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Ealing and Northfield

Pitzhanger Manor is a lovely venue

On Monday the new Conservative association for Ealing Central and Acton had a knees up at Pitzhanger Manor. It was all a bit posh with champagne and black tie but was good fun all the same. Ben Moore-Bridger from Ealing Times covered the event and wrote a nice piece about it. The new candidate, Angie Bray, came across really well and everyone enjoyed Shadow Chancellor George Osborne’s speech to the troops.

Georgian Eating RoomThe setting was wonderful – the Georgian Eating Room at Pitzhanger Manor. The picture left is a bit small and taken with a fish eye lens (I nicked it from the Ealing council site). The picture does not convey how pretty the room is. It manages to be both grand but welcoming at the same time.

A great place for a party. Anyone can hire it. Follow link for more info.

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Ealing and Northfield

Ealing announces 75% more street cleaning next year

EalingIn a press release today Ealing Council announced that it will spend an extra £1.5 million on street cleaning next year. The street cleaning budget this year (2006/07) is just over £2.035 million. The extra spending of £1.528 million will take this budget up to £3.563 million next year.

As a result many more streets will be cleaned every day instead of twice a week. Other streets will be upgraded from being cleaned once to twice weekly. Streets around rail and Tube stations will be cleaned daily in the morning and again in the afternoon, so they will be tidier when commuters arrive home.

Council Leader Jason Stacey said:

Once the new arrangements are up and running, residents should be able to see the difference, especially in our town centres and around our key community areas.

I am pleased to be able to announce this significant additional investment as it will mean more parts of the borough will get cleaned more regularly.

Residents have told us they want cleaner streets and that is why it is one of this administration’s three key priorities.

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Ealing and Northfield

Sorting out Labour’s legacy will take some time

Tonight I was reviewing the written questions laid by councillors at the last full council meeting on 23rd January while my wife watched Desperate Housewives.

Maybe we should have fixed it five years agoI could not quite believe question 14 from Labour councillor Tej Ram Bagha:

To ask the Portfolio Holder what plans there are to repair the Southall Town Hall clock, which has been broken for five years.

Sorry Councillor Bagha but we have only been in power since May, following on from 12 years of Labour misrule, so we have not had the chance to put everything right yet. No doubt we will get round to fixing Southall Town Hall’s clock but it is a shame that the last Labour administration did not get round to it. Doh! By my reckoning you are entitled to question our record on this matter in January 2011.

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Ealing and Northfield

Council tax back under control – 1.9%

TownhallLast night David Scott, cabinet member for finance and performance, took the opportunity given by a budget question from Councillor John Ross to make the announcement that Ealing’s council tax would only go up by 1.9% next year.

Although he caveated his statement by pointing out that the budget setting process was not quite complete and was subject to scrutiny this is great news for Ealing. This is the lowest rise in Ealing since before the 12 years of Labour administration. At a time when headline inflation (CPI) has hit 3% it is a great achievement to come in considerably under that level and hence deliver a real terms decrease in council tax to the people of Ealing. After 12 years of Labour misrule the people of Ealing, particularly those least able to afford to pay the council tax, will be able to spend more of their own money on their own priorities and not have it confiscated by the Town Hall.

Categories
Ealing and Northfield High tax, low pay

London Living Wage debate at full council

TownhallThe meat of last night’s full council meeting was two debates: one on the London Living Wage and one on Holocaust Memorial Day. The later was entirely uncontroversial and was a good opportunity for all sides to restate their commitment to remembering genocide and passing this knowledge on to the young.

The London Living Wage debate was less so. The Labour group had put up a motion which made a commitment to adopting the London Living Wage and working to ensuring that our whole supply chain adopted it (even if their workforce is not in London). The LibDems upped the anti by trying to extend the commitment to young people. Although the Conservative group, and Leader Jason Stacey in particular, are in favour of making sure that people are properly paid there were real reservations about trying to push this (the LLW) down our supply chain. The council needs to get on with delivering its priorities, like keeping the council tax under control, and not get side tracked with trying to force subcontractors to pay London pay rates to someone working on a remote site in Wales say.

