Showing posts with label George Irvin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label George Irvin. Show all posts

Tuesday 13 June 2023

Barry Gardiner opposed Barham Park development in 2021 so why silent in 2023?

 

I am grateful to a Wembley Matters reader for the link he sent to a letter  from Barry Gardiner opposing one of the proposed planning applications for the site in Barham Park, The letter was sent to Gerry Ansell, Brent Council's Head of Planning in May 2021 LINK.

Although the specific application was different (larger and higher) to that approved yesterday, most of the  arguments used still apply. I draw attention to the last line of the letter: 'I would ask that the application be rejected and the use of the land be returned to the people of Wembley in deference to the principle of Titus Barham's bequest.'

The letter:

Planning Application 21/1106  776 and 778 Harrow Road.

I am writing to express my strong personal objection to Planning Application 21/1106 which concerns the former park keepers' houses in Barham Park. I understand that the applicant is seeking to demolish these houses and erect a four storey residential building comprising 9 self-contained flats with roof top terrace and associated access, parking and landscaping.

I originally objected to the sale of the properties in 2010 and I was advised the following year that they were to be leased to a housing association for reuse by families on the Council's housing register. I was therefore appalled when, contrary to assurances, it became apparent that the sale had gone ahead in 2012.

I then objected to Planning  Application 14/2078 in 2014 arguing that the Housing was only ever appropriate on this land as it was built as tied accommodation for the park wardens and it would be totally wrong if the site were to undergo extensive redevelopment, I was therefore pleased when planning permission for application 14/2708* was rejected.

Having seen the proposed plans for this current proposed application, my strong objections to the redevelopment of this site remain. I am very concerned by the height of the new proposed development, which is one-storey higher than the proposals in 2014. I also fear that the inclusion of a roof top terrace on a building within a park, may lead to visitors of the park feeling uncomfortable and overlooked.

Barham Park is extremely important within the local community and has a specific historial significance which appears to be lost on the developer. Barham Park is also home to the war memorial where every year services are held and wreaths laid to remember those who, at their country's call, left all that was dear to them to hazard their lives in the cause of freedom. For all these reasons the Park should be regarded as a special place within the Borough and should be protected from this development.

While I appreciate that it was a council of a different political complexion which originally sold off the existing properties in the Park, the current Council should not allow that negative event to set a precedent for further despoilation. The existing houses and their gardens are within the Barham Park Estate and the Planning Committee are fully aware that this was bequeathed to the people of Wembley in 1937 for their use and enjoyment in perpetuity,

I would ask that the application be rejected and the use of the land be returned to the people of Wembley in deference to the principle of Titus Barham's bequest.

 

*discrepancy in the application reference numbers is in the original letter


Monday 12 June 2023

Crunch time for defence of Brent's Green spaces at Planning Committee this evening

 

The application by property developer and funfair owner George Irvin to build four 3 storey houses in Barham Park comes to Brent Planning Committee this evening.  There are fears that if this application is approved (and planning officers recommend approval) that it will set a precedent for building on other Brent green spaces where there are existing buildings.

As documented by Wembley Matters the application has been surrounded by controversy:

  • The failure of Trustees of the Barham Park Trust Committee to make any comment or act on the restricted covenant on the site
  • Failure of the Trustees/Council to secure a professional valuation of the covenant
  • The make-up of the Trust Committee chaired by Muhammed Butt leader of the Council and consisting of members of his Cabinet with no other representation
  • Irvin's offer of free tickets to his funfair to councillors. Rita Begum, a member of the Planning Committee took advantage of this
  • Long-standing concerns about the make-up of the Planning Committee that is alleged to include   Muhammed Butt's  brother Cllr Saqib Butt and his brother-in-law Cllr Ajmal Akram. The Chair is the partner of the Deputy Leader of the Council. 
  • The failure of planning offices to answer an allegation of misrepresentation of planning guidance made by Philip Grant LINK
  • Misleading information in the notification of the meeting to residents which said that attendance was restricted to on-line. Though corrected that was later repeated on the council's website
  • The publication  of the Supplementary Report on the application after 5pm on Friday giving no time for new requests to speak at tonight's meeting
  • The failure of North Brent MP, Barry Gardiner, to intervene despite making defence of Barham Park a major local issue in the 2010 General and local election.

