I suppose I could have done a piece on Vaughan Gething’s belated resignation; but I’ve said almost all I want to say on that nice Mr Musk’s platform. He’s moving to Texas, you know. (Musk, not Gething.)
I will just add that Gething’s resignation speech was a classic of ‘Welsh’ Labour. He took no responsibility whatsoever for his fate; the mistakes, the errors of judgement, the lies, being an arrogant prick, no – it was all somebody else’s fault!
And of course, he was the victim of racism. Ideas of victimhood, and exploiting it, are now so embedded in the Labour party in Wales that they direct policy and legislation. As you’ll read in the third section of this offering.
Which is a Miscellany! A section on Woodknowledge Wales, yet another gang of enviro-shysters. Part three is on yet more tinkering by the ‘Welsh Government’ with the democratic process. And finally, some thoughts on wind turbines, and pylons.
◊
WOOD YOU BELIEVE IT!
An outfit that’s been in the news lately is Woodknowledge Wales (WKW). It encourages greater use of wood. I quote: “We champion the development of wood-based industries for increased prosperity and well-being in Wales“.
‘Well-being‘! That meaningless term used to justify anything and everything.
I have no issue with timber-framed buildings, or even buildings made entirely of wood. The issue is the politics, the funding, the peripheral messages and hidden agendas that always attach to outfits like WKW.
So who runs this show, and where might we find them?
Looking through the early directors of what was originally the Welsh Timber Forum I saw a few names I recognised, in fact, people I know personally. But there seems to have been a kind of takeover in 2016.
Of the six directors at the start of 2017, two have since left. The four remaining directors – of what converted to a Community Benefit Society (CBS) on St Patrick’s Day 2022 – all joined in 2016.
The two departures may even have been connected with the change to a CBS. Strangely, perhaps, of the 36 directors who’ve come and gone since 2001 those two were the only ones to describe themselves on the Companies House listings as ‘Welsh’.
Below you see the current WKW directors from the latest accounts (to 31.03.2023) filed with the Financial Conduct Authority. Also the companies they run or, in the case of Rachel Moxie, the day job. This filing still uses the address of one of the departed.
Though I’m unclear on the status of Gary Newman. He was a director when WKW was a company, yet he’s signed the most recent accounts from the FCA as secretary.
But if Newman is now WKW secretary, rather than a director, this would explain why he isn’t listed as being a director of The Foundational Economy Alliance Wales Ltd.
This lot moved in November 2022 from the United Welsh housing association offices in Caerffili to an address in Porthaethwy (Menai Bridge), which is quite a move.
However, the new address for WKW, the one given on the website, is 22 Cathedral Road in Cardiff. (Possibly out back.) Also known as Pentan House, for at this address we also find, Pentan, Rant Media, Moxie People, LRM Planning, The Green Business Centre, and who knows who else?
With Woodknowledge Wales we have another outfit serving the ‘Welsh Government’s self-destructive obeisance to the Net Zero cult. With councils and housing associations made to use more wood in their new builds.
Much of which will be from timber grown by foreign corporations on what used to be Welsh family farms. Or wood from monoculture plantations poisoning land and water.
The role I suggest for WKW would explain the presence on The Board of Shayne Hembrow of Corruption Bay’s favourite housing association.
Deputy Chief Executive / Commercial Director of Wales and West Housing Association . . . In addition Shayne is chair of Shelter Cymru and Chair of Woodknowledge Wales.
Hembrow is yet another third sector grifter who came to Wales to help third-rate politicians wreck our country. But I can’t see him listed on the W&W website. Has he gone undercover?
In the FCA filings we see only Hughes, Meade and Moxey named as directors. So does this mean that Godefroy, Healy and Hembrow joined more recently? And why is Godefroy described in her bio as a “trustee“, for WKW isn’t a registered charity?
Finally, and in what seems to be a recurring theme, we have with Woodknowledge Wales a group close to if not controlled by Corruption Bay . . . with one of those involved getting loans from the Development Bank of Wales.
In the case of director Jasper Meade, in January 2020, he landed two loans from DBW Investments (14). One specific to a factory in Buttington, near Welshpool; the other, a more general charge over a number of his companies.
As I say, a recurring theme. Which is why I suggest the Development Bank of Wales needs to be investigated, and then taken away from the control of politicians.
