This Guest Post is the view of the authors and not necessarily that of Wembley Matters. Guest Post by SKPPRA (South Kenton Preston Park Residents' Association).
Yesterday the UN Secretary General of the UN
António Guterres told humanity at the COP26 conference in Glasgow - ‘We face
a stark choice: either we stop [the addiction] or it stops us’.
Here in Wembley Brent Council gave an instant
response to the UN that afternoon when contractors for the Council started work
on the climate destroying redevelopment of the Preston Library site. In the
words of Mr. Guterres - Brent Council have decided not to stop climate
destruction but to stop us!
The library development is a
disaster for the climate and for our local community which has fought for so
long to retain a library use at the site. The local community strongly opposed
the development in 90% of the responses made to Brent Council in the
pre-application consultations and in the town planning process. The proposed
development reduces community use at the site, overlooks and impacts on the
amenity and privacy of the adjoining owners, and was found by the High Court in
two separate Judicial Reviews to be contrary to the requirements of the Local
Plan.
Brent Council was only able to avoid
the quashing of the planning consent for a second time by invoking The Senior
Courts Act – a Thatcher Government statute designed to limit individual and
community involvement in local government decisions. The present Council, it
appears has strong addictions not only to climate abuse but to the methods of
its political opponents back as far as Mrs. Thatcher in the 1980s.
SKPPRA (South Kenton Preston Park
Residents Association) and the residents living next to the Preston Library
Site in Wembley have for more than three years sought to plot a better course
for the community, the site and for the planet.
Brent Council proposes to demolish
the existing Preston Library building and to build a new library on the same
site a few metres away from the existing building. Residents know this is unsustainable
and a climate destroying development. The proposal results in an avoidable
emission of six hundred tonnes (600tCO2e) calculated using the ICE database
at https://circularecology.com/ for the demolition and rebuild of
the library building.
To mitigate these emissions
ten-thousand trees (one third of the street trees in Brent) need to be planted
and mature for ten years to offset the avoidable emissions in the library
development. Brent to be carbon neutral by 2030?
The Community’s initiative not only
saves the building and the planet, but avoids the emissions caused by the
development, retains the trees destroyed by the Council, and avoids disruption
to the underground river - Crouch Brook at the site.
The initiative is a response to the consequences
of climate change, the recent floods in the area, and to Brent Council’s
Climate Emergency Declaration (July 2019) which says that the Council will work
with residents ‘every step of the way’
to make the borough carbon neutral by 2030.
Community Proposal for Preston
Library site with the retention of existing library (yellow), trees and new
housing (grey). The existing library is demolished in the Brent Council Scheme
to form a car park.
The UN IPCC report (9th
August 2021) advised that this was the last report where there was still a
chance to take emergency action to avert a climate disaster. The SKPPRA
community and Brent Council know the critical ‘every step’ and ‘emergency
action’ now means the immediate retention of the existing Preston Library
building.
The Council Leader noting the publication of the IPCC
report said
‘we can change
our wasteful consumption of finite resources,
.. we can cease to be a drain on this exceptional and priceless
planet…. To do nothing is to condemn ourselves and our descendants to
untold misery and chaos. This is a climate emergency, we must act now’.
For five years however Councillor Butt has
refused to consider or respond to detailed objections to the development and refused
to look at the alternative proposal or even take any step of the way
with residents.
Referring this hypocrisy to the Mayor of
London, to central Government Departments,
to Barry Gardiner the local MP, and to Kier Starmer (Leader of Councillor Butt’s
party) received no response other than the advice that avoiding the effects of
climate change - was a ‘local matter.’ The UN Secretary General doesn’t agree.
Residents have invested time and resources in
preparing an alternative proposal to save a valuable community resource and to
prevent climate change.
In contrast - the Council has failed to apply
its own policies on sustainable development, refused to explain or publish the
cost of the development, and refused to consider any alternative proposals as
promised in the Council’s own Climate Emergency Declaration.
Unfortunately, we live in Wembley but not on
Councillor Butt’s exceptional and priceless planet.