Monday, 3 November 2014
Farewell to Myron Jobson of the Kilburn Times
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| Myron Jobson |
He is joining the Financial Times to to work on features, mainly for one of its supplements.
Myron's recent series of articles on the campaign to save Stonebridge Adventure Playground has shown committed local journalism at its best.
It is a big leap into another world and I wish him well.
Mysterious Brent Full Council Meeting change may have unintended consequences
This is the rather terse statement on the Brent Council website announcing the very unusual change in the meeting of Full Council.
Peter Goss gave me rather fuller information just before his office closed on Friday:
However, this raises rather more questions than it answers.Councillors have this afternoon been notified that the Full Council meeting on 17 November has been moved to 8 December in order that the outcome of the consultation on the borough plan can be considered as part of the 1st reading of the budget. The web site has been amended to reflect this change.
1. Who made the decision and under which provision of the Brent Constitution?
2. When the Council has a carefully constructed Forward Plan how was this major item missed in the calendar?
3. With the Borough Plan consultation not closing until Friday November 28th, how will it be possible for the Brent officers to compile a report for Full Council in just 5 working days?
I remain sceptical about the reasons for this decision.
One consequence of the three week delay is that some councillors may be caught in the six month rule. This disqualifies councillors from office if they have not attended a council meeting, which they are expected to attend, in a six month period.
Unless some special dispensation is granted, or councillors presently not on a committee are drafted on to a committee that meets before November 24th, there appear to be three councillors who face disqualification as a result of the postponement.
These are John Duffy (Kilburn), Zaffar Van Kalwala (Stonebridge) and Ahmad Shahzad (Mapesbury).
This may (or may not) be an unintended consequence of the postponement decision but it would be absurd, and expensive, if as a result of the postponement three by-elections are triggered.
Labels:
Ahmad Shahzad,
Brent Council,
Constitution,
Full Council,
John Duffy,
postponement,
Zaffar Van Kalwala
Sunday, 2 November 2014
Scott Bartle launches positive campaign to win Brent North for the Greens
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| Scott Bartle |
Scott holds registration as a positive behaviour
psychologist and works within the NHS. He lives in Mapesbury Ward Brent,
where he stood as Green candidate in the 2014 local elections and gained 8% -
one of the highest results for an individual Green Party candidate in the
constituency.
Explaining his decision to stand Scott said:
As a Cornishman raised in one of the most deprived areas of the UK and Europe I am acutely aware of the human impact that poverty can have as detailed in the ‘horror’ statistics. It was no surprise that the regional areas of Britain were increasingly turning away from the three main parties as they have experienced neglect since Thatcher, perpetuated by Blair, and continued by the coalition.
It was also no surprise that in Brent, one of the most deprived areas of London, we have people turning away from the UK government and mistakenly thinking that their values are represented by elements in Syria. When people are alienated from the society they live in, there is only so far that they can be pushed. It’s been said that the apocalypse won’t come like lightning, but gradually like a fog. Mostly, successive governments have managed to avoid the ire of the public in perpetuating the agenda of their corporate donors but the fog is starting to become visible around us.
Whilst this fog may be pollution, as our government is being taken to court by the EU for London’s poor air quality - we know only the Greens will protect our environment.
When Labour started the erosion of civil liberties and now the Tories pledge to repeal Human Rights legislation – we need the Greens to lead the resistance.
When Labour sought to channel public money out of the NHS through Private Finance Initiatives that we are still paying now – we need a Green to look at the long term.
As studies reveal 50% of people receiving social care in Brent feel unsafe, we need to stop allowing private equity companies to funnel profits off-shore when they’re failing in their primary duty – Greens care.
When our foreign policy, rendered inconsistent by our colonial past is still causing conflict across the world and giving cause to recruit people from our own communities – we need a Green to challenge that.
When the economic policy of ‘austerity’ advocated by Conservatives and Lib-Dems is an irreconcilable failure and Labour pledge to continue it - the fog envelopes us.
Nobody actually wants all of this – it’s why it is vital we look for an alternative.
As Parliamentary Candidate for Brent North I will seek to highlight that Greens can provide something for people to vote FOR, rather than against – a real choice.
Through saying YES to Human Rights, YES to a consistent foreign policy, YES to Economic Change, YES to Public Services, YES to Environmental Action, YES to Green Jobs we are saying YES to a sustainable future for people, nature and wildlife worldwide
Labels:
Brent North,
General Election Green Party,
NHS,
Scott Bartle,
social care,
Syria
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