Difference between revisions of "PPS Group"

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Staff 1st March 2014 - 31st May 2014: <ref> [http://www.appc.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/MAY-14-REGISTER-1.9.14.pdf APPC Register Mar14-May14] Accessed 9/9/14 </ref>
 
Staff 1st March 2014 - 31st May 2014: <ref> [http://www.appc.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/MAY-14-REGISTER-1.9.14.pdf APPC Register Mar14-May14] Accessed 9/9/14 </ref>
[[Lisa Alexander]] | [[Donald Anderson]] | [[Jodi Anderson - Smith]] | [[Tom Arnold]] | [[James Blanchard]] | [[Conor Brennan]] | [[Nicola Brown]] | [[Stephen Byfield]] | [[Deborah Campbell]] | [[Leander Clarke]] | [[Ellis Cresswell]] | [[Bobby Dean]] | [[Rebecca Eatwell]] | [[Rhian Ellis]] | [[Richard Fletcher]] | [[Euan Glen]] | [[Simon Greenhalgh]] | [[Tom Hammond]] | [[Sara Henrikkson]] | [[Amy Hopkinson]] | [[Douglas Johnson]] | [[Claire Jones]] | [[Lewis Jones]] | [[Paul Kelly]] | [[Mark Kerr]] | [[Simon Leonard]] | [Henrietta Luchterhand]] | [[Simon Marlow]] | [[Andy Martin]] | [[Janis McCullock]] | [[Will Morgan ]] | [[Andrew Murray]] | [[Laura Nuttall]] | [[Huw Owen]] | [[Josh Owens]] | [[Steven Park]] | [[George Parkinson]] | [[Dipal Patel]] | [[Guy Pilbeam]] | [[Alex Reid]] | [[Julian Seymour]] | [[Steven Singleton]] | [[Karl Smyth]] | [[Charles St George]] | [[Kai Stormer]] | [[Laura Taylor]] | [[Heather Thomson]] | [[Jack Thomson]] | [[Amber Whitelaw]] | [[Chris Wotton]]
+
[[Lisa Alexander]] | [[Donald Anderson]] | [[Jodi Anderson - Smith]] | [[Tom Arnold]] | [[James Blanchard]] | [[Conor Brennan]] | [[Nicola Brown]] | [[Stephen Byfield]] | [[Deborah Campbell]] | [[Leander Clarke]] | [[Ellis Cresswell]] | [[Bobby Dean]] | [[Rebecca Eatwell]] | [[Rhian Ellis]] | [[Richard Fletcher]] | [[Euan Glen]] | [[Simon Greenhalgh]] | [[Tom Hammond]] | [[Sara Henrikkson]] | [[Amy Hopkinson]] | [[Douglas Johnson]] | [[Claire Jones]] | [[Lewis Jones]] | [[Paul Kelly]] | [[Mark Kerr]] | [[Simon Leonard]] | [[Henrietta Luchterhand]] | [[Simon Marlow]] | [[Andy Martin]] | [[Janis McCullock]] | [[Will Morgan ]] | [[Andrew Murray]] | [[Laura Nuttall]] | [[Huw Owen]] | [[Josh Owens]] | [[Steven Park]] | [[George Parkinson]] | [[Dipal Patel]] | [[Guy Pilbeam]] | [[Alex Reid]] | [[Julian Seymour]] | [[Steven Singleton]] | [[Karl Smyth]] | [[Charles St George]] | [[Kai Stormer]] | [[Laura Taylor]] | [[Heather Thomson]] | [[Jack Thomson]] | [[Amber Whitelaw]] | [[Chris Wotton]]
  
 
Staff 1st December 2013 - 28th February 2014:<ref> [http://www.appc.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/FEB-14-REG-7.3.1411.pdf APPC Register Dec13-Feb14]] Accessed 9/9/2014 </ref>
 
Staff 1st December 2013 - 28th February 2014:<ref> [http://www.appc.org.uk/wp-content/uploads/FEB-14-REG-7.3.1411.pdf APPC Register Dec13-Feb14]] Accessed 9/9/2014 </ref>

Revision as of 08:03, 30 September 2014

Twenty-pound-notes.jpg This article is part of the Lobbying Portal, a sunlight project from Spinwatch.
Nuclear spin.png This article is part of the Nuclear Spin project of Spinwatch.

