Sunday, 8 March 2026

ACAA Raises Concerns Over UK Visa ‘Emergency Brake’ for Afghans and Urges Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood to Review the Decision

 Republished with permiasion from London-TV

  

The Afghanistan & Central Asian Association (ACAA), an award-winning UK-based refugee charity headquartered in London and the largest charity supporting Afghan and Central Asian communities in the United Kingdom, has expressed serious concern over Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood’s decision to impose an “emergency brake” on new student visa applications from Afghanistan, Cameroon, Sudan, and Myanmar.

The policy was introduced by the Home Office in response to concerns that some individuals entering the UK on student visas later apply for asylum. While ACAA recognises the UK government’s responsibility to maintain the integrity of the immigration system, the Charity warns that such measures risk unfairly impacting genuine applicants who are seeking lawful opportunities for education and professional development.

ACAA is particularly concerned that, while the suspension of student visas applies to all four countries, the government has chosen to suspend work visas specifically for Afghan nationals alone. The charity believes that singling out Afghans in this way is deeply troubling and risks further restricting already limited legal pathways for a population facing one of the most severe humanitarian crises in the world.

The suspension of student visas removes an essential route to higher education for thousands of qualified applicants. For young Afghans especially, access to education has already been severely restricted, particularly for women and girls who have been denied the right to secondary and higher education inside Afghanistan for almost five years under Taliban rule.

For many of these young people, the opportunity to study overseas represents one of the few remaining chances to pursue academic goals, build self-reliance, and secure long-term stability.

Darius Nasimi, Head of Funding and Partnerships at the Afghanistan & Central Asian Association, said:

Over the years, I have spoken with and supported many young people in Afghanistan whose greatest hope is simply to study. For many of them, studying abroad has been the last remaining pathway to education. Afghanistan is experiencing one of the most severe humanitarian and political crises in the world. Limiting access to legal visa routes risks closing doors for people who are trying to build a better future through education and lawful migration. 

We are particularly concerned that while the government has restricted student visas for several countries, it has chosen to suspend work visas specifically for Afghan nationals. Singling out Afghans in this way unfairly penalises a population already facing extraordinary hardship. As a society, we must do more to advocate for and challenge policies that risk closing one of the last doors still open to them. We respectfully ask the Home Secretary to review this decision and ensure that genuine Afghan applicants are not unfairly affected.

ACAA also emphasises that it remains supportive of constructive and humane migration policies. The Charity is grateful to the UK Government for offering sanctuary to over 37,000 Afghans through its two resettlement schemes since 2021, providing vital protection for those fleeing conflict and persecution.

The charity further welcomes the Government’s pledge to open new capped safe and legal routes as an alternative to dangerous small boat crossings, and would be interested in cooperating with the UK Government to support the development of effective and humane pathways.

At the same time, ACAA expresses concern over recent reductions in asylum-related spending. The Charity opposes Home Secretary Shabana Mahmood’s decision to cut £1 billion from the asylum support budget, warning that such reductions undermine the support systems needed for vulnerable people seeking protection.

ACAA continues to work closely with Afghan communities across the UK, providing integration support, advice services, education programmes, and humanitarian assistance. The Charity also operates projects inside Afghanistan delivering vital aid to vulnerable communities.

The charity calls on the UK Government to engage with civil society organisations, universities, and Afghan community groups to ensure that immigration policies safeguard both the integrity of the visa system and the opportunities available to those genuinely seeking education and safety.

Two exhibitions celebrating diversity in Brent!

 Guest post by Philip Grant in a personal capacity.

   


The “Celebrating Brent’s Somali community” display at Kingsbury Library.

 

One of the best things about living in Brent is the rich diversity across the borough. This is reflected in the way we may look, dress, speak and worship differently, yet can all live side by side as ordinary human beings, and enjoy a great variety of shops, eating places and cultural activities.

 

Brent Museum and Archives, working with volunteers from the community, currently has two small exhibitions in local libraries which celebrate parts of this rich mix. As you may not know about them, I am writing a short piece to share this information, so that you can go and enjoy these displays if you wish to (and I hope you will).

