. I think it might be helpful if Nigel just
described the governance arrangements a little further. |
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NIGEL READER: England and Wales
position, yes. The Agency is a non-departmental public
body. It is an Assembly sponsored public body of course,
as far as activity in Wales is concerned. It has a Board
Chairman, appointed by the Ministers, answering through
Ministers to Parliament. A Chief Executive who is also
the Accounting Officer; she covers England and Wales
in that capacity. Gareth Wardell is appointed by Assembly,
and is the Assembly appointee to the Board. I am an
Executive Director but I am answerable to the Board.
I am not a member of the Board. The Board comprises
15 members including Chairman and Chief Executive; the
Chief Executive is the only executive member, the rest
are non-executive members; Gareth is one.
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TOM JONES: If the Environment
Committee for National Assembly was extremely concerned
about the Agencys work in Wales or a piece of
it, how would they perceive who would they call
to provide evidence? Would they see Gareth as being
diplomat, being an accountable person? Would it be Chair
and Chief Executive or Environment Agency who would
come down and be answerable?
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NIGEL READER: Clearly, Gareth
would play a role in that regard But the ultimate
accountability lies with the Chief Executive and Chairman
on behalf of the Board.
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TOM JONES: On the top of page
two, moving away from that, and you make a very interesting
observation about Devolution in reverse. Where a consequent
Act actually changed the Assembly's role responsibility.
Could you explain that to the Board in more detail please?
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: Yes. The issue
here is that where you have a number of responsibilities
devolved to the Assembly, when you get new legislation
that responsibility, or the equivalent responsibility
in the new Act, is not automatically devolved to the
Agency - to the Assembly, apologies. Which can effectively
appear to reduce the extent of the devolved powers.
We would really suggest that where there is a new Act,
the powers should generally be transferred to the Assembly.
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| The more fundamental issue is that, unlike the Scotland
Act of 1998, which transferred general legislative and
Ministerial competence in the devolved area to the Scottish
Parliament and to the Scottish Executive respectively,
the Government of Wales Act generally provides that discrete
powers not be transferred by the order or by primary legislation.
So the Scotland example would be that general legislative
competence in the environment or agriculture is with Scottish
Parliament. The NAW only have those powers within the
field of the environment or agriculture that have been
transferred to it. |
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TOM JONES: Is that a problem?
Have you had cases where that has been a problem?
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: Lets
say sometimes we have to find pragmatic solutions while
the legislative framework catches up, and the example
on the top of page two is precisely such a case.
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LORD RICHARD: Can I ask
you two other examples you have quoted in the page too
- similarly activities different in England and Wales
in the conservation and regulation.
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| Now, you say recent consultation further increases the
difference. Can you expand on that a bit and the one also
where you say the two countries diverge. Why do you believe
they diverge? |
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: It is really
meant to be an illustrative point more than anything
else. Our primary concern is to ensure that Wales enjoys
the same standards of environmental protection as England,
and this is one example where there is a divergence
and that it appears not to be beneficial to the environment.
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| And conservation: the amendments to the conservation
regulations in England in 2000 mean that Special Areas
of Conservation have a legal status in England and they
don't enjoy that same legal status in Wales, and that
is important. |
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LORD RICHARD: Why is that,
what's ?
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TED ROWLANDS: Is that not by choice
about the Assembly Government?
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LORD RICHARD: That is what
I want to know what's the statutory framework
for that?
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: I am not enormously
au fait with the legislative details of this
particular example, but perhaps if we could talk about
the wider principle. It is where you get a legislation
or amendment to some piece of legislation in England
and where there are devolved powers within the Assembly
to effect that legislation. And the extent to which
that takes place in a parallel or sequential process.
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| Tto pick an example, which might be the Animal By-Product
Regulation Order, the Agency is not the competent part
of that, but it is an EU Regulation that must be enacted
on the first of May.There has been consultation in England
with regard to what that enactment would mean, but we
have not yet had that consultation issued in Wales. So
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LORD RICHARD: What happens?
