Thursday 18 October 2018
Will skipping reduce fly-tipping?
When I lived in Shepherd's Bush a couple of decades ago the Council used to leave skips in key sites for the collection of bulky items that would be otherwise fly-tipped. It worked pretty well and quite a few items used to disappear overnight as people raided the skip for useful or saleable bits and pieces.
Cllr Butt & Cllr Sheth (see comments) |
Will the skips initiative encourage people to get rid of surplus items they've been keeping in their shed, loft or the cupboard under the stairs?
Will it result in more landfill?
Will it reduce fly-tipping on our streets and open spaces?
This is is the announcement from Brent Council:
Community skips are coming to Brent, as part of a trial providing a new and easy way to help residents get rid of their household junk.
Under Brent Council's Love Where You Live campaign, the community skips will be manned by local residents and will give people the chance to dispose of unwanted household items and learn more about how we can all do our bit to create a cleaner, greener Brent.
Waste such as furniture, garden clippings, small electrical items, recycling and mattresses can be deposited in the skips. Each household can drop off up to five bulky items or five black bags (or a mixture of both) and will be required to bring one form of identification, which can include a drivers licence, council tax or utility bill.
Under the new trial, community skips will be at the following locations over the next six weeks from 8am - midday:
- 20 October 2018 - Townsend Lane, Fryent
- 03 November 2018 - Ken Way, Barnhill (opposite Lidl)
- 17 November 2018 - Shaftesbury Avenue, Kenton (bottom end)
- 01 December 2018 - Essoldo Way, Kingsbury
The community skips are for residents only and no trade waste will be accepted. The skips will not accept the following items:
- Asbestos
- Car tyres
- Fridges / freezers
- Oil / oil drums
- Paint cans
Labels:
Brent Council,
fly-tipping,
lanfdill,
skips
Tuesday 16 October 2018
UPDATE: WEMBLEY STADIUM SALE OFF Big players sideline locals and Brent Council as they tussle over Quintain and Wembley Stadium
The Financial Times reported yesterday that the sale of Quintain by its owner Lone Star is at a stand-off over the price with the area of contention between £2bn and £2.3bn. The Delaney led consortium according to the article has not yet moved into formal talks with Lone Star as discussions over the price continue.
The Delaney Consortium includes Canadian, Quatari and Dutch firms as well as Delaney itself while rival bidders are based in the US and Germany, along with LRC founded by a London-based Israeli investor.
With both Quintain and Wembley Stadium up for sale to big players it feels as if it is not only Brent residents but Brent Council that have been sidelined.
UPDATE: THE FA HAS CALLED OFF THE WEMBLEY STADIUM SALE FOR NOW
The Delaney Consortium includes Canadian, Quatari and Dutch firms as well as Delaney itself while rival bidders are based in the US and Germany, along with LRC founded by a London-based Israeli investor.
With both Quintain and Wembley Stadium up for sale to big players it feels as if it is not only Brent residents but Brent Council that have been sidelined.
UPDATE: THE FA HAS CALLED OFF THE WEMBLEY STADIUM SALE FOR NOW
Labels:
Brent Council,
Delaney,
Lond Star,
Quintain,
Wembley Stadium
Monday 15 October 2018
Caroline Lucas tells Hammond to fully fund teachers' salary increase & reverse per pupil funding cuts
Caroline Lucas MP has written to the Chancellor, Philip Hammond, ahead of the Budget regarding school funding:
Dear Philip,
I
am writing to you ahead of the Budget and following the recent protest
by over 1,000 headteachers about the funding crisis in our schools.
Yesterday
morning I received the ‘Dear Colleague’ letter on school funding from
the Secretary of State of Education about the Department’s use of OECD
figures on education spending. The purpose of the letter appears to be
to rebut the criticism from Sir David Norgrove, Chair of the UK
Statistics Authority, that education ministers have made "exaggerated"
claims that "do not give the full picture" on school funding. You will
be aware of Sir David’s concerns about repeated misuse of statistics,
and the Government’s deliberate distortion of data on the schools
crisis: “…figures were presented in such a way as to misrepresent
changes in school funding. In the tweet, school spending figures were
exaggerated by using a truncated axis, and by not adjusting for per
pupil spend.” [1]
I
am writing to you ahead of the Budget to make it clear that Damian’s
letter has not allayed my concerns, nor those of the headteachers,
staff, parents and children in Brighton Pavilion, and no doubt across
the country. Given that Sir David’s letter specifically raises the key
issue of adjustment for per-pupil spend, it beggars belief that the
letter did not address the Institute for Fiscal Studies finding that
total school spending per pupil fell by 8 per cent in real terms between
2009/10 and 2017/18 [1].
Moreover, the National Audit Office have also identified an 8 per cent
real-terms reduction in per-pupil funding for mainstream schools between
2014/15 and 2019/20 due to cost pressures [2].
It
is vital that the Government reverses the per-pupil funding cuts and
also fully funds the 3.5 per cent pay rise recommended by the School
Teachers Review Body (STRB) for all pay ranges and allowances. Heads are
talking about being forced to make redundancies in order to afford
well-deserved pay rises for their teachers.
Heads,
teachers, teaching assistants, parents and pupils all know the impact
of the cuts. There are particular concerns for children with Special
Educational Needs and Disabilities (SEND). I have received
heart-breaking emails from headteachers for many months. Counselling
services cut, vital SEND support cut or not provided, staff not
replaced, enrichment activities and trips cut back, basic supplies paid
for by charity, repairs not undertaken. To provide just a few examples
of the most recent messages from headteachers in Brighton Pavilion:
“…if it was not for our parents and friends we would not manage”“Already we have had to rely on parent fundraising to update our reading books”“…significant undervaluing of and mean spirited approach to children's education in this country and the totally inadequate funding”"where do I find the money from?... We don't have the money.”“…the building is falling apart, there is no money for trips, enrichment activities or other things that help to enhance children's learning.”For children with SEND: “we have nothing left to provide for their needs adequately.”“We increasingly rely on volunteers”
I
am also receiving representations from sixth form colleges who face a
serious shortfall between the funding they receive and the amount they
need to educate their students. I urge you to take account of the new
report produced by London Economics on behalf of the Sixth Form Colleges
Association: Understanding the funding shortfall in sixth form education [2].
It shows the dramatic impact of the government freeze on sixth form
funding combined with a sharp increase in running costs. The report
found that sixth form colleges need an increase in funding of at least
£760 per student in 2020/21 to continue providing a high quality
education to young people. The report also found that, in real terms,
sixth form colleges received £1,380 less per student in 2016/17 than
they did in 2010/11 – a 22 per cent decline in funding [3]. I trust you will urgently address the issue of sixth form funding in the forthcoming Budget.
Lastly,
and in short, the purpose of this letter is to ask that we do not get
the same barrage of lame excuses about OECD spending comparisons on
Budget Day. As you will understand from the quotes and information
above, they simply do not wash, and I urge you to directly address the
issue of rising pupil numbers in schools. Talking about ‘more money’ is
an old political trick that fools no-one and leaves this funding crisis
unaddressed. Educational standards are in jeopardy. Yet, with the
per-pupil funding they need, our schools could deliver great outcomes
for all children. Without it we are letting down a generation. The
Budget is yet another chance for you to respond as the crisis requires
and I sincerely urge you to do so.
Best wishes,
Caroline
Labels:
Caroline Lucas,
Philip Hammond,
school funding,
STRB
Sunday 14 October 2018
Brent Council austerity cuts to hit the old, the poor, the young & the environment
Monday's Cabinet Meeting will be considering 'savings', known to most of us as 'cuts', of some £20million for 2019/20-2020/21 with cuts totally £40 million expected over the four year term of the current administration.
The Council Tax base (number of households paying the tax) is expected to rise by 2.5% per year and the Council expect to raise Council Tax itself by 4.99% in 2019-20 and 3.99% in 2020-21. At the same time there are proposals to cut Council Tax Support by up to 15% over the period.
The Council Tax base (number of households paying the tax) is expected to rise by 2.5% per year and the Council expect to raise Council Tax itself by 4.99% in 2019-20 and 3.99% in 2020-21. At the same time there are proposals to cut Council Tax Support by up to 15% over the period.
The Council's Financial Position |
Demographic Pressures |
The process following the Cabinet meeting is:
· These proposals, together with any
changes made by Cabinet, will form the basis of consultation between October
2018 and January 2019 with local residents, businesses and other key
stakeholders;
· The three scrutiny committees will
review the budget proposals and report accordingly;
· In November the General purposes
committee will review the calculation of the council tax base; and
· After consultation, a budget report
will be presented for Cabinet to recommend a final budget and council tax to
the February 2019 Council meeting.
The Officers' Report states:
The proposals have been categorised as follows:Appendix A:Appendix B:Appendix C:Appendix D:
There are usually some items in the report that the administration do not intend to implement but where they can claim in not implementing then that they have 'listened' to residents. (Forgive me for my cynicism!)A. Recommended budget proposals that have relatively minor impact on residents, business and other stakeholders. Typically these proposals represent generating additional income, general efficiencies in order to reduce expenditure and transformation programmes in order to deliver services within a reduced budget envelope.B. These proposals are considered to be ‘difficult’ in that they will have a direct impact on residents, businesses, the voluntary sector and other key stakeholders. Typically these proposals represent a service reduction or a transformation in the way in which services are delivered.C. These proposals are considered to be ‘very difficult’ as they represent a greater reduction in key council services and will have a greater impact on key recipients of council services, including vulnerable clients.D. These proposals are considered to be the ‘most difficult’ as they represent a significant reduction in key council services, including to the most vulnerable residents in the borough.Officers’ expectation is that savings of £40m will be needed over the lifetime o f this Administration. The profile of these is broadly balanced, and so officers’ advice is that the Administration should seek to agree savings of at least £20m in order to be able to agree a balanced budget for at least the next two years. However, it is important to note that, on the current funding estimates, significant further savings will need to be agreed at the Council meeting of February 2021. As a result the current working assumptions is that anything not agreed in this budget round may need to be considered again at the point in time, and further options identified.
There are 161 pages on detail on the proposals so I cannot summarise them hear but I have embedded them below.
Headline items that will impact on the old, the young and all residents include
- renegotiate adult social care costs to bring them down to the lowest current level (this may mean some agencies will withdraw from bidding), renegotiate Supported Living and Housing Related Support, and reducing carer visits to 15 minutes.
- ending Youth Service provision at the last remaining Youth Centre in Brent, Roundwood
- reduce the number of Children's Centres from 17 to 8, transforming into Family Hubs ( there is a further option of closing them all)
- reduction in Early Help Service staffing and increase in fees
- reduce Connexions Service further
- reducing Library opening hours and possibly closing one library
- making 40 full time equivalent Environmental Services staff redundant (producing 'leaner teams' !)
- ending street cleaning of residential streets (Zone 5) and removing their litter bins
- reduce the opening hours of Abbey Road Recycling Centre or close it completely
- reduce or end grants to Brent's voluntary organisations
Free trees for Brent community groups
Trees on the King's Drive Estate in Wembley Park |
Community groups in Brent are being encouraged to apply for free tree packs to brighten up their local area.
In partnership with The Conservation Volunteers (TCV) the Mayor of London is making available 25,000 trees for community groups, free of charge, to plant in their London neighbourhood.
To find out more and apply for a community tree pack, visit https://www.london.gov.uk/community-trees.
Advice from our Parks Service:
- Groups or interested residents should contact Brent through the parks service to discuss where they would like to plant the trees
- Trees can be planted on private land with the permission of the landowner, which may or may not be Brent Council
- To ensure a good spread of trees throughout the borough, we would encourage local groups to apply together and share a tree pack
- Not all trees will be suitable for all locations and trees on public land will be maintained by Brent Council, so make sure to get in touch to discuss
Labels:
Brent Council,
Brent Parks Service,
Mayor Of London,
trees
Saturday 13 October 2018
Proposed new ward structure in Brent
Proposal 1 |
Proposal 2 |
The General Purposes Committee of Brent Council, which consists of Cabinet members plus Cllr Colwill leader of the Conservative Group, will be discussing plans for new ward divisions on Wednesday LINK.
The proposals are the Council's response to the Local Government Boundary Review and would reduce the number of Brent councillors from 63 to 57. There are two options on the table with the main difference being whether there should be 3 wards with 2 councillors each or 2 wards with 3 councillors each after the great majority of wards have been allocated 3 councillors each. There is an attempt to have boundaries that reflect existing communities with their own centre.
These are the proposals:
The following ward
proposals are the same for both proposals and are for 3 member wards.
Ward 1 – Wembley
Central ward
This ward is predominantly made up
of the current Wembley Central ward but incorporates some of the current
Alperton and Tokyngton wards. The community centre of the ward remains Wembley
Central.
Ward 2 – Queensbury
ward
The boundary for this ward remains unchanged
from the current Queensbury ward. When forecasting the electorate for 2024, it
was projected to be 12,906 which represents a marginal variance from the mean
electorate. There is also an established local community identity in this area.
Ward 3 – Mapesbury
ward
The ward takes in the entirety of the current
Mapesbury ward but takes in some of the current Dudden Hill Ward. The community
centre would incorporate parts of Willesden and Cricklewood.
Ward 4 – Sudbury
ward
This ward is predominantly made up of the
current Sudbury ward but takes in some of the current Wembley Central ward. The
community centre of the ward remains Sudbury.
Ward 5 – Willesden
Green ward
This ward is predominantly made up
of the current Willesden Green ward as it is one of the established
communities; for electoral equality it would take in some of Dudden Hill ward.
Ward 7 - Northwick
Park ward
This ward is predominantly made up
of the current Northwick Park ward but also incorporates some of the current
Sudbury ward. The community centre remains Northwick Park.
Ward 8 – Queens Park ward This ward is
predominantly made up of the current Queens Park ward as it is one of the
established communities; for electoral equality it takes in some of the current
Kensal Green ward.
Ward 9 – Kilburn ward The boundary for this
proposed ward remains unchanged from the current Kilburn ward. When forecasting
the electorate for 2024 was projected to be 12,581 which is a marginal variance
from the mean electorate.
Ward 10 – Kingsbury ward This ward is
predominantly made up of the current Fryent ward but also encompasses some of
the current Welsh Harp and Barnhill wards. The community centre for this ward
would be Kingsbury hence the suggested a name change.
Ward 11 -
Brondesbury Park This ward is
predominantly made up of the current Brondesbury Park ward but also
incorporates some of the current Kensal Green ward. The community centre
remains Brondesbury Park.
Ward 12 –
Tokyngton ward This ward is
predominantly made up of the current Tokyngton ward but also incorporates some
of the current Stonebridge ward. The current CST1 polling district has been
moved into this ward as the North Circular Road forms the boundary for this
proposed ward. The community centre remains Tokyngton.
Ward 13 –
Kenton ward The ward takes in the
entirety of the current Kenton ward and also takes in some of the current
Northwick Park and Barnhill wards. The new boundary for this ward runs along
the two railway lines thus forming a natural ward boundary. The community
centre remains Kenton.
Ward 14 –
Dollis Hill ward This ward is
predominantly made up of the current Dollis Hill ward but would also
incorporate some of the current Dudden Hill ward. The community centre remains
Dollis Hill.
Ward 16 –
Neasden ward This ward is made up of
the current Welsh Harp ward but also incorporates some of the current Barnhill
and Dudden Hill wards. As this ward covers one of the established communities
of Neasden a name change for the ward is proposed.
Ward 17 –
Wembley Park ward This ward is
predominantly made up of the current Barnhill ward but also incorporates some
of the current Tokyngton and Stonebridge wards. As this ward covers one of the
established communities of Wembley Park a name change for the ward is proposed.
Ward 18 –
Alperton ward This ward is
predominantly made up of the current Alperton ward but also incorporates some
of the current Wembley Central ward. The community centre remains Alperton.
Ward 19 –
Preston ward This ward is
predominantly made up of the current Preston ward but also incorporates some of
the current Tokyngton ward. The community centre remains Preston.
The following are for
proposal 1 and are for 3 member wards
Ward 6 –
Stonebridge ward
This ward is predominantly made up
of the current Stonebridge ward but also incorporates some of the current
Tokyngton and Harlesden wards. The community centre remains Stonebridge.
Ward 15 – Harlesden
ward
This ward is predominantly made up of the
current Harlesden ward as it is one of the established communities for
electoral equality it takes in some of the current Kensal Green and Willesden
Green wards.
The following are for
Proposal 2 and are for 2 member wards
Ward 6 – Stonebridge
ward
This is predominantly made up of the current
Stonebridge ward but also incorporates some of the current Tokyngton ward. The
community centre remains Stonebridge.
Ward 15 – Harlesden ward
This ward is
predominantly made up of a more concentrated area of the current Harlesden ward
as it is one of the established communities for electoral equality it takes in
some of the current Kensal Green ward.
Ward 20 – Church
End ward
This ward is made up of the current
Harlesden and Stonebridge wards in equal measure but also incorporates small
parts of the current Kensal Green and Willesden Green wards. The community
centre would focus around Church End which could suggest a name change.
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