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Ealing and Northfield

Ealing parking waste

The Evening Standard last night printed figures (see Parking Account 2004-5.xls) from the Department of Transport giving financial performance of councils in respect of their parking accounts. They are not supposed to make a profit on these but their surpluses are available for use in road and safety improvement schemes. Ealing was ranked a rather pathetic 29 out of 33 in the 2004/5 financial year. Apparently they took £15.1 million and left a surplus of £886,000. You might think that it is not good to make surpluses but think on.

£15.1 million is the equivalent of 377,500 £40 tickets. In other words 377,500 of our residents and visitors have had that moment of teeth grinding fury when you realise that the parking attendants have got you. They cannot console themselves that at least all the road safety schemes we need in the Borough are well funded because Parking Services have spent it all on their workforce and can only come up with a surplus of £866,000.

In business language Ealing’s margin is only 6%. 24 councils manage a margin of 20% or more with Kensington & Chelsea ranked first with a margin of 61%.

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Ealing and Northfield

Ealing Times coverage of election night

According to Ealing Times “The Conservatives have stormed to victory in the local council elections wrenching control away from Labour.” See their coverage.

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Ealing and Northfield Tram

Ealing council’s Tram fight starts here

Last night the Ealing Conservative Group met. It was confirmed that there would be a Council meeting on 18th May at which there would essentially be one item on the agenda: withdrawing Ealing Council’s support of the Tram and Ealing Council becoming an active opponent of the scheme. This was one of the Conservatives’ key election promises for the local election this week and we will make sure that the Tram is stopped in its tracks.

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Ealing and Northfield

Stunning night

Although it was a great night nationally for the Conservatives, it was a stunning night for Ealing Conservatives. We won an overall majority on the council, taking 37 out of 69 seats, an additional 20 seats. One of those who lost seats was the Labour leader Leonora Thomson.

In Northfield our hard work was transformed into a winning margin of 890 each on average. The count was a new experience for me. It was very friendly and civil. It is a shame that more people who are cynical about politics cannot see how local politicians behave close up when they are tired after a long day and the stress of the build up. All candidates seemed very fair-minded and respectful of the verdict of voters. In particular our Labour opponents handled themselves with great dignity in spite of being rejected by the voters.

I left after the Northfield declaration as my wife needed to get to bed in order to be fit for work today so I missed the excitement of the rest of the evening. It is not quite the same hearing about it through the media.

The Conservative group of councillors will be meeting tonight to start to implement our programme for Ealing.

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Ealing and Northfield

11 hours knocking up

It is a naff phrase but we call it knocking up. The process of getting your vote out. Not many voters know how the politicos work. Canvassing is the process of asking people how they will vote and recording their responses. In passing you may chat to voters about the issues, try to get your point across and listen to their issues but the bottom line is you want to find out how they will vote. The canvas returns tell you who your “pledges” are, ie those people who have promised to vote for you. Having canvassed for a week or two before the elections you spend election day knocking up. In other words you go round all your pledges and remind them to get to the polls. Our team of four started at 8.30am and went through to 7.30pm with a short break for a late lunch at the Plough in Northfields Avenue.

Most of the pledges I talked to had voted or intended to vote. Some women were waiting for the their husbands to come home before they went together. One lady was organising a BBQ so it looked like she would not get out. I met one family coming out the door for an evening stroll to the polls. A few people did not realise you get three votes, one for each councillor vacancy. One Polish guy I talked to was worried about having made a tick rather than a cross – that is fine as long as your intentions are clear. He also pointed out that he had only ticked one box. Uh oh! Two wasted votes.

My opposite number in the Labour group, Simon Woodroofe, and I are both a little worried about being low in the alphabet. We have one odd Green standing so if too many people vote one Green and two Tory or Labour we might drop off the bottom. Doubt it though. I have only met a very small number of female Green voters. No men.

I met two of the Labour group mid afternoon. It looked like they were just starting. Too late guys. My prediction is that Northfield will be Conservative tomorrow.

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Ealing and Northfield

Blue Ealing

The Evening Standard last night published a political map of London showing how Labour could suffer in London today. Using new figures from Tony Travers of the LSE they painted Ealing blue and suggested that the Conservatives would have 15 London councils, a gain of 7 over today’s number.

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Ealing and Northfield

Electronic Ealing, not yet

As a candidate for Ealing council I have been trying to find out what the current councillors do beyond their council duties and Googling them all. Too many councillors seem to be satisfied just to just be councillors as the only urls that come up are Ealing council or Operation Black Vote or other directories of councillors. A few have made enough impact in their work life that their names come up at work sites and a few more have been active in the Association of London Government or the Local Government Association and a few references come up that way. A few, especially ex-mayors, come up in the papers, especially Ealing Times.

