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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CHAIR OF THE ENVIRONMENT, PLANNING
& TRANSPORT COMMITTEE OF THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY FOR
WALES,
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RICHARD EDWARDS
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held at
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National Museum & Gallery, Cardiff
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on
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5th December 2002
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LORD RICHARD: Thank you very much for
coming. We are much obliged. I wonder if you could introduce
yourself and your colleagues for the record.
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Good afternoon, ladies
and gentlemen. Thank you very much for the opportunity
to give evidence to you today.
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I am Richard Edwards, Assembly Member,
and I chair the Assemblys Environment, Planning
and Transport Committee. I am accompanied by Siwan Davies,
who is the Clerk to the Committee, and by Mr Keith Bush,
who has acted as legal adviser to the Committee, particularly
in the course of the Nantygwyddon investigation by the
Committee.
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LORD RICHARD: What we have asked people
to do is in effect speak for five to ten minutes and
open the subject up and then answer questions.
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RICHARD EDWARDS: That is fine. Thank
you for the opportunity to give evidence. The Commission
will have seen already my written submission and really
the first point that I would like to emphasise is that
although the subject committees in the Assembly have
the same formal structure - we all have a policy development
role and a scrutiny role, we all have members of the
executive sitting as fully fledged members of the Committee
but, of course, we do not have executive powers as such
- all the subject committees are different and I think
what defines their mode of operation and the influence
that they are able to bring to bear on the executive
is the relationship and the internal dynamic between
the chair of the Committee, the Minister in the Committee
and the members of the Committee.
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Our Committee has developed a method
of working constructively with the Minister rather than
adopting an adversarial approach. Actually that approach
has persisted despite quite a turnover in Committee
membership. Only three of the current members of the
Committee, that includes the Minister and myself, were
actually members of the Committee when it was set up
in April 2000. At some stage or another I think over
a third of the Assembly have sat on the Environment,
Planning and Transport Committee. I think this constructive
engagement with the Minister has enabled the Committee
to influence the Welsh Assembly Government= s agenda.
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I draw attention to perhaps the two
most important areas of work for the Committee which
have been the policy review of public transport and
the Nantygwyddon investigation.
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The transport policy review considered
steps needed to facilitate improved and integrated public
transport services in Wales and whether the depth and
breadth of the Assembly= s powers over public transport
were a barrier to doing so. It concluded that whilst
some improvements could be delivered within the existing
settlement, longer term statutory and organisational
changes were required. It highlighted a gap in the Assembly=
s powers over transport, both in relation to Whitehall
and local government.
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Perhaps if I can refer you to paragraph
seven of the written submission and quote from it. The
review identified a A ... lack of specific power to
require local authorities to plan and deliver joined-up
(regional) public transport services...@
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: For once
that piece of current jargon could mean something. You
have enlightened us on that. The Government uses it
as A love all@ . I am sorry I interrupted.
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RICHARD EDWARDS: That is fine.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: I am delighted.
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Okay. Thank you very
much. A ... lack of regulatory powers affecting bus
and rail services; lack of statutory control over the
Traffic Commissioner; and no specific provisions in
respect of rail services.@
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As for the independent investigation
into the Nantygwyddon landfill site, that followed concerns
expressed by local residents about the effect of the
site on their health and the environment. It set a precedent
for the work of the subject committees. It adopted the
novel procedure of using an independent investigator
to undertake detailed investigation and make recommendations
to the Committee. The Committee invited interested parties
to appear before it and comment directly on the investigator=
s recommendations. The Committee then reported in turn
to the Assembly and its recommendations were endorsed
in full by the Assembly in plenary session.
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It highlighted issues associated with
the power of committees and also the roles of the Minister
and members of the committee. Again, if I can perhaps
refer you to paragraphs 12 and 13 of the written submission
and quote again from it. Paragraph 12, first: A Public
inquiries can summon witnesses and require the production
of documents. Committees themselves can only do so ...
in relation to the staff of certain public bodies.@
As far as Nantygwyddon is concerned, that is related
to the Environment Agency and the health authority and
obviously the officials of the Assembly itself. The
Committee was to some extent hampered by its inability
to obtain information about the affairs of the waste
disposal company which had at one time operated the
tip. I feel that Consideration should be given to whether
the Assembly= s power to require the attendance before
committees of witnesses and the production of documents
should extend to all individuals or bodies who have
information relevant to the Assembly= s functions.
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In terms of the role of the Minister,
I think there was a potential anomaly here arising out
of the legal character of the Assembly as a single corporate
body. It emerged that the results of the Committee=
s investigation were being cited as evidence in support
of complaints being investigated by the European Commission
against the UK for alleged failure to implement effectively
the Waste Framework Directive. The Assembly (Welsh Assembly
Government) is the channel through which the UK Government
gathers information to defend itself against such complaints.
The Minister found herself in the position of being
required to assist the UK Government in relation to
a matter where the Committee, of which she is a member,
has itself carried out an investigation.
