Categories
National politics

Who are the biggest kids?

Teachers are due to start “industrial action short of a strike” on 26th September in support of their dispute with the Government over pay, jobs, pensions and workloads. Apparently the unions don’t want to affect pupils and the idea is that the action is “pupil, parent and public-friendly”.

I spent five minutes this morning reading this document produced jointly by the NUT and NASUWT. It gives 18 pages of detailed instructions of what teachers should (not) do (I thought teachers resented reading lots of long guidance documents). The document gives you an insight into to quite how militant and out of touch the teaching unions are.

Some of the instructions given to teachers by their unions as a part of this “industrial action short of a strike” are:

  • Members should not attend any meetings outside school session times which are not within directed time and where there is no published directed time calendar for the academic year which has been agreed with the NUT
  • Members should produce only one written report annually to parents.
  • Members should not carry out classroom observation in any school which refuses to accept that there will be a limit of a total of three observations for all purposes within a total time of up to three hours per year.
  • Members should send and respond to work-related emails only during directed time.
  • Members should refuse to cover for absence.
  • Members should refuse to undertake supervision of pupils during the lunch break.
  • Members should not organise or co-operate with any arrangements for observation which involve pupils commenting on the work of teachers or being involved in decision making about teachers’ roles, responsibilities, pay and promotion.
  • Members should refuse to invigilate any public examination, including GCSEs and SATs.
  • Members should refuse to undertake administrative and clerical tasks … such as collecting money from pupils and parents, investigating a pupil’s absence, bulk photocopying and preparing, setting up and taking down classroom displays.

Can you imagine any area of private commerce where this kind of behaviour would be tolerated from adult employees let alone so-called professionals?

Teachers really let themselves down with this nonsense. 73% of NUT members didn’t even vote on this industrial action. The militants have taken over and they make teachers look foolish, difficult and childish frankly.

Categories
Ealing and Northfield

Council continues to waste residents’ recycling efforts

In spite of promises to reinstate kerbside re-cycling which is the most environmentally friendly approach to re-cycling, Ealing Council still mixed up most (81%) of dry re-cycling in July. In figures released by the Council last Wednesday, it became clear that 1,132.60 Tonnes out of 1,399.62 Tonnes of dry-recycling (81%) was sent by Enterprise to the Ideal MRF in Kent. Across the Borough, most of residents’ carefully sorted re-cycling was mixed up and sent to Kent to be re-sorted again at great expense.

For the first four months of the current financial year 87% of dry-recycling was sent to the MRF.

The Council keeps telling us that things are going to get better, but when the numbers finally dribble out weeks after the month end, it seems that the rate of improvement is all too slow. The Council has consistently downplayed this huge backward step in our re-cycling. The gold standard for re-cycling is kerbside sorting which ensures that the best use is made of the waste. The Council has thrown away most of residents’ sorting and separating efforts for 4 months now.

Categories
Ealing and Northfield

The politics of beds with sheds

In the coverage of the sheds with beds issue there is a clear difference in the comments being made by the government and by Ealing council and its Labour councillors.

In the BBC News piece last Friday Grant Shapps, Minister of State for Housing and Planning, said:

This is a pretty sophisticated shed if I ever saw one. Had that been stopped at the early stage we wouldn’t be ending up with streets of buildings like this with lots of people shoved into small spaces. This needs to be actually tackled by the councils on a planning basis from the outset and they need to show an example by knocking some down.

Shapps clearly feels that councils could have done more, earlier. By coming down hard on the first few sheds councils might have stopped the thousands from being built. Quite.

The council’s position is summed up by leader Cllr Julian Bell:

We’re doing everything we can to tackle this issue and have created a special team dedicated to investigating illegal outhouses, but we need more funding and greater powers.

The government clearly doesn’t buy this line. Indeed a CLG press release announcing a grant of £280K to Ealing Council to tackle this issue specifically said:

Some councils have argued that they need to have a new legal power of entry into premises without notice. However, councils already have this ability provided they obtain a magistrates’ warrant – which provides a proportionate check and balance on the use of such powers.

The CLG press release covering last week’s raid also delicately pointed out:

Magistrates’ warrants were issued ahead of the dawn raid, granting Ealing Council the legal power to enter the premises without notice.

The government is quite reasonably pointing out that the council can enter premises without notice but they need to be overseen by a magistrate. Does the council really want the power to enter premises at will?

Bell’s position is essentially “Not me Guv”. He is trying to kid us that this is all some kind of surprise to him and that he is dealing with it as best he can in trying circumstances. This is nonsense.