It is hard to find out much about the councillors themselves. Beyond the Councillors’ declaration of interest page of the council’s website there is little out there and essentially no councillor has an active website of their own. I am not saying that every councillor needs to be a nerdy blogger who is feverishly posting inane chit-chat on a blog everyday. On the other hand it might be useful to have a few words of background, an idea of what they do for a job and how much time they devote to the council. It is all very well knowing what committees people serve on but we should also be able to find out what their individual priorities are and what they are campaigning on.

No opposition councillors have any kind of web pages. The Labour Acton Central councillors shared a blog that has not been updated since November. Similarly, the Labour Elthorne councillors shared a blog that has not been updated since December. Labour Councillor Philip Portwood has his own blog but again has been quiet since February, perhaps since he had some IT problems with his council supplied PC. Finally Labour Councillor Gurcharan Singh, and apparent contender for Labour leadership after the elections, has his me, me, me photo site.

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Ealing and Northfield

Conservatives winning here

The last 3 days has seen big efforts from the Northfield Conservative candidates to persuade the people of Northfield to vote for them. On Saturday and Sunday morning we delivered another leaflet to every home. This time we gave people a taste of what the local papers have been saying about Ealing council for the last couple of years. Not much of it good! On Sunday we got back to canvassing again, finishing off the last areas we have not got to so far. On Monday we started revisiting the people who were out last time we called.

I met our current Labour councillors on Carlyle Road on Saturday morning. They were talking to their own voters but were not knocking on all doors. We have been approaching all voters. Very few people are turning us away. Most Labour voters are miserable and happy to unload. A few are coming over to us but most seem to be intent on staying at home on Thursday. By Sunday the councillors were spotted in South Ealing Road about ready to give up because the response they were getting was so bad. No sign of the LibDems except for 3 or 4 of their bright orange signs saying that they are: “winning here”. Not likely.

On Tuesday night we were leafleting the tube stations at South Ealing and Northfield. This is experience slightly took the wind out of our sails. People in a hurry to get home don’t want to see yet another obstacle standing between them and their hearth. Maybe one in five took the leaflets with many muttering as they went past that we had their votes. I was impressed how polite and interested many people who you might think were not natural Tory voters were. Many new immigrants seem to be much less cynical about politics and happy to see local activists in their faces. Too many white, professional looking types were avoiding eye contact, tut-tutting and looking too important by far to engage with a mere candidate for the council.

Ealing Councillor David Scott was helping us canvas on Monday morning and Stewart Jackson, MP for Peterborough, was out canvassing on Tuesday evening. Thanks for your help.

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Ealing and Northfield

Labour leader under threat

According to the Ealing Times yesterday, Labour council leader, Leonora Thomson, is under threat from one of her fellow Labour councillors, Lady Margaret ward councillor and ex-mayor Gurcharan Singh.

The Times points out that with two suspended councillors the woes of the ruling Labour group are multiplying. Councillor Joginder Saroe has been suspended in the expectation of a damning report from the Standards Board. Councillor Richard Porter resigned following an unpleasant re-selection battle.

I googled Singh just now and found that apart from being deputy mayor he has his own website. He has obviously gone to the trouble of registering a domain name to support his bid for power but otherwise “This site is currently under construction”. There is though a Labour logo and a photo of himself. If I were him I might make the photo a little smaller.

Categories
Ealing and Northfield Health, housing and adult social services

Ealing’s Strategic Health Authority revealed

The TaxPayers’ Alliance has today produced a useful survey of London’s health spending and the Strategic Health Authorities that oversee it (see their report titled Flatlining).

Since Labour came to power it has doubled health spending in London from about £6 billion in 1997/8 to £12 billion in 2005/6. To give a feel for the size of this number the Mayor is spending £3 billion in the current financial year. This would be great if we all thought that we were getting twice as much health care. The TaxPayers’ Alliance’s report points the blame for this lack of performance at the 5 Strategic Health Authorities (SHAs) that oversee this spending in London.

Ealing is covered by the North West London SHA and local Conservative politician Richard Barnes serves as a non-exec, hopefully protecting our interests. Like all these bits of the NHS they have their own website.

You can see their last annual report on the website too. This is typical of the breed (expensive, glossy, full colour, stuffed with lots of pictures) and as such it fails to tell you anything you might want to know. In the last year for which figures are available they spent £202 million of which £12 million was spent on themselves, ie their offices in the West End and £100K a year salaries for their executives. They list their activities but give no breakdown of how the £190 million they spend on these activities is broken down. We have no way on knowing if any of this spending is useful to us.

No need to worry though Pat Hewitt, our popular Secretary for Secretary of State for Health, is going to make these five bodies more responsive to the people of London by amalgamating them into one super SHA. So they will spend £1 billion out of the £12 billion that gets spent on health in London. They will spend it on target setting and giving the health professionals on the front line a hard time. When they have finished they will refuse to give us any information about how they have spent the cash. Great!