Sunday, 19 January 2025

Kilburn Job Centre Fire: A stitch in time, Brent?


 

Guest post by Pete Firmin

 

On the afternoon of Friday 17th, much of South Kilburn was in gridlock. Buses were backed up in Cambridge Avenue, without either passengers or drivers, and pedestrians were wandering around trying to work out how they could get anywhere. Kilburn High Road was blocked off from both Cambridge Avenue and Coventry Close by vehicle or foot.

 

The cause? A massive fire in the ex-Job centre on Cambridge Avenue (rear entrance Coventry Close). According to the Kilburn Times LINK 10 fire engines and 70 firefighters attended. Eye witnesses report seeing people jumping from windows to escape the fire (with one person seriously injured), and the police officer guarding the site (still, on Sunday,) telling me that there had been arrests.

 

This was not the first time the fire brigade has had to turn out to fires in that building, this was at least the 3rd time in a few months."

 

The ex-Job Centre has been closed and empty since March 2018. There have been rumours of it being taken over by a religious organisation and a failed planning application to turn it into housing, but locals haven’t seen any sign of development. A Kilburn Councillor was told that the owners ripped out all toilets when it closed to prevent occupation. Owner is Rossmore Properties, based in the City of London.

 

The building has been squatted many times since it closed, with some evicted as early as July 2018 LINK

 

But in the last few years the owners seem to have done little to prevent squatting – while access points have occasionally been blocked off, others have been created, to the extent that now a large part of a wall at the side of the building has been removed to create a new entrance.

 

The squatting has escalated in the last year or so, alongside a serious increase in squatting across South Kilburn, much of it in blocks that Brent Council has left semi-derelict as its regeneration stalls. It is thought that much of that is organised by criminal gangs, who then offer homes (at what price?) to the homeless. It is not just unoccupied flats with have been subject to this, and not just in blocks of flats which are part of Brent’s regeneration.

 

This writer has no objection to people squatting (truly) empty buildings at a time when homelessness is increasing and London rents are beyond many peoples reasonable scope. The problem in South Kilburn is that much of the squatting has been associated with theft and terrorising residents.

 

Rubbish accumulation

 

Neither Brent Council nor the Department for Works and Pensions (DWP) (the previous occupants of the building) have any responsibility for the ex-Job Centre. However, Brent has known about the problems there for many years, and not just the squatting. For years residents have repeatedly reported the accumulation of rubbish next to the rear entrance. While Brent -rightly – says it is not responsible for clearing that rubbish since it is on private land, it has also refused to take action to force the owners to act. We have been told that “it is too difficult”. Yet now we see where Brent’s refusal to act has led – a massive use of resources by the London Fire Brigade and disruption to local residents.

 

Brent, under pressure from residents and quite probably the Fire Brigade, must now force the owners to act.

 

 Editor's Note

A little digging reveals two companies under the Rossmore Properties title. Rossmore Properties Ltd with net total assets of £3.4m and Rossmore Properties (Kilburn) Ltd  with rather less!


Dilip Amin is the sole director of both with a resigned officer at Rossmore Properties (Kilburn) Ltd and a total of 5 resignations at the main company.

Things get more complicated with NSS Trustees acting as  a Lender to the main company, the owner of the Job Centre, 3 Cambridge Avenue, NW6 5AH


The owner continues to have obligations including keeping the property in good condition (5.5):


Perhaps now that lives have been put in danger in the property, Brent Council will bite the bullet and take action.

Saturday, 18 January 2025

Residents' meeting on drug and knife crime, Brent Civic Centre, Monday 27th January 6.30pm - 9pm

 


 

From Brent Council

Local residents are invited to a public meeting on Monday 27 January to discuss ongoing efforts to reduce drug and knife crime in Brent. 

 

Chief Superintendent Sara Leach will speak about the steps the police in Brent are taking to cut crime and build trust within the community. She will outline how the police are working alongside the council, local partners, and the community to make Brent a safer place for everyone. 

 

Brent’s commissioned support services will also explain how they help adults and young people who are worried about their own or someone else’s drug use.

The meeting will provide community members with the chance to share their views, voice their concerns and discuss ways everyone can work together to improve safety in the borough. 

