Posts Tagged ‘damian collins’

The future of nuclear power at Dungeness

Posted in Community Projects, Miscellaneous, On the coast on January 12th, 2011 by admin – 0 Comments

The future of nuclear power at Dungeness
Public Meeting
Saturday 22 January
The Assembly Rooms
Church Approach, New Romney
TN28 8AS
10.30am – 12.30pm

The Department for Energy and Climate Change has agreed to a request by Shepway District Council and local MP Damian Collins to hear local people’s views about the future of nuclear power at Dungeness.
It’s part of the public consultation on the government’s latest nuclear strategy proposals – which exclude Dungeness as a site for a new nuclear power station.

Shepway District Council will explain the progress that has been made on talks with the government and the meeting will give you the opportunity to make your views known and ask questions about the importance of nuclear power to The Marsh.

All welcome

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Agenda for business growth in 2011

Posted in Miscellaneous, On the coast on January 8th, 2011 by admin – 0 Comments

Damian Collins MP says “As we get back into the swing of things our focus is inevitably on the future and the things we are planning to do in the twelve months ahead. I believe that one of the major priorities for 2011 for the area is how we can get more growth in the local economy, to create the new jobs we need and support businesses.

Just before Christmas I had a meeting in Westminster with the Energy Minister Charles Hendry to discuss how we can establish an agenda for a new power station at Dungeness. I was joined at the meeting by Shepway Councillors Rory Love and Carole Waters. I have been campaigning for a new power station at Dungeness since before I was elected to parliament and intend to keep the pressure up. I was pleased in the meeting that the Minister confirmed that the Department for Energy would support and attend a public meeting in Romney Marsh this month. This meeting will give people the chance to have their say in the latest round of consultations on the Government’s programme for new nuclear power stations. One of the biggest issues we have faced through these consultations is the objection of Natural England to the development of a new power station within the protected habitats sites at Dungeness. I want us to turn this argument around and establish an agenda for how we can overcome these objections, even if this requires new research to be conducted into the habitats at Dungeness and how it might be possible to restore them after the development takes place of compensate for some loss of habitat. The benefits that the new power station could bring to the local economy are too great for us to leave any stone unturned in our campaign to make it happen.”

http://www.damiancollins.com/2011/01/agenda-for-business-growth-in-2011/

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Remembrance Day

Posted in Miscellaneous on November 11th, 2010 by admin – 0 Comments

This week we have received the very sad news of the death of Willie Richardson, who gave so many years of service to people on Romney Marsh, as a County and District Councillor and a former Coxswain of the RNLI Dungeness Lifeboat. He was also a wonderful man whose friendship and advice I hugely valued. He was much loved and respected by all who knew him and worked with him, and we all send our deepest sympathies to his wife Judith and their family. Willie had lived all his life in Dungeness and was a keen supporter of the power station, and the campaign to see a new one built. When I saw him to discuss this just over ten days ago he was full of enthusiasm and good ideas.

We will miss you Willie.

Today is also Remembrance Day when we mark the sacrifices made in by our armed forces at home and around the world. We also particularly remember those men who have lost their lives in Afghanistan in the last year, including Rifleman Peter Aldridge, who lived in Folkestone, and the members of the Royal Gurkha Rifles who have been on a tour of duty there; Rifleman Suraj Gurung, Corporal Arjun Purja Pun, Major James Bowman, Lieutenant Neal Turkington, and Gunner Zak Cusak.

As the years pass it becomes more and more important that we also remember the sacrifices people made in the First and Second World Wars. I believe that each new generation should understand what people did in those years to defend freedom in its darkest hours. We see reminders of this around the District, from the solitary grave of a Battle of Britain pilot on Romney Marsh, to the military cemetery at Shorncliffe and the Road of Remembrance in Folkestone.

Readers of my column will know that I have been involved for the last few years as Chairman of the Step Short project which is working to mark the role Folkestone played in the First World War. It is believed that up to nine million men passed through the town at that time, to and from the trenches of the Western Front in France and Belgium. In August, the Step Short memorial walk from outside The Grand on The Leas, down the Road of Remembrance and to the harbour, traced the last steps that many of these men would have taken on English soil. To help people understand more about the role Folkestone played during the war, and the stories of the people involved here at that time, the Step Short project is soon to launch a new website. This will include a walking guide for the route of the Remembrance Walk, information about places of interest linked to the war, as well as a lot of archive material from the period. I hope that this will be of use and interest to local people and visitors, and please let me know if you would like any more information about this, or the Step Short project.

Damian Collins MP for Folkestone and area

http://www.damiancollins.com/2010/11/remembrance-day/

http://stepshort.gofolkestone.org.uk/index.html

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Gurkhas safe in the Strategic Defence Review

Posted in Miscellaneous, On the coast on October 19th, 2010 by admin – 0 Comments

The Prime Minister has just announced the results of the Strategic Defence Review and has confirmed that the Gurkhas are not affected by the savings being made in the Defence budget.

