Kilburn Village Residents Association (KVRA) also presented a petition this morning about the proposed tower block and infill on Kilburn Square. The petition of 900 signatures was presented byMargaret von Stoll a founding member of the Kilburn Square Co-op:
Kilburn Square Petition speech to Brent Council Feb 7 2022
Good morning Councillor Butt, Cabinet Members and Officers
My name is Margaret von Stoll. I’m a longstanding Kilburn Square resident, and founding member of the Kilburn Square Co-op.
I’m here to present a 900-signature petition against the scale of the council’s proposals for infill development at Kilburn Square, and to voice our disillusionment with the pre-consultation process to date.
Despite repeated requests for more meaningful engagement, we have just been informed that the Council intends to submit its Approach A to Planning – an option which fails to address our concerns about our existing green space, and about overcrowding on the estate.
We feel let down by the undemocratic decision-making, and an inadequate and unprofessional engagement process. I would like you to listen to our concerns. You'll see they impact on Health, Environment, Community Engagement, Scrutiny and other portfolios as well as Housing.
Last year we were relieved when Source Partnership was selected as our independent Advisor We were led to believe that they would be allowed to work as a neutral channel between the Council and residents throughout the process
Their resident survey on the original scheme concluded;
“There is very little demonstrable support for the Council’s proposals, or trust in the consultation process”
That powerful statement was omitted from the published summary; and our request to send the full report to every household was refused. And since the re-set decision, Source has been largely sidelined. This is simply not acceptable!
Councillor Southwood:
You have acknowledged our community’s concerns, stating that you now sought “a scheme that can work for everyone”. That Brent would:
· ensure the team would work “in collaboration with residents”
· and balance the housing targets with respect for the wellbeing of estate residents
We are here to say, Brent’s actions and latest decisions prove otherwise.
Our ‘design workshops” have proved to be one-way Drop-Ins, residents being instructed to choose from limited design proposals, without being allowed to state on record that none of the proposals address our concerns. We’ve been told “these are your options, your vote will be wasted if you don’t choose one”.
This engagement process is tokenistic, and gives only the illusion of collaboration with affected residents. You have held community-led co-design efforts elsewhere – why not on Kilburn Square? To tell us the scale and shape are fixed, and then offer us further engagement is disingenuous and totally unfair.
Brent is proud to have one of the largest social housing programmes in London. We believe you should be creating homes and places we can all be happy to live in - not just more housing. The London Plan stresses that the optimal capacity of a site is not the same as the maximum capacity.
We do accept the need for SOME additional housing. But Amenity Space at Kilburn Square is already much lower than Brent’s own policy norms require; and the scale of your current proposals would make this much worse.
Whilst increasing the number of homes at Kilburn Square by 60% may make economic sense, and achieve targets, there will be significant detrimental impact to our health and wellbeing through the overcrowding, loss of health and community facilities and loss of mature trees and open green space.
Brent’s Climate strategy seeks to increase green space - not remove it. New research shows we are the area most deprived of green space in the whole Borough. Your Approach A proposal will remove our green lung – which helps mitigate flood risk and the appalling air quality from Kilburn High Road.
Finally, let me point out that our petition is also addressed to the Chair of the Wellbeing Scrutiny Committee – for good reason. Brent’s Housing Director assured the Committee in January that “they would not want to force homes on anyone, so where they had built had been with the support and encouragement of local residents and ward councillors”. We urge the Council to honour that philosophy in relation to Kilburn Square; and, even at this late stage, to genuinely engage with residents to create a more sustainable solution.
Responding Cllr Southwood thanked Margaret for her 'helpful and detailed overview of the journey so far' but said the com mitment had always been to blance balance the provision of genuinely affordable homes with the benefits to the original residents of the estate. She recogniseed concern over the height of the proposed tower, the density of the proposals and the value that residents put on the green space.
Architects had come up with proposals to meet, in variable ways, the residents' concerns which result in proposals A and E. She said that she would agree to disagree with the residents over their criticism of the level of engagement. The tower height had been reduced and the issue of density could be picked up during the planning process.
