Example response to second consultation on BW charity

Here is an example response to the second DEFRA consultation on transferring BW to charity status. Despite complaints, the deadline is still 24th October. It’s always best to put responses in your own words, if possible. The example response contains an introductory statement, replies to the questions about England and Wales, and replies to the questions about Scotland. If you answer the questions about Scotland there’s a separate email address for the replies. Please take the time to respond if you can – it’s important that DEFRA is aware of our concerns. You can download the example response here Defra nwc 2 response Sept 11

Or read it below

Response to DEFRA Supplementary consultation on certain aspects of the proposed Transfer Order for transferring the functions of British Waterways in England and Wales to a New Waterways Charity and for making consequential provision in Scotland

To: NWCresponses@defra.gsi.gov.uk, scotlandscanals@scotland.gsi.gov.uk
From:
Date:

Introductory statement

In order to protect boat dwellers from homelessness, BW should not be transferred to charity status unless and until the following conditions are met:

Section 43 (3) of the 1962 Transport Act should be declared incompatible with the European Convention on Human Rights;

Sections 13 (2) (3) and (4) of the 1971 British Waterways Act should be repealed;

Sections 8 (1) (2) (3) and (4) of the 1983 British Waterways Act should be repealed;

The New Waterways Charity should not have the power to bring injunctions banning boat owners from its waterways for life;

The Mooring Guidance for Continuous Cruisers and plans for Local Mooring Strategies should be abandoned;

The February 2010 Revised Draft Byelaws should be abandoned;

The amendment to Schedule 5 of the Public Bodies Bill secured by BW, exempting the functions of the British Waterways Board from the provisions of Clause 22 falling within section 22(3)(b) to (e) should be abandoned, and

The powers of BW or the New Waterways Charity to make “subordinate legislation” should be restricted to the existing Byelaw making powers under the 1954 British Transport Commission Act.

In place of these powers, which are inappropriate for a 21st century charitable body, the following powers and duties should be established:

Legal recognition of the homes of boat dwellers on a par with that enjoyed by house dwellers.

Statutory protection of boat dwellers from harassment and unlawful or summary eviction, of the same magnitude as the protection enjoyed by house dwellers, applicable to all boat dwellers on inland and coastal waters, whether or not they have a permanent mooring.

Clarification that the test for compliance with s.17(3)(c)(ii) of the 1995 British Waterways Act is as intended by Parliament, namely, whether the boat has remained in one place for longer than 14 days without good reason.

Explicit recognition that boat dwellers without permanent moorings are classed as travellers for the purposes of s.225 of the 2004 Housing Act; the 2010 Equality Act; the Human Rights Act and the EU requirement placed on the UK to draw up a national plan in 2011 to ensure that every homeless traveller has access to suitable accommodation.

Security of tenure for mooring holders on a par with that enjoyed by the tenants of houses.

Statutory protection from increases in boat licence fees and mooring fees on a par with that enjoyed by the tenants of social housing in respect of rent increases.

The New Waterways Charity specifically classified as a housing authority.

Response to consultation questions

Questions in section 3 – the transfer in England and Wales

Do you agree that the power for the Secretary of State and the Welsh Ministers to give directions on the sale of land assets will no longer be needed when the assets of BW in England and Wales transfer to the NWC? If not, what are the circumstances in which you envisage such directions would be needed?

No. This question avoids the most important issues. Transferring BW and the EA into one huge monopoly is a step in the wrong direction. The NWC will be responsible for the housing of thousands of families, regardless of whether this consultation chooses to address this fact. Families who rent houses on land do not face eviction from every house in the country at the whim of a landlord who owns all of the freeholds in the country. The competition commission would not look favourably on this.

Neither BW nor its successor can be trusted to properly manage the waterways and associated property without public scrutiny and accountability through Parliament. This would contradict section 1 of the 1962 Transport Act that defines BW as a public authority with responsibilities for the management of the waterways, to users and to the public.

An absolute and additional safeguard is needed – not to direct disposal of property, but to protect property that is held in trust for the nation, in other words public property, from being disposed of. Too much property belonging to the public and important to the functioning of the waterways has been sold off by BW already. Disposal or sale of such property (such as lock keepers’ homes, wharves, warehouses, operational land etc) would be detrimental to the peration and maintenance of the waterways. Such an absolute safeguard can only be achieved by statute. Additional statutory protection against disposal of property by the NWC is needed.

Do you agree that the provisions in ss.73 to 75 of the 1962 Act and s.137 of the 1968 Transport Act are not needed by the NWC? If not, please explain your reasoning.

I support the position of Unite and the other Trade Unions within BW on this issue with regard to all staff whose annual wage is less than around £40,000. However, the transfer to the NWC should take the opportunity to reduce the pay, bonuses and pensions of the BW Directors and senior management staff to an acceptable and financially viable level so that funds can be re-directed to the maintenance of the waterways.

Do you agree that the NWC should have an enhanced statutory proposer role in relation to ministerial orders on classification and maintenance of its waterways? If not please explain your reasons.