This is excellent news and means that the Gurkhas will continue to provide their important and unique service as part of the British army of which we are all proud.

In the chamber of the House of Commons David Cameron has confirmed that there will be no losses of infantry regiments as a result of the review and that any reductions in manpower for the army will be made away from the front line.

Members of the Royal Gurkhas Rifles currently on duty in Afghanistan will also have been pleased to hear David Cameron’s committment that ‘there is no cut whatsoever in the support for our forces in Afghanistan’.

In addition the defence review maintains our committment to the training base in Brunei where the Gurkhas are also stationed.

Overall the defence review takes a long term strategic view of our national security needs in the years ahead. After the review, it is expected that Britain will still have the fourth largest defence budget in the world, and that we will be able to maintain our obligations at home and around the globe; defending our freedom and supporting our values. This includes a committment to maintain Trident as our independent nuclear deterent, and to upgrade the system with a new generation of submarines in the 2020s. A decision I wholeheartedly support.

Damian Collins MP

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MP’s meet with Defence Secretary to discuss Gurkhas.

Posted in Miscellaneous on October 1st, 2010 by admin – 0 Comments

TWO of our local MPs have met with Defence Secretary Liam Fox to discuss the future of the Gurkhas.

Doubts were raised by influential backbencher Patrick Mercer when he said the two Nepalese battalions – based here in Kent on a three-year rotation – may be disbanded to save money.

A fortnight ago Shepway MP Damian Collins and his Dover counterpart Charlie Elphicke sought assurances the Gurkhas would be safe. Both men were encouraged by what they described as a “positive” meeting.

Dr Fox told them he is an admirer of the Gurkhas. But the message still remains the same: everything is ruled in, and nothing is ruled out.

What will mitigate in the Gurkhas’ favour is that the mega-rich Sultan of Brunei pays for a proportion of the regiment’s costs.

For his money, the Sultan’s oil-soaked country gets its own private mini-army, and the prestige of having arguably the world’s most feared fighting force on its doorstep. The Gurkhas get a well-appointed base with jungle terrain to train in, and a hot climate. Soldiers and their families are often very happy there.

Mr Collins has asked for a breakdown of the figures relating to the Sultan’s contribution, as this may be a persuasive component to the argument for keeping them. One wonders if the Sultan is keeping a close interest in the fate of the Gurkhas.

If the British government decides to get rid of hundreds of years of military history, their benefactor in Brunei might just take them on full time.

Excerpt from: http://www.thisiskent.co.uk/

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Maiden speech calls for Dungeness to be reconsidered

Posted in In the country, Miscellaneous on May 27th, 2010 by admin – 0 Comments

British Houses of Parliament

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New MP Damian Collin made his maiden speech in the House of Commons today and wasted no time in bringing the issue of a new power station at Dungeness before the House. Here is a transcript of todays maiden speech.

Damian Collins (Folkestone and Hythe) (Con): It is a great pleasure to follow the hon. Member for North Antrim (Ian Paisley). It seems that his constituency has yet another passionate and powerful advocate to represent it in this Chamber. I am sure that Members will also have been delighted to see his father present in the Gallery to witness his speech. I, too, have the distinction of following in giant footsteps, and I am particularly pleased to have the opportunity so early in this Parliament to pay tribute to my predecessor, Michael Howard.

Michael Howard will be known by many Members on both sides of the House for his 27 years of service to his constituents and his fine record in Government, too, as Secretary of State for the Environment and for Employment and—I hope that my right hon. Friend the Member for Maidenhead (Mrs May) will allow me this observation at this moment—as possibly the finest Home Secretary that this country has seen since the war. He will also be fondly remembered by Members on this side of the House for his leadership of our party. He did not lead us to ultimate victory, but we would credit him with turning the corner of our fortunes and laying the foundations for the success that we enjoyed at the last general election. I was also privileged in my four years as the prospective parliamentary candidate for Folkestone and Hythe to benefit from his friendship, judgment and insight. I was very grateful for that.

In an interview for a book published recently, my right hon. Friend the Prime Minister mentioned that Michael Howard had one of those brilliant lawyerly minds that meant that he could win an argument even when he was in the wrong. I am sure that all those who have known him and worked with him will have seen that quality represented first hand. He was undoubtedly one of the finest politicians of his generation in the Conservative party and we remember him warmly for that. He was also dogged and determined in the pursuit of the interests of his constituents. In that regard, he was certainly a man who had something of the fight about him and something of the right about him.

I have the distinction of being the fourth Member to be elected to serve the constituency of Folkestone and Hythe since its creation in 1950, although the Cinque Port towns of Hythe and New Romney, within its boundaries, have been represented continuously since the very first Parliament was summoned by Simon de Montfort in 1265. I am conscious—as were previous speakers, as the hon. Member for Bermondsey and Old Southwark (Simon Hughes) said—that I follow not just one distinguished predecessor, but a long line of people who have represented the people of Folkestone and Hythe in Parliaments over the years. That is certainly a great honour.

