Tonight's Planning Committee will decide on the planning application from the London Welsh School to take over the Bowling Green Pavilion and build an adjacent single storey classroom in King Edward VII Park. The application is supported by planning officers and the Council has gone to considerable lengths in smoothing the application's passage, even to the extent of putting S106 money aside for landscaping of the bowling green which is next to the proposed school.
This is in stark contrast to the obstructiveness of the council regarding Stonebridge Adventure Playground which is also due to be displaced from the Stonebridge site to make room for the expansion of Stonebridge Primary School and the building of new houses. They have been offered no help at all to find a new site and Cllr McLellan made an untrue statement to the local paper suggesting that the Playground had refused an alternative site.
It is not to disparage the Welsh School, which I admire, to point out that it has 30 pupils whilst hundreds of Stonebridge and Harlesden children from many schools, use the Adventure Playground particularly
at holiday times and weekends when other facilities are not open.
The motivation behind this is a mystery to me.
At the same time it is worth considering the precedent of giving an approval to the building of a school in the park, albeit a small one, when there are extant free school proposals elsewhere in the borough, one of which, Gladstone, proposed to building on playing fields next to Gladstone Park.
Looking at the papers for tonight it appears that the officers' despite being reminded of the Qiueen Elizabath II Fields in Trust Agreement
LINK have not fully informed committee members of the content of the agreement it. Instead they have merely stated that negotiations about that would be a separate process. They do not warn the Committee that in addition to the S106 costs of landscaping the bowling green that Fields In Trust may seek financial investment from the Council in the remainder of the park.
The Trust said:
I can confirm that Brent Council did submit a
formal request to Fields in Trust with regards to granting a lease on the
disused bowls pavilion area to the London Welsh Language primary school on a 15
year term, and in addition to erect a single storey classroom block and convert
the paved hard landscape area to an all weather playground.
We were
advised that the bowling green and Pavilion are unused and the area fenced off,
furthermore there was no bowls interest.
I can confirm that the Council’s request was
rejected by our Trustees in January 2015 because the site is protected for
recreational purposes and the proposed new use would be outside the objects of
the Deed of Dedication. In order for the matter to even be reconsidered
by our Trustees the Council would need to offer up for protection a replacement
site of at least the size of the land being lost or provide a payment which is
to be made available for investment in the facilities within the remainder of
the site. To date we have not received a revised application, which I
believe would only be forthcoming should planning consent be granted."
60 local residents have indicated to the Council that they would be interested in resurrecting the Bowling Club but the Council gets round that by saying that they are prepared to subsidise existing clubs but not a new one.
Can you talk about 'even playing fields' regarding bowling?
Suggestions that Collins Lodge could become a school building, initially claimed to be unsuitable, are now answered with the statement that the Council wants to retain the currently empty Lodge as a possible cafe/toilets in the future. The barely used dilapidated space next to the Lodge is claimed to be needed by Veolia.
The Friends of King Eddie's Park petition has been signed by all three Preston Ward Labour councillors, Sam Stopp (Wembley Central), Cllr Wilhemena Mitchelll-Murray (Wembley Central) and Ernest Ezeajughi (Stonebridge).
The application is the first item on the Agenda after formalities. The meeting begins at 7pm at the Civic Centre (Conference Hall).