The Planning Committeee Meeting is in the Conference Hall at Brent Civic Centre at 6pm or you can attend online HERE.  

There are several remarks on the planning portal regarding the difficulties many residents have had downloading documents and being timed out. Clearly accessibility is central to proper democratic participation. Not helped today by this announcement:



Friday 9 June 2023

Last minute Supplementary Report on Barham Park Planning Application - Brent Planning Officers still recommend approval. Barham family submission disregarded.

 

 

A Supplementary Report was published this afternoon by Brent Planning Officers regarding the application by George Irvin to build 4 three storey houses within the park on the site currently occupied by a modest pair of two storey houses. The Planning Committee in at 6pm on Monday June 12th. The public can attend in-person or on-line.

Some of the Supplementary Report is concerned with the actual boundaries of the site followed by a consideration of some of the 'further representations' that have been reported on this website:

 A number of further comments have been received in objection to the proposals since the publication of the committee report including comments from 4 people who commented previously. In total (including previously reported and new objections), 46 residents objected to the proposal in addition to the petition with 160 signatures, the Sudbury Court Residents’ Association, Wembley Central and Alperton Residents’ Association and Cllr Lorber. An objection has now also been received from the Brent Parks Forum. The objections include some issues previously raised and some additional concerns.

The Supplementary Report requires close scrutiny as the wording is often unclear or ambiguous. The officers continue to recommend that the application is approved and state that the covenant on the park is not a material planning consideration. They do not refer to the Barham family's submission. In my view they fail to adequately answer Philip Grant's allegation of misrepresentation of planning policies.

Philip Grant emailed the head of planning this evening having seen the Supplementary Report:

Dear Mr Ansell,


Further to my email to you last Tuesday morning, 6 June, attaching a copy of my objection comment about the Committee Report on the 776 & 778 Harrow Road application, I am frankly disgusted by the response in the Supplementary Report, which has appeared on Brent's website this evening.

This is my further comment on application 22/4128 this evening:

'I have just read the Supplementary Report, published on Brent Council's website this evening.

It is totally unacceptable that the objection comments which I made on 5 June, about the misrepresentation in the Committee Report over the Sudbury Town Neighbourhood Plan policies. should be "dealt with" merely with an Officer Response of:
'This is discussed within paragraphs 5-16 of the main report.'

My comment had explained in detail why paragraph 13, in particular, was incorrect.

If Planning Officers are not prepared, or not able, to explain why Sudbury Town Neighbourhood Plan policies LGS1 & 2 and BP1 should not override the other policies which they rely on to support this application, then the application should not proceed to a decision at the Planning Committee meeting on 12 June.'

Yours sincerely,

Philip Grant.


 

 This is a link to the 'main report' LINK  A flavour is provided by the extract below which made my head hurt when I tried to grapple with it!

Paragraph 13


Wednesday 7 June 2023

Barham family urge Planning Committee to protect Titus Barham's gift to the people of Wembley that stipulated 'his gardens should be used for the enjoyment of local people and nothing else'

 

Letter published with permission

Dear Councillor Kelcher,


I am writing on behalf of the Barham family to object to the building of even more houses within Barham Park.


As you will know Barham Park was the family home of the Barham family from around 1895 to 1937. From 1913 it was the home of Titus Barham and his wife Florence who spent a great deal of time and money to plant and improve the gardens. While it was a gated and fenced private home and gardens Titus would open it to the public on a regular basis. As supporters and founders of the then recently built Wembley Hospital, Titus and Florence held many fundraising events in their home and gardens.


As you will also know Titus and his wife were major benefactors, supporting many worthwhile causes in Wembley and Sudbury. In recognition of this Titus was selected to become the Charter Mayor of the newly formed Wembley Borough Council. Sadly he died on the very day the Charter was to come into effect.


Prior to his death in 1937 Titus had arranged to gift his home and gardens expressly “for the enjoyment of local people” . This gift became Barham Park.


As you will also know this charitable endowment placed responsibility on Wembley, and later Brent Councils, to manage and look after the Park in the best interests of local people.


