Today is traditionally seen as a time to look back on things, and what strikes me most about the past year is the realignment of politics.
The Tories appear to have got themselves in an election losing strategy of eternal austerity. In doing so they have abandoned all the attempts at niceness, detoxification and so on that David Cameron originally based his leadership on. Together with what looks like an increasingly dangerous threat from Nigel Farage, if I were a Tory I would be seriously worried by the next General Election.
Incidentally, although it tends to be the Political Right that bandies the term "class war", there is a strong argument that it is the aristocracy that has the strongest sense of class. If one reads Lawrence Stone's classic The Crisis of the Aristocracy 1558-1641, this is one of his major points. I recall being particularly struck by a short vignette of a ship wreck in the 1620s in that book where one of the gentleman held off the common crew from the only lifeboat with a drawn sword whilst allowing only his fellow aristocrats aboard. Such an image might be considered emblematic of Mr Cameron's own approach.
Ed Miliband, in contrast, has had a remarkable year, especially in the second half. He has managed to position Labour credibly on the economy, and crucially as on the side of ordinary people in terms of cost of living. Even more remarkably, he managed to make the political weather in the Syria debate. I cannot recall a parallel of the Leader of the Opposition effectively determining a major foreign policy decision in the way that Labour were able to stop military action in Syria.
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Tuesday, 31 December 2013
More on Hotel Libraries
Some while ago I wrote a brief post on hotel libraries. It would seem this a growing trend, at least according to the New York Times.
Monday, 30 December 2013
The Looming Debt Crisis
The precariousness of the current recovery is emphasised by the likely effect of a rise in mortgage rates. I suspect that it could be actually worse than implied. If large numbers of people found that they could not service their debts at the same time, that would multiply the damage. A wave of repossessions might cast lots of properties on the market at the same time, driving prices in a sudden lurch downwards, pushing vastly greater numbers of people into negative equity, and scaring people currently disparate to enter the market. The Help to Buy scheme would only make such a scenario worse, and there is no sign of the government even trying to rebalance housing in this country, which has now become a fundamental part of the malfunction of our economy.
George Osborne seems to me not to have an economic strategy; merely a political strategy for the next election.
George Osborne seems to me not to have an economic strategy; merely a political strategy for the next election.
Sunday, 29 December 2013
Nick Cohen on Food Banks
I can't better Nick Cohen's condemnation of the Tory and Liberal Democrat position on food banks. Iain Duncan Smith is merely the worst example of a government where lying and hypocrisy are ordinary tools of business, and the poorest are deliberately and cynically targeted.
Saturday, 28 December 2013
Economical Misconceptions
Once again Martin Francis appears to be misrepresenting Brent Labour Party, this time on economic policy. You can see Martin's views here. Lets not worry about whether the misrepresentation is deliberate or accidental, and just work through them.
Incidentally lets also quickly welcome Martin's still quite faint praise for Wembley Library as a library "for local people".
First off, Martin is concentrating still on Brent Council activities, which are only part of the economic policy of a party of national government like the Labour Party. Indeed local authorities play quite a small part. I actually quite like a lot of the stuff coming from the Heseltine Review about regional development, although more recognition that London is the UK's biggest region would be nice.
Anyway, lets concentrate on what Brent Council can do for the purposes of this post.
Are there any Magic Sectors?
For whatever reason, economic discussions often seem to praise one area of economic activity and denigrate others. Martin claims Brent Green Party is quite anti-retail. If so, I think that is as silly as being anti-construction or anti manufacturing as Thatcher was in the 1980s. There is no magic part of the economy. There is just a need for an overall balance.
The UK as a whole has a problem that our tradable sector is too small for our imports, and we need to correct that but things like tourism and indeed retail can contribute to our "exports" to some extent albeit they are no adequate substitution for high end manufacturing.
Living Standards
The current government seems wedded to a kind of asset stripping model where wages and other costs are ruthlessly pushed down. This, aside being pretty miserable for people on low wages, doesn't seem to work. Someone else will always be able to undercut us. Whereas cost cutting works for an individual company, it doesn't work for the economy as a whole as all national economies rely primarily on the goods and services we sell to each other. Cutting the income of one part of the economy cuts the income of others and sets us off on a downward spiral.
Labour's approach is more about modifying the benefits system so that it ceases to subsidise employers who refuse to give their employers a living wage. This can be done partly through restructuring benefits, but also through promoting the Living Wage, and I would like to see a rise in the Minimum Wage which has been drastically eroded by inflation. The main way the Council can influence this is through paying its own employees (They all get the London Living Wage and above), building a London Living Wage requirement into its contracts (as happened with the Public Realm contract recently) and encouraging private employers to pay the London Living Wage (as Islington claims some success in).
Training
A second area Councils can influence is education and training. Brent has achieved a significant turnaround from exam results below the London and National average twenty years ago, to being above the London and National averages now. We are now routinely examining contracts for opportunities to create apprenticeships, as well as in Brent's directly employed workforce.
There are also some third sector organisations like LEAP that do interesting work in brokering and supporting people into jobs. A key part of this kind of work is getting people to travel to opportunities. Brent has good transport links to the rest of London, but many people from our poorest areas seem reluctant to use them. We need to work out why that is. Anecdotally, I have been told of recruitment difficulties by some employers, which seem to be more linked to attitudes than to harder barriers,. Again, that needs more work.
Given Brent's particular demographics, I think there is scope for the Council helping people further, especially with language skills. Anecdotally, I have heard that BACES are not always user friendly to complete novices in English and that may need to be addressed. I think our libraries service are active in this way, as well as in encouraging English literacy for English speakers.
Encouraging Small Businesses
Nationally, Labour has been prominent in promoting small businesses, which are a major engine of jobs growth, through events like Small Business Saturday. The Council has also been active in trying to help people start their own businesses, as in the Kensal Green Kitchens Scheme. I think it is fair to say that this is an area where Labour needs to develop its policies more in line with the outlines in Ed Miliband's Conference Speech.
