240913 -13Sep24
Flooding, Tithe Maps, Overhead Power Lines, LPA portal, Sharing Layers, Zoho Mail, PSGA layers, Banter
Last updated
Flooding, Tithe Maps, Overhead Power Lines, LPA portal, Sharing Layers, Zoho Mail, PSGA layers, Banter
Last updated
Video Timeline (min:sec):
00:00 - 11:00 Flooding, Tithe Maps
11:00 - 16:00 Overhead Cables
16:00 24:52 Links to LPA portal
24:52 - 26:40 Sharing Layers
26:40 - 35:20 Parish Online email on Zoho
35:20 - 40:51 PSGA layers
40:51 - 53:00 Banter
53:00 58:08 (end) Flooding - reprise
WEBVTT
1 00:00:29.110 --> 00:00:30.780 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Good afternoon, Richard.
2 00:00:31.310 --> 00:00:34.100 Parish Clerk: Good afternoon. I haven't seen you for a while.
3 00:00:35.840 --> 00:00:37.740 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It's not been that long, has it?
4 00:00:37.980 --> 00:00:40.469 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Are you on your wind down now?
5 00:00:41.190 --> 00:00:42.069 Parish Clerk: Oh, yes.
6 00:00:43.170 --> 00:00:46.920 Parish Clerk: hopefully. Interviews next week for for my replacement.
7 00:00:48.500 --> 00:00:50.549 Parish Clerk: How's long? Sutton coming along?
8 00:00:51.511 --> 00:00:59.690 Graham Stoddart-Stones: They've had 2 applicants, one of whom was something like a double Phd. In everything except parism.
9 00:00:59.920 --> 00:01:09.099 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So, and the other one had masses of experience of Paris Karchism. So you wonder why she's coming to little ago quite long, long. Sutton?
10 00:01:10.310 --> 00:01:14.660 Parish Clerk: In it to a portfolio of 2 or 3 other parishes. I expect.
11 00:01:14.660 --> 00:01:16.979 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Very likely. Yes, why not?
12 00:01:17.350 --> 00:01:18.830 Parish Clerk: Tends to be the way.
13 00:01:20.580 --> 00:01:31.210 Parish Clerk: Of course you've got a and you've got a humongous pay bill. So you know she's she's looking forward to a to a good salary. Unlike unlike my parish, that you know.
14 00:01:32.110 --> 00:01:36.439 Parish Clerk: it's probably not as attractive as some of those that have been advertised recently. Oh, hello!
15 00:01:36.440 --> 00:01:37.120 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.
16 00:01:37.340 --> 00:01:39.680 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So are you able to
17 00:01:39.890 --> 00:01:43.590 Graham Stoddart-Stones: work out what you're going to do next? Or is that still a matter of
18 00:01:43.990 --> 00:01:46.099 Graham Stoddart-Stones: depends when someone takes over.
19 00:01:46.950 --> 00:01:52.079 Parish Clerk: Yeah, it's more than anything I got enough. I got enough to do coming up, anyway, with carnivals.
20 00:01:52.730 --> 00:01:53.700 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, indeed!
21 00:01:53.870 --> 00:01:55.139 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Hello, Hazel.
22 00:01:55.810 --> 00:01:56.579 Councillor Helen Davey (Hazel): Yeah. Linda.
23 00:01:56.580 --> 00:01:57.230 Andrew Clegg: Got it.
24 00:01:57.480 --> 00:01:58.280 Councillor Helen Davey (Hazel): Graham.
25 00:01:58.430 --> 00:02:01.990 Councillor Helen Davey (Hazel): Parish, Clark and Andrew. Hello!
26 00:02:05.900 --> 00:02:06.570 Councillor Helen Davey (Hazel): I'm actually.
27 00:02:06.570 --> 00:02:12.889 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Touch Dave Andrew. With what the state of the Parish Council is now in Martok. Are you still alive at the.
28 00:02:12.890 --> 00:02:29.310 Andrew Clegg: I'm I'm as much out of touch as you are, Graham, and that that I'm happy about that Graham. Sorry I didn't make the meeting the other day, but but just out of interest. I've just returned from a place called Long Sutton.
29 00:02:29.630 --> 00:02:32.250 Andrew Clegg: Well, no, to be precise.
30 00:02:32.540 --> 00:02:34.468 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right. I don't see
31 00:02:34.950 --> 00:02:35.480 Andrew Clegg: Ben.
32 00:02:35.480 --> 00:02:35.990 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Space. Yeah.
33 00:02:35.990 --> 00:02:37.739 Andrew Clegg: Yes, your former colleague. Yes.
34 00:02:37.740 --> 00:02:38.510 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.
35 00:02:38.780 --> 00:02:49.908 Andrew Clegg: He's got a lot of wonderful ponds, none of which show any trace of phosphate in them. So we had a rather boring time. We didn't even see any blue at all. He he thought, probably thought I was a charlatan.
36 00:02:53.280 --> 00:02:54.570 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh dear!
37 00:02:54.570 --> 00:02:55.080 Andrew Clegg: Hmm.
38 00:02:55.080 --> 00:02:56.320 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Hi Stuart!
39 00:02:56.580 --> 00:02:57.075 Stuart Withington: Hi.
40 00:02:57.570 --> 00:02:58.670 Councillor Helen Davey (Hazel): Let's do it.
41 00:02:58.670 --> 00:02:59.650 Stuart Withington: I'll.
42 00:03:00.950 --> 00:03:06.189 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, I've got, as you say. Here is the person that's got today's list of questions.
43 00:03:09.345 --> 00:03:10.830 chris edwards: Sorry I'm late.
44 00:03:10.830 --> 00:03:11.160 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.
45 00:03:11.160 --> 00:03:11.890 chris edwards: Everybody.
46 00:03:11.890 --> 00:03:18.859 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Chris is is the one that's courteous enough to call me in advance and say, I'm gonna hit you. With all these questions.
47 00:03:21.160 --> 00:03:23.629 Graham Stoddart-Stones: We got Malcolm coming. That's wonderful.
48 00:03:23.630 --> 00:03:25.000 Parish Clerk: Morning, welcome.
49 00:03:25.000 --> 00:03:25.860 chris edwards: Yeah.
50 00:03:25.860 --> 00:03:27.000 Andrew Clegg: Hi. Malcolm.
51 00:03:27.510 --> 00:03:28.919 Councillor Helen Davey (Hazel): Hello, Malcolm.
52 00:03:30.930 --> 00:03:31.930 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Hey! Stuart.
53 00:03:31.930 --> 00:03:32.729 Councillor Helen Davey (Hazel): Do it.
54 00:03:36.050 --> 00:03:36.820 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I'm sort of mouth.
55 00:03:36.820 --> 00:03:38.340 Stuart Withington: Still looking to the heavens.
56 00:03:46.270 --> 00:03:47.460 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Let's see.
57 00:03:47.470 --> 00:03:51.299 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Malcolm's on mute at the moment, so I can't talk to him.
58 00:03:52.080 --> 00:03:53.130 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There we go.
59 00:03:53.410 --> 00:03:54.389 Malcolm Daniels: There we go!
60 00:03:55.040 --> 00:03:56.110 Parish Clerk: Hi.
61 00:03:59.440 --> 00:04:02.009 Malcolm Daniels: Hi, guys. Sorry I haven't been on lately.
62 00:04:02.910 --> 00:04:03.420 Malcolm Daniels: I'm.
63 00:04:03.420 --> 00:04:04.100 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Like this.
64 00:04:04.100 --> 00:04:06.379 Malcolm Daniels: More or less turned upside down.
65 00:04:06.920 --> 00:04:07.770 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes.
66 00:04:07.990 --> 00:04:10.520 Malcolm Daniels: I'm now suffering from Mnd.
67 00:04:12.650 --> 00:04:14.500 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That doesn't help anything, does it?
68 00:04:14.500 --> 00:04:15.170 Malcolm Daniels: No.
69 00:04:15.840 --> 00:04:18.850 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And there's no good prognosis for it.
70 00:04:19.170 --> 00:04:20.550 Malcolm Daniels: Damn!
71 00:04:20.550 --> 00:04:21.329 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.
72 00:04:21.579 --> 00:04:26.489 Malcolm Daniels: So I'm I'm not really gonna take part. I'm just going to sit back and listen.
73 00:04:27.200 --> 00:04:28.950 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, it's lovely to see you.
74 00:04:29.380 --> 00:04:30.169 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and
75 00:04:31.180 --> 00:04:33.040 Graham Stoddart-Stones: hopefully we can cheer you up.
76 00:04:33.330 --> 00:04:34.310 Malcolm Daniels: Thank you.
77 00:04:37.080 --> 00:04:44.240 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And today Chris has promised to give us the most wonderful of opportunities to cheer you up.
78 00:04:45.120 --> 00:04:46.669 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It's all yours, Chris.
79 00:04:47.010 --> 00:04:48.130 chris edwards: Thank you.
80 00:04:49.330 --> 00:04:53.579 chris edwards: right. Well, I'll share my screen, of course, 1st of all.
81 00:04:54.810 --> 00:04:56.110 chris edwards: and
82 00:04:58.170 --> 00:05:01.340 chris edwards: here we go. So here's my little parish.
83 00:05:02.357 --> 00:05:11.120 chris edwards: Now, if I zoom in to an area within the parish, we've got some new housing estates which have been finished
84 00:05:11.320 --> 00:05:16.059 chris edwards: about 370 home homes in this area.
85 00:05:16.470 --> 00:05:21.680 chris edwards: and the land slopes downhill from where my cursor is
86 00:05:22.500 --> 00:05:24.330 chris edwards: sort of southwest.
87 00:05:25.020 --> 00:05:31.530 chris edwards: And what's happened over the last couple of years is that as the buildings have been put up.
88 00:05:31.680 --> 00:05:37.000 chris edwards: more and more homeowners have experienced flooded gardens
89 00:05:37.250 --> 00:05:39.849 chris edwards: from water underground water
90 00:05:39.870 --> 00:05:42.100 chris edwards: obviously flowing downhill.
91 00:05:42.100 --> 00:05:42.600 Councillor Helen Davey (Hazel): And.
92 00:05:42.600 --> 00:05:47.709 chris edwards: And I was wondering how I could use parish online
93 00:05:47.960 --> 00:05:48.860 chris edwards: to
94 00:05:49.030 --> 00:05:50.629 chris edwards: get to grips with
95 00:05:50.940 --> 00:05:52.870 chris edwards: who I should approach
96 00:05:53.030 --> 00:05:54.120 chris edwards: to try and
97 00:05:55.450 --> 00:05:58.750 chris edwards: fix the problem of all this excess water.
98 00:05:59.050 --> 00:06:02.369 chris edwards: So what I've done is, I've had a look
99 00:06:02.450 --> 00:06:04.850 chris edwards: at OS overlays.
100 00:06:04.860 --> 00:06:06.490 chris edwards: Psga.
101 00:06:06.680 --> 00:06:08.530 chris edwards: So if I click on that
102 00:06:08.940 --> 00:06:11.290 chris edwards: and I come down to
103 00:06:11.320 --> 00:06:13.609 chris edwards: water network nodes.
104 00:06:13.740 --> 00:06:16.370 chris edwards: water network watercourses.
105 00:06:16.838 --> 00:06:19.000 chris edwards: Let's click on that 1st of all.
106 00:06:21.000 --> 00:06:21.990 chris edwards: And
107 00:06:22.510 --> 00:06:24.059 chris edwards: as an example.
108 00:06:24.440 --> 00:06:26.370 chris edwards: we'll have a look at
109 00:06:26.770 --> 00:06:30.170 chris edwards: a couple of nodes here.
110 00:06:30.730 --> 00:06:32.249 chris edwards: Now, I don't know what
111 00:06:32.990 --> 00:06:37.080 chris edwards: the terminology of nodes is. What does it represent?
112 00:06:37.730 --> 00:06:42.019 chris edwards: What could I do to get information about the notes?
113 00:06:42.110 --> 00:06:44.280 chris edwards: So if I click on that.
114 00:06:45.180 --> 00:06:48.209 chris edwards: Here we come. It gives me a reference number.
115 00:06:48.370 --> 00:06:54.449 chris edwards: but I I can't understand a word of what is being put in the
116 00:06:55.390 --> 00:06:57.819 chris edwards: layer on the left hand side.
117 00:06:58.120 --> 00:06:59.860 chris edwards: Who do I contact
118 00:07:00.010 --> 00:07:03.479 chris edwards: to have a meeting regarding notes?
119 00:07:04.980 --> 00:07:07.639 chris edwards: Let me just close that for a moment.
120 00:07:07.820 --> 00:07:13.489 chris edwards: and if I go on to the next one. Water courses. I'll I'll zoom out.
121 00:07:16.610 --> 00:07:18.499 chris edwards: Click on mortar courses.
122 00:07:19.360 --> 00:07:20.750 chris edwards: Now then.
123 00:07:22.010 --> 00:07:26.669 chris edwards: if I I don't know what these are, so if I click on one at random
124 00:07:28.980 --> 00:07:31.570 chris edwards: again. I have a reference number.
125 00:07:31.790 --> 00:07:35.290 chris edwards: but I can't decipher what on earth
126 00:07:35.360 --> 00:07:38.759 chris edwards: all these squares are, and there are lots of them.
127 00:07:40.940 --> 00:07:43.969 chris edwards: so that you know, I would like to know?
128 00:07:44.040 --> 00:07:46.890 chris edwards: I mean, I could ask parish online, of course.
129 00:07:47.080 --> 00:07:50.259 chris edwards: What do these do these represent?
130 00:07:50.320 --> 00:07:52.999 chris edwards: I go up into view. Go to legend.
131 00:07:53.600 --> 00:07:55.620 chris edwards: and I can't find
132 00:07:55.800 --> 00:07:58.040 chris edwards: that coloured square anywhere.
