Categories
Ex-Mayor Livingstone

Boroughs held to ransom

The Mayor is going on about Freedom Passes again, see today’s press release, where he is misquoting me for at least the third time now. Guess I will have to get used to it.

The Mayor uses the Freedom Pass issue to pose as the voters friend whilst holding the boroughs to ransom to pay for it all. The notes in his own press release make it all quite clear:

Under the existing ‘reserve scheme’, if the London boroughs have not reached agreement with Transport for London by 31 December before the next financial year then the statutory reserve scheme comes into effect at a cost determined by Transport for London, effectively ensuring that the concession cannot be watered down or under-funded.

Or to put it another way: effectively ensuring that TfL can charge what it likes for the scheme and the boroughs just have to pay up.

TfL can hold the boroughs to ransom and yet it can:

So when the boroughs say abolish the reserve scheme they don’t mean take away Freedom Passes. They mean allow us to negotiate Freedom Passes with the overblown and wasteful TfL as equal negotiating partners without the Mayor holding a gun to our head. The boroughs have real responsibilities for the old and disabled. The Mayor is a poseur.

Categories
Ealing envirocrime

Private equity driving flyposting

Alchemy Partners making a messYou might wonder why we keep getting flyposted by Bar 38 in Hammersmith (see photo taken yesterday of two Bar 38 posters taken yesterday at junction of South Ealing Road and Little Ealing Lane).

Private equity shops drive their businesses hard to make cash – why not? I have no problem with that until they think it is OK to mess our neighbourhood with flyposting to pull in the punters.

I visited Bar 38 twice in February to complain about this and again yesterday. I have taken down the posters and sent the photo to our envirocrime officer.

Jon MoultonThe Bar 38 chain of bars is currently part of the Tattershall Castle Group.

They in turn are owned by well-known private equity shop Alchemy Partners led by Jon Moulton pictured right. I have written to Moulton to ask him to stop this.

Categories
Ex-Mayor Livingstone Policing

Lvingstone not in control of police

The Mayor was commenting on crime at his press conference this morning (the crime part of the press conference starts about 19 minutes 5 seconds in). Livingstone managed to blame the media, the TV series 24 (which I have to say is a moral cesspit), the movie Kill Bill (ditto), Margaret Thatcher and John Major. See BBC coverage here.

The Mayor’s prescription was to put metal detectors into schools although he fully acknowledged that this was outside his powers.

The Mayor wasted no time explaining how the £3.2 billion we spend on the Met every year, who employ almost 50,000 people, could be better to spent to tackle crime more effectively. The Mayor is not going to get the Met off the sick. He is not going to break up its bureaucracy to get more officers on the street. He is not going to get bobbies patrolling on their own as they do outside London. He is not going to streamline the Met’s paperwork to get officers back on the street. He is not going to use more civilians to release warranted officers for frontline duties.

The Met costs £100,000 per warranted officer but our kids keep being killed by knives. The Mayor is talking about movies and politicians who have been out of power for 10 years. Clearly he does not have much influence over the police.

Categories
Ex-Mayor Livingstone

Livingstone – Green hypocrite

I get to watch the Superbowl.  You lot get to go to work on Monday to pay for itBack in February I noticed that Livingstone not only flew to Miami in his one man crusade to save the planet from climate change but also that his NFL game in October will encourage 10,000 Americans to fly the Atlantic to see their own game played in London (see previous posting).

I really quite like Americans, heck I even married one, but I don’t really see the point of ferrying a foreign game plus its spectators to London.

10,000 seemed bad enough but this number seems to have jumped to 15,000 now.

Labour assembly member, Murad Qureshi, is in the habit of asking planted questions of the Mayor when Livingstone wants to brag about something or other. In the last round of questions he came up with this easy ball for the Mayor:

Murad Qureshi: What benefits will hosting the NFL in October bring to London?

Ken Livingstone: The economic benefit to London of the visitor spend for the NFL game this October, negotiations for which started with my visit of October 2005 to New York, is estimated at £20 million. An estimated 15,000 American fans are expected to travel to watch the NFL Game in London and spend leisure time here at the same time. The viewing audience will also be swelled by British & European NFL fans travelling from other parts of the UK and Europe and staying in the city, bringing further economic benefit throughout the capital.