 

There have been Somali people in Brent for more than forty years. The colourful “Celebrating Brent’s Somali community” has been on display at Kingsbury Library since January, and is likely to be there until at least after the school Easter holidays (something to do with your children?). It features a variety of objects from the parts of East Africa where Somali peoples originate from, and shares the stories of some Somali community figures in Brent, including a local councillor. Well worth a visit if you are in the area, or perhaps attending one of the other events which Brent Libraries put on at Kingsbury Library.

Part of the “Portraits of Brent” exhibition at the Willesden Gallery.

 

“Portraits of Brent” is a new exhibition at the Willesden Gallery, on the ground floor of Willesden Green Library. It shares stories of Brent residents whose backgrounds are from South West Asia and North Africa, including portraits of them and objects they have contributed which reflect the cultures their families have brought to our area. Alongside these exhibits is a beautiful modern painting depicting the House of Wisdom, a medieval public library and centre of learning in Baghdad, which was destroyed in a Middle Eastern war (not recently, but more than 750 years ago!).

 

The exhibition’s welcome board.

 

The “Portraits of Brent” exhibition will be available to visit until late April. It is part of a range of exhibitions reflecting various communities which make up Brent’s rich tapestry (I can remember earlier ones featuring Brazil, the Caribbean and Romania, and there have been others as well). These are helping to ensure that the Brent Museum and Archives collections represent everyone in our borough (not just the White British like myself!).

 

I hope you will take the chance to visit these exhibitions, which help us to enjoy the diversity we share in Brent. I believe that diversity is a strength for our community, and that we can and do live and work well together in a multi-cultural society, unlike the former Conservative Home Secretary – twice removed! – who grew up in Brent, and has now transferred her ambition for power to Reform UK! Her political prejudice has no place in our borough.


Philip Grant.

London Assembly Report: 'We cannot allow London to become a place where only a small number of families can afford to live and even fewer can manage to enjoy a good quality of life'

 

Wembley Matters has covered the declining primary school population in thhe borough over the past two or three years with soome schools reducing the number of classes in each year group and with the possibility of amalgamation or even closures on the horizon. Brent is not affected as much as some London boroughs but it is still an issue. Several factors have fed the decline including the number of European families leaving after Brexit, movement out of London due to affordable housing unavailablity (including Brent Council's policy of moving families on the housing list out of the borough), lack of housing for bigger families and low incomes and long working hours.

 
A report from the London Assembly, 'A London for every child - Reversing the city's declining population' tackles the issue LINK
 
WILL LONDON BECOME A CHILDLESS CITY

A survey of Londoners has found that almost a third (30 per cent) consider the city to be an unsuitable place to raise children, with four in ten Londoners (41 per cent) considering it to be a suitable place.

 

London is facing a significant demographic challenge. After a decade of rapid growth in the 2000s, the number of children living in London has since gone into decline at a faster rate than elsewhere in the UK since the early 2010s.

 

Between 2013 and 2023, London’s population of 0-9 year olds decreased by 99,100, despite the overall population of the capital increasing by 506,000 during the same period. The decline has been sharper in Inner London than Outer London. This has given rise to concerns that London – and particularly Inner London – could become a “child-free area”.

 

The London Assembly Economy, Culture and Skills Committee has today launched its report - A London for every child: Reversing the city’s declining child population – setting out steps for the Mayor to make London a more child-friendly city.

 

Families in London face serious financial and practical barriers, including the cost of childcare and housing. For families who stay in the capital, they are often faced with new housing developments that are designed to discourage children playing in their community, or unwelcoming attitudes from neighbours or the authorities.

 

The declining number of children is having a notable effect on London’s school system. Schools with falling roll numbers are facing increasing financial pressure since their funding is provided on a per-pupil basis. In recent years, this has resulted in a rise in the number of schools in London that have closed or merged due to falling pupil numbers.