PPS is a multi-client lobbying firm specialising in the property and development industry. Established in 1990 as Political Planning Services, PPS Group was formed in 1999 with two operating companies: PPS (Local & Regional) Ltd and PPS (Public Affairs) Ltd.[1] With a strapline of 'working in the tougher areas of communications', PPS has more than once been accused of employing unethical tactics.

Criticism

Evening Standard journalist Andrew Gilligan wrote in July 2007:

FROM its headquarters in Mayfair, PPS has become the key player in a little-known corner of the PR industry - the branch that specialises in winning developers planning permission for unpopular schemes. Local protesters, residents' groups and even council planners may never have heard of PPS but PPS knows all about them. Its 60 staff act as the public face of controversial developments, and run a sophisticated war machine to get those developments past the objectors.
The company was founded 17 years ago by Stephen Byfield, a former staffer for a Labour MP, and Charles St George, an ex-Tory councillor. Its client list reads like a roll-call of the development industry: volume housebuilders, such as Barratt, Wimpey, and Taylor Woodrow; big retailers; quarry owners; and power stations. Mr St George, now the company's director of special projects, lives on a country estate in Somerset and is described by PPS as having 'expertise in just about everything'. Mr Byfield remains the managing director of PPS and is heavily involved in BAA's hugely controversial project to expand Stansted Airport.[2]

Fake letter writing

Imperial Wharf, London

Private eye reports on PPS

On 30 July 2007, PPS was exposed by Channel 4’s Dispatches programme and the Evening Standard for using ‘trickery, deceit and manipulation’ to secure planning permission for certain developments. They were accused of bugging private council meetings, forging letters from residents in support of developers and disguising themselves as students to help builders, St George, obtain planning permission for more than 700 homes in Fulham [3] The Standard also received internal PPS documents, leaked by concerned staff, showing the then PPS director in charge of the Imperial Wharf account, Nick Keable, describing how the company had 'created a large number of letters for projects as diverse as power stations, quarries, and supermarkets.' This is all in breach of the APPC’s code of conduct, of which PPS is a member.

The [ES] report found that many of the supposedly favourable letters sent to the council backing a massive St George Developments scheme at Imperial Wharf, Fulham, came from people who could not be traced. Other, real, residents told ES that letters they had supposedly sent, backing the development, did not reflect their views, were not written by them and included signatures that had been faked. Internal PPS documents, leaked to ES by concerned staff, show the then PPS director in charge of the Imperial Wharf account, Nick Keable, describing how the company had 'created a large number of letters for projects as diverse as power stations, quarries, and supermarkets...'

'PPS has conducted a campaign of this kind for St George as part of their programme to secure planning permission for Imperial Wharf. A steady stream of positive letters, garnered by PPS, has helped to right the balance in St George's favour.'

The Standard also 'obtained a PPS document instructing a staff member to pose as a student in order to get information from councillors', and told of 'how the local councillor for Imperial Wharf, Brendan Bird, was visited by two people claiming to be students and asking detailed questions about the planning application.'

BAA and Stansted

A similar fake letter campaign took place regarding Stansted airport expansion, although the Evening Standard couldn’t prove that the letters came from PPS.[4]:

The Evening Standard reported:

At an SSE [Stop Stansted Expansion] public meeting in January 2006, Carol Barbone, the group's chair, was approached by a young man, Phil Bartram, saying he was a journalism student and wondering if he could take... copies of SSE's research and slideshow presentations for his studies. Ms Barbone handed them over.
Only several months later, when a supporter received a message from Mr Bartram with a BAA email address, did she realise that he was actually on a work placement with, and subsequently fully employed by, BAA.
The lobbyists' trade body, the Association of Professional Political Consultants (APPC), held an emergency meeting on Friday to discuss possible action against PPS following our report. The report found that many of the supposedly favourable letters sent to the council backing a massive St George Developments scheme at Imperial Wharf, Fulham, came from people who could not be traced.
Other, real, residents told us that letters they had supposedly sent, backing the development, did not reflect their views, were not written by them and included signatures that had been faked. Internal PPS documents, leaked to us by concerned staff, show the then PPS director in charge of the Imperial Wharf account, Nick Keable, describing how the company had "created a large number of letters for projects as diverse as power stations, quarries, and supermarkets....
"PPS has conducted a campaign of this kind for St George as part of their programme to secure planning permission for Imperial Wharf. A steady stream of positive letters, garnered by PPS, has helped to right the balance in St George's favour."WE ALSO obtained a PPS document instructing a staff member to pose as a student in order to get information from councillors, and we told of how the local councillor for Imperial Wharf, Brendan Bird, was visited by two people claiming to be students and asking detailed questions about the planning application.
BAA's director of communications for Stansted, Mark Pendlington, is a former managing director of PPS. And PPS, we can reveal, has also been retained by BAA at Stansted to help win its case. The PPS website says that the lobbyist's managing director, Stephen Byfield, is "currently working on the consultation programme for Stansted Airport's expansion". The latest APPC register lists BAA Lynton, the airport operator's property arm, as a PPS client.
"Since Pendlington took over the atmosphere has changed," says Brian Ross, a senior officer with Stop Stansted Expansion. "It has started to get a lot more personal." The Standard has no direct evidence linking PPS to the fake letters sent to newspapers supporting the airport expansion. PPS specifically denies any such involvement. Mr Byfield told the Standard: "Our job at Stansted was to advise on the consultation programme. The last piece of work we did for them was about two months ago. We were not involved in support letter generation, and if you even seek to imply that we were, we will sue your arse." PPS and Mr Keable have also denied the allegations of forgery at Imperial Wharf, saying they would "never" forge letters.
A spokesman for BAA initially claimed to the Standard that PPS's work at Stansted had ended "more than two years ago". Told about the entries in the APPC register and on PPS's own website, BAA amended its statement to clarify that PPS has worked for the airport operator as recently as May. BAA conceded that Philip Bartram had sought information from Stop Stansted Expansion, describing himself as a journalism student, in the way that campaigners have said.
However, it said Mr Bartram was only on a work placement with BAA at the time, although he was subsequently employed by the company. It said it had not instructed him to represent himself as a student. BAA denied that either it or its contractors had used forgery and suggested the fake letters might be from real people who were too afraid to give their names.

APPC response

The APPC held an emergency meeting in July 2007.[5] APPC chair Gill Morris said PPS’ law firm Carter-Ruck was reviewing the coverage.

Lobbying for energy firms

PPS says that it 'has worked with most of the UK's big energy companies as well as many of the smaller players in the market'.

Energy policy is rarely out of the headlines meaning that even local projects can become national news overnight. Our team blends stakeholder engagement, media relations and public affairs to help our clients meet the challenges facing the industry in the UK.
Whether it's supporting a successful NSIP application for nuclear new build on behalf of EDF Energy or securing support from key politicians shale gas exploration for Cuadrilla, we understand the technologies, market and political issues which can affect your company.
Our experience covers nuclear, on and offshore wind, gas, CCS, biomass, unconventional hydrocarbon, marine, and associated grid connections to name but a few. This gives us unprecedented market insight. [6]

Nuclear

Among PPS Group's clients is EDF Energy, who the agency worked with for over three years on one of the "largest planning consultations ever held in the UK" for a new nuclear power plant at Hinkley Point C project. This involved supporting EDF Energy New Nuclear Build "with the design, management and delivery of its statutory pre-application consultation process for the new power station". PPS's Stephen Byfield called it a "significant logistical challenge":

During two years of formal, statutory consultation for the Hinkley Point C project, 34 public exhibitions were held, 67 local meetings took place, nearly 6,500 consultees were engaged and there were more than 100,000 visitors to the dedicated consultation website established by EDF Energy. In total, more than 2,000 consultation responses were received and 33,000 comments processed in a detailed consultation report submitted with the application.