All of a sudden it is 15,000 transatlantic flights rather than the 10,000 described in the Mayor’s original press release. I can’t quite work out how this fits in with his London Climate Change Action Plan. The Action Plan suggests that the Mayor and GLA bodies:

lead by example ensuring that all agencies under Mayoral control avoid flights wherever possible and offset their emissions when air travel is the only option.

Unless you are coming to London for a football game. Doh! It seems where the Mayor’s new greenery clashes with his old GLC habits of funding bread and circuses the later will win out.

Categories
Communications disease Ex-Mayor Livingstone

Transport for London blow £22K on two job adverts

TfL are notoriously wasteful as we know from their £78 million comms budget and the 821 people who earn more than £50K per year there.

Browsing through recent questions to the Mayor and his answers I found this gem from Roger Evans:

Roger Evans: How much did the recent adverts placed in The Economist for Head of Planning and Head of Finance cost?

Ken Livingstone: The recent adverts in the Economist were placed at a cost £11,000 each and include publication on line for 4 weeks. The Economist is a global publication and is used for campaigns where we would wish to attract an international readership. The Economist has in the past generated high quality applications for TfL and is considered to be a viable alternative to national press for specialised appointments.

The fact that these ads were online for 4 weeks makes me so much happier that this crap cost £22K. Not.

Reading further I find that the total spending on job ads by TfL this year has been £3.9 million.

Good work by Roger Evans.

Categories
Ealing and Northfield

Never trust a LibDem

jon-ball.jpgBrowsing through the local papers online this morning after a short Easter break I saw the Ealing Times story about local councillor Jon Ball being selected as the LibDem candidate for Ealing Central and Acton.

I noted a positive comment from a certain Huw Prior. I often amuse myself by Googling such people. In September last year Prior was nominated as a LEA school govenor by … yep, you guessed it, the LibDems.

Here is his potted biography:

Huw stood as a candidate in the King’s Cross ward at the recent London Borough of Camden Council elections. He has only lived in Camden since June 2005 and although new to the area, he already loves the vibrancy, diversity and sense of community it inspires.

A follower of the music scene in Camden, he regularly go to concerts around the Borough and also enjoy and support local theatre. Huw also take full advantage of the sporting facilities available in Camden from working out at Mornington Sports Centre to spending time in Regents Park.

Originally from the southern tip of West Sussex, he has been fascinated with politics since the age of 12, (local, national and international) and graduated with a 2:1 in International Relations from Aberystwyth University in 2003. Huw now works in local government for Barnet Council, liaising with residents on a daily basis.

A trip to India opened his eyes to huge inequality and injustice in the world, which continues to galvanise him. Since moving to London, he has seen problems of crime, poor housing and healthcare and developed a strong desire to help make a difference to people’s lives.

Anyone who has heard Ball waffling through a council meeting knows that he will be eaten for breakfast by the Tory candidate Angie Bray. Let’s hope that Labour can come up with someone a bit more exciting otherwise it will be very dull at the next general election.

Categories
Communications disease

DfT blowing £10 million on cartoons

£10 million worth
Like me you might have seen the recent ad campaign, with its cartoon engine on wheels character, from the Department for Transport and wondered what it all costs. The answer is £10 million according to an e-mail I just received. The campaign includes billboards, online, print and this website. An emetic “Show you care” box allows you to sign up for further information on the campaign. I asked the DfT how much it was all costing, what their objectives were and how their achievement of these objectives would be measured. I look forward to a long tussle in about six months to get sight of their post campaign impact research.

Dear Phil

Thank you for your email about the Act on CO2 campaign. The Department for Transport is investing £10m over the last fiscal year and the current one to support this campaign.

The campaign encourages the existing driving public to consider:-

  • purchasing a car with a more fuel efficient engine; and
  • the way they treat their engine when they drive.

Specific key peformance (sic) indicators, which will be measured in research, are:

  • To increase the number of new car buyers who identify the impact on the environment as one of the top 5 factors taken into account when choosing their next car; and
  • To increase the number of people who strongly disagree with the statement “the way a person drives has so little impact on the environment it is not worth worrying about.”

I hope this is helpful.

Regards etc

We should not be surprised by all of this as the government spent £321 million on advertising through the Central Office of Information in the 2005/6 financial year – something like three times what was spent before New Labour (see previous posting). The total for all state comms spending is more likely to be around the £1 billion mark.

Categories
Communications disease

Local Labour MPs vote for £10K to spend communicating

Andrew Slaughter: Maybe this extra cash will stop me being crushed by Shaun BaileyOn Tuesday MPs debated a new communications allowance. Jack Straw is the Leader of the House and led the debate which saw MPs voting themselves a £10K a year comms allowance. This will allow them to spend £10K each telling us how great they are.

Piara Khabra: Maybe this cash will give Sonika a chanceI am happy to say that almost all the Tories voted against it although two did not: Quentin Davies and Bob Spink. What a couple of boobies? All the Labour MPs voted for except for two: Kelvin Hopkins and Lynne Jones. The LibDems were typically conflicted but some of the more sensible ones like David Laws and Chris Hune voted against.

Stephen Pound: Please pile up the cash over thereOur three local Labour MPs, Khabra, Pound and Slaughter, all voted for their extra cash. Shame on them.

Follow the link for the complete list of shame. Ayes bad. Noes good.

Categories
Ealing envirocrime

Fisking Widdup

Here is my response to Ellen Widdup’s e-mail.

Widdup reckons that:

  • I have implied she cannot do her job.
  • I have questioned her professionalism.
  • I have slated her abilities as a reporter.

She is right although maybe I would say she hasn’t done a very good job rather than she cannot do it! I called her story “ridiculous”. I reported that one of her statements was “utter garbage”. I questioned the standard of journalism and fact checking by all papers that covered the story. I referred to Widdup as a “so-called journalist”.

I am entitled to call her story ridiculous because it is very far from the truth as I shall demonstrate.

In her story she claimed: “Cameras will be installed around the borough before the change in collections from weekly to fortnightly.” In Ealing we had 10,274 people go to the trouble to complete a consultation questionnaire which asked people about 2 weekly collections. The response was so negative that on 12th February the council issued a press release that quoted council leader Jason Stacey as saying:

It is essential that when you run consultations that you listen to what people tell you. As a result, I am happy to confirm here that there will be no move to a fortnightly collection and we will add plastics to our household recycling service later in the year.

Widdup’s statement was utter garbage and she could have got her facts straight with a cursory look at recent Ealing press releases.

The germ of this story was the following quote from last month’s Around Ealing:

To catch vandals and envirocriminals, cameras disguised as anything from tin cans to house bricks will instantly email images to the council’s CCTV control centre.

The quote came from an article on page 9 that dealt exclusively with crime. To link this with domestic waste collection is to simply defy the truth.

Around Ealing Page 9 - Click through to PDF

The following statements from the Standard article were just plain wrong:

“Council war on residents who put out rubbish on wrong day”

“A London council is to use hidden cameras to catch residents who leave rubbish out on wrong day.”

The article mis-represents envirocriminals defining them as “those who leave out black bags when they should not or allow the contents of their bins to spill out on the pavement.”

Widdup was clearly impatient with the Ealing comms people last week. I am told that she was given a statement by them that stuck to the facts. These facts did not make much of a story so she kept chipping away in the hope that she could magic one out of thin air. Apparently she feels that Ealing Council is obliged to meet her deadlines and that if it tries to scotch her story by keeping schtumm then she is exonerated from her responsibility to check facts. She is not.

Widdup confirms that she did not talk to Will Brooks, portfolio holder for Environment and Transport. It is funny how she was able to quote him as saying: “anyone who broke the rules on collection would be considered to be a fly-tipper”. As far as I am aware Councillor Brooks has never said or written any such thing. Indeed he called the Standard’s news editor to clarify this so-called quote and they refused to take his call. Brooks has e-mailed the Standard twice and failed to get a response. I challenge the Standard to explain the provenance of this quote.

Widdup shows her ignorance of modern local government by misnaming Ealing’s Transport and Environment Scrutiny Panel a committee. If she had picked up on this subtle distinction she might have noticed that Councillor Vivendra Sharma is an opposition councillor and so perhaps not best placed to be a source for the purposes of fact checking. She claims that Sharma corroborated her story. In fact his quote does not. It is clear that he is merely commenting on the story that he has been given. He is quoted as saying:

I predict a lot of complaints about this method of catching litter louts. It is possible that many will question the motives of using CCTV and feel it is an infringement of privacy. Everyone realises that fly-tipping is an issue which needs dealing with and that putting your rubbish out early or leaving bags split open can encourage a rat problem, but I think there may be better ways of approaching it.

Judge for yourself.

Before I sign off I will just give Widdup a short lesson in defamation. Slander usually refers to a verbal defamation and libel is refers to written defamation. Nothing is defamation if it is true unless the facts are organised to give a misleading impression. I stand by what I say. It is true.

Categories
Ealing envirocrime

They don’t like it up ’em!

You may remember that Evening Standard journalist Ellen Widdup is the one that managed to get a front page byline with her “Spy cameras in tins of beans” story last Tuesday (see previous posting). Now she has written to me asking me to delete that posting.

Fat chance.

When I got her e-mail yesterday the immortal words of Dad’s Army’s Corporal Jones sprang to mind. The second and penultimate paragraphs are very funny. The middle three are the rambling self-justification. Here is what she said:

I am writing to you regarding to your blog entry (posted below):

The reason for my correspondance (sic) is that I resent your implication that I cannot do my job and the slur on my professionalism. Clearly you are entitled to voice your opionion (sic) on the content of the Evening Standard article but I do not believe this should extend to slating my abilities as a reporter.

You do not know the background to how I came across this story so perhaps it would be an idea to fill you in so you can make a more educated comment on the content of the piece. The story was originally in the Mail on Sunday (prior to its appearance in the Standard) and the paper quoted directly from your own council magazine which read “To catch vandals and envirocriminals, cameras disguised as anything from tin cans to house bricks will instantly email images to the council’s CCTV control centre.” It also said that a council spokeswoman (from your press office at Ealing) had confirmed that “envirocriminal” extended to people who fail to put their bin out on the right day.

I needed to confirm the facts of this story before we ran anything so I telephoned your press office and spoke to an officer* about the content of the Mail on Sunday piece and asked for clarification on the word “envirocriminal” and for more information on what the council had proposed. She said she would get back to me. I then called her on another two ocassions (sic) and each time she failed to respond to my questions or meet my deadlines.

I was therefore forced to find an alternative method of confirming or denying the substance of the Mail on Sunday article. I tried to call Will Brooks but there was no response so I went through the list of councillors sitting on the Transport and Environment Committee until one of them answered my phone calls. That happened to be Virenda (sic) Sharma. Mr Sharma confirmed the story was true and gave me all the background information I needed to write the story. I had no reason to doubt that what he was telling me was true. I may also point out at this point that, at no stage, has Mr Sharma, complained that he has been misquoted or denied what he told me on that day. With this knowledge, I hope you can no[w] (sic) vent your anger elsewhere. Perhaps you would like to criticise your own incompetant (sic) press office who fail to respond to press queries of an urgent nature? Or perhaps you should speak to Mr Sharma because clearly he has a different understanding of the meeting than you do?

Either way I ask you to remove this entry to your blog immediately. It constitutes a slanderous attack on my abilities as a reporter and if it is not removed, you will be hearing from my lawyers.

Please confirm you have received this email. I look forward to hearing from you.

I will be taking her statements apart later but I thought that some of the people who wasted a lot of time last week trying to damp down her inaccurate and silly story might enjoy her making a fool of herself. More later.

*Note I edited out the name of an officer here as I don’t want to involve one of Ealing’s employees in my spat with a journalist.