 

Key recommendations in the report include:

  • London should seek to become a UNICEF Child Friendly City. The Mayor should identify the steps required for London to achieve this recognition and pursue actions that enable him to do so.
  • The Mayor should include specific requirements for homes suitable for children across all types of tenure in the next London Plan. These requirements should be included in the draft London Plan, which is due to be published in 2026.
  • The Greater London Authority (GLA) should develop a map of all the spaces in London that children and young people can access for play and informal recreation. This would help boroughs identify where they have a deficit or surplus of provision and support cross-borough collaboration.

Hina Bokhari OBE AM, Chair of the London Assembly Economy, Culture and Skills Committee, said:

Children and young people are essential to London’s vibrancy as a global city. Providing the right conditions for children to flourish as they grow up and choose to remain here as adults is essential to the city’s long-term economic, social, and cultural dynamism, which further benefits the rest of the country.

We cannot allow London to become a place where only a small number of families can afford to live and even fewer can manage to enjoy a good quality of life.

The cost of housing and childcare, housing developments that are not designed with children in mind, and systems and attitudes that make family life more difficult are contributing to the declining number of children in the capital.

We heard that falling pupil numbers are placing real pressures on London’s schools. As enrolments decline, so too does funding, which makes already tight budgets even harder to manage. 

This can lead to difficult decisions, including reducing the extracurricular activities that enrich pupils’ experiences, or cutting back on essential supports for children with special educational needs and disabilities. 

London must prioritise keeping children and families in the city. Without urgent action, we risk seeing even more families take the decision to leave and set up their lives elsewhere.

 


 

In Brent the recent building programme under the leadership of Muhammed Butt and Shama Tatler has failed to address the housing needs of the majorty of Brent families. 

The report addresses all the factors  that have contriibuted to the decline in London's child population but I think the section on housing is particularly pertinent;

 

We found that the availability and affordability of suitable housing are key factors in the decision to have children in London. The lack of affordable housing is particularly pronounced in Inner London.Over the last decade, house prices in London have increased faster than earnings, and less than half of London households own their home, compared with around two-  thirds in all other UK regions.53 In September 2025, the average price of a home in London was £556,000, compared with the England average of £293,000. 

 

 

Affordability is also a key issue for renters, since London has a larger private rental sector than other UK region and the highest average rent in the country. In October 2025, the average monthly rent in London (£2,265) was 60 per cent higher than in England as a whole (£1,416) When we asked Londoners about the main reasons they might consider leaving the capital, respondents most often cited housing pressures, including the high cost of buying or renting.

 

Many young people understandably want to own their own home before having their first child, but this is out of reach for most Londoners. In 2024, the median home in London cost 11.1 times the median salary, compared with 7.7 times across England.57 The Office for National Statistics considers anything above five times annual income to be unaffordable. In its submission to our call for evidence, the G15, which comprises London’s leading housing associations, stated that housing costs “have consistently outpaced wages and welfare support, making London fundamentally unaffordable for many families who would otherwise choose to stay in the city.”

 

 For those who stay in London, Susie Dye noted that unaffordable housing results in suppressed households, where “young adults [are] still living with their parents because they cannot get that first home”.59 Ultimately, this will impact whether many young Londoners feel in a position to raise children in the city.

 

The high cost of housing is also a major driver of poverty in London. Katherine Hill (Strategic Programme Manager, 4in10) observed that “people simply cannot afford to bring up their children” in most Inner London boroughs and that they are “faced with the choice of not having any children or moving out to have them.”

 

Echoing this point, Susie Dye emphasised:

 

“If you cannot find somewhere stable and affordable to make a home and bring up a family, then either you delay that or you move away.”

 

Alongside affordability, the shortage of family-sized homes in both the social and private sectors is making London increasingly unviable for families with children. However, data from the 2021 census shows that homes in London have fewer bedrooms on average than elsewhere in the country, with just 47 per cent of London homes having three or more bedrooms, compared with 63 per cent in the rest of England.62 Between 2016 and 2025, under the GLA’s Affordable Homes Programme, the vast majority (78 per cent) of homes delivered were 1 or 2 bed homes. 19 per cent of homes had 3 bedrooms and just 3 per cent had 4 or more bedrooms.

