Monday, June 17, 2013

Support Dungeness Nature Reserve ....








Photo Kent Wildlife Trust
Please restate your objection to the quarry at Dungeness...


Hello there,

If you have previously submitted objections to Kent County Council about the proposal to excavate shingle from the Dungeness Nature Reserve then you should have received a letter from them recently, as the applicants have submitted further information on their plan*. Despite many more pages of information, the applicants haven’t actually changed their plan in any material way... They still intend to operate heavy machinery and to excavate shingle from a beautiful open section of the Kent coastline—and their plans now clash with a Coastal Access Path that Natural England is developing to join Camber to Folkestone so that we can enjoy many more miles of coastline.

We only have a couple of days to restate our objections to the proposal—and it would help our campaign enormously if you could send Kent County Council another message too. You can do so via our website at http://www.lovedungeness.org/add-your-voice/options/1306/ (or email Kent County Council directly at planning.applications@kent.gov.uk). Feel free to use the email we’ve drafted to Kent County Council below, regarding the latest information from the applicants.

Thanks again for your help protecting the Dungeness Nature Reserve from the proposed shingle excavation works. Please share this email with anybody you think may be interested (or alert them to our campaign via our website at http://www.lovedungeness.org/add-your-voice/tell-others/).

*In case you missed it, the new information is available to view online – just search for the application number “KCC/SH/0381/2011” on Kent County Council’s website at http://tinyurl.com/kentplanning and click on the “Documents” tab. The new information has filing dates spanning May and June 2013.

Draft response to Kent County Council (use as you please)


I write to state my objection to planning application KCC/SH/0381/2011, which seeks permission to excavate shingle from the shore of Dungeness in Kent.


The applicants' state in their "new" information, as recently published on Kent County Council's planning website, that they discounted extracting shingle from the beach in front of the power station as it is designated within the Dungeness, Romney Marsh and Rye Bay Site of Special Scientific Interest (SSSI). The applicants say that one purpose of the SSSI designation is to protect the special coastal processes that occur in this area - and they note that the SSSI status of the beach in front of the power station can be verified via the mapping tools available on Natural England's website. What the applicants fail to mention, however, is that the very maps that they are now using to define the boundaries of the SSSI also show that the entire site of their proposed quarry in Dungeness is also within the SSSI and the Special Area of Conservation (SAC). Therefore the location cannot be regarded as suitable, as the unique coastal processes that occur where the quarry would be located are also clearly protected. It would set a very worrying precedent if private businesses and corporations (such as EDF Energy, as one of the applicants) are permitted to take material from such a heavily protected conservation area and to disturb such a valuable natural public amenity.


Natural England has also begun work on a Coastal Access Path joining Camber to Folkestone (which is expected to open next year, in 2014). This path will include the Dungeness foreshore and nature reserve, including the very section of coastline where the applicants propose to site their quarry. The benefits of Natural England's coastal path to the public are clear (including the economic benefits that Natural England notes such schemes bring to local communities) - and the coastal path will be a remarkable attraction for residents and visitors to Kent to enjoy all year round. However, it will be blighted by a noisy quarry, where dangerous heavy machinery operates, if the applicants are allowed to excavate shingle from the Dungeness foreshore as they propose.


Dungeness is a varied landscape of international scientific and environmental importance. It is one of only four outstanding Special Areas of Conservation in the United Kingdom that support annual vegetation drift lines, and it hosts a remarkable and unique variety of wildlife, including more than 600 different types of plant (a third of all found in Britain) and many rare insects (some of which aren't found anywhere else in Britain).


The documents recently submitted by the applicants do not materially alter their previous proposals - the proposed quarry would still change the unique character of Dungeness for generations to come and won't provide local communities with the effective long-term flood protection they need. I ask you to reject the application and to push the applicants to pursue a more effective and sustainable alternative that does not involve Dungeness.

Sunday, June 16, 2013

East Kent Transition Gathering in Deal today

Some of transitioners at the Landmark Community Garden
We had a successful Transition gathering today here in Deal. We had over 30 people from Faversham, Whitstable, Dover, Canterbury, Folkstone, Sevenoaks and good showing from Deal.

The theme for the afternoon was community food growing and specifically how you get the community enagaged. Much of the afternoon was a mix of tea, cakes and informal sharing  on how to make our projects more sucessful.

We used some permaculture principles to look at the issue of engaging our communities. Some very useful side discussion on role/impact of finance; inspiration from New Zealand and some very inciteful perspectives from all of the growing projects in the region; local geography of where the projects were and how public a space; The impacts of the recession and world without economic growth on individuals, households and our community and how more direct access to skills and food can reduce those impacts.

