Tuesday, 5 November 2019
Protest to save Roe Green infants-Strathcona jobs 4pm tonight Brent Civic Centre
Cllr Butt addresses staff and parents at an earlier demonstration against closure |
To ensure that jobs are not loss NEU members will be demonstrating outside Brent Civic Centre at 4pm today.
Gail Tolley told a meeting of Chairs and Vice Chairs of governors last week that at least two neighbouring boroughs were closing primary schools due to falling pupil numbers and several primary schools in Brent that had expanded with new build were now going to reduce their numbers by one form of entry.
Labels:
Brent Council,
NEU,
redundancies,
Roe Green infants,
Strathcona
Friday, 1 November 2019
The Impact of Air Pollution on Children's Health - Clean Air for Brent meeting November 12th
From Clear Air for Brent
As you hopefully know by now we are holding an exciting public meeting at Queens Park Community School on Tuesday 12th November 7.30-9.30pm with a really strong variety of speakers. It is also our AGM and we are inviting members to stand for the steering group.
There is a particular vacancy for someone who would like to up our social media profile, though we would love to hear from anyone who feels they might have something to offer the group, taking us forward or in different directions. Your energy and enthusiasm will be appreciated. We meet five or six times through the year with email conversations between the meetings. If you would like to stand please email cafbrent@gmail.com as soon as possible and one of us will be in touch to find out what your strengths and interests are.
In the meantime if you are coming to the meeting but have not yet signed up on Eventbrite please do here - it really helps us to know what the numbers will be. A flyer with all the information is also attached
Please do pass this on to your network groups - all are very welcome.
At the meeting we are proud to present some great speakers who will bring a wealth of knowledge and suggest action to be taken:
Dr Ian Mudway of King’s College, London, a leading expert on air pollution and its impact on health and Rosamund Kissi-Debrah, the mother of Ella Roberta, who died aged 9 in 2013 after a severe asthma attack, whilst living next to the South Circular road. The pathologist who carried out her post mortem said it was “one of the worst cases of asthma ever recorded in the UK”. Rosamund is now a passionate campaigner against air pollution and in May 2019 her daughter’s inquest was re-opened. We will also hear from Cllr Thomas Stephens who chairs Brent Council's Air Quality Scrutiny Task Group and Humphrey Milles, a local resident who has been driving a national ad campaign on awareness of pollution issues.
See you on the 12th!
Best,
Clean Air for Brent
Thursday, 31 October 2019
Tuesday, 29 October 2019
Brent Council washes its hands of Delipod Hub
Sunday, 27 October 2019
URGENT: Delipod Hub Monday Deadline -please sign the petition to stop this physical, social & cultural vandalism
A message from the managers of the Delipod Hub
Link to Performance Compilation HERE
Link to Performance Compilation HERE
Hi All, Since we opened the Delipod Hub has attracted artists, artisans, writers and musicians along with customers from toddlers to grannies and the full diversity of cultures for whom Brent is home. Little did we know however that the Delipod Hub was held with such affection until the petition to save it was launched by a local resident’s association only a few days ago.
It has now over 800 signatures and rising, and the voices of support have been spontaneous, many and loud. For your information, we have now signed the lease surrender document as we had built up arrears and were under threat of legal proceedings - this after repeatedly trying to engage with Brent on this issue for well over a year.
I wrote to the local councillors on Friday. I have written again just now stating that we will not start to any significant dismantling of the Hub until Tuesday leaving the option open on Monday for a reconsideration. Perhaps this is too strong, but from the messages of support we’ve received, it’s almost like the Hub’s closure would be an act of physical, social and cultural vandalism.
Seee the one-minute compilation of some of the live music nights held at the Hub – it’s fab. Please do sign and spread the petition: LINK Monday!!!
Thank you, Peter (Billy) & Serena
Labels:
arrears,
Bretn Council,
closure,
Delipod Hub
Local history on show in Kingsbury Road
Guest post by local historian Philip Grant
If you
don’t live in Kingsbury, or visit Kingsbury Road, you may not know that for the
past 18 months the Council has been carrying out “town centre improvements”
there (funded mainly by the GLA). These include new paving, new trees, new
cycle lanes on both sides of the road and extra cycle parking stands for the
station and shopping centre.