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On the question of the roles of members
themselves, in my own personal view, and this is a personal
view, I think it is anomalous that a member of the Committee,
and in this case a member of the investigation, was
a member of the local authority also which was one of
the bodies under investigation. I know that members
of other legislatures in the UK can be members of local
authorities also. What I would say - again in my own
personal view - about Wales is that it is a very small
country. I think relationships are quite close and relationships
between committees of government are quite close. I
think there is scope for possible conflict of interest
and a public perception of impropriety. Now I hasten
to add that the member in question behaved perfectly
in accord with legal requirements and standing orders
and in practice I do not think really there was a problem
but in theory in my own view there is a problem and
certainly it made me feel uncomfortable.
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I think I should mention, also, perhaps
to end with, the Planning Decision Committee which is
a curious hybrid between the executive and legislative
parts of the Assembly. Decisions relating to called-in
planning applications and recovered appeals under the
Town and Country Planning Act 1990 and applications
for orders under the Transport and Works Act 1992 are
taken by full committee members and not by an individual
minister, which is what happens in England and Scotland,
of course. The aim is to be transparent and to have
transparent evidence based decisions. I would say the
approach has been successful in that there has been
no successful legal challenge to any decision of a Planning
Decision Committee. They are cross-party bodies but
the experience has been that consensus has almost always
been achieved and on the few occasions when there have
been differences of opinion then these have cut across
party boundaries usually.
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Again, my written submission highlights
issues relating to joint decision making with Whitehall.
Can I just refer you to paragraphs 18 and 19. A ...
there is in the pipeline one called-in application which
will involve a joint decision with the Department of
Trade and Industry@ . Now of course there may not be
a difference of view between Whitehall and the Assembly,
the planning decision committee, but should there be
a difference of view it is unclear what would happen
in that event.
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Paragraph 19 A Where a Transport and
Works Act Order affects both England and Wales, the
decision whether to make it is that of the Secretary
of State, but the consent of the Assembly is required.@
The situation did arise recently with the Wye Navigation
Order 2002. Actually the Assembly voted unanimously
to give the necessary consent having been provided with
the reasons of the Secretary of State for wanting to
make the order. Clearly again the potential for a different
view being taken by the Assembly to that of the Secretary
of State is there and again it is open to question what
would happen in that event. As I say this has not happened
often at all but I am just signposting a potential problem.
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I think perhaps I should stop there.
I have given you some overview of some of the main areas
of interest in the Committee= s remit. Thank you.
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LORD RICHARD: Thank you very much indeed.
Do you think the Assembly is big enough?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: My own view, again
this is a personal view, I am not speaking on behalf
of the Committee but I think I am speaking perhaps from
my experience as Chair of the Committee in part anyway,
is I think the Assembly is too small. I think there
should be more members. I think there is a problem.
I know that in the written submission from the Panel
of Chairs the point was made that the pressure on time
and the difficulty of timetabling does, you could argue,
encourage more focus on the part of subject committees
to prioritise. To some extent that is true but I think
on the other hand it is very difficult for members to
achieve their maximum potential in terms of knowledge
and expertise of subject matter when they are members
of several committees and the pressure of time means
they cannot research as thoroughly as they might be
able to do otherwise. I think this is reflected perhaps
in the scrutiny function of the committee. I think there
is plenty of breadth in terms of scrutiny but perhaps
depth when it comes to subject matter is questionable.
I do feel that if there were more Assembly Members then
it would be easier for members of subject committees
to acquire greater in-depth knowledge of the subject
matter.
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The other point I would make, perhaps,
in relation to this question is there has been quite
a high turnover of committee members - I think the point
is made in the submission - which militates against
a collective memory. Again, I think that does undermine
the effectiveness of the Committee both in terms of
policy development and in terms of scrutiny in terms
of in-depth knowledge of the subject matter.
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TOM JONES: On that point, none of the
committee members apart from yourself and the Minister
have been there ---
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RICHARD EDWARDS: And one other.
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TOM JONES: --- longer than two years,
yet out of that Committee is formed the final arbiter
to planning inquiries, etc. In terms of the depth of
experience the Committee members may have less experience
than the Minister would have perhaps. Is this a good
or bad thing? Is that a final decision or does the Minister
receive your recommendations as a Committee?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: No.
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TOM JONES: The accountability is to
the Committee in that sense.
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RICHARD EDWARDS: The final decision
is that of the Planning Decision Committee which tends
to be chaired either by myself or by the Minister. Of
course it will depend on what part of the country the
appeal relates to. Clearly if it happened in my constituency
or a neighbouring constituency then obviously I would
have an interest, or potential interest, and would not
be part of the Decision Committee. The same would apply
to the Minister. I do not know what the breakdown is
but I would chair most of the Planning Decision Committees
and if I do not generally it is the Minister who does
so.
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I think every member of the Planning
Decision Committee is required to take some basic training.
