Categories
Communications disease Ex-Mayor Livingstone

CC ads cost more than whole Tory election campaign

The biggest spender on advertsing during the last general election campaign was the Tory party. It spent £8.2 million. They do this every four or five years to try to persuade the whole country to vote for them. Whatever you think about the Tories’ donors most of this cash comes from little people paying their subs. I’m one of them. £50 a year. See the Electoral Commission website.

CC in LondonerA couple of weeks ago the Evening Standard reported that the London Mayor, Ken Livingstone, was going to spit in our faces by spending £8.7 million on telling us about his unwanted extension to the Congestion Charge, an extension that will probably ensure that no surplus is generated from the stupid tax for many years. I did not really take the information in. This weekend I saw a billboard in South Ealing Road, a TV advert and a double page spread in the Londoner. It is fully four months until this change comes into force yet Livingstone is using £8.7 million of our cash to ram his scheme down our throats.

Categories
Ealing and Northfield

GLA member selected for Ealing Central and Acton

Angie BrayApologies for all of the pictures of politicos over the last few days. At least this one is female and a Tory. Angie Bray is the GLA member for the West Central GLA constituency which includes Hammersmith & Fulham, Kensington & Chelsea and Westminster. She was selected as the prospective parliamentary candidate for the new Ealing Central and Acton parliamentary constituency on Thursday evening.

This seat replaces the old Ealing, Acton and Shepherds Bush seat which is currently held by Labour MP, Andrew Slaughter who is an ex-leader of Hammersmith and Fulham council.

With the boundary changes this seat becomes a very winnable seat for the Tories.

Categories
Ex-Mayor Livingstone

Labour GLA member wants London flag

Murad Qureshi.jpgIt is Mayor’s question time again on Wednesday of next week and one of the sillier Labour GLA members, Murad Qureshi, has tabled the following question to the Mayor:

“With your campaigns to encourage a civic identity of being a Londoner, is it not time for a London flag similar to that which you see in Devon and Cornwall?”

The Mayor spends £100 million a year promoting himself. The last thing he needs is a flag. Or, maybe a flag would be cheaper?

Categories
Ealing and Northfield

More Labour mischief

Dan WhittleThis is another story that is critical of one of our local newspapers, the Ealing Times again. Today on their website and also in the paper with a picture of three of the villains of the piece they cover Labour’s Olympic petition campaign. Times journalist Benedict Moore Bridger has failed to tell us the whole story. He quotes Dan Whittle and refers to him as the petition organiser. He does not mention that Whittle is full time assistant to Anne Snelgove, Labour MP for South Swindon. He was Labour PPC for Wells at the last election. In a previous article he was referred to as political education officer for Central Ealing and Acton Labour Party.

Today’s article features a picture taken on 14th September (more old news from the Times) of a Labour minister, Labour MP and Labour activist. The article quotes Ealing Labour leader Sonika Nirwal. The previous article quoted Sian Vasey, director of Ealing Centre for Independent Living. What the article does not say was that she stood as a Labour candidate at the local elections in May.

Make no mistake. Anything you hear about an Olympics petition will be coming straight out of the Labour party and anyone signing this is either naive or a fully paid-up Labour member.

Ealing’s Conservative council is taking the Olympics seriously. Labour is lining up another empty campaign to try to distract us from delivering real benefits to the people of Ealing. Remember that whilst they huff and puff about another second order issue their councillors are managing a 50% attendance rate at the Health, Housing and Adult Social Services Panel against the Tories 100%.

Categories
Ealing and Northfield

Ealing 2nd most improved

The Ealing Times is today covering the issue of how much council tax we collect. They manage to turn a good news story into a bad news one.

The year before last the council had a glitch and managed to leave £7.1 million uncollected at the end of the year. This does not mean that this was all lost. Much of this was collected subsequently. Since then, according to a rather out of date GMB press release dated 27th September, Ealing has improved its performance such that it is the second most improved borough in London. At the end of this year the shortfall was was much reduced to £5.2 million and since the year end a further £1.5 million has been collected.

It is irritating that some people get away without paying. If they do a moonlight flit it can cost more to collect the money than you could recover. The £5.2 million sounds like a lot but the council had collected 95.6% of its projected £122 million council tax income by the end of the year.

It is worth comparing this tax with the Mayor’s CC which is essentially another tax. Last year the Mayor collected £254 million in revenue but spent £148 million in costs. This left a surplus of only £106 million (without considering the capital costs of the project). By comparison it costs the council only about £3 million to collect both council tax and business rates.

The Times’ Benedict Moore Bridger is indulging in voodoo economic when he adds previous year’s outstandings to calculate amounts of council tax that could be returned to residents. Most of this is collected after the year end.

As part of our VFM agenda the new administration is keeping a close eye on this area and expects Ealing’s improved performance in this area to keep on improving.

Categories
Ealing and Northfield

Northala Pastor

Pastor David WisePastor David Wise of Greenford Baptist Church should perhaps stand as a councillor as he obviously fancies himself as a bit of a politician. Last night he presented a 700 name petition to the council in favour of the second phase of the Northala Fields project.