As
part of the consultation exercise for the improvements, I suggested that local
history panels (which I offered to design, free of charge) could be provided as
part of the new seating areas. I received no response to this suggestion, until
I mentioned it, several months later, to one of my ward councillors. Then, as
if by magic, it was welcomed as a good idea.
Earlier
this month, after a lot of input and “chasing” on my part since the summer of
2018, four illustrated panels, telling “The Kingsbury Road Story” were fitted
to bench seats along the north side of the road. This document tells you where
you can find them, and gives a taste of what you will discover on each panel.
Click bottom right to enlarge to full size
Click bottom right to enlarge to full size
Does
Kingsbury Road have much of a story? After all, it is just a suburban local
shopping centre, isn’t it?
Well,
most of the buildings you see there today appeared in the 1930’s, and there are
interesting stories behind some of them, but the history of this thoroughfare
goes back a lot further to Kingsbury’s Saxon origins. Its name means “a place
belonging to the King”, and was first recorded in the reign of King Eadwig.
(Never heard of him? He was only King from AD955 to
959!)
You
can see Kingsbury Road on an extract from a map drawn in 1597, shortly after a
wealthy local farmer, John Lyon (founder of Harrow School), gave money to
provide £2 a year for the upkeep of the road – labour (at tuppence a day) was
cheaper then. Putting gravel on the surface during the summer was meant to stop
the road from becoming too muddy during the wetter winter months, and the same
method was still being used by the local Council in 1910, when this photograph
(by a farm near today’s Kingsbury Station) was taken.
The
local history panels bring the story of Kingsbury Road right up to the rich
cultural mix of shops you will find in Kingsbury Road today. The heritage trail
they provide will hopefully guide visitors along the road, from the Kingsbury Station
bus stop to the library (closed for refurbishment from 11 November to 15
December inclusive), which will be one of the venues for the LBOC 2020 “Museum
of All Brent Life”.
I hope
that readers will enjoy “The Kingsbury Road Story”. If so, perhaps they can
suggest other locations in Brent where similar history panels might be
appreciated, and get their local councillors on board, to make the idea a
reality.
Philip Grant.
Labels:
John Lyon,
King Eadwig,
Kingsbury,
Kingsbury Road,
Philip GRant
Saturday, 26 October 2019
Brent Stop the War will join Kashmir protest outside Downing Street on Sunday
Brent Stop the War has issued the following clarification regarding Sunday's Kashmir demonstration:
A well-attended 14th October meeting on PEACE & JUSTICE FOR KASHMIR in the Community Hall at the Cricklewood Mosque, was co-sponsored by Brent Mosque and Brent Stop the War. It was supported by Brent Central Labour Party and Brent & Harrow Palestine Solidarity Campaign.
We agreed to have the Brent Stop the War banner on the demonstration in support of Kashmir on this Sunday (October 27th) assembling outside Downing St from 12.00 noon. There has been some public controversy over this demonstration, its purpose and its destination.
Our meeting heard how the Modi government in India had withdrawn the (limited) autonomy of Kashmir and violently repressed the opposition, ignoring longstanding UN resolutions. It was also made clear that this is neither a Pakistan vs India dispute nor a Hindu/Muslim one, but the right of Kashmiris to self-determination and for a just and peaceful solution to the dispute.
Kashmiris have long protested on October 27th, the date the Indian military entered Kashmir in 1947. In the UK, this is marked with a protest each year outside the Indian High Commission.
With the Hindu festival of Diwali falling on Sunday 27th, some have expressed the view that it would be inappropriate to hold the demonstration. Other claims that the demonstration will cause communal conflict because it coincides with Diwali 2019, could be seen as promoting a view of the Indian High Commission as a Hindu institution, when in fact the Diwali religious festival is not exclusive to India and the country defines itself as secular.
Although It is perfectly normal in a democratic society to protest outside the embassy of a government which breaks international law, out of respect for the celebration of Diwali we will not be going on to the High Commission.
We will join the protest outside 10 Downing St, which has raised no criticism of the actions of the Modi Government.
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