133 00:08:01.400 --> 00:08:09.269 chris edwards: So that's that's my initial inquiry, and I'm just wondering if anybody has got any information
134 00:08:09.290 --> 00:08:14.380 chris edwards: that I could make use of as you. Could. You explain to me, perhaps.
135 00:08:14.550 --> 00:08:17.800 chris edwards: what these nodes and what these water course?
136 00:08:18.875 --> 00:08:19.560 chris edwards: Row.
137 00:08:20.340 --> 00:08:22.510 chris edwards: Things represent.
138 00:08:23.290 --> 00:08:24.610 chris edwards: Any ideas.
139 00:08:29.980 --> 00:08:33.179 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, that's interesting, isn't it? Nobody knows anything.
140 00:08:36.770 --> 00:08:40.070 chris edwards: I suppose the next port of call is to write up a ticket.
141 00:08:44.960 --> 00:08:50.960 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, certainly. They'll be able to if you go to the layers, Chris.
142 00:08:51.150 --> 00:08:54.030 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and hover over the right hand end.
143 00:08:54.700 --> 00:08:57.899 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Does it tell you where the information's coming from.
144 00:08:58.060 --> 00:09:02.390 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So you know how you if you just go up to the top layer, the Us. Overlays there.
145 00:09:02.980 --> 00:09:08.789 Graham Stoddart-Stones: does it tell you? There, if you just sort of hover somewhere other than over the arrow. Yeah, there we go.
146 00:09:09.100 --> 00:09:10.339 Parish Clerk: Okay, should I?
147 00:09:11.390 --> 00:09:13.320 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It doesn't tell you a thing, does it?
148 00:09:13.320 --> 00:09:14.110 chris edwards: No.
149 00:09:17.400 --> 00:09:23.449 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and if you do the same on the individual layers, does that achieve anything? No, okay.
150 00:09:27.370 --> 00:09:31.100 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But then I think yes, your only course of action is to write to
151 00:09:31.210 --> 00:09:32.699 Graham Stoddart-Stones: just fair enough. Then.
152 00:09:32.700 --> 00:09:35.100 chris edwards: Hmm, yeah, I'm happy to do that.
153 00:09:35.730 --> 00:09:36.480 chris edwards: Yeah.
154 00:09:37.030 --> 00:09:44.710 chris edwards: you know, if it if it gives some answers to the problems that our parishioners have got with surface flooding.
155 00:09:44.870 --> 00:09:48.930 chris edwards: Then obviously, you know, I could sort of develop that, and.
156 00:09:49.550 --> 00:09:55.939 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I did have some. I had some further thoughts on that, and it's rather useful that Malcolm is on board today.
157 00:09:56.260 --> 00:10:02.040 Graham Stoddart-Stones: because I wonder what happens if you go and look at the tithe maps from previous
158 00:10:02.510 --> 00:10:03.740 Graham Stoddart-Stones: centuries.
159 00:10:05.240 --> 00:10:07.609 chris edwards: What, what layer would I be looking at?
160 00:10:07.610 --> 00:10:11.930 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I think they're in the Somerset er the yeah.
161 00:10:12.380 --> 00:10:16.839 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So if you go yeah, close, close all those down, Chris.
162 00:10:17.980 --> 00:10:21.320 chris edwards: I was going to come back to those later. So.
163 00:10:21.320 --> 00:10:25.110 Graham Stoddart-Stones: If you just go up to the magnifying glass and type in tithe.
164 00:10:26.390 --> 00:10:28.570 Graham Stoddart-Stones: which I think is TITH, E,
165 00:10:32.480 --> 00:10:35.860 Graham Stoddart-Stones: yeah. So go into either Heritage or the Hr.
166 00:10:36.530 --> 00:10:38.450 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Not sure which it's gonna be.
167 00:10:38.470 --> 00:10:39.710 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah. So.
168 00:10:40.520 --> 00:10:53.343 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and last time I was looking at these with Malcolm, it was crystal clear why places were wet? Because it shows you all the Duponts and everything else that they had a couple of 100 years ago.
169 00:10:54.780 --> 00:10:55.770 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And
170 00:10:56.206 --> 00:11:00.949 Graham Stoddart-Stones: it became. If you're looking at the slope where your people are all getting soaked.
171 00:11:00.950 --> 00:11:01.900 chris edwards: Yes.
172 00:11:03.300 --> 00:11:04.170 chris edwards: so
173 00:11:04.816 --> 00:11:07.549 chris edwards: what might that tell me?
174 00:11:07.550 --> 00:11:17.190 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, not nothing. At the moment the 46 when when I was looking with Malcolm, it was showing us you know, previous ponds which have disappeared, or.
175 00:11:17.190 --> 00:11:17.620 chris edwards: Yes.
176 00:11:17.620 --> 00:11:19.209 Graham Stoddart-Stones: They've gone on the ground.
177 00:11:19.520 --> 00:11:23.369 Graham Stoddart-Stones: but there's nothing there in that particular area for you.
178 00:11:23.610 --> 00:11:24.600 chris edwards: No.
179 00:11:24.600 --> 00:11:28.230 Malcolm Daniels: Isn't there something around the ford? 46.
180 00:11:29.580 --> 00:11:30.690 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, that suits
181 00:11:31.000 --> 00:11:41.990 Graham Stoddart-Stones: new clothes. Let's see, that's the new sort of the underlying one coming through. Can you turn off your underlying OS layer, Chris, so that we don't get confused by the stuff.
182 00:11:42.360 --> 00:11:45.450 chris edwards: Right, I'll I'll come out of there completely.
183 00:11:45.480 --> 00:11:47.639 chris edwards: What do you want me to turn on.
184 00:11:47.640 --> 00:11:50.630 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The the standard was to go back up to the top. Green ones.
185 00:11:52.350 --> 00:11:58.390 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Now go into the ordnance survey. Psga. Sorry. 3rd one down, 3rd one down
186 00:11:59.450 --> 00:12:02.869 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and turn off the standard, or at least reduce the the bridge.
187 00:12:02.870 --> 00:12:03.730 chris edwards: Oh, there we are!
188 00:12:03.730 --> 00:12:04.340 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes.
189 00:12:04.340 --> 00:12:05.599 chris edwards: Yeah, that's better.
190 00:12:07.440 --> 00:12:10.839 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So you've got orchards there.
191 00:12:11.100 --> 00:12:11.720 chris edwards: Yeah.
192 00:12:11.720 --> 00:12:14.480 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Which presumably were there because there was water.
193 00:12:15.490 --> 00:12:16.749 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And you go to what
194 00:12:17.010 --> 00:12:18.180 Graham Stoddart-Stones: pay school
195 00:12:18.300 --> 00:12:19.000 Graham Stoddart-Stones: then.
196 00:12:19.000 --> 00:12:23.829 chris edwards: One orchard still exists, but all the rest have disappeared.
197 00:12:24.250 --> 00:12:27.390 chris edwards: So that one still is still an orchard.
198 00:12:27.610 --> 00:12:28.810 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right, and then there's all.
199 00:12:28.810 --> 00:12:32.820 chris edwards: These here, these fields are now housing estates.
200 00:12:32.820 --> 00:12:35.750 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, I'm quite intrigued by 39.
201 00:12:35.750 --> 00:12:36.980 Malcolm Daniels: Yeah.
202 00:12:37.260 --> 00:12:37.930 Andrew Clegg: Close.
203 00:12:37.930 --> 00:12:38.700 Parish Clerk: 12 years.
204 00:12:38.700 --> 00:12:39.750 chris edwards: He is.
205 00:12:39.750 --> 00:12:40.960 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Bit of a giveaway, don't you.
206 00:12:40.960 --> 00:12:42.360 chris edwards: Yes, yes.
207 00:12:44.060 --> 00:12:52.189 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That looks like marshiness in the the left top left corner of 39. Yeah, I know what that legend means, but it looks marshy to me.
208 00:12:54.000 --> 00:12:58.100 chris edwards: There's a there's a pond. Yeah, yeah.
209 00:12:58.790 --> 00:13:06.046 chris edwards: anyway. Thank you very much for that. That's most interesting, because I'll soon. I'll ponder that later on.
210 00:13:07.257 --> 00:13:09.680 Parish Clerk: Quite the worst.
211 00:13:09.680 --> 00:13:10.180 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Another day.
212 00:13:10.180 --> 00:13:11.829 chris edwards: Sorry about that.
213 00:13:13.620 --> 00:13:14.610 chris edwards: So.
214 00:13:15.600 --> 00:13:17.390 Malcolm Daniels: Serious Note.
215 00:13:19.460 --> 00:13:20.450 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Jumping, up.
216 00:13:20.770 --> 00:13:22.830 Malcolm Daniels: Can you hear me? Yes.
217 00:13:22.830 --> 00:13:23.460 Parish Clerk: Yeah.
218 00:13:24.500 --> 00:13:30.619 Malcolm Daniels: As a serious note. I think this underlines something that we discovered
219 00:13:30.910 --> 00:13:38.129 Malcolm Daniels: is that when you actually are considering planning applications, you should always look at the time map.
220 00:13:38.360 --> 00:13:39.370 chris edwards: Yes.
221 00:13:40.110 --> 00:13:40.540 Parish Clerk: Actually.
222 00:13:40.540 --> 00:13:41.230 Andrew Clegg: Hmm.
223 00:13:41.230 --> 00:13:44.450 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Look at 17 and 18, Chris. They're all marked Lakes.
224 00:13:44.450 --> 00:13:46.480 chris edwards: Yeah. Yes.
225 00:13:46.480 --> 00:13:47.270 Parish Clerk: Yes, sir.
226 00:13:47.270 --> 00:13:48.140 chris edwards: Yeah.
227 00:13:48.140 --> 00:13:49.950 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Blindly obvious.
228 00:13:49.950 --> 00:13:50.925 chris edwards: Yes.
229 00:13:52.080 --> 00:13:53.950 chris edwards: that's very interesting.
230 00:13:54.670 --> 00:13:58.210 Malcolm Daniels: And Great Lake and Little Lake 20 and 22.
231 00:13:58.210 --> 00:13:58.950 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.
232 00:13:58.950 --> 00:13:59.539 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, so, like.
233 00:13:59.540 --> 00:14:00.280 chris edwards: Dash.
234 00:14:00.280 --> 00:14:04.460 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I don't know how that's going to solve the problem for you, but it might explain it.
235 00:14:04.770 --> 00:14:10.259 chris edwards: Yes, indeed, I shall certainly tap into that. Yeah, yeah.
236 00:14:10.260 --> 00:14:25.340 Andrew Clegg: Chris last year was a particularly wet year for us. The clay got very saturated, and there's a large part of the village where you couldn't dig a hole without it immediately filling up.
237 00:14:27.181 --> 00:14:51.299 Andrew Clegg: but most of the time you simply don't know that that's the soil structure. It's just when you have a particularly wet winter, and last winter was particularly wet in the sense that it rained a lot over a long period, and we had we had a lot of areas like this where people experiencing flooding that just appeared.
238 00:14:51.300 --> 00:14:51.630 chris edwards: And.
239 00:14:51.630 --> 00:14:56.580 Andrew Clegg: They never experienced it before. Yes, but that's only going to get worse as time.
240 00:14:56.580 --> 00:14:57.200 chris edwards: Oh, yeah.
241 00:14:57.760 --> 00:14:58.140 Andrew Clegg: You know.
242 00:14:58.140 --> 00:14:58.880 chris edwards: Yes.
243 00:15:00.120 --> 00:15:04.269 Malcolm Daniels: The planning authority ought to take this into account, and they don't.
244 00:15:04.270 --> 00:15:14.019 Andrew Clegg: They never do. In fact, they particularly ignore any any comment from local look based on local knowledge.
245 00:15:14.040 --> 00:15:14.520 chris edwards: And but.
246 00:15:14.520 --> 00:15:17.920 Andrew Clegg: Going back a, you know, 50 years or so. Yes.
247 00:15:17.920 --> 00:15:18.640 chris edwards: Yes, but.
248 00:15:18.640 --> 00:15:22.789 Malcolm Daniels: But Andrew, aside map is hardly local knowledge.
249 00:15:23.317 --> 00:15:27.540 Andrew Clegg: I suspect it is, as far as planning
250 00:15:27.580 --> 00:15:29.815 Andrew Clegg: offices are concerned.
251 00:15:30.560 --> 00:15:35.023 chris edwards: Now forgive me for moving on to something quite different.
252 00:15:35.560 --> 00:15:41.019 chris edwards: there's some activity going on in our parish, and nobody will tell us what's going on.
253 00:15:41.130 --> 00:15:45.279 chris edwards: and it's to do with extending an overhead
254 00:15:46.540 --> 00:15:47.430 chris edwards: Cable
255 00:15:47.780 --> 00:15:49.669 chris edwards: across the main road
256 00:15:49.880 --> 00:15:57.680 chris edwards: into a field which an agricultural field which has got planning permission for 200 homes. Now.
257 00:15:57.680 --> 00:15:58.330 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It's all right.
258 00:15:58.330 --> 00:16:02.740 chris edwards: I've gone. I've gone to the South Somerset District Council
259 00:16:02.870 --> 00:16:03.930 chris edwards: layer.
260 00:16:04.190 --> 00:16:07.249 chris edwards: and I found overhead cables.
261 00:16:07.740 --> 00:16:09.210 chris edwards: and I'm just wondering.
262 00:16:09.210 --> 00:16:10.060 Parish Clerk: Alone.
263 00:16:10.660 --> 00:16:16.879 chris edwards: I. I was expecting to see where the lines of cables were going through our parish.
264 00:16:16.890 --> 00:16:18.799 chris edwards: but nothing comes up.
265 00:16:18.970 --> 00:16:25.169 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, I think you have to zoom quite a long way out, Chris. I think it only does. The main distribution. Pylons.
266 00:16:25.170 --> 00:16:26.260 chris edwards: Oh, fair enough.
267 00:16:26.540 --> 00:16:27.470 chris edwards: fair enough.
268 00:16:27.847 --> 00:16:32.000 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And aren't you talking about work that's about to take place?