The Tory group and the 3 LibDems voted for the Tory motion with the Labour group being unable to support it:

This Council notes that all employees subject to the pay and conditions of Ealing Council are paid at or above the level of the London Living Wage. This Council believes that all members of our community have the right to earn a living wage. As community leaders this Council will work with partners in seeking to deliver a living wage across Ealing.

Many in the Tory group were wondering why the Labour group was proposing their motion now when they are in opposition rather than implementing it a year ago when they were still in power. Could it be that they didn’t want to be constrained whilst they were still responsible for the bills but now that they are in opposition they can be as irresponsible as they like?

I had prepared a speech on this subject as it is one of my specialist subjects. Unfortunately I did not have the chance to deliver it as we ran out of time. Labour councillors Mahfouz and Bell seemed particularly keen to hear me speak and it is gratifying to know that I have such an ardent fan base amongst the Labour group. Indeed I was a bit disappointed that they failed to quote the blog having done so for the previous two meetings running. Rather than disappoint my fans here is what I would have said:

This year’s London Living Wage of £7.05 was announced by the London Mayor on 18th May. We would be very unwise I think to take lessons in economics from the most economically illiterate man in British politics.

This is the man who raised cash fares on public transport by 33% in January.

This is the man who raised the GLA precept by 13.3% last year.

This is the man who has increased the GLA precept by 175% since the GLA was created only seven short years ago.

In September the Joseph Rowntree Foundation published this report that found that two million households in England struggle to pay their council tax each year. The report found that the majority of people having difficulties paying their council tax are working people on low incomes and in low-value housing. The report found that one in four households in band A receives a summons and that one in seven in band B does.

Is this any surprise when this council under a Labour administration raised council tax by 25% in 2003 and has raised council tax by 71% this century so far?

And it is not just the Labour Mayor and Labour councils that tax the poor so hard.

In October another piece of work paid for by the JRF found that the Labour government’s tax and benefits reforms had weakened work incentives:

  • since Labour came to power someone on benefit trying to improve themselves by working harder gets to keep 2.5p less of each extra £1 they earn
  • over 2 million workers would lose more than half of any increase in earnings to taxes and reduced benefits
  • of these some 160,000 would lose more than 90p of each extra £1 they earned.

What is it you lot [Note that “you lot” is Tory group code for Labour or the Labour group] call Gordon Brown now? The Great Clunking Fist. The Great Clunking Fist coming down on the heads of the poor.

There is no point in the state legislating for high wages and then just confiscating them all again in taxes.

The best thing that this council, the London Mayor and Gordon Brown can do to get off the backs of the poor is to control our costs and keep all taxes low.

Categories
Ealing envirocrime

Another dispatch from the envirocrime frontline

Unique Food and Wine

Northfield’s envirocrime protection officer, Ricky Wright, has been pursuing businesses that make a mess of South Ealing Road (see previous posting). Unique Food and Wine at 142 South Ealing Road picked up a £50 fixed penalty notice on Friday for not managing their rubbish properly.

Northfield residents can help with the campaign too. If you use the shops in South Ealing Road then make a point of talking to the shop keepers and asking them what they do with their rubbish and what they are doing to help keep up the neighbourhood. They will be wealthier in the end if South Ealing Road looks nice. They will certainly end up poor if you withdraw your custom so let them know that you expect high standards on South Ealing Road.

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Ealing and Northfield Ex-Mayor Livingstone

Gazette can’t add up

On page 2 today the Gazette carries comments from opposition leader Sonika Nirwal regarding the small rise in council tax signalled by council leader Jason Stacey (see previous posting). Both the Gazette in its headline and Nirwal in her quote try to slur the new administration with the word hypocrisy. What a load of twaddle?

In the pre-amble to the Conservative manifesto for the local elections in May we identified one of our programme focuses as:

Keeping council tax as low as possible. Cutting out the massive waste at Ealing Council and delivering true value for money for the council tax already paid by residents.