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: It is a very
good point. The conundrum for a body such as ourselves
is that do we, for example, continue to provide exemptions
for some activities such as land spreading of some of
these products under existing legislation. Or do we
say that we are cognisant of the fact that there is
an EU Regulation coming into place on the first of May,
which must be implemented. Early indications from the
Assembly are that we should act with existing legislation,
but of course we could be open to legal challenge on
that, and that is less than an ideal situation.
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LORD RICHARD: Is that analogy
to the fact that the Assembly has not actually got on
with doing the consultation in time or is it to due
to the structure of the consultation in England?
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: I think there
is huge pressure on the legal resource not only in the
Assembly but I think it would be fair to say DEFRA also.
Governments generally are being faced with whole rafts
of legislation from Europe. I think it is an enormously
important area to invest in. Fundamentally, the whole
purpose of this Commission is to look at expanded powers
of the Assembly however, you have to get your
policy capacity right in terms of deciding what it is
you want to do, as a precursor to having the legislative
powers with which to do it.
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| It is very much the same, really, with implementation
of some of the EU legislation. There is a whole host of
possible options as to how they are implemented and there
is potential for perhaps an improved level (not a diminished
level but an improved level) of compliance in Wales. But
in the absence of the intellectual rigour applied to the
problem in the first case it is difficult to get that. |
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER-BOOTH: The
regulation was made by the Council, by the Commission.
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: It is regulation
that goes into direct effect. I think it has to be a
Commission one to go into direct effect doesn't it?
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER-BOOTH: The
Council would have agreed to it won't they? So our Minister
was a party to this regulation?
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LORD RICHARD: But is not
- precisely it is not the origin of the regulation.
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Dr LAURA McALLISTER: It is a fact
it is coming into force on the
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LORD RICHARD: Different
method of the consultation.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER-BOOTH: But
it's the going one step back if it was too quick
to do it, sometimes happens. We had somebody at the
Council or whole affair or in the Commission that should
have objected early.
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: Through Europe
it would have been a dialogue between the UK and the
Council and the Commission about this regulation. And
there has been some quite effective engagement, for
example there is a UK (I don't know if derogation is
the right technical term) there has been some
kind of agreement of slippage in terms of the cooking
oil element of Animal By-Product Regulation.
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| There is a wider point because there is a bigger challenge
in Wales given the size of the agricultural sector and
the importance of the agricultural sector to the wider
economy. Whilst there is an argument that we should have
a long timetable to think about implementation of some
of these measures, and indeed take more of a risk-based
approach, we need to be making that representation in
Europe through UK Government, which obviously has not
been successful in its entirety on this occasion. |
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PETER PRICE: Can I pick up a couple
of things first I as I understand the picture you have
just painted? Your concerns about the possibility of
divergence in the law between England and Wales as effectively
your area you're in attributing the divergence not to
choice but to the lack of resources to carry forward
legislation in parallel with the lack of resources available
to the National Assembly Government. Is that a direct
correct impression and to what extent could it that
be mitigated and isn't it at the moment being mitigated
by good collaboration with DEFRA?
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: I think that
there are two aspects to it. As you have outlined there
is the issue of resource and I am sure that mitigation
is entirely possible by joined-up working with DEFRA
and indeed, you know, a real Wales presence and voice
in UKREP for example.
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| Coming back to your question of choice though, I think
that is an important one, because that really brings us
to consider the policy development and indeed advocacy
capacity of the Assembly in order to really be shaping
what it is that these lawyers should be bending their
minds to. |
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TED ROWLANDS: To follow through
after that I am not very clear. What we are trying to
get at from you is whether it is a matter of power?
Isn't it partly a matter of powers? Assembly has the
power to implement these directives by statutory delegated
legislation. It has not done so in this case, or perhaps
the resource reason or others it has not chosen
not to do it or actually not got around to it is that
what you're saying in the case of the animal by-product?
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: In the case
of Animal By-Products; in the case of other legislation
it may not have the powers but in this case it does.
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TED ROWLANDS: In the case of the
kinds of special area of conservation that you mentioned
is that a case of not getting round to it, or the adding
it does not want to follow that model I mean?
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: I think it
is a bit of both to be honest.