Many thanks to Jo Barker for faciliating us, Sue and Kath from Deal Fairtrade for the fairtrade produce, Mike at Deal Town Hall for arrangements and DWI welcome team of Vicki, Charles and Rose and all those who donated cakes.

Guardian's article on Transition Towns ...

Locally grown food, community-owned power stations, local currencies … can small-scale actions make a difference? Yes, according to the Transition network – in fact, it's our only hope

John-Paul Flintoff Saturday 15 June 2013
The Guardian - Full article at:
http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2013/jun/15/transition-towns-way-forward
----
Late last year, Rob Hopkins went to a conference. Most of the delegates were chief executive officers at local authorities, but it was not a public event. Speaking in confidence, three-quarters of these officials admitted that – despite what they say publicly – they could not foresee a return to growth in the near future.
"One said: 'If we ever get out of this recession, nothing will be as it was in the past,'" Hopkins recalls. "Another said: 'Every generation has had things better than its parents. Not any more.' But the one that stunned me said: 'No civilisation has lasted for ever. There is a very real chance of collapse.'"
Shocking stuff – shocking enough to leave many people feeling hopeless. And Hopkins has heard MPs and others in positions of power confess to similar fears in private. But the co-founder of the Transition Town movement is determined to offer courage and inspiration, and to do that he has published a short book, The Power of Just Doing Stuff, showing what people are already doing to develop a more resilient economy.
For instance, a Transition group in Brixton raised £130,000 to install the UK's first inner-city, community-owned power station, consisting of 82kW of solar panels on top of a council estate. A group in Derbyshire created a food hub that makes it economically viable to grow food in back gardens for sale, as an affordable alternative to supermarkets. And groups in Totnes, Stroud, Lewes, Brixton and Bristol launched their own local currencies. Taken on their own, these initiatives may not make a vast difference. "But when there are thousands of communities worldwide all weaving their bit in a larger tapestry," Hopkins says, "it adds up to something awe-inspiring and strong."
What he is arguing is that sweeping changes in history are made not only by "big" people doing big things but by groups of "ordinary" people doing smaller things together. And that it's a mistake to overlook those small steps.
"There is no cavalry coming to the rescue," he says. "But what happens when ordinary people decide that they are the cavalry? Between the things we can do as individuals, and the things government and business can do to respond to the challenges of our times, lies a great untapped potential. It's about what you can create with the help of the people who live in your street, your neighbourhood, your town. If enough people do it, it can lead to real impact, to real jobs and real transformation of the places we live, and beyond."
The Transition network was founded in 2005, as a response to the twin threats of climate change and peak oil. Unlike other campaign groups, the Transition network never set out to frighten people, but seemed resolutely upbeat, determined to find opportunity in what most regard with dismay.
One of the movement's most fundamental ideas was to ask what the world might look like in the future "if we get it right" – then work out backwards how to get there. Generally speaking, the Transition vision is of a move towards self-sufficiency at the local level, in food, energy and much else, but the specifics of what "getting it right" might look like were never handed down from above.
Every so often, well-meaning people give Hopkins advice. "They say, you need to set up a political party, and have politicians everywhere, and set up the bank of Transition, and a Transition power company. And I think, yeah, or what we could do is have every community build its own energy company, or bank. And that's much more powerful."
Transition is like a huge open-source research and development project, he says. "Different groups try different things, and if an idea works, it spreads."
During seven years, the movement has attracted high-profile supporters. Transition gives "great grounds for optimism," says Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall, "on topics that are often rather doom-laden". Jonathan Dimbleby concurs: "Once upon a time, it was tempting to mock the idea of a Transition Town, but if ever there was an idea whose time has come, this is it."
A sensory garden for children in Sao Paolo, Brasil
A sensory garden for children in Brasilandia, Brasil
And Transition is not just a British phenomenon. There are more than 1,000 Transition initiatives in more than 40 countries. Fans include Ed Miliband and former German president Horst Köhler – an economist by profession, and former president of the IMF. Next month, Hopkins will appear at a conference with France's president and prime minister.
