Friday, 18 January 2019
Three wrongs don't make a democracy
My last posting was entitled the law the legislators like to ignore. Events suggest my mind was in the right place. The title would have suited better here though. If you havent I recommend reading the AG's statement on the election expenses.
My synopsis: a large proportion of elected candidates (possibly 18) failed to meet the requirments of the law updated 2014, the Judicial Greffier exercised powers not granted them in the law, and the AG has used his unchallengable right to declare that prosection is not in the public interest. In all three cases they were wrong.
This isn't the first instance where I am aware the AG has used this unique power to 'disappear' a political problem. When the then constables of St Peter and St Brelade decided to declare that camper vans could park in one or two designated spots, notable Le Port, contrary to the explicit requirements of the law, it got referred to the AG. As constables they had the opportunity to bring a proposition to the States to amend the law to facilitate what they wanted to do. But instead they simply took unilateral action. Quite disgraceful in my mind that the head the parish honorary police and someone who sits in the legislature should openly break the law , and overtly breach their responsibilities (and oath of office?) to uphold it. I am told when it was referred to the AG that the decision was made that any case bought to him in respect of camper vans at Le Port would not be in the public interest . He decided a priori to any case, evidence or facts!
This time we do have a sort of justification given by the AG. "bearing in mind the consequences to good government of investigating and prosecuting these alleged offences, it is not in my view in the public interest to proceed against all these individuals. The States and Government of Jersey would be significantly impaired at an important time for the Island." I find that hard to swallow.
For starters we are only talking a most one third of the Assembly. There are plenty of places in the world where whole govenments are gone in an instance, unplanned and new elections held. It might have happened in the UK just the other day if Mrs may had lost the vote of confidence. It was only relatively recently under Cameron that fixed term elections became the standard for the UK. In 2010/11 Belgium functioned well enough despite not having a government for two thirds of a year (http://content.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2052843,00.html ) There is no evidence to support the AG's assertion, indeed what evidence there is seems to point the other way.
Lay that against the alternative we now have. Up to a third of a legislature aren't competent enough to get a declaration of expenses submitted in time, despite the consequences being loss of their new seat. How is that going for good governance? And that is the chartable view of their actions. A cynical observer might well conclude that the actions of the 18 members, the Judicial Greffier and the AG is typical of a self serving introspective systesm that will do anything to preserve its power and the outward appearance of functionaing democracy and rule of law. That, in other places, would be called corruption.
Saturday, 8 December 2018
The law the legislators like to ignore.
Next week the States are to debate a proposition which has the potential to be up there in the top five worst pieces of legislation the States have adopted see: Draft Taxation (Companies - Economic Substance). Like one of other pieces in my top 5 - the introduction of 0/10 - it is a response to 'defend ' the finance industry from external actors. As the Intro puts it the law provides the means by which commitments of the States of Jersey to address the concerns of the EU Code of Conduct Group (Business taxation) ("COCG") regarding economic substance are met.
I've no problem with them addressing that. But it is the impact on quite legitimate business that really concerns me. Like the 0/10 it the law of unintended consequences that the legislators are ignoring. I became aware of it when a few weeks ago an acquaintance who runs a perfectly legitimate non finance business told me he was preparing to wind up his company if this proposition were passsed as it stands. (There are no amendments and no alternatives on the table as yet so it is all or nothing).
But it is worse than that because it seems to be built upon a fundamentally flawed concept too.
The intention , again quoting the report of the proposition is to deal with " The jurisdiction should not facilitate offshore structures or arrangements aimed at attracting profits which do not reflect real economic activity in the jurisdiction". It should be obvious there are three elements involved here - attracting profits, offshore structures and arrangements, and real economic activity in the jurisdiction. The proposition only addresses the last item. Profits are only mentioned twice - in the report, not the body of the proposed law. Offshore is similarly only mentioned once - in the quote I gave above.
