Saturday 22 June 2024

WINDRUSH DAY – The stories of some West Indians in Wembley

 Guest post by local historian Philip Grant to mark Windrush Day. Written in a personal capacity



1.West Indian immigrant workers search a newspaper for jobs on arrival in 1948. (Image from the internet)

 

Today, 22 June, is Windrush Day, the anniversary of the arrival of the “Empire Windrush” at Tilbury Docks in 1948. The ship brought hundreds of men from the Caribbean, looking for jobs, after the British Nationality Act of 1948 allowed citizens of Commonwealth countries to settle in the UK, to help rebuild the country after the Second World War. 

 

There had been people from the West Indies in Wembley twenty-four years earlier, representing their island nations at the British Empire Exhibition. This is one of the photographs, taken at the time by a Harlesden photographer, which I will be using in a talk I hope to give in October this year at Harlesden Library, as part of the “Becoming Brent” project for the BEE’s centenary:

 


2.Representatives of Trinidad and Tobago in their section of the West Indies Pavilion, 1924.
(Source: Brent Archives – Wembley History Society Collection)

 

I don’t know whether any of the original Windrush passengers came to live in Wembley, but there were certainly other West Indians here that year. Just over three weeks before the “Empire Windrush” docked, the entire West Indies test cricket team came to Vale Farm, at the invitation of Wembley Cricket Club, to play in a benefit match for Learie Constantine (after whom a cultural centre in Willesden is now named). You can read about the match in an article that I will ask Martin to attach below.

 


3.Learie Constantine, at the height of his cricketing popularity. (Image from the internet)

 

Learie Constantine was a remarkable man, braving colour prejudice in the late 1920s and 1930s to become the club professional for the Lancashire Cricket League side, Nelson, where he became very popular. During the Second World War he worked for the Ministry of Labour, looking after the welfare of West Indian men who had come to Britain to work in wartime factories. He went on to become a lawyer, fighting racial discrimination, and played an important part in bringing about Britain’s 1965 Race Relations Act.

 

 

In July and August 1948, Wembley County School in Stanley Avenue played host to the mens’ Olympic Games teams from seven Commonwealth countries, including Bermuda, British Guiana (now Guyana), Jamaica and Trinidad. The school also arranged accommodation, with the families of pupils, for the female members of two teams. Three Jamaican women athletes stayed with the Welson family, shared coconuts and pineapples with them (a rare treat in food-rationed Britain) and cooked them a meal of boiled rice with grated coconut and red beans.

 

 


4.The Jamaican Olympics team at Wembley County School, July 1948. (Courtesy of the Old Alpertonians)

 

 

Most of the Jamaican team, paid for by public subscription to represent their island at the Olympic Games for the first time, had spent twenty-four days on a banana boat to reach England. Their captain, Arthur Wint, was already in London, as he had just finished his first year as a medical student at Barts Hospital. He would win Jamaica’s first Olympic gold medal, but he already had wartime medals. Along with his brothers, Lloyd and Douglas, he had volunteered to join the RAF in Jamaica, been sent to train in Canada, and finished the war as a Spitfire pilot (one of around 500 World War Two “Pilots of the Caribbean”!). Arthur Wint was another remarkable West Indian to have graced Wembley in 1948, the “Windrush” year. You can read my article about his life here.

 

 

But it wasn’t all sunshine for people of the Windrush generation who came from the Caribbean to work in Britain. The work available was mainly in public services, like London Transport, the Post Office or nursing. Several people I collected memories from for a Kingsbury local history project in 2009, had come to this country from the West Indies in the 1950s and 1960s.  One told me of the hostility that many English people showed them when they arrived, just because of the colour of their skin. Many landlords would not accept coloured tenants, and even going to church was not pleasant, as they were made to feel unwelcome at first.

 

 

Another incident recounted to me was about one of the first West Indian families to rent a flat in an old Stonebridge tenement row called Shakespeare Avenue. A live snake was put through their letterbox! Luckily neighbours called a local Englishman, nicknamed “Noah”, who was good with animals. He recognised it was non-poisonous, and soon picked it up and took it away.

 

 


5.Christmas Day in the Children’s Ward, Wembley Hospital (Chaplin Road), 1950s.
(From a nurses recruitment brochure in the Wembley History Society Collection at Brent Archives)


 

One job where accommodation for West Indians was not a problem was as a nurse, or nursing student, at Wembley Hospital. The hospital’s matron welcomed a number of young women from the West Indies in the 1950s, for a two-year training course to become a nurse. You would be paid a £300 a year training allowance, out of which £128 a year was deducted to cover the cost of your board and lodging in the Nurses’ Home. Once you qualified as a State Enrolled Nurse, your annual salary would be £452. I have used the photograph above, of one of these nurses, several times, but I have never discovered the name of the nurse. If you recognise her, please let me know her name in a comment below!