I think it is a fair point that you make. In this case
the Minister is a professional planner so she would
anyway have perhaps more detailed knowledge of the subject
than your ordinary run of the mill politician.
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TOM JONES: The point I want to make
is that here is an example of where the Committee has
power, we have talked about scrutiny powers of the Committee
and we have talked with other Chairs about the ability
of the Committee to influence policy decision making,
here is a decision making role of the Committee which
is far reaching.
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Yes, indeed, but again
I think the point is made in the submission that the
Committee is advised by officials.
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TOM JONES: By the Assembly Government=
s officials?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Yes, by the Assembly
Government officials, yes.
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TOM JONES: In the case of Mr Bush here,
he is your Committee= s adviser?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Mr Bush did advise
the Committee on the Nantygwyddon investigation. I do
not know, Mr Bush, if you want to clarify your position,
perhaps you had better.
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KEITH BUSH: I think the formal position
is that the Office of the Counsel General provides advice
not only to the Assembly Government but also, where
needed, to the legislative and scrutiny side of the
Assembly. Obviously great care is needed to avoid situations
where a conflict of interest can arise. In relation
to Planning Decision Committees no conflict of interest
arises because that executive function has been totally
delegated to those Committees.
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VIVIENNE SUGAR: Is the Planning Decision
Committee formed from your own Committee?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Yes.
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VIVIENNE SUGAR: How do you avoid conflict
of interest there where as part of a ten member Committee
a member might have participated in a strategic discussion
about environmental considerations in Wales which are
at the heart of an individual planning appeal when that
comes before them? They may have expressed an opinion
already in Committee about the general policy of such
matters.
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RICHARD EDWARDS: I am not aware such
a situation has arisen. Keith?
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KEITH BUSH: The guidance which is given
to members is that first of all if there is any specific
conflict of interest they are disqualified from being
a member. When it comes to the kind of issue you are
referring to, where it is a politically controversial
topic where a member, perfectly naturally, may have
expressed a view in policy terms, then the guidance
adopts a rather lighter touch and suggests that really
it is a matter for the conscience of individual members.
If they feel so wedded to a particular attitude to a
particular kind of development, for example, that they
feel they would not be able to look at the matter objectively
then they are advised they should not participate in
the decision.
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VIVIENNE SUGAR: Yes. I am going to
risk Lord Richard= s wrath here - and pain of death
not to mention wind farms - if the Committee had produced
a report on sustainable energy, how could the public
then believe that as a member of a Planning Decision
Committee somebody would be unencumbered to hear the
individual appeal case?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: I think that is a
very good question. I do not think I can answer that.
All I can say, on the basis of experience so far, is
obviously such a situation has not arisen.
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LORD RICHARD: It has not been challenged?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: It has not been challenged.
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LORD RICHARD: It has not been challenged
in the courts?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: No. There has not
been any legal challenge. There was one attempt to challenge
but the applicant withdrew before it came to court.
Sorry, I think there was one attempted challenge but
the applicant in question dropped the challenge before
it went to court.
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Can I say again perhaps about the membership
of the Planning Decision Committee. It does draw its
members from the Planning Committee although of course,
as I pointed out earlier, about a third of the members
of the Assembly have undergone the basic training. I
do feel myself that it is quite a burden, frankly, on
the Planning Committee that only members of the Planning
Committee can sit on Planning Decision Committees. There
is a rota and four members from cross-party will sit
on it. I would say especially there is a pressure on
the smaller parties who find themselves often in the
position where they would need to sit on practically
every Planning Decision Committee. I do feel - this
is my personal view again - that the membership needs
to be drawn from a wider network in the Assembly.
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PAUL VALERIO: Can you explain why it
is there is such a high turnover of Committee members?
The preceding witnesses have been supported in their
committees by two or three original members. Is this
common throughout the whole of the Assembly? What is
the underlying reason why there is such a high turnover?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: I think it is a common
feature of all. Far be it for me to speak for all the
other subject committees but I think it is a common
feature. It has been a particular feature of this Committee.
I can only say really it is a matter for the party political
groups. For instance, was it in March, April, May of
this year that the Plaid Cymru group on the Committee,
of where there were three members, were all substituted
en bloc by three others. As I say, that is a
matter for the party political group, it is a choice
for them but it has an unfortunate effect on the Committee
because obviously three people who had sat on the Committee
for about a year and acquired a certain level of expertise
and knowledge were removed and new people had to build
up that base of knowledge and did not share the collective
memory of the Committee stemming back to its inauguration.
It undermines continuity and, I would suggest, effectiveness
certainly.
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PETER PRICE: What is the role of the
Deputy Minister in the Committee and generally, taking
your field but also compared with other Deputy Ministers?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: The Deputy Minister
has no real role in the Committee and the Deputy Minister
is not a member of the Committee and does not attend
Committee meetings. So, quite frankly, I think that
is all I can say on the matter. It is a matter for the
Minister and the Government.