Filipa Leao Pimentel is involved in Transition in Portugal, but is based in Brussels and works to explain Transition to MEPs. Recently, she arranged for members of an economic and social committee to spend a day with Transition initiatives in their own countries. "I have lived in Brussels for years, and I have never seen anything like the discussion that came afterwards. There was a Greek who visited Portugal and she was touched by how we dealt with the crisis. One of the most conservative members talked about his 'journey'. Later, he said to me: 'Can you believe it, I talked about this as "my journey"?!'"
When the Transition movement started, it was driven by green politics, and its biggest critics have tended to be deep greens. One, the writer Ted Trainer, threw the movement into mild existential crisis in 2009, when he accused Transition of being merely reformist, and too "easily accommodated within consumer-capitalist society without threatening it".
Hopkins's response was, essentially, to plead guilty. "For years, in the green movement, we have held that we are right, that we have the answers … [But] many of the answers we need are to be found in people who we might, in a more judgmental moment, see as being part of the 'system', including business people, lawyers, church groups, local history groups, and thousands of ordinary people with busy lives, bills to pay and children to raise."
Today, Hopkins says he will only know that his new book has succeeded if his ideas are taken up by those kinds of people. Indeed, he wrote the book with his own sister in mind. "I hope she won't mind me saying that! She's raising kids, she's very busy. She is somebody for whom all this stuff would pass her by. Not interesting at all. But if Transition is going to get anywhere, it needs to reach people like her."
In the biggest, most successful Transition groups, every effort is made to avoid being worthy. The Tooting group's first big event was a big street celebration, a Trashcatcher's Carnival, with Arts Council funding. "In Topsham, in Devon, they asked: 'What is it that unites people in this town? Is it peak oil, or is it beer?' And they started a brewery. What are you inviting people to be part of? A group that talks about climate change? Or a historic, celebratory rethink about a place and what it does?"
The key thing is to find ways to bring people together. "In Totnes, we started to change the narrative: how do we create a culture of entrepreneurship, and support young people? And all kinds of new people came in."
At the first Local Entrepreneurs Forum, local business people gave advice to would-be entrepreneurs. But later they switched to a Community of Dragons, in which enterprises pitched to the entire community. And on the basis that "everybody is an investor", individuals pledged support in the form of time, cash, land, support, services and more.
The localisation movement has not always been good at talking about economics, Hopkins says. "If Tesco wants to open a branch in my town, they can say it will bring jobs and so on. The localisation movement never tends to do that, they just say localisation is a great idea, it's sustainable, it's good for the community. So we tried to map the local economy and put a value on it. Here in Totnes we spend £30m on food every year, of which £22m goes through two supermarkets. It's like water running through our fingers, going to banks and offshore investors. But it could be staying local. If we spent just 10% of that locally, we'd have £2.2m staying in the local economy to be spent again.
"Could a hospital that buys four tonnes of lettuce every year get that locally? If it uses energy, could it use a local energy company? We're looking at different ways of investing internally."
'Bristol Pounds' can only be spent locally, so more money stays in the city
One powerful way to prevent money leaking from a community's economy is by using local currencies. Businesses in Bristol can pay their rates in "Bristol pounds", and the city council gives staff the option to take part of their salary in B£s. The new mayor, George Ferguson, announced at his inauguration last November that he would take his entire salary in B£s, which can only be spent in Bristol. More than £180,000 has been turned into B£s, estimated to be worth £1.8m in local economic activity.
This new emphasis on economic development has galvanised the Transition Town movement, and not only in the UK. "The economic crisis helped us to gather so many people," says Pimentel. "In Portugal, we are under water. There is no money. You see your country starting to sink, and you close down, waiting for it to pass – but this is not going to pass. Transition was our framework to give people something to do. Instead of thinking, 'My god, we are sinking,' we said: 'Let's do this.' Little steps are important."
Important because they contribute to something bigger – the "larger tapestry" Hopkins talks about – but also important because it's small steps that help people recognise that they have power to make a difference. "Starting a vegetable garden in the street is small," Pimentel says. "But what is incredible is that when people learn to do that, they start to have confidence.
"The key thing is persistence. What people tell me now is, 'I thought that you were going to fail, and you did not.' They say: 'It's really true that doing little things, step by step, makes a difference.' And when they say that, I smile. I feel very proud. So even if things seem small, or you think it will not make a big difference, just persist."