 

This represents just 11 per cent of the need for 3 bed homes and 8 per cent of the need for homes with 4 beds or more, based on the GLA’s Strategic Housing Market Assessment. The G15 noted in its response to our call for evidence that this “lack of appropriate housing is likely to influence families leaving London or deciding against having more children.”

 

When we asked Londoners about the main reasons they might consider leaving the capital, several cited the lack of space in housing as a major reason for them considering leaving London.

 

We are concerned that even where family-sized homes are built, families with children are not able to access them. Susie Dye claimed that data suggests that family-sized homes in London are being occupied by shared tenants, particularly young professionals without children.

 

A further negative effect of the lack of suitably sized homes for families is overcrowding. In its submission to our call for evidence, the G15 stated that London has the highest levels of overcrowding in England. It noted that many families “are raising children in homes that are too small, with little prospect of moving to a larger property.” The G15 referenced research conducted by one of its members in 2022, which found that of families with one child, 34 per

cent live in overcrowded conditions in London, compared with 12 per cent outside the capital.

 

This provides strong evidence of unsuitable housing conditions for families in London

 

Friday, 6 March 2026

Half of councillor members of Scrutiny Committee absent for consideration of the Urgent Treatment Centre hours reduction.

 

   

After three attempts and a 570 signature petition, Brent Community and Wellbeing Scrutiny at last considered, albeit in a limited way because the proposal has been implemented, the reduction in hours at Central Middlesex Urgent Treatment Centre. Hours were reduced by 3 hours daily from February 1st, 2026.

 

The London North West University Healthcare NHS Trust was represented by Pippa Nightingale. As on the other occasions, no papers were tabled from the Trust. Councillors and public were denied any evidence on which to base their questions.

 

Furthermore, attendance at the meeting was low, the place for Brent Healthwatch remained empty, and to cap it all the livestream was not working for the presentation by Amandine Alexandre and Ms Nightingale's initial response. The public were denied their right via the livestream or watching the recording, to see and hear democracy in action and hold it to account.

 

Fortunately, I had my mobile phone with me, and the wobbly recording above must suffice.

 

There may well be case for the reduction in hours, but our grievance was twofold: 1. The consultation was inadequate, rushed, reached too few people, the result not full reported and implemented without notice and 2. Scrutiny Committee had not done its job of fully examining the proposal and had to be forced by public pressure to put it on the Committee's Agenda. The latter appeared to have been done reluctantly by Committee Chair Cllr Ketan Sheth who before and after Ms Nightingale's appearance emphasised what a busy person she was, regretted the short notice she had been given (this has been going on for weeks) and seemed to be suggest we were all privileged to be in her presence and that by calling for accountability we were an inconvenience. 

 

Neither Chair, Cllr Ketan Sheth nor the Vice Chair of the Committee, Cllr Ihetsham Afzal, asked any questions of the Trust representative. Cllr Abdi Aden, Cllr Bhagwani Chohan, Cllr Arshad Mahmood, Cllr Tazi Smith, and Cllr Diane Collymore were all absent. 

 

So, no livestream and half of councillors absent - accountability?

 

Those councillors who did attend did their best and notably Co-optees Rachelle Goldberg (Jewish Faith Schools) and Archdeacon Catherine Pickford (Church of England Faith Schools) asked extremely pertinent questions that sometimes made Pippa Nightingale appear complacent and not in touch with the lived experience of local patients.

 

There were several areas where Ms Nightingale's account was at odds with the facts. She claimed the petition had not been received until after the reduction in hours was implemented. In fact it was tabled at Scrutiny Committee on January 19th LINK and was implemented on February 1st (but not announced until February 2nd).

 

She claimed that the 'Have Your Say' process undertaken by the Trust was an 'engagement’ exercise and not a not a formal consultation that befitted a minor local change rather than anything significant.

 

On the engagement/consultation Pippa Nightingale claimed the majority of patients said that the change in hours would make 'minimum impact'.   This is the Trust's own FoI response LINK.