 

 

Barbara came to London from Barbados in 1964, to work as a nurse. By 1970, she and her husband lived in a privately-rented one bedroom flat in Harlesden, costing £3 10s a week. Brent Council had built its Chalkhill Estate, but was finding it hard to let hundreds of homes there, because the rent was so much higher than the “controlled rent” (as low as £1 a week) families in run-down properties were paying. That is when Barbara and her husband, and other hard-working West Indian families, got the chance to become Chalkhill tenants. They had to show their passports, provide references to prove that they were of good character and that they had sufficient income to pay the rent (which was £10 10s for their new two-bedroom flat).

 

 

6.The Chalkhill Estate with Brent Town Hall beyond, 1980s. (Internet image, courtesy of Winston Vaughan)

 

 

Brent Town Hall is a Wembley connection of the last West Indian in my article. Dorman Long was born in St Lucia, and as a young man was a teacher there, before he came to London in 1960. As his teaching qualifications were not recognised, his first job here was as a postman, later going on to work for a housing association, then as a race relations adviser. He soon became involved in local politics, and was a Brent Labour councillor for 33 years. 

 


7.Dorman Long (right) greeting Nelson Mandela at Wembley Stadium, April 1990.
(Source: Brent Archives – “Wembley Observer” newspaper cutting)

 

 

Cllr. Dorman Long was Leader of Brent Council from 1987 to 1990, following a turbulent period when the borough was frequently labelled in the press a “Barmy Brent”. One of his finest hours was welcoming the recently-freed Nelson Mandela to Wembley, and trying to make him a Freeman of Brent. I did not know him personally, but I have read that Dorman Long was a kind person, and a man of principle – excellent qualities for a leader.

 

 

Windrush Day was established to honour the contribution that migrants, particularly those from the West Indies, have made to this country. I hope this article has shown, through just a few examples of both ordinary and extraordinary people, how much our community has benefitted from the diversity and experience they have brought and shared with us.

 

 

Philip Grant.

 

 

 

 

Thursday 20 June 2024

Display and talk about the British Empire Exhibition - Tuesday July 9th at Kingsbury Library

 Guest post by local historian Philip Grant

The BEE Palace of Industry at night – a 1924 postcard (Source: Brent Archives)
[Standing in the same spot now, you would be looking at the front of Brent Civic Centre!]

 

I began the year by explaining why I think we should commemorate the centenary of the British Empire Exhibition in 2024. It is an opportunity to consider (or reconsider) our views on “Empire”, learn more about the history of the British Empire and its effect on the lives of the people in the lands it acquired (often by force), and collect the stories of families who have come from across the former “Empire”, and beyond, to live in Brent today.

 

It is also an opportunity to discover more about the Exhibition itself, an event which put a small, little-known Urban District in Middlesex on the world map. People came to Wembley in 1924 from across the world to take part in the Exhibition, and 17 million visitors flocked to Wembley Park to see it.

 

Crowds around the Burma Pavilion on the Whit Monday bank holiday, 1924.

 

To help you get a feel for what took place at Wembley Park a century ago, there is a small exhibition at Kingsbury Library this summer. I will also be giving an illustrated talk, in conjunction with that display, at a free Kingsbury Library coffee morning event on Tuesday 9 July, 11am to 12noon. Details are on the poster below (which includes a “link” to the Eventbrite site where you can reserve your seat for the talk). I hope you enjoy these events!

 

Philip Grant

 

Wednesday 19 June 2024

The long 'Swift weekend' will leave many Wembley residents with delays and diversions. Consultation on the application for additional events at the stadium closes on Monday

 

The weekend ahead will see three Taylor Swift Concerts - Friday, Saturday and Sunday. 

Doors open on Friday and Saturday at 4.30pm,.  This means early road closures and bus diversions will affect school children  at home-time on Friday. On previous occasions I have found school children heading north stranded by the 206 bus at Brent Park where it is curtailed on event days. School children heading south towards Harlesden on the 206 bus route from Wembley Park will find the bus does not run pre-event and the 18 and 92 will be diverted.

To add to the difficulties Chiltern trains will not stop at Wembley Stadium station on Saturday and Sunday due to  works on the line. Chiltern have objected to the proposed increase in the number of events at the Stadium as they do not have the staff or rail stock to cope.