Southwood said that over-crowded families, currently in homeless accommodation without a voice, would be given priority in the additional housing. The Plan A proposal was now entering the formal phase and would include work around the green space including making better use of it.
Cllr Butt in a notably more aggressive contribution said that he made no apologies for building homes and addressing the needs of children for the stability that would give them a secure future. Concerns would be taken into account but decisions had to be made that would not suit everyone - 'I will make no apology for that'.
Margaret von Stoll was muted on zoom when she tried to come back on those remarks.
A further comment is expected from KVRA later this week.
Having read the article above, I decided to go to the webcast, to get an impression of how this matter was dealt with by Brent's Cabinet.
ReplyDeleteI went to the agenda page for the meeting on Brent's website, but this carries the message "This webcast has been deleted". The Cabinet Meeting webcast has not been added to the "Webcast library" page on the website yet. It seems I will have to be patient, and hope that it is made available soon.
It appears from the report that the Council Leader will make no apology for building homes that people in the borough need.
I wonder if he will apologise for handing 152 of the 250 homes the Council will be building at Cecil Avenue / Wembley High Road to a developer, to sell at a profit, when they could be affordable rented homes for local people in housing need?
FOR INFORMATION:
ReplyDeleteFurther to my comment at 15:08 above, the webcast of this morning's Cabinet Meeting is now available on Brent's website, and I have watched the section covering the Kilburn Square petition and Cabinet's response to it.
As a result, I have just sent this email to the Leader of Brent Council:-
'Dear Councillor Butt,
I have watched the webcast from this morning's Cabinet meeting over the petition from residents of Kilburn Square, and the responses by Councillor Southwood and yourself to it.
You made much in your response of the challenges that are facing Brent families in temporary accommodation, and the need for the Council to build more homes so that those families can have a better future.
You said that building those homes had been a key priority for you, that it was the right thing to do, and that you were not making any excuses for building them.
You gave a recent example of a woman whose family had been in temporary accommodation for many years, and had now been rehoused in a decent, permanent home in Wembley.
Let me ask you a straight question, and ask you for a straight reply to it:-
What excuse are you making for not building all of the 250 homes on Brent Council's Cecil Avenue site in Wembley as affordable Council homes for rent, and only using 98 of the 250 as Council homes for Brent people in housing need?
Cecil Avenue is a vacant, Council-owned site. Full planning permission for the 250 home development on that site was given a year ago, and the Council could by now have a contractor building those much needed homes there.
Instead, your Cabinet resolved last August to adopt a "developer partner" option, under which the contractor who would be appointed, and paid by Brent Council to build those 250 homes (plus 54 at the Ujima House site across the High Road), would be allowed to purchase 152 of the 250 homes at Cecil Avenue and sell them for profit.
People in the borough, including those in temporary accommodation that you spoke so passionately about, deserve to know why. I look forward to receiving your response, and sharing it publicly. Thank you. Best wishes,
Philip Grant.'
I agree with Philip
ReplyDeleteIf Brent Council were truly wanting to reduce the number of families in Temporary Housing and provide the Homeless with decent accommodation, then the amount of property that has been built in Brent over the past 5 years should have solved the problem or at least reduced it considerably had it been fairly distributed between developers and the Council. Brent Housing Policy is a very unfunny joke. They now act like Estate Agents and only want to sell to the highest bidder.
A lifelong resident of Brent, I was placed in Temporary Accommodation after having my first child. After bidding on Locata for more years than I can remember, and two more children I was finally assigned a permanent home, my first born son at this time was 21 years old.
ReplyDeleteBrent Housing Policy is meaningless
FOR INFORMATION:
ReplyDeleteFurther to my email to Cllr. Butt (see 7 February above), I have received a reply.
This was published as a blog on 9 February as "Council housing at Cecil Avenue – a reply from Cllr. Muhammed Butt".
I hope you will read his reply, if you are interested in this issue.