 


  

So only if you add the ‘Unsures ‘to ‘No Impact’ and ‘Minor Impact’ can you make that claim. Faced with the fact that the engagement/consultation had only 42 responses, compared with the 570 petition signatories, Ms Nightingale said lots of people on Patient Panels had responded. Unfortunately, though my FoI asked for information’...to include reports, statistics and comments made by organisations or individuals (latter names redacted)' no reports from Patient Panels were included in the Trust's FOI response.

 

The in-person events only attracted 2 people.

 

Another 'insignificant change' came up at the end of the meeting - another change that was implemented despite local opposition from patients. This was the closure of the Hydrotherapy Pool at Northwick Park Hospital. Implemented last August, Pippa Nightingale said closure had been a success with patients treated by NHS staff at several council sports centres and some referrals to 'Stanmore' (National Orthopaedic Hospital). Surely another issue calling for evidence and a proper report to Scrutiny Committee rather than just verbal assurances? 

 

The post-election administration, whatever the political balance, must strengthen the scrutiny process so that it properly reflects the council's duty to stand up for local concerns. 


NOTE: Throughout Pippa Nightingale referred to the Urgent Care Centre, rather than the Urgent Treatment Centre. I understand that Urgent Care Centre is old terminology and referred to a less comprehensive offer than what are now called Urgent Treatment Centres. I am left not sure what the provision is at Central Middlesex Hospital.

 

Published and promoted by James Paton on behalf of Brent Green Party, c/o 23 Saltcroft Close, Wembley, Middlesex, HA9 9JJ.

Wednesday, 4 March 2026

Petition to Protect Kensal Green Cemetery from irreversible harm

 

Kensal Green Cemetery


 

The Keep Kensal Green campaign to urge Sadiq Khan to call in the Kensal Canalside Development because of widespread concerns over contamination of the  site and other issues closed on February 15th but that has been followed by a major petition calling for the protection of the well known Kensal Green Cemetery on the other side of the canal. It is a familiar  and intriguing sight to anyone on the upperdeck of buses on the 18 bus route who can peer over the cemetery's tall walls.
 
 

 The proposed development (Credit: BBC)
 
 
The Petition to Sadiq Khan reads:
 
      

A nationally important place of remembrance for Londoners is at risk of irreversible harm.

 

We ask the Mayor of London to step in now to protect Kensal Green Cemetery — a place of remembrance, peace, and profound human meaning — from irreversible harm caused by development proposals at Kensal Canalside.

 

Still in daily use for burials, cremations and memorial visits, Kensal Green Cemetery is a place of quiet reflection and remembrance, where generations of Londoners have laid their loved ones to rest. It is a rare green refuge in a dense urban area, valued by families, visitors and local communities. It is also a Grade I listed historic landscape of national significance.

 

The proposed developments would significantly overshadow the cemetery with a wall of 98m tower blocks, damage its setting, tranquility, and fragile ecology, and permanently alter its character. Added to that, developers want to build a commuter route right through the middle of the cemetery! Historic England has warned that the resulting harm will be “widespread” and “profound”. This is not a marginal impact or a matter of taste. It is a clear and lasting harm to one of London’s most important historic burial grounds. Once this setting is damaged, it cannot be restored.

 

This threat sits within a wider pattern of serious concerns about the scheme, including:

 

  • unsafe emergency vehicle access
  • excessive scale beyond the site’s capacity
  • inadequate provision of genuinely affordable housing
  • unresolved contamination and unexploded ordnance risks
  • poor transport connectivity and traffic impacts
  • insufficient green space and public health concerns

 

Taken together, these failures point to a scheme that does not represent good growth and does not meet London’s strategic planning objectives as a whole.

 

We therefore urge the Mayor to use his powers to intervene — including calling in or directing refusal of the application — to prevent irreversible harm and to ensure that development here respects human dignity, heritage, safety, and community wellbeing.

 

Protect Kensal Green Cemetery and London’s history — for the families who visit today, for the wider city that values it, and for future generations.

 

Why Kensal Green Cemetery Matters

 

Kensal Green Cemetery was established in 1833 as the first of London’s great Victorian garden cemeteries. It is one of the 'Magnificent Seven' cemeteries, created to provide dignified burial, green space, and places of reflection for a growing city.

 

Now a Grade I listed historic landscape, the cemetery reflects London’s religious, cultural and social diversity. It contains over 250,000 burials and is both a site of national heritage and a living place of remembrance, visited daily by families, mourners, and local residents.

 

Those buried here include both ordinary Londoners and figures of national significance — engineers, writers, scientists, reformers, and public figures who helped shape modern Britain — among them Isambard Kingdom Brunel, Charles Babbage, William Makepeace Thackeray, and Anthony Trollope— alongside countless ordinary Londoners whose families continue to visit and care for their graves. 

 

The cemetery also holds powerful social history, including the memorial to Kelso Cochrane, whose 1959 murder became a defining moment in Britain’s struggle against racism and helped galvanise the cultural resistance and community organising that gave rise to the Notting Hill Carnival.

 

Beyond its cultural and historic importance, the cemetery functions as a vital urban micro-habitat: its mature trees, undisturbed ground, and low levels of artificial lighting support birds, bats, insects and other wildlife that can no longer survive elsewhere in the surrounding city.

 

Kensal Green Cemetery was designed as a place of peace, greenery and contemplation. Its open character, setting and sense of calm are central to its meaning. Once these qualities are lost, they cannot be recreated.

IF YOU SUPPORT THE CAMPAIGN SIGN THE PETITION HERE 

 

In an update  on the petition's progress the Campaign says:

          

Our hope is simple: that the Mayor of London steps in to overturn RBKC’s decision.

But we face powerful interests — so we must be ready to present our strongest possible case.

Contamination is one of the most serious concerns. When the former gasworks site is excavated, toxic gas and dust will be released. These pollutants do not remain contained to the site — they can spread through air and water, affecting residents and the fragile ecology of Kensal Green Cemetery. The concerns go even further: insufficient affordable housing, inadequate emergency access, lack of social infrastructure, and widespread gridlock.

To be able to act quickly and effectively, we have launched a Crowd Justice campaign to raise £20,000 to secure expert legal counsel and ensure we properly present our case to the Mayor of London.

👉 Please help with a small donation to legal funds.

There are thousands of pages of planning and environmental documents to review, and extensive legal arguments to prepare. Preparing properly takes expertise. And expertise costs money.

If the Mayor does not take positive action, we may need to pursue a full Judicial Review. That would require further funding. But right now, our focus is ensuring we are ready — and that our community is not priced out of defending itself.

We are not asking for large donations. If we all give just £5 or £10, we will be in a strong position to stand up for our neighbourhood and our heritage.

Every little truly helps! If you can, please make a small contribution — and please share the link with someone else who cares.

 



Tuesday, 3 March 2026

Excited Greens launch their Brent Council Election Campaign on a wave of enthusiasm after Hannah Spencer's by-election victory


 

Some of the Green candidates  standing in the May local election (Credit: Nick Woollard)

 

  Brent Green Party launched its campaign for the Brent Council May Election on Sunday full of the joys of Spring following  Hannah Spencer's amazing Manchester by-election win. They could not have chosen a better time to get motivated to win as many seats as possible on May 7th.

Amanda Alexandre, Green candidate for Harlesden and  Kensal Green ward, said:

Since the election of Hannah Spencer, we have received many heartfelt congratulations from residents across the borough - on the street, at the cafe, on the allotment. Our membership has also increased to over 700 and more than £350 in donations have been donated to our crowdfunding campaign since Friday.  All this support has unlocked a new level of ambition for Brent Green Party for the elections of May 7th  


The launch began with speeches from some of the candidates explaining why they were standing for the Greens:

 

 

This was followed by training in canvassing for the many members who are new to politics and knocking on doors for the first time. There was lots of enthusiasm for getting started with a number of Action Days taking place across the target wards in the weeks ahead. 

 

Stressing the participative nature of Green Party politics, members then broke into small groups to share ideas for the upcoming Brent Green Manifesto with the emphasis on fresh and imaginative policies. This produced some very animated discussion as can be seen from the photographs of excited participants below:

 

Credit: Nick Woollard    

 
Credit: Nick Woollard    
 
 
Credit: Nick Woollard   

 
Credit: Nick Woollard   

 

Children were welcomed to the event and enjoyed badge making and drawing, and the food and drinks of course.

 

 
Credit: Nick Woollard    

 

 

It was a friendly and convivial gathering with lots of new connections made as well as old friendships consolidated, boding well for the challenge ahead.

 

 
 
Credit: Nick Woollard   

 
Credit: Nick Woollard    
 

 
Credit: Nick Pollard   
 
 
Credit: Nick Woollard   
  
 
Credit: Nick Pollard    
  
 
Finishing with some young singing and song writing talent    Credit: Nick Woollard
 
NOTE: Membership of Brent Green Party passed 700 today with many joining after Hannah Spencer's by-election victory.
 
If you would like to support Brent Green Party's 2026 Election Campaign uou can donate to the crowdfunder HERE. 
 
 
Published and promoted by James Paton on behalf of Brent Green Party and its candidates c/o 23 Saltcroft  Close, Wembley, HA9 9JJ.

LETTER: Complaint about delays with repairs? No problem, Brent will delay dealing with your complaint

 

Via ChatGPT         

 

Dear Editor,

   

Last November, with increasing frustration at lack of progress with mounting issues around our blocks, Alpha, Gorefield and Canterbury Tenants and Residents’ Association in South Kilburn submitted an official complaint to Brent Council. This listed over 20 outstanding issues around the blocks, some reported years ago, and also complained about the lack of communication from Council departments about these issues.

 

The response we received at the start of December was, to be frank, a joke. The seriousness with which the responding officer treated the complaint is perhaps best shown by the fact that they got the name of the blocks wrong. They tried to pin the blame for repairs not being carried out on the officer who does monthly walkabouts around the area with us and said “I am pleased to hear that a walkabout is scheduled for 11 December 2025. During this visit, all outstanding issues will be collated, and further updates will be provided afterwards. I have also reminded the wider service areas of the importance of clear and timely communication, both to manage expectations and to ensure residents feel included in the process of improving their community spaces.”


 

We waited until after that walkabout to respond on the off chance that what was written might materialise. Fat chance, so we escalated the complaint (20/12), pointing out that, as so often, no other Council officers came besides the one who always comes and makes meticulous notes. In escalating the complaint, we objected to the attempt to place the blame for delays on that officer, since we know for a fact that he passes on issues (he copies us into the emails). Like us, he rarely gets responses. In the face of this we named a succession of more senior Council officers who have, at various times, promised to take action to action those issues and little has happened and nothing more is heard.

 

The acknowledgement we received on 5th January said, “the latest date by which we hope to respond in full is 25 February 2026, although we will aim to do so sooner if at all possible.”

 

On 25th February we received an email from the Complaint Investigator saying “I am writing to update you with progress on your complaint. Unfortunately, ongoing unprecedented caseload pressures mean that we will need more time to complete the investigation. We expect to provide you with a full response to your complaint by 25 March 2026.”

 

Unbelievable. 

 

Of course, in the meantime, a few of those issues initially complained about have been dealt with, most haven’t, and new ones (reported, of course,) have arisen. As ever, getting blood from a stone is much easier than getting any information from brent Council.

 

Meanwhile, we are told that Brent's Chief Executive is concerned at problems with neglect of South Kilburn, A Cabinet officer recently told an online meeting that he knew there are real problems in South Kilburn. Yet knowing and concern and actually doing anything seem a long way from their minds. When, earlier last year, officers from several South Kilburn TRAs wrote to all and sundry (MP, CEO, Councillors, council officers), in general terms about lack of action and communication, most didn’t respond, those that did told us they were passing our letter on to Council Officers, obviously oblivious to what we were raising in the first place.

 

Note: To be clear, the Council blocks concerned are not part of South Kilburn regeneration, though people might think they are being neglected in advance of demolition.


Pete Firmin, chair, Alpha, Gorefield and Canterbury Tenants and Residents Association