Sussex Police Consultation on Precept

Residents can now take part in Sussex Police & Crime Commissioner Katy Bourne’s consultation for the Sussex Police Precept 2017/2018. This proposes to increase the police element of council tax rise by around £5 per household to fund over 100 new police officers and specialist staff.

The web address is https://www.sussex-pcc.gov.uk/priorities/budget/

 

We need the right people, with the right skills in the right place to protect you and fight crime,” said Sussex PCC Katy Bourne.

“That’s why I want to invest in 100 new officers and staff in specialist teams to strengthen local policing and keep our communities safe.”

I am responsible for setting the policing element of council tax in Sussex. I would like to ask households if they would be prepared to pay – on average – an additional £5.00 which would create an extra £3m for policing each year. When that is added to the £2m savings already identified, it allows Sussex Police to invest in over 100 police officers and specialist staff in the following areas.”

  • Community Priority Crime Teams: to investigate local crime problems, dismantle organised gangs and remove repeat offenders and provide a reassuring community presence.
  • Expert Youth Teams: to target and support those younger people most at risk of committing crimes or becoming a victim of crime.
  • Specialist Firearms Officers: for counter terrorism deterrence and response.
  • Public Protection Investigators: to provide appropriate response and more capacity to deal with the increased reports of sexual offences and child protection cases.

Sussex Police is modernising its services to meet the local policing and security needs of the 21st century. This new way of working has been acknowledged as ambitious and positive by Her Majesty’s Inspectorate of Constabulary.

“Whilst that transformation is under way across all areas of policing and will take time, I want to make sure Sussex residents can see local policing being strengthened now.

The consultation, which began on the website this week and will include public engagements across Sussex, closes in January 2017. The PCC will then present her recommendations on whether to propose a rise in the precept to the Police and Crime Panel in January.

 

Simon Ellery – Sussex Police

 

A27 Consultation Response

Please use the link to access a copy of Earnley Parish Council’s submission in response to Highway’s England Consultation with regard to the proposed “improvements” to the A27. Earnley Parish Council Consultation Response

 Highways England response form is available at http://www.surveymonkey.co.uk/r/H6SMXTN the consultation closes at 11.45pm on 22nd September 2016.   For further information, please see http://www.highways.gov.uk/roads/road-projects/a27-chichester-improvement/

 The final consultation events are due to take place on:

Friday 9th September 2016

Bracklesham Barn, Beech Avenue, Bracklesham, PO20 8NU

10am -7pm

 Saturday 10th September 2016

Bracklesham Barn

10am – 2pm

 Wednesday 14th September 2016

Chichester Assembly Rooms, North Street, Chichester, PO19 1LQ

10am – 8pm

 Thursday 15th September 2016

Chichester Assembly Rooms

10am – 8pm

 Please take this opportunity to make your views known.

 

 

 

 

 

A27 Petition

A resident in Chichester has now set up a petition at: https://petition.parliament.uk/petitions/165748

Bookers Lane Temporary Road Closure

WEST SUSSEX COUNTY COUNCIL

(EARNLEY: BOOKERS LANE)

(TEMPORARY CLOSURE) ORDER 2016

 

NOTICE is hereby given that not less than seven days from the date of this notice, West Sussex County Council made an Order under the Road Traffic Regulation Act 1984, the effect of which will be to prohibit any vehicle from proceeding at any time along the length of Bookers Lane from a point 125 metres north of Bookers Cottage southwards for a distance of 250 metres.

 

The Order is necessary to protect public safety whilst a culvert is replaced.

 

The Order will come into operation on 21st September 2016 and will continue for 18 months, or until the proposed works are completed, whichever is earlier. It anticipated that the works will commence on or after 21 September 2016 and will take 1 month to complete.

 

Any queries about the works taking place or the effect of the Order on traffic using the highway should be directed to West Sussex Council Contact Centre, telephone number (01243) 642105.

 

Dated this 1st day of September 2016

 

Director of Law Assurance & Strategy

County Hall

Chichester.

 

 

Was your child born between 1 Sept 2012 and 31 August 2013?

If so your child is eligible to start school in September 2017.

You will need to apply on line from 3rd October further information below:

Is your child starting school 2017

 

A27 – Highways England

Highways England’s latest update is now available please use this link to access it.

A27

Best4Chichester are campaigning for Highways England to reconsider option 5 ‘the Northern Bypass’ please see information below:

Open letter to Councillors from Best4Chichester

A27 Upgrade Costs and Benefits

A27 Option 5

 

A27 – Chichester Observer Poll

Official: Residents can vote for an A27 bypass alternative.