Placemaking
The Council could do a lot to encourage businesses in areas like Ealing Road or Harlesden Town Centre through improving the Public Realm, as I have often advocated. There is good research that
improving the quality of the public realm leads to increased turnover by local businesses. Another key role for the Council would come in planning or supporting a unique selling point for different areas say food in Harlesden, an Asian offer in Ealing Road, the Arts in Kilburn High Road, the new Willesden Centre in Willesden and so on. It would obviously be useful if national government would expand local authority powers on licensing and son on, as Ed Miliband recently promised on a Kilburn visit.
The Environmental Agenda
Finally, in what has become a rather longer post than I intended, our pressing environmental needs create economic opportunities. These could come in all kinds of forms: retrofitting old homes, selling environmental advice as the Carbon Trust does (when we held an environmental event for businesses at the old Town Hall the Carbon Trust representative explained that the Carbon Trust had originally been set up to cut business costs, not for environmental purposes at all), creating markets through spreading awareness of environmental needs.
Martin makes a bit of a nod to this sort of thing in his "Green Enterprise Zone" idea, but it is is intriguing how many misconceptions lie behind that. Firstly, the long term plans for the Wembley area (essentially shaped by the Labour Party) effectively give less emphasis on Wembley as a retail area than in the past. That is arguably just a recognition of reality, but Martin seems to think we are doing the opposite. Secondly, Martin seems to have forgotten about Park Royal, which is Europe's biggest Industrial estate with lots of space for all kinds of businesses, including green businesses, and companies like McVities that have really led environmental improvements in their areas. Developing businesses there, along with ll the difficulties around transport and so on, would still be far easier than trying to overturn almost twenty years of Planning work around Wembley.
Hopefully all this gives some idea of the amount of work already underway through the Council and the Labour Party to develop Brent's economy. However, boosting the economy in Brent is really something that can only really be done effectively if central government pursues an effective growth policy rather than the current actively damaging one.
Incidentally lets also quickly welcome Martin's still quite faint praise for Wembley Library as a library "for local people".
First off, Martin is concentrating still on Brent Council activities, which are only part of the economic policy of a party of national government like the Labour Party. Indeed local authorities play quite a small part. I actually quite like a lot of the stuff coming from the Heseltine Review about regional development, although more recognition that London is the UK's biggest region would be nice.
Anyway, lets concentrate on what Brent Council can do for the purposes of this post.
Are there any Magic Sectors?
For whatever reason, economic discussions often seem to praise one area of economic activity and denigrate others. Martin claims Brent Green Party is quite anti-retail. If so, I think that is as silly as being anti-construction or anti manufacturing as Thatcher was in the 1980s. There is no magic part of the economy. There is just a need for an overall balance.
The UK as a whole has a problem that our tradable sector is too small for our imports, and we need to correct that but things like tourism and indeed retail can contribute to our "exports" to some extent albeit they are no adequate substitution for high end manufacturing.
Living Standards
The current government seems wedded to a kind of asset stripping model where wages and other costs are ruthlessly pushed down. This, aside being pretty miserable for people on low wages, doesn't seem to work. Someone else will always be able to undercut us. Whereas cost cutting works for an individual company, it doesn't work for the economy as a whole as all national economies rely primarily on the goods and services we sell to each other. Cutting the income of one part of the economy cuts the income of others and sets us off on a downward spiral.
Labour's approach is more about modifying the benefits system so that it ceases to subsidise employers who refuse to give their employers a living wage. This can be done partly through restructuring benefits, but also through promoting the Living Wage, and I would like to see a rise in the Minimum Wage which has been drastically eroded by inflation. The main way the Council can influence this is through paying its own employees (They all get the London Living Wage and above), building a London Living Wage requirement into its contracts (as happened with the Public Realm contract recently) and encouraging private employers to pay the London Living Wage (as Islington claims some success in).
Training
A second area Councils can influence is education and training. Brent has achieved a significant turnaround from exam results below the London and National average twenty years ago, to being above the London and National averages now. We are now routinely examining contracts for opportunities to create apprenticeships, as well as in Brent's directly employed workforce.
There are also some third sector organisations like LEAP that do interesting work in brokering and supporting people into jobs. A key part of this kind of work is getting people to travel to opportunities. Brent has good transport links to the rest of London, but many people from our poorest areas seem reluctant to use them. We need to work out why that is. Anecdotally, I have been told of recruitment difficulties by some employers, which seem to be more linked to attitudes than to harder barriers,. Again, that needs more work.
Given Brent's particular demographics, I think there is scope for the Council helping people further, especially with language skills. Anecdotally, I have heard that BACES are not always user friendly to complete novices in English and that may need to be addressed. I think our libraries service are active in this way, as well as in encouraging English literacy for English speakers.
Encouraging Small Businesses
Nationally, Labour has been prominent in promoting small businesses, which are a major engine of jobs growth, through events like Small Business Saturday. The Council has also been active in trying to help people start their own businesses, as in the Kensal Green Kitchens Scheme. I think it is fair to say that this is an area where Labour needs to develop its policies more in line with the outlines in Ed Miliband's Conference Speech.
Placemaking
The Council could do a lot to encourage businesses in areas like Ealing Road or Harlesden Town Centre through improving the Public Realm, as I have often advocated. There is good research that
improving the quality of the public realm leads to increased turnover by local businesses. Another key role for the Council would come in planning or supporting a unique selling point for different areas say food in Harlesden, an Asian offer in Ealing Road, the Arts in Kilburn High Road, the new Willesden Centre in Willesden and so on. It would obviously be useful if national government would expand local authority powers on licensing and son on, as Ed Miliband recently promised on a Kilburn visit.
The Environmental Agenda
Finally, in what has become a rather longer post than I intended, our pressing environmental needs create economic opportunities. These could come in all kinds of forms: retrofitting old homes, selling environmental advice as the Carbon Trust does (when we held an environmental event for businesses at the old Town Hall the Carbon Trust representative explained that the Carbon Trust had originally been set up to cut business costs, not for environmental purposes at all), creating markets through spreading awareness of environmental needs.
Martin makes a bit of a nod to this sort of thing in his "Green Enterprise Zone" idea, but it is is intriguing how many misconceptions lie behind that. Firstly, the long term plans for the Wembley area (essentially shaped by the Labour Party) effectively give less emphasis on Wembley as a retail area than in the past. That is arguably just a recognition of reality, but Martin seems to think we are doing the opposite. Secondly, Martin seems to have forgotten about Park Royal, which is Europe's biggest Industrial estate with lots of space for all kinds of businesses, including green businesses, and companies like McVities that have really led environmental improvements in their areas. Developing businesses there, along with ll the difficulties around transport and so on, would still be far easier than trying to overturn almost twenty years of Planning work around Wembley.
