Categories
Ealing and Northfield

Bassam the munificent

Mafouz and BrownI had a good old laugh at Bassam Mahfouz’s latest piece of electioneering. If he thinks this will get him elected in Ealing Central and Acton then he had better think again.

Luckily for him scaredy cat Brown has chickened out of a general election so Mahfouz has got at least 18 months to try to do better.

It is amazing what you can achieve as an opposition councillor in Mahfouz’s fantasy political world.

According to Mahfouz “Labour pressure brings end to Tram plan”. He goes on to say “We made it clear to the Mayor that people in Ealing opposed his tram plan and I respect him for making the right decision for local residents”. No mention of Save Ealing’s Streets or the LibDems and Tories who actually stood in the 2006 local elections on an anti-tram platform unlike Mahfouz.

Apparently Mahfouz “is promoting more recycling and innovative ideas to make Ealing a greener place to live”. I wonder what he is talking about? The previous Labour adminstration had 12 years to sort out cardboard re-cycling. The Tories did it in months. Similarly they had 12 years to sort out plastics recycling. The Tories will bring this in on November the 19th. I could go on about us signing the Nottingham Declaration, etc, etc.

If Mahfouz is so keen to big up the Tories’ track record in Ealing maybe he should join us?

Mahfouz shows his desperation by repeating the Mayor’s lies about the Freedom Pass. He says: ‘Ealing Tory councillor Phil Taylor has called for the Freedom Pass to be “re-targetted away” from most pensioners to those who were “very old”‘. Mahfouz obviously knows nothing about pensioner poverty. Maybe he should get out and knock on a few doors. Here is what I actually said. The London Mayor has used this as source material for press releases three times so it is no surprise to see Mahfouz using it. London Labour seem to think that the Mayor’s fight with London Councils over the way TfL can just impose any price rises they like on councils will resonate with voters.

Mahfouz needs to check out Google as he has an eminently Googleable name. A critical piece from me is listed third after his Ealing council entries on UK searches.

Categories
Ealing and Northfield

Area committees to go

Townhall.jpgThe papers for Cabinet have been published and it is official that Cabinet are recommending the end of the area committees, see paper here. In response to the Neighbourhood Governance panel’s recommendations the Cabinet are proposing some core principles:

  • Any new structure for neighbourhood governance in the borough is centred around ward councillors
  • That £40k of capital funding is made available to each ward and that this is expended taking into account the recommendations of ward councillors, who will utilise and develop informal and formal networks to consult local people
  • The current Area Committee structures are abolished and their community involvement role is transferred to ward councillors
  • Where cross-ward initiatives or projects are being considered, councillors from different wards will be encouraged to work together to develop bespoke consultative arrangements and make joint recommendations

Given our experience with the Northfield ward forum I think this will go a long way to making local government more engaging and relevant for local people. The £40K capital budget will allow councillors to do some interesting things in their neighbourhood.

In Northfield we have three tip top councillors (I would say that) and we are enthusiastic to take on this additional task. I am sure there are a lot of councillors who will feel that this is an extra burden. The public will be able to see their councillors in action very directly and judge their performance on some really close-to-home issues. Where the three ward councillors come from different parties, what we call split wards, the public will measure them by their ability to work together. Interesting times for some.

Categories
Ex-Mayor Livingstone

Great weekend, but …

Don't worry about the blank chequeThis has been a great weekend for news as far as I am concerned.

On Friday Gordon Brown announced Crossrail as a part of his election-winning giveaway goodie-bag.

On Saturday England performed magnificently on the rugby pitch and Gordon Brown chickened out of an early general election.

I think Labour would have lost a lot of seats but not enough to ensure a stable Conservative government that could change the course of our country’s future. I think a reasonable majority 18 months down the track is a much more attractive proposition. By then the economy will be looking sad and Gordon Brown’s mismanagement of domestic affairs for the last ten years will be hard for him to deny.

Which brings us back to Crossrail. Brown could have announced this scheme 10 years ago. He spent 10 years not giving this scheme the go-ahead because he did not see the electoral advantage in it for him and his party. Now he sees that the zeitgeist is running against him in London and that both London MPs and Livingstone will have a hard time keeping their positions in general and mayoral elections and all of a sudden Crossrail is a goer.

As far as I can see Crossrail will be great for Ealing, London and the whole country. I moved here in 1987 mainly because I thought that it was brilliantly situated for access to the City, West End and Heathrow. Crossrail just takes that to another level. The financing of Crossrail will come to be seen as a problem though.

Between Ruth Kelly and Gordon Brown they held out for more cash from the City. I think that it is a shame that the Corporation of London agreed to give up £200 million. Why? Because this cash was earmarked for economic development. I know that Crossrail will drive both London’s and the whole country’s economy but other parts of the country get transport infrastructure and economic development funds. It seems London has to make a choice. Don’t forget that the Mayor is also using LDA cash that should be going towards economic development to fund his bread and circuses programme, you know Tate Gallery extension, Tour de France, Childcare Affordability Programme, etc.

The London London Chamber of Commerce and Industry have shown how London subsidises the rest of the country. In the context of a net outflow from London in the range £5.8 to £20.4 billion the price of Crossrail at £16 billion over 10 years of building seems pretty modest.

The worst part though is that the London Mayor has agreed to underwrite this programme with our council taxes, see warning from London Councils here. As the blog Burning Our Money points out this programme is likely to cost a lot more than the advertised £16 billion. The Corporation of London’s economic development pot is just a spit in the bucket. The Mayor has signed a potentially huge blank cheque with our cash. He doesn’t care about our tax bills. He cares about getting re-elected and getting his hands on Crossrail. This is a project of national significance and as such should be underwritten by central government not London. The contrast with the Mayor’s Olympic funding pledge could not be more stark.

The Mayor’s job was to get Brown to give us the cash for Crossrail and not to expose Londoners to unecessary risk. The Mayor has blown it.

Categories
Ealing and Northfield

Thames Water mess up Murray Road

Murray-Road blue writingCatching up on some casework tonight I came across this photo from one of our neighbours in Murray Road.

It looks like Thames Water have left a mess after their mains replacement programme went down Murray Road. I guess this paint is water-soluble but they have made a right old mess. I wrote to ask them what the score is.

All the roads around where I work were dug up earlier this year and although the process was a bit long-winded I can’t see any blue paint around now. Hopefully this will wash away soon. Still it would be interesting to hear what Thames Water has to say.

Categories
Ealing and Northfield Northfield Ward Forum

Northfield Ward Forum

We had the second Northfield ward forum on Tuesday. Northfield is trailblazing for the Borough – I will come back to this later.

We had 22 attendees – 12 representatives of residents’ associations (Boston Manor, EFRA, NABTA, OEN, North Road/South Road, Ealing Civic Society, Kingsdown) and Streetwatchers plus six council officers and our SNT sergeant, Cliff Elam. All three councillors were there. Last time, see previous posting, we had representatives from a couple of the churches. I have been asked if the public can come to this session. We are starting off with residents’ association reps and Streetwatchers but it will be open to the public soon I guess.

We kicked off by presenting Northfield Avenue’s elite street sweeper, Nadia, with some flowers and our thanks for her excellent work.

We spent some time talking about planning. Dick Johns from the Council talked about the Local Development Framework. This is the piece of work that will allow to have more control of planning at the local level in the future. This is currently being consulted on and the public can get involved between now and 19th October. Follow this link for more information.

In the short term there was a lot of concern about applications for more takeaways around Northfield station. Cllr Mark Reen has taken a lead on this issue. Another local issue is the language school and hostel that has sprung up without a change of use opposite the station. Add to that Charlie’s which has applied to sell booze until 2pm.

Sgt Elam reassured us that Northfield is the safest ward in Ealing.

The group found the meeting useful and we committed to repeating it on a quarterly basis.

The Neighbourhood Governance Specialist Scrutiny Panel, follow link, has been looking at area committees and the idea of setting up ward forums across the Borough, maybe even with their own budgets. The Cabinet is due to provide its response to this on 16th October and we should see a new regime in place in the next municipal year, starting next May. It is likely that all wards will be following in Northfield’s footsteps.

Categories
Parking Services

Parking Services minutes available

Parking Services Specialist Scrutiny PanelThe minutes of the last Parking Services session are up on the Council’s website here. A couple of people asked me for these so here they are.

They include a list of the issues raised by the public. I can see the final report being a bit long!

Categories
National politics

Labour on the phone

On Tuesday we held the second Northfield ward forum, more on that later. In passing David Millican, one of our three councillors, told me he had been canvassed by Labour – by an automated telephone call. The same thing happened to me last night. The call went along the lines of “If you are going to vote Labour press 1, if you are going to …”.

I hate anyone calling me, especially in the evening, unless they are a real person I want to talk to. Automated calls just make me foam with anger. Machines don’t have lives they just just waste ours!

No doubt Brown is trying to work out whether to go to the country. I wouldn’t trust the result from automated canvassing.

Categories
Health, housing and adult social services

Poor health

Remember Gordon Brown’s windy rhetoric in Bournemouth last week:

So let me set out how we take the NHS into a new era.

Our great achievement of the 1940s was a service universal to all. In 2007 we need a service that is accessible to all and personal to all.

Our great ambition now: a National Health Service that is also a personal health service.

Today both the Telegraph and the Guardian are reporting how far the NHS needs to travel if it is to get to the point where it is valued by its customers in the way that health systems are valued in the wealthiest countries of Europe. Both of these newspaper reports are based on a report from an organisation called Health Consumer Powerhouse.

European health league table

It is clear from the table above (click to enlarge) that the UK is not getting value from its healthcare system. Three groups are apparent. The elite group of wealthy countries have scores in the range 687 to 806. These are the countries you might expect to have good health systems, the Nordics, Austria, Netherlands, France, Switzerland, Germany Belgium and Luxembourg. It is a national scandal that the UK is not in this group.

Instead we languish in a group of countries that were until recently considered to be the poor men of Europe. Between Lithuania at 496 and Estonia at 633 there are fifteen countries. The UK is scored at 581 which puts it bang in the middle of a group of countries which we might once, in our arrogance, have written off as “poor Mediterraneans” or “former Soviet block”.

We are just not getting value for our health spending. Brown has had ten years. Brown has spent the money. Brown has failed.

Categories
Ealing and Northfield

Mahfouz trips himself up

bassam-maufouz-site.jpgLabour councillor Bassam Mahfouz is their Transport, Environment & Climate Change Spokesman and is also going head-to-head with Angie Bray in the Ealing Central and Acton constituency. Last month he tried to have a go at the current Conservative administration for their performance in the parking area, highlighting the rate at which people were winning cases at the final court of appeal for these things which is called PATAS. Apparently Ealing was the worst in West London with 80% people winning their appeals. See his claims here.

The only problem is that wheels grind somewhat slowly in such matters and 90% of these appeals are a hang over from the old contract which the new Conservative administration inherited from the old Labour administration. Getting this right was one of the first pieces of business of the new administration. Today the Tory Transport portfolio holder issued a press release firmly putting Mahfouz back in his box.

A parking contract negotiated by the previous Labour administration has been held responsible for the high number of wrongly issued parking tickets in Ealing. Last year, 80%of appeals against tickets issued by Ealing Council were upheld – the highest rate of successful parking appeals in west London. It has now been revealed that 90% of the 1,458 successful appeals occurred under the parking contract negotiated by the previous Labour administration, which has now been renegotiated.

Labour’s contract paid bonuses to the contractor for issuing over 170,000 tickets whether or not the tickets were issued correctly. It gave an incentive to issue extra tickets with no penalties for the issuing of unfair tickets. A new contract, negotiated by the Conservative administration late last year, removed incentives for issuing over an arbitrary number of tickets and penalises the contractor where they issue tickets incorrectly.

Cabinet portfolio holder for Transport, Cllr Vlod Barchuk, said there was little doubt as to why Ealing had issued so many false tickets last year. He said:

“This is yet another legacy inherited from the previous Council. Labour’s contract actively provided incentives to the contractor to issue dodgy tickets and victimise motorists. It’s no surprise that so many Ealing motorists have brought successful appeals. The new contract is fairer as it puts the emphasis on tickets being issued correctly.”

“It’s a particularly disgraceful piece of spin by Labour’s Transport spokesman, Cllr Bassam Mahfouz, to have suggested last week that the high number of wrong tickets issued last year was our fault. At the same time he tried to take credit for stopping the tram, when Cllr Mahfouz and his party had actively supported it. How shameless and dishonest can you be?”

As the unwise Mahfouz himself says:

The Council should be ensuring that their parking wardens are only ticketing those who have genuinely broken local regulations.

Quite!

The young tyke has also being trying to claim that he had some kind of a role in killing the tram. Pull the other one Bassam.