In the main body of the document we say:

Year on year a Conservative run Ealing Council will hold council tax to levels as low as possible.

This is exactly what we are doing. That’s called delivery not hypocrisy.

If you wonder about the Gazette’s reporting you should certainly worry about their maths. They take five year’s worth of percentage rises and add them up. To have any mathematical sense they need to be multiplied. Doh! I pointed this out on 24th February when they first used the figures like this (see previous posting).

The tables below are constructed straight from my council tax bills since 1999. They show the excruciating rise in council tax Band D in Ealing during the early years of this century driven by the wastefulness of both the old Labour administration and the London Mayor. Ealing council’s charge has gone up 71%, the GLA precept by 175% (ie 2.75 times) and the council tax (which covers both of these) has gone up by 86%. Note how both the Mayor and the Labour council tried to control their rises in election years (election years highlighted in red).

Ealing's Council Tax

Categories
Ealing envirocrime

No shit

Sorry about the Anglo-Saxon expression but it really is shit that a small minority of our residents think that it is OK to have a dog and not clear up after it. The picture below was taken in Junction Road on Saturday morning first thing.

Book him Danno

There have been persistent reports of dog fouling in Junction Road. Ricky Wright, the Northfield envirocrime protection officer, decided to prioritise this issue and put up a sign. This had a small effect but the problem remained. After visiting the area once with the Safer Neighbourhood Team and failing to make any progress Ricky literally decided to stake out the site every morning last week. He had to wait to Saturday to get a result.

The person concerned let their dog foul in plain sight and then managed to bag it but just chuck it in the street. A strange kind of half measure. Anyway they got an £80 littering fine for their (lack of) trouble. The fine would have been bigger if it had dog fouling.

As you can see from the photo the street was otherwise clean. No amount of expensive cleaning by the council can keep our streets looking good unless we change the behaviour of the small minority who mess the place up.

Some people may ask whether this was a good use of resources. For myself I am sure that it is. It is only by directly confronting poor behaviour that we can have an impact. Well done to the council and Ricky in particular.

Categories
Ealing and Northfield

Councillor’s surgery

This morning I was on duty at Northfield Community Centre in Northcroft Road. The Northfield councillors do their surgeries there on the second Saturday of the month from 10.30am-12 midday.

This was my third time, we take it in turns. The first time I had two people, second time none, this time three. I do not want to discuss the specifics of their cases obviously but there were some common threads that are worth commenting on. The three cases were:

  • a chap who had been handled badly by the Ealing Council pensions service (ie one of our own pensioners)
  • a bloke who has had some shoddy work done on his council flat and is having trouble getting it sorted out
  • a couple who had problems with their rubbish collection.

The common thread here seems to be the lack of a customer service ethic amongst council staff. The story was unreturned phone calls, letters not responded to and slapdash work. The lack of service ethic applies to those at the top just as much those on the front line.

What is sad about these cases, and hundreds more like them I expect, is that an awful lot of calls and letters and anger could have been averted by a quick response, a straightforward apology and some attention to detail in the first place. I have three letters to write on Monday.

Categories
Ealing and Northfield Health, housing and adult social services

Ealing council secures next year’s cash for better council houses

Today Ealing Times is covering the great news that the “Decent Homes” funding Ealing was due to get next year has been preserved from possible cuts. The following year’s funding will have to wait on the next Comprehensive Spending Review. It seems that the Ealing Times don’t know that Ealing Homes is wholly owned by Ealing Council. This “ALMO” is an innovation, and an overhead, forced on councils by central government.

This money is great but the way it is dispensed is typical of what is wrong with this government’s approach to local government. Ring-fenced pools of money are doled out by Whitehall civil servants. Lots of officers’ time is wasted writing bids to get the cash. Whitehall employs rows of civil servants to evaluate the bids. In this case the bureaucracy overhead was made worse by the invention of a whole new class of quango – the ALMO. In a sane world councils would be given one grant and left to get on with raising any extra cash they need to deliver local priorities.