269 00:16:32.440 --> 00:16:32.873 chris edwards: Yes,
270 00:16:33.740 --> 00:16:35.969 Graham Stoddart-Stones: None of that's going to be on the map yet.
271 00:16:36.200 --> 00:16:38.310 chris edwards: No, of course not. No, no.
272 00:16:38.350 --> 00:16:42.589 chris edwards: let me just see Table View. That wouldn't help, will it?
273 00:16:42.760 --> 00:16:43.240 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.
274 00:16:43.240 --> 00:16:44.290 chris edwards: Oh, here we are
275 00:16:44.770 --> 00:16:53.970 chris edwards: overhead cables! I haven't. I haven't actually looked at this before, so I won't bore you. With that I will go on to that tonight when I,
276 00:16:54.110 --> 00:16:57.160 chris edwards: you know, have a scout around.
277 00:16:57.160 --> 00:16:57.500 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Chris.
278 00:16:57.500 --> 00:16:58.420 chris edwards: Had cables.
279 00:16:58.420 --> 00:17:02.179 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Let's execute Andrew's favorite
280 00:17:02.380 --> 00:17:07.769 Graham Stoddart-Stones: point, and if you go into this table view and go along to the column, mark Parish
281 00:17:08.260 --> 00:17:14.310 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and click on it. Then that should sort everything into parish order like, there's nothing for Rainsford. Okay.
282 00:17:14.319 --> 00:17:16.529 Andrew Clegg: They're all Somerset parishes, aren't they?
283 00:17:16.530 --> 00:17:18.730 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, but nothing for Aynsford.
284 00:17:20.079 --> 00:17:21.339 Parish Clerk: 1st I hear is, I.
285 00:17:23.530 --> 00:17:24.170 chris edwards: Oh no!
286 00:17:24.170 --> 00:17:25.920 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.
287 00:17:25.920 --> 00:17:26.310 chris edwards: No.
288 00:17:26.319 --> 00:17:28.349 Parish Clerk: Yeah, it should be.
289 00:17:28.349 --> 00:17:29.649 Andrew Clegg: Sounds good man.
290 00:17:30.095 --> 00:17:30.540 chris edwards: Richard!
291 00:17:30.710 --> 00:17:31.960 Andrew Clegg: Didn't know.
292 00:17:33.180 --> 00:17:33.840 Andrew Clegg: Well.
293 00:17:33.840 --> 00:17:37.029 Parish Clerk: Well, I'm under the I'm under the national grid layer.
294 00:17:37.090 --> 00:17:41.099 Parish Clerk: and I can see all our towers and pylons and cables.
295 00:17:41.260 --> 00:17:42.230 chris edwards: Yeah.
296 00:17:42.230 --> 00:17:44.700 Andrew Clegg: Well, you've got one or 2 up there, haven't you? Yeah.
297 00:17:44.700 --> 00:17:45.880 Parish Clerk: We've got a few.
298 00:17:46.270 --> 00:17:51.859 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So have you got is this, if Chris goes into the national grid lair, can he see those.
299 00:17:52.490 --> 00:17:53.939 Parish Clerk: Should be able to.
300 00:17:54.210 --> 00:17:56.640 chris edwards: It's not on the.
301 00:17:56.820 --> 00:18:00.830 Parish Clerk: Yeah, it's under national grid, on your on your layers.
302 00:18:01.700 --> 00:18:04.400 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Just do a search. See fastest way.
303 00:18:05.490 --> 00:18:06.220 Parish Clerk: There you are!
304 00:18:06.470 --> 00:18:06.970 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right.
305 00:18:06.970 --> 00:18:08.410 chris edwards: Oh, look at this.
306 00:18:09.000 --> 00:18:10.869 Parish Clerk: Yeah, Tara's pylons.
307 00:18:12.740 --> 00:18:17.329 Parish Clerk: But you need to come out of it. I expect Chris to my.
308 00:18:17.330 --> 00:18:17.910 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.
309 00:18:18.250 --> 00:18:23.169 Andrew Clegg: I'd switch off Chris, I'd switch off your tithe map. It might make it a little bit.
310 00:18:23.170 --> 00:18:25.170 chris edwards: What there is tied under.
311 00:18:25.740 --> 00:18:26.620 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Somerset Heritage.
312 00:18:26.620 --> 00:18:27.390 Parish Clerk: Number set.
313 00:18:28.160 --> 00:18:30.520 Stuart Bacon: It's the bottom of the green ones, Chris.
314 00:18:30.520 --> 00:18:31.990 chris edwards: Oh, okay, thank you.
315 00:18:34.610 --> 00:18:36.000 chris edwards: Yeah. Great.
316 00:18:37.490 --> 00:18:38.290 chris edwards: So that's a bit.
317 00:18:38.290 --> 00:18:39.699 Stuart Bacon: Sorry you didn't turn that off, Krish.
318 00:18:39.700 --> 00:18:41.388 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You haven't turned it off yet.
319 00:18:42.072 --> 00:18:44.087 Andrew Clegg: It's probably there for good.
320 00:18:46.250 --> 00:18:48.940 chris edwards: Thank you. So zoom out.
321 00:18:48.940 --> 00:18:52.830 Graham Stoddart-Stones: If I were you I'd turn off your boundaries as well. They're a pain in the neck.
322 00:18:53.840 --> 00:18:55.499 Parish Clerk: The zoom right.
323 00:18:55.920 --> 00:19:03.140 Parish Clerk: You're gonna have to zoom out over towards over towards me, Chris, because they only got the the main ones by the look of it.
324 00:19:06.290 --> 00:19:07.029 chris edwards: No. Okay.
325 00:19:07.332 --> 00:19:08.240 Parish Clerk: It switched on.
326 00:19:10.810 --> 00:19:12.450 chris edwards: Not snow, not snow.
327 00:19:19.420 --> 00:19:20.150 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And the Cape.
328 00:19:20.150 --> 00:19:20.620 Parish Clerk: Yes.
329 00:19:20.620 --> 00:19:24.280 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Overhead lines as well to the overhead lines as well, and they're saying.
330 00:19:24.280 --> 00:19:24.720 Parish Clerk: Hang on!
331 00:19:25.070 --> 00:19:26.439 chris edwards: Oh, there you go!
332 00:19:26.440 --> 00:19:27.310 Andrew Clegg: Oh, there we go!
333 00:19:27.310 --> 00:19:29.220 chris edwards: That's the that's the main ones.
334 00:19:29.380 --> 00:19:30.830 Parish Clerk: That's the main ones.
335 00:19:32.510 --> 00:19:35.370 Andrew Clegg: Everything leads to Stagusi, doesn't it?
336 00:19:36.440 --> 00:19:37.259 chris edwards: Of course.
337 00:19:37.260 --> 00:19:38.540 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Imagine? Why.
338 00:19:39.990 --> 00:19:42.530 Parish Clerk: We're a net, we're we're a net importer.
339 00:19:42.760 --> 00:19:43.390 chris edwards: Yeah.
340 00:19:43.790 --> 00:19:44.120 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.
341 00:19:44.120 --> 00:19:44.670 chris edwards: We're we're.
342 00:19:44.670 --> 00:19:46.960 Andrew Clegg: Really. Oh, yes, I suppose you are.
343 00:19:46.960 --> 00:19:49.050 chris edwards: We're down here.
344 00:19:49.670 --> 00:19:52.390 chris edwards: miles from that main.
345 00:19:53.550 --> 00:19:54.330 chris edwards: Yeah.
346 00:19:54.330 --> 00:19:55.710 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Where we don't have.
347 00:19:56.400 --> 00:19:56.849 Parish Clerk: What I mean.
348 00:19:56.850 --> 00:20:02.130 Andrew Clegg: Get electricity in Castle Carey. You'll have some.
349 00:20:02.130 --> 00:20:04.020 Graham Stoddart-Stones: How about subs? But how about substate?
350 00:20:04.020 --> 00:20:06.339 chris edwards: Let's let's go to substations.
351 00:20:06.340 --> 00:20:07.090 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That you.
352 00:20:09.030 --> 00:20:14.889 Parish Clerk: I still think that's probably that's probably still the main ones. So Bridgewater and
353 00:20:15.070 --> 00:20:19.700 Parish Clerk: yeah, Bridgewaters, Sherton and the like.
354 00:20:19.950 --> 00:20:21.770 chris edwards: Yeah. Okay.
355 00:20:21.790 --> 00:20:24.940 chris edwards: well, thanks everybody for your input.
356 00:20:25.060 --> 00:20:27.300 chris edwards: I've learned a lot this afternoon.
357 00:20:27.540 --> 00:20:29.959 chris edwards: and I shall stop sharing.
358 00:20:30.600 --> 00:20:31.660 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And is that it
359 00:20:32.000 --> 00:20:32.540 Graham Stoddart-Stones: just a.
360 00:20:33.140 --> 00:20:34.240 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Real questions.
361 00:20:34.240 --> 00:20:35.840 chris edwards: That's it, actually, yes.
362 00:20:36.360 --> 00:20:38.510 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I think that's great point right?
363 00:20:38.510 --> 00:20:44.080 Parish Clerk: Well, I think he did very well. It's very, very interesting to see the see, the old, the old maps, and.
364 00:20:44.080 --> 00:20:44.500 chris edwards: Yeah.
365 00:20:44.500 --> 00:20:45.709 Parish Clerk: To have a good look.
366 00:20:45.960 --> 00:20:46.800 chris edwards: Yes.
367 00:20:47.260 --> 00:20:49.259 Stuart Withington: I've I've got a question, have you?
368 00:20:49.700 --> 00:20:50.620 Stuart Withington: Yes, please.
369 00:20:50.620 --> 00:20:52.189 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Stewart, pitch in.
370 00:20:53.190 --> 00:20:54.590 Stuart Withington: Last week.
371 00:20:54.730 --> 00:20:57.479 Stuart Withington: You show me how to get our
372 00:20:57.780 --> 00:21:01.750 Stuart Withington: district planning website into
373 00:21:01.930 --> 00:21:03.220 Stuart Withington: parish online.
374 00:21:03.630 --> 00:21:04.990 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, a link to it. Yes.
375 00:21:04.990 --> 00:21:07.879 Stuart Withington: A link to it. I tried that, and
376 00:21:08.040 --> 00:21:11.798 Stuart Withington: it just returns null when it when it's looking for that.
377 00:21:12.760 --> 00:21:13.350 Stuart Withington: so.
378 00:21:13.350 --> 00:21:21.670 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, can you go? 1st of all, share your screen, Stuart, please, and then go to your portal and select a specific.
379 00:21:21.850 --> 00:21:22.410 Parish Clerk: Both.
380 00:21:23.680 --> 00:21:28.540 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Application that you're interested in. I mean, it doesn't matter which one it is. It's just anyone you like.
381 00:21:33.710 --> 00:21:39.079 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So all those portals you can search just by the road name, and you can find
382 00:21:39.880 --> 00:21:42.760 Graham Stoddart-Stones: an application of someone who's near you.
383 00:21:43.360 --> 00:21:44.999 Graham Stoddart-Stones: or you can even look on the map.
384 00:21:45.400 --> 00:21:46.400 Stuart Withington: Can you see that.
385 00:21:47.140 --> 00:21:48.689 Stuart Bacon: No, we can't see your screen.
386 00:21:48.840 --> 00:21:49.720 Stuart Bacon: Scott.
387 00:21:52.230 --> 00:21:53.620 Stuart Withington: done something wrong.
388 00:21:53.620 --> 00:21:55.410 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Are you on a windows, machine.
389 00:21:55.570 --> 00:21:56.290 Stuart Withington: Yes.
390 00:21:56.290 --> 00:21:58.260 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So if you move your mouse down to the bottom.
391 00:21:58.260 --> 00:21:58.840 Stuart Withington: Oh, there he is!
392 00:21:58.840 --> 00:22:00.040 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Zoom screen. Yeah.
393 00:22:03.690 --> 00:22:05.199 Graham Stoddart-Stones: there you go. It's coming.
394 00:22:07.160 --> 00:22:11.070 Stuart Withington: Okay. We made planning 24.
395 00:22:11.280 --> 00:22:12.440 Stuart Withington: You remember that.
396 00:22:12.620 --> 00:22:13.270 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right.
397 00:22:13.657 --> 00:22:15.980 Stuart Withington: I put my house in there.
398 00:22:15.980 --> 00:22:16.580 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yup!
399 00:22:16.780 --> 00:22:17.630 Stuart Withington: So I
400 00:22:19.350 --> 00:22:21.810 Stuart Withington: turn that on I click on
401 00:22:21.970 --> 00:22:23.170 Stuart Withington: my house.
402 00:22:23.270 --> 00:22:25.269 Stuart Withington: I get planning 24 up.
403 00:22:25.890 --> 00:22:29.739 Stuart Withington: I get linked to public access. Uttlesford.
404 00:22:29.740 --> 00:22:33.240 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah. But where did that link come from? Where did you get that link from?
405 00:22:34.150 --> 00:22:39.329 Stuart Withington: I went to the planning site and just copied the
406 00:22:39.800 --> 00:22:40.360 Andrew Clegg: Yeah.
407 00:22:40.360 --> 00:22:41.160 Stuart Withington: Address.
408 00:22:41.460 --> 00:22:45.990 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay. So oh, okay, I think I know what the issue is. But.
409 00:22:45.990 --> 00:22:46.530 Andrew Clegg: Yes.
410 00:22:46.530 --> 00:22:48.010 Stuart Withington: It comes out. It's just no.
411 00:22:48.450 --> 00:22:53.050 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, when you're on the planning site. Can you do a search
412 00:22:53.550 --> 00:22:57.579 Graham Stoddart-Stones: on that site, or or go into the portal.
413 00:23:00.770 --> 00:23:05.099 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So come out of there altogether. Just go to another tab on your browser, Stuart.
414 00:23:08.410 --> 00:23:10.090 Stuart Withington: That's still parish online, isn't it?