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LORD RICHARD: It is that
Brussels thing is it? Special area of conservation.
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: It is not a
Brussels thing. If we take our example, where there
is more progress being made. There is a PSA target,
which effectively drives the contract between Treasury
and English Nature. Which means that they have a requirement
to have 95 per cent of SSSIs in favourable condition
by 2010, that PSA target is actively driving key milestones
towards that end objective. And at the moment there
is already 58 per cent achievement they are on
a kind of straight line to the end point.
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| We don't have the same drive in Wales at the moment,
but we do have a backstop which is the Water Framework
Directive. But the Water Framework Directive would not
require that to happen until 2015. So it could in theory,
take us five years longer to get the same point in Wales
as in England, which we would argue was undesirable. As
indeed is the lack of that clear drive in terms of the
milestones, even between now and 2010. |
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PETER PRICE: So far as we are
dealing with resource as the problem, and dominantly
in the example you've stated it is the lack of resource
in the Welsh Assembly Government that is leading to
divergence predominantly where you have cited examples
which you thought was 50/50, choice and perhaps I am
applying mathematics to something that you said both
there. But it seems resource is the bigger of the two
issues rather than choice of divergence down to the
extent that it is resource. How far could this be further
addressed by better elaboration of DEFRA in turning
this the other way around? Is there a lack of good collaboration
with DEFRA from your perspective as an outside body
in the relationship between you two, but one that is
very close to what is going on?
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: Obviously,
you're aware this is an outsider perspective. We do
perceive a lack of resource and perhaps a lack of focus
and direction of the available resource around some
of these issues. Albeit I would say that this is a second
order in the equation.
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| With regard to the relationship between NAW and DEFRA,
I think that there are some good working relationships
in place, but I think it is fair to say that DEFRA themselves
struggle with a lot of this. Which in turn makes the burden
on Wales even greater. I think Nigel you probably see
that better and more closely than I do. |
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NIGEL READER: I was going to add
I think it takes two to collaborate of course, and I
think that DEFRA themselves would in some areas be desperately
short of resource in lawyer support and policy support
in relation to waste in particular. And I think that
their ability to collaborate with National Assembly
officials is somewhat limited and may not be at the
top of their agenda either. I think that improvement
could be made, but what I am saying it is a two-way
thing; it is as much with DEFRA I think as it is with
National Assembly.
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PETER PRICE: I want to pick up
something that you said a moment minute ago, I didn't
have a chance of picking up then that was about the
retrogression of power to the Assembly and this issue
again of whether this is by choice or accident. Where
you have new legislation that appears to take back to
Whitehall power that under previous legislation was
in Wales, in your experience this has been always by
accident or something that has failed to notice it.
And, therefore, that the machinery is not good enough
at the moment for dealing with that, or in principle
that its need is too complex or are choices being exercised
in this?
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: My experience
so far is that it has often been Environment Agency
bringing to the attention of NAW that in fact this diminution
of powers either occurred or is on the verge of occurring.
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PETER PRICE: That was in Whitehall
accident or choice?
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: In Whitehall
I have no idea.
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NIGEL READER: Cock-up or conspiracy?
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PETER PRICE: No evidence. I mean,
when the issue was taken up with them, is there a tendency
to say good heavens is that what we have done, or to
say oh yes that is exactly what we have done?
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: Well discussions
with lawyers usually look closer to the former than
the latter don't they?
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LORD RICHARD: He is a lawyer.
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TED ROWLANDS: When I read your
page two almost from after the first paragraph, the
end of your answer, what struck me was this curious
ambivalence you have got between on the one hand you
like a bit of divergence but not too much. It is sort
of there is that sentence you want the megawatt electricity
power planning position transfer; you want an attainable
[inaudible] in energy again in the subsequent paragraph.
Are you saying that to the Commission that you want
to shift you think that there is more room for
Devolution or is it about writing this whole environment
balance about right? What are you advising us? What
is the message you want to - I get a rather ambivalent
feeling for your page two.