As I went into the council chamber the good pastor was directing his minibus full of congregation up to the gallery and urging them to line the rail of the gallery. The minibus full showed their appreciation of the pastor after his sermon and supported Councillor Mahfouz and the Labour group in their defence of the big vision thing over Councillor Stacey’s down to earth approach.

The pastor has put his speech, including recordings from the council chamber, up on his church’s website so you can decide for yourself by following the link.

Jason Stacey, the leader of Ealing council, responded to the petition and started off by asking the pastor to read out the actual petition (also on the church’s website). This went a long way to bursting the pastor’s balloon:

  • The council is going to complete the park, not downgrade it.
  • The council is going to spend the park’s surplus on the park, not reallocate it.
  • The funding for Phase 2 does not exist in anyone’s budget, certainly not the previous Labour administration’s.
  • There will be no loss of amenities unless you count visitor’s centres as essentials rather than nice-to-haves.

The council’s discussion of this subject went all the way to the guillotine and indeed beyond it. I had the chance to make my maiden speech and made the last speech on the subject. I had prepared something but decided to wing it.

The thrust of my contribution was to point out that although Phase 1 has been a great success and is a credit to all involved it is entirely different from Phase 2. Phase 1 was a straight business proposition. You can dump waste on our site, we will charge you and build a park. This was a great trick but one that can’t be repeated once the site is landscaped.

Phase 2 is totally different. To achieve this someone needs to go cap in hand to various “funders”. These people all have small allocations and strict criteria. Rustling up the odd £5 million will be very hard and in any case most funders would expect matching funding from the council, money that is simply not available if we are to complete higher priority projects such as Northolt Swimarama. Trying to compete for these funds in the run up to the London Olympics is probably futile in any case.

The thrust of the pastor/Labour’s argument was that Phase 1 was a success, trust the team to deliver Phase 2 or we will we will lose amenities. The reality is that the two phases are completely different. The menu of amenities does look like a list of bells and whistles if you compare it with something tangible like a swimming pool. Our council can only have so many priorities so visitor’s centres do not make the list.

Minibus full

Northala Fields is a great project. Now is the time to complete it. I am sure that the pastor’s flock seen above will enjoy it. They will also enjoy living in clean, safe, VFM Ealing too.

Categories
Ealing and Northfield

Council meeting tonight

Townhall.jpgFor you politics junkies there is a full council meeting tonight at 7pm. Often these can be a little dull but tonight’s promises to be a humdinger, see the agenda.

The opposition is tabling a motion on Northala Park. It is being tabled by Cllr Mahfouz who likes to think of himself as the Labour hard man. There will also be a petition from Pastor David Wise, who would maybe do well to avoid such a politcal subject. Jason Stacey, the new Conservative council leader, has spotted that phase 2 of this project “has no clothes” and will stand his ground in the face of this attack. Labour want to play double or quits with public money and we want to concentrate on the priorities we were elected to deliver.

Whilst Mahfouz is huffing and puffing about the loss of a few bells and whistles at Northala Park the Labour councillors can’t be bothered to address the important stuff at the Health, Housing and Adult Social Service Panel (see previous posting). It is a bit rubbish Labour preening on this relatively trivial issue while they cannot be bothered to do the hard work of working their way through fat papers on subjects such as health, housing and social services.

Anyway it should be entertaining so come on down to the Town Hall for 7pm. Get there in plenty of time and grab a seat in the gallery. It is your council.

Categories
Ealing envirocrime

Another fly-posting menace

Rowans.jpgRowan’s, a bar in Chiswick High Road, has been fly-posting quite spectacularly in the neighbourhood. Today I took down 18 posters as follows:

  • 1 gates of Elthorne Park
  • 5 junction of Little Ealing Lane and South Ealing Road
  • 2 zebra crossing south end of Northfield Avenue
  • 4 junction of Lower Boston and Boston Roads
  • 6 junction of Boston Manor and Swyncombe Avenue

Although they are in the borough of Hounslow I don’t see how hard it would be to get the Hounslow licensing panel to review their licence. I have written them a letter and will take it round there this afternoon. Whilst I am at it I will dump their signs on their premises too.

Categories
Ealing and Northfield

Too many yellow boards in the neighbourhood

September 24th attackTwo very violent assaults in the neighbourhood have taken place in the last few weeks – both perpetrated by gangs of hoodie wearing black teenagers. As a result the police have been appealing for help from the public using their yellow boards.

A vicious stabbing happened in Mattock Lane on Sunday 17th September. Only a week later a savage beating was meted out to an off-duty policeman on Sunday 24th September near the junction of South Ealing Road and Little Ealing Ealing Lane, see photo right.

It seems only sensible to avoid groups of hooded youths at night right now until these evil people are caught.

The photo right and articles linked to above are both from Ealing Times.

Categories
High tax, low pay

Gordon’s chains for the poor

IFS.gifThe Joseph Rowntree Foundation have been doing more good work to show how this government ill serves the poor. This time through a report from the IFS funded by them published today.

It makes sobering reading:

  • 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.

If Brown would untax the poor he could really make a difference in people’s lives. In doing so he would probably have to untax all of us. He would rather keep the squeeze on and try to help the most vulnerable with credits only these then trap the poor in dependency. Oh, that’s OK then!