 

Attendees will also have an opportunity to meet and ask questions of local police sergeants, police officers, council officers, addiction recovery advocates, and support workers. These representatives will share their ongoing efforts to tackle drug and knife crime and invite feedback on how they can better connect with local communities.

 

Councillor Harbi Farah, Cabinet Member for Public Safety and Partnerships, said:

 

This is an opportunity to hear what has already been done in Brent on these community safety priorities, find out how organisations and individuals can help reduce drug use and knife carrying, and suggest ways forward.

 

The public meeting is organised by the Brent Safer Neighbourhood Board (SNB) which is made up of community members and partners, including the council. Its role is to scrutinise the police and enable the community to engage with the police. 

 

Following the meeting, the SNB will work with the police to ensure action is taken on the issues raised by residents. 

 

The meeting will take place on Monday 27 January, from 6.30-9pm at the Grand Hall in Brent Civic Centre. Refreshments will be provided, and there is no need to register in advance. The event will also be webcast online.

 

Thursday, 16 January 2025

Zoë Garbett Green Assembly Member to London Mayor: You are ignoring the reality of estate regeneration

 This may resonate with South Kilburn residents:

Shortly after handing in a petition from residents of the Lesnes Estate for the Mayor to ‘call-in’ the proposed development, Zoë Garbett AM questioned the Mayor over his failure to acknowledge how much he has ignored the reality of Londoners suffering through the city’s ongoing estate regeneration.

Quoting lived experience of those residents from the Thamesmead estate, Zoë pointed to the real-life impacts of estate regeneration on individuals and communities across the city, drawing on their awful living conditions, uncertainty, and displacement.

Following the exchange, Green Party London Assembly Member Zoë Garbett said:

Estate regeneration is displacing Londoners, ripping communities apart with no accountability for the developers and landlords tasked with improving housing across our city. Refurbishment should always be the default option.

Estate regeneration can drag on for years, decades even. There are very few safeguards to make sure this doesn’t happen. It's a lottery – and the Mayor needs to listen to residents to prevent more councils, housing associations and developers embarking on more disastrous regeneration schemes.

My biggest thanks to the residents of the Lesnes Estate for showing me around their community, and for forcing this issue onto the Mayor’s desk before the crisis gets any further out of hand.

In response to the concerns raised, the Mayor said:

I’ll undertake today to get my Deputy for Housing to look into this issue, but also to work with you, Zoë, to try and ameliorate the circumstances [residents] are living under.

To view the full exchange, please click here

UPDATE: Drivers ignoring Wembley High Road ban WILL be fined, Brent Council confirms. Fine £130 or £65 if paid within 14 days.

 


Following rumours that the cameras on the closed section of Wembley High Road are not being used to catch drivers ignoring the 'Buses and Emergency Vehicles Only' restriction, a reliable source at Brent Council has said that the cameras are working and are catching unauthorised vehicles. The motorists will all receive a fine.

UPDATE:

 Councillor Krupa Sheth, Cabinet Member for Environment and Infrastructure, said: 

People using the emergency/bus lane without authorisation will receive a fine of £130 or £65 if paid within 14 days. We've communicated the closure widely, officers have been on site to speak with motorists, and we've also increased signage around the area to make the situation crystal clear.


 

Ofsted insection of Brent services for children and young people with special needs or disabilities - Give your views before 9am on Tuesday 21st January


 

From Brent Council

 

On 13 January 2025, Ofsted and Care Quality Commission (CQC) announced that they would be undertaking Brent’s local area SEND inspection between 13 – 31 January. 

You can read more about what to expect from a local area SEND inspection here: https://orlo.uk/EZMVA


Get involved! 

As part of the inspection, the inspectors are seeking the views of children and young people with SEND, their parents and carers, and practitioners. 

You can give your views here: https://orlo.uk/TxBcz The survey is open until 9am on 21 January 2025. 

If you need an easy-read version of the summary, or need any assistance to complete the survey, you can ask at any of Brent’s Family Well-being Centres, or contact the Brent Parent Carer Forum by emailing admin@brentpcf.org or call Mirela on

Refugees International on Ceasefire: Humanitarian aid is a right under international law, not a bargaining tool.

Statement from Refugees International

Yesterday, Israel and Hamas announced a temporary ceasefire and a pathway for the exchange of hostages in return for a surge in humanitarian aid, relief supplies, and fuel, along with the withdrawal of Israeli forces from populated areas of Gaza and the return of internally displaced Palestinians to their homes. 

A ceasefire between Israel and Hamas offers a reprieve from the relentless and indiscriminate Israeli military assaults that have devastated Palestinian civilians for the last 15 months, and an end to the terrifying ordeal for the hostages and their families. The Israeli military has killed an estimated 47,000 Palestinians to date, with potentially tens of thousands more deaths that have not yet been recorded. Thousands more are missing and injured. The initial six-week pause outlined in the agreement must evolve into a permanent ceasefire–one that provides the necessary space for sustained recovery, long-term solutions to the root causes of this crisis, and adherence to international law by both Israel and Hamas.

The scale of the assault on and destruction of Gaza’s civilian population and infrastructure is unprecedented. The systematic targeting of essential infrastructure and restrictions on critical humanitarian supplies have unleashed famine, disease, and untold suffering. All warring parties must commit to the immediate and unconditional protection of civilians, an end to attacks on civilian infrastructure, and unimpeded humanitarian access. 

The deal, while a start, does not go far enough in outlining the explicit protections Israel and Hamas are obligated to provide Palestinian civilians. We are particularly concerned that the agreement ties the delivery of humanitarian aid and civilian protections—which are obligations under international law—to both sides’ compliance with prisoner exchanges. Every ceasefire attempt between Israel and Hamas has ended in violations, and this should not be permitted to again imperil humanitarian action. 

Humanitarian aid is a right under international law, not a bargaining tool. Humanitarian access must be ensured under any scenario, and the Israeli government must allow unimpeded humanitarian aid and access into all parts of Gaza, through all functional border crossings. Israel’s well-documented practice of restricting critical aid must be reversed, and the international community must hold Israel accountable and ensure the unconditional, uninterrupted flow of aid to Gaza.

Israeli forces have forcibly displaced nearly the entire population of Gaza. Their withdrawal from populated areas, while necessary, is not sufficient to address the plight of hundreds of thousands who cannot return to homes in northern Gaza and other areas systematically depopulated by Israeli military operations. Refugees International calls on Israel to guarantee the freedom of movement for all Palestinians, including access to areas it has unilaterally designated as “military zones.” They must also release Palestinian doctors and aid providers taken and forcibly disappeared after being captured during Israel’s sieges of Gaza’s major hospitals and clinics.

This is a hopeful moment in a conflict that has seen few of them. But it is a midpoint, not an endpoint. All international partners must deploy all tools of diplomatic leverage to hold the warring parties accountable for fulfilling these terms and producing a definitive end to this horrific war.

 

Wednesday, 15 January 2025

Tulip Siddiq: The findings of the Independent Adviser on Ministerial Standards in full

 Brent residents who were constituents of Tulip Siddiq when she was the MP for the Hampstead and Kilburn constituency, will have been following the alleged corruption story with interest. The findings of the Independent Adviser on Ministerial Standards are perhaps more nuanced than she claimed in her resignation letter yesterday. Here it is in full:


Tuesday, 14 January 2025

Tony Slattery, Stonebridge boy


 Tony Slattery

A reader has asked my if I will write about Tony Slatter - a  'Stonebridge boy'.  The actor, comedian and master of improvisation was indeed born on the Stonebridge Estate.

He was born into an Irish working class family - the youngest of 5 children to parents Michael and Margaret Slattery. Some write that there was a big gap between him and his older sister that made him a bit of a loner.

He did very well at school and went to Gunnersbury Boys Grammar School and then Cambridge.

It emerged very late in his career that at the age of eight he had been sexually abused by a Catholic priest but had never told his parents. This contributed to  mental health problems covered in a Horizon documentary 'What's the Matter with Tony Slattery?'

This much I can glean but if there is anyone out there who knew Tony in his Stonebridge days and can do him justice, please do contribute in comments below or email me at martinrfrancis@virginmedia.com