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PETER PRICE: Whether he was a member
of the Committee would depend on a particular circumstance?
There is no policy running through all the committees?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: No.
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PETER PRICE: On the Health Committees
he is the Deputy Minister, on your Committee, is he
not?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: No. It is for the
party political groups and the Government. Obviously
Deputy Ministers do sit on some committees which cover
the portfolio that they are responsible for, if that
is the right word, because I have to say - and again
I am speaking personally and not towing any sort of
party line - I am quite confused, really, about what
the Deputy Minister does or does not do. I have to say,
frankly, in practice it is very much open to the Minister
what the Deputy Minister does and does not do. The Minister
will choose in practice. Deputy Ministers do not have
any locus in the Act.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: Do they
get paid additionally?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: No, they do not.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: Do they
have infrastructure and private secretaries and so on?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: No, they do not. No,
they do not get any sort of financial support.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: A bit like
a PPS?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: I suppose, yes. I
do not know if that is an exact parallel but probably
that is the best I would be able to think of, yes.
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LAURA McALLISTER: Can you elaborate
a little bit about your scrutiny role in relation to
the ASPBs particularly? You mentioned the Environment
Agency in your paper and obviously that is a difficult
one in respect that it is an England and Wales body.
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Yes.
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LAURA McALLISTER: We heard from one
of the other subject chairs that her Committee did not
place the scrutiny of the ASPBs necessarily as a priority.
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Did not necessarily?
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TOM JONES: Before you answer, can I
declare an interest as a member of CCW.
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Right, okay. I will
be very careful about what I say about the CCW.
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TOM JONES: On the contrary.
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LAURA McALLISTER: Can you say to what
extent it has been a priority for the Committee and,
secondly, how you have gone about scrutinising and how
effective you think that scrutiny has been?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: I think scrutiny of
the ASPBs has been a top priority for the Committee.
I would say there is a sharp contrast between the method
of scrutiny of, say, the Minister and the method of
scrutiny adopted for ASPBs which has tended to be more
in a sort of select committee style of scrutiny perhaps,
more adversarial.
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The Committee holds an annual session
with the CCW, the Environment Agency and the National
Parks where they are scrutinised on all aspects of their
functions. Again, I think I would make the point that
in terms of the result of the scrutiny we have been
quite good at identifying the need for review of functions
of the various agencies, for instance to what extent
they seem to overlap the need for a more streamlined
and more coherent approach but perhaps not so good at
the subject based scrutiny of bodies. This relates in
part to turnover and the pressure on members of the
Committee. Most of them are members of other subject
committees as well as standing committees and there
are all the other commitments which Assembly Members
have.
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VIVIENNE SUGAR: Talking about the difficulty
you have around obtaining evidence and the power to
summon witnesses which you referred to in the document.
Obviously it was a matter of concern that someone was
claiming something was commercially confidential which
was why the information could not be supplied. How big
an issue is this generally?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: I raised that particular
question in the context of an adequate ongoing investigation.
Quite frankly it is only in the context of that investigation
that it has been a problem.
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VIVIENNE SUGAR: It is mentioned in
the evidence we have from the Panel of Chairs as a general
principle.
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RICHARD EDWARDS: I believe that in
the Local Government and Housing Committee in particular
there was a problem about the leader of a local authority
refusing to attend and give evidence. I am aware of
that but I do not think I am aware - off the top of
my head anyway - of any other instances.
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TED ROWLANDS: May I pursue Laura= s
point. It is interesting. You do consider it as a priority
to scrutinise these bodies. Ministers have come to us
and said A No, we have these bodies much more accountable
to us because we issue much more detailed remit letters
specifying what we expect of them than ever before pre-devolution@
. As a Committee do you see in either draft form or
at any stage the ministerial remit letters to each of
these three bodies you mentioned?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: I am not aware.
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TED ROWLANDS: The remit letters - which
I have to say I think I am right in saying the Ministers
have laid quite heavy store by them saying to us A this
is the way we have made quangos more accountable@ -
they are not shared with you?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: I am not aware of
these remit letters, certainly not in so far as they
apply to the ASPBs which come within our remit. I have
to say that is news to me.
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PETER PRICE: The bodies which come
within your remit generally - I suppose some of them
are funded by the Assembly and some are not such as
the Environment Agency - maybe the remit letter might
not apply to a body such as the Environment Agency whereas
it would apply to a body that was funded by the Assembly?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: There is an issue
I suppose about the Environment Agency in the sense
that it is an England body and a Wales body and it is
jointly funded by Whitehall and by Cardiff. I think
there is some concern within the Committee about the
accountability of the Environment Agency. I have to
say in practice there have not been any problems in
terms of the attendance of representatives from the
Environment Agency in the Committee. Usually what tends
to happen is the Director in Wales is seen to be responsible
or accountable to the Committee and the Minister for
the Environment Agency in Wales, although the Chief
Executive did attend the meeting when we discussed the
FMPR - which is Financial Management and Policy Review
- of the Environment Agency. It is important and I think
I am expressing the general view of the Committee that
the Environment Agency is not seen as an England and
Wales body but an England body and a Wales body which
is jointly accountable and the Chief Executive of which
is jointly accountable to the Secretary of State in
Whitehall and to the Assembly Minister in Cardiff.
