The Undercliff cafe in Ovingdean reopens for the Summer

Tomorrow, ‘The Undercliff’ cafe at Ovingdean, will be organising an Easter Egg hunt aimed at young children. All the proceeds of the egg hunt will go to charity.

Lukas said: “I used to come here as a kid, every few days, I went rock pooling. I used to get ice-crams. I have fished off the slip here regularly.” The slip is near Brighton marina.

“We’re trying to make it feel as if you’re on holiday down by the beach. The Mediterranean style, Mezze menu will encourage that.”

Undercliff Cafe Ovingdean
The Undercliff is the newly named cafe on the cliff walk in Ovingdean

Lukas and his partner offer Mediterranean inspired cuisine because Lukas’ father, Zeki Atesli, is Turkish. The couple’s vision for the café is to be a community hub throughout the day and until sunset during the summer months when it’s lighter.

While travelling in South East Asia, the couple sampled Vietnamese salted iced coffee which they have tried to re-create. It’s their signature, iced coffee and consists of condensed milk, salted caramel, cream and coffee with a dash of salt.

At the Undercliff Café, you can order fresh fruit smoothies and Borek which is a Turkish filo pastry parcel with spinach and feta. There are vegetarian and vegan options as well as bacon butties and sausage rolls.

Turkish food including Borek
Mediterranean Mezze including Turkish Borek

A Turkish inspired menu also boasts specialist beer, wine and cocktails. The couple now have a licence to serve alcohol in moderation and play recorded music until 10pm. This means customers can watch the sunset and enjoy some Mezze by the sea while listening to ambient music.

With a sun downer, you can order smoked almonds, olives, stuffed feta peppers and smoked paprika hummus with rosemary focaccia.

Lukas, ever the entrepreneur, said: “We’re planning to do paddle board rental in the summer from May or June when tides are less volatile and there’s consistently better weather.”

Bea wants to develop the charitable side of the business. She said: “We just want to use the café for good, I have made up 100 bags of dog treats and the money is going to Cancer research. I also made some homemade granola; I just want to do some good because we can sell things here.”

When The Deans GRAB Volunteers came to clean the beach at the Undercliff cafe, Bea offered free cake to everyone involved. She also gave free food to Pedal People who provide accessible cycle rides for elderly people living in care and all ages of people who have a disability or health need.

A donation of more than £1,000 was given by the Undercliff cafe to Rottingdean Heritage which runs the Grange and the Windmill.

Bea said: “Pedal Peeps are always welcome here for some free coffees. They’re amazing. I think they need more volunteers.

“I just want to help the local area. I definitely want to work with charities around here. We definitely want to do something with marine conservation.”

Lukas’ father, Zeki Atesli, who is an A&E Consultant, holds the lease for the building from Brighton Council. He encouraged the couple to buy a defibrillator for the Undercliff with the help of British Heart Foundation. BHF and Lukas’ father are both are training all of the staff at the café and members of the public in how to use it to save lives.

Defibrillator sponsored by the British Heart Foundation

A family-run business, the cafe opened for the first time last May and reopened for the summer season two weeks ago. Four or five staff work in The Undercliff has public toilets next door.

Lukas and Bea said they will open every day of the year until December with a covered Pergola and heaters in case of bad weather, allowing customers to watch the stormy sea. During the Spring, they open from 9am until 5pm and in the summer they will stay open for longer, perhaps until it gets dark.

You can look up @The_Undercliff on Instagram. A Facebook page is coming soon and the team have a website.

The Sussex Mayor

There will be seven voting members, including the Sussex Mayor, on the devolved Sussex Mayoral Combined Authority.  Six of these voting members will be elected, two from East Sussex, two from West Sussex and two from Brighton and Hove. The Sussex Mayor is the seventh voting member on the new Board.  Each member will have a vote. The default voting system is that a clear majority of four voting members will carry a change in policy or Sussex-wide legislation. Associate members like the Police and Crime Commissioner, the local NHS Trust Chief Executive or district council leaders can attend meetings, and can be given voting rights.

Only Unitary Authorities like Brighton and Hove and County Councils will be represented on the devolved Mayoral Authority. By 2028, the whole of Sussex should be unitary authorities like Brighton and Hove which is better because a single authority runs all the council services in the area.

If the referendum is approved, the first mayoral elections will take place on 07 May 2026. There will be a Board with at least seven voting members and others who can effectively deputise if the voting members are absent.