PPS Group director, Charles St George, who led the project, argued that from PPS’s point of view,

the value of the process was demonstrated by the fact that EDF Energy made changes to its plans in several key respects in response to the consultation. The final proposals for Hinkley Point C represent a better outcome for the affected local communities and that’s a direct result of the pre-application consultation". [7]

PPS states that it has 'already helped to establish EDF Energy’s status with the affected local communities as new owners and potential operators of the new power stations. We are now working with EDF Energy to implement extensive pre-application community consultation and communications activities to support forthcoming applications to the IPC for new nuclear build at both sites'. [8]

Fracking

In December 2012 PPS hosted a roundtable shale gas breakfast at the UK House of Commons. This followed the publication of the British government’s gas strategy on 5 December. PPS reported that:

Christopher Pincher MP, a member of the energy and climate change select committee, set out his views on the potential for shale gas and his thoughts on the energy bill. Over 25 guests from across the on-shore oil and gas sector attended the event. [9]

'Getting the facts across' on Shale gas and 'winning a social licence to operate'

In November 2012 PPS director Paul Kelly gave a talk at the SMI Shale Gas environmental summit on the subject of 'Effective Communication – Getting the facts across about the environmental impact of Shale Gas'.

Paul spoke about the need to embrace the concept of winning a social license to operate and set out the key ground rules for effective communication in local communities. He explained how it was vital to fully understand the local community by listening to it while also securing the buy in from all levels of the company seeking the license to operate. Finally he gave some tips on how to present clear factual communication of the issues surrounding on shore energy exploration. [10]

Community engagement

In October 2013 PPS director Paul Kelly addressed the UK Shale Gas Summit as part of a panel of industry experts discussing how to effectively engage with communities. The event also marked the publication of a recent PPS survey on public attitudes to community benefits and energy infrastructure.

During a lively debate, Paul focused on his experience on the ground and stressed that while no two communities are the same, and some level of protest is inevitable, the key is to understand and address each communities specific concerns whilst ensuring the facts are clearly and consistently communicated, at both a local and national level.
Other speakers included DECC’s head of unconventional gas and oil, Duarte Figueira, Environment Agency’s head of community, Tony Grayling and Tim Yeo MP.

[11]

Shale gas clients

From August 2013 the APPC lobbying register showed PPS as handling the account for Cuadrilla Balcombe rather than Cuadrilla as a group - Hanover Communications is listed as the agency responsible. [12]

Edinburgh Council link

In October 2007, PPS hired Donald Anderson as director of the PPS Group’s Scotland office. Anderson was leader of Edinburgh City Council from 1999 to 2006. During this time, Anderson supported an unpopular new development by Mountgrange Capital, the massive Caltongate scheme, that will see parts of the Old City overhauled to build luxury flats (listed and sound un-listed buildings demolished). It has been heavily critised for the scale and quality of the proposed new buildings, the impact on views and inadequate public consultation.[13] Mountgrange Capital is a client of PPS although it insists that Anderson will not be working on the account. Anderson insisted his current employment at PPS was not linked to his support of Mountgrange’s plans while he was council leader. ‘It’s a laughable notion,’ he said. ‘I didn’t carry undue influence.[14]