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LORD RICHARD: Could I come back to
scrutiny administered by your Committee. The Minister
is a member of the Committee?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Yes.
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LORD RICHARD: To anybody looking at
it from outside it looks a bit too cosy to be effective
as a body scrutinising its own membership.
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Yes.
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LORD RICHARD: It may help in policy
formation but does it inhibit as far as scrutiny is
concerned?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: I suppose it depends
on your definition of scrutiny, I guess. If by scrutiny
you mean the adversarial select committee style of scrutiny?
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LORD RICHARD: It does not have to be
aggressive, it has to probe.
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Sure. Yes, you could
say that it is cosy but I have to say that the scrutiny
is ongoing. The Minister attends every meeting of the
Committee. She has to give regular reports at least
once a month. It has been once a fortnight in past years.
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LORD RICHARD: Once a month is a session
of the Committee?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: No, the Committee
meets once a fortnight.
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LORD RICHARD: What happens once a month?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: The Minister gives
a report to the Committee.
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LORD RICHARD: Once a month?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Once a month, yes.
There is usually an hour= s scrutiny of that report.
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LORD RICHARD: She goes through the
report?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Yes. It is a written
report. Usually she introduces it very briefly and there
is an hour of questions related to the report and sometimes
issues outside of the report.
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LORD RICHARD: Can you call for background
papers?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Yes. Any information
which we have requested from the Minister has always
been supplied.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: The fact
that this goes on continuously presumably leads to greater
input from the Committee than if you just occasionally
produce a report.
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RICHARD EDWARDS: This is the point
I am trying to make, yes. It might from the outside
seem like a bit of a cosy relationship but the reality
is that the Minister has no place to hide. She is there,
she is a member of the Committee, she is a fixture and
she is subject to questioning all the time. She gives
updates on policy development, issues that the Committee
itself has inputted into all the time or periodically.
There is no real place for her to hide so I would suggest
that this ongoing scrutiny is reasonably effective.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: We have
been told in some committees the relationships between
the Committee, the Committee Chairman and the Minister
have been more effective and produced better results
than in other committees. Presumably the real responsibility
for that would lie with the Committee if they want to
be over cosy and just say A anything you say, Minister@
. That is their prerogative. If you want to make it
work you can make it work.
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Put it like this,
there are no institutional barriers to scrutiny, it
is very much a case of what you make of it.
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TED ROWLANDS: There are institutional
barriers. We went through it with the Minister. I ran
into some difficulty on it. In your paragraph seven
you have listed these cross border organisations: the
Strategic Rail Authority, Railtrack, the Traffic Commissioner
and the regulatory powers over buses. This is paragraph
seven where you identify them.
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Yes.
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TED ROWLANDS: Could we explore how
much of a problem these have been to you to creating
an integrated view about transport. For example, the
lack of something called the Traffic Commissioner, what
has that meant in practical policy making terms?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Can I say, that was
a recommendation that the Committee made in its review
of public transport.
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TED ROWLANDS: I understand.
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RICHARD EDWARDS: On the basis of evidence
which was put before it by any number of bodies acting
as witnesses. The Minister has accepted the recommendation
and is pursuing the matter.
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TED ROWLANDS: I understand. I am just
trying to find out what would you like to do, if you
had some statutory control, what is it that has stopped
you at the moment because you have not got a statutory
control over the Traffic Commissioner, what aspect of
the policy that you were involved in was impeded by
the lack of such control?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: I do not think it
is a question of being involved in any policy, as I
say this was a review and this was a recommendation
which emerged from the review.
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TED ROWLANDS: It is conceptual?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Yes, it is conceptual.
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LORD RICHARD: It is the Assembly, not
the Committee.
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Can I say, the Committee
itself does not discharge any executive function so
it would be a matter for the Minister.
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TED ROWLANDS: You say A The Committee
identified significant barriers to the Assembly= s ability
to develop integrated public transport policy...@ and
among those barriers was a A ... lack of statutory control
over the Traffic Commissioner@ . All I was trying to
discover was what of the policy aspect was the lack
of regulatory control impeding?
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VIVIENNE SUGAR: On the same point,
in paragraph 32 of the evidence on the committees generally
it says A A further issue highlighted in both the Committee=
s public transport review and the Nantygwyddon investigation
was the relationship between the Assembly and local
government. With regard to the nature of the Assembly=
s relationship with local government, it is not clear
what mechanisms are available to committees to ensure
implementation of recommendations relating to local
authorities. Again, I would be happy to develop this
point at the oral session@ . I think what we are trying
to get at is what is the precise mechanism you would
want to have?
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LORD RICHARD: Ted is trying to get
at the lack of regulatory control.