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|
Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: Let me try
to clear that up. I am sure Nigel will want to comment
also. What we want to do is ensure that there is a minimum
level of environmental protection and standards across
England and Wales and indeed preferably beyond. And
you get all of the benefits that come with that,in terms
of creating a level playing field for industry across
England and Wales. You could say that there should not
be any divergence at all.
|
| I take you back again to the example of the Waste Strategy
for Wales. In that respect we enjoy Devolution enormously.
And I suppose that the wider or perhaps more fundamental
question is the opportunity and scope it gives for the
NAW to think in terms of policy development and whether
or not they wish to go above that level playing field
in terms of environmental protection, principally for
the benefit of the wider sustainability that it would
bring. |
| An example would be the way in which we all perceive
Sweden and the fact that it holds its environment in high
regard, and this provides them with competitive advantage.
So the opportunity for Wales to make those decisions to
make that investment we would regard as being very healthy. |
|
TED ROWLANDS: It is question
of investment or a question of primary legislative powers
required to do that or what secondary powers. You have
got to improve standards. How far could it go outside
European directives?
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: There is a
hierarchy of stages. The first is getting the policy
right so you know what it is you want to do. The second
is using the legislative powers that are currently at
your disposal, and you know it is clear from some examples
that we are not getting the maximum benefit out of that.
The third stage is primary legislation, and the decisions
you need to make around that.
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| First of all it is almost as much an emotional decision
as a logical decision in many ways, but it is a political
decision at the end of the day. The balance is around
the extent to which you believe there is the need to spend
money to maintain ground. So you would have a big investment
in keeping up with the legislative requirements coming
from Europe that affect Wales; currently we can piggy-back
on the back of the UK legislative process. |
| At the moment, if I can describe it crudely, in many
ways we get our cake and our jam and eat it all because
we get the business delivered and then we can turn all
our energies and attention into saying exactly what we
want, how we want, some modification and are we going
to spend extra money here there or elsewhere. I think
that primarily legislation would undoubtedly give freedom
where you have got more radical policy decisions, but
there will be a consequence with that,in the cost to the
NAW previously described and the cost to the Environment
Agency, around issues of critical mass skills, economies
of scale, £2 million subsidy in terms of EP and £1.7
million buffer in terms of our flood defence functions. |
|
TOM JONES: When you compare that
through Wales your position to reflect the environmental
needs of Wales with Scotland, bearing in mind that everything
happens in the European framework; that something has
put into Brussels thinking that at an early stage rather
than a late stage, the wishes and sensitivity of the
Scottish environmental to Wales is, that do you think
that you are piggy-backing and trying to influence your
colleagues in the England and Wales Agency is as effective
as the counterpart in Scotland who may not be able to
go more directly to Brussels?
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|
Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: The Brussels
angle is an interesting one. Just before we go to the
Brussels angle though it is probably worth pointing
out to you that our parallel body in Scotland (SEPA)
buy into services provided by the Environment Agency
in England and Wales. A good example would be RIMNET,
which is to do with nuclear incident management, and
our flood warning services. So, effectively, there is
joined up working already with Scotland.
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| The answer to your question is the extent to which you
believe the formal lines of communication with Europe
are as or more effective than the lobbying routes. And
we can probably debate that for the rest of the day. I
think that Wales voice is under-heard in the formal
channels, compared with the extent of what we do with
DEFRA. |
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LORD RICHARD: Is this something
going through Brussels which you have said you have
got views on it? You can't get any documents direct
can you.
|
|
Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: There is two
ways we would do that. We would do it through DEFRA,
so that the UK voice was heard, and through the Wales
European Centre.
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|
TOM JONES: That is the relative
thing isn't it? What I was asking you about was the
input at the beginning of it you see, is not Brussels
then you find at a later stage, heck this will
effect Wales in a certain way which will contravene
or contradict our established policies here so it is
getting that in early enough.
|
| The question was whether the Scottish Environment Agency
is able to do that because of its extra responsibilities
or not? |
|
Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: The first thing
to say in going back to your point about needing to
be in Europe is that we have now got better joined-up
working between the Agency and DEFRA. Traditionally,
we have not necessarily been welcomed with open arms
in that debate in dialogue and they have seen it as
something for civil servants to do. .
|
| Going back to WEC. I don't see that as entirely reactive.