Hopefully all this gives some idea of the amount of work already underway through the Council and the Labour Party to develop Brent's economy. However, boosting the economy in Brent is really something that can only really be done effectively if central government pursues an effective growth policy rather than the current actively damaging one.
Friday, 27 December 2013
Massacre of the Holy Innocents
Today is the Feast of the Massacre of the Holy Innocents, so I thought I would put up a picture. It is Pieter Brueghal's image of that subject. Although it is a biblical subject, it is often taken to be a commentary on contemporary atrocities in the Low Countries by the Hapsburg regime.
I am often surprised that people seem to think that comments by analogy are somehow a modern invention.
Thursday, 26 December 2013
Christmas Leftovers
The Guardian has some tips on Christmas leftovers which sounds as if it has been prompted by the Love Food, Hate Waste Campaign. There is also a short infographic on the potential advantages of a smarter approach to food waste.
A World on Fire
Over Christmas, I have been reading Amanda Foreman's A World on Fire, which is an account of the American Civil War seen through the perspective of Anglo-American relations. Truly a remarkable achievement, that took her eleven years to write. If you don't want to buy it, you can borrow it from Brent Libraries.
Tuesday, 24 December 2013
Thomas Hardy and the Oxen
I am not sure why, but I have always been moved by this poem by Thomas Hardy, which is at l;east topical this evening:
Christmas Eve, and twelve of the clock.
"Now they are all on their knees,"
An elder said as we sat in a flock
By the embers in hearthside ease.
We pictured the meek mild creatures where
They dwelt in their strawy pen,
Nor did it occur to one of us there
To doubt they were kneeling then.
So fair a fancy few would weave
In these years! Yet, I feel,
If someone said on Christmas Eve,
"Come; see the oxen kneel,
"In the lonely barton by yonder coomb
Our childhood used to know,"
I should go with him in the gloom,
Hoping it might be so’
Christmas Eve, and twelve of the clock.
"Now they are all on their knees,"
An elder said as we sat in a flock
By the embers in hearthside ease.
We pictured the meek mild creatures where
They dwelt in their strawy pen,
Nor did it occur to one of us there
To doubt they were kneeling then.
So fair a fancy few would weave
In these years! Yet, I feel,
If someone said on Christmas Eve,
"Come; see the oxen kneel,
"In the lonely barton by yonder coomb
Our childhood used to know,"
I should go with him in the gloom,
Hoping it might be so’
Looking Both Ways on Planning Appeals
One of the curiosities of planning appeals at the moment is that the Planning Inspectors are being more sympathetic to appeals aimed to develop outbuildings at the same time that the Tories in particular have made such an issue of "garden grabbing". Thus one part of the government seems to encourage intensification of back garden use and another simultaneously discourages it.
Monday, 23 December 2013
Licensing the Rented Sector
Brent Council currently has proposals to license properties rented out in the private sector. The consultation ends on 28 February.
Should Iain Duncan Smith Deliver the Alternative Christmas Message
In a couple of days, the Queen will be doing her usual broadcast and sticking (I imagine) to her usual themes of the nation working together praising public service and some gentle references to the relevance of the Christian message. Would it not make for a bracing alternative if Iain Duncan Smith were to broadcast an alternative Christmas message?
He could make it clear that he hates large numbers of British people, smear the working poor as dysfunctional scroungers, finally come clean on his ambition to replace the welfare state with food banks or perhaps nothing at all. He could throw in some of his famously misleading statistics ( even the Economist questioned his honesty on this, saying "questionable numbers have floated out of Iain Duncan Smith's office into the public debate like raw sewage". The Queen's broadcast usually has some fairly strong visuals. Possibly Martin Rowson could be asked to try his hand an animation? I would suggest that Mr Duncan Smith dress up as The Grinch, but as the Grinch changes his mind that wouldn't really fit Mr Duncan Smith's character.
I understand that the Queen's Christmas broadcast no longer seems to get the attention it used to, perhaps Mr Duncan Smith could perform that traditional Tory function of promoting the monarchy by using a simultaneous alternative broadcast to force people to switch channels?
He could make it clear that he hates large numbers of British people, smear the working poor as dysfunctional scroungers, finally come clean on his ambition to replace the welfare state with food banks or perhaps nothing at all. He could throw in some of his famously misleading statistics ( even the Economist questioned his honesty on this, saying "questionable numbers have floated out of Iain Duncan Smith's office into the public debate like raw sewage". The Queen's broadcast usually has some fairly strong visuals. Possibly Martin Rowson could be asked to try his hand an animation? I would suggest that Mr Duncan Smith dress up as The Grinch, but as the Grinch changes his mind that wouldn't really fit Mr Duncan Smith's character.
I understand that the Queen's Christmas broadcast no longer seems to get the attention it used to, perhaps Mr Duncan Smith could perform that traditional Tory function of promoting the monarchy by using a simultaneous alternative broadcast to force people to switch channels?
Sunday, 22 December 2013
How Long Can Iain Duncan Smith Last
Iain Duncan Smith appears to have got himself in a confrontation with the Trussell Trust. Iain Duncan Smith is denying the obvious truth that the explosion in the Trust's food bank usage from about 41,000 in 2010 to about half a million now has nothing to do with the government's "reforms". His junior minister explicitly welcomes the expansion of food banks, and I find it hard not to believe that the pauperisation of large numbers of people is an actual objective of the Tory government.
Adding to that, ministers have presided over the incompetent implementation of the universal credit, whilst simultaneously undermining their own policy with on the go cuts.
David Cameron will surely have to remove Iain Duncan Smith. This is not because Mr Duncan Smith is so obviously cruel, stupid and mendacious. It is because he has become all too successful in conveying the Tory priorities of tax cuts for the rich and food banks for the poor. The stark unfairness of the government in punishing the most vulnerable is David Cameron's own policy, but Iain Duncan Smith makes it so obvious that he is surely too much of a political liability to continue.
