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Ex-Mayor Livingstone

Mayor needs to explain missing cash

I have written to the Mayor today to ask him to explain a discrepancy between what he has told me and his reply to a question by Andrew Pelling, AM. The Mayor wrote to me at the end of October to say that the £10K he had bid for a trip to the Winter Olympics for two at a Variety Club do on 12th September had been made “on behalf of my charity account in the GLA budget”, see previous posting. This does not accord with a reply to a question asked by Andrew Pelling in time for the last Mayor’s Question Time on 15th November. The reply states that only £5,000 was given to the Variety Club.

According to the answer the Mayor’s charity account currently only has a balance of £1,257.37. Could it be that the Mayor cannot pay the second half of this bill out of the charity account because there is not enough money in it? Perhaps if he is going to swank around at big charity balls he might spend his own money. Mr Mayor are you prepared to pay up?

The Mayor promised to offer these tickets to Londoners through a prize draw in the Londoner not so freesheet. Three months have gone by since the ball on 12th September and still no sign of the draw in the December issue of the Londoner.

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Ex-Mayor Livingstone

Another Livingstone power grab

Guess who?The Mayor is trying to make another grab for control of waste, an area that has traditionally been under the control of local authorities and which he sees as being a way to get more power for himself. His press release issued today says:

We need one city-wide body to manage London’s waste sustainably, so we don’t dump it outside the city or burn it. David Miliband, the Secretary of State for the Environment, could resolve these problems by unequivocally backing the creation of a single waste authority under the office of the Mayor of London, which would give us a city-wide body similar to the way we deal with transport.

So the Mayor wants to centralise London’s handling of waste and make it as inefficient and wasteful as Transport for London.

I don’t recommend that you read the 404 page Municipal Waste Management Strategy and certainly don’t ask how much it cost in all its full colour, commissioned artwork glory. I did load the PDF and search for terms such as “savings”, “cheaper” and efficiency savings”. You will not find any references to saving you money in this document. How can you centralise a service on a pan-London basis and not make one of your key objectives slashing costs? You will find talk about sustainability and vision which all equals much greater costs to ordinary Londoners.

The Mayor’s strategy talks of a fifth functional body. Imagine Waste for London in addition to Transport for London. Maybe WfL will have a £78 million comms budget too. Maybe WfL will employ 821 people who earn more than £50K per year. You can assume that WfL would really hurt your pocket.

Categories
Ex-Mayor Livingstone

A billion here, a billion there …

Mayors Question Time.jpgI could not attend Mayor’s Question Time this Wednesday but I have been reviewing the webcast this morning.

Roger Evans, the Tory transport spokesman on the GLA, challenged the Mayor on the cost implication of his announcement on Monday regarding Congestion Charge banding. Follow the link above and move the slider control to 1:45:00. The Mayor would not give a direct answer to the question but essentially said that if people traded down it would be a good thing and it did not really matter if income was lost. He said:

The TfL budget this year is over £5 billion. The income from the congestion charge is I think about £120 million. Therefore a variation of £2-3 million within the congestion charge has no overall impact on the totality of the budget.

There are a couple of problems with this statement. Firstly, the Mayor has taken £677 million off Londoners in charges and fines and spent every penny of the money, and more, on set up and running costs. He needs to make a surplus of £60 million this year before he starts to generate cash. At the end of this financial year it is likely that the Mayor will have taken over £900 million since the scheme started and made a net income in the order of £10 millions. If this is green taxation then we will all be very poor in the future. Secondly, the average net income from the charge (which ignores the capital costs of the scheme) for the first three full years of operation has only been £83 million so even excluding set up costs the Mayor is being wildly over-optimistic about income from his silly scheme.

This statement reveals the wishful thinking that has led to financial disaster that is the congestion charge. The City Hall idiots think “this scheme will make money therefore I do not really have to control costs”. It follows that they sign contracts that are overly expensive, they make arbitrary deadlines and do not consider the cost implications of meeting them, in their haste they do not fully consider all the costs they will be liable for, when they run into problems they throw more money at the thing and they don’t do any proper analysis before they make changes that will undermine the viability of the scheme. In this way all the income to-date has been squandered in costs and there is little prospect of any net cash being returned to Londoners to spend on useful things like policemen say.

Beware though. If you think that wasting £100 millions on Congestion Charging is a trivial matter then consider the effect of taking billions off Londoners and wasting most of that too. This week the Mayor also talked about London moving to road pricing before the rest of the country. This will cost us billions, not hundreds of millions.

Remember the quote (Evening Standard 27th January) from Michele Dix, director of congestion charging at TfL: “It would generate £3 billion gross and net revenue of between £1 billion and £2 billion.” This silly woman, typical of TfL management, can’t refine her cost estimates more accurately than to the nearest £1 billion. She seems to think that it acceptable to tax people to this extent and then lose anywhere from a third to two thirds of the money in collection costs. If the Congestion Charge is a model for road pricing then the scheme will cost us £3 billion and every penny will disappear in costs until the scheme has run for at least 5 years.