 

Highways England is giving local residents the opportunity to let them know if they believe that none of the proposed A27 options will benefit them by ticking the option box in its questionnaire labelled ‘NO OPTION’. Residents are also being invited to make alternative suggestions for traffic improvement in a separate box. These alternatives CAN include other bypass options, including those previously considered, whose details can be found on Highways England’s website.

 

Figures provided by Highways England suggest that none of the proposals currently under consultation will make significant savings on local journey times and several of them will actually increase some local journeys times. Meanwhile, four of the five options will restrict local traffic movements by including NO RIGHT HAND TURNS at the Stockbridge and Whyke junctions. This will involve local traffic making longer journeys along the A27, rat running through Chichester, travelling through the interior of the Manhood Peninsula, or the villages of North Mundham and Runcton. When the A286 to the Witterings or the B2145 to Selsey are congested or blocked, residents’ ability to use alternative routes will be severely reduced. Option 2, which proposes a link road from the Fishbourne Roundabout across the A286, the B2201, the Canal and joining the B2145/B2166 roundabout while removing the Stockbridge and Whyke road roundabouts, will mean Selsey traffic will also become blocked by West Wittering beach traffic.

 

ChichesterDeservesBetter, the campaign group opposing the Northern Bypass, has already stated that all the options except Option 2 are just sticking plasters that will not improve traffic in the longer term. Best4Chichester, however, argues that Option 2 is simply a more expensive sticking plaster that will, according to Highways England, require upgrading just 13 years after its completion. Information on the Highways own website shows that Option 2 is only 10% cheaper than Option 5, one of the Northern Bypass options. The Northern Bypass, Option 5 in the Highways England study, meanwhile, brings far more benefits for both through and local traffic with less impact on the Chichester Harbour AONB, the visitor economy and local people’s day to day lives.

 

Comparisons between Option 2 (Fishbourne to Hunston Link Road) and Option 5 (Northern Bypass).

 

Option 2 will cost £280.2 million, require the removal of 20 homes, will involve the creation of a raised road (due to flood risk) across open fields on one of the last remaining undeveloped coastal plains in the south east. The Option 2 link road will be completed in 2022 but will have reached capacity by 2035 when it will require upgrading to a part-dual carriageway. (Before joining the single lane road to the Wittering Beaches!). The construction delay costs (or costs incurred by business and residents due to disruption during construction) are estimated to be £25 million for Option 2, more than 30 times higher than the £0.8 million costs for Option 5. A major fact to be considered is the impact of traffic disruption on the Manhood Peninsula’s important tourism economy, which represents over half the entire Chichester District tourism economy. The Fishbourne flyover and link road will have ‘signficant adverse effects’ on the Fishbourne and Chichester Conservation Areas and the Chichester Harbour AONB and the Manhood peninsula’s natural habitat and landscape. The degradation to the environment, loss of important views of the Cathedral and Downs from the peninsula and the impairment to recreational cycling and walking across the Manhood will also impact the local visitor economy. In addition, Option 2 results in worsening noise levels, while Option 5 shows an overall noise improvement.

 

 

 

Option 5 will cost £307.80 million (10% more than Option 2), require the removal of 8 homes (60% less than Option 2), and will involve the construction of a partially new road circumventing the northern edge of Chichester, outside of the South Downs National Park and south of Lavant. Option 5 shows ‘higher journey time improvements across all routes’ than Option 2. Option 5 also will create better access to Goodwood and improve accessibility to other tourism locations in the area, including the coast. The predicted reduction in accident costs for Option 5 is £73.6 million, compared to just £8.4 million for Option 2, while air improvement is also better for Option 5 than for Option 2.

 

 

The Chichester Observer is running a poll where local residents can vote for their favourite option currently under consultation. Readers can also vote for NONE OF THEM. By choosing to reject all the options currently out for consultation does NOT mean no bypass or improvements in the future but will make Highways understand local’s concerns and work harder to address them.

 

 

http://www.chichester.co.uk/news/transport/observer-poll-vote-on-your-favourite-a27-improvement-option-for-chichester-1-7511455

 

District Councillor Graeme Barrett

New Councillor

Earnley Parish Council is pleased to announce that at its meeting on 28th July 2016 it was resolved to co-opt John Stant onto the parish council.

Looking for a Job?

Career Event Chichester Job Centre

Are you:

Looking for a Job

Thinking about a career change.

 

Then this is the event for you.

Come along to speak to local employers about the jobs they offer in the area

 

 Tuesday 12th July 2016

10am to 3pm