Adding to that, ministers have presided over the incompetent implementation of the universal credit, whilst simultaneously undermining their own policy with on the go cuts.
David Cameron will surely have to remove Iain Duncan Smith. This is not because Mr Duncan Smith is so obviously cruel, stupid and mendacious. It is because he has become all too successful in conveying the Tory priorities of tax cuts for the rich and food banks for the poor. The stark unfairness of the government in punishing the most vulnerable is David Cameron's own policy, but Iain Duncan Smith makes it so obvious that he is surely too much of a political liability to continue.
Saturday, 21 December 2013
Activity Around Wembley Civic Centre
It is striking how the Brent Civic Centre is coming into its own as the whole area fills up with activity. The London Design Outlet is a key part of this, but the area should also soon benefit from the renting of retail space in the Civic Centre, the use of the area outside for events such as markets and the ongoing development of areas such as the former Palace of Industry site.
Following requests tap water is now available in the Melting Pot, and an ATM has been added outside the library entrance.
Of course, this needs to go hand in hand with developments such as better crossing facilities on Fulton Road and improved bus connections, but the naysayers who have decried the Civic Centre for so long have surely been proved wrong.
Following requests tap water is now available in the Melting Pot, and an ATM has been added outside the library entrance.
Of course, this needs to go hand in hand with developments such as better crossing facilities on Fulton Road and improved bus connections, but the naysayers who have decried the Civic Centre for so long have surely been proved wrong.
Friday, 20 December 2013
Economics and Climate Change
In a recent political debate I attended, the case for action on climate change was presented essentially as an economic burden, which is largely the George Osborne take on the subject. In fact, climate change could create economic opportunities by creating new markets for green energy, and cheaper ways of doing things, as suggested here.
You can also look at it as a pay now, or pay more later problem. If we don't deal with the problems of climate change now, the cost of dealing with them in future may be far higher.
You can also look at it as a pay now, or pay more later problem. If we don't deal with the problems of climate change now, the cost of dealing with them in future may be far higher.
Thursday, 19 December 2013
Next Local Government Settlement
Yesterday various crucial figures for local authority funding were published. It is too soon to assess what they probably mean, but I will be amazed if there are not various land mines set about to make the life of local authorities even more impossible.
Parliamentary Expenses
Lord Hanningfield is reported to be abusing parliamentary expenses. He feels he is being persecuted and that he is effectively merely doing his job. Previously, he was actually convicted of fraud. In any normal job, a person convicted of fraud would be removed from their position, and would no longer be in a position to fiddle the system.
Wednesday, 18 December 2013
Austerity Britain
The Guardian has an unremittingly bleak overview of poverty and suffering in Britain caused by the government's inept and ideological approach. Many of the government's "reforms" have been pushed through without even attempting to work out the impact, which by the way probably makes them unlawful. The saddest thing is that if government ministers read such articles, I suspect that they simply would not care.
Moberly Sports Centre Application
The application for Moberly Sports Centre has finally been put forward. If successful, this would mean that both Vale Farm and Moberly would have had substantial investment despite David Cameron's eternal austerity agenda.
UPDATE
The comment below is actually quite wrong. This is not an exhaustive list, but one could mention the recent £1.7 million investment in Vale Farm Sports Centre, the refurbishment of Kilburn Library, the refurbishment of Ealing Road library, Brent's first completely new library for twenty odd years at Wembley, the rebuild of Willesden Green Library Centre, Brent's first new park for twenty years or so in Chalkhill, the opening of Villiers Road park in Willesden, one of Europe's most environmentally friendly buildings in the Civic Centre, a major redevelopment of Harlesden Town Centre, and a host of new housing in Wembley, South Kilburn and elsewhere.
As well as these physical investments there are a number of service transformations in terms of improved recycling, greater personalisation of adult social services and a range of other services. Despite a far harder financial situation, the record of achievements in 2010 to 2014 is far greater than under the Tory/Liberal Democrat administration of 2006 to 2010.
UPDATE
The comment below is actually quite wrong. This is not an exhaustive list, but one could mention the recent £1.7 million investment in Vale Farm Sports Centre, the refurbishment of Kilburn Library, the refurbishment of Ealing Road library, Brent's first completely new library for twenty odd years at Wembley, the rebuild of Willesden Green Library Centre, Brent's first new park for twenty years or so in Chalkhill, the opening of Villiers Road park in Willesden, one of Europe's most environmentally friendly buildings in the Civic Centre, a major redevelopment of Harlesden Town Centre, and a host of new housing in Wembley, South Kilburn and elsewhere.
As well as these physical investments there are a number of service transformations in terms of improved recycling, greater personalisation of adult social services and a range of other services. Despite a far harder financial situation, the record of achievements in 2010 to 2014 is far greater than under the Tory/Liberal Democrat administration of 2006 to 2010.
Tuesday, 17 December 2013
Political Priorities and Budgets
Martin Francis is seeking to persuade people there is some magic way for Councils like Brent to avoid setting balanced budgets. In fact Councils are required to set a balanced budget. If a Council breaks down (like Anglesey), it can have commissioners put in to pass a budget without any public accountability.
Where Martin and I could agree is that the Tory government's austerity programme is utterly self defeating because it destroys economic growth. It is also pretty clearly now admitted that it is an ideological project to shrink the state. One might add that David Cameron and Nick Clegg have both been accused of misleading people in their defence of the cuts programme. The only solution to this bigger picture would be the election of a government without an ideological commitment to shrink the state, and that can only mean a Labour government.
However, that does not alter the position of a local authority such as Brent which has to carry on delivering services to sometimes vulnerable residents to the best of its ability. Senior local authority figures have argued that on present trends this will become impossible. They may be right, but in order to limit the damage as much as possible, we have to be as imaginative as possible. Simply objecting to any change just won't do. Instead, we have to identify areas where we should no longer attempt to do things (As Brent did for instance with regard to festival spending), where we can do things more efficiently (as Brent has done in a range of procurements, notably the public realm contract) and where we can do things in a totally different way (as Brent did with the introduction of alternate weekly collections).
That means being hard headed about what the priorities are, which is the essence of political choice. Martin's "just say no" approach is not even possible to implement, and in any case is a negation of political choice, and in fact a retreat into mindless small minded conservatism.