Clients

As of end of May 2014 (full list): Airvolution Amco Developments Anchor Homes Annington Homes Approved Cables Iniative Armstrong Kent ASC Renewables Axion Land Barratt Homes Batched on Site Association Birmigham Oratory CACI Ltd Cala Homes Camden Lock Markets Ltd Carrington Power Ltd Celtic Array Celtique Energy Chelstone Management Ltd City and Country Homes Ltd City Wall Properties Claremont Fan Court Foundation Ltd CTP Ltd Cuadrilla Balcombe Ltd Cuadrilla Bowland Ltd Dandara Ltd Deveron Homes Discovery Park Doric properties Drum Property Group EDF Energy Edward VII Estates Eider Homes Emcor Group Plc Eon Climate and Renewables Force 9 Fred Olsen Lines Gatwick Airport Ltd Gazeley Uk Ltd General Motors Gerald Eve Goodman Logistics Hammerson Estates Hargreaves Services Ltd Hawk Developments UK Ltd Henderson Global Investors Hollamby Estates Industrial Acoustics Company Ineos Enterprises Ltd Jackamax Ltd Kent Enviropower Ltd Kirkwood Homes Ltd Koopmans Ltd Lafarge Tarmac Land Securities Linden Homes London Borough of Merton Council London Resort Company Holdings Lumicity Ltd Marplace (number 480) Ltd Merton Properties Mill Farm Verntures Ltd Miller Argent (South Wales) Ltd Miller Argent South Wales Ltd Miller Homes Mrs Jean M Powell Murray Estates National Grid Northpoint Developments Ltd Nova Loca Oakhill Group Oxted Residential Peel Environmental Holdings Ltd Pegasus Life Plastics 2020 Plymouth Estates Redrow Homes Ltd Renaissance RLW Estates Ltd Rory Young Saica Pack Ltd Saica Paper Uk Ltd Sainsburys Supermarket Ltd Scottish Government SDS Ltd Severn Trent Water St Christopers Fellowship SVSM (NCGM) new Covent Garden Tata Steel Taylor Wimpey Developments Ltd The Inglis Consortium LLP United Investments Portugal SA Vattenfall Warmafloor Wartsila West Coast Estates Wheelabrator Wisley Property Investments Wyvil Road Ltd

As of August 2013 clients included the following energy companies: EDF Energy | Celtique Energy | Cuadrilla Balcombe Limited | Kent Enviropower Ltd | Kirk Energy | Eon Climate and Renewables | RWE Npower Rewnewables | Vattenfall [15]


As of August 2012 clients included the following energy companies EDF Energy, Cuadrilla Resources and RWE npower renewables [16]Balfour Beatty Capital, Eon Climate and Renewables, Land Securities, Sainsburys, Taylor Wimpey, Tonbridge and Malling Council, Western Power Distribution, General Motors [17]

Previous clients

As of 2006: Anchor Developments | Anchor Trust | Ashfield Estate | B&Q | Ballymore Properties | Henry Boot | Hertfordshire County Council | Homes for Scotland | Iconshield Ltd | Ineos Fluor | Persimmon Homes | PPG Land Ltd | Premier Travel Inn | Princes Quay Trust | Prologis Developments Ltd | BCB Environmental | Bedell Corporation | Biffa Waste | Bristol City Council | British Film Institute | Cala Homes | Cardway Ltd | Catesby Estates Ltd | Cemex Uk | Chelsea Harbour Ltd | Chenil House | Chris Rokos | Circle Red Properties Ltd | CIT Developments | City of Bristol College | Claymoss Properties Limited | Cory Environmental | Countryside Properties | Crest/Galliford LLP | Darinian Limited | Develica | Edenlaw West | EDF Energy | Enodis Property Development | Ewart Properties | FBC Media | Grade Wand (Wescity Developers Ltd) | Guaranty Trust Bank | Gyle Shopping Centre | Ipswich School | JG Land Ltd | John Thompson and Partners | J Sainsbury | London Associated Properties | Legal and General | Lincolnshire County Council | Linden Homes | Linden/Dowland Graylingwell LLP | Local Government Challenge | London and Newcastle | M Baker | Mariposa Investments | Motor Accident Solicitors Society | Merseyside Waste Disposal Authority | Mimas Developments Ltd | Mouchel Parkman | MVV Environment | Nathanial Associates Ltd | National Grid | NHP Leisure Developments | NJW Developments | Thurleigh Estates Limited | N Power Renewables | O&H Properties | Olive Green Group | Parsons Brincherhoff | Peel Land Investments | Peel Holdings | Pelham Holdings | Redrow Homes Ltd | Riding Lane North | RLW Estates Ltd | RMJM Consortium | Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors | RREEF Ltd | Rugeley Power Ltd | Safestore Ltd | SAICA Packaging UK Limited | Salisbury District Council | Spring Urban Regeneration | St Modwen Properties Plc | Sussex Healthcare | Taylor Wimpey UK Ltd | The Catesby Property Group | The Junction Limited Partnership | The Mall | Tilbury Green Power Ltd | TQ9 LLP | UK Boxer Property Co Ltd | Viridor Waste Management | VT Group | Waste Recycling Group | Wheelabrator | Whitbread Group Plc | Whitekirk Golf and Country Club | Workspace Glebe | Zurich Assurance