As I read it, and I am certainly not alone in this, the proposed law applies to all Jersey companies, not just those that need to be addressed in the COCG objective. Most established companies won't actually have any difficulty in passing the economic substance test, but some most definitely will. There is a list in section 3 that identifies the relevant activites. they include most finance activities of course, but also intellectual property holding business. That's where my acquaintance is caught. It would equally cover software developers, playwrights, artists, authors, plant breedrs who retain breeders rights, patent holders etc etc.
There is a sort of get out clause in the introduction.
A "high risk IP company” is a company which carries on an intellectual property holding business and –(a) the company
– (i) did not create the intellectual property in an intellectual property asset which it holds for the purposes of its business,
(ii) acquiredcthe intellectual property asset–(A) from a connected person, or
(B)in considerationfor funding research and development by another person situated in a country or territory other than Jersey; and
(iii) licences the intellectual property asset to one or more connected persons or otherwise generates income from the asset in consequence of activities (such as facilitating sale agreements) performed by foreign connected persons; or
(b) the company does not carry out research and development, branding or distribution as part of its Jersey core-income generating activities;
The part I would draw your attention to is the first bit of paragraph 5 .
5
Requirement to meet economic substance test
(1)
Subject
to paragraph(8), a resident company must satisfy the economic
substance test in relation to any relevant activity carried on by it.
(2)
A
resident company meets the economic substance test in relation to a
relevant
activity if –
(a)
the
company is directed and managed in Jersey in relation to that
activity;
(b)
having
regard to the level of relevant activity carried on in Jersey
–(i)
there are an adequate number of employees in relation to that
activity who are physically present in Jersey (whether or not
employed by the resident company or by another entity and whether on
temporary or long – term contracts),
(ii)
there
is adequate expenditure incurred in Jersey, and
(iii)
there
are adequate physical assets in Jersey;
(c)
the
company conducts Jersey core-income generating activity; and
(d)
in
the case of Jersey core-income generating activity carried out for
the
relevant company by another entity, it is able to monitor and
control
the carrying out of that activity by the other entity.
Anyone who has ever run a start up business, especially in software development or research will be laughing their heads off. Such entities start in one of two ways - the owners working unpaid hours to develop product, or they get a large dollop of investment cash . 90% of the time it is the former. And if you are developing software you are like playwrights and authors and artists producing intellectual property - something that is licensed rather than sold. It is a shoe string operation usually there are no employees (directors are office holders that are not necessarily employees - if they are unpaid they cannot be!). There' s no income initially in development, and of course much of what you need to buy , if anything, is likely to be software tools not available locally. Assets are minimal , possibly don't even belong to the business, but are the personal proporty of the owners. Not much chance of meeting the economic substance test.
Now if I can go back to the key error. It arises in the item quoted above
i) did not create the intellectual property in an intellectual property asset which it holds for the purposes of its business. That is always true! For much the same reason companies cannot go to prison - they are legal structures. A structure cannot create intellectual property. You need a sentient being for that - almost always a human, put I guess art created by elephants or dogs might qualify. It is the reason anyone who works in research or software development will always find their employment conditions stipulate they assign their employer all rights to intellectual property created. It is troubling that the law seem to be so ignirant of the realities of the creation of intellectual property.
The penalties for falling foul of this all encompassing law are steep if you are a minnow start up, potentially £100,000 pounds. Peanuts to the biggest players who may make huge gains from doing exactly what the COCG want to stop, but disasterous for small legitimate businesses. There is a form of appeal set out in articles 12/13. First to the Comptroller (the one who raises the penalties and presumably whose department benefits from the fines !) . After that to a Commission.
4)A Commission of Appeal shall be constituted for the purpose of hearing an appeal under Article12 as it would be constituted from the Commissioners of Appeal appointed under Article 10(1) of the 1961 Law for the purpose of hearing appeals under the 1961 Law.
Hopefully you will have already identified the other open goal in this whole charade. This proposed law explicitly and only refers to companies. There is no provision for sole traders, partnerships, trusts or foundations that undertake the exact same activities. It is quite implausible that the legal advisors to the States (the AG or SG) did not see this. Of course those other mechanisms are excellent business for some parts of Jersey' legal fraternity. What a strange and quite unfathomable coincidence !!
Tuesday, 20 November 2018
A lost decade
Ten years ago we had an election in Jersey. The senatorial contest was notable for having three declared groupings - JDA, TimeForChange and Jersey2020. I was a candidate alongside Daniel Wimberley and Nick Palmer as the 2020 group. It felt as though some organised politics might actually arise from that. It was also of course run in the backdrop of revelations and investigations concerning child abuse in the care system.
The saddest thing for me is just how much those topics we were raising then are still relevant today, many more so. And how so little has been achieved by the States since on those issues. Despite the intervening Committee of Inquiry we still have repeated reports of various parts of the care system not adequate, needing change and failing children.
It will be hard for some to credit that back then we didn't have an energy policy and there was no position on climate change. Energy if it was considered was a matter of the Treasury Minister as shareholder dropping round for a cup of coffee to Jersey Electricity and informing the chief exec what level of dividend they expected to receive. The difference that election was the revelations concerning the new incinerator , since it does produce a spot of electricty from the burned waste.
It took the formation of the JCAN on the back of our campaigning that election, and a few more years to finally get an energy policy and a commitment on climate change. In classic Jersey fashion that was based on two decades old material - the Kyoto protocol. And it hasn't been updated since despite the rest of the world (arguably absenting the USA) having agreed the more ambitious Paris agreement.
An area I was almost alone in raising was food security, waste and the role of allotments. At that time the only proper site was at Grouville and that only because the land had been in the same hands since before the planning law was introduced and hence not controlled by it. We do now have a number of other allotment sites , but that is much more due to the work of JALGA than any assistance from the States. And all that before food banks became a big thing in the UK and almost a decade before Brexit talks of needing food and medicine stockpiles. It is a forgotten truth in politics that the best time to tackle a problem is when most cannot yet see it is going to be a problem.
No one would be surprised to hear that a former software developer like me was arguing for diversifying into a tech sector, especially software development, and for online voting. We have a sort of tech sector now, but it is far too intertwined with finance to be a proper diversification. One small step which I did call for back in 2008 came to pass in the last couple of years - putting official notices on the States own web site.
Naturally some of those big items were never going to get much progress unless there was a significant change in States members and their political priorities as a group. Of course that didn't (hasn't) happen. And the small victories. Easy really when you know how the highly personalised and individualistic system works. Make a fuss in an election , and then go relatively quiet. At some point the info seeps into the consciousness of the elected members and you let them think they dreamed it up all by themselves. It only takes 7 to 10 years! The frightening thing is we don't have that long to get properly on top of the big issues from a decade ago - climate change, sustainability and living within our means.
Friday, 28 September 2018
UN declaration on peasant rights
The UN Human Rights Council has passed the Declaration on the Rights of Peasants and Other People Working in Rural Areas.
"In a resolution adopted by a vote of 33 in favour, three against and 11 abstentions, the Council adopted the United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Peasants and Other People Working in Rural Areas, and it recommended that the General Assembly adopt the United Nations Declaration. It invited Governments, agencies and organizations of the United Nations system and intergovernmental and non-governmental organizations to disseminate the Declaration and to promote universal respect and understanding thereof."
The UK has consistently voted against the declaration at previous stages of its evolution. It did so again today. The other two no votes were Hungary and Australia.
It will now go forward to the General Assembly.
Among the key rights are :
The right to
land, access, use and management of land, necessary for the
realization of the rights to an adequate standard of living, to
health and to participate
The
right to seeds and biodiversity, includes right to use, grow, reuse,
store, develop, exchange, transport, give and sell seeds. By
developing their seeds, peasants build more resilient and sustainable
farming systems, able to feed others in spite of climate change.
The
right of food sovereignty, referring to the right to a
development model in which peasants can not only choose but also
develop their own means of production, processing,distribution and
consumption, in such a way that it valuesand
improves the social and working conditions within agricultural and
food systems.
The right to decent income and means of subsistence
Worldwide there are 2 billion peasants and other people working in rural
areas who would be coverd by these rights if adopted.
To my mind this declaration is almost diametrically opposed to the current situation in Jersey. That 1974 law was designed and works to ensure land is available to commercial farmers. Here we have no land occupation rights. You can own land, but the right to work agricultural land is tightly controlled by the States. To be a bona fide agriculturalist as they put it you have to have a margin profit of £40,000 per year and meet other restrictions. As a smallholder the amount of land you can occupy is limited but you still have to have £5,000 margin. The law intentionaly denies subsistence and self supporting occupation - legally I guess its illegal to be a peasant in Jersey! A synopsis of the law is at https://www.gov.je/Industry/FarmingFishing/PlantsProduce/Pages/LandControl.aspx
Food soverignty is a concept that seems unknown to Jersey policy makers. Our approach is to corral all producers into a one managed scheme. You only have to look at the struggle Darren Quenault had to set up his own dairy to see how this right isn't supported locally.
The right to a decent income certainly doesn't exist in Jersey for self employed and seasonal workers. For starters if you own your land, those fields are counted as assets against you for income support.
The States need to do some serious policy revision thinking before this declaration gets to the UN General Assembly if it has any intention to be compliant.
Monday, 23 July 2018
So bad I posted it twice!
"The States communications team are being given the authority to ‘approve’ information released to the public if it is deemed likely to cause reputational damage"
https://www.bailiwickexpress.com/…/freedom-information-sp…/…
On the same days as "Children's Service cover-up claimed by whistleblower" https://jerseyeveningpost.com/news/2018/07/23/childrens-service-cover-up-claimed-by-whistleblower/
Outrageous. I guess we now know why they needed to up the communications unit to 34. It didn't even exist 12 years ago! Back to controlled, manipulated, States managed newsflow and information. Mushrooms prosper by being kept in the dark and fed sh*t. Are you a human or a fungus?
In the beginning was the plan, and then the specification.
And the plan was without form, and the specification was void.
And the darkness was upon the faces of the implementors;
And they spoke unto their managers, saying: “It is a crock of cow manure, and it stinketh.“
And their manager went to the second level manager, and he spake unto him, saying: “It is a crock of excrement, and none may abide the odor thereof.“
And the second level manager went to the third level, and he spake unto him saying: “It is a container of excrement, and it is very strong, such that none may abide before it.“
And the third level went to the division manager, and he spake unto him, saying: “It is a vessel of fertilizer, and none may abide its strength.“
And the division manager went to the assistant vice-president, and he spake unto him, saying: “It contains that which aids plant growth, and it is very strong.“
And the assistant vice-president went to the vice-president, and he spake unto him, saying: “It promoteth growth and it is very powerful.“
And the vice-president went before the president and spake unto him, saying: “This powerful new product will promote growth of the company.“
And the president looked upon the product and saw that “It was good!
Friday, 25 May 2018
Ineffectual changes
The recent election in Jersey didn't catch the imagination of voters it seems. A few small changes and novel occurrences didn't make much of a dint in the voter turnout.
Moving the election to May instead of the usual Autumn period didn't do it, even though the weather was favourable. Personally it meant for the first time in three decades I had no active part in a significant election where I was eligible to vote. April and May are the busiest times for general fruit and vegetable growers. Miss the planting season and it is most of a year's earnings lost. So I wasn't a candidate and couldn't get involved in campaigning.
Unprecedentedly I think half the ministers didn't restand. And at least two ministers decided to refight deputy seats rather than put themselves before an Island wide electorate. The result is that voters were unable to give those minister a drubbing if they felt policies or performance warranted it. In a party system of course they have the chance do do that by proxy by voting against the party candidate. This aspect is particularly irritating to me. The ministers stand as individuals, but act together under collective responsibility. But as soon as an election comes they want to be independents again and deny collective responsibility where it really matters - to the electorate.
The third different thing this election was the presence of a party with a worked out manifesto and standing enough candidates to have an outside chance of being a major driving force in the assembly. In those respects I think what Reform did was a service to the electorate and set a bar for others in future election about the level of detail and comprehensive nature of manifestos the electorate might expect.
Perhaps the most notable feature of this election was the fact that all but two of the candidates restanding for election were returned. Given there were 9 sitting members contesting 8 senatorial seats one casualty at least was guaranteed there. The other was constable of St Mary in a re-run of the last election which was similarly close the other way. The conclusion I draw is the that the electorate was fearful and went for the 'better the devil you know' option. What they feared is the question.
And the outcome of this election? Well actually not much change as I can see. I don't expect much from the new Assembly on ecology, sustainability or resource dependency. That the election in the Assembly for chief minister is between a former accountant and another former accountant probably speaks volumes for what is the principal and overriding concern and interest of the elected members. And as they say if you want to know what someone values look at what they count.
Moving the election to May instead of the usual Autumn period didn't do it, even though the weather was favourable. Personally it meant for the first time in three decades I had no active part in a significant election where I was eligible to vote. April and May are the busiest times for general fruit and vegetable growers. Miss the planting season and it is most of a year's earnings lost. So I wasn't a candidate and couldn't get involved in campaigning.
Unprecedentedly I think half the ministers didn't restand. And at least two ministers decided to refight deputy seats rather than put themselves before an Island wide electorate. The result is that voters were unable to give those minister a drubbing if they felt policies or performance warranted it. In a party system of course they have the chance do do that by proxy by voting against the party candidate. This aspect is particularly irritating to me. The ministers stand as individuals, but act together under collective responsibility. But as soon as an election comes they want to be independents again and deny collective responsibility where it really matters - to the electorate.
The third different thing this election was the presence of a party with a worked out manifesto and standing enough candidates to have an outside chance of being a major driving force in the assembly. In those respects I think what Reform did was a service to the electorate and set a bar for others in future election about the level of detail and comprehensive nature of manifestos the electorate might expect.
Perhaps the most notable feature of this election was the fact that all but two of the candidates restanding for election were returned. Given there were 9 sitting members contesting 8 senatorial seats one casualty at least was guaranteed there. The other was constable of St Mary in a re-run of the last election which was similarly close the other way. The conclusion I draw is the that the electorate was fearful and went for the 'better the devil you know' option. What they feared is the question.
And the outcome of this election? Well actually not much change as I can see. I don't expect much from the new Assembly on ecology, sustainability or resource dependency. That the election in the Assembly for chief minister is between a former accountant and another former accountant probably speaks volumes for what is the principal and overriding concern and interest of the elected members. And as they say if you want to know what someone values look at what they count.
Tuesday, 10 April 2018
CoM, CoI and coincidence?
As I write at least six of the current Council of Ministers are not seeking re-election to the States let alone as ministers. . Add in a handful of assistant ministers also bowing out at the prospect of another election and one has to wonder what has triggered this unprecedented winnowing of the chaff.
Commonly social media messages refer to rats jumping a sinking ship. I doubt that is the cause. If the CoM had lost a vote of confidence in the assembly, or serried ranks of protesters were evident outside the latest meetings I might take that suggestion.
I put to you another reason - their job is done as they see it. Is it coincidence that many of those ministers were in the Assembly when the events leading to the Committee of Inquiry into abuse in care was put in place. Some of them worked very hard to undermine, deflect and eviscerate the terms of reference and the standing and findings of the CoI. Well the CoI reported and there is now nothing left to attack. The findings, however weak, are being implemented and the questions that never were put are now unnoticed. Questions of no import to anyone except perhaps historians of some future age.
Job done. Arses covered, reputations quickly buffed up again and those who were to be protected have been . Rewards, titles, and invitations in the post soon....
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