The two houses in the Park close to the railway were built specifically to house Parks Department workers who helped to maintain and look after the Park. The building of those two houses, although maybe questionable at the time, could be justified because of the link with the Park and it’s purpose. No such link exists now and will not certainly exist if and when the two houses are replaced by the proposed 4 taller buildings whose sole purpose is not to house Parks Department workers working in Barham Park, but simply to generate a rental income for their owners.


I also understand that the Council has had a long-standing policy of protecting Parks from intrusive development. While the original building of the two houses may have been questionable the proposed building of 4 larger and taller houses is an affront to the wishes of Titus Barham.


As Councillors, you and members of the Planning Committee reflect on the action of one of your predecessors, namely Titus who was a Wembley Councillor for 4 years, and continue to respect and protect his generosity specifically for the enjoyment of local people.


On behalf of the Barham family I would therefore urge you and your Council colleagues to REJECT the latest Planning Application and to uphold Titus Barham’s express wish that his gardens should be used for the enjoyment of local people and nothing else.


Please present my appeal as outlined in this message to all Councillors in Brent and especially to the members of the Brent Planning Committee.


Yours sincerely

Allan Barham
On behalf of the Barham family

 

Sunday 4 June 2023

Are our parks and green spaces safe with Brent Council?


A meadow in Fryent Country Park was again used as a car park for football fans on Saturday. This time for those attending the FA Cup Final on the day of a rail workers' strike.  On social media  I expressed were concern about the use of a designated nature reserve for this purpose.

The meadow was  last used as a car park on another train strike day in June last year, this time for fans going to an Ed Sheeran concert. LINK

On that occasion Brent Council told Wembley Matters:

The event field at Fryent Country Park is available for commercial hire and events are very common there. Wembley Stadium approached the council to rent it on the basis the rail strike would create additional parking and traffic pressures in the Wembley area. The council agreed to its rental on the basis this would provide sensible relief across the wider area.

 

As well as a rental income to the council, the parking revenue was agreed to be ring-fenced to improve future event day management arrangements in the Wembley area, for example, more council enforcement, toilets and better fencing.

 

This is unlikely to be a regular occurrence, but the field is available for commercial hire as has always been the case.

 

 


Concern was heightened  by the news that Brent Council planners were recommending that Brent Planning Committee approve George Irvin's planning application to build four 3 storey houses in Barham Park. Liberal Democrat councillor for Sudbury ward, Paul Lorber, has written to Brent  Parks department asking whether this will set a precedent for other sites in the borough:

The Planning Officer recommendation on the Barham Park planning application going to Committee on 12 June 2023 suggests that the Council Housing Policies over rides this and the protection of Parks and Open Spaces is now a dead duck.

It is of some surprise to find that the Park Service made no representations on the Barham planning application and is silent on the issue and the implications for other Parks and Open Spaces.

Perhaps you can explain why?

In view of this can you provide the following:

  1.  List of all of Brent’s Parks and Open Spaces which have residential buildings (I am aware of around wood Park and King Edward VII Park for example) and other buildings which on the basis of the Barham Park recommendation are now at risk.
  2. How many of the above have been looked at and assessed as suitable for future housing development.
  3. Whether in view of planning officers  recommendations the Protection of Parks and Open Spaces needs to be reviewed and strengthened.
Residents across Brent are now asking “is our Park/Open Space safe?” and they need reassurance.

I would appreciate an early reply.

Regards
Paul

PS. As you know there used to be a large House in the middle of Gladstone Park some years back. As it was used as a private residence is the site now suitable and acceptable for a residential development? Is the Council position on Barham Park (silence by the Parks Service and the Barham Park Charity managed by Council officers) a precedent of what residents can now expect in the future?

 

This is the relevant section of the Officers' Report. The promise of the first paragraph is dismissed in the subsequent paragraphs:

 

The Sudbury Town Neighbourhood Plan designated Barham Park including the land within the application site as a Local Green Space under Policy LGS1, with LGS2 relating to Barham Park. This policy highlights that the Local Green Spaces will be given long term protection and proposals for development which is not ancillary to the use of the land for recreational purposes will be resisted. The Local Green Space designation for Barham Park includes the houses and the majority of their curtilages as being within the designated space. It is set out within Neighbourhood Plan policy BP1 (Barham Park) that any proposals for the re-use or redevelopment of park buildings for residential us (Use Class C3) will not be supported.