Thursday, June 13, 2013

Victoria's Green Matters - 13th June 2013

Deal With IT's Secretary Victoria Nicholls writes a regular column in the East Kent Mercury

 It is difficult to think of the natural world in terms of monetary value - in economist speak this is ‘natural capital’. Our ecosystems supply us with a vast range of services and benefits and as such could be considered as similar to financial wealth and so are referred to as natural capital.

Nature provides goods and services such as the capture and storage of carbon dioxide by natural forests and soils; the output of the oceans; the microorganisms putting goodness into our soils; the growth of plants and the release of oxygen through photosynthesis; the protection of populated areas by coastal wetlands and much more.
Norway is a country rich in oil and it has used that oil money for the public good by giving $1 billion each to Indonesia and Brazil to encourage them to reduce their rate of deforestation. We can hardly expect our present government to do similar but in 2011 it did publish a National Ecosystem Assessment. This report documented how nature provides a wide range of vital benefits to the UK and how they give huge economic value.

For example, £1.1 million per year has been estimated as the amount achieved in benefit from improved river water quality and the value of the carbon taken up by UK woodlands is about £690 million per year.

There is no reason why businesses cannot develop strategies that value and protect natural capital and the government has a wide range of options to implement them.

Victoria Nicholls. DWI Transition Deal.
 

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Wild Food @ the Chequers this Saturday

Wild Food
Free demonstration, Sat 15 June, 1.30pm

Drop by to hear about - and taste - some of the wild foods and edible seaweeds available to gather around Deal.

Lucia Stuart of The Wildflower Kitchen will be demonstrating some of the simple but delicious recipes she prepares from plants gathered in the hedgerows and on the coast.

The demonstration is free so just drop in - no need to dine, it's open to all including children.

Monday, June 10, 2013

The power of Just doing stuff....

Rob Hopkins one of the founders of Transition movement has new book out - 'The power of  Just doing stuff'

Hugh Fearnley-Whittingstall says “There’s a buzz around this book, and its message, that gives great grounds for optimism on topics that are often rather doom-laden. Its true power lies in the fact that it’s many smart ideas are already underway”



For more info on the book see  http://transitionculture.org/shop/the-power-of-just-doing-stuff/

Or if you cannot she the embedded video ...http://youtu.be/rsIhiuzSOjQ

Saturday, June 8, 2013

Canterbury Eco Screening 19th June

Our colleagues at Transition Canterbury has its next Eco Screening  on Weds 19 June 6 - 9pm in Chives Café on the top floor of Waterstones on St Margaret's St, Canterbury.


We will be showing the film Permaculture: The Growing Edge - and having a discussion about it afterwards.
£3 or £2 concessions


Food and drink available
Everyone welcome - come with your friends!

Thursday, June 6, 2013

Victoria's Green Matters - 6th June 2013

Deal With IT's Secretary Victoria Nicholls writes a regular column in the East Kent Mercury

One of our most popular television programmes is ‘Springwatch’ when we delight in seeing all sorts of wild animals going about their daily lives.
 It is difficult to realise that in some areas of the country it is quite legal to kill the buzzard that we have watched hatching and feeding its chicks. It was recently reported that Natural England had issued licences to kill buzzards where game birds were being bred. An increasingly rare gull has seen its population decimated since the 1970s, originally culled to protect water supplies from pollution but latterly believed to be culled to protect game birds for a small number of people to kill for sport.
Our government is also likely to go ahead with a cull of badgers, a protected species, against all scientific evidence that it will be ineffective and without any recourse to the dairy industry which insists on reducing their cattle’s resistance to disease by continuing to over produce milk.
Many people here in Deal will be unsympathetic regarding the plight of gulls which are regarded as nothing but a nuisance. The lesser black back gulls in question are summer visitors that breed in Lancashire and then return to Portugal. Our much more common herring gulls which scavenge for food here can cause lots of trouble, coming into gardens for food and nesting in inconvenient places. It is important not to give them the opportunity to tear open rubbish bags which should not contain food.

Victoria Nicholls. DWI Transition Deal.

Friday, May 31, 2013

Victoria's Green Matters - 30th May 2013



Deal With IT's Secretary Victoria Nicholls writes a regular column in the East Kent Mercury

A recent report on the state of wildlife in the UK has shown that most species are in decline and a third have halved in number in the past 50 years.

This is a sad state of affairs and most of the blame for the situation can be placed squarely in our hands. The intensification of agriculture and the over use of pesticides has led to the loss of habitats in hedgerows, ponds, meadows and forests. Climate change, overfishing and building developments have also played their part.

The ‘State of Nature’ report was compiled by 25 conservation groups which shows just how broad the study has been. Tens of thousands of volunteers have taken part in this survey to help our naturalists and scientists make the study so comprehensive.

We have all noticed the decline in the populations of birds, butterflies, moths and insects in our gardens and our favourite hedgehog has declined so much that there are fewer than 1 million left.

When we go out into our lovely countryside we are lucky enough to be able to see nature all around us for free but if we want to conserve the countryside for us and future generations we must realise that, as a nation, we need to invest in it. Our government needs the political will to reform agriculture, fisheries and forestry.

Wildlife provides clean water, clean air, pollinates crops and prevents soil erosion, among other things, and these ecosystem services are vital to protect the land we love so much.

Victoria Nicholls. DWI Transition Deal.

Monday, May 27, 2013

State of Nature report

For the first time ever, the UK’s wildlife organisations have joined forces to undertake a health check of nature in the UK and its Overseas Territories. 