Britain's only Green Council is itself struggling with these realities in Brighton. It is noteworthy that the people responsible for making the budget (led by the wonderfully named Mr Kitcat) are trying to get on with it, whilst local Green MP Caroline Lucas is sitting on the sidelines trying to distance herself from her own colleagues. Incidentally, the Brighton Greens appear to divide themselves into a whole set of different fruits; I wonder where the Brent Greens would fit in the salad?
UPDATE
A response to the two comments below can be found in this post.
Where Martin and I could agree is that the Tory government's austerity programme is utterly self defeating because it destroys economic growth. It is also pretty clearly now admitted that it is an ideological project to shrink the state. One might add that David Cameron and Nick Clegg have both been accused of misleading people in their defence of the cuts programme. The only solution to this bigger picture would be the election of a government without an ideological commitment to shrink the state, and that can only mean a Labour government.
However, that does not alter the position of a local authority such as Brent which has to carry on delivering services to sometimes vulnerable residents to the best of its ability. Senior local authority figures have argued that on present trends this will become impossible. They may be right, but in order to limit the damage as much as possible, we have to be as imaginative as possible. Simply objecting to any change just won't do. Instead, we have to identify areas where we should no longer attempt to do things (As Brent did for instance with regard to festival spending), where we can do things more efficiently (as Brent has done in a range of procurements, notably the public realm contract) and where we can do things in a totally different way (as Brent did with the introduction of alternate weekly collections).
That means being hard headed about what the priorities are, which is the essence of political choice. Martin's "just say no" approach is not even possible to implement, and in any case is a negation of political choice, and in fact a retreat into mindless small minded conservatism.
Britain's only Green Council is itself struggling with these realities in Brighton. It is noteworthy that the people responsible for making the budget (led by the wonderfully named Mr Kitcat) are trying to get on with it, whilst local Green MP Caroline Lucas is sitting on the sidelines trying to distance herself from her own colleagues. Incidentally, the Brighton Greens appear to divide themselves into a whole set of different fruits; I wonder where the Brent Greens would fit in the salad?
UPDATE
A response to the two comments below can be found in this post.
Monday, 16 December 2013
The Curious Case of the Barham Park Planning Appeal
Back in November, the Planning Committee was asked for permission to change the use of the various buildings that used to be the house of Mr Barham. I absented myself from that item, because I had been party to awarded the contract to the new tenant ACAVA, so I felt there might be an appearance of bias. Officers recommended granting permission, but the Committee decided to refuse, which would make it impossible for ACAVA to use it for artists' studios as intended.
The curiosity of this situation is that the application was made by the Council in its role as Trustee of the Barham Park charity. On Tuesday last week, the Charity decided to appeal the decision, meaning that the Council is now appealing against a decision of its own Planning Committee.
The curiosity of this situation is that the application was made by the Council in its role as Trustee of the Barham Park charity. On Tuesday last week, the Charity decided to appeal the decision, meaning that the Council is now appealing against a decision of its own Planning Committee.
Sunday, 15 December 2013
Public Realm Contract in Brent
The Public Realm Contract has now been agreed by Brent Council. The attempt to create a controversy over the bidding process appears to have petered out as quickly as it appeared quite a long way into the negotiation.
This allows us to pay more attention to what the contract is actually about, waste collection, street cleaning and grounds maintenance in Brent. A lot of work was done in the lead up to the formal tender to make sure that the process was really competitive. The previous administration signed a contract in 2007 that didn't really get value for money, because Veolia weren't really put on the spot to justify winning the business. A number of signals went out thius time to achieve the opposite. These included, investment in a depot in Alperton, changing the contract for the blue top bin waste to a different supplier, and refusing to extend the lifetime of the existing contract. The result was a genuinely competitive examination of the issues that should set us up well for future progress.
However, Brent will have to make sure that it clients the process well so that the new ways of doing things are adhered to and that the contract works well over time. Different ways of doing things include: banded town centre collections, a very different role for the contractor in communications, an output focused approach to street cleaning, greater emphasis on waste reduction, different street gritting arrangements, different waste collection expectations, maybe smaller bins, lower carbon emissions, weekend cleaning in parks. This is in addition to all the fairly substantial changes made during the life of the current contract including alternate weekly collections, and the package of measures introduced at the start of this financial year.
Agreeing all this is a substantial achievement, but keeping on top of it during the life of the contract will also need attention, and will be one of the big challenges going forward.
UPDATE
I got a little further detail on the public realm contract here.
This allows us to pay more attention to what the contract is actually about, waste collection, street cleaning and grounds maintenance in Brent. A lot of work was done in the lead up to the formal tender to make sure that the process was really competitive. The previous administration signed a contract in 2007 that didn't really get value for money, because Veolia weren't really put on the spot to justify winning the business. A number of signals went out thius time to achieve the opposite. These included, investment in a depot in Alperton, changing the contract for the blue top bin waste to a different supplier, and refusing to extend the lifetime of the existing contract. The result was a genuinely competitive examination of the issues that should set us up well for future progress.
However, Brent will have to make sure that it clients the process well so that the new ways of doing things are adhered to and that the contract works well over time. Different ways of doing things include: banded town centre collections, a very different role for the contractor in communications, an output focused approach to street cleaning, greater emphasis on waste reduction, different street gritting arrangements, different waste collection expectations, maybe smaller bins, lower carbon emissions, weekend cleaning in parks. This is in addition to all the fairly substantial changes made during the life of the current contract including alternate weekly collections, and the package of measures introduced at the start of this financial year.
Agreeing all this is a substantial achievement, but keeping on top of it during the life of the contract will also need attention, and will be one of the big challenges going forward.
UPDATE
I got a little further detail on the public realm contract here.
Saturday, 14 December 2013
Walls of Colour at Brent Civic Centre
The Walls of Colour exhibit that was partly painted by Kensal Green residents, and partly paid for by Kensal Green ward working, is on display at the Brent Civic Centre. Unfortunately, this image doesn't really convey the scale of the picture, which is about ten feet high.
Closure of a Free School
Michael Gove has decided to close a free school in West Sussex. You have to read quite a way into the piece to discover the fate of the 65 children. They are being shunted into a local primary school. So, as well as costing a great deal of money and providing poor quality education, this school is now disrupting another school locally where the local authority are expected to sort out the mess.