 

Neighbourhood Plan Policies LGS1, LGS2 and BP1 are relevant to the proposal as the site is within the area defined as Local Green Space by the plan. However, the proposal does not result in the loss of any Local Green Space. The site contains house for which the authorised use is as dwellings within Use Class C3 and as such, the proposal is not considered to result in the redevelopment of park buildings.

The proposal is considered to accord with policies LGS1, LGS2 and BP1. Nevertheless, if one contended that Policy BP1 relates to all buildings within the area designated Local Green Space as opposed to all buildings within the park itself, it is noted that the fall-back position for the applicant would be the continued use of the houses and their curtilages for their current lawful use, for purposes withinUse Class C3. In this instance the proposed redevelopment of the site would continue to be acceptable having regard to the existing use of the site.

 

Saturday 3 June 2023

UPDATE:Lorber challenges attendance restriction. Brent Council recommends approval of application to build in Barham Park and restricts attendance at the Planning Committee considering it

 

The proposed four 3 storey houses in Barham Park


Residents who have made comments on funfair supremo and developer, George Irvin's, controversial application to build four 3 storey houses in  Barham Park, have been surprised to receive letters apparently restricting attendance at the Planning Committee that will decide the application on June 12th.

The letter (below) cites Covid restrictions but these were not in evidence at the Council's Annual General Meeting and currently not in evidence in the public areas of the Civic Centre.

The UK Government website says, 'There are no coronavirus (Covid-19) restrictions in the UK.' 

Despite widespread opposition to this proposal the Chief Planner is recommending approval.

 

TOWN AND COUNTRY PLANNING ACT 1990 (as amended) THE PLANNING COMMITTEE

Re: 776 & 778, Harrow Road, Wembley, HA0 2HE 

 

I refer to the planning application for the above site which proposes:- 

 

Demolition of 2 existing dwellings and construction of 4x new three storey dwellinghouses, associated cycle and refuse storage, amenity space and boundary treatment 

 

The application will be formally considered at the meeting of the Planning Committee on 12 June, 2023 starting at 6pm. 

 

As a result of the current regulations allowing the Council to hold meetings of the Planning Committee remotely coming to an end, the Council is now required to hold this as a socially distanced physical (face to face) meeting. 

 

This meeting of the Committee has therefore been arranged to take place in the Conference Hall, at the Civic Centre. 

 

As we are still operating under existing Covid restrictions, capacity within the meeting venue has been strictly limited to ensure compliance with the necessary social distancing guidelines. 

 

We are therefore encouraging those who wish to observe proceedings to continue doing so via the live webstream which we will continue to make available on the Council’s website

 

https://www.brent.gov.uk/your-council/democracy-in-brent/local-democracy/live-streaming/ 

 

It is possible to speak at the Committee Meeting, which (in advance of the current restrictions coming to an end) can continue to be undertaken online (including via the telephone) or now, as an alternative, in person at the meeting, subject to the restrictions set out in the Council's Standing Order. These provide for one objector and/or one supporter of the application to speak. The Chair has the discretion to increase this to two people from each side. In doing this, the Chair will give priority to occupiers nearest to the application site or representing a group of people. 

 

To address the committee you must notify Executive and Member Services by 5 pm on the working day before the committee meeting. Please email committee@brent.gov.uk or telephone the Executive and Member Services Officer, Mrs Dev Bhanji, on 07786 681276 during office hours. If you would prefer to attend the physical meeting to speak in person then please could you indicate this when notifying us of your request, as attendance will need to be strictly managed on the night. This may involve you having to wait in a separate area outside of the meeting room until you are called to speak.

 

The Chief Planner's recommendation for this application is to Grant Consent

 

 UPDATE:

 

Following expressions of concern from local residents about the restriction on attendance at the consideration of a very controversial planning application, Sudbury Lib Dem councillor Paul Lorber has written to Brent Council:


This is a very odd letter to be sent to Councillors and residents about a Planning Meeting.

There are no COVID restrictions in place and none were applied at the recent Council AGM.

This has confused resident concerned about this controversial Planning Application and given an impression that residents are being dissuaded from attending and show the strength of local opposition.