There is huge opportunity for us to be proactive there.
We have had a secondee from the Environment Agency in
the WEC for the last year who has been very good at identifying
what some of the potential issues and challenges for Wales
are in the forthcoming legislation. The extent to which
Scotland is more effective than England in making the
European connection is questionable. |
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TOM JONES: And Wales the
Wales end of it?
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NIGEL READER: I don't think I
would be qualified to judge effectively in terms of
the European agenda. It is certainly getting better
the route through for the Agency in England and
Wales with DEFRA; there is much more of a joining up
in terms of the influence going into Europe. Now in
part that trend has been accelerated by the financial
management and policy review of the Agency, which recognised
that the Agency could do better, but also the things
that DEFRA could do better for the Agency or with the
Agency. One of which was giving the Agency an influence
in respect of what DEFRA was doing in Europe.
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LORD RICHARD: You haven't
actually had a case yet have you where your Welsh views
look of legislation radically differs from the English
view? What did you do there about you know you
might say I suppose nothing there is nothing
we can do about it?
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: There are probably
two things that would happen. Firstly, we would seek
to influence colleagues who are making that representation.
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LORD RICHARD: In Government?
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: In Government
and also through UKREP. . The other thing we do pragmatically
is endeavour to design slightly modified implementation
regimes .
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LORD RICHARD: It strikes
me using your evidence that it all works really reasonably
well provided that Wales and England want the same thing
- its when you know there are diversions then there
is problems. If the divergences don't get deeper there
will be problems.
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|
Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: Yes. There
will be bigger challenges and issues to manage. We can't
sit here and pretend that they will be insurmountable
because clearly they are not, and we see models elsewhere
that have been managed. But I suppose that it is just
acknowledgement of what those challenges are and the
costs associated with them.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER-BOOTH: I would
like to follow up this point about the influencing of
European draft legislation and the early stage. My first
question is does the National Assembly play a part on
this, if so is it effective? That is the first question?
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: The National
Assembly has a direct route through lobbying and, in
terms of the reconstitution of the WEC and the establishment
of the National Assembly office as part of new arrangements,
they have a route there. They don't have an official
voice as a distinctive Member State in the type of official
representation delegation.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER-BOOTH: The
reason for asking this is that years ago I was concerned
with the European Communities Committee in the House
of Lords, and it had a sub-committee on the environment,
and it had people on it like Lord Ashby, Lady White,
and it had Wales advisers like Professor Ron Edwards
from Cardiff. And they went over to Brussels and they
had an intellectual dialogue with the people in the
Commission, and to a much less extent in the Council.
And they often won the argument but this is my impression,
I am not an expert. Now does that kind of thing happen
from Wales now through the Assembly or in any other
way?
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: We have limited
exposure to the decision making or indeed the opportunity
to influence that decision making in Europe.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER-BOOTH: Going
back to your point, it is about getting in early and
that is much more effective than trying to stop people
doing things at the last moment. In a way that is what
seems to me in going back all these years from the House
of Lords in the 70's with this, the 70's, they were
getting in early, and they were winning the argument.
They were making complete fools of the people in the
Commission indeed DG[?] whatever it was but.
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LORD RICHARD: The Commission
is a very able body. If you want to talk to the Commission
you go to them and say presumably if you don't go and
talk to them, it is because you feel inhibited doing
it rather than that there is a bar at the other end.
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|
Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: Interesting
observation because we recently had the Chair of the
Environment Committee come and speak to the Chair of
our Committees.
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LORD RICHARD: Your Committee?
In this Assembly?
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: In Europe.
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PETER PRICE: Which institute in
Europe? Parliament?
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: The MEP running
the environment.
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PETER PRICE: Caroline Jackson.
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: Caroline Jackson.
She was lamenting the extent to which Member States
effectively engage with Parliament. She said the level
of challenge she has experienced is paltry.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: That is down
the road to Parliament. The people you have got to get
at in Brussels is the Commission when they are thinking
about policies and my experience of Brussels was that
the Commission was very open to discussion.
|
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TED ROWLANDS: You did not as a
Welsh Agency go to the European Commission without permission
from headquarters?