Bell is in a difficult position as is Ealing Southall MP Virendra Sharma. Don’t forget that Julian Bell isn’t just a Greenford councillor and leader of his party group on the council. He is Virendra Sharma’s paid employee working as a researcher in Parliament and has been since Sharma was first elected as an MP in 2007. This problem didn’t just emerge this year or last year. It has been building up over decades. Decades during which 15 Labour councillors in Southall were effectively silent except for a few ineffectual complaints that something should be done from one or two. Sharma started as a Southall councillor in 1982, thirty years ago. These sheds were literally built around him during his time as a councillor. To claim ignorance is risible.

If you can bear it you can read three year’s worth of minutes of the Southall Area Committee from 2005-2008 (the area committee was wound up in 2008 and I can’t get minutes before 2005 off the website) there is not one mention of back garden buildings or sheds with beds in three years and certainly no substantive discussion of planning enforcement or overdevelopment beyond some muttering by Cllr Kang about planning enforcement.

The Labour party isn’t some kind of irrelevant, minority cult in Southall. The constituency Labour party in Southall is the largest in the country. At the time of the 2010 Labour leadership election it had 1,206 members. Only 4 CLPs had a membership of over 1,000 and Ealing Southall was the biggest. The idea that the Ealing Southall Labour party hasn’t known that this was going on for decades is incredible.

According to theyworkforyou.com Virendra Sharma has spoken or asked questions in Parliament on 441 occasions. The only time I can find any mention of the sheds with beds issue was on 13th June this year. This statement, which is very much in keeping with the council line, came after the Sun article in October 2011 and after Chris Rogers’ pieces on the BBC in February. He was hardly breaking new ground here. This was just a statement designed to allow Sharma to say that he had raised this issue in Parliament. Great. The technical term is covering his arse. Sharma regularly asks questions and makes interventions on TB, Sri Lanka and health issues and foreign affairs more generally. He clearly has interests that he pursues in Parliament. This clearly isn’t one of them though.

I look forward to hearing more from Councillor Bell and ex-councillor Sharma listing the things they have done to highlight this issue and even to tackle it but I suspect I won’t. Southall is owned by Labour politically speaking. Labour might own this problem of its own making too.

Categories
Ealing and Northfield

The economics of sheds with beds

On Friday the Southall sheds with beds story made it onto the BBC 10 o’clock news again. BBC investigative journalist Chris Rogers has now done three big pieces on this issue:

The Sun also covered this issue in its own inimitable fashion in October 2011. The most recent raid has been covered by the Gazette and ealingtoday.co.uk which both pretty much just re-hashed the CLG press release. The council also did its own press release. The actual raid happened on Tuesday and it took until Friday to make the media.

Some facts emerge from this coverage:

  • This has been going on a long time. In the Sun piece Bilhar says: “I’ve been here nine years and have never had a visit from the council.”
  • The going rate for the rent seems to be £40 per man per week with 4-5 men per shed making the sheds worth £500-800 per month each to the landlord.
  • The people seem to be overwhelmingly single, working-age men of South Asian and mainly Punjabi origin in the case of Southall.
  • The estimate given for the number of these buildings is 10,000 in the South East of which the highest number are in Southall and Slough with 2,500 in Ealing.
  • The men work at a rate of £50 per day for cash in hand.

It is not hard to work through the economics of this activity. If each shed is worth £500 per month say then rogue landlords are potentially pulling in £60 million a year in rent from these 10,000 sheds, £15 million per annum in Southall alone. You can double or treble this number when you add in people in main buildings sharing rooms. This illegal workforce probably numbers near enough 100,000 across the South East. Previously the police have told me that their working estimate for the Southall component of this workforce is 20,000. At £50 per day these men are potentially earning maybe £10K per annum each and doing a billion Pounds worth of labour at maybe half the cost of legally employed, semi-skilled UK citizens doing the work (where you have to pay Employer’s NI and properly take out Employee’s NI and PAYE).

With the economic crisis this workforce maybe working less often and at lower rates than they were 4-5 years ago but across the South East thousands of dishonest employers are employing these men and potentially denying tens of thousands of UK workers a job.

The council might claim that this is an issue of planning enforcement that it is ill-equipped to deal with due to the law as it is currently framed. But, at base this is a massive, illegal enterprise that has been going on under the noses of the authorities for years. To tackle it you need to follow the money. As soon as we get the employers and landlords in court or being assessed by HMRC the sheds will quickly become home offices, gyms and tool sheds – and stay that way. The men will disappear as soon as the money does.

Categories
Uncategorized

Parking danger zones – July

For the last three months I have been keeping track of the parking tickets given out by the Borough, see April, May and June. Since I last wrote on the subject of parking tickets the council has released their July data. You can see the data published by the council here.

For comparison the council gave out 197,302 tickets in the 2011/12 financial year (see Annual Report here). I have multiplied the monthly totals by 12 to give the equivalent yearly rate and divided that by last year’s total number of tickets issued to give an idea of the proportion that one road feature or offence represents compared to the whole borough.