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TED ROWLANDS: What is the regulatory
policy that is being impeded by the lack of statutory
control?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Basically what respondents
to the review wanted to see was an office in Cardiff,
I suppose an office of the Traffic Commissioner in Cardiff
so I suppose the Commissioner would be closer to the
concerns and needs of Wales.
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I think it is fair to say, as you have
suggested, that it is a conceptual concern that the
review had about the fact that the Traffic Commissioner
does not have a presence in Wales and if he or she did
have a presence in Wales then clearly there ought to
be some accountability directly to the Assembly which
would in effect mean the Minister for Transport in the
Assembly.
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TED ROWLANDS: What about the regulatory
controls on rail and bus services? Was there a practical
policy implication that was being impeded by the lack
of such powers or are those conceptual?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: The Assembly has no
powers over the rail service. Clearly if the Assembly
had some power of direction then the Minister would
be able to influence funding and standards of rail services
in Wales. At the moment on the board of the SRA there
is a representative for Wales, who is appointed by the
Secretary of State. The Minister and the Committee too,
I should say, have developed relations with the SRA.
In fact we had representatives from the SRA in attendance
in the meeting we held yesterday morning in the Assembly
but this is grace and favour.
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The Assembly is looking for a power
of direction similar to the power of direction that
the Scottish Parliament has over the rail industry.
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TED ROWLANDS: For example, the Committee,
in conjunction with the Minister, would like to be able
to take the view about the franchise and what should
be in that franchise, etc.?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Just to elaborate.
What happened yesterday was that the Strategic Rail
Authority were there to give an update on the franchise
process.
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TED ROWLANDS: Right.
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RICHARD EDWARDS: And give some indication
of the way that they are evaluating the different bids.
Basically I suppose the Committee was seeking to influence
the criteria on which they would make the bid but obviously
not discuss the nature of those individual bids in any
comparative sense. The Committee would want to see the
Assembly have a direct say in this matter.
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As I say, the SRA were there yesterday
by grace and favour. I do not complain about that and,
as I say, we have developed a reasonable working relationship
with them.
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TED ROWLANDS: As far as you know, they
would take into account the priorities you were enunciating
to them?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: They are not bound
to, they can listen to us and they did so in a very
reasonable way and I suppose it was useful. How meaningful
it was at the end of the day in terms of what will happen
when the franchise is awarded is another matter because,
as I say, neither the Minister nor the Committee has
any direct say in the matter, only indirect.
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TED ROWLANDS: If the Minister had the
power of direction, do you feel there would have been
a sharper set of exchanges?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: One would have expected
so, yes.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: Rather than
formal powers is it not money? Joint accountability
is a very difficult thing to make work and in my experience
generally the person who pays the majority of the piper
- if one can call it such a thing - calls the tune.
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Yes.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: That is
what worries me about joint accountability. It is a
prescription for the lack of real responsibility because
people can say A Oh, well, the other side said such
and such@ . It is a very difficult thing to make it
work. Between the two Houses of Parliament there are
lots of things with joint responsibility and very often
the Commons may be running them. Some things the Lords
think are sufficiently important that they pay more
than their whack so effectively they can make the police,
or whatever it is, security really responsible. If you
do not do that it is very difficult to make it work,
at least that is my hunch.
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RICHARD EDWARDS: We are coming from
the point of wanting to see some democratic accountability
that we have control or power or whatever over service
delivery with regard to rail in Wales. At the moment
we have no control whatsoever in effect but we are perceived
by the general electorate to have that responsibility.
Certainly that is my experience as an Assembly Member
from my postbag, e-mails, surgeries or what have you.
I represent a part of Pembrokeshire which is not very
well served by public transport at all, as you might
expect. Clearly as far as ordinary people are concerned
the buck stops with the Assembly.
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TOM JONES: Can I ask a question about
this member who is appointed by the Secretary of State
on to the Strategic Rail Authority, for example. Do
you have an input into it? Does the Minister have an
input into the appointment of that person by the Secretary
of State? Is it independent?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: I think the Minister
was consulted. I think the Minister was consulted by
the Secretary of State.
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TOM JONES: Then, in terms of accountability,
you mentioned the words A grace and favour@ , the Chair
and the Chief Executive of that Authority would have
some wish to be not answerable, that would not be the
right definition, but what about the member from Wales,
does that person have linkage with you?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: What I would say is
the Minister was consulted but as you know consultation
covers a multitude of sins and you make of it what you
will. I would say that person - whose name I forget
- she has attended one meeting of the Committee but
there is no direct accountability to the Minister let
alone the Committee.
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TED ROWLANDS: You were seeking joint
responsibility?
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TOM JONES: Would you wish that person
to have some accountability to you?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Yes. I think the Minister
should be responsible for nominating that person on
behalf of Wales.
