Friday, 14 February 2025

Brent Council and the MIK (K-Pop) Festival: 'You couldn't make it up!'

 Guest post by Gaynor Lloyd

 


Regarding Paul Lorber's comment at 17:02 on 13 February on the latest blog on the MIK Festival  LINK

 

Oh, Paul, it is much, much worse than that. At the Licensing Hearing, we were told by Magic Sound’s event organisers that Brent Council had "identified" Northwick Park Playing Fields for these events.  In fact, in the earliest report by Magic Sound to the Arts Council, who are giving grant funding for this as part of a "levelling up" agenda for culture in boroughs deprived of culture, Brent is listed as getting 2 days of Magic Sound activity. And the date of that report? July 2023

 

Of course, residents and even then, in only a few roads in the Northwick Park Ward side only heard by circular letter just before Christmas 2024. Magic Sound's event organisers had to tell the Council to let their own very long-standing tenants in the bungalows by the pavilion know that their homes would be around 80 metres from the stage of the K-Pop event, before they received the Magic Sound circular letter.  

 

 Seems a bit extraordinary really - were some of us old cynics not of the view that everything Brent Council does in our area is conducted in absolute secrecy. After all, as I said at the Licensing Hearing, we are just at the northern most outpost of Brent - Harrow, really. 

 

But we outpost residents still need protecting from nuisance. Noise, for instance. The Licence does have some conditions but mainly it's what to do if we feel the festival is too loud. But there have been no onsite decibel sound tests taken at different angles, under various weather conditions.  Bear in mind the site is right next to the hospital as well as surrounded by residential properties, and a care home at the entrance. Windows will be open; the festival will be in warmer weather.   Decibel data should be available, and residents understand in practice what the Council's environmental officers view as "acceptable" - so we know when to ring up the one dedicated noise complaints number manned by Magic Sound for someone to trot out and measure, and possibly find our complaint is valid - and the odd adjustment made.

 

Traffic to our narrow heavily parked roads - oh well, maybe a temporary CPZ. That went down well...Then, apparently, TfL had just agreed that Northwick Park and South Kenton tubes with their narrow, restricted tunnel entrances and narrow platforms might not be an ideal exit strategy for 15,000 /20,000 of this young demographic at 10:30pm having been on their feet all day at the concert. So Magic Sound suggested they might provide up to 150 stewards to guide the 10–24-year-olds unfamiliar with our area leaving the concert at 10:30pm to walk through the University, across Watford Road and in long crocodile the 2.5 km to Harrow on the Hill Station - the "hub" transport asset for the festival goers. (One of the Committee asked if the motorcycle inhibiting barriers which inhibit passage through the tunnels could be removed to facilitate easier egress... well, no, as they are there for the other 362 days of the year safety for the station users...)

 

You couldn't make it up. But the fact is that Magic Sound now has the Licence. The conditions do not reflect the various suggestions made to placate the tsunami of reasoned and serious protests and representations made on valid licensing grounds of nuisance, public safety by over 170 residents. To be honest, the conditions couldn't. They must be limited to activities within the actual licensed area - OK, 2/3rds of our playing fields but not dealing with litter and traffic and public safety issues outside that area in our surrounding streets or en route to Harrow on the Hill. 

 

It was obvious from the Hearing that the application was made too early with plans only in formulation. Yet Brent Safety Advisory Group (BSAG) had passed it even with many questions unanswered. Of course, BSAG will be our protectors once the final details of each festival are available (31 days before), when they make the final recommendations beyond the conditions. Some of us - call us old cynics if you will - don't see that as very much protection. Indeed, all due respect to the undoubtedly serious members of BSAG - and not for one moment doubting their integrity - based on what they OK'd for the Hearing (and on which the Committee said it was relying), the words "chocolate" and "teapot" spring unbidden into - at least - my mind.

 

So, whatever discussions take place with the applicants going forward, as indicated, e.g., by Cllr Kennelly, we are confronted with an approved application with inadequate conditions. Forever.  So, as things stand, these Festivals will happen, with no further resident involvement or opportunity to make representations. Unless things go horribly wrong.

