Thursday, 28 May 2015
Housing and anti-gentrification campaigns are building up all over London
Labels:
campaigns,
gentrification,
housing,
residents,
social housing,
tenants
Shakira Martin of NUS (FE) on 'Proper, proper, proper solidarity'
Labels:
austerity,
further education,
NUS,
Shakira Martin,
soldiarity
Wednesday, 27 May 2015
Natalie Bennett: Don't Get Angry - Get Active!
Natalie Bennett, leader of the Green Party, was speaking at the demonstration marking the Conservative Government's Queen's Speech, at Downing Street today.
Earlier Caroline Lucas had given her intial reaction to the Queen's Speech:
Regeneration and Gentrification in South Kilburn
Following his recent guest blog about South Kilburn, Pete Firmin, took me on a tour of the estate and talked about some of the issues confronting residents. In particular we discussed the HS2 vent which HS2 want to site on a carpark next to Queens Park Bakerloo and Overground station but which Brent Council wants to site next to St Mary's Catholic Primary School.
It is estimated that the building the vent will take 6 years and at the construction peak will necessitate 187 truck trips into the site and then 187 out again.
It is not clear that people moving into the new flats have been made aware of the disruption that awaits them.
In this video Pete highlights the issues:
It is estimated that the building the vent will take 6 years and at the construction peak will necessitate 187 truck trips into the site and then 187 out again.
It is not clear that people moving into the new flats have been made aware of the disruption that awaits them.
In this video Pete highlights the issues:
Labels:
Brent Council,
gentrification,
HS2,
residents,
South Kilburn,
St Mary's Primary School,
tenants,
tunnel,
vent. Queen's Park
Tuesday, 26 May 2015
Kenton Conservatives confirmed as official opposition on Brent Council
It appeared that there might be further consideration of which of the Conservative groups to recognise as the principal opposition during the pretty confusing Annual General Meeting Council meeting on May 20th and resolution before the General Purposes Committee on May 27th was mentioned. A constitutional working party was mentioned.
However I have today confirmed with Council officers that no additional business has been added to the GP Committee agenda for tomorrow which is below:
However I have today confirmed with Council officers that no additional business has been added to the GP Committee agenda for tomorrow which is below:
1 Declarations of personal and prejudicial interests
Members are invited to declare at this stage of the meeting, any relevant financial or other interest in the items on this agenda.
2 Minutes of the previous meeting
3 Matters arising
4 Deputations (if any)
5 Representation of Political Groups on Committees
At its meeting on 20 May 2015 the Council reviewed the representation of political groups on its main committees. As soon as practicable after such a review, those committees are required to conduct a review of the representation of political groups on any sub-committees they may have. This report sets out the rules to be applied during the course of the review.
6 Appointments to Sub-Committees / Outside Bodies7 Pensions Board membership
The committee will consider nominations for membership of the Pensions Board and a recommendation from officers to appoint an independent Chair.
8 Any other urgent business
The officer stated:
I have not been notified at this time of any other urgent business to be considered at this meeting. I can also confirm that the principal opposition party was agreed at the annual council meeting on 20 May as the Conservative Group, comprising Cllrs Kansagra, Colwill and Maurice.
Brent want Welsh Harp kept open as Environmental Education Centre
Brent Council has responded to my message regarding the Welsh Harp Environmental Education Centre. Although they have not answered all my questions they did state:
The Centre is required to be subject to a formal Community Asset Transfer process, which must be an open marketing of the facility. Please see the council’s statement on the matter below -Councillor Eleanor Southwood, Lead Member for Environment at Brent Council said:
“Although the Centre was due to close following Council budget savings, we have been making strong efforts to ensure that it can continue as a community facility.“To allow this to happen, we must go through a formal process which involves marketing the facility in an open and transparent way.“We are committed to helping keep the Centre open as an environmental education centre and we will favour bids which show that they can do this.”
Labels:
budget savings,
Community Asset Transfer,
Eleanor Southwood,
marketing,
Welsh Harp Environmental Education Centre
Sufra Foodbank call for support for #FoodParcelChallenge
From Sufra North West London
If you’ve been feasting with family and friends over the Bank holiday weekend, have some pity on the 20 or so volunteers who started the #FoodParcelChallenge yesterday.
Last Sunday, Councillor Roxanne Mashari, Brent Council’s Lead Member for Employment & Skills, turned up at the food bank, alongside 22 other families in need and many volunteers, to pick up a food parcel for the start of the challenge. Together, we’re pledging to live on a typical food parcel for 5 days to raise awareness of food poverty in Brent and fundraise for Sufra NW London’s food bank.
The last financial year witnessed a 62% increase in the number of food parcels delivered, serving 3,858 people of whom more than two-thirds were unique users.
You can check out Councillor Roxanne Mashari’s daily blog on her experiences of taking part in the #FoodParcelChallenge here. Although I’m not sure I agree with her comments on Pea & Mint Soup!