Can you please clarify the position and if the letter and references to COVID restrictions were sent in error a new notification sent out and if appropriate the item postponed to a later date.

Regards,
 
Paul Lorber

 

 




Friday 5 May 2023

Ward councillor calls for site meeting and public presentation on the implications of the planning application to build 4 houses in Barham Park

 


 The proposed houses

 

 Cllr Paul Lorber, Liberal Democrat councillor for Sudbury, has sent Brent Council a petition from over 150 people about the controversial planning application LINK to build four 3 storey houses in Barham Park:

I have been asked by local residents and supporters of Barham Park to send in the enclosed petition from over 150 local residents opposed to the plans to build extra houses within Barham Park.

The residents are keen to ensure that the Planning Service takes into account the long standing Brent Council policy of protecting Public Parks and Open spaces irrespective of what ever pre planning application discussions may have taken place behind closed doors.

They are concerned about:

  • Over development
  • Over intensification  of residential uses in the Park
  • Extra traffic entry into the Park by visitors, delivery drivers and scooter food deliveries driving into the Park through an entry point under the Park ownership and close to the path created specifically for walkers.
  • This will not be a car free development what ever may be stated on paper as Brent Planning Service does not have the resources to either monitor or enforce this.
  • There are environmental issues including impact on mature trees (some subject to TOPs) near the site.
  • Loss of further Park land as the applicant is proposing to part of land not currently under his ownership.
For these and other planning reasons the residents are calling on the Planning Service to recommend refusal and for the Planning Committee to refuse this application.

As a local Councillor for the area I request a site meeting and public presentation of the proposal and implication for the Park.

By copy I am requesting that the Parks Service and the Barham Park Charity responds to this application and makes a clear statement about the policy on protecting Public Parks and policy of selling off further land inside a Public Park which this application and proposed development will require.

The deadline for comments on the application 22/4128 is nexy week on Tuesday May 9th although normally comments received after the deadline but beforew an application goes to Pllaning Committee are taken into account. You cna submit comments directly on the Planning Portal or by email. Unfortunately emailed comments are not published so if you want others to see your comments post on to the portal. LINK
 
There are about 30 objections at present.

Thursday 27 April 2023

Be Fair on the Fun – An open Letter to Brent on councillors’ free rides

 Guest post in a personal capacity by Philip Grant

 


George Irvin’s Fun Fair at Roe Green Park, 21 April 2023.

 

Last week, Martin revealed that Brent councillors had been offered free tickets for George Irvin’s Fun Fair at Roe Green Park, on 21 and 22 April. This raised some concerns, because George Irvin is also involved in a planning application affecting Barham Park, which may come before some of those councillors for a decision within the next few months.

 

In the circumstances, I thought it best to make sure that Brent’s Monitoring Officer was aware about the situation, and that she knew that there would be public interest in how she responded to it. The open letter which I sent her on 25 April is set out in full below. I know that some readers may find my letter hard to follow in places, because it refers to parts of the Brent Members’ Code of Conduct, but I hope that many of you will take the trouble to read it. 

 

I believe it is important that decisions made by the Council, its committees and their members, are not only fair and impartial, but that we, as citizens of the borough, can feel confident that they are fairly and properly made. That must mean that there should be no suspicion that the people making the decisions may have been influenced by a gift received from, or any personal friendship with, a person who could benefit from that decision.

 

One of the comments made under last week’s blog was: ‘why can’t residents be on the Barham Park Trust Committee to ensure our park is protected?’ That is a very good question! Why should that committee have just  ‘5 members of the Cabinet appointed by the Cabinet’?  You will see that the final recommendation I made to Brent’s Corporate Director of Governance is that there should be an independent review of the committee’s membership.

 

 

This is my open letter:

 

To: Debra Norman                                                                   From: Philip Grant                              
      Corporate Director of Governance and Monitoring Officer, 
Brent Council.

                                                                                                                       25 April 2023

 

THIS IS AN OPEN LETTER

Dear Ms Norman,

 

Gift to Brent Councillors by George Irvin, and its implications
for ‘sound and transparent decision making’.

 

I know that in both of your roles, as Brent Council’s Governance Director and as its Monitoring Officer, you wish to ensure that Council members abide by the Brent Members’ Code of Conduct, Planning Code of Practice and Licensing Code of Practice.