Perhaps that should give Mr Gove pause for thought.
Perhaps that should give Mr Gove pause for thought.
Friday, 13 December 2013
Further Details on Mitre Bridge and Old Oak Stadium
I have a little further detail on Mitre Bridge. Work is likely to be tendered for in Summer 2014, with physical work beginning in September and ending in March 2015. I imagine that timetable may still be subject to change as these things generally are.
In a further note, Queens Park Rangers are apparently contemplating building a new Stadium just south of Willesden Junction.
In a further note, Queens Park Rangers are apparently contemplating building a new Stadium just south of Willesden Junction.
National CIFPA Figures on Libraries
Some top line figures on libraries nationally are available here. Fairly gloomy reading. Generally performance down in significant respects, although it is interesting to see how web visits bounce up and down.
Thursday, 12 December 2013
Mitre Bridge Update
I am trying to get further details, but I understand that a strengthening of Mitre Bridge off Scrubs Lane is scheduled for 2014/15. This has the potential to divert lots of heavy goods traffic that currently chokes Harlesden Town Centre away from residential areas. I have been pursuing the issue for some years, so it is good to see some progress at last.
According to my present information, the plans are for a two way bridge capable of carrying vehicles up to 40 tons.
According to my present information, the plans are for a two way bridge capable of carrying vehicles up to 40 tons.
Harlesden Town Centre Works
Another quick update on the Harlesden Town Centre works. The first phase of works on Harlesden Town Centre is due to be complete by Christmas, with phase 2 beginning on 6 January. This should allow a slightly easier flow of traffic during the immediate Christmas period. Tavistock Road is due to be closed off until the traffic turn around on Manor Park Road.
Wednesday, 11 December 2013
Kensal Green Planning Issues
I thought I would do a short update on some Kensal Green Planning issues that have been rumbling on.
The former Willesden Social Club site on the corner of Rucklidge Avenue has yet another application in. This sounds quite similar to the previous ones, although this time the units are intended to be "affordable". The applicant is Origen Housing, which are already quite advanced in their work on the former Service Station site on Harlesden High Street.
The Green Man, which successfully got planning permission to regularise its status after an unauthorised conversion, has yet to do anything about the new planning permission it has. I gather the enforcement team have now paid another visit and threatened prosecution unless quick progress is made.
There is a long running issue about the church at the top of Scrubs Lane. The original planning permission included the erection of a set of giraffe heads. I cannot actually recall the art in question, but they were apparently subject to metal theft. However, there is still a planning condition for artwork on the site. I am told that progress is slowly being made, and that a design is now available that the planners consider a suitable concept.
Park House behind the Harlesden Tesco is now well on the way to completion.
The former Willesden Social Club site on the corner of Rucklidge Avenue has yet another application in. This sounds quite similar to the previous ones, although this time the units are intended to be "affordable". The applicant is Origen Housing, which are already quite advanced in their work on the former Service Station site on Harlesden High Street.
The Green Man, which successfully got planning permission to regularise its status after an unauthorised conversion, has yet to do anything about the new planning permission it has. I gather the enforcement team have now paid another visit and threatened prosecution unless quick progress is made.
There is a long running issue about the church at the top of Scrubs Lane. The original planning permission included the erection of a set of giraffe heads. I cannot actually recall the art in question, but they were apparently subject to metal theft. However, there is still a planning condition for artwork on the site. I am told that progress is slowly being made, and that a design is now available that the planners consider a suitable concept.
Park House behind the Harlesden Tesco is now well on the way to completion.
Tuesday, 10 December 2013
Favourite Books
Via Public Libraries News, interesting to see the most favoured titles in Scotland's jails. I wonder what an equivalent list for Brent might look like?
A Return to Colocation and Libraries
Thanks to Leon for the recent comment on my arts and libraries post. Thinking a bit more about my post on arts and libraries on Friday, I think another way to look at this is in co-location terms. Co-location is a buzzword in the library world at the moment, perhaps rather too much so.
Where it is done well, the various services can become mutually reinforcing. I would say that this is part of the success of the new Wembley Library. Key to the success is accepting the value of each of the services co-located, and not treating any of them as just an add on. Thus, the Revenues and Benefits service just above Wembley Library are not squeezed into the space. They had a space custom designed for their needs. The Registration service on the other side of the atrium similarly had a proper space and wedding garden designed for their needs.
In some areas there has been a suspicion that different disparate activities are just being crowded in together to save money. This is true, for example, of the public reaction to the sculpture gallery in Bury. It is also a sensitivity whenever a library hosts a perhaps noisy arts event.
Leon, in his comment on my original post, points out that he is making a comment around dividing a common pot. I see where that is coming from, but some arts funding comes not from a common pot, but from an arts only source. I suppose I am suggesting that the key thing to look at is where can we combine different revenue streams so that "the whole is greater than the sum of its parts." We need to combine people from different interests _ arts, libraries, public health _ together. Each has its own justification. The important thing is to value each appropriately and get them to work together.
Incidentally, I saw that Public Libraries News referred to libraries in Greater Manchester, where there seems to be plenty to be gloomy about. The exception was in Salford. Here the budget is reported to have been cut by half a million pounds, but visitor numbers have gone up from 799,240 in 2008/9 to 1,381,928 in 2012/13. That is a remarkable increase in usage. Their web site doesn't seem very clear on how they have managed such growth despite a declining budget, but I suspect getting all their leisure activities working together probably has something to do with it.
Where it is done well, the various services can become mutually reinforcing. I would say that this is part of the success of the new Wembley Library. Key to the success is accepting the value of each of the services co-located, and not treating any of them as just an add on. Thus, the Revenues and Benefits service just above Wembley Library are not squeezed into the space. They had a space custom designed for their needs. The Registration service on the other side of the atrium similarly had a proper space and wedding garden designed for their needs.
In some areas there has been a suspicion that different disparate activities are just being crowded in together to save money. This is true, for example, of the public reaction to the sculpture gallery in Bury. It is also a sensitivity whenever a library hosts a perhaps noisy arts event.