PPS Group was hired by British Energy in 2003/4 and also was retained by Countryside Properties.

People

  • Stephen Byfield, a former staffer for a Labour MP.
  • Charles St George, an ex-Tory councillor.
  • Andrew Cumpsty, director (March 2008). Leader of the Conservative Group at Reading Borough Council, having been a councillor since 2004. Former head of corporate affairs at Ericsson Services, which operates in the telecoms sector, including supporting the rollout of masts for client Hutchison 3G.[18]
  • Bobby Dean - Account Executive from PPS Group who was seconded to Communications Team at EDF Energy for four months in July 2011 – October 2011 (4 months) to assist in the co-ordination and delivery of the Hinkley Point C Consultation Report to the Infrastructure Planning Commission. [19]

Staff 1st March 2014 - 31st May 2014: [20] Lisa Alexander | Donald Anderson | Jodi Anderson - Smith | Tom Arnold | James Blanchard | Conor Brennan | Nicola Brown | Stephen Byfield | Deborah Campbell | Leander Clarke | Ellis Cresswell | Bobby Dean | Rebecca Eatwell | Rhian Ellis | Richard Fletcher | Euan Glen | Simon Greenhalgh | Tom Hammond | Sara Henrikkson | Amy Hopkinson | Douglas Johnson | Claire Jones | Lewis Jones | Paul Kelly | Mark Kerr | Simon Leonard | Henrietta Luchterhand | Simon Marlow | Andy Martin | Janis McCullock | Will Morgan | Andrew Murray | Laura Nuttall | Huw Owen | Josh Owens | Steven Park | George Parkinson | Dipal Patel | Guy Pilbeam | Alex Reid | Julian Seymour | Steven Singleton | Karl Smyth | Charles St George | Kai Stormer | Laura Taylor | Heather Thomson | Jack Thomson | Amber Whitelaw | Chris Wotton

Staff 1st December 2013 - 28th February 2014:[21] Lisa Alexander | Donald Anderson | Jodi Anderson - Smith | Tom Arnold | Conor Brennan | Nicola Brown | Stephen Byfield | Deborah Campbell | Leander Clarke | Ellis Cresswell | Bobby Dean | Rebecca Eatwell | Rhian Ellis | Euan Glen | Simon Greenhalgh | Tom Hammond | Joanna Hatton-Jones | Sara Henrikkson | Amy Hopkinson | Douglas Johnson | Claire Jones | Lewis Jones | Paul Kelly | Mark Kerr | Henrietta Luchterhand | Kirsty Mair | Simon Marlow | Andy Martin | Janis McCullock | Will Morgan | Andrew Murray | Josh Owens | Steven Park | George Parkinson | Sam Schofield | Julian Seymour | Steven Singleton | Karl Smyth | Charles St George | Kai Stormer | Heather Thomson | Rebecca Warden-Brown | Amber Whitelaw | Chris Wotton

Staff 1st September 2013 - 30th November 2013:[22] Donald Anderson | Jodi Anderson - Smith | James Barber | Zac Bingham Thaker | Conor Brennan | Nicola Brown | Stephen Byfield | Deborah Campbell | Laura Carruthers | Lois Catterall | Leander Clarke | Sarah Coolican | Ellis Cresswell | Bobby Dean | Rebecca Eatwell | Rhian Ellis | Euan Glen | Simon Greenhalgh | Tom Hammond | Joanna Hatton-Jones | Jack Hillcox | Jo Hoare | Amy Hopkinson | Douglas Johnson | Claire Jones | Lewis Jones | Paul Kelly | Mark Kerr | Kirsty Mair | Simon Marlow | Andy Martin | Lindsey McCallum | Will Morgan | Andrew Murray | Josh Owens | Steven Park | Chanel Patterson | Sam Schofield | Julian Seymour | Steven Singleton | Karl Smyth | Charles St George | Heather Thomson | Rebecca Warden-Brown | Keiran Watkins | Kevin Whitmore | George Wilkinson | Henry Wilson

Former Staff

Contact information

PPS Group (London Office)
69 Grosvenor Street
London W1K 3JW
Phone 020 7529 1700
Fax: 020 7629 7514
http://www.ppsgroup.co.uk
Former website on the Internet Archive: http://www.ppsgroup.info

Resources

Notes

  1. Political Wizard Databases >Public Affairs >Public Affairs Consultancies >PPS Group Ltd, accessed 13 November 2009
  2. TRICKERY, DECEIT, MANIPULATION From The Evening Standard - 30/07/2007 (2358 words) Features Revealed: the story behind one of London's most controversial new developments BY ANDREW GILLIGAN
  3. It's a con-sultation, Private Eye 1192
  4. From ‘Another Whiff of Dirty Tricks and the Battle Over Stansted’ By ANDREW GILLIGAN / Evening Standard Posted on: Monday, 6 August 2007, 18:10 CDT http://www.redorbit.com/news/business/1025052/another_whiff_of_dirty_tricks_and_the_battle_over_stansted/index.html
  5. APPC meet PPS crisis
  6. Energy, PPS website, accessed 9 September 2013
  7. Stephen Byfield, PPS Group wraps up nuclear power plant consultation, PPS Group website, 29 November 2011, accessed 19 May 2012
  8. PPS Group, Case study: EDF Energy - New Nuclear Power Stations, acc 9 September 2013
  9. Nick Sutcliffe, PPS hosts shale gas breakfast at House of Commons, PPS Group website, December 7th, 2012
  10. Stephen Byfield, PPS addresses shale gas summit on effective communications, PPS website, 6 November 2012 acc 9 Sept 2013
  11. Stephen Byfield, [ PPS address Shale Gas conference on community engagement], PPS website, 11 October 2014 originally accessed 17 Feb 2014
  12. APPC Register quarter March to May 2014
  13. http://news.scotsman.com/scotland.cfm?id=1689642007
  14. http://www.prweek.com/uk/news/article/757645/former-council-head-lead-pps-scotland/
  15. APPC Register Period Register for 1st June 2013 - 31st August 2013
  16. APPC Register Entry for 1 Dec 2011 to 29 Feb 2012
  17. PPS Group, APPC Register Entry for 1 June 2012 to 31 August 2012,
  18. Ericsson Services duo Cumpsty and Dobson join PPS, Ian Hall, Public Affairs News, March 2008
  19. Bobby Dean, LinkedIn, accessed 19 May 2012
  20. APPC Register Mar14-May14 Accessed 9/9/14
  21. APPC Register Dec13-Feb14] Accessed 9/9/2014
  22. APPC Register Sept13-Nov13] Accessed 9/9/2014
  23. Ericsson Services duo Cumpsty and Dobson join PPS, Ian Hall, Public Affairs News, March 2008
  24. http://www.appc.org.uk/appc/filemanager/root/site_assets/pdfs/APPC_Register_Sep_06_-_Nov_06.pdf; http://www.appc.org.uk/appc/filemanager/root/recycle_bin/List_APPC_Jun.pdf

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