 

It has become public knowledge (see: https://wembleymatters.blogspot.com/2023/04/developer-george-irvin-offers-brent.html ) that the principal owner of the George Irvin’s Funfairs business recently offered a gift of free use of his funfair at Roe Green Park on 21 and 22 April 2023 to Brent councillors, ‘along with family and friends’. I’m attaching a true copy of the blind-copied email of 14 April, containing this offer, in case you have not seen it.

 

As there is at least one application to the Council, from George Irvin or a company he effectively controls, which councillors are likely to have to decide within the next few months, I believe that the Council needs to be pro-active in dealing with the implications of this gift. 

 

I will set out my views on this (as a retired public servant, formerly in a role where integrity and fairness were at the heart of my responsibilities), and offer some suggestions / recommendations. I will number these, and put them in bold type, and would ask that you consider these, please, and respond to me on them.

 

The email to Brent councillors, from the Senior Manager at Irvin Leisure, does not contain the “usual” offer (to use George Irvin’s description from his response to the blog article) of ‘£10 of tokens to all the councillors that can be given to anyone including charities’. 

 

Instead, it says: ‘we would like to invite you along with family and friends to our Funfair free of charge as I will arrange tickets for you all.’ In order to obtain those tickets, councillors are told: ‘Do confirm to George direct if you wish to attend’, and are given George Irvin’s personal email and mobile phone contact details.

 

What is being offered is clearly ‘a gift or hospitality’, in their capacity as a member, likely to be covered by para. 31(c) of the Brent Members’ Code of Conduct, subject to the value threshold.

 

1. I would strongly suggest that, in order to ensure that all councillors comply with para. 31(c), you write to all members of the Council and require them to notify you if they accepted free tickets for George Irvin’s funfair at Roe Green Park this month. If they did, they should advise you, as Monitoring Officer, of how many free visits they made to the funfair, and how many family members and/or friends also used free tickets to the funfair on 21 or 22 April. As required by para. 31(c), they should also advise you of what they believe was the value of the gift they received.

 

I’ve suggested that you require all members who took advantage of George Irvin’s gift to notify you, as they could easily underestimate the value of the gift, especially if they had family or friends with them. As shown on the poster which formed part of the email, entrance to the funfair was £2 per person. Tokens for rides were 10 tokens for £10, but as the very small print underneath states: ‘number of tokens per ride varies’. 

 

Roe Green Park is my local park, and as I was walking through it on 21 April, looking through the fencing around the funfair, signs were showing 3, 4 or 5 tokens per attraction (some of the big “thrill” rides may have been even more), or the same amount in £s if paying contactless. This was a typical example:

 


 

2. I would suggest that a reasonable approximate value, per person per visit to the funfair, to be applied when calculating the value of the free funfair gift from George Irvin or his company, should be treated as at least £25 (unless a councillor can provide details of which rides etc. he/she and their family and friends went on, and the number of tokens for each). As the rides were being provided ‘free of charge’, they are more likely to have been taken advantage of than if those enjoying them had to pay £4 or £5 for each ride, for each person.

 

The planning application I referred to above is 22/4128, seeking to demolish two houses in Barham Park (actual address 776-778 Harrow Road, Wembley), and replace them with four 3-storey houses. The applicant is Zenastar Properties Ltd, owned by members of the Irvin family. Although George Irvin is not shown as a director of that company, the architects drawing up the plans submitted in support of the application had no doubt that the client they were acting for was George Irvin, as shown by this example:

 

 

There may be other planning, or licensing, applications to Brent Council by companies which George Irvin is either a director of, or where other members of his family are directors but he still has a controlling interest. In view of this, it is important that all councillors who accepted the offer of funfair tickets, free of charge, are identified, and that the ‘gift or hospitality’ they received from George Irvin or Irvin Leisure is recorded in their Register of Interests on the Council’s website at the earliest opportunity.

 

3. I would recommend that you advise any councillor who has received such a gift that they have a ‘personal interest in any matter being considered by the Council’ under para. 32 of the Brent Members’ Code of Conduct. And that, as a result, they should not take part in considering and deciding any planning or licensing application, or any other matter involving George Irvin or any company over which he may exert some control, including planning application 22/4128.