This is the announcement from Brent Council

Wembley Stadium will be hosting Taylor Swift: The Eras Tour on the following dates in June:

 

-        Friday 21 June

-        Saturday 22 June

-        Sunday 23 June

 

Please read below to see how this might affect you.

 

Timings

 

- Friday 21 June: Doors open at 4.30pm and road closures will be in place from 12.30pm.

-  Saturday 22 June: Doors open at 4.30pm and road closures will be in place from 12.30pm.

-  Sunday 23 June: Doors open at 3.45pm and road closures will be in place from 11.45am.

 

We expect the area around Wembley Stadium to be very busy before and after these events so please avoid the area if you can unless you have a ticket.


Event day parking

 

Event day parking restrictions will be in place from 8am to midnight on main roads and from 10am to midnight on residential roads on 21, 22 and 23 June.

 

If you have a paper permit, please make sure you clearly display it in your vehicle. If you have an electronic permit, you do not need to display this.

 

Drink-free zone

 

We want to create a safe and enjoyable experience for all visitors.

 

To crack down on anti-social behaviour, we will be enforcing a ban on street drinking in the streets around Wembley Stadium before these events, as part of the Public Space Protection Order (PSPO).

 

Despite the announcement made some years ago (see below) on the Brent Council  website the North End Road link, which would enable the 206 bus route to run on event days, has still not been actioned by TfL:


 The 206 bus route serves the Kings Drive/Pilgrims Way Estate at The Paddocks stop. The estate is up a steep hill from Wembley Park so curtailment of the service particularly affects elderly residents with mobility problems. It also affects residents on the Kings Drive Estate who use the 206 bus to travel to work at Tesco/Ikea at Bridge Park or the industrial area south of the stadium.

Taylor Swift's performance coincides with the last few days of a consultation on a planning application made by Wembley Stadium for an increase in the number of events held at the stadium and changes in the sports/concert split. Neighbourhood comments have to be made by Monday June 24th.

Of the 109 comments so far more than 100 are objections to the stadium's proposals. They include objections from long-standing residents who find the gradual increase in the number of events disrupts their lives to an an unreasonable degree as well as residents of the new developments around the stadium who find the noise and disruption more than they bargained for when moving into the area. Questions are asked about access to the new Wembley Park Medical Centre on event days.

Here is a fairly typical objection on the Planning Portal:

Objects

 

I am writing to formally object to the proposed application for increased events at Wembley Stadium, which seeks to remove the swap cap clause and increase the number of live and sporting events from 46 to 54 per annum. As a resident, I am deeply concerned about the significant and detrimental impact this will have on our community.

1. Existing Strain on Community Resources and Wellbeing

The current frequency of events, averaging nearly one per week, already imposes a considerable burden on local residents. Increasing this number to 54 events per year will exacerbate existing issues, including noise pollution, stress, and elevated rental prices. The intensified schedule will disrupt the peace and quality of life for those living in the vicinity, undermining the community's well-being.


2. Overlapping Impact with Neighboring Venues

Wembley Stadium's impact cannot be viewed in isolation. The neighbouring arena also hosts numerous live events, collectively causing significant disruptions on a regular basis. While these venues predate the residential developments, the area was designed to foster a livable and safe environment for residents, particularly young adults. This balance is increasingly at risk with the proposed increase in events.

3. Negative Effects of Live Fan Parks and Anti-Social Behavior

The introduction of Live Fan Parks has further aggravated the situation. Located prominently at the front of the stadium, these parks frequently play loud music and promote an environment conducive to alcohol consumption, hooliganism, and other undesirable behaviours. This has led to numerous instances of anti-social behaviour, property damage, and safety concerns for local residents, who often find unwanted and unsolicited guests entering their buildings.

4. Environmental and Sustainability Concerns

The proposed increase in events is unsustainable from a noise, environmental, social, and resource perspective. The cumulative impact on local infrastructure, waste management, and public transport systems will be profound, straining the borough's resources and compromising its commitment to sustainability.

5. Preservation of Community Livability

As residents, we chose to live in this area to enjoy its amenities and community atmosphere. The relentless increase in events prevents us from doing so, as it disrupts our daily lives and diminishes our quality of living. The local community deserves to enjoy the facilities and environment without the constant disruptions caused by an excessive number of events.