The #FoodParcelChallenge seems easier that it looks. But it only hits you when you’re rummaging through the bags to see what’s for dinner. Yesterday, I had black coffee for breakfast and a biscuit, a can of baked beans for lunch and boiled rice for dinner with a tin of chick peas. And there wasn’t much of it either. You can follow our pangs of hunger and unrepentant rant on Twitter and Facebook.
But we need your help, to keep serving families in poverty and provide them with wholesome, healthy food during their time of crisis. Please support the team and sponsor us here.
The #FoodParcelChallenge will end with The Big Lunch on St. Raphael’s Estate, sponsored by Halifax and Daniel’s Estate Agents, on Saturday 30 May 2015. They’ll be a free barbecue, snacks and milkshakes, plus lots of entertainment. My mouth is watering just thinking about it!
£1,000 FOR YOUR VOTE
Yes, you have until Saturday, to help us win £1,000 from the Aviva Community Fund to set up a food growing project on St. Raphael’s Estate. This will help us provide fresh fruit and vegetables at the food bank and provide new volunteering and learning opportunities for the local community.
I’m not one to keep to my 5 a day, but now that I’m doing the #FoodParcelChallenge, I would die for a carrot. Even a tomato, and I hate tomatoes.
All you have to do is click here, create a login, and give us 10 votes. Now that’s not too much to ask for, is it? We need 5,000 votes, and we’re only half-way there.
Deadline is Saturday. Do it now.
If you’ve been feasting with family and friends over the Bank holiday weekend, have some pity on the 20 or so volunteers who started the #FoodParcelChallenge yesterday.
Last Sunday, Councillor Roxanne Mashari, Brent Council’s Lead Member for Employment & Skills, turned up at the food bank, alongside 22 other families in need and many volunteers, to pick up a food parcel for the start of the challenge. Together, we’re pledging to live on a typical food parcel for 5 days to raise awareness of food poverty in Brent and fundraise for Sufra NW London’s food bank.
The last financial year witnessed a 62% increase in the number of food parcels delivered, serving 3,858 people of whom more than two-thirds were unique users.
You can check out Councillor Roxanne Mashari’s daily blog on her experiences of taking part in the #FoodParcelChallenge here. Although I’m not sure I agree with her comments on Pea & Mint Soup!
The #FoodParcelChallenge seems easier that it looks. But it only hits you when you’re rummaging through the bags to see what’s for dinner. Yesterday, I had black coffee for breakfast and a biscuit, a can of baked beans for lunch and boiled rice for dinner with a tin of chick peas. And there wasn’t much of it either. You can follow our pangs of hunger and unrepentant rant on Twitter and Facebook.
But we need your help, to keep serving families in poverty and provide them with wholesome, healthy food during their time of crisis. Please support the team and sponsor us here.
The #FoodParcelChallenge will end with The Big Lunch on St. Raphael’s Estate, sponsored by Halifax and Daniel’s Estate Agents, on Saturday 30 May 2015. They’ll be a free barbecue, snacks and milkshakes, plus lots of entertainment. My mouth is watering just thinking about it!
£1,000 FOR YOUR VOTE
Yes, you have until Saturday, to help us win £1,000 from the Aviva Community Fund to set up a food growing project on St. Raphael’s Estate. This will help us provide fresh fruit and vegetables at the food bank and provide new volunteering and learning opportunities for the local community.
I’m not one to keep to my 5 a day, but now that I’m doing the #FoodParcelChallenge, I would die for a carrot. Even a tomato, and I hate tomatoes.
All you have to do is click here, create a login, and give us 10 votes. Now that’s not too much to ask for, is it? We need 5,000 votes, and we’re only half-way there.
Deadline is Saturday. Do it now.
Labels:
Aviva Community Fund,
councillor,
foodbank,
Roxanne Mashari,
St Raphael's. edible garden,
Sufra
Brent shows - again - how little it cares for South Kilburn
Demonstration outside the school |
Guest blog by Pete Firmin, South Kilburn resident
On Friday 22nd May, pupils, parents teachers and local residents held a
protest at the gates of St. Mary’s Catholic Primary School in South Kilburn
against the proposal from Brent Council that the `ventilation shaft’ for HS2 be
sited right next to the school and close to flats.
Apparently such ventilation shafts are necessary at certain distances along
the line in order to get rid of the air pushed in front of the speeding trains,
otherwise they would slow the trains down. Such vent shafts are not a small
thing, being usually about 25 m by 25 m and 2 storeys high – the size of a small
block of flats. Such an enterprise is calculated to take up to 6 years building
work, involving movement of over a hundred lorries a day to and from the
affected area at peak times, with the association noise, disruption and
dust..
HS2’s current proposal is that this be sited close to Queen’s Park station,
but Brent Council is pressing that it be on the Canterbury Works site next to St
Mary’s school instead. Some studies suggest a ventilation shaft is not essential
at either site.