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Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: No.
|
|
LORD RICHARD: Without clearing
it with the UK body?
|
|
Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: No, we would
have dialogue with colleagues in England., largely in
order to tap into the policy advice and expertise that
would reside there as to how to make our case in the
Commission. Hopefully, that will be effective.
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|
PETER PRICE: Can I take up the
issue of how much legislative space there is to be divided
between the UK and Welsh levels? The point being in
very large areas the legislation is in fact EU legislation,
and if I can just try and see what the picture is of
where the areas of legislative competence are within
the UK, to be split up. Would it be accurate to say
standards are set for air, water, soil, and waste all
at the level of EU legislation, and that in those areas,
what we are talking about is our monitoring and enforcement,
with the possibility of tweaking the standards a little,
not really very much? And that if we are talking about
monitoring and enforcement given that there is a divergence
of structures between England and Wales. For example,
in local authorities, and some other agencies, inevitably
there are going to be growing divergences in issues
to do with monitoring, and enforcement, requiring different
legislation or whoever passes it for England and Wales.
Is that any kind of accurate snapshot?
|
|
Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: I was with
you until you got to the point of saying that there
will be monitoring and enforcement done by separate
people in separate places. What was your point after
that?
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|
PETER PRICE: That the structures
for example, in local Government in Wales, as compared
with Local Government in England, are increasingly divergent,
and that because the agencies in Wales that are going
to be involved in monitoring and enforcement, are differently
structured, that inevitably, that means that the e-legislation
governing them, whether it be primary or secondary,
has to be different. To what extent is that true and
at WEC?
|
|
Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: I would not
digress from that proposition.
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PETER PRICE: In what ways?
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|
Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: If we are talking
about creating a level playing field or indeed settling
for a minimum standard across Europe, you want bodies,
however discrete and divergent, having a shared and
common understanding of the required outcome. I think
that is huge. We are currently involved in new legislation
and getting into the detail of implementation.
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| And we neglected to talk about what the environmental
outcome is in adequate detail, so that all these different
bodies can be aligning themselves around delivering that
outcome. So I would hope that even with divergent structures
you would get a greater degree of commonality in terms
of the end product that is being delivered. |
|
TOM JONES: In one sense I think
earlier on you were critical of the fact that quality
of SIs in Wales and England was not of the same order
because on the one hand the Treasury was directing targets
for this nature, another had increased the quality of
an SI with a different mechanism. You haven't got to
have that sort of target setting because the quality
of the piece of land can be to encouragement of voluntary
process as well as the protected process. So the environment
scheme for Wales could achieve the same outcomes for
sensitive evidence meant as could be a protective negative
position of the blanket negativity. So, what I am saying
is that divergent policy can actually achieve the same
European-wide standard, the flexibility for that.
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|
Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: I think what
you are actually describing for me is divergent implementation
not divergent standards. So I think that we can now
have commonality of standard and an agreement about
environmental outcome. I think that there are huge opportunities
for that possibility in terms of how this is delivered.
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TED ROWLANDS: That is what Brussels
and Treasury and everybody else has to do to have adjusted.
The Commission is looking at the alternatives; the obvious
alternative model is the Scottish model. To what extent
from your experience, is the Scottish model appropriate
as an alternative to the England and Wales model? In
other words are there any material differences in environmental
issues between the Scotland and England relationship,
between England and Wales relationship, that would not
make the Scottish model particularly appropriate to
apply?
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|
Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: I don't know
if I am qualified really to comment on the Scottish
legislative process. I suppose the only thing I may
be able to offer on that is some help in that looking
at our parallel bodies in Scotland and comparing and
contrasting them, which I am not sure is entirely the
gist of your question. But when you look at the SEPA,
there are positives and negatives. Things that would
frustrate me enormously working in SEPA are that they
are only kind of half a body in many ways have
got all the environmental protection function of the
Environment Agency and a flood warning responsibility,
but they have no wider flood defence responsibilities.
So they miss huge opportunities for real integration,
particularly in terms of river basin management.