I should like to indulge the House with reference to two former Members whose careers might be particularly relevant to the political times that we find ourselves in today. Sir Edward Watkin, who was a Victorian railway magnate and responsible for one of the early attempts to build a channel tunnel at Folkestone, rebelled from his party in 1886 and sat as a Liberal Unionist in support of the Conservative Administration of the time. Sir Philip Sassoon, who created the beautiful Port Lympne estate in my constituency and was a cousin of Siegfried Sassoon, the war poet, was a elected as a Conservative Member, but in 1920 served as the Parliamentary Private Secretary to David Lloyd George in a post-war coalition Government.

The constituency is large and varied. It stretches for some 20 miles along the coast, from the Battle of Britain memorial just to the east of Folkestone, to Dungeness and the Kent-Sussex border. Inland, it includes the unique landscape of Romney marsh and the beauty of the Elham valley and the north downs. The entrance and exit of the channel tunnel is based in my constituency. Folkestone itself, although no longer a seaport and ferry port, is undergoing a very exciting process of regeneration, as it becomes a new hub for creativity and the arts, and I believe that it has a very bright future.

The constituency also included for the first time in an election the Saxon Shore ward, taken in from Ashford borough, but true cartographers would probably say that the constituency’s boundaries are constantly changing, not owing to the pains of the Boundary Commission but because of the shifting shingle peninsula at Dungeness, which is constantly moving with the climate. The force of nature is seen by the location of lighthouses that were once offshore but are now hundreds of yards inland. It is a truly unique place in the English landscape. Charles Harper referred to it in his 1914 guide to the Kentish coast as

“one of the most remarkable places in England…a waste of shingle, with here and there a sparse patch of gorse, and stretching as far as the eye can reach.”

That landscape has not changed much but for the notable addition of the arrival of nuclear power in the 1960s. Nuclear power at Dungeness is an issue in which my hon. Friend the Member for Wealden (Charles Hendry), the Minister for energy, knows that I have taken a strong interest, and on which I have corresponded with him. I should like to address some remarks in this debate to nuclear power at Dungeness.

Dungeness A power station was given approval in 1959, and a B-generation power station was commissioned in the 1960s and opened in the 1980s. That power station is due to start being decommissioned in 2017. There had been a long-held assumption in my constituency that we would be benefit from a new generation nuclear power station, as part of the Government’s new build programme. Earlier in the debate today, the right hon. Member for Doncaster North (Edward Miliband) cautioned us against sending out mixed messages on the future of nuclear power. Certainly, my constituents heard a very evident mixed message from the last Government: Dungeness was originally included on the Government’s list of possible sites for new build nuclear power stations and was then removed last autumn, and there has followed a consultation process in which my constituents have taken an active and lively interest.

There is a great deal of support for nuclear power in my constituency. I am sure that hon. Members who have nuclear sites in their constituencies know that there is a good deal of support for them, because they generate a huge number of jobs and important support for the local economy. In my constituency, the area of Dungeness and the Romney marshes remains a relatively deprived part not only of my constituency, but of Kent and the south-east of England. Nuclear power could play an important part in my community.

It appears from the consultation process launched by the last Government that one of the main reasons why Dungeness was taken off the Government’s list of potential sites was the objections of Natural England. It is one of the Government’s statutory consultees, and in some ways it is only doing its job, but its assessment, based on the habitats regulations, was that the loss of the vegetated shingle in the area around Dungeness power station could not be mitigated, as the landscape was unique. All of us in my constituency would agree that it is a unique landscape, but we are also mindful that the potential development land for the new power station is only 1 per cent. of the entire protected site of special scientific interest around Dungeness, Rye and Romney Marsh; we are talking about a relatively small area of development.

When, in 1959, the Minister of Power gave consent for the first power station to be built, he reached the conclusion that the mitigation necessary, and the damage to the area, was so small that it could not be said that the building of a power station compromised the integrity of the whole site. I know that my constituents will hope that the new Government can look again at the case for nuclear power in Dungeness and will draw a similar conclusion—that it may be possible to work to mitigate the impact of the building of a new power station without compromising the integrity of the entire site, which is greatly valued not only by my constituents but by people across the country. We see the great value that nuclear power has for our community, and we would like to encourage and support it.

In conclusion, my constituents believe that having a sustainable environment is foremost among everyone’s interests in the decades ahead, but we should also have a sustainable sense of opportunity for people, so that there is an opportunity for work, for a decent life, and for people to provide for their families and children, so that people can hope that their children will have a better standard of living than they have enjoyed. We might say that those are eternal dreams and ambitions, held by every generation, but they are only delivered and realised by the decisions that we take in this House every

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