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TED ROWLANDS: Is it saying the Secretary
of State for Transport and the Assembly Minister are
jointly responsible for the SRA and therefore the Minister
and then the Committee can make him or her accountable
for the actions of the SRA in the context of the Welsh
rail services, is that what you are recommending?
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SIWAN DAVIES: It is a recommendation
for direction over the SRA for services which are Welsh
and to be able to be consulted on those which are cross
border. It is the same power as in Scotland.
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TED ROWLANDS: You are seeking identical
power to that in Scotland?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Yes.
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VIVIENNE SUGAR: Could I ask you to
clarify paragraph 32?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Yes, okay, certainly.
This is really, again, I suppose in relation to the
transport review and the fact that the Assembly cannot
require local authorities to act in a regional capacity.
They do so on a voluntary basis, as you would know,
but the Assembly does not have the power to require
them to do so. Also I suppose - and again I need to
be careful that I am expressing a personal view here
- from my perspective as Chairman, I am a bit unclear
about the line of accountability between the Assembly
and local authorities. Obviously the Assembly awards
local government revenue settlements. It has strategic
responsibility for the services that local government
delivers. It looks clearly to local government to further
its objectives, to enact its objectives and obviously
local authorities do have a certain autonomy, they are
elected bodies. I think there is potentially - how can
I say - a problem for the Assembly of having any sort
of guarantee that local authorities can deliver on its
objectives given the fact that the Assembly does not
have any primary legislative powers.
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In theory, of course, the Assembly
could hypothecate funding. The Welsh Assembly Government
chooses not to do that, that is not the policy. There
is huge resistance from the Welsh Local Government Association
to hypothecation.
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In the context of transport there is
a concern - I speak certainly for the majority of the
Committee here - that we want to see these improvements
in public transport, we are urging the Minister to give
more money but where is the guarantee at the end of
the day that the money will be spent on the improvements
that we want to make. I am not saying it will not happen
but I think there is no cast iron mechanism for ensuring
it will. This raises quite a lot of constitutional issues
and the whole relationship between the Assembly and
local government is one of declared partnership. Partnership
implies equal parties and clearly if one is seen to
be too prescriptive then you could argue it ceases to
be a partnership.
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As I say these are my personal views
largely, although certainly there is a concern in the
Committee about hypothecation I think. I think the feeling
would be that unless the money is ring fenced then transport
will be squeezed by other budget lines which might be
seen to be more pressing.
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VIVIENNE SUGAR: I understand the Committee=
s sense of frustration. You have done all this work,
you have come out with the ideas now you need to make
sure it happens. I guess we need to ask Sue Essex to
come back to say A What are you doing about this@ .
I guess we need to gauge how much of an issue this is
in terms of our report as a Commission and how significant
is it that you feel the Assembly should have powers
to direct local authorities.
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Again I have to say
I am speaking on behalf of myself, I need to make that
quite clear. I think it is quite interesting really
in the whole debate about the powers of the Assembly
that the focus has been very much on the relationship
between Whitehall and Westminster and the Assembly.
That has very much overshadowed the relationship between
the Assembly and local government. I think - and again
this is my own personal perception - certainly there
was widespread hostility to the creation of the Assembly
in local government. I think in the Assembly itself
there is a feeling that we have - and I do not dispute
that this should be the case - to be conscious of that
hostility and we must do our best to accommodate it.
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Clearly the main reason for the hostility
was local authorities felt their own powers, their own
scope for autonomy would be compromised and undermined
by the Assembly. I feel that the Assembly in its initial
stages - it is just finding its feet now - was extremely
accommodating to local government. This is my personal
view, I do not pretend it is in any way representative
of my own party. I have my own views on these matters.
I think it is a problem. I think it is a problem which
I perceive from the point of view of the Committee on
some of the subject matter that we deal with.
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Also, just speaking as an individual
Assembly Member representing the area I do, in the local
authority that my constituency is located in, it is
a problem that I think if people perceive there is something
wrong in local government they think the Assembly can
sort it out and the reality is either the Assembly cannot
or will not.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: Is not one
underlying problem the lack of tax raising or tax varying
powers by the Assembly? The parish council can raise
two pence on rates, you cannot, you can reallocate the
money you have been given but you cannot raise more
money and be responsible and be seen to be responsible.
If you want a better railway service, right, the people
in Pembrokeshire will have to pay an extra two pence.
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Even though we cannot
raise any taxation, any revenue, we just allocate it,
there is a problem which I have mentioned already, there
is no guarantee the money we allocate for various services
will be spent. There is no guarantee, I am not saying
it will necessarily be the case that would happen. Yes,
of course it goes without saying that if we had tax
raising powers then clearly it would be much easier
but then that raises other issues about whether people
would want the Assembly to have tax raising powers.
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LORD RICHARD: You contemplate using
tax raising powers?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Certainly I believe
personally that the Assembly should have primary legislative
powers and I think then frankly, being realistic, it
befalls that the Assembly should have tax raising powers.
I think being frank it would be very difficult to sell
that to the electorate, especially when Wales is generally
perceived to be - with some variations - a poor country.