Categories
Ex-Mayor Livingstone

CC suicide

CC sign.jpgKen Livingstone has announced the latest nail in the Congestion Charge’s coffin. Even less income will be collected as a result of today’s announcement. This announcement was headlined on the Radio 4 PM programme today as “increased CC for the most polluting vehicles”. In the details of the press release though it seems that small vehicles will be exempted from 2008 but the extra charge for large vehicles will not come in until 2009 or 2010. In other words our economically illiterate Mayor is going to give up a substantial part of the existing income before he gets the new income.

As I wrote back in September the CC has to make a surplus of at least £60 million in the current financial year just to break even over its life to-date. This latest blow to the financial viability of the CC will ensure that all of the income, over £200 million a year from hard-pressed London drivers, is totally wasted in excessive costs.

The CC is specifically designed to force people to make errors and incur excess penalty charges. It is therefore very dependent on penalty payments to make a surplus. As Conservative AM Angie Bray revealed by asking a question of the Mayor 30% of revenue comes from fines. There is a significant risk of a collapse in revenue as London drivers get wiser. This was seen recently when Angie Bray asked about the impact of allowing people to pay the next day. The answer revealed that the CC will lose £5.7 million a year as a result.

Another blow was highlighted in the Evening Standard on Monday. A lone campaigner called Barrie Segal is challenging various aspects of the administration of the scheme. The Standard reports that another £8 million of fines are potentially at stake.

It appears that the Mayor is trying to rebrand the CC as a carbon fighting measure. We know it has had no significant impact on the steady reduction in car use in central London, driven mainly by the sustained persecution of London drivers by decriminalised parking (code for taking parking off Met traffic wardens and allowing local authorities to soak drivers). It has yet to make money and it is looking increasingly likely that it never will.

Up until the end of March 2006 the Mayor has taken £677 million off London drivers and blown all of it and more on costs. What a chump!

Categories
Ex-Mayor Livingstone

Ferrari Mayor

Both the FT and BBC Radio 4’s Saturday PM this afternoon covered the Tories’ problems with an open primary for the London Mayoral candidate and the possible involvement of Nick Ferrari among others.

Ferrari’s position seems to be that really good candidates (like him obviously) are too busy doing real stuff to bother with campaigning until maybe the start of 2008. I think that if people can’t make a commitment to London and the Tories sooner than that then we should not consider them. It may well be that we cannot recruit a big hitter but it is better to accept this sooner rather than later. With this rolling process of deadlines that will not hold it makes it too big a risk for ANYONE to apply because they are likely to have the legs cut from under them by the central party if the panjandrums don’t like the candidate. Isn’t the point of an open primary that Londoners choose from a wide field?

The party should set out a timetable and stick to it. A low key candidate will gather momentum if they get to work and the party gets behind them sooner rather then later.

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Ex-Mayor Livingstone

Mayor using his personal charity account to act the swell

I received a nice letter from the Mayor today. I was inspired to write to him on 2nd October to follow up an article in the Evening Standard (see previous posting). I wrote to find out what he was doing swelling it up at the Variety Club do on 12th September. The Mayor mentioned the function in his October report but he failed to mention that he had spent £10K!

Mayor of London 31-10-2006.jpgMayor of London 31-10-2006 Page 2.jpg

According to his reply the £10K of our cash he spent came from “my charity account”. As a personal guest of Lord Coe it appears that Livingstone did not have to pay for his own dinner but decided to use £10K of our council taxes to bid for a trip for two to the next Winter Olympics. I am all for plutocrats taking part in charity auctions but it smells somewhat when a public servant thinks that it is appropriate for him to take part in the fun with our money.

I have searched in vain on the GLA/Mayor’s website for any mention of this budget. I don’t think that any questions have been asked about it. How much is it? What is it spent on? I have asked the GLA Conservatives to ask some questions and hopefully put a stop to this. I guess this is hidden somewhere in the bowels of the overall budget of £11.8 million for the Mayor’s Office. Did Conrad Black and Barbara Amiel spend that much?

I sent my letter on 2nd October. They probably got it on 3rd. Judging by the stamped date they have held on to it for 28 days before replying. The reply was sent 2nd class. They are clearly doing everything they can to reply as slowly as possible. Cynical or what?

Categories
Ex-Mayor Livingstone High tax, low pay

Boris Johnson reveals reality of low pay, high tax Britain

Writing in today’s Telegraph, Boris Johnson describes the plight of an RAF logistics worker who is paid £11,500 a year, or £958 a month – around the minimum wage level. She has to pay £116 in tax and £61 in National Insurance which is just another tax. Earning so little she is being taxed at a rate of 18% even before she pays Council Tax at a rate of £118 a month.