The reports summary key findings are presented here, and the full report is online: www.rspb.org.uk/stateofnature

  • 60% of the 3,148 UK species we assessed have declined over the last 50 years and 31% have declined strongly.

  • Half of the species assessed have shown strong changes in their numbers or range, indicating that recent environmental changes are having a dramatic impact on nature in the UK. Species with specific habitat requirements seem to be faring worse than generalist species.

  • A new Watchlist Indicator, developed to measure how conservation priority species are faring, shows that their overall numbers have declined by 77% in the last 40 years, with little sign of recovery.

  • Of more than 6,000 species that have been assessed using modern Red List criteria, more than one in 10 are thought to be under threat of extinction in the UK.

  • Our assessment looks back over 50 years at most, yet there were large declines in the UK’s wildlife prior to this, linked to habitat loss.

  • The UK’s Overseas Territories hold a wealth of wildlife of huge international importance and over 90 of these species are at high risk of global extinction.

  • There is a lack of knowledge on the trends of most of the UK’s species.

  • As a result, we can report quantitative trends for only 5% of the 59,000 or so terrestrial and freshwater species in the UK, and for very few of the 8,500 marine species. Much needs to be done to improve our knowledge.

  • What we do know about the state of the UK’s nature is often based upon the efforts of thousands of dedicated volunteer enthusiasts who contribute their time and expertise to monitoring schemes and species recording.

  • The threats to the UK’s wildlife are many and varied, the most severe acting either to destroy valuable habitat or degrade the quality and value of what remains
.
  • Climate change is having an increasing impact on nature in the UK. Rising average temperatures are known to be driving range expansion in some species, but evidence for harmful impacts is also mounting.

The full report is online: www.rspb.org.uk/stateofnature

We should act to save nature both for its intrinsic value and for the benefits it brings to us that are essential to our wellbeing and prosperity.

Targeted conservation has produced inspiring success stories and, with sufficient determination, resources and public support, we can turn the fortunes of our wildlife around.

The State of Naturereport serves to illustrate that with shared resolve and commitment we can save nature

Sunday, May 26, 2013

East Kent Transition Gathering 16th June in Deal

The next East Kent Transition Gathering will be on Sunday 16th June 2-60pm at Deal Town Hall in the High Street.

This informal gathering will be around the theme of Community Food Growing and how it can impact positively to make local community more sustainable.

The gathering is open to all those involved in local transition groups or projects, those who who want to find out more about Transition movement or just concerned about the environment.

Transition Town groups can be found at Faversham, Whitstable, Canterbury, Hythe, Folkestone, Thanet and Deal. Plus there is a great number of individual projects inspired by the movement.

The event is free but please bring a mug for drinks and some food to share (Cakes are always good Ed) or plants to swap. For more details see the East Kent Transition Facebook page


Saturday, May 25, 2013

Deal Station Garden ... Our first lettuce (ah)

The Deal Station Garden is looking good.

We got our first crop of lettuce today and even managed to some share it with the Platform One Cafe  at the station...
 
roll on the strawberrys

Spokes at the Deal Motor Show...


Good to see our colleagues from Spokes (East Kent's Cycling Campaign) group down at the Deal Motor Show today at Walmer.

They were doing good trade with queues to see Dr Bike.

Given it was a Car show it was great to see so many cycles today ...

http://www.spokeseastkent.org.uk/

Victoria's Green Matters - 23rd May 2013



Deal With IT's Secretary Victoria Nicholls writes a regular column in the East Kent Mercury

If you are a climate change denier you will not attribute our horribly cold winter and spring to anything other than 'it was just one of those things'. Fair enough - turn up the heating, wear more clothes and grin and bear it. What will you think when this becomes the norm? Is it still one of those things?

The changes to our weather are minor in the great scheme of things; this is not so if you happen to live in Alaska. Alaska is warming faster than anywhere else in the USA with a 4°F increase in average temperatures and melting ice is endangering the way of life for those people who still live off the land and sea. There is no question that changes are happening - people live with them every day but the debate about the causes of these changes still goes on.

As a result of increased temperatures there is coastal erosion, retreating sea-ice, thawing permafrost and record forest fires all of which impinge on the way of life of people who have hunted for their food for many years. The hunters notice that the winters are getting later and are warmer and shorter; springs are earlier and rising waters are causing floods. Many communities are threatened by these changes and will need to move to safer ground.

Melting ice has other effects, too. International companies scramble to compete for the oil and coal deposits - but burning them will increase the warming even more.

Victoria Nicholls. DWI - Transition Deal.