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PETER PRICE: Can I pursue the primary
legislation point you have just come back to. In the
Cabinet= s proposals for primary legislation in this
legislative year there are two which seem to fall under
your Committee= s remit: the Commonland of Wales Bill
and the Planning Bill.
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TOM JONES: Commonland would be the
Agriculture Committee.
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PETER PRICE: The Agriculture Committee
or your Committee. In any event for the one or two that
fall within your remit, what would be the significance
of it and where has it got to? If this is not something
you are not up to speed on please say.
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Apparently there is
a third one. Mr Bush has just said there is a third
one.
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MR BUSH: There is a Landfill and Emissions
Trading Bill which is within the remit of the Committee
also.
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PETER PRICE: What is the current state?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Can I mention the
Planning Bill because I know the Planning Bill was published
yesterday I believe, although I have not had an opportunity
yet to have a look at it in any detail anyway. Actually
the Planning Bill will be the first scrutiny of primary
legislation by the Committee but I have to say the scrutiny
will be extremely limited in the sense that the Bill
has not been published in draft form so if there is
any strong opposition to clauses in the Bill then it
is a question of lobbying MPs to make amendments in
the House of Commons Standing Committee.
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Can I say that the Committee itself
has consulted quite extensively on the proposals for
reforming the planning system in Wales and obviously
we hope to see the recommendations that we made reflected
in the published Bill, that is basically the state of
play. We did have quite a role really in the pre-legislative
stage.
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PETER PRICE: The pre-legislative stage?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: From the Wales point
of view in the sense that there was an input clearly
from the Minister and Assembly officials into the drafting
of the Bill because obviously it applies to Wales.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: Also, presumably,
from your Committee?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Yes. We discussed
the proposals on several occasions.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: Did you
produce a report?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: No, the Committee
itself did not produce a report, no.
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PETER PRICE: Is this a piggyback Bill
where you are aiming now to have a whole slab of clauses
relating to the planning system in Wales? How is the
impact here? Is this original proposal for a Land Use
Planning Bill a reference to something which is coming
along for England and Wales or something where the Assembly
itself wanted such a Bill in any event?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: The Committee is not
responsible in any way for initiating this. It does
not have any executive functions, it is a matter for
the Minister and it is a matter for the Minister I suppose
really on the shape of the Assembly' s input into the
drafting of the Bill.
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PETER PRICE: Is this an example in
any way of where ambitions have been frustrated by lack
of primary powers? That is the bottom line of where
I am going on this.
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RICHARD EDWARDS: As I say, I have not
seen the Bill yet so I am not in a position to comment
on whether I am happy with the end result. Clearly the
fact the Bill has not been published in draft does severely
constrain the Committee in any sort of scrutiny role
in terms of going through the clauses.
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LORD RICHARD: Do you ever lobby London
direct?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: The Committee itself
has not lobbied London directly other than through the
Minister, of course, as a member of the Committee and
we take the view, obviously, that is the most effective
way of exerting influence in London, through the Minister.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: Would it
not possibly be a good idea to say A Please another
time have a draft Bill and maybe we can do it more directly@
?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Absolutely.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: How would
you say that or would you just say it through the Minister?
After all, the Minister is the nature of a channel between
the Committee, the Assembly and Whitehall.
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Yes.
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SIR MICHAEL WHEELER BOOTH: In a sense,
not being personal, I have no idea in your particular
case, a channel has a power, it is like the usual channels
in Westminster, they have considerable power because
they are the intermediaries between the sides. Would
there not be an advantage in the Committee itself saying
rather loud and clear that they want draft legislation
published in future?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: Yes. I would agree
with that but I would say, also, that in the circumstances
we find ourselves in the most effective way of lobbying
London is clearly through the Minister. I think, being
realistic, if it was just a question of the Committee
or members of the Committee lobbying we would be quite
low down the pecking order in terms of exerting influence.
That is only my own personal view.
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TOM JONES: Does the same apply to the
European Commission and Parliament? Would you not wish
to have an input at an early stage into information
and legislation on the environment?
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RICHARD EDWARDS: I think it is one
of the reasons why we try to emphasise really in terms
of policy development on the pre-legislative phase because
when it comes to subordinate legislation often, certainly,
most of the statutory instruments relating to the Environment,
Planning and Transport portfolio emanate from Europe,
they are European Directives and we can do absolutely
nothing about them frankly. In terms of prioritising
time and in terms of making a judgement as to how you
are likely to exert most influence, I think the consensus
within the Committee, cross-party really, is that we
focus more on discussing the principles of legislation
and hoping we can influence it in that regard rather
than spending time going through lines of subordinate
legislation when the reality is we can do absolutely
nothing to change it.
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LORD RICHARD: Thank you very much indeed.
It was very good of you to come. It has been very interesting.
We have learnt a lot.
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RICHARD EDWARDS: I hope so yes. Thank
you very much indeed.
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