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| The other frustration I would have is the fact that
they have no powers to refer cases to Court. It all has
to be done through the Procurator Fiscal. Whereas in England
and Wales we have no such requirement to go through the
Crown Prosecution Service. |
| There are other areas where they are making significant
progress, for example Sustainable Urban Drainage. I think
SEPA would be considered to be way ahead of the Environment
Agency in England or in Wales. But I think that that is
more an issue of turning your mind to the particular priority
rather than any information structure or internal arrangement.
Is there anything you want to add Nigel? |
|
NIGEL READER: The issue was looked
at again as part of the financial management and policy
review in terms of looking at the SEPA model for the
Environment Agency. The balance of judgement was that
the model we have now is better. The benefit I think
is the access to the critical mass, and the economies
of scale; you can get diseconomies of scale of course.
We do watch carefully, to ensure we have got a fair
proportion of costs and funding to Agency Wales. The
balance of judgement is that the current arrangement
is a more efficient and effective set-up.
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: You mention that
there was this interaction was it F something?
|
|
NIGEL READER: FMPR financial
management and policy review, also known as a quinquennial
or five yearly review .
|
|
TED ROWLANDS: When did it take
place?
|
|
NIGEL READER: Two years ago. It
reported at the beginning of last year.
|
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TED ROWLANDS: That is a document
you have.
|
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NIGEL READER: Yes we certainly
have it. Im happy to make that available.
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TOM JONES: The issue there was
because at the same time the Assembly was doing a review
of the County for Wales. And they could look at the
two individual organisations in depth and detail which
they did. But what they could not do is actually take
a more localistic view of the environmental responsibilities
and protection on a Wales basis because you are an England
and Wales body, that we were a Wales-only body
they could not actually rejig the whole thing. So that
you came to an end at that point, but you couldn't take
a broader change.
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| Can you tell me, being accountable to the Assembly you
obviously presumably meet Sue Essex the Minister and your
officials on a fairly regular basis. Have you been before
the Environment Committee and have you noticed any change
in their capacity to question you from the earlier days,
in that we are told that now they have a policy capacity
which helps Assembly Members or the Committee who are
not Members of the Assembly Government, to scrutinise
and to ask questions of detail. Are you aware of anything,
any sort of deepening of their interrogation of you? |
|
Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: Yes absolutely.
Which is super. I think that the other thing is that
they are advocating greater policy focus. I think they
are holding down areas where they really want to make
a difference. An example would be the planning document
Delivering for Wales. That is something
that we are really getting behind and driving through.
Biodiversity would be another example where they have
had a big focus, taking evidence from all sorts of people
and really setting the agenda on priorities to push
it forward.
|
| I suppose the one thing I would also advocate is perhaps
a bit more joining up across the Committees. For example,
we had a joint Committee spanning agriculture and environment
to deal with the foot and mouth crises. And now, when
we talk with Sue Essex about agriculture and waste issues,
we need to have a parallel discussion with Mike German
because all the waste bits Sue Essex will be looking at,
and the agriculture bits Mike German will be looking
after. Whilst we do some joining up at official level,
I think that there is that opportunity for us to encourage
some more of that joining up in determination of policy
setting and scrutiny. |
|
Dr LAURA McALLISTER: I want to
take you back to something you said earlier on that
I found interesting, that was in connection with the
relationship between policy capacity and potential for
legislative change. I wonder if you could answer this
within the context of the sustainable development duty
that rests with the Assembly in many respects. I wondered
if you could in your paper you refer to some
areas where there is clearly an overlap of policy spheres
between environmental policy and energy policy, in particular
the DTI impact on windfarms I think is example you give
us.
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| I wonder in terms of that, if we are to assess the success
of the Devolution settlement, which of course includes
yourselves as well. Is there any weakness in it to be
judged the problem which could be solved by the
transfer of specific functions or are they fundamental
weaknesses which could only be solved through primary
legislative capacity? I wonder if you could answer that
if you can within the context of the sustainable development?
Have there been times or have there been instances where
problems in developing that policy could only be solved
through primary legislative panels? |
|
Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: Let us start
with the energy example. I think that the energy example
is a very important one because you could argue that
energy policies arestrategic issues for UK Government.