∼
All that said, I could still support this push to use more wood if I thought it would result in a forestry industry employing thousands of people in rural areas, sustaining Welsh communities, complementing farming rather than being used to destroy it.
But that won’t happen. It’ll be like renewable energy, environmentalism, 20mph, and all the other results of politicians buying into the climate cult and the control agenda.
◊
BYE-BYE, PORT TALBOT
Let’s stick with Woodknowledge Wales (WKW) for just a minute. They’ve been pushing a report, ‘Serious About Green?—Building a Welsh wood economy through co-ordination‘.
This makes it clear – as I suggested earlier – that WKW is not simply concerned with us using more wood in buildings. The agenda is much bigger.
And while the report itself seems to be the work of WISERD, the quote below is from Woodknowledge Wales, and can be found here.
Wales is a sheep, beef and dairy nation and Wales is a steel nation. These activities are deeply ingrained in our cultural identity. They may have been rational activities for the past century but are not well-aligned to the low carbon needs of 21st Century Welsh society.
We must give up good-pay steel jobs and the Welsh family farm. And we must do so because a bunch of zealots have decided that we who belong here, working in our own country, in spheres they disapprove of, must lose everything.
◊
UNIVERSAL FRANCHISE . . . AND THEN SOME!
Now we’re going to consider the Elections and Elected Bodies (Wales) Bill. Here’s a shorter summary. And this is how WalesOnline reported it last week.
You’ll see that everyone is to be put on the electoral register whether they want to be on it or not. Speaking for the Electoral Reform Society, chief executive Darren Hughes had this to say:
Automatic voter registration is a win-win for voters as it takes one more thing off their to-do list while also . . . helping to enfranchise the hundreds of thousands of missing voters in Wales.
Which is, as we psephologists are wont to say, and at the risk of sounding technical, utter bollocks.
“Takes one more thing off their to-do list“, says Kiwi Darren. But what if it was never on their to-do list? There are thousands of people in Wales who have chosen not to be on the electoral register.
Consequently, to put them on the register, without their permission, will be an infringement of their privacy and an assault on their freedoms.
As well as bulking up the electoral rolls the Bill also references candidates, and inevitably, we find ‘diversity’ mentioned. Here’s what the summary says on page 5.
“Specific characteristics” is code for trans, as the ‘Welsh Government’ now shies away from using the legally incorrect and deliberately misleading ‘protected’. But it also introduces a new term with “socio-economic circumstances“? Does that mean preference will be given to poor people?
It’s worth asking, because the summary then takes a rather curious twist when it talks of “financial assistance“.
(Is Section 29 written correctly, or should it read, ‘specified characteristics’?)
For me, the mention of disability is a distraction, for most beneficiaries of this largesse will in fact come from other groups.
I expect race and a certain religion to figure, but there may be another clue here.
Welsh Ministers may provide financial assistance schemes to help candidates in Welsh elections that have specific characteristics or specified circumstances overcome barriers to participation.
I went to the full version of the Bill in the hope of finding “specified circumstances” explained. But there was nothing. Leaving me to think the Labour party will sponsor candidates from certain categories on whose loyalty it can count.
Putting everyone on the electoral register only makes sense if we have compulsory voting. But we don’t, and I’m not aware of any plans to introduce it. So why put everyone on the electoral register?
Here’s another concern. This legislation might be in place for the 2026 Senedd elections, which means it will complement the Senedd Cymru (Electoral Candidates Lists) Bill. Yes, that’s the one giving us huge constituencies and closed lists.
In the WalesOnline article you’ll see mentioned Mick Antoniw, the Counsel General. Now I have concerns about this man’s role in elections.
Mainly because of his involvement in pushing through the closed lists system. I dealt with it in my piece Senedd Cymru (Electoral Candidate Lists) Bill. There I explained that Antoniw was even trying to get away with not naming candidates!
The electoral systems of Wales and the UK are screwed up enough without making things worse.
Consider, Labour has just won a landslide victory in the July 4 general election. But it was only a landslide in terms of seats, and entirely due to the peculiarities of the FPTP system. The turnout was well down on recent elections.
The problem – in addition to the Gething factor and the failure of devolution – is that too many people don’t feel engaged by politics, or feel that politicians don’t speak for them.
The priority should therefore be engaging with those who are already on the electoral registers but don’t vote. Because it makes no sense to register people who have no intention of voting.