Conclusion

In light of the aforementioned points, I strongly urge the committee to reconsider the proposal to increase the number of events at Wembley Stadium. The long-term negative consequences on the community, environment, and local resources far outweigh any potential benefits. I echo the sentiments of my fellow residents, [ ] and implore the committee to prioritize the well-being and sustainability of our community.

 

This submission takes up the issue of the claimed benefits to the local economy:

Objects

 

I object to the proposed changes to planning permission.

Businesses in the wider vicinity(not adjacent to the stadium or benefitting from increased footfall)are finding that clients are choosing to avoid event days particularly due to a lack of adequate accessible parking and increased delays due to traffic congestion.

Those that do benefit are in a narrow related category only.

There is a noticeable reduction in revenue with clients either avoiding event weekends or not being able to allocate adequate time within retail premises.Many businesses commit additional staff for normal busy weekends and certainly this will have a direct effect on hiring or retaining staff.

Traffic management as proposed in variation 2 will only exarcebate the situation.

 

A supporter of the application wants something in exchange:

 

  I live in Chalkhill and I am in favor of this planning application as it will support the economic activity of the National Stadium and the greater area around it.

However, this has to work both ways and I would like the National Stadium to contribute to 2 things in exchange for getting planning permission:

1. The activity of the National Stadium brings a lot of anti-social behaviour and the National Stadium should be responsible for policing the area during the events, including cleaning up the streets within the entire CPZ area. Enough of the garbage on the streets, people peeing in public, etc.

2. The activity of the National Stadium should bring financial benefits to those who have to endure all the nuisance it brings. Chalkhill is one of the poorest areas in London yet it is located just opposite the National Stadium. There are no sports facilities in Chalkhill yet it is located just opposite of the "Temple of Sports". This is not acceptable. Brent Council is broke so the National Stadium should invest heavily in sports facilities in Chalkhill. The Chalkhill open space by the river Brent is in dire condition and could benefit from a running track, "artificial" football ground, basket ball ground, tennis court, etc. No one uses the BMX and scooter tracks and they should be removed. The upgrading of the Chalkhill open space should be done in tandem with an upgrade of the Poplar Grove Centre (perhaps a swimming pool?) which should become open to the public again. Basically, there is room, with the financial and managerial support of the National Stadium, to make a big impact to one of the poorest communities in London.
 

And another takes up the issue of movement around the Wembley area:

 

In as much as I support this application as it will be useful for the local economy. However, I have reservations around residents' parking access as this may be affected by visiting individuals taking up parking spaces which are already low in number around the area. Will the council offer Event Day Parking Permits to residents and their visitors for free or supply enforcement officers or a system to protect residents parking spaces. Also, I would ask that the Council takes into consideration the local residents who use public transport who will be seriously hampered by the changes in local bus routes being cancelled on event days and how this may impact on them. I'm for the planning permission to go ahead but some level of support around local residents travel needs and requirements would be welcomed.

 

Cllr Paul Lorber has stepped into the debate through a request to Brent Council:

 

This paragraph appears in the document produced for the Stadium in support of their planning application and included in the Brent Council Planning Portal:

 

 

5.12 WNSL has conducted pre-application discussions with the Leader and Chief Executive of Brent Council where the proposals in this application were presented. 

 

Following that meeting it was agreed between the attendees that: 

 

“The proposals presented were positively received and WNSL were commended for their professional delivery of stadium event operations to date. It was recognised that the flexibility built into the application to provide a range of dates to promoters and artists is a necessary requirement for WNSL to continually deliver global event success and retain Wembley Stadium’s world class status as an iconic venue for the delivery of sporting and non-sporting events. The benefits of retaining high quality acts at the stadium also reap great rewards for the borough of Brent through the growth of the local community, businesses, economy and tourism.”

 

The intent for including it by the applicant is clearly to influence others. Personally I do not believe this should have been included.

 

I recall that when previous changes to use of the Stadium was being considered (use by Tottenham for example) the Council organised public information and consultation meetings.

 

The latest proposals will have a major impact on the lives of tens of thousands of residents in the Wembley area.

 

One major impact overlooked is on families with a disabled resident requiring regular care when that care is disrupted because buses are diverted or cancelled and the carer cannot attend or is delayed.

 

I am not sure if Social Care or even NHS providers are consulted to seek their views on the impact of more Large Event days or increasing the capacity of smaller events to 60,000.

 

The Planning Meeting is too restrictive and means that the number of speakers is restricted.

 

The Council should organise a number of public meetings where the Planning Application and its impact can be fully explained and local people have an opportunity to have their say snd their concerns responded to.