Brent Council’s proposal ignores the pleas from local residents and school
staff and users and is putting its regeneration scheme above any concern for the
health and wellbeing of students and residents. They have the support of Queens
Park residents in this, who feel the vent shaft would be a “blight” on their
community, despite the disruption and siting being much further from their homes
and schools than is proposed for South Kilburn. As so often, South Kilburn is
seen as the dumping ground for things that Brent and its middle classes regard
as `undesirable’.
The issue of Brent and HS2 has a background. The local Tenants and
Residents Association has been asking Brent Council about HS2 and how it will
affect us for years, ever since we discovered it is due to run underneath (or
very close to) our flats. Unfortunately, unlike Camden, Brent Council didn’t
seem to be looking at this at all, its only comments being that HS2 offered
great `business opportunities’ for Old Oak Common. Even when we got letters from
HS2 saying they may want to Compulsorily Purchase our properties we got no
support from Brent. We’ve all had at least 2 such letters now, and, despite our
urging, Brent Council appears to have done nothing to get proper answers from
HS2 on this. Some people have been told verbally that this is just something
that HS2 has to do and they will not be wanting to CPO our properties, but we
have never had such a commitment from HS2 in writing.
Then, despite us asking for years that Brent take up our concerns and
nothing happening, we discovered from a third party that a report on HS2 was due
to go to Brent Council in March last year. This was the first we knew
about proposals about the siting of the vent shaft, when the report argued for
its siting in South Kilburn rather than next to Queens Park station. We asked
that we be allowed to address the Council when it discussed the report, but this
was refused. Instead we were given a commitment that our concerns would be taken
on board. Given our concerns included opposition to the Council’s push for the
vent shaft site to be adjacent to the school and our flats, this was clearly not
the case.
Then this year we saw by chance an email from a Council officer to one of
our Councillors which said “HS2, we continue to lobby for this
to be relocated from the Council owned site at Salusbury Road car park to the
rear of Canterbury Works. Various professional studies have been commissioned
which support this Full Council approved stance and have been recently submitted
to HS2 for their consideration.”
Around the same time the headteacher of St Mary's school came away from a
meeting with HS2 and Council officers convinced the vent shaft was going to be
put next to the school. Soon after leaflets were put through our doors
campaigning against the vent shaft being sited there. This came from people
associated with the school, and since then they have had a meeting for all
parents, produced petitions and initiated the protest outside the school.
Local residents support the opposition from school users to the siting of
the shaft here, but there is an added complication. The leaflets put through
every door and the drive behind the school campaign come from a PR company
employed by the property developers building luxury flats (no social housing) at
Canterbury House (also next to the school and a block of flats) and property
developers hoping to build a ten-storey block of flats on the Canterbury Works
site (currently a vehicle repair site, and the site where Brent wants the vent
shaft site to be).
Many of us are opposed to both the siting of the vent shaft
next to the school and our flats and ANY further development of the site. We
think that having been living on the middle of a regeneration building site for
the last 3 years (with the myriad of complaints that has involved, about which
Brent has done nothing), we should have respite from any further development and
the disruption, noise and dirt involved. Added to which, the Canterbury House
development is luxury flats only (advertised as in Queens Park, even though in
the middle of South Kilburn), and development on the Canterbury Works would
probably be similar, or at the very least the low proportion of social housing
we are now seeing in SK `regeneration’), this would only add to what we have
called the `social cleansing’ taking place with regeneration. SK is also already
one of the most densely populated parts of Brent. We have lost some our little
green space through regeneration, we would like to get some back rather than
further development. So, as well as opposing the siting of the vent shaft here,
we would oppose planning permission for further flats on the site too. Some of
us joined the protest outside the school with placards opposing both the HS2
vent shaft and the property developers.
Just to be clear, the PR company’s employee working with the school put on
the “No to HS2 at Canterbury Works” Facebook page “We do not want to see a ventilation shaft at
Canterbury Works, we are protecting the interests of Canterbury House and a
ventilation shaft would be detrimental to this development and to its future
residents who will be part of the South Kilburn community.” Protecting the
interests of Canterbury House means the property developers, it couldn’t be more
explicit. Future residents seem to take precedence over current ones too. When they started work on
Canterbury House (the building has been empty for years, even though planning
permission was obtained some time ago), they knew that HS2 was going through the
area and people had been served with potential CPO orders. Our belief was that
they were hoping for maximum compensation (unlike us!) and that was why they
pressed ahead.
We are hoping we can have one united campaign
involving both school and local residents against the siting of the vent shaft
here. There does seem to be an attempt to keep us at arms length from the school
campaign, given our critical stance.
As
so often, Brent Council has spent years ignoring the concerns of local residents
and is now intent on pressing HS2 to trample on the interests of both school
pupils and residents.
Labels:
Brent Council,
Canterbury Works,
CPO,
HS2,
Pete Firmin,
Queens Park,
South Kilburn,
St Mary's Catholic Primary,
vent shaft
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