One change we’ve already seen was the requirement on July 4 for those wanting to vote to produce photographic ID. Now as we know, from the USA and elsewhere, such a rule is racist, and so would never have been introduced by Labour.
For Labour is far more ‘flexible’ when it comes to rules relating to voting.
Which is why I predict that, in addition to putting everybody’s name on the electoral register, we shall also see moves to make postal and proxy voting easier.
In the 2026 Senedd elections we could see un-named Labour candidates, with “specified characteristics” and “specified circumstances“, benefit from “financial assistance” . . . and be elected in turnouts of 127%.
Try to argue then that democracy’s in trouble!
The truth is that once again we see Labour introducing dangerous divisions and dubious methods to serve its own narrow political interests.
◊
LINKS TO THE OLD NORTH
Many of you must be aware of Bute Energy’s plans for a pylon run some 60 miles long from that company’s wind farms in Powys south through the Tywi valley to Llandyfaelog, south of Carmarthen.
There the line from Powys will connect with the line from Pembroke to England. For of course virtually all the power generated in Wales goes to England. (Thankfully, we get the thousands of excellent jobs provided by ‘renewables’.)
The project is being handled by Bute’s Green Gen Cymru. And it’s explained, sort of, here, and if you scroll down there’s even an interactive map.
As might be expected, there is considerable opposition along the route.
And the plan is severely testing the loyalties of some politicians. (Also, their mental dexterity.) For example, Ann Davies, the new Plaid Cymru MP for Caerfyrddin, has said she opposes the pylons . . . but not the wind turbines.
I don’t want to spend too much time on the Tywi valley project because it’s really just the intro to the other elements of this section.
As I say, roughly half of the electricity generated in Wales goes to England, and the amount will increase if all the planned wind farms get built. The situation is similar in Scotland, with electricity generated there having even further to travel to consumers in central and southern England. (With power being lost in transmission.)
And although it’s been reported once or twice, I’m not sure how many people are aware of the planned new Scottish connection. In a nutshell, it’s proposed that electricity generated off south west Scotland will be taken by undersea cable to Pentir, near Bangor, and then overland to Swansea North substation.
I’d like to be able to show you a map of the route, but there isn’t one, all I’ve seen is a vague line from Bangor to Swansea . . . through Eryri. Which obviously isn’t going to happen.
In this CPRW article Dr Jonathan Dean has this to say.
The route of this line is not yet known, despite me asking them numerous times. As they will not get consent for pylons in Eryri national park they basically have two options:
- along the north coast to Conwy, up the Conwy valley, past Bala then down to the Tywi valley to Swansea
- across the top of Pen Llŷn to Porthmadog, subsea to near Aberystwyth then cross country to Swansea
Which could mean the pylons coming down the Teifi valley, where there is already a campaign fighting Bute pylons. This Bute line will carry electricity from Lan Fawr, east of Llanddewi Brefi. I assume it will also serve Blaencothi and Nant Ceiment.
Then the pylons will also run down to Llandyfaelog. But will they share the line coming from Powys, or will there be two pylon runs past Llandeilo? And will they interfere with the route of the planned bypass?
However you look at it, lovely Ystrad Tywi is in for a forest of steel pylons marching for mile after mile over hill and dale. Each one sunk in hundreds of tons of concrete. And all done to save the environment, innit?
∼
The reason that Scotland and Wales have despoiled landscapes in order to generate electricity for England, is partly due to their politicians buying into the climate scam, and partly due to the difficulty of building onshore wind farms in England.
The latter due to different laws that allowed communities affected by such projects to object and, effectively, block them. But the law is changing.
Clearly, if onshore windfarms can in future be built in England, where the power is needed, there’ll be less need to erect windfarms in Wales. In fact, the need might be removed entirely.
It seems obvious to me that many of the mooted projects won’t now be needed. And that might include the pylon runs in the Teifi and Tywi valleys, even the big one from Bangor to Swansea.
And seeing as Bute Energy has yet to erect a single turbine, I think the ‘Welsh Government’ should call a halt to onshore wind projects in order to assess how the new legislation in England might impact on Wales.
We don’t want the ‘Welsh Government’ (via NRW) felling tens of thousands of trees, allowing hundreds of 800ft wind turbines, and hundreds of miles of pylons, if nobody wants to buy the electricity they erratically produce.
We’ll just have to live without the thousands of £70,000 pa jobs they’d have created.