 

Please confirm if any Public Meetings will be held in advance of the Planning Meeting.

 

 Make comments  objecting, supporting or neutral on the Brent Council Planning Portal HERE

Unfortunately some residents are having trouble accessing the site. If so search for Reference 24/1329.

 




Tuesday 18 June 2024

Brent Council explains the Wembley Library changes

 I have recently been asked about the Wembley Library plans by people who have been in the Civic Centre and found the ground floor library closed. A temporary and much reduced library has been installed on the first floor shared with a Hub and with a restricted number of study spaces available elsewhere in the Civic Centre. The changes will cost more than £2m are are expected to be completed in the Autumn. The new main entrance to the Civic Centre will be next door to Sainsbury's - the present library entrance.

This is the statement from the Brent Council website:

Transformation of Wembley Library and Community Hub

Brent’s award-winning Civic Centre opened in 2013, replacing the former headquarters at Brent Town Hall. The building attracts thousands of visitors each year who come to speak to customer services, get married, register births and deaths, study, socialise and more.

As one of the greenest public buildings in the country, it uses 70% less energy, saving money and protecting the environment, and it brings all our services under one roof.

Since the building first opened, we have been regularly checking how people use the building to ensure it continues to be a welcoming space creating a positive experience for all visitors.

Customer Access review

Since the Covid pandemic, more residents access our services online and face-to-face support is being prioritised for residents with the most complex need.

In 2021, we launched a review to improve the way customers and residents access our services in the Civic Centre to respond to the changing needs of those using the building.

We received feedback from over 500 residents, staff focus groups, workshops and surveys.

As a result of this consultation, we will be making some changes to the building to improve the customer experience.

The key layout changes

The redesign will see changes to Wembley Library, the Community Hub, the Customer Services Centre and the Registration and Nationality space on the ground floor and the mezzanine floors.

The benefits will include:

  • A new welcoming main entrance to the building on Exhibition Way by Sainsbury’s and new customer waiting area.
  • A new dedicated customer area on the ground floor, where customers can meet with Hubs and Customer Service staff. This will include more meeting rooms so that customers can have private and confidential conversations with staff
  • A new purpose-built and enclosed Children’s Library
  • A repurposed mezzanine floor with a flexible and multi-use Library space and an increased number of study spaces
  • A private Family Room for confidential meetings
  • The building will be more accessible for visitors with wheelchairs, pushchairs, and complex needs
  • A dedicated digital area to support residents and visitors

Work update

Construction work to revamp and improve Brent Civic Centre is now underway.  Work is expected to be completed in autumn 2024. Throughout this period, all services will remain operational. A temporary library service will be available on the first floor of the civic centre. We apologise for any inconvenience caused and thank you for your patience. 

Democracy in Brent – Council and Leader responses to my open email.

 Guest post by Philip Grant in a personal capacity


Martin reports Cabinet’s (in)action over my efforts to get 28 May minutes corrected.

 

If you have been following the saga over the Bobby Moore Bridge advertising lease, and what happened at the Brent Cabinet meeting on 28 May, you will know I feel strongly that the subsequent official minutes for item 7 are not a correct record.

 

On Sunday, Martin published a guest post from me, setting out the text of an open email which I had sent to the Council Leader, Cllr. Muhammed Butt, and all the members of his Cabinet. This forwarded an email I had sent to Brent’s Corporate Director (Law and Governance), which gave details of the changes I believe needed to be made to the minutes, to make them a correct record, which is what minutes of meetings are meant to be. I wrote: ‘I hope that you will approve those amendments at your meeting on Monday.’

 

In the hour before that meeting, there was an exchange of emails between the Corporate Director and myself, followed by an email from the Council Leader after the meeting. As Martin has published my views, I think it only fair that he should also publish the Council’s response to them.

 

Here are the full texts of the email exchanges on Monday 17 June, so that followers of “Wembley Matters” can read them if they wish to, and make up their own minds on the issues. All of the emails were copied to the Council Leader, Cabinet members and Brent’s Chief Executive. (As I am writing this, I will reserve the right to have the final word! You are welcome to agree or disagree with me in the comments section below.)

 

Monday 17 June at 9.15am, from Brent’s Corporate Director (Law and Governance):

 

Dear Mr Grant

 

Thank you for your emails relating to this matter and I note your main concerns identified in your email of 14 June 2024 (now copied to the Cabinet and Chief Executive) following your consideration of Mr *****’s email of earlier that day.