No. The maintenance of the waterways should be an absolute duty of the NWC and should be the top priority for expenditure. Commercial and cruising waterways should not be downgraded. Instead, the NWC and the Government should seek to increase the number of commercial waterways and should seek to improve financial viability by expanding freight. Maintenance of the waterways should not be a hostage to financial circumstances. The NWC’s budget should be examined as a whole to identify areas where unnecessary, ill thought out spending can be cut. Examples are Directors’ salaries, bonuses and pensions; loss-making joint venture property schemes; local mooring strategies; useless bollards; cycle speed bumps that obstruct wheelchair users, and glossy promotions.

Currently, BW’s managerial priorities are detrimental to its customers and the opportunity should be taken to reduce the powers of the NWC and increase its accountability in order to protect the homes and livelihoods of boat dwellers. At present BW’s status as a public body means that there is at least a minimal level of accountability to Parliament, boaters and the public.

Do you agree that the power of Ministers to direct the NWC under the Transport Act 1962 should be restricted to circumstances in the interests of national security? If not, what powers of direction, if any, should continue to apply to the NWC?

If the waterways need to be controlled in the interests of national defence or security, then BW should remain a public body. The specific powers under Section 27 of the 1962 Transport Act should be retained in order to maintain effective public scrutiny and accountability in order to safeguard the already minimal rights of boat dwellers which will otherwise be lost if BW becomes a charity. This is important because BW has a track record of harassment, threats of homelessness and actual evictions directed at the estimated 15,000 or adults and children who live on boats on its waterways, especially those without moorings, which is clearly not in the national interest.

You are invited to indicate and explain your preferred option in relation to the proposed FOI, EIR and transparency regime. Are there any improvements that you would like to see to the NWC’s proposed transparency statement?

I favour Option 3: Include NWC as a public authority in Schedule 1 of the Freedom of Information Act. If a task is traceable back to a public purpose, especially if it is publicly funded, it will still be subject to the Freedom of Information Act and the Environmental Information Regulations. [See the review of complaint SO 42/8/4 from Intelligent Addressing regarding Ordnance Survey, adjudicated by the Advisory Panel for Public Sector Information, 30 April 2007]. The NWC will have a public purpose, will be be carrying out public functions and will continue to be publicly funded. Therefore its public functions will be subject to the Freedom of Information Act and the Environmental Information Regulations.

It will be detrimental to transparency to have different functions of the NWC subject to different regimes for the release of information. This would further reduce the trust and confidence of BW’s customers, especially residential boaters, in the NWC. It would encourage the NWC to continue the obfuscation, deception, bullying and harassment experienced by liveaboard boaters that has been the practice of BW for decades. BW currently uses a variety of underhand tactics to avoid the release of information through legitimate Freedom of Information requests. This organisational culture should not be allowed to continue; instead, a transition to charity status should be taken as an opportunity to change this culture permanently.

The Freedom of Information Act is a vital safeguard against the abuse by BW of the already minimal rights of boat dwellers both with and without home moorings. Without the access to information made possible by this provision, boat dwellers’ ability to exercise their rights and to challenge unlawful actions, including summary eviction, by BW or the NWC will be further reduced. This will leave many without any real protection against homelessness in a context where they can be evicted from the vast majority (2,200 miles) of the UK’s inland waterways in an eviction process which includes being banned for life by way of injunction from these waterways. Compared to the eviction process that applies to the tenants of houses, this is already vastly disproportionate.

There is no mechanism for enforcing the transparency statement set out in the consultation document and therefore it will be ineffective in ensuring that Freedom of Information is achieved. The NWC should follow the example of more enlightened organisations and adopt a policy of publication of all information apart from the small proportion that is genuinely confidential. In addition, the NWC in England and Wales should be required to adhere to standards identical to those laid down in the Ethical Standards in Public Life etc (Scotland) Act 2000.

Do you agree that the disqualifications applying to members of the BW Board through the House of Commons Disqualification Act 1975, Scottish Parliament (Disqualification) Order 2010, and National Assembly for Wales (Disqualification) Order 2010 should not be applied to the trustees of the NWC? If not, please explain your reasoning.

No. Office holders or Trustees of the NWC should resign before seeking election as MPs, MEPs, MSPs or AMs. To allow them to stand without resigning would be to create a conflict of interest and in the use of their time which would be detrimental to the NWC.

Questions in section 4 – Scottish provisions

Do you agree with the Scottish Government’s proposal that the British Waterways Board, operational solely in Scotland, should consist of a chairman, a vice chairman and between one and four other members?

No. There should be a chair, vice-chair and 7 other members, to avoid the concentration of power in the hands of too few people and to act as a safeguard against the abuse of power.

Do you agree with the Scottish Government’s proposal that the British Waterways Board
operating solely in Scotland should, in future, come within the scope of the following relevant Scottish legislation:
(a) the Freedom of Information (Scotland) Act 2002;
(b) the Environmental Information (Scotland) Regulations 2004;
(c) the Scottish Public Services Ombudsman Act 2002; and
(d) the Ethical Standards in Public Life etc. (Scotland) Act 2000?

Yes. In addition, the NWC in England and Wales should be required to adhere to standards identical to those laid down in the Ethical Standards in Public Life etc (Scotland) Act 2000.

Do you agree that the water abstraction legislation now in place in Scotland is sufficient such that the requirement for Ministerial consent in the Transport Act 1962 can now be repealed?

Yes

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