 

There has been a total disregard by the Council of its obligation to its own tenants of the bungalows to give them quiet enjoyment of their homes. A similar total disregard of residents using the fields for recreation. A complete failure even to notify its regular formal sports hirers of the proposal, let alone consult them. The placing of the stage over the Gaelic Football pitches used for practice and League games over decades - and, as the set up is scheduled to sterilise the ground for up to 10 days before the festival, and 5 days after, effectively wrecks the Gaelic Football's season. The event organiser at the consultation event days before expiry of the consultation deadline admitted it was the residents who had told them of the existence of the Gaelic football pitches. The Council had not even given them details of any hirings at all.

 

From the event organiser's extensive experience of events in fields like ours, they acknowledged the likely damage to the pitches from compaction of the ground, and that the ground would have to be restored after the event - with a longer period therefore of unavailability. They even acknowledged that the pitches may not recover at all. At the consultation, we were told that the work of restoration would be covered by a financial bond. At the Hearing, there seemed to be a pulling back from that. Of course, there is nothing in the Licensing conditions - it isn't covered by any of the licensing objectives, which is all the Licensing Committee look at.

 


 

As to restoration, I remind myself that events in parks were "consulted upon" in Brent's Budget Approval in February 2024. 2 pages (2024-25 – RS 13), presented by Cabinet Member Krupa Sheth. [above] Note "There would be no impact on service users” and " there is a risk that more events in parks may impact the natural fabric of the park and it would require organisers to undertake full risk assessments in that regard and for the Council's approval process to fully account for any risk"

 

I only knew about the "consultation " because Brent Friends of the Earth had been invited to comment, an n we trawled through the numerous pages for anything affecting our environment and natural spaces. Brent FoE even responded to that consultation - reflecting some deep concern about the effects of more events in parks - which comments we thought had resulted in the final recommendations. Note "It is also important that any events calendar should provide space and time between events for grounds to recover and a proper rotation of sites to be used would be most appropriate."  Now having the evidence of this first "event" in the new policy, is it any wonder I am worried? And just who are residents and pitch users to rely on to believe in full and timely restoration of our playing fields at Northwick Park?

 


 

I would just finish by saying that, at the entrance to Northwick Park is a prominent sign advertising the charitable funding for the park by the Football Foundation. When I look this up, I find that there is a Brent Plan dated August 2024 and, lo, Northwick Park playing fields are Priority Project 4.

 

Does the left hand not know what the right hand is doing? Or is the money from Magic Sound just the only thing that matters? I would say "You couldn't make it up" - but, heck, this is Brent Council.

7 comments:

Trevor said...

This is an outstanding guest article authored by Gaynor Lloyd, the former Labour Councillor for the Barnhill ward.

Jaine Lunn said...

I was never in doubt that this would not go ahead this year due to delay which leaves Magic Sound with little time to promote and organise this event. Having said that I believe it's quite unlikely that this type of event will ever happen at Northwick Park as no promoter would wish to go against so many local residents who are much better informed about the Park and it's locality in comparison to the idiot that suggested to Magic Sound that it would be a good fit for them to host this type of event in this Brent Park. Brent Council surely cannot be that desperate for a few ££££s to ruin are already run down parks, and deprive the local residents from access to Open Green Space of which is disappearing by the day to unscrupulous developers and highly suspect planning permission being granted by Brent Councils' Planning Committee.

Anonymous said...

This seems to be a decision that would benefit from an application for Judicial Review? Are there any organisations that would have funding for this?

Anonymous said...

Jaine uses a very technical word "Idiot" when referring to a decision maker at Brent Council - does she mean 1. Councillor M Butt, 2 Councillor K Sheth and as they do seem to spend rather a lot of time together does she actually mean 3. both?

Jaine Lunn said...

In response to Anon 15.21.

Had I known the name of the person that suggested the idea to Magic Sounds to use Northwick Park, I would have referred to them by name, so I hope that answers your question.

I used the word Idiot as it comes from the Greek, Idiotes which translated means a person who has no professional knowledge or skill.

If using the Latin Idiota translated means an Ignorant Person.

Oxford Dictionary refers Idiot to an obsolete term for a person that is foolish or stupid.

Thats my final answer.

Anonymous said...

... and rock and roll

Anonymous said...

Interestingly another K Pop concert is scheduled to take place Twickenham (a much more sensible venue than the well used playing fields at Northwick Park) in June 2025 and is much further advanced, in that, they have acts announced and tickets going on sale next week. https://www.pressparty.com/pg/newsdesk/TheOutsideOrg/view/444546/