415 00:23:10.090 --> 00:23:13.860 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, they're all personal. If you go to the right hand where they say, plus yeah.
416 00:23:13.860 --> 00:23:16.519 Stuart Withington: Sorry the Zoom menu is in the way.
417 00:23:16.520 --> 00:23:17.790 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, it always is.
418 00:23:18.170 --> 00:23:20.070 Stuart Withington: So I'll go to search.
419 00:23:20.070 --> 00:23:20.690 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yup!
420 00:23:26.320 --> 00:23:26.940 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There we go!
421 00:23:26.940 --> 00:23:28.030 Stuart Withington: Came up with that.
422 00:23:28.250 --> 00:23:29.459 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yup, and if you just.
423 00:23:29.460 --> 00:23:31.109 Stuart Withington: So I copied that.
424 00:23:31.430 --> 00:23:34.709 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, no, no, that's the problem. That's the problem.
425 00:23:34.900 --> 00:23:35.860 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So
426 00:23:36.060 --> 00:23:40.320 Graham Stoddart-Stones: what you have to do is to find a specific application.
427 00:23:41.030 --> 00:23:48.510 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So if you don't have a number or no just type in a postcode or something type in your postcode. There must be somebody who's building something in your place.
428 00:24:03.430 --> 00:24:07.970 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, there you go. So just go into any one of those doesn't matter which. Just click on the link.
429 00:24:13.550 --> 00:24:15.449 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There you go now
430 00:24:15.480 --> 00:24:21.339 Graham Stoddart-Stones: what you have to. Unfortunately, if you look up at the top, the URL at the top.
431 00:24:21.340 --> 00:24:21.920 Stuart Withington: Yes.
432 00:24:21.920 --> 00:24:23.720 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It's not very specific.
433 00:24:23.760 --> 00:24:27.460 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But if you go now to say, click on the documents, Tab.
434 00:24:31.830 --> 00:24:34.540 Graham Stoddart-Stones: there you go. That's a much more relevant number.
435 00:24:34.690 --> 00:24:40.100 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So you see, the URL has now got a specific number in it. You just copy the whole of that URL
436 00:24:42.760 --> 00:24:44.789 Graham Stoddart-Stones: up on your top of your browser.
437 00:24:45.200 --> 00:24:46.030 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.
438 00:24:46.320 --> 00:24:47.090 Graham Stoddart-Stones: good.
439 00:24:48.820 --> 00:24:49.540 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.
440 00:24:53.230 --> 00:24:58.590 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Now go to parish online and paste that into your link. Tab.
441 00:25:01.490 --> 00:25:03.910 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So if you edit that one.
442 00:25:04.700 --> 00:25:05.270 Stuart Withington: And.
443 00:25:05.270 --> 00:25:06.129 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Easy, click, on.
444 00:25:06.130 --> 00:25:07.939 Stuart Withington: Pencil. Yeah. Pencil.
445 00:25:10.580 --> 00:25:15.549 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And just. Yes, change that link, delete that one, and put in a new one.
446 00:25:20.560 --> 00:25:21.220 Stuart Withington: Yeah.
447 00:25:21.220 --> 00:25:25.800 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You can just do the control control. V, if you want to basically do.
448 00:25:25.920 --> 00:25:26.540 Stuart Withington: Space.
449 00:25:26.540 --> 00:25:27.140 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It's.
450 00:25:28.660 --> 00:25:29.440 Stuart Bacon: Yeah.
451 00:25:29.440 --> 00:25:31.223 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Do a control. V,
452 00:25:33.000 --> 00:25:34.359 Graham Stoddart-Stones: that's the old one.
453 00:25:34.540 --> 00:25:36.880 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I think that may be the new one.
454 00:25:38.590 --> 00:25:39.579 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There you go.
455 00:25:39.830 --> 00:25:41.300 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So just save that.
456 00:25:46.140 --> 00:25:48.810 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And now click on that link the arrow.
457 00:25:49.720 --> 00:25:51.389 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and then it'll take you to the right one.
458 00:25:53.380 --> 00:25:54.419 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There you go.
459 00:25:54.740 --> 00:25:55.610 Stuart Withington: Brilliant.
460 00:25:57.090 --> 00:26:00.750 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There's something weird about this app
461 00:26:01.000 --> 00:26:08.120 Graham Stoddart-Stones: that if you don't actually go into a page other than the home page, you don't get the right URL.
462 00:26:09.460 --> 00:26:14.609 Stuart Bacon: Thing to do is when you go back. If you go back a couple of stages with that one.
463 00:26:16.970 --> 00:26:17.999 Stuart Withington: How do I go back.
464 00:26:20.070 --> 00:26:22.519 Graham Stoddart-Stones: What do you mean? Just click on the details. Tab.
465 00:26:22.910 --> 00:26:26.879 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, when when you had the oh.
466 00:26:26.950 --> 00:26:29.220 Stuart Bacon: do us do it. Go to search again.
467 00:26:29.660 --> 00:26:31.490 Stuart Bacon: and just put in the
468 00:26:31.977 --> 00:26:34.900 Stuart Bacon: the postcode of where the application is.
469 00:26:36.080 --> 00:26:37.000 Stuart Bacon: So
470 00:26:37.170 --> 00:26:41.739 Stuart Bacon: pop like I right click on the the link that I find the one that I would
471 00:26:42.210 --> 00:26:43.080 Stuart Bacon: 2
472 00:26:43.620 --> 00:26:47.520 Stuart Bacon: right click on the on the on the link of that.
473 00:26:47.780 --> 00:26:49.330 Stuart Bacon: No sorry. Go back
474 00:26:49.830 --> 00:26:51.130 Stuart Bacon: to this episode.
475 00:26:56.010 --> 00:27:01.549 Stuart Bacon: so you would find the one in that list there that you want the the link to go to.
476 00:27:04.230 --> 00:27:05.300 Stuart Bacon: So.
477 00:27:05.565 --> 00:27:06.890 Graham Stoddart-Stones: You just right, click, there.
478 00:27:06.890 --> 00:27:10.939 Stuart Bacon: Right click there and find the URL, and then use that for the link
479 00:27:11.040 --> 00:27:13.032 Stuart Bacon: who put into the
480 00:27:14.280 --> 00:27:15.390 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay, that that works.
481 00:27:15.390 --> 00:27:17.229 Andrew Clegg: Yeah, copy, link.
482 00:27:17.570 --> 00:27:18.140 Stuart Bacon: Yeah.
483 00:27:21.800 --> 00:27:22.940 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Perfect. Okay.
484 00:27:22.940 --> 00:27:25.960 Stuart Bacon: Takes you to the homepage of that application.
485 00:27:26.120 --> 00:27:26.750 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.
486 00:27:27.080 --> 00:27:28.310 Graham Stoddart-Stones: that makes sense.
487 00:27:33.180 --> 00:27:35.950 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So you need to click on the pencil again, Stuart.
488 00:27:42.450 --> 00:27:43.979 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and delete that one.
489 00:27:49.300 --> 00:27:49.890 Stuart Withington: Huh!
490 00:27:50.490 --> 00:27:52.160 chris edwards: I thought that was the new one.
491 00:27:52.400 --> 00:27:54.480 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, no, that'll do that. Okay. So save that.
492 00:27:54.480 --> 00:27:55.280 Andrew Clegg: A new one.
493 00:28:00.330 --> 00:28:03.010 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And now click on the arrow. There you go!
494 00:28:11.450 --> 00:28:12.220 Stuart Bacon: Okay.
495 00:28:12.220 --> 00:28:16.150 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, I suspect there's something wrong in the the copying.
496 00:28:17.760 --> 00:28:22.520 Andrew Clegg: Wonder if you've actually got 2 links you have probably didn't delete.
497 00:28:22.520 --> 00:28:24.809 Stuart Bacon: Can read it at the top, you drop the end. The new one.
498 00:28:24.810 --> 00:28:25.400 Parish Clerk: And what.
499 00:28:25.840 --> 00:28:26.240 Andrew Clegg: Yeah.
500 00:28:26.240 --> 00:28:28.830 Stuart Bacon: At the end of the 1st one it says, Yeah.
501 00:28:29.010 --> 00:28:35.360 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, it's very long, that one, is it? Just go into edit again, Stuart, and delete the whole of that.
502 00:28:39.270 --> 00:28:40.460 Stuart Withington: How do I do leak.
503 00:28:41.090 --> 00:28:41.480 Stuart Bacon: Vanishing.
504 00:28:41.480 --> 00:28:46.020 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Highlight it like you're doing, and then just click delete or back arrow, whatever you want.
505 00:28:46.670 --> 00:28:47.449 Parish Clerk: Control Line.
506 00:28:47.450 --> 00:28:48.899 chris edwards: Inside the box. Yeah.
507 00:28:49.690 --> 00:28:50.070 Parish Clerk: Yeah.
508 00:28:50.070 --> 00:28:51.079 Graham Stoddart-Stones: There you go!
509 00:28:51.080 --> 00:28:51.700 Parish Clerk: Okay.
510 00:28:52.060 --> 00:28:54.730 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Just you can hit your delete button now.
511 00:28:57.830 --> 00:28:59.029 Stuart Withington: Maybe paste.
512 00:28:59.030 --> 00:29:01.269 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, you just do control. V, same thing.
513 00:29:01.270 --> 00:29:02.940 Andrew Clegg: Control, V.
514 00:29:04.340 --> 00:29:09.499 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So on your keyboard you have a control key on the left hand side.
515 00:29:12.080 --> 00:29:13.690 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Good! Now try that one.
516 00:29:18.030 --> 00:29:19.290 Parish Clerk: That's a bit sure.
517 00:29:19.690 --> 00:29:20.540 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Bingo!
518 00:29:20.540 --> 00:29:21.060 Andrew Clegg: Yeah.
519 00:29:21.060 --> 00:29:21.860 Parish Clerk: Hey? Really?
520 00:29:21.860 --> 00:29:24.329 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay. Well, thanks to us both for that.
521 00:29:25.370 --> 00:29:27.750 Stuart Withington: Thank you. I'll stop sharing then.
522 00:29:29.740 --> 00:29:34.389 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Now, Hazel, last week you promised us that you'd go arrive full of questions.
523 00:29:34.390 --> 00:29:35.600 Parish Clerk: I thought it was college.
524 00:29:35.600 --> 00:29:36.159 Graham Stoddart-Stones: This.
525 00:29:38.130 --> 00:29:42.189 Councillor Helen Davey (Hazel): i. 1 thing I would like to know is how to
526 00:29:42.840 --> 00:29:44.000 Councillor Helen Davey (Hazel): share
527 00:29:45.389 --> 00:29:46.529 Councillor Helen Davey (Hazel): if I've
528 00:29:46.540 --> 00:29:48.630 Councillor Helen Davey (Hazel): created a a
529 00:29:48.920 --> 00:29:54.659 Councillor Helen Davey (Hazel): document of parish online, how I can share that with another councillor.
530 00:29:55.150 --> 00:29:57.267 Councillor Helen Davey (Hazel): You have done that before, but
531 00:29:58.750 --> 00:30:01.620 Graham Stoddart-Stones: When you say you've created a document, what do you mean by that?
532 00:30:01.620 --> 00:30:09.500 Councillor Helen Davey (Hazel): Oh, perhaps I've used the wrong word when when I've made a map stuff on it, how can I share that with another?
533 00:30:09.900 --> 00:30:10.550 Councillor Helen Davey (Hazel): Personally.
534 00:30:10.550 --> 00:30:14.729 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So he, he just logs into Paris online, and he goes into the same layer.
535 00:30:14.880 --> 00:30:17.969 Graham Stoddart-Stones: What you've created is visible by everybody in your.
536 00:30:17.970 --> 00:30:21.020 Councillor Helen Davey (Hazel): Oh, right. Oh, that's fine! Thank you.
537 00:30:21.020 --> 00:30:25.739 Stuart Bacon: Yeah. Just need to tell them the layers that you've got turned on for the information you want them to see.
538 00:30:27.000 --> 00:30:27.810 Councillor Helen Davey (Hazel): Sorry.
539 00:30:28.140 --> 00:30:30.480 Stuart Bacon: You just need to tell them which layers
540 00:30:30.570 --> 00:30:33.350 Stuart Bacon: want them to be able to see when they log in.
541 00:30:33.450 --> 00:30:35.219 Stuart Bacon: Oh, where you
542 00:30:35.530 --> 00:30:38.220 Stuart Bacon: information you're wanting them to to look at.
543 00:30:38.220 --> 00:30:44.760 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Same way as it is for you, Ellen, when you, unless you click on a layer, you don't see the data that's in there.
544 00:30:44.760 --> 00:30:45.410 Councillor Helen Davey (Hazel): Yes.
545 00:30:45.410 --> 00:30:48.499 Graham Stoddart-Stones: They won't see the data unless they actually select that layer.
546 00:30:48.500 --> 00:30:49.040 Councillor Helen Davey (Hazel): Yes.
547 00:30:49.040 --> 00:30:49.490 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But then they.
548 00:30:49.490 --> 00:30:50.150 Councillor Helen Davey (Hazel): Nothing.
549 00:30:50.550 --> 00:30:51.690 Councillor Helen Davey (Hazel): I shall
550 00:30:51.820 --> 00:30:54.110 Councillor Helen Davey (Hazel): sort that out then. Thank you very much.
551 00:30:54.280 --> 00:30:55.060 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Pleasure.
552 00:30:56.380 --> 00:30:58.729 Councillor Helen Davey (Hazel): I'm sorry I haven't got a big list of things.
553 00:30:59.290 --> 00:31:02.039 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, every little one helps.
554 00:31:02.040 --> 00:31:05.920 Councillor Helen Davey (Hazel): I've got all my folder, with all your
555 00:31:06.130 --> 00:31:08.050 Councillor Helen Davey (Hazel): information, all your different
556 00:31:09.000 --> 00:31:14.880 Councillor Helen Davey (Hazel): sessions. So I tend to go back, and then sometimes I can't find what I'm looking for. So then
557 00:31:15.050 --> 00:31:16.200 Councillor Helen Davey (Hazel): that's when I
558 00:31:17.290 --> 00:31:19.790 Councillor Helen Davey (Hazel): well, there, there we go. Thank you.
559 00:31:21.920 --> 00:31:27.760 Graham Stoddart-Stones: just in case there's anybody who hadn't noticed it. There's a new parish online newsletter out this week.
560 00:31:28.580 --> 00:31:35.449 Graham Stoddart-Stones: full of all sorts of tips of how they're going to help you use their email system and their web
561 00:31:35.650 --> 00:31:36.950 Graham Stoddart-Stones: building system.
562 00:31:37.870 --> 00:31:42.820 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So if you aren't using their designs, then there's not much in the Newsletter for you.
563 00:31:43.760 --> 00:31:47.350 chris edwards: I've actually registered for one of these webinars
564 00:31:47.370 --> 00:31:49.700 chris edwards: coming up in about 10 days time.
565 00:31:51.190 --> 00:31:54.020 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Excellent. Well, do tell us all about it.
566 00:31:55.150 --> 00:31:57.700 chris edwards: This is to do with
567 00:31:58.640 --> 00:32:04.259 chris edwards: the new email platform that parish parish online have introduced.
568 00:32:04.390 --> 00:32:07.879 chris edwards: We, our Parish council, are now using it.
569 00:32:08.357 --> 00:32:13.140 chris edwards: It's it's an upgraded version of what we've had before from parish online.
570 00:32:13.270 --> 00:32:21.149 chris edwards: But it's a little bit unwieldy at the moment. So that's why I'm interested in having a bit of a teaching.
571 00:32:21.280 --> 00:32:24.740 chris edwards: and to follow any tips and tricks that they can
572 00:32:24.960 --> 00:32:27.810 chris edwards: give to parish councillors.
573 00:32:29.330 --> 00:32:34.620 chris edwards: so that's why I'm interested in joining the session.
574 00:32:35.160 --> 00:32:35.990 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay.
575 00:32:39.640 --> 00:32:42.320 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I wonder what email platform they use.
576 00:32:42.970 --> 00:32:46.279 chris edwards: Something called Zoho emails.
577 00:32:46.460 --> 00:32:49.829 chris edwards: It's it's a company based in the Netherlands.
578 00:32:49.830 --> 00:32:50.830 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Eventually I.
579 00:32:50.830 --> 00:32:53.490 chris edwards: Which surprises me. But there we are.
580 00:32:53.660 --> 00:32:55.910 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, I use their whole all the time.
581 00:32:56.290 --> 00:32:56.790 chris edwards: Is.
582 00:32:56.790 --> 00:33:00.069 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes, all, my, all my company emails are on Zoho.
583 00:33:00.070 --> 00:33:01.560 chris edwards: Oh, right, right.
584 00:33:01.860 --> 00:33:02.660 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So
585 00:33:03.580 --> 00:33:05.369 Graham Stoddart-Stones: if you have a question to ask.
586 00:33:05.440 --> 00:33:07.630 Graham Stoddart-Stones: now is the time to pour everybody
587 00:33:10.180 --> 00:33:13.190 Graham Stoddart-Stones: with my non-knowledge.
588 00:33:17.850 --> 00:33:21.700 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Is there anything specific in Zoho that you want to do at this moment.
589 00:33:24.770 --> 00:33:30.670 chris edwards: I got right when I registered last night on parish online for this seminar.
590 00:33:31.690 --> 00:33:34.170 chris edwards: They sent me a
591 00:33:34.646 --> 00:33:36.980 chris edwards: link, for when I should
592 00:33:38.022 --> 00:33:40.069 chris edwards: join, join the
593 00:33:40.180 --> 00:33:41.300 chris edwards: session.
594 00:33:42.290 --> 00:33:43.980 chris edwards: But unfortunately.
595 00:33:44.180 --> 00:33:45.800 chris edwards: I've lost that link.
596 00:33:46.590 --> 00:33:51.080 chris edwards: So I'll have to write. I'll have to send an email to parish online.
597 00:33:51.380 --> 00:33:53.510 chris edwards: please. Would you send me another link?
598 00:33:53.620 --> 00:33:56.250 chris edwards: And I'll make sure I save it properly.
599 00:33:56.250 --> 00:34:00.620 Stuart Bacon: Has it? Have you saved it and it gone into the calendar for your email?
600 00:34:00.830 --> 00:34:05.379 chris edwards: Yeah, it's gone into calendar, but I don't know whether the join
601 00:34:05.840 --> 00:34:08.530 chris edwards: thing is in the calendar.
602 00:34:08.530 --> 00:34:12.799 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, no, I I would check a lot of the a lot of the time.
603 00:34:13.396 --> 00:34:14.409 Stuart Bacon: If you
604 00:34:14.719 --> 00:34:25.120 Stuart Bacon: find the calendar event with that in and open the open the calendar event. All of the details that were in the email will really be in that calendar event.
605 00:34:25.120 --> 00:34:28.309 chris edwards: Right. Well, I'll tell you what, if I open up
606 00:34:28.340 --> 00:34:32.990 chris edwards: while we're talking my Zoho emails?
607 00:34:33.420 --> 00:34:35.959 chris edwards: Wait a minute. Wait a minute. Wait a minute. Wait a minute.
608 00:34:38.030 --> 00:34:39.050 chris edwards: Go with me.
609 00:34:39.050 --> 00:34:41.400 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Green, Chris, because we'd all be fascinated.
610 00:34:41.600 --> 00:34:43.700 chris edwards: Yeah, I'll I'll share in a minute.
611 00:34:46.900 --> 00:34:48.389 chris edwards: Famous last words.
612 00:34:48.889 --> 00:34:49.940 chris edwards: right?
613 00:34:51.250 --> 00:34:52.199 chris edwards: So.
614 00:34:52.330 --> 00:34:53.819 chris edwards: screen share.
615 00:35:02.640 --> 00:35:05.009 chris edwards: can you all see that? Yeah.
616 00:35:05.310 --> 00:35:07.570 chris edwards: yeah. Okay, so this is the new
617 00:35:07.880 --> 00:35:11.449 chris edwards: platform Zoho platforms, as they call it.
618 00:35:12.215 --> 00:35:16.760 chris edwards: I'm so I'm getting to grips with my emails.
619 00:35:16.840 --> 00:35:21.789 chris edwards: I had a huge problem with sending attachments to other counsellors.
620 00:35:21.960 --> 00:35:27.230 chris edwards: But fortunately I've ironed out the problem that I had.
621 00:35:27.280 --> 00:35:30.319 chris edwards: Anyway, if we go up to Calendar
622 00:35:33.350 --> 00:35:35.240 chris edwards: and I go
623 00:35:36.810 --> 00:35:39.579 chris edwards: the 24th here we are
624 00:35:40.430 --> 00:35:41.390 chris edwards: parish
625 00:35:41.730 --> 00:35:44.059 chris edwards: online insights getting to grips.
626 00:35:45.860 --> 00:35:47.609 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, there is the link.
627 00:35:47.610 --> 00:35:48.180 Parish Clerk: There!
628 00:35:48.180 --> 00:35:50.770 chris edwards: Wait wait a minute.
629 00:35:50.770 --> 00:35:51.620 Parish Clerk: There is.
630 00:35:51.620 --> 00:35:54.719 chris edwards: Where? Where's the join the meeting?
631 00:35:55.120 --> 00:35:57.529 Parish Clerk: It says, join event.
632 00:35:57.530 --> 00:35:59.470 Stuart Bacon: Able to attend, scroll down.
633 00:36:00.850 --> 00:36:03.089 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That huge, a purple URL.
634 00:36:03.090 --> 00:36:05.180 Stuart Bacon: Spot. Oh, this one! Yes.
635 00:36:05.330 --> 00:36:06.690 Stuart Bacon: rival.
636 00:36:06.990 --> 00:36:11.563 chris edwards: Right. Well, thank you for that. I mean, when I when I got the
637 00:36:12.170 --> 00:36:19.080 chris edwards: details from parish online confirming my attendance, there was a nice little box rather like this.
638 00:36:19.380 --> 00:36:22.330 chris edwards: which says, join meetings.
639 00:36:22.330 --> 00:36:23.540 Graham Stoddart-Stones: If you look at the white.
640 00:36:23.540 --> 00:36:25.279 chris edwards: But it's not. It's not clear.
641 00:36:25.280 --> 00:36:28.059 Graham Stoddart-Stones: White. Look at the white letters above the.
642 00:36:28.060 --> 00:36:29.020 Parish Clerk: Yeah.
643 00:36:29.620 --> 00:36:30.160 Parish Clerk: Hmm.
644 00:36:30.160 --> 00:36:32.321 chris edwards: Okay, yeah. Got it. Got it. Okay?
645 00:36:32.630 --> 00:36:34.679 Andrew Clegg: Thank you.
646 00:36:34.680 --> 00:36:38.048 chris edwards: Thank you for letting me find.
647 00:36:38.610 --> 00:36:40.660 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That's all we're about. Chris is
648 00:36:41.390 --> 00:36:43.740 Graham Stoddart-Stones: humorous. Friday afternoons.
649 00:36:45.520 --> 00:36:47.540 chris edwards: And what
650 00:36:49.360 --> 00:36:51.530 chris edwards: There was another query I had.
651 00:36:51.800 --> 00:37:01.969 chris edwards: Oh, dear, I've got to forgotten what it is now I'll I'll think of it. During the course of this afternoon's session. But anyway, here here is, here is the emails
652 00:37:01.990 --> 00:37:02.645 chris edwards: that
653 00:37:03.620 --> 00:37:15.080 chris edwards: we're getting on a daily basis. And I'm a little bit rusty on some of the things, but I think I've got to grips with most most of the stuff.
654 00:37:15.700 --> 00:37:18.180 Stuart Bacon: Think what the stuff is on the right hand side.
655 00:37:19.490 --> 00:37:22.720 chris edwards: Your audio is a bit difficult this afternoon, Stuart.
656 00:37:22.990 --> 00:37:27.670 Stuart Bacon: So I'm a bit intrigued as to what the what is going on on the right hand side
657 00:37:27.870 --> 00:37:28.670 Stuart Bacon: 8.
658 00:37:29.950 --> 00:37:30.650 chris edwards: Bye.
659 00:37:35.840 --> 00:37:37.639 chris edwards: where should I point.
660 00:37:37.640 --> 00:37:39.760 Stuart Bacon: Right, right a bit outside of the.
661 00:37:39.760 --> 00:37:43.139 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, that's the that's the browser, then has anything to do with email.
662 00:37:43.140 --> 00:37:45.030 Stuart Bacon: No, because that's within the
663 00:37:45.320 --> 00:37:47.210 Stuart Bacon: in the email system, isn't it?
664 00:37:47.210 --> 00:37:48.610 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, I don't think so.
665 00:37:48.610 --> 00:37:49.580 chris edwards: I don't know.
666 00:37:50.420 --> 00:37:52.860 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, that's within the email system. Because
667 00:37:53.270 --> 00:37:56.169 Stuart Bacon: you change your browser Tab
668 00:37:56.710 --> 00:37:58.849 Stuart Bacon: first, st then that won't be there. I'm I'm
669 00:37:58.870 --> 00:37:59.990 Stuart Bacon: well, he's right.
670 00:37:59.990 --> 00:38:01.249 chris edwards: Tell me what to do.
671 00:38:01.715 --> 00:38:04.010 Stuart Bacon: Click! On your parish online, 1 3rd one in.
672 00:38:04.720 --> 00:38:07.139 Stuart Bacon: and that that section will have gone.
673 00:38:08.740 --> 00:38:10.370 Stuart Bacon: If you go back to the left one.
674 00:38:11.840 --> 00:38:12.830 Stuart Bacon: Let's say.
675 00:38:12.830 --> 00:38:13.830 Parish Clerk: English.
676 00:38:14.400 --> 00:38:16.420 Stuart Bacon: Sections there. You've got the
677 00:38:16.840 --> 00:38:18.229 Stuart Bacon: main page
678 00:38:18.240 --> 00:38:22.610 Stuart Bacon: scroll on the very right hand side and within that, then you've got
679 00:38:23.378 --> 00:38:26.380 Stuart Bacon: the scroll of the emails inside that
680 00:38:27.470 --> 00:38:30.490 Stuart Bacon: you've got that little bar on the right there, with
681 00:38:30.540 --> 00:38:31.860 Stuart Bacon: a variety of
682 00:38:32.130 --> 00:38:33.960 Stuart Bacon: other beaches.
683 00:38:34.330 --> 00:38:34.940 chris edwards: Yeah.
684 00:38:36.690 --> 00:38:40.739 Stuart Bacon: Presumably the second one up is turning it from dark mode to light mode.
685 00:38:41.776 --> 00:38:43.879 Stuart Bacon: Not sure what the
686 00:38:44.420 --> 00:38:45.639 Stuart Bacon: lightning is.
687 00:38:51.140 --> 00:38:52.680 Stuart Bacon: but yeah, you've got
688 00:38:52.810 --> 00:38:54.679 Stuart Bacon: lots to lots to work out.
689 00:38:54.930 --> 00:38:55.710 chris edwards: Yeah.
690 00:38:56.710 --> 00:39:09.820 chris edwards: it'll take me ages to go through, but I mean I'll get there in the end, and the more you use it, the more accustomed I will be to finding all these little tips and tricks, but we've only had this a short while.
691 00:39:10.220 --> 00:39:12.389 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Do you like that black screen? Chris?
692 00:39:12.930 --> 00:39:16.290 chris edwards: Well, I find it's less glaring, for my eyes.
693 00:39:16.290 --> 00:39:17.150 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Good.
694 00:39:18.270 --> 00:39:21.639 chris edwards: Where? Where do I change from dark mode to light mode.
695 00:39:21.640 --> 00:39:22.669 Stuart Bacon: Oh, scroll down.
696 00:39:22.670 --> 00:39:24.159 Andrew Clegg: The bottom right.
697 00:39:24.710 --> 00:39:26.219 chris edwards: Sorry. Let me get rid of
698 00:39:26.870 --> 00:39:27.810 chris edwards: bottom.
699 00:39:29.070 --> 00:39:29.910 chris edwards: Yes.
700 00:39:29.910 --> 00:39:30.510 Stuart Bacon: Yeah.
701 00:39:30.810 --> 00:39:31.580 Stuart Bacon: yeah.
702 00:39:34.070 --> 00:39:44.750 chris edwards: It's okay during the daytime for me to read a a light background. But what I I do most of my computering in the evenings. So that's why I prefer to have Darkman.
703 00:39:46.550 --> 00:39:47.350 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay.
704 00:39:47.570 --> 00:39:48.420 Stuart Bacon: Fair enough.
705 00:39:48.550 --> 00:39:49.710 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Each to their own.
706 00:39:49.890 --> 00:39:50.510 chris edwards: Yeah.
707 00:39:55.780 --> 00:39:56.690 Stuart Bacon: to add
708 00:39:56.850 --> 00:40:00.740 Stuart Bacon: something totally different. Going back to your earlier comment, Chris.
709 00:40:01.740 --> 00:40:08.049 Stuart Bacon: About sort of the match and the ticket you're gonna create for for us to ruin this weekend.
710 00:40:09.940 --> 00:40:11.342 Stuart Bacon: I've been looking
711 00:40:12.349 --> 00:40:19.200 Stuart Bacon: been been looking at the maps. And yeah, turning on all of the
712 00:40:19.940 --> 00:40:23.177 Stuart Bacon: all of the features, and whatever under
713 00:40:23.740 --> 00:40:25.679 Stuart Bacon: the electricity stuff
714 00:40:25.980 --> 00:40:28.269 Stuart Bacon: down the bottom here and under the national grid.
715 00:40:28.450 --> 00:40:28.870 chris edwards: Yes.
716 00:40:29.636 --> 00:40:32.700 Stuart Bacon: There is another unexplained
717 00:40:33.130 --> 00:40:34.359 Stuart Bacon: gray box.
718 00:40:34.360 --> 00:40:35.230 chris edwards: Okay.
719 00:40:35.230 --> 00:40:37.080 Stuart Bacon: But just
720 00:40:39.750 --> 00:40:42.330 Stuart Bacon: to the north of you at Castle Carey.
721 00:40:42.550 --> 00:40:43.350 chris edwards: Yes.
722 00:40:44.980 --> 00:40:47.300 Stuart Bacon: Oh, it comes up saying Castle Carey!
723 00:40:47.740 --> 00:40:50.279 chris edwards: That's the railway station. Yeah, right?
724 00:40:50.280 --> 00:40:52.259 Stuart Bacon: Your own workstation. There's a just
725 00:40:52.320 --> 00:40:56.369 Stuart Bacon: as you turn those those on that sort of
726 00:40:57.500 --> 00:40:59.390 Stuart Bacon: it would disappear.
727 00:40:59.820 --> 00:41:04.039 Stuart Bacon: I I what would have thought well, it's sorry it's not the national.
728 00:41:05.270 --> 00:41:07.420 Stuart Bacon: I don't want to turn national grid on, but
729 00:41:07.610 --> 00:41:11.360 Stuart Bacon: that's it doesn't appear in any way in the legend.
730 00:41:11.620 --> 00:41:12.360 chris edwards: No.
731 00:41:13.190 --> 00:41:15.470 chris edwards: So that's yet another instance.
732 00:41:15.870 --> 00:41:16.600 chris edwards: Yeah.
733 00:41:17.270 --> 00:41:18.718 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, except you just
734 00:41:19.600 --> 00:41:21.780 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Have you just turned all those layers off.
735 00:41:23.000 --> 00:41:25.400 Stuart Bacon: I've just well, I just turned the electricity off.
736 00:41:25.400 --> 00:41:26.030 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.
737 00:41:26.030 --> 00:41:28.250 Stuart Bacon: The box is still visible on the map.
738 00:41:28.910 --> 00:41:30.840 Graham Stoddart-Stones: What happens if you do a refresh.
739 00:41:37.190 --> 00:41:39.400 Stuart Bacon: There's wait half an hour.
740 00:41:40.170 --> 00:41:43.900 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, it's it's just as you come back as a railway station, isn't it?
741 00:41:44.300 --> 00:41:44.900 Stuart Bacon: Yeah.
742 00:41:47.140 --> 00:41:52.799 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So the the word castle carry is there from the Ordnance Survey. It's nothing to do with the.
743 00:41:53.059 --> 00:41:56.430 Stuart Bacon: Yeah, no, no, yeah. I guess that's to stop the train station then
744 00:42:00.680 --> 00:42:01.600 Stuart Bacon: his own.
745 00:42:02.800 --> 00:42:05.010 Stuart Bacon: What I've got, I think. Where's.
746 00:42:05.430 --> 00:42:08.020 Graham Stoddart-Stones: They got it now. Yes, what's that one.
747 00:42:08.330 --> 00:42:11.270 Stuart Bacon: That's with with the aerial photography on
748 00:42:15.850 --> 00:42:18.020 Stuart Bacon: and that's the only thing on
749 00:42:18.220 --> 00:42:20.436 Stuart Bacon: in it. It sends the
750 00:42:21.380 --> 00:42:23.590 Stuart Bacon: train station to a big grey box.
751 00:42:24.660 --> 00:42:25.640 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Interesting.
752 00:42:26.380 --> 00:42:28.870 chris edwards: You click on that box. What happens.
753 00:42:29.180 --> 00:42:29.950 Stuart Bacon: Nothing.
754 00:42:30.200 --> 00:42:30.820 chris edwards: Hmm.
755 00:42:31.490 --> 00:42:32.620 chris edwards: Oh, okay.
756 00:42:32.620 --> 00:42:36.029 Stuart Bacon: The parish detail. It's nothing to do with the bot.
757 00:42:36.270 --> 00:42:37.040 chris edwards: Yes.
758 00:42:38.260 --> 00:42:38.930 Parish Clerk: Hmm.
759 00:42:39.160 --> 00:42:41.889 Andrew Clegg: Castle carry station isn't square, is it?
760 00:42:42.210 --> 00:42:43.940 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, it's long.
761 00:42:51.400 --> 00:42:53.889 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Perhaps it's the military trying to disguise it.
762 00:42:57.020 --> 00:42:58.720 chris edwards: Play around with that this evening.
763 00:42:59.720 --> 00:43:03.479 Graham Stoddart-Stones: If you go out to view legend there, Stewart, did it give you anything.
764 00:43:05.180 --> 00:43:06.949 Stuart Bacon: If anything, I'll come back to it
765 00:43:09.260 --> 00:43:13.909 Stuart Bacon: new legend, and it sits just with the parish boundary. It didn't show anything more.
766 00:43:13.910 --> 00:43:14.540 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Okay.
767 00:43:15.590 --> 00:43:20.569 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And what did you turn on, or is it just turning on the aerial photography that brought up.
768 00:43:21.000 --> 00:43:29.620 Stuart Bacon: I I changed from the the OS premium Stack standard to the white version and put the aerial photography on.
769 00:43:29.990 --> 00:43:32.780 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, but which one produced this? The box?
770 00:43:34.680 --> 00:43:36.720 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right? That one did.
771 00:43:36.870 --> 00:43:40.819 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah. So that's the problem. It's in the premium stack.
772 00:43:42.470 --> 00:43:45.959 Stuart Bacon: Oh, no, it's it. Yeah, it's in the OS premiums, though.
773 00:43:45.960 --> 00:43:47.530 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, got it.
774 00:43:47.680 --> 00:43:49.130 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So I mean.
775 00:43:49.620 --> 00:43:51.420 Graham Stoddart-Stones: what I'm saying is that
776 00:43:51.480 --> 00:43:53.149 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Chris's answer to that or.
777 00:43:53.150 --> 00:43:53.680 Parish Clerk: Pardon me.
778 00:43:53.680 --> 00:43:55.820 Graham Stoddart-Stones: She's also really nothing to do with me, chief.
779 00:43:56.380 --> 00:43:56.999 Malcolm Daniels: Thank you for that.
780 00:43:57.000 --> 00:43:58.909 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Nothing to do with ordnance, survey.
781 00:43:59.600 --> 00:44:04.220 Malcolm Daniels: It's not something to do with a new contract, is it?
782 00:44:04.490 --> 00:44:05.710 Malcolm Daniels: You want to eat.
783 00:44:06.250 --> 00:44:08.479 chris edwards: The the New. What Malcolm.
784 00:44:08.480 --> 00:44:10.580 Malcolm Daniels: The new car part.
785 00:44:10.890 --> 00:44:12.340 chris edwards: I would doubt it.
786 00:44:12.340 --> 00:44:15.139 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, that's a bit to the left, isn't it? Yes.
787 00:44:17.500 --> 00:44:20.199 Stuart Bacon: It's the monochrome white and black OS.
788 00:44:20.200 --> 00:44:20.690 Malcolm Daniels: Yeah.
789 00:44:20.690 --> 00:44:21.360 Parish Clerk: I mean I'm stuck.
790 00:44:21.360 --> 00:44:22.819 Stuart Bacon: But they're telling me.
791 00:44:22.820 --> 00:44:23.370 Malcolm Daniels: What's happening.
792 00:44:26.730 --> 00:44:33.640 Andrew Clegg: I I suspect there may be one owned and Survey Map series that has a square
793 00:44:33.830 --> 00:44:40.130 Andrew Clegg: dot for a net railway station, and you've just just turned that on when you turned on the stack.
794 00:44:40.900 --> 00:44:44.240 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, they're not consistent across all their productions.
795 00:44:44.900 --> 00:44:45.710 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, should be.
796 00:44:45.710 --> 00:44:47.280 Andrew Clegg: Shouldn't they? But.
797 00:44:47.280 --> 00:44:49.249 Graham Stoddart-Stones: In a perfect world, but.
798 00:44:49.250 --> 00:44:49.630 Andrew Clegg: Yeah.
799 00:44:49.630 --> 00:44:53.180 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, we live in a world with less trust. So it's not perfect.
800 00:44:53.670 --> 00:44:58.080 chris edwards: I'll I'll have a look at the other stations up and down the line
801 00:44:58.460 --> 00:45:02.579 chris edwards: tonight to see whether they've all got squares.
802 00:45:03.350 --> 00:45:05.360 Parish Clerk: Bridge. Bridgewater hasn't.
803 00:45:05.360 --> 00:45:06.040 Andrew Clegg: Yeah.
804 00:45:06.040 --> 00:45:07.340 Parish Clerk: Playing as you were talking.
805 00:45:07.340 --> 00:45:11.840 Andrew Clegg: Floating. This the station for for Glastonbury.
806 00:45:12.587 --> 00:45:14.830 Parish Clerk: Yeah, for Pilton.
807 00:45:15.090 --> 00:45:15.870 Andrew Clegg: Yeah.
808 00:45:16.390 --> 00:45:20.349 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Good afternoon. Haven't seen you spotted you there before. Nice to see you.
809 00:45:21.640 --> 00:45:26.030 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So inevitably the focus turns to you, Alistair, to ask if you have any questions.
810 00:45:28.200 --> 00:45:35.390 alastair boyd: No, I've been up to my eyebrows in the last few weeks, and I've been able to join you. But I thought tonight I could just get any orbit late.
811 00:45:35.640 --> 00:45:39.030 Graham Stoddart-Stones: All right. Well, I'm hoping you were going to put us out of our misery.
812 00:45:39.270 --> 00:45:39.710 Parish Clerk: No.
813 00:45:42.330 --> 00:45:44.600 alastair boyd: You get a bit highbrow for my job.
814 00:45:45.070 --> 00:45:49.200 alastair boyd: All I want to know is, is Ash Borough Council on board yet or not.
815 00:45:50.683 --> 00:45:52.416 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Let me just check.
816 00:45:59.830 --> 00:46:00.580 Parish Clerk: Definitely.
817 00:46:00.580 --> 00:46:05.410 alastair boyd: Quite nice to say a lot of work if they were on, and did things wrongly.
818 00:46:05.410 --> 00:46:06.870 Parish Clerk: Hey? It's right.
819 00:46:07.890 --> 00:46:09.810 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So remind me how you're spreading that.
820 00:46:10.120 --> 00:46:12.960 alastair boyd: Ashford, A. SHFO. RD.
821 00:46:13.170 --> 00:46:13.970 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.
822 00:46:14.230 --> 00:46:16.290 alastair boyd: Tara, BOUR GH.
823 00:46:22.540 --> 00:46:31.720 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It's not known as a council in its own right. There's Ashford Bowdler, there's Ashford Carbonell, there's Ashford Hill, there's Ashford in the water.
824 00:46:31.720 --> 00:46:35.459 alastair boyd: No, it's Ashford's quite. It's the borough of Ashford. It's quite big
825 00:46:35.940 --> 00:46:37.040 alastair boyd: in Kent.
826 00:46:37.210 --> 00:46:38.349 alastair boyd: Ashley, Kent.
827 00:46:38.933 --> 00:46:45.449 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Maybe I need to go on the business because it's this only deals with towns, parishes, or community councils.
828 00:46:45.810 --> 00:46:48.760 Parish Clerk: Should put standard.
829 00:46:49.160 --> 00:46:54.379 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Because the the clue is that you can go on to parish online's own website
830 00:46:54.500 --> 00:46:56.149 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and ask them how much
831 00:46:56.660 --> 00:46:59.020 Graham Stoddart-Stones: the cost is for their
832 00:46:59.430 --> 00:47:03.339 Graham Stoddart-Stones: area, and if they've already bought it, they'll say you've already bought it.
833 00:47:03.980 --> 00:47:07.270 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So that's a way of knowing whether Ashford has got it or not.
834 00:47:07.270 --> 00:47:09.650 alastair boyd: Have your telephone number for parish online.
835 00:47:10.240 --> 00:47:10.940 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.
836 00:47:11.820 --> 00:47:14.640 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I can, since I happen to be on the page.
837 00:47:15.620 --> 00:47:18.529 alastair boyd: I think time to finish all kind of the weekend, though.
838 00:47:20.440 --> 00:47:23.509 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, no course to 3, no way.
839 00:47:23.940 --> 00:47:24.460 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Besides.
840 00:47:24.460 --> 00:47:29.059 alastair boyd: Yeah, I think only a 3rd of them work in the offices, anyway.
841 00:47:32.070 --> 00:47:33.859 alastair boyd: Sorry folks, I'm holding you up.
842 00:47:34.850 --> 00:47:35.630 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, no.
843 00:47:35.630 --> 00:47:37.589 Stuart Bacon: Thanks for in time.
844 00:47:38.010 --> 00:47:41.259 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Funnily enough. I don't have a phone number on this website.
845 00:47:42.300 --> 00:47:43.790 alastair boyd: I'll look it up on the.
846 00:47:44.490 --> 00:47:46.140 alastair boyd: I might be at the computer.
847 00:47:46.620 --> 00:47:49.159 alastair boyd: Okay, sorry, gents. Keep going.
848 00:47:50.800 --> 00:47:51.419 alastair boyd: Time is short.
849 00:47:51.420 --> 00:47:56.300 Graham Stoddart-Stones: See if there's a mapping for businesses, businesses.
850 00:47:56.300 --> 00:47:57.840 Parish Clerk: Surface movement.
851 00:48:05.550 --> 00:48:06.250 Parish Clerk: He's
852 00:48:07.660 --> 00:48:08.620 Parish Clerk: it seems
853 00:48:13.020 --> 00:48:14.349 Parish Clerk: I'm so sorry.
854 00:48:14.350 --> 00:48:18.619 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It's weird, Ashley. There's no listing for anything. Starting with Ashford.
855 00:48:18.620 --> 00:48:23.219 alastair boyd: Right. Move on. Let the you know I'm not cramming other people's time up.
856 00:48:23.730 --> 00:48:29.700 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, no, I think, the reason I said that you're a ray of sunshine to us is because we're running out of things to say.
857 00:48:32.670 --> 00:48:35.380 Stuart Withington: Could I ask about the tithe layer?
858 00:48:35.940 --> 00:48:39.149 Stuart Withington: I I just tried searching on it.
859 00:48:39.450 --> 00:48:42.390 Stuart Withington: cause I was quite interested in possibly.
860 00:48:42.390 --> 00:48:42.860 Parish Clerk: You might.
861 00:48:42.860 --> 00:48:49.260 Stuart Withington: Able to decline planning applications, and it doesn't seem to appear on mine at all.
862 00:48:49.780 --> 00:48:51.719 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Would you like to share your screen.
863 00:48:51.970 --> 00:48:53.740 Malcolm Daniels: Georgie Somerset, isn't it?
864 00:48:54.510 --> 00:48:58.980 Parish Clerk: Yeah, if you you're not in and you're not in Somerset, are you, Stuart? No.
865 00:48:59.520 --> 00:49:05.970 Parish Clerk: I think Malcolm will probably be able to to advise us, but I suspect it's probably a Somerset. Only Lane.
866 00:49:05.970 --> 00:49:08.300 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So if you do a search at the top.
867 00:49:08.660 --> 00:49:11.890 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and you type in TITH e.
868 00:49:12.250 --> 00:49:13.790 Stuart Bacon: It's sorcer, only.
869 00:49:15.700 --> 00:49:16.840 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Nothing. So
870 00:49:17.320 --> 00:49:18.260 Graham Stoddart-Stones: it's.
871 00:49:18.530 --> 00:49:28.709 Andrew Clegg: Yeah, Stuart, if you want to see the tithe map, the best place for old maps is, believe it or not, the National Library of Scotland.
872 00:49:29.280 --> 00:49:31.189 Andrew Clegg: and I'm sure you'll find it there.
873 00:49:31.500 --> 00:49:32.780 Malcolm Daniels: We got more.
874 00:49:33.420 --> 00:49:38.340 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It's a wonderful place that's like you can get very, very lost in there in time. Wise, I mean.
875 00:49:38.890 --> 00:49:40.998 Andrew Clegg: Yes, give yourself a morning.
876 00:49:42.530 --> 00:49:44.639 Stuart Withington: And that that's all online, is it?
877 00:49:44.640 --> 00:49:45.230 Andrew Clegg: Yeah, absolutely.
878 00:49:45.230 --> 00:49:46.160 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Everything's online.
879 00:49:46.160 --> 00:49:51.510 Andrew Clegg: It's worth going there just to learn how to use it. You can see lots of things.
880 00:49:51.570 --> 00:49:52.600 Andrew Clegg: Oh, brilliant.
881 00:49:52.600 --> 00:49:53.659 Stuart Withington: Thank you for that.
882 00:49:56.220 --> 00:50:02.390 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So for those of you who are utterly fascinated about talking to councils, about getting data out of them.
883 00:50:03.126 --> 00:50:09.069 Graham Stoddart-Stones: We could ask Richard to summarise the meeting that we had with Somerset Unitary Council
884 00:50:09.140 --> 00:50:10.570 Graham Stoddart-Stones: on Thursday.
885 00:50:14.710 --> 00:50:16.869 Parish Clerk: For those in the benefits of Somerset.
886 00:50:16.950 --> 00:50:23.480 Parish Clerk: They are they are working towards having a consistent approach across the whole county.
887 00:50:24.563 --> 00:50:31.989 Parish Clerk: I. I made the point that the Rolls Royce Service of of Ssdc. Needed to come to the West Somerset area
888 00:50:32.040 --> 00:50:37.200 Parish Clerk: because we're in the the Sunday Football League, whereas Chris is in the Premier League
889 00:50:37.210 --> 00:50:38.320 Parish Clerk: for data.
890 00:50:40.130 --> 00:50:46.260 Parish Clerk: but they they assure me that they probably got something in my somerset on the back of a bit of paper.
891 00:50:46.560 --> 00:50:52.430 Parish Clerk: Can't say fag packet anymore that they might be able to share at some stage. But at the moment it's gonna take a bit of work.
892 00:50:53.226 --> 00:51:01.530 Parish Clerk: They are. They are trying, and they are working. We are heading towards trying to get some more highways information out of them.
893 00:51:01.550 --> 00:51:04.660 Parish Clerk: so that we get that consistent across the the piece.
894 00:51:05.118 --> 00:51:10.489 Parish Clerk: It was a very, very useful sort of 3 quarters now, wasn't it, Graham? They were. They were.
895 00:51:10.490 --> 00:51:10.940 Graham Stoddart-Stones: That I.
896 00:51:10.940 --> 00:51:11.690 Parish Clerk: Yeah.
897 00:51:11.690 --> 00:51:16.320 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The line that I really liked was from John, who was calling in from Brittany
898 00:51:16.330 --> 00:51:20.710 Graham Stoddart-Stones: somewhere, and he was a little bit. His connection was a bit unstable.
899 00:51:20.760 --> 00:51:24.359 Graham Stoddart-Stones: but we were talking to a lady called
900 00:51:25.050 --> 00:51:26.470 Graham Stoddart-Stones: as the owner.
901 00:51:27.390 --> 00:51:28.350 Graham Stoddart-Stones: floating on.
902 00:51:28.350 --> 00:51:30.620 Parish Clerk: You know Santa Santa.
903 00:51:31.120 --> 00:51:33.539 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No, not Santa, the other 1. 0, Wimmer.
904 00:51:33.540 --> 00:51:34.989 Parish Clerk: Emma Emma Plummer.
905 00:51:34.990 --> 00:51:42.030 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So Emma is responsible for getting data to and from the parishes, particularly the Lcns
906 00:51:42.230 --> 00:51:42.980 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and
907 00:51:43.770 --> 00:51:46.940 Graham Stoddart-Stones: came from Mendip, where she worked alongside.
908 00:51:47.573 --> 00:51:49.999 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Adam, who is now the head of Gis.
909 00:51:50.370 --> 00:52:04.840 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and there were 2 statements that fascinated me. The one was that Somerset, West and Taunton has never had a Gis, which I didn't know was possible, and see how they could function without one. But never mind, perhaps they, your argument is, they don't function very well.
910 00:52:05.350 --> 00:52:08.399 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and the second statement was that Emma said that she
911 00:52:08.670 --> 00:52:19.409 Graham Stoddart-Stones: had found that the Highways department to be of all the departments in the council by far and away the most friendly, cooperative, and helpful.
912 00:52:19.780 --> 00:52:20.330 chris edwards: Rubbish.
913 00:52:20.330 --> 00:52:21.120 Andrew Clegg: Which.
914 00:52:21.120 --> 00:52:31.300 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Out the most wonderful line from John in France, saying, Well, you're obviously talking to a completely different highways department.
915 00:52:31.770 --> 00:52:45.359 Graham Stoddart-Stones: but she has promised that she's going to talk to them specifically about which bits of the highway they claim that they own, and that they'll be responsible for mowing and so forth, and which bits the rest of us can expect to have to catch up on.
916 00:52:46.060 --> 00:52:50.430 Malcolm Daniels: Emma is very good. Actually, I I used to have a lot of dealings with her
917 00:52:50.470 --> 00:52:52.039 Malcolm Daniels: when I was on
918 00:52:52.230 --> 00:52:54.069 Malcolm Daniels: dealing with Mendit.
919 00:52:54.380 --> 00:52:55.020 Graham Stoddart-Stones: I.
920 00:52:56.360 --> 00:52:58.899 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So you're talking to Emma a lot, Emma Plummer.
921 00:52:59.370 --> 00:53:00.300 Malcolm Daniels: Yeah.
922 00:53:00.300 --> 00:53:01.010 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.
923 00:53:01.380 --> 00:53:03.019 Malcolm Daniels: She was very helpful.
924 00:53:03.870 --> 00:53:09.430 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, she's now got a bigger job, which she still says is part-time, which I found extraordinary.
925 00:53:09.910 --> 00:53:19.360 Graham Stoddart-Stones: But yeah, as as Richard said, it was a positive meeting, and they made all sorts of promises, and we do have a sort of a permanent line of communication with them, which is a big step.
926 00:53:19.520 --> 00:53:20.360 Malcolm Daniels: Good.
927 00:53:20.680 --> 00:53:27.570 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And for those of you who are not in Somerset, Somerset has recently started exporting many more layers of data
928 00:53:27.760 --> 00:53:28.729 Graham Stoddart-Stones: to us.
929 00:53:31.280 --> 00:53:36.560 Graham Stoddart-Stones: so things like, for instance, the Heritage map that you can't see Stuart in your in Essex.
930 00:53:36.968 --> 00:53:42.540 Graham Stoddart-Stones: The tithe maps. I'm sure you've got them. It's just that no one's ever thought to put them out online.
931 00:53:43.150 --> 00:53:47.219 Graham Stoddart-Stones: So another good case for you to argue with Simon Miles.
932 00:53:51.240 --> 00:53:58.820 alastair boyd: Just when you were talking about highways. I spent 2 years on a Government committee dealing with the compensation and Compulsory Purchase Acts.
933 00:53:59.190 --> 00:54:01.040 alastair boyd: which is very interesting.
934 00:54:01.110 --> 00:54:04.977 alastair boyd: One of the things was where the country lanes. I don't know
935 00:54:05.360 --> 00:54:07.269 alastair boyd: how far it goes out to.
936 00:54:07.380 --> 00:54:16.450 alastair boyd: but the ownership of the road on underneath the surface. The councils have a control of the surface of the road and diverge up to the hedge or ditch.
937 00:54:16.520 --> 00:54:20.829 alastair boyd: The land underneath still remains to the ownership of the neighbouring
938 00:54:21.040 --> 00:54:22.080 alastair boyd: landowner.
939 00:54:22.610 --> 00:54:31.730 alastair boyd: and I was. The telephone companies had the least power as far as compulsion purchase right, and the water companies had the most.
940 00:54:32.120 --> 00:54:37.339 alastair boyd: and I was busy trying to move the new act over. So it was worked on the telephone system.
941 00:54:37.540 --> 00:54:43.940 alastair boyd: But it was quite interesting, and and I had my son hit a telegraph pole
942 00:54:44.000 --> 00:54:45.619 alastair boyd: and broke it off.
943 00:54:45.820 --> 00:54:50.939 alastair boyd: and they were coming after me for 800 pounds for it, and I said, well, your pole is sitting in my ground.
944 00:54:51.090 --> 00:54:55.879 alastair boyd: If you, if you want to do that, then I'm going to give you notice, for every pole stuck in our purge.
945 00:54:55.970 --> 00:54:57.790 alastair boyd: and then I never heard another thing.
946 00:54:59.356 --> 00:55:01.969 Andrew Clegg: And then.
947 00:55:01.970 --> 00:55:06.079 alastair boyd: When the High Speed railway came through they redirected the road.
948 00:55:06.140 --> 00:55:11.089 alastair boyd: I said, Right, I want the land back to the middle of the road. They hopped and puffed, and everything else. But I got it back
949 00:55:11.180 --> 00:55:13.079 alastair boyd: so it must be reasonably sound.
950 00:55:13.440 --> 00:55:18.480 alastair boyd: And the other thing was, have anybody tried to work on Cadestial Plot. Parcels.
951 00:55:18.480 --> 00:55:19.560 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes. Yeah.
952 00:55:21.125 --> 00:55:26.920 alastair boyd: We we had some criminals had dumped 29,000 tons of waste
953 00:55:26.970 --> 00:55:28.179 alastair boyd: in a woodland.
954 00:55:28.450 --> 00:55:31.780 alastair boyd: and they've been sold in parcels.
955 00:55:32.190 --> 00:55:37.090 alastair boyd: and that's been very, very useful, being able to locate the owners of the ground underneath it.