Leon, in his comment on my original post, points out that he is making a comment around dividing a common pot. I see where that is coming from, but some arts funding comes not from a common pot, but from an arts only source. I suppose I am suggesting that the key thing to look at is where can we combine different revenue streams so that "the whole is greater than the sum of its parts." We need to combine people from different interests _ arts, libraries, public health _ together. Each has its own justification. The important thing is to value each appropriately and get them to work together.
Incidentally, I saw that Public Libraries News referred to libraries in Greater Manchester, where there seems to be plenty to be gloomy about. The exception was in Salford. Here the budget is reported to have been cut by half a million pounds, but visitor numbers have gone up from 799,240 in 2008/9 to 1,381,928 in 2012/13. That is a remarkable increase in usage. Their web site doesn't seem very clear on how they have managed such growth despite a declining budget, but I suspect getting all their leisure activities working together probably has something to do with it.
Monday, 9 December 2013
Cllr Dhiraj Kataria Behavior
I blogged a few days ago that Cllr Dhiraj Kataria has left Labour to join the Liberal Democrats. This partly makes for Cllr Carol Shaw defecting from Brent Liberal Democrats to the Tories (Which I think relieved some of her colleagues), and Cllr David Clues long awaited resignation as a councillor. One up, two down for the Liberal Democrats.
However, my own feelings are of relief that he is no longer a Labour Councillor. I had similar feelings when Bertha Joseph defected. It was good to no longer be even tangentially associated with her embarrassing behavior. Similarly, it is good to no longer have a party colleague telling residents to go to hell. Of course his worst behavior was what the solicitor writing the investigating report (paragraph 6.10) referred to as Dhiraj Kataria admitting to having "lied to his fellow-councillors and to me", which is astonishingly strong language for a solicitor. He also tried to cast the blame for leaking things on to other members of the Labour Group.
This behavior actually caused Brent Labour Group to expel him for an indefinite period. Under the rules, he was allowed to reapply to join the Labour Group again, which he did in early 2013. One assumes that at this time, he was happy with the way the Labour Party functioned. I suspect those of my colleagues who voted by a narrow margin to readmit him probably regret their misguided generosity.
In any case, it will be easier to deal with such an individual as an avowed political opponent than as a colleague.
However, my own feelings are of relief that he is no longer a Labour Councillor. I had similar feelings when Bertha Joseph defected. It was good to no longer be even tangentially associated with her embarrassing behavior. Similarly, it is good to no longer have a party colleague telling residents to go to hell. Of course his worst behavior was what the solicitor writing the investigating report (paragraph 6.10) referred to as Dhiraj Kataria admitting to having "lied to his fellow-councillors and to me", which is astonishingly strong language for a solicitor. He also tried to cast the blame for leaking things on to other members of the Labour Group.
This behavior actually caused Brent Labour Group to expel him for an indefinite period. Under the rules, he was allowed to reapply to join the Labour Group again, which he did in early 2013. One assumes that at this time, he was happy with the way the Labour Party functioned. I suspect those of my colleagues who voted by a narrow margin to readmit him probably regret their misguided generosity.
In any case, it will be easier to deal with such an individual as an avowed political opponent than as a colleague.
Sunday, 8 December 2013
Science and Policy Making
Nature and the Guardian have two excellent pieces, one advising policy makers about science and the scientists about policy making. The gap between these two worlds was one of the things that most struck me in my recent reading of Bad Pharma.
Saturday, 7 December 2013
Local Authority Electricity Generation
I was interested to read of a growing trend towards municipal electricity generation. Brent is doing this in two ways.
On a small scale Brent is now itself an electricity generator. The new Civic Centre uses waste fish products as a renewable fuel for a generator in the basement. This is expected to power all the Civic Centre's electricity needs, with surplus power being sold on the grid. Three years ago I asked about using buildings for solar installations, but was told the payback time would take too long. However, it would be good to keep this idea in mind in case the economics change. Parking meters have long had solar panels, and it is imaginable that certain kinds of street furniture might be suitable. There may also be some scope for some Council owned or school buildings to be used.
The authorities that do this on a sufficient scale (and that sounds a lot more practical for somewhere like Southampton than for Brent) will also have the advantage of an inherent hedge against electricity price rises. If prices up, an authority that is a substantial power generator can offset the higher cost of consumption by selling its own electricity at a higher price.
The second area where the Council can affect this agenda is in planning requirements. We routinely require new buildings to generate at least an element of their own electricity. Current planning policy also includes provision for district heating schemes in South Kilburn and in Wembley. Neither of these are live yet, but there is potential for substantial numbers of homes to be connected once a critical mass is achieved.
On a small scale Brent is now itself an electricity generator. The new Civic Centre uses waste fish products as a renewable fuel for a generator in the basement. This is expected to power all the Civic Centre's electricity needs, with surplus power being sold on the grid. Three years ago I asked about using buildings for solar installations, but was told the payback time would take too long. However, it would be good to keep this idea in mind in case the economics change. Parking meters have long had solar panels, and it is imaginable that certain kinds of street furniture might be suitable. There may also be some scope for some Council owned or school buildings to be used.
The authorities that do this on a sufficient scale (and that sounds a lot more practical for somewhere like Southampton than for Brent) will also have the advantage of an inherent hedge against electricity price rises. If prices up, an authority that is a substantial power generator can offset the higher cost of consumption by selling its own electricity at a higher price.
The second area where the Council can affect this agenda is in planning requirements. We routinely require new buildings to generate at least an element of their own electricity. Current planning policy also includes provision for district heating schemes in South Kilburn and in Wembley. Neither of these are live yet, but there is potential for substantial numbers of homes to be connected once a critical mass is achieved.
Friday, 6 December 2013
Iain Duncan Smith and the Latest Universal Credit Failure
Characteristically sliding out the admission under the cover of more high profile events, Iain Duncan Smith has now admitted to the latest stage if his universal credit failure. I find it frustrating that our political culture allows these failures of basic political competence with impunity whilst punishing what are often just gaffes or minor personal failings.
UPDATE
Really what planet is Iain Duncan Smith on? He really does seem to think he can just plough on regardless of the real world. Well done to Rachel Reeves for holding him to account.