In July there were 8 sites that generated more than 200 tickets in the month, some 17.7% of all tickets issued in the Borough.

Again all top 8 sites are CCTV enforced and 4 out of 8 sites are bus lane sites. Altogether these 4 high volume bus lane sites generate over half of all bus lane tickets in the borough.

The Otter Road box junction is getting out of hand with 800 tickets in July. This number has been going up every month for four months and now almost 5% of all tickets in the Borough are given out at this one site. Some comms work needs to be done to knock back this number.

April: 652
May: 704
June: 750
July: 800

If all these tickets were paid at the 50% (which is on average what happens in practice) this one box junction is worth £624K to the council. I will be asking officers what is going on here. Maybe the leader of the council in whose ward it is will want to do some asking too?

Categories
Ealing and Northfield

Ealing council top for bus lane tickets – too many tickets issued outside Morrisons in Acton

I was not happy to see a report in the Evening Standard yesterday saying that Ealing was the top borough for giving out tickets for straying onto a bus lane. Ealing does cover a large area so you might expect us not to be at the bottom but we don’t necessarily have to be at the top either. The ealingtoday.co.uk website picked up the story yesterday.

I have been keeping track of the parking tickets given out by the Borough. I have just had a look at June’s data, see here.

For comparison the council gave out 197,302 tickets in the 2011/12 financial year (see Annual Report here). I have multiplied the monthly totals by 12 to give the equivalent yearly rate and divided that by last year’s total number of tickets issued to give an idea of the proportion that one road feature or offence represents compared to the whole borough.

During June there were 12 road features or offences in one place that accumulated over 200 tickets in the month. Almost a quarter of all tickets issued in our borough were issued on these sites (23.7%). Interestingly all of the high volume sites are policed with CCTV (the J code indicates a ticket policed by CCTV). The top 12 were:

It really stands out that 6 out of 12 sites were bus lane enforcement (34J). For three months running the 100 odd metres outside Morrisons on Steyne Road in Acton has been the second most prolific site for tickets in the entire borough, see April and May figures. An average of 508 tickets per month over three months, or 6,100 tickets a year. The number for bus lanes tickets across the whole borough given by London Councils is 24,690. So this tiny bit of bus lane is driving one quarter of all bus lane tickets across the borough. This does look suspiciously ike the borough is raking in the income without making sufficient efforts to give people the information they need to comply.

Categories
Ealing and Northfield

Enterprise contract won’t be right until end of September – if we are lucky

Shockingly the council has admitted that street cleaning is not going to be up to scratch until the end of September, fully six months after its contractor Enterprise started the street collection and cleaning portion of their £15 million per annum contract.

This whole matter is going to be discussed again at the Overview & Scrutiny Committee on Thursday at 7pm. As a prelude the council’s Assistant Director Street Services, Earl Mckenzie, authored a report on the environmental services contract which was published at the end of last week without fanfare. Section 1.4 of the report admits: “… it is planned same day street cleansing will be taking place fully by the end of September 2012.”

The street cleaning figures have been awful since this contract started, as any resident with their eyes open knows. The person in charge of the Ealing rubbish fiasco, Cllr Bassam Mahfouz, has clearly learned his personal philosophy at the knee of Eric Idle. Ealing’s own Comical Ali told us at the last council meeting that 80% of the Borough’s streets were clean enough in the first week of July. It was highly suspicious that he had plucked this one week’s figure out of the air. It seems that the outturn for the whole month was 75% which is markedly better than the previous three months which averaged only 59% good enough (with 41% being unsatisfactory).

Mahfouz repeated his statistical twisiting on the actonw3.com and ealingtoday.co.uk websites at the start of August.

As we mentioned in a council meeting two weeks ago grade A streets for cleanliness was back over 80% in the first week of July and improving solidly.

The reality was that the service slumped again pulling the average for the month down to 75%. He was less keen too to explain that the reason for this marked improvement (from bad to not so bad) was that the contractor had gone back over sites that had been marked down and cleaned them a second time – had taken resits if you will.

Before April the old contractor routinely got better than 90%. We still have a long way to go before we get there. The end of September will be fully six months since this contract started. Let’s hope that the end of September isn’t another promise made by the council that its contractor fails to keep.

Categories
Policing

New Telegraph Police commentator complaining not informing

It looks like the Telegraph has taken ex-Met Assistant Commissioner John Yates on as a regular commentator on policing affairs. He wrote last Friday and this week. Last week he was praising policemen and warning about elected police commissioners. This week he is on about cuts. Yates sounds like too much of a spokesman for police producer interests and not enough like an independently minded commentator.

He points out that the Met has to deal with making cuts of £769 million. Yates fails to put the £769 million in the context of the Met’s overall £3.7 billion spend. This is 20% of their overall spend like many other parts of the public services. The deficit has to be tackled. End of.

He points out that most of their budget is manpower. The way to tackle it is to deal with staff terms and conditions.

Why is it the Met get free use of public transport in London but don’t travel to work in uniform when they use it? Free, visible policing.

Why not close police canteens and get the police using restaurants and shops like the rest of the working population (most policemen work 9 to 5 like anyone else)? Free, visible policing.

These two proposals on their own give you your 20% back.

Has the Met closed its in house uniform tailoring service yet? How many drivers and limos are still in use? How many residential properties and executive dining rooms? Time to clean house.

Categories
Ealing and Northfield

Ealing’s Comical Ali

Labour’s Cllr Bassam Mahfouz, who is responsible for Transport and Environment in Ealing, has always liked to look on the bright side but today proved that he really is the Comical Ali of Ealing when it comes to the Ealing rubbish fiasco.

In a statement to the ealingtoday.co.uk and actonw3.com websites today he said:

We know that there have been problems with this contract but things are improving all the time. On Tuesday we saw all streets in the borough returned to kerbside sorting with the complete roll out of new recycling vehicles.

Mahfouz was immediately debunked by a range of Acton and Ealing residents. Here is a selection.

Jerry Foulkes on ealingtoday.co.uk:

There was no kerbside recycling in Sunnyside Road on Tuesday this week (31st July) all the recycling was tossed into one big truck just as it has been since Enterprise took over in April. Either Councillor Mahfouz is mis-informed, or in denial, or both.

Sara Nathan on actonw3.com:

Road sweeper in Goldsmith Avenue today – BEFORE the rubbish recycling collection natch- said there was no co-ordination of the different services at all and he had no idea when the rubbish pickup was. This is a hopeless waste of money.

Andy Horridge on ealingtoday.co.uk:

Weds 1 Aug, 8.45pm. The recycling wagon eventually arrived. It was ‘kerbside sorting’, but the vehicle was the ridiculous type that has a hydraulically operated ‘basket’ arrangement that has to be swung upwards every 5 minutes to enable the basket’s contents to be dropped into the vehicle’s hopper(s). The previous contractor’s vehicles were far better suited to the job in both size as well as function.

Nina Battleday on actonw3.com:

Our recycling of plastics is usually on Wednesday.On 25 July nothing was collected. I reported this by Email, received a reply telling me that it would be collected, it wasn’t. Not collected 1 Aug either. Phoned Ealing, they told me it would definitely be collected today. Nothing has happened, which does not surprise me in the least. Yet another phone call tomorrow, I fear. Meanwhile, our estate is loaded up with unsightly bags full of plastics.

Nicola Howard on actonw3.com:

Again, recycling not collected on Baldwyn Gardens. This is the second week in a row. Collection day is Thursday, not when Enterprise feel like it. It’s about time Bassam Mahfouz resigned and, heads should roll.

Nigel Brooks on ealingtoday.co.uk:

It was all being dumped together on Boston Road this week. The road then received a perfunctory ‘sweep’ and there were green bags dumped for three days before collection. Simply, get your damned act together Cllr Mahfouz. Get out on the streets and stop patronising residents with supposed ‘progress’ reports!!!

Harold John Ward on ealingtoday.co.uk:

You are right the recycling is a joke and the one which is great we have to pay to have our garden rubbish taken away and yet where I live in South Ealing people are just leaving the rubbish out but not in the green bags so its not taken by the lorry that comes for the garden staff so it’s left there then the next day the smaller trucks come round and pick it up because people must complain about it so whats the point of me paying when you can just leave it out and you still pick it up free of charge so this is very unfair on us that have paid don’t you think councillor Bassam Mahfouz?

Jon Kennedy on actonw3.com:

Its the same all over u need to phone the council we were promised that the sweeper will come after the collections next week

Ellie Rose on actonw3.com:

Sweeper came before the collection today here also in West Acton. After the collection, there were cans, carrier bags and paper all over the road and pavement.

Jocelyn Ridley on actonw3.com:

It would be nice to have a collection. For the second week running Baldwyn Gardens has been missed out. Really irritating.

Categories
Ealing and Northfield

Parking ticket danger zones – May

I have been keeping track of the parking tickets given out by the Borough, see here. I have just had a look at May’s data, see here.

For comparison the council gave out 197,302 tickets in the 2011/12 financial year (see Annual Report here). I have multiplied the monthly totals by 12 to give the equivalent yearly rate and divided that by last year’s total number of tickets issued to give an idea of the proportion that one road feature or offence represents compared to the whole borough.

During May there were 8 road features or offences in one place that accumulated over 200 tickets in the month. One sixth of all tickets issued in our borough were issued on these sites (17.5%). Interestingly all of the high volume sites are policed with CCTV (the J code indicates a ticket policed by CCTV). The top 8 were: