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Ealing and Northfield Ealing envirocrime

Pound makes a fool of himself

Local MP Steven Pound makes a total fool of himself this morning commenting on the silly baked bean story in the Gazette. He says:

I think that it is a good idea that has been spoilt by bad planning and execution. The council had a duty to explain this to people before they did it. Instead of being secretive and surreptitious they should have been upfront and honest and people would have supported it. Whoever came up with the idea of putting cameras in tins of baked beans needs to come up with 57 reasons why to convince me.

It is probably fair to say that Pound will not have studied the Tory local election manifesto for Ealing in detail. If he had he would have found the following statement, in bold, under the heading “Graffiti and Flytipping”:

A Conservative run Ealing Council will take all measures, including CCTV operations in known problem areas, to catch those responsible for graffiti and fly tipping. We will adopt a policy of prosecution in all cases and will press for the heaviest fines to be imposed upon those responsible.

The council doesn’t need 57 reasons it has a mandate.

Pound should know that the reason the baked bean hare started running was due to a line in the March issue of Around Ealing, a council publication that is delivered to every home in the borough. The prominent article on page 9 about community safety, with two pictures of CCTV cameras, said:

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.

To call the council’s approach secretive and surreptitious is plain wrong. The council has absolutely been upfront and honest and people do support the cameras as a result.

The five quotes at the bottom of the article from real people were much more sensible than anything Pound said:

  • I think it is a good idea, Anita Gaida
  • In one way they are good, but on the other hand it is a bit sad, Matt Stollar
  • There is definitely something in it, John Clancy
  • I think it is a good idea, Gulaid Abdi
  • I think it is a great idea, very creative, and I am very happy to see them doing it if it will help the problem, Martina Drury

I guess Pound making a fool of himself is not a first.

Categories
Ealing and Northfield Ealing envirocrime

Rubbish wind up

Sun's CCTV camera disguised as baken bean tin pictureI choked on my cornflakes this morning when the august Radio 4 Today programme told me that the Sun and Mail were reporting that Ealing council was thinking of using spy cameras to persecute the good people of Ealing. What a load of pants.

Yesterday the Standard carried a ridiculous story that spy cameras were to be used to harass people putting out their bin bags. No, the borough is already using CCTV to catch persistent fly-tippers. Back in June I reported that in Northfield ward:

Some of the flytippers will be in for a nasty surprise over the next few weeks as David [our envirocrime protection team leader] has got the use of a mobile camera. We should be seeing some mugshots soon.

Shortly after pictures of offenders who had been fly-tipping on the side roads off Northfield Avenue appeared in Around Ealing – hardly covert.

The Standard story talked about the cameras being used to police a move to 2 weekly collections. Utter garbage. We asked people about this during our recent waste consultation and not surprisingly the response from people was so negative that the Conservative group, which is committed to actually providing the services people want, would not dream of going to two weekly collections.

As I found on my Southall tour last week we have some people who really mess up the neighbourhood with fly-tipping. We will be using cameras to trap these people. We will not clean up Ealing by running around after these people with a van picking up their mess. We need to change their behaviour and with fly-tippers that means catching them and prosecuting them.

The Mail story is a straight copy of the Standard story – fair enough as they are sister papers from Associated Newspapers. The Sun story has simply lifted all the quotes out of the Standard article and randomly phoned up an Ealing resident called Danny Christie at some ungodly hour of the night to get a quote. You can judge the standard of the journalism and fact checking by the fact that Labour’s councillor Sharma has had a sex change according to the Sun. Maybe Sharma will make the News of the World on Sunday. The so-called journalist at the Standard is called Ellen Widdup – wind up surely?

Categories
Ealing and Northfield

Labour decide on woman for Southall

The Ealing Times is reporting this morning that Labour has gone for an all-women shortlist for the Ealing Southall Constituency.

Two of the Labour councillors, Cllr Gurcharan Singh and Cllr Virendra Sharma, have been having a good go at each other.

Singh: The real reason for this [all-women shortlist] is Mr Khabra and my opponent, Virendra Sharma, came to the conclusion that they can’t beat me fair and square. They convinced people that we should have an all-women shortlist. Now there is no way I can take part – short of getting a sex change. He realised he could not beat me so now he is saying: ‘If I’m not getting it then you’re not having it either.’ I wasn’t expecting it and I’m disappointed that the Labour party would aspire to make a decision like this. The representation of one group should not be at the expense of another – they should have men and women.

Sharma: I’m surprised he thinks I’ve got that much power. Councillor Singh’s comments are childish.

Ouch! Apparently Cllr Singh told the Ealing Times he will do everything in his power to fight the decision. Sounds like a recipe for future rumbling.

Maybe now Singh will take down his website with its me-wall pictures of Singh with Blair, Livingstone, et al. According to the hit counter almost 8,000 people have visited this little shrine to himself.

It looks like Labour Group leader, Sonika Nirwal, is now the front-runner. With typical Oxbridge arrogance, but maybe not the grammar, she says:

I am the front runner, definitely. I am leader of the group, I’m a young, Asian woman. I grew up in Southall, I’m educated in politics from Cambridge – of course I would want to do it.

Apparently Labour are worried about losing Ealing Southall. They should be. After 12 years of an ineffective Labour council the place is still not right. After 15 years of having a lobby-fodder pensioner as an MP the place is still not right. The combination of the energy and enterprise of Southall’s people with a Conservative council and a Conservative MP is what Southall needs.

Categories
Ealing envirocrime

Southall walkabout

Back from my holiday on Sunday I flipped through the Gazette only to find a whole page devoted to their “Clean-up Southall Campaign” complete with quotes from Southall councillors Gurcharan Singh and Kamaljit Dhindsa. Having been in Southall a only couple of weeks before I was not sure I believed Singh’s prescription “we need more resources to solve the problem”. The new council is pouring more resources into the environment in Southall but more is required than just council spending. Cllr Dhindsa’s diagnosis also seemed a bit weak:

A lot of new arrivals coming into Southall are not aware of how rubbish is cleared here, and also about recycling. In some parts of the world people clear out their rubbish by chucking it into the street, and when new arrivals come here they don’t realise that it is wrong to do that here.

Only on Tuesday these councillors were voting against a budget that included:

  • an increase to the street cleaning budget of 75%
  • an extension of street cleaning in Southall from 8pm to 10 pm
  • an extension of zone 1 (continual cleanse) down Western Road to the borough boundary
  • many of the roads in Southall moving from a weekly to a twice weekly cleanse.

I went to look for myself.

In general the public realm looked pretty good:

Southall Park

Southall Park looked lovely in the sunshine

Southall Park Loos

The new loos looked clean and well-maintained

Southall lights and cameras

New street lights and safety cameras

Southall bin

Newish bins with bin bags in place

New street sign

New street signs

Some of the roads and pavements could have looked better, as could most in the entire borough. The last Labour administration let the budget for streets fall to £1 million per annum. The new administration immediately increased this to £1.5 million on election last year and will maintain this level of spending this year and into the future. It will take many years though to undo the damage caused by Labour to our roads.

I spotted four fly tips at the ends of Beaconsfield Road, Hortus Road, Kingston Road and Featherstone Road and another one halfway down Havelock Road opposite the Gurdwara. Is it really new arrivals doing all this or is it long-time residents and businesses who simply don’t want to clear up after themselves? The most spectacular flytip was the one in Kingston Road which was just by the back door of a food business. Dumposaurus Dumpsters Austin TX would eagerly provide dumpster rental to them.

Kingston Road fly-tip

I reported all five to the the council’s customer services desk on 020 8825 6000 this morning. Any member of the public can do this. Clean-up Southall? Yes! Pick up the phone! It is a shame that the Gazette’s feature, covering one whole page, did not not take the opportunity to advertise this phone number.

The real problem I saw was in the private rather than the public realm. In my short walkabout I came across eight envirocrime cases where local businesses or landlords are simply not complying with the law and using public spaces to run their businesses and as dumping grounds. These are not hapless newcomers that don’t know any better but cynical businessmen who want to make more profit by exploiting the environment.

Case 1

Ruby's

Ruby’s Food and Wine one the Uxbridge Road seem to think it is OK to put out their overflowing dumpsters and cage trolleys on the footpath

Case 2

Roshni Restaurant

The Roshni restaurant on South Road seem to be quite happy to sublet the footpath outside

Case 3

Alley behind South Road

The landlord who owns the alley behind South Road (entrance St Joseph’s Drive), and the tenants who use it every day, need to police their own private property

Case 4

Skylark

It looks like the Skylark travel agency on The Crescent are putting out their commercial waste at the wrong time

Case 5

The Crescent open space

Which businesses are putting their dumpsters on The Crescent Road Open Space?

Case 6

State Bank of India

The State Bank of India on The Green seems to be incapable of keeping its grass free of litter

Case 7

Private land adjacent to Dominion car park

The landlord of the private land to the right of the Dominion car park needs to clean it up

Case 8

Sira Super Store

Sira Super Store on King Street is totally taking the Mickey with a fork lift and 4 cage trolleys on Church Avenue and bags and crates alongside the store

All eight of these envirocrime cases have been reported to the Southall envirocrime area manager this morning. Any member of the public and certainly any of the 15 Labour councillors in Southall can do this too. As David Cameron says: “We are all in this together”.

We have similar issues, although perhaps not as many, in both South Ealing Road and Northfield Avenue in my ward. Councillors and residents just have to keep on reporting these things to the council – you can also have a dramatic effect by just talking to businesses yourself directly. For instance, I worked with residents of Airedale Road on a short campaign and persuaded a butcher to stop leaving his meat-filled dumpster on the street over the weekend. Let these businesses know that they won’t get your custom if they mess the place up.

Categories
Ealing envirocrime

Rowan’s at it again

Yesterday I was in Southall doing a bit of research. I came across evidence that Rowan’s, a licensed business near Kew Bridge in the borough of Hounslow, were at their old fly-posting tricks again. I saw one poster at the end of Southbridge Way, one at the end of St Joseph’s Drive and four on the junction of the Uxbridge Road and South Road.

Rowan's fly-posting again

I wrote about these people back in October. Then it was 18 yellow paper posters that identified their two-bit business. This time they have gone anonymous. A quick call to the number given and a woman told me that she represented Rowan’s and that she would have a word with their marketing agency, AK Marketing. What a load of rubbish.

I took down 18 of their signs last time and delivered them to their premises along with a friendly warning to lay off. This time I have asked Ealing envirocrime enforcement to go after them with Penalty Charge Notices and Hounslow licensing to review their licence on the grounds that they are causing a public nuisance.

Categories
Ealing and Northfield

Tory council delivers on its promises

Reading through council leader Jason Stacey’s comments on the budget just now I am struck again by the clarity of thinking he displays. Last year he set the council’s near term priorities as being:

Priorities.bmp

Key points of the budget are:

  • the Ealing element of council tax is set to rise by just 1.9%
  • reserves up by a further £2 million
  • an additional £6.1 million to be invested in improving the local environment
  • including street cleansing to be increased by 75%
  • an additional £1.8 million is to be spent safer communities
  • including a £1 million partnership project with the local police to get 50 Police and Community Support Officers onto the streets.

It is great to see that “it does what it says on the tin”.

For the dedicated follow this link to see the whole budget report to be discussed by the full council meeting on Tuesday 6th March. Come to the town hall at 7pm to take part.

Categories
Ealing envirocrime

Fly-posting DJs messing up west London

Hammersmith Palais being anti-social

I have been working with our envirocrime team and their equivalent in Hammersmith and Fulham to try to reign in the people who are messing up our streets with plastic sign boards tie-wrapped to lamposts. I have personally visited Bar 38 in Hammersmith twice in February to berate them about their signs but for the last three Fridays the running has been taken up by the Hammersmith Palais. Their posters appeared at the junction of South Ealing Road and Little Ealing Lane today and at just about every junction down South Ealing Road and back down the A4 into Hammersmith. I must have seen at least 50 of them during my drive to work and this is only a small sample of the total.

The picture above shows three posters at the junction of Bond Street and the Broadway, taken by Ricky Wright our envirocrime protection officer for Northfield. Two fixed penalty notice were issued by Ricky today to both the venue and the promoter of their club night. I have to say though that £50 penalties are not going to change this behaviour.

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Ealing and Northfield

Ealing improves CPA rating

The Audit Commission published its CPA ratings this morning – the key benchmark against which councils are measured. The new administration is more worried about what local people feel rather than what government inspectors want but it is good news all the same to see an improvement in our ratings. The council retains its 3 star rating but its “direction of travel” has moved from “improving adequately” to “improving well”.

Follow link for Ealing’s results.

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Ealing and Northfield Policing

Ealing to get 50 additional PCSOs

EalingToday the council has announced that an additional 50 Police Community Support Officers (PCSOs) will be hired in Ealing subject to an agreement between Ealing Council and the Metropolitan Police Service being finalised, see press release.

Apparently, the council is finalising the details of a £2 million investment programme over two years to fund the extra PCSOs. The 50 officers will start work across the borough from May.

Council Leader Jason Stacey says:

This is a ground-breaking new initiative for Ealing as funding for the new PCSOs is coming from the council. It will be a significant boost to the resources that go into reducing crime and tackling anti-social behaviour and envirocrime. This will help us deliver one of our key priorities which is safer communities.

Categories
Ealing and Northfield

Initial waste consultation results

EalingThis morning the council has announced the initial results from the massive consultation on the future of our waste collection services, see press release. It seems that the results from the massive waste consultation were clear in some areas but not in others. Altogether 10,500 people responded.

The whole of Ealing, the Elthorne ward south of the railway tracks and Southfield ward have clearly opted to keep black sacks. The picture is less clear in the rest of the borough. As a result a new, simpler consultation is going out to the rest of the borough this week. It was clear that the two wheelie bin and fortnightly collection options were not popular overall so second time around it will be a straight choice between bin bags and one wheelie bin.

The council has heard the clear message that plastic recycling is popular and this will be added to the recycling service this year.