All of those middle class types who are guilty about their own good fortune and hence supportive of high taxes forget about the low paid and pensioners who have to eke out every penny and would rather not pay for a load of those same middle class types to have unproductive jobs on quangos and the suchlike.

In the same paper, on the same day the London Development Agency, a part of the Mayor’s wasteful empire, is looking to spend £35K per annum on an Equality & Diversity Manager.

We are looking for an enthusiastic and knowledgeable equality specialist to work within the LDA Equality and Diversity team on a six month contract.

You will play a pivotal role in driving forward the Gender Equality agenda whilst developing new areas of LDA work such as a focus on migrant workers and forging links with the Commission for Equality and Human Rights. As well as contributing to GLA group programmes and the development of internal projects, policies and strategies you will also provide agency wide leadership on Equality and Community Cohesion Impact Assessment.

You will be a committed and flexible self-starter with a proven track record of putting strategic and policy decisions into practice. You will also require exceptional political sensitivity, influencing ability and a thorough understanding of legislation and issues affecting London’s diverse and multi-racial communities.

So instead of spending public money bringing economic developnment to London the twits at LDA are spending our RAF lady’s hard earned cash on rubbish. It takes the tax from about 16 low-paid people to pay for one Equality & Diversity Manager. Doh!

In reality it is much worse than that as it is not costless to collect tax and the E&D Manager is not costless to employ. Let’s double the number of low-paid people required to support this drone if we want a realistic idea – 32.

Categories
Ex-Mayor Livingstone

Mayor publishes Muslims in London report

The Mayor has been looking at Muslims in London and publishes this report today, just as Muslims are celebrating Eid ul-Fitr.

It makes interesting reading. As ever the Mayor draws the wrong conclusions though.

The report identifies a weakness in the level of educational achievement by this group and points out that attainment in English is a major handicap. This handicap is exacerbated by an unwillingness of some to speak English in the home.

I have noticed the same mistake being made by the newly-arrived Polish community in Ealing. If you don’t speak English at home your children will always be disadvantaged at school, this will feed through to low educational achievement and, in the end, relative poverty.

The Mayor’s prescriptions include:

  • The DfES and local education authorities should work towards eliminating direct and indirect discriminatory practices by educational institutions.
  • There needs to be Londonwide accesible and affordable interpretation services for people with a first language other than English.
  • Local Education Authorities must work with communities to increase the proportion of Muslim teachers and Muslim school govenors in areas with significant Muslim communities.

My prescriptions would be:

  • Hire more great teachers like Gerry Curran.
  • Shut bad schools quickly and make sure investment goes into good schools. Muslims, like the rest of us, are quick to spot and use good schools.
  • Provide free or subsidised English teaching to all new immigrants that need it.
  • Extend the We are Londoners campaign to be a “Londoners speak English” and “Speak English at home” campaign.

One London

The Mayor spends £100 million a year on advertising. It is a shame he can’t spend it doing something useful like making sure that London kids get the best start in life. One way to achieve that is for them to speak English as early as possible.

Categories
Ex-Mayor Livingstone

Caribbean Showcase – Emperor Livingstone’s bread and circuses

Caribbean Showcase.gifToday Roger Evans AM, the Conservatives’ transport spokesman on the GLA highlights spending on the Caribbean Showcase on his blog.

At the last but one Mayor’s questions on 13th September Damian Hockney asked about the funding of the Showcase, the Mayor’s Notting Hill Carnivall spoiler. It cost £308K. The Fibbing Mayor does not simply say “I paid for practically all of it with your precept money that I am supposed to spend on policemen really”. No he tries to obfuscate:

  • the GLA only spent £68K
  • the LDA, which is part of the GLA, only spent £120K
  • my little sub-quango Creative London, which is part of the LDA, only spent £95K
  • I made TfL and the London Fire Brigade spend a couple of grand each for stalls.

On 11th October, at LDA questions Damian Hockney kept up his attack by asking what criteria the LDA used to decide to support spending £215K on this farce. They still have to reply to the question. More on this later.

So all-in-all the Mayor wasted £287K of our precept cash trying to force the Notting Hill Carnival to do what he says. No doubt he tells them in private meetings that if they bend to his will they can have this cash for the Carnival. Once he has made them move to the park he will take the money away no doubt.

Categories
Ex-Mayor Livingstone Tram

Last word on the tram for now

In a leader tonight the Evening Standard summed it up nicely:

“In the context of what a scheme like the Thameslink expansion could achieve for commuters, the Mayor’s persistence with his pet scheme for a tram in west London looks increasingly inexplicable. The tram would displace traffic onto residential roads and a majority of those living locally object to the plan – following the election of three councils on a platform of opposition to the scheme. This is no way to go about improving public transport.”

You could say the same thing about Crossrail as well.

See Ealing Times coverage.