But then, bearing in mind the Assemblys sustainable
development duty, and indeed the recent White Paper
on Energy and the importance of renewables, it is clearly
important for Wales to be able to make decisions about
the size, scale, pace and location of these renewable
facilities. So I think that there is a balance to be
struck between the Assembly's aspirations in terms of
really being a sustainable country, and what could be
perceived as a constraint.
|
| But in answer to your direct question re primary legislation
or transfer of powers; presumably, either legislative
model would work. One example where we are pressing quite
hard for primary legislation is around the Fisheries Review.
We had a Fisheries Review looking at England and Wales,
and there are a number of archaic practices and whole
lists of by-laws and all sorts of issues that could be
rationalised and moved away by a primary legislation Bill.
I know we are pressing quite hard for that one. |
| But I am not sure that I can think of other examples.
I suppose the conundrum there is whether you join in with
the UK in terms of drawing up primary legislation, or
whether it is something you try to tackle on your own.
There are pros and cons of both. |
|
PETER PRICE: If I may come in
on the inter-dependence between your organisation and
others in Wales. We have talked about the National Assembly
essentially today, and we know your independence with
your own parent body, but what other organisations are
important to you in carrying out your trials and in
what ways are they important? For example, what is the
role of the authority? Can you put that in perspective
of which are bodies and what are the bodies and yours
in relation to?
|
|
Dr HELEN PHILLIPS: Yes, to take
your lead in terms of the local authorities, hugely
important, principally around where we have shared responsibilities.
And there are a number of examples of that with local
authorities. Contaminated land would be one, where local
authorities are responsible for identifying contaminated
land, indeed the designation of contaminated land. Another
example would be fly tipping, where local authorities
look after small scale non-hazardous fly tip waste,
and the Agency look after fly tip waste at the other
end of the spectrum.
|
| Another example is where we are co-regulators. |
| Another example around local authorities as planning
authorities, where clearly decision-making powers are
theirs, but there is an advisory role for us. A notable
example is development in the flood plain, where we are
very dependent on local authorities taking our views into
account. |
| There is a kind of anomaly in Wales at the moment in
regard to our status as statutory consultee. We need our
role to be enshrined in legislation. At the moment we
are in limbo, but needless to say I am happy to report
that the local authorities are general happy to have our
advice. The other sector, if I could put them together,
would be other environmental organisations. I would include
in that the CCW, Forestry Commission, RSPB Cymru, by way
of example of organisations that have aspirations or are
charged with delivering certain environmental outcomes
where we have an overlapping or parallel interest. I think
it is fair to say that they intend to be more parallel
than overlapping because obviously with the Financial
Management and Policy Review and other such initiatives
we have effected a reasonable mapping exercise of responsibilities.
Is there any degree of duplication that we need to be
seeking to eliminate or to work in a more joined-up way?
Surprisingly really, duplication is marginal. |
| Then there are other sectors. There are community-based
groups with which we interact with in two different capacities.
One as a way of raising awareness of environmental issues
in terms of taking some personal responsibility for good
environmental management and practices. But that is notoriously
hard and it is often best to tackle it on the scale of
the general public rather than community groups. We do
a certain amount of that. I suppose that the kind of more
focused interaction is in licensing decisions where we
have a frank debate with communities. The source of some
of that tension is often the understanding of the extent
to which they have been informed as opposed to the extent
to which they are being consulted, ie what the extent
of their influence is on the decision-making process.
|
| And our legislative requirements are invariably to make
decisions based on sound science. There are a number of,
if I can use the planning analogy, material considerations
we can take into account, for they are often not as wide
as the considerations our communities would like to see.
In many respects we are our own worst enemies in that
way because we don't parallel track the planning applications
procedure and the authorisation procedure. So communities
often have had quite a long dialogue between two parties
by the time any development proposal comes to fruition,
and we are not best served by that. |
|
LORD RICHARD: Can I thank
you very much indeed for coming? Clearly is very interesting
and fascinating - we have heard an awful lot so far
from ministerial and Government elements so it is nice
to talk to you at the sharp end. Thank you very much
indeed.
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