 

The second part of the sentence in the 14 April email to councillors (‘Do confirm to George direct if you wish to attend as many other Councillors will be attending’) gives the impression that George Irvin or Irvin Leisure may already have made the offer of free tickets personally to ‘other Councillors’, and that they have already accepted that offer.

 

If correct, that implies that Mr Irvin or his companies may already have had a business or personal relationship with some Council members. I was already aware of a rumour, mentioned in a comment on an online article about the offer, that George Irvin had ‘attended the wedding of at least one senior councillor's offspring.’ This gives rise to the possibility that George Irvin could be considered a ‘friend’ of one or more, possibly senior, Brent councillors, which would make him a ‘connected person’ of the councillor(s) under para. 30 of the Brent Members’ Code of Conduct.

 

4. I would strongly suggest that in writing to all councillors (under 1. above), you require them to disclose to you any other contacts or meetings, business or personal relationships, they have had with George Irvin, or members of his family. If any such relationships are disclosed, you should consider whether these amount to George Irvin being a ‘friend’, or ‘person with whom [the councillor] has a close association’. If that is the case, you should advise the councillor that Mr Irvin must be treated as a connected person, they should not take part in considering or deciding any matter involving George Irvin, or any company over which he may exert some control.

 

This may become particularly important if planning application 22/4128, or any subsequent application in respect of 776-778 Harrow Road, were to be approved. Mr Irvin, or Zenastar Properties Ltd, could potentially make a large profit if they were able to replace the existing two (former park keepers’) homes with four new homes. But to be able to build four homes on the site, they would need to remove the covenant which restricts the site to two homes, and possibly to acquire a small extra piece of the Barham Park land.

 

Any change to, or removal of, the covenant, or any sale of land, would require a decision of the Barham Park Trust Committee. 

 

5. I would strongly suggest that any member of that Committee who has either accepted the offer of free rides at the Roe Green Park funfair, or any other George Irvin or Irvin Leisure funfair, or has had any relationship with Mr Irvin or any of his companies, other than a purely business one in their role as a councillor or Cabinet member, should be barred from involvement in any decision of the Committee relating to that covenant and/or any sale of land in Barham Park. Even if the relationship might not meet the para. 30 threshold, in the circumstances of this matter ‘a member of the public knowing the facts would reasonably regard it as so significant that it is likely to prejudice [the member’s] judgement of the public interest’, under para. 34 of the Brent Members’ Code of Conduct.

 

As you are aware, the Barham Park Trust Committee is currently treated as a sub-committee of Brent’s Cabinet, and ‘comprises 5 members of the Cabinet appointed by the Cabinet.’ This Committee is ‘responsible for the trustee functions in relation to the Barham Park Trust.’ But the Trustee is the London Borough of Brent, which holds Barham Park ‘on trust to preserve the same for the recreation of the public.’

 

One of those who commented on the blog article which made public the offer, of free funfair rides to councillors, wrote: ‘why can’t residents be on the Barham Park Trust Commitee to ensure our park is protected?’ That is a good question. Is there any good reason why the Committee should be the sole preserve of self-appointed members of Brent’s Cabinet?

 

6. I would recommend that the question of the membership of, and voting rights at meetings of, the Barham Park Trust Committee is the subject of an independent review, possibly under the auspices of one of Brent’s Scrutiny committees. The independent review should be allowed to make recommendations, which would initially be considered by the relevant Scrutiny Committee, and that Committee could place its final recommendations, if any, before a meeting of Brent’s Full Council.

 

Finally, in the interests of transparency, I should say that I was one of many objectors to a previous planning application in respect of 776-778 Harrow Road. As a result of this, I received a letter on 18 April 2023 from Brent’s Planning and Development Services, headed ‘PLANNING APPLICATION - THIS MAY AFFECT YOU.’ It advised me of application 22/4128, and said that if I wished to make comments on it, I should do so by 9 May. I have not yet had time to consider the application documents properly, so have not yet decided on any comment I might make.

 

I look forward to receiving you full response to the six suggestions / recommendations I have made, once you have had chance to consider and follow-up on them.

 

Yours sincerely,


Philip Grant.