956 00:55:37.200 --> 00:55:42.210 alastair boyd: There's a bill for up to 15 million pounds to get it shifted.
957 00:55:42.610 --> 00:55:45.449 alastair boyd: And it's quite, quite an interesting thing.
958 00:55:45.550 --> 00:55:48.370 alastair boyd: I presented that to them at the meeting.
959 00:55:48.620 --> 00:55:54.870 alastair boyd: and I think that helped the Environment Agency got it going. But they were the main parties for doing nothing that got us in the mind. In the 1st place.
960 00:55:56.740 --> 00:55:58.900 Graham Stoddart-Stones: No one noticed 29,000.
961 00:55:58.900 --> 00:56:02.680 alastair boyd: We we there. I found it in July 23,
962 00:56:02.970 --> 00:56:05.259 alastair boyd: and complained to the Borough Council.
963 00:56:05.440 --> 00:56:19.189 alastair boyd: and I think I pickled them off because they? They told us nothing to do with them, so it's nothing to do with them, nothing to the English language, nothing to do with the environment. They've seen all the rest of it until we managed to get on television in January.
964 00:56:19.220 --> 00:56:23.999 alastair boyd: Within 4 days of the there's a court order stopping all work in there.
965 00:56:24.250 --> 00:56:28.949 alastair boyd: there's still those huge pile of waste that's killing all the trees around about it. But
966 00:56:29.090 --> 00:56:32.249 alastair boyd: yeah, I just thought it'd be interesting to say that it does work.
967 00:56:32.480 --> 00:56:34.760 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Have they been able to find who dumped it there.
968 00:56:35.040 --> 00:56:41.189 alastair boyd: Nope, not yet. They've they've got sites all over Kent, apparently. I dare say they've got sites over your way, too.
969 00:56:41.440 --> 00:56:47.579 alastair boyd: They just move this waste in. They get paid for it. They get the waste license money. They just pocketed it.
970 00:56:48.900 --> 00:56:50.050 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Unbelievable.
971 00:56:50.050 --> 00:56:56.210 alastair boyd: It's it is unbelievable. It really is unbelievable. Norris scope where we're going in there without number plates without livery.
972 00:56:56.510 --> 00:56:59.100 alastair boyd: 8 or 10 times a day with the same lorry.
973 00:56:59.280 --> 00:57:01.860 alastair boyd: All being reported to the police didn't do anything
974 00:57:02.620 --> 00:57:05.209 alastair boyd: now. Of course they're all trying to find out what went on.
975 00:57:06.540 --> 00:57:09.209 chris edwards: Seem to remember the television programme. Alistair.
976 00:57:09.210 --> 00:57:10.380 Andrew Clegg: Yeah, so do I.
977 00:57:10.380 --> 00:57:10.850 chris edwards: Hmm.
978 00:57:10.850 --> 00:57:11.460 alastair boyd: Yeah.
979 00:57:12.090 --> 00:57:13.110 alastair boyd: yeah, this.
980 00:57:13.110 --> 00:57:13.570 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well.
981 00:57:13.570 --> 00:57:16.180 alastair boyd: They've had a ministerial order
982 00:57:16.190 --> 00:57:20.329 alastair boyd: that the Ea. Have got to use their own funds to to get it cleared.
983 00:57:20.670 --> 00:57:29.093 alastair boyd: But then, at the moment. Sort of vetting all these contractors where it's gonna go to. Somebody else's whole, I expect. Anyway, that's an aside.
984 00:57:29.430 --> 00:57:30.130 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Wow!
985 00:57:31.460 --> 00:57:37.900 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, let me just check with anybody if there's any more questions, because otherwise I shall declare it's the weekend.
986 00:57:39.460 --> 00:57:44.369 Parish Clerk: Going back, going back to going back to Chris's surface water flooding.
987 00:57:44.370 --> 00:57:45.110 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah.
988 00:57:45.590 --> 00:57:51.659 Parish Clerk: Under under your Ssdc. You've got a risk of flooding from surface water layer.
989 00:57:51.660 --> 00:57:52.660 chris edwards: Okay.
990 00:57:53.490 --> 00:57:58.700 Parish Clerk: And that that's got some squiggles on it for that field above those houses.
991 00:57:58.700 --> 00:57:59.070 chris edwards: Right.
992 00:57:59.070 --> 00:57:59.860 Parish Clerk: As well.
993 00:57:59.860 --> 00:58:00.290 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, you should.
994 00:58:00.290 --> 00:58:02.089 chris edwards: Okay, I'll take a look at that, Richard.
995 00:58:02.290 --> 00:58:03.640 chris edwards: Thank you very much.
996 00:58:04.280 --> 00:58:05.509 Parish Clerk: You want to share.
997 00:58:05.510 --> 00:58:08.500 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, I've always wanted to see Squiggles.
998 00:58:13.510 --> 00:58:14.540 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Oh, my good.
999 00:58:14.540 --> 00:58:15.450 chris edwards: Oh yes!
1000 00:58:15.450 --> 00:58:15.870 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Wow!
1001 00:58:16.840 --> 00:58:17.350 Graham Stoddart-Stones: If you.
1002 00:58:17.350 --> 00:58:17.920 chris edwards: Yes.
1003 00:58:17.920 --> 00:58:21.560 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Click on view. Legend, does it tell you what that is?
1004 00:58:24.300 --> 00:58:26.759 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Risk of flooding surface water? Okay.
1005 00:58:27.670 --> 00:58:28.340 chris edwards: Hmm.
1006 00:58:28.530 --> 00:58:29.910 Stuart Bacon: Only a thousand.
1007 00:58:31.980 --> 00:58:33.480 chris edwards: Yeah, that was useful.
1008 00:58:35.630 --> 00:58:39.530 Parish Clerk: It's also I think it's also, if I turn that one off and turn on.
1009 00:58:40.360 --> 00:58:42.959 Parish Clerk: Oh, don't you just love all these layers?
1010 00:58:43.540 --> 00:58:44.529 Parish Clerk: You see a
1011 00:58:44.900 --> 00:58:45.850 Parish Clerk: you.
1012 00:58:45.850 --> 00:58:47.169 Graham Stoddart-Stones: It's the Rolls, Royce.
1013 00:58:47.170 --> 00:58:51.749 Parish Clerk: Certainly Rolls Royce. Yeah, it's the Rolls Royce. They get the Rolls. Royce.
1014 00:58:52.470 --> 00:58:53.160 Parish Clerk: Yeah.
1015 00:58:53.590 --> 00:58:58.359 Parish Clerk: Cause I'm assuming it's this, it must be the same sort of information from the 2.
1016 00:58:58.890 --> 00:58:59.350 chris edwards: Yeah.
1017 00:58:59.350 --> 00:59:00.509 Parish Clerk: Want to come home.
1018 00:59:01.348 --> 00:59:09.229 chris edwards: Richard, if you scroll the map down, pull it down so you're going north. Go on bit more bit more bit more. No down.
1019 00:59:10.110 --> 00:59:12.261 Graham Stoddart-Stones: And other. Down there you go.
1020 00:59:12.620 --> 00:59:18.039 chris edwards: Bit more. Stop there! Stop there! You see the word station or Sta.
1021 00:59:18.560 --> 00:59:23.700 chris edwards: Normally it floods in the 2 fields below the station.
1022 00:59:23.700 --> 00:59:26.410 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah, if you turn those on, it does show that.
1023 00:59:28.710 --> 00:59:31.180 chris edwards: There we are. Yes, yes.
1024 00:59:32.240 --> 00:59:33.750 chris edwards: yeah. There we go.
1025 00:59:35.470 --> 00:59:38.750 Parish Clerk: There is, there is just those squiggles are there? Look, yeah.
1026 00:59:38.750 --> 00:59:40.139 chris edwards: Yes, yes.
1027 00:59:40.140 --> 00:59:45.450 Parish Clerk: That's on the that's that's on the the least layer. But yeah.
1028 00:59:45.600 --> 00:59:46.740 Parish Clerk: it's there.
1029 00:59:46.810 --> 00:59:48.269 Parish Clerk: Excellent. So they are
1030 00:59:48.670 --> 00:59:50.940 Parish Clerk: that just underlines the.
1031 00:59:51.190 --> 00:59:52.169 chris edwards: Yes, one of the.
1032 00:59:52.380 --> 00:59:58.039 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Chris to ask the local planning authority how the hell they didn't object to it on those grounds.
1033 00:59:58.040 --> 01:00:00.249 chris edwards: Yeah, exactly. Yeah, yeah.
1034 01:00:02.060 --> 01:00:05.025 Andrew Clegg: The local planning authority simply asks,
1035 01:00:05.520 --> 01:00:05.970 Parish Clerk: And.
1036 01:00:05.970 --> 01:00:07.139 Andrew Clegg: The Drainage board.
1037 01:00:07.460 --> 01:00:16.289 Andrew Clegg: and they go with whatever the Drainage board says. So the the problem is that it wouldn't have occurred in the comment from the Drainage Board.
1038 01:00:16.610 --> 01:00:17.310 chris edwards: Yeah.
1039 01:00:18.530 --> 01:00:19.330 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Right!
1040 01:00:19.730 --> 01:00:44.749 Andrew Clegg: I think you have, as we have, as we have as villages, to actually use these maps and point it out, and then send in a particular note, when we have to comment on an application to say, note that this such and such appears on the on the on the map, and could the Drainage board be asked to comment? Otherwise they don't. Otherwise the guys don't ask, or the people don't ask.
1041 01:00:44.750 --> 01:00:45.700 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Single, right.
1042 01:00:45.700 --> 01:00:46.500 chris edwards: Yeah.
1043 01:00:46.500 --> 01:00:48.839 Parish Clerk: You're pointing out that water flows downhill.
1044 01:00:49.550 --> 01:00:51.829 Andrew Clegg: Oh, they'll be done!
1045 01:00:51.830 --> 01:00:53.200 chris edwards: New one. I made red one.
1046 01:00:53.200 --> 01:01:06.350 Andrew Clegg: Most planning applications. If you read the Fras, you'll find it doesn't flow downhill, it flows uphill on all our planning applications. We've got the parrot flowing the wrong way.
1047 01:01:06.350 --> 01:01:09.349 Parish Clerk: The purposes of those not in Somerset. That's the name of a river.
1048 01:01:11.650 --> 01:01:12.790 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Wonderful.
1049 01:01:13.330 --> 01:01:18.240 Malcolm Daniels: The other thing which you can get off. The environmental map
1050 01:01:18.500 --> 01:01:21.280 Malcolm Daniels: is ancient remains.
1051 01:01:21.780 --> 01:01:22.740 Malcolm Daniels: Oh.
1052 01:01:22.740 --> 01:01:23.215 Andrew Clegg: Yeah.
1053 01:01:23.690 --> 01:01:25.700 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Of buildings or humans.
1054 01:01:26.080 --> 01:01:26.850 Andrew Clegg: Yeah, it's
1055 01:01:30.020 --> 01:01:31.580 Andrew Clegg: no, it's a very good one that.
1056 01:01:31.990 --> 01:01:34.170 Malcolm Daniels: Yeah, cause we
1057 01:01:34.560 --> 01:01:37.620 Malcolm Daniels: we made them have a
1058 01:01:39.370 --> 01:01:42.979 Malcolm Daniels: I can't remember what they call them. Now, people who
1059 01:01:43.060 --> 01:01:44.750 Malcolm Daniels: the archaeological
1060 01:01:45.220 --> 01:01:49.869 Malcolm Daniels: people had to be present while a particular place was built, you know.
1061 01:01:49.870 --> 01:01:50.730 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yes.
1062 01:01:51.270 --> 01:01:56.139 Andrew Clegg: Well, you have. You have the fosse way going right through the middle, don't you? So we.
1063 01:01:56.140 --> 01:01:56.770 Malcolm Daniels: Yeah.
1064 01:01:56.910 --> 01:01:57.910 Malcolm Daniels: Hmm.
1065 01:01:58.180 --> 01:02:02.149 Malcolm Daniels: it's another thing which that series of maps helps with.
1066 01:02:02.150 --> 01:02:02.780 Andrew Clegg: Yeah.
1067 01:02:02.780 --> 01:02:03.560 chris edwards: Yes.
1068 01:02:08.000 --> 01:02:10.610 Malcolm Daniels: Planning didn't take any of that into account.
1069 01:02:11.320 --> 01:02:12.150 Andrew Clegg: Really.
1070 01:02:13.580 --> 01:02:14.220 Malcolm Daniels: No.
1071 01:02:15.620 --> 01:02:20.599 Malcolm Daniels: So it's another thing that local parishioners got to be careful of.
1072 01:02:20.970 --> 01:02:21.730 chris edwards: Yes.
1073 01:02:21.730 --> 01:02:22.610 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Thank you.
1074 01:02:24.370 --> 01:02:30.960 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Well, ladies and gentlemen, thank you all very much for your time, Malcolm. It's wonderful to see you. I hope you'll come back to us again.
1075 01:02:30.960 --> 01:02:32.290 chris edwards: Yeah, yeah, I hope.
1076 01:02:32.290 --> 01:02:33.550 Malcolm Daniels: Gave us through, now.
1077 01:02:33.550 --> 01:02:34.179 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Yeah. Good.
1078 01:02:34.180 --> 01:02:34.800 Parish Clerk: Oh, good!
1079 01:02:34.800 --> 01:02:37.200 Graham Stoddart-Stones: Wonderful. Well, stick with us, stick with us.
1080 01:02:37.450 --> 01:02:42.429 Graham Stoddart-Stones: and everybody have a very fine weekend, and I'll see you next week. Thank you for your time.
1081 01:02:42.430 --> 01:02:44.650 Stuart Withington: Thank you.
1082 01:02:44.650 --> 01:02:45.230 Malcolm Daniels: Aye.
1083 01:02:45.230 --> 01:02:45.550 alastair boyd: Bloody.
1084 01:02:45.550 --> 01:02:46.300 Councillor Helen Davey (Hazel): Bye, bye.