The Mayor will sit on the Council of Nations and Regions with the Prime Minister, the First Ministers of Scotland, Wales and the Deputy First Minister of Northern Ireland. The mayor will also represent Sussex on the Mayoral Council with other countywide or metro Mayors like the Mayor of London, Greater Manchester, Liverpool and other northern regions.

The Independent Remuneration Panel will recommend allowances and the new authority would set its own allowances and agree the allowance of the Sussex Mayor.

Elections have been postponed in East and West Sussex from May 2025 to May 2026 in order to ensure that the Sussex Mayor is elected at the same time as local elections. I do not think elections for the new unitary authorities will take place until 2027 and these councils will not be fully functioning until 2028. It means there will be very little democratic accountability between May 2026 and May 2028. According to the Local Government Association, shadow elections might take place during this time and they will not be full elections.

This part of the process is not at all clear to me and is causing concern to Councils across East and West Sussex as well as Brighton and Hove. All three authorities of Brighton and Hove, East and West Sussex support devolution to bring greater investment and protection of Sussex’ natural resources into the area. All three authorities are consulting widely about the boundaries of the five new unitary authorities.

Green Party concerns in Lewes and East Sussex (click here)

Councillor Ezra Cohen from Lewes District Council and East Sussex County Council feels there are inadequate safeguards in place to protect democratic accountability, ‘enhance representation and restore trust’ in public services.

Lewes District Council would like to ensure that devolution is ‘truly a transfer of power to communities, not just a reshuffling of centralised authority.’

Four out of five of the District and Borough Council leaders in East Sussex feel lack of council elections ‘risks undermining the very principles of local democracy and public trust that the White Paper claims to champion.’

Mayoral campaigns can spend up to £140,000 which East Sussex County Council (ESCC) feels is too high and creates a financial barrier to democratic participation. The Sussex Mayor will be elected two years before the unitary authorities go live.

Mayoral elections will use the First Past the Post voting system, a Supplementary Vote system might be fairer according to East Sussex County Council (ESCC.)

Councillor Cohen is concerned that the Sussex Mayor will operate alone for two years without a directly elected assembly like the London Assembly. This means there will be no checks and balances to what the Sussex Mayor is doing.

Councillors in West Sussex County Council are also very concerned about democratic accountability. Click on the link (in green) to read their concerns.

I think only the Mayor of Sussex will be elected at the same time as local elections in all of the new unitary authorities in 2027. 

There are no statutory duties to produce local climate and nature strategies alongside the Local Growth Plan and Spatial Development Strategy.

Police and Crime Commissioners need 100 signatures in support of their candidacy rather than £5,000 which is a stronger test and prevents economic discrimination.

Brighton and Hove would like to retain its distinctiveness

Brighton and Hove residents would like to remain as a discrete unit and unitary authority within existing boundaries to maintain the distinctiveness of the towns. However, we are well under the optimum size of a unitary authority which is 500,000.

Geographical boundaries

Alongside devolution and a Sussex Mayor, the government is asking for proposals for unitary councils in all parts of Sussex which are better because a single council runs all the services for the area. I think there should be four or five unitary authorities.

East Sussex has a population of 555,484 and wants to maintain its boundaries and maintain its existing partnerships which makes sense. West Sussex has a population of 900,862 which is almost double the optimum size of a unitary authority.

I think Crawley (with a population of 120,545) and Horsham (with a population of 149,464) and the rural areas in between should be another unitary authority focused around Gatwick airport and Three Bridges stretching Westwards.

Brighton and Hove with a population of 279,637 should extend Westwards to encompass Adur and possibly Arun and protect its coastal heritage.

This would leave Worthing (with a population of 112, 240) and Chichester (with a population of 128,003) and Petersfield as the main towns in rural West Sussex.

Timetable

Spring 2025: Sussex-wide national devolution consultation run by the government.

Spring to summer 2025: Local consultations across Sussex run by local government.

End of September 2025: Councils to submit a detailed plan to ensure Sussex is economically viable, provide better public services for residents and show how community views have shaped the plan.

End of 2025 to early 2026: Ministers will consider proposals for the unitary authorities and begin implementing the proposals.

May 2026: Elections for the Sussex Mayor.

May 2027: Elections for the new unitary authorities.

May 2028: Unitary authorities are fully functioning and go live.