UPDATE
Really what planet is Iain Duncan Smith on? He really does seem to think he can just plough on regardless of the real world. Well done to Rachel Reeves for holding him to account.
Arts, Libraries and Library Campaigners
Public Libraries News has a rather negative take on North Yorkshire's success in getting grant money for artists in residence in their libraries. The criticism is echoed by various other campaigners. I think this is a very misguided approach.
Firstly, I don't agree with the view that the arts are a kind of nice add on that can be dispensed with when budgets tighten (Let us leave to one side whether budgets actually need to tighten or whether the whole eternal austerity agenda is just ideological). If you want to have arts activity at all, you need to sustain it. It cannot simply be switched on and off like an electric light. There needs to be a physical infrastructure and a skills base. If you do away with this base, it is enormously difficult to build it back up again; what I believe economists call hysteresis.
Secondly, the arts are a significant contributor to society as a whole. You can argue for this in economic terms, as I have with regard to the Tricycle Theatre in Kilburn, the new Library Centre in Willesden, and the Civic Centre in Wembley. In each case, the arts events help draw people towards those Town Centres and get people spending on local businesses.
There are much wider social benefits as well. I think for instance of all the work that the Tricycle does with drama workshops. Some of these artists in residence may well contribute to the core business of libraries of promoting reading as Brent's poet laureate did.
Another possibility is that the artists in residence or other arts events help to attract audiences who perhaps have old fashioned views of libraries. Brent's artist in residence at Kilburn Library spent a significant amount of effort trying to reach out to people in South Kilburn. The ability to attract new users is certainly characteristic of Brent Dance Month, that brings many people into libraries who are not normally library users.
Above all, this kind of stuff is fun, and people do need some fun in libraries even (or perhaps especially) when the outlook for libraries and local government is so very bleak.
Firstly, I don't agree with the view that the arts are a kind of nice add on that can be dispensed with when budgets tighten (Let us leave to one side whether budgets actually need to tighten or whether the whole eternal austerity agenda is just ideological). If you want to have arts activity at all, you need to sustain it. It cannot simply be switched on and off like an electric light. There needs to be a physical infrastructure and a skills base. If you do away with this base, it is enormously difficult to build it back up again; what I believe economists call hysteresis.
Secondly, the arts are a significant contributor to society as a whole. You can argue for this in economic terms, as I have with regard to the Tricycle Theatre in Kilburn, the new Library Centre in Willesden, and the Civic Centre in Wembley. In each case, the arts events help draw people towards those Town Centres and get people spending on local businesses.
There are much wider social benefits as well. I think for instance of all the work that the Tricycle does with drama workshops. Some of these artists in residence may well contribute to the core business of libraries of promoting reading as Brent's poet laureate did.
Another possibility is that the artists in residence or other arts events help to attract audiences who perhaps have old fashioned views of libraries. Brent's artist in residence at Kilburn Library spent a significant amount of effort trying to reach out to people in South Kilburn. The ability to attract new users is certainly characteristic of Brent Dance Month, that brings many people into libraries who are not normally library users.
Above all, this kind of stuff is fun, and people do need some fun in libraries even (or perhaps especially) when the outlook for libraries and local government is so very bleak.
Thursday, 5 December 2013
More Problems at A and E
The self defeating nature of the government's austerity programme is being laid bare in Accident and Emergency again. The cut backs in other parts of the NHS and in Social Services are pushing people towards emergency provision and thereby overwhelming capacity in that provision. This is the exact opposite of what should be happening. More preventative care should be taking pressure off emergency provision, which would make treatment more effective in many cases and probably cheaper as well.
Wednesday, 4 December 2013
Intelligent Street Lighting
The Scotsman carries an interesting story about intelligent street lighting in Glasgow. As I mentioned before, I think this is an area that Brent is going to have to look at over the next few years.
It last attracted political attention in the Borough in the run up to the 1998 elections. Back then, one of the Labour Party's key election pledges was to renew Brent's street lighting. This was done by what was for the time an innovative PFI contract, which is still running. I believe it finishes in 2018. The 1998 debate was largely about crime, but I suspect in 2018, we will be more focused on carbon emissions and the cost of electricity.
However, street lighting technology constantly changes so it would be good to explore whether it is possible to adapt the Glasgow pilot to Brent needs.
It last attracted political attention in the Borough in the run up to the 1998 elections. Back then, one of the Labour Party's key election pledges was to renew Brent's street lighting. This was done by what was for the time an innovative PFI contract, which is still running. I believe it finishes in 2018. The 1998 debate was largely about crime, but I suspect in 2018, we will be more focused on carbon emissions and the cost of electricity.
However, street lighting technology constantly changes so it would be good to explore whether it is possible to adapt the Glasgow pilot to Brent needs.
Tuesday, 3 December 2013
Council Tax Arrears
Recent reports confirm that the grim picture for Council Tax summons in Brent is no isolated case. Essentially all these authorities have been passed an impossible choice of making even deeper cuts in services or making up the difference in Council Tax. This is no accident but a deliberate choice by Eric Pickles in his efforts to wreck local democracy.
Monday, 2 December 2013
Cllr Dhiraj Kataria
I understand that Cllr Dhiraj Kataria has left the Labour Group to join the Liberal Democrats. Some may recall that Cllr Kataria has had dealings with the Liberal Democrats before. Those dealings involved an accusation that the then Leader of the Council had interfered in a planning application. Oddly, these breaches had supposedly occurred some time before the actual accusation was placed, Cllr John was completely exonerated.
The actual allegation was made by Cllr Paul Lorber on the basis of information passed to him by Cllr Kataria. Cllr Paul Lorber subsequently refused to reveal the source of the information to the investigating officer, something I thought odd at the time.
Now Cllr Kataria is reported to have joined the Liberal Democrats.
The actual allegation was made by Cllr Paul Lorber on the basis of information passed to him by Cllr Kataria. Cllr Paul Lorber subsequently refused to reveal the source of the information to the investigating officer, something I thought odd at the time.
Now Cllr Kataria is reported to have joined the Liberal Democrats.
Registry Office Services
I notice, amidst all the gloom in local government, that there is some good news at the next Brent Executive. Brent has a longstanding shared registery office arrangment with Barnet. Happily, this service has not been bundled into Barnet's ill advised mass privatