DavidofMersea
Well-Known Member
Colchester council, which pays for the public conveniences in West Mersea, has announced the seafront blocks, in Coast Road at the top of the hard, and two in Victoria Esplanade, will shut in April.
All councils are trying to save money by offloading services. If you want to keep the toilets, residents need to lobby the West Mersea Town Council to take them over.
West Mersea’s mayor Peter Clements said: “There is no way on the amount of money we receive, we would run the public toilets.
“It is something that should be carried by the whole borough.
“It is a very expensive thing to run. We couldn’t possibly afford it.”
The seafront toilets are used by visitors, as well as fishermen, sailors and beach hut owners.
West Mersea’s mayor Peter Clements said: “There is no way on the amount of money we receive, we would run the public toilets.
“It is something that should be carried by the whole borough.
“It is a very expensive thing to run. We couldn’t possibly afford it.”
The seafront toilets are used by visitors, as well as fishermen, sailors and beach hut owners.
West Mersea can ask for whatever amount it needs, and it will be collected through Council Tax by Colchester Borough Council.
...has announced ... will shut in April.
Peter Clements should realise the importance of these facilities, as he is also a local yachtsman, but no doubt feels the political pressure to economise services as being more important. Shame on him for his quoted comments.
In Southend the council granted leases on some of the toilets and they became food outlets on the condition that toilets were kept available for public use. One of them is called Tolouse! The loos are much better than the old council ones just not quite so big. Privatise loos - way to go.
As I understand the situation, Colchester Borough Council fund West Mersea council, and Peter Clements is saying that CBC do not give WM enough pay for the maintenance of the toilets - and if that is true, I cannot see it is Peter Clements fault
West Mersea Town Council sets its own annual budget, and then requests the money it needs (called a "precept") from Colchester Borough Council, who collect it via Council Tax. Parish and Town Council precepts are not subject to capping, so they can ask for whatever they reasonably need. It would seem reasonable for a tourist town to provide some public toilets. So Peter Clements isn't telling the whole story.
In Ibiza, and perhaps mainland Spain as well, there are no public toilets. There is a law that says that if you run a restaurant, hotel, bar, etc., you must allow Joe Public to use your toilet
Why would PC not be telling the whole story? It is CBC that are closing the loos, and why would PC protect them against Mersea interests?
Why would PC not be telling the whole story? It is CBC that are closing the loos, and why would PC protect them against Mersea interests?
I have seen the same thing working in the Netherlands and Germany. People are usually expected to pay one euro but it would need a major cultural shift for it to work in Britain.
You'd need to ask him. Maybe he hopes CBC will change their minds. Maybe he doesn't want to be seen to be increasing West Mersea's precept. Maybe he doesn't understand how his council is funded.
You'd need to ask him. Maybe he hopes CBC will change their minds. Maybe he doesn't want to be seen to be increasing West Mersea's precept. Maybe he doesn't understand how his council is funded.