@D. Mond. going off subject. You might think Cllr Clemens' response was robust. I thought he said exactly what I had expected him to say.
Mrs M, your mask is slipping.
"I've got 99 problems..."
She's not addressing the concerns of the few, if she was she would be in actual direct dialogue with the District Council. This is, yet again, all about getting her name in the papers. You yourself have entered into dialogue with councillors, albeit through the medium of the letters page of the Dawlish Gazette. I trust that you're satisfied with the robust response you received.
The online petition asks for a first name, a last name, an email address and a postcode. (and before anyone says that these details could be made up - so equally, I imagine, could the same details have been made up by those participating in the consultation questionnaire). As least we have a councillor trying to address the concerns of some of the electorate.
Politics by petition seems to be this pseudo-independent "politicians" way of doing business. She's clearly one of those here on dawlish.com who completely misunderstands the wording of the results of the consultation, and seeing as she was elected by little more than 20% of the Dawlish Central electorate, she's hardly in a position to talk about mandate. She has also implied that the ...
There is now a petition about the 'consultation'. https://you.38degrees.org.uk/petitions/save-the-lawn-this-is-not-the-site-for-a-new-play-park-in-dawlish
So glad I get up every day to go to work in order to pay taxes, that then get sent to a pariah state.
Thank you for the copy, Diana Mond, from the Evening Standard. Further information can be observed from the DFID Development Tracker website regarding payments being made to North Korea - https://devtracker.dfid.gov.uk/
Copied this from the Evening Standard: Foreign aid projects in North Korea include English lessons and workshops, as well as equipment and training for physiotherapy units. A Foreign Office spokesman told the Standard: “The projects we carry out in North Korea are part of our policy of critical engagement, and are used to promote British values and demonstrate to the North Korean people ...