Saturday, 2 February 2013
Tanks at Brent Town Hall on Monday?
Action now would enable a new leader to take over before the final decisions are made on the 2013-14 budget with controversies remaining over the level of Council Tax, the London Living Wage and departmental budgets.
As I write it seems that the threat to Butt's has diminished slightly over the last few days but the arithmetic is very tight. He defeated Ann John by only one vote last May so in theory it only requires one vote to switch.
Rather than a left/right division it appears that this is almost a generation split with reports that the move has been spearheaded by a senior councillor and ex-member of the Executive who had a reputation as a left-winger in the 1980s.
During his period in office Muhammed Butt has promoted younger councillors such as Krupesh Hirani and Michael Pavey and built up a team of younger supporters whilst at the same time retaining the support of some Labour heavyweights.
As Brent Town Hall witnesses the last of its dramas (or will it all fizzle out?) the new Civic Centre awaits the triumphant entrance of the Leader.
Watch this space...
Meanwhile the battle for the Labour nomination for parliamentary candidate for Brent Central is hotting up with up to six names in the hat according to reliable sources. Cllrs Val Kalwala, Choudry and Mashari have all been mentioned. The latter would benefit if Labour decides on an all-woman short-list and she would be pitted against Dawn Butler.
Brent Council Tax unchanged but rents increase in 2013-14 budget
The new approach to social housing is explicit in the report's comment from the Brent Housing Partnership:
BHP agrees with the recommendation to increase rents on average by 3.74%. We recognise that this will place an additional financial burden on the 32% of Brent Council tenants that are currently are not in receipt of housing benefit. However BHP recognises that Brent is now operating a self financing housing business and that this increase is necessary to ensure the success of the Council's business plan.
Labels:
Brent Council,
Brent Housing Partnership,
council tax,
Hillside Housing Trust,
rent,
Stonebridge
Friday, 1 February 2013
Willesden Green regeneration: 'Never mind the deadline, let's make a decision'
Brent Planning Committee is to consider the planning application for
the Willesden Green Cultural Centre on February 13th despite the Public
Inquiry for the Willesden Town Centre continuing until February 14th.
This is also the final date for submissions on the planning application.
The
Council get over this little problem by recommending that the Committee
(which is supposed to be independent of the Council) grant consent in
principle and delegate the final decision to the Deputy Director of
Planning and Development who will make the decision:
(a) taking into account any further representations received on or before the 14th February 2013;and for the conservation area consent:
(b) any direction by the Mayor of London to refuse the application. In accordance with Article 5 of the Town & Country Planning (Mayor of London) Order 2008 following the Council’s determination of this application, the Mayor is allowed 14 days to decide whether to allow the draft decision to proceed unchanged or direct the Council under Article 6 to refuse the application;
(c) Satisfactory prior completion of a Section 106(s) under the Town & Country Planning Act 1990 and/or other form(s) of agreement/undertaking in order to secure the S106 matters as detailed in this report
(b) any direction by the National Planning Casework Unit, the Secretary of State having considered the matter, to refuse the applicationThe planning application reports can be read on the Keep Willesden Green blog HERE
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