♦ end ♦
© Royston Jones 2024
Not very public, the public consultation on trawsfynydd, letting more radiation polute the area even more.
As John Jenkins said “I curse the day I was born a Welshman”
If everyone eligible to vote is automatically registered, that would mean some areas would have more than the approximately 60,000 voters that the Boundary Commission sets per Ward. So new boundaries would have to be applied. And that would mean the need for more Assembly Members and Members of Parliament. Enlarging the trough!
A few points if I may.
The address in Cathedral Road is just leased offices – I don’t think there’s any connection between the companies.
I think character is correct. Character is basically related to thought process – how you behave and what you believe. Characteristics include things like hair colour, blood type etc.
Being on the electoral register means more than just being able to vote. For example it’s used as a point of reference by companies to assess financial ‘stability’ – how long have you lived at this address etc. It may also be used by Social Security.
There are two versions of the electoral register.
The full version includes the name and address of everyone who is registered to vote, except those who register to vote anonymously.
The open register, is an extract of the full electoral register. This version is available to anyone who wants to buy it, such as businesses or charities.
You can opt out of the open register when you register to vote.
Of course you may, Ifor. You’re always welcome. You should know that.
Though I think there is a connection with one of the outfits already at 22 Cathedral Road. And this connection explains the move to Cardiff. Plus of course, being nearer to Corruption Bay.
Felling trees to clear land for wind turbines, whilst concurrently conducting ‘rewilding’ by planting them on annexed farmland, is all a bit ‘Dear Liza’ don’t you find?
If it wasn’t the case that one jerk will follow another, I could be pleased to learn that Gething is gone. Have they cleared away the floods yet; he must have been bawling his eyes out this time?
It will be interesting to see who the junta blame, when things go wrong, now that there is, apparently, a friendly face beaming from the east end of the M4. They can’t possibly accept responsibility themselves.
Come election time, I am backing Abolish the Assembly.
Copy below of my letter to Welsh Government. Awaiting reply.
Rt Hon Vaughan Gething MS
First Minister
Welsh Government
5th Floor Ty Hywel
Cardiff Bay
CF99 1NA
My Ref: NCC/WJ/174
Your Ref:
Date: 10 July 2024
Dear First Minister
Subject: Wind Energy Policy – Wales and England
I refer to the policy statement on onshore wind published 8 July 2024 on GOV.UK, available at the following hyperlink and attached in pdf format.
https://www.gov.uk/government/publications/policy-statement-on-onshore-wind/policy-statement-on-onshore-wind
In view of the dramatic policy change in England, I would be grateful if your officials could review the 10 pre-assessed areas for wind energy set out in Policy 17 and 18 of Future Wales National Plan 2040. A review is considered necessary as wind energy sites in Wales are to connect to a national electricity grid serving England and Wales. The 10 areas are outlined on plan in Annex 1 below.
I look forward to a response from your officials when they have had an opportunity to assess the implications of the change of policy in England. Thank you.
Yours sincerely
Please keep us updated, Wynne.
Well done indeed. If I remember correctly, you were well ahead of the game on the recycling score.
Thank you, Dai. If you’re referring to Vaughan Gething’s mate, I certainly dug out the connection a while back. Also, the donations from that same source for Gething’s leadership bid in 2019.
What that miscellany tells us is that time is running out…fast. The crooks profiteering from a dubious green gospel ( I don’t know exactly which version!) seem to have UK gov as well as the Bay regime well and truly tucked up. Over recent weeks they have no doubt been beavering away advancing their case while media has been distracted by the VG saga. Can’t people deal with more than one thing at a time ? Tackle the enemy on more than one front ? Do something a touch more useful than engage in pompous posturing while likes of TATA are forging ahead with their vision untroubled by a bit of “local difficulty” ?
Best own goal of this year is yet to be scored. The closed list scam designed to create perpetual domination for Labour may prove very productive for Reform, who seem as good at taking votes off Labour as they are at taking votes off Tories. Their biggest potential may be in motivating the non voting element of the electorate off its collective arse and bumping up the total vote beyond the safe working margin that has protected Labour for over 25 years. Now I don’t relish the thought of having an Anglo Brit supremacist outfit having that much clout in our Senedd but if it serves to flush out the Stonewalls and the sundry green grifters then I’ll grudgingly acknowledge their contribution to the cause. Bet clever old Mick never thought about that when dreaming up his long term survival plan.
The “crooks profiteering from a dubious green gospel” were given legitimacy in 2017 by Theresa May’s update of the Climate Change Act, which legally commits the U.K. to net zero by 2050, then given a rocket up the ar$e in 2022 by Boris Johnson with the British Energy Security Strategy which commits the U.K. to carbon free electricity by 2035. So the stage was set by true blue, business loving Tories, the woolly jumpered tree huggers barely got a look in. Labour have upped the game a bit by shifting that date to 2030. The Welsh Government, who are still working to the 2035 deadline, will have to now cut their timescale or risk having London “do it to them”
As Ofgem will be publishing the first Centralised Strategic Network Plan in 2026, which will detail what is generated where and how to get the energy to customers, with a 25 year horizon, the next two years will see intense activity with all developers staking claims left, right and centre
The influence on Boris was his missus, Carrie. And she in turn was influenced by her good friends the Goldsmith brothers. (I believe she almost married one of them.)
If you’re right about being behind the clock then allowing onshore wind projects in England will not impact on developments in Wales. They’ll all go ahead.
I can’t see anything in England changing things in Wales but always worth asking
wales needs to generate twice what we cut do from renewables to hit the 2030/2035 target, then three times again by 2050
we can’t do that from onshore alone and could do it all with offshore
It seems to me that everyone is working towards targets unthinkingly. Which is why I keep using terms like ‘cult’.
But who set these targets?
Where is their evidence of the need for these targets?
Will those who set these targets be gaining in any way from the rest of us slavishly following their diktats?
Will the changes demanded make any real difference if the Earth is going through a cycle that has nothing to do with human behaviour?
UN Paris Agreement and then governments choose to sign up for it
if it’s a natural cycle, probably not
if it’s not, then yes
The crooks to whom I refer are more likely to be “true blue business loving Tories” because these are the chancers who operate either within or in tandem with an assortment of financial institutions who are gaming any old thing that becomes available through government policy at UK or devolved level. The “tree huggers” only feature insofar as they blindly support the corporatist smash and grab campaign in the misguided belief that it is a real long term solution. When the turbines fail or fall, the posh boys from the City will not be seen anywhere so the wooly jumpers will have to fund or undertake the clearance/repair work. Bad deal all round.
Not sure about the Tories being SO business loving. They shafted many exporting UK businesses with BoJo’s “oven-ready” Brexit. Quote: In June 2018, while attending an event for EU diplomats in London, Johnson was reported to have been asked about corporate concerns over a so-called hard Brexit. In response to the question, Johnson was reported to have said “Fuck business”. Unquote. OK, so it’s hearsay, but it is widely known…
But that was the nature of Brexit. It was always going to be like that
One of the touted benefits of the Holyhead freeport is it will restore freight traffic volumes that were lost due to Brexit
You write, “One of the touted benefits of the Holyhead freeport is it will restore freight traffic volumes that were lost due to Brexit”. The operative word here being, ‘touted’.
Because much of the traffic lost at Holyhead has been due to the rise in the use of ‘superferries’ travelling direct to the continent. This would have happened without Brexit. Stands to reason that an Irish trucker delivering to Lyon or Madrid will not travel through Wales and England to Dover when there are ferries direct to Brittany and Euskadi. Same applies to his continental counterparts with a delivery for Mrs O’Shaughnessy in Galway.
You really must get over Brexit, Jonathan. I’ll be here to help.
Was it just a coincidence that the Irish superferries freight volumes only increased when Brexit went live though? Especially as generally it increases journey times
Logistically it makes sense for some routes, and for driver welfare it has advantages, but that has rarely driven change in the “trucks’n’sheds” industry
I’ll never get over Brexit as it’s fundamentally sub-optimal to supply chain operations and therefore illogical
I believe we’d have seen superferries with or without Brexit. Because they’re not confined to these routes. They’re almost global.
We probably would, in time, but a 30% drop in freight volume coincident with Brexit cannot be coincidence
I’d need more information to evaluate this, “a 30% drop in freight volume”.
I’m assuming ‘superferries’ are container-based, as there’s a shit-ton of those operations going on in Dublin Port, but no such provision in Holyhead. Ro-ro traffic bound for the continent is logically always going to use the EnglandAndWales land bridge to the continent, all other factors regarding customs checks, etc, being equal, as you’re talking near enough half the travel time, end-to-end.
But Eire to Breizh or Euskadi allows the driver to grab a few hours sleep and there’s a minimum of paperwork when they land. I honestly can’t see the advantage of the ‘land bridge’ for Irish drivers unless they’re going to Scandinavia.
Purely from a ‘time is money’ perspective you understand, and all things being equal would mean end-to-end customs union as-was, so no paperwork whether Britain is avoided or not. There are cabins on the Holyhead-Dublin boats, so that probably constitutes their few hour’s sleep from the perspective of the haulage firm bosses, ha.
The bungled Brexit was undoubtedly damaging to business. However a huge slice of our financial services sector ( City types !) don’t really give a shit about British industry as long as they are able to invest in global enterprises and assets such as land. Most of those institutions and big business either overtly or covertly back the Tories. A few break ranks from time to time and that is often an early indicator that time is up for Tories. This time around some backed Sir Keir whose underlying values are akin to those of Cameron if not Boris’. No big jeopardy there as the other half of the Unionparty takes over.
The pylon lines from the Tywi and Teifi valleys will enter the substation at Llandyfaelog separately as neither has the capacity to carry both loads. As you have pointed out these are to extract energy from mid Wales to the 400 kV transmission grid and will require a new substation building. Bute are also planning a battery storage park (termed a BESS) next to the substation. And, as there is now a handy substation available, Lightsource BP are planning a 240 MW solar park
Meanwhile, to meet the extra demand for electricity in mid Wales, NGED are planning a third line of pylons to take energy from the 400 kV grid. This will have its own new substation
Part (but only part) of the issue here is a total failure of Bute and NGED to collaborate on a holistic solution, which just happens to be a breach of their Ofgem distribution licenses which Green Gen have only just been granted! I’m sure Ofgem will overlook this in their drive to be seen to be promoting competition
Is there really, “extra demand for electricity in mid Wales“, or are you referring to an extra demand for transmission facilities?
I’ve not looked at the latest detailed projections yet, or why this line is proposed, but electrification of heat and transport will increase demand. NGED will have to justify the need to Ofgem otherwise they’ll not get built
This is a letter I sent to the Western Mail but which failed to get published …
Green Gen Cymru, the Bute Energy offshoot, have just published the feedback they received on their proposed pylon line in the Tywi valley to connect the proposed Nant Mithil wind farm to the grid
They start off by saying “We’re acting now to build and operate a green energy network that will make sure 100% renewable energy can flow to communities in Wales.”
The only way I could get their electricity to my community would be:
Their proposed 132 kV line to the new substation at Llandyfaelog/Ferryside/near Carmarthen (the name changes depending on who writes about it)
400 kV line through Swansea, head of the valleys then to Gloucester
400 kV line past Birmingham and Wolverhampton, through Wrexham to Connah’s Quay
400 kV line along the north coast to Pentir, near Bangor, over the Menai Strait and across Ynys Môn to Wylfa
33 kV line to Amlwch, then Dulas
Finally a 11 kV line that goes over my garden to the 240 V transformer that feeds my house … assuming no one else uses first!
The Green Gen line will not connect to ANY distribution systems other than via the 400 kV transmission system where all electricity for the whole U.K. is “mixed together”, and for someone living in say Builth Wells, the electricity “journey” will be similarly tortuous
I do wish they wouldn’t treat us like simpletons!
Yes, Jonathan, the being treated like simpletons is very frustrating. It’s a shame your letter didn’t get published as it would help to educate the “simpletons” in the whys and wherefors of why Green Gen should, of course, not been granted the IDNO licence by Ofgem. But that’s a whole other story. As you say, a holistic solution is badly needed if Wales is not to be trashed by all of WG and Bute’s (and other developers’) plans to be able to supply the 400 kV grid. It’s been barely a week (has it?) since GreenGEN got its IDNO licence so for GreenGEN to be breaching the conditions of licence so soon is astonishing. Although, I guess, knowing Bute, perhaps we shouldn’t be so surprised.
They were breaching the conditions before it was granted, and a requirement of granting it was that they met all conditions?
It’s just total mockery. So who can hold them to account? Or I suppose what I’m saying is “who can I email?”. Obvs I’d need to know which conditions they were breaching.
Take a look at Condition 7A
OK, diolch.