 

The main purpose of minutes of a Cabinet meeting is to establish a clear record of the decision(s) taken.  The minutes should also establish the reasons for the decision(s) including any alternative options which are placed before Cabinet but not agreed.  This can be done by reference to the report relating to the decision.

 

The minutes meet these requirements.

 

Other details of the meeting are not required to be included.  In respect of what is included I cannot see that the minutes are inaccurate.

 

In respect of the first section you wish to substitute, the decision and reasons are required to be recorded in the minutes.  The minutes refer to the potential options being presented in the report, they do not state that the Leader specifically presented these options himself. You had of course already spoken about the Options so there could be no doubt that the Cabinet was aware of them and of the views of those who supported the petition to take note of them.  In agreeing the recommendations in the report, the Cabinet was agreeing to note items as recommended as Mr ***** explained.

 

Cllr Donnelly-Jackson thanked you for your contribution, which was for the purpose of representing the residents who supported the petition, and I think recording that as Cabinet thanking residents is not inaccurate.

 

There is no general requirement for Cabinet members to vote by a show of hands or to formally state their support.  Cabinet members were given the opportunity to indicate that they did not agree the recommendations which the Leader had proposed be agreed, for example if they had thought Option A was the correct choice.  None of them chose to do so.

 

In respect of your second proposed substitution and your intervention to raise a point of order, the minute clearly captures the import of the Leader’s response.  As a member of the public observing a Cabinet meeting you would not have the formal right to raise a point of order.  However, given you stated the point you wish to raise anyway, had the Chief Executive or Head of Law considered there was a matter of concern to address I am sure they would have provided advice.

 

In summary, although I wasn’t at the meeting, I have watched the webcast and do not consider the minutes to be an incorrect representation of the decision or the reasons for it, including the options which were presented by the report.

 

Best wishes

 

Debra

 

Debra Norman
Corporate Director, Law & Governance


 

Monday 17 June at 9.35am, my reply to Ms Norman’s email:

 

Dear Ms Norman,

 

Thank you for yoùr detailed response to the concerns I raised.

 

I note what you have said, but still believe that the minute for item 7 of the 28 May Cabinet meeting is NOT a correct record, and should not be accepted by Cabinet as such.

 

I would be grateful if you would, please, publicly make clear at the meeting that a member of the public involved at that meeting does not accept that minute as being a correct record, and have that included in the minutes of today's meeting. Thank you. 

 

Best wishes,

 

Philip Grant.


 

Monday 17 June at 9.59am (meeting started at 10am!), reply to me from Ms Norman:

 

Dear Mr Grant

 

Thank you for your email.

 

This would be a matter for the Leader.

 

Best wishes

 

Debra


 

Monday 17 June at 11.08am, from Cllr. Muhammed Butt’s to me:

 

Thank you.

 

The minutes were accepted as a true reflection of the cabinet meeting held in May.

 

Regards

 

Muhammed

Cllr Muhammed Butt
Leader of Brent Council
Labour councillor for Tokyngton ward.

 

It is not often I agree with Cllr. Butt, but I think that what has happened over this matter, since the open email I wrote to him on 20 May (about the need for the voting on the Bobby Moore Bridge advertising lease to not only be fair, but to be seen to be fair) is a ‘true reflection’ of the state of Democracy in Brent under his Leadership.

 

I said above that I would have the final word. This is the reply I sent to the Council Leader, with copies to Cabinet members and Brent’s Chief Executive and Corporate Director … etc.:

 

Dear Councillor Butt,

 

Thank you for your email.

 

I will pass on your message to those who are interested.

 

I hope that you and your Cabinet colleagues will consider, along with the Chief Executive and Corporate Director (Law and Governance), the points I made in my email of 15 June, about the need for Cabinet decisions, and votes on them, to be more visibly seen to be considered and made, in the interests of open democracy.

 

That is also something where "Change" would be welcomed. Best wishes,

 

Philip Grant.

 

Brent residents deserve to be treated with more respect by our elected councillors*. The least we should expect in a democracy is that the decision-making body, Brent’s Cabinet, considers  decisions carefully and votes properly on them in its public meetings!

 

Philip Grant.

 

* They were democratically elected. Cllr. Butt topped the poll, receiving 1447 votes, when he was elected to represent Tokyngton Ward in 2022, and Labour councillors won 57.6% of the votes cast in Brent, on a 30.67% turnout. Under our first-past-the-post system, that gave Labour 49 out of 57 Council seats, and after such a victory it was unsurprising that Cllr. Butt’s councillors voted to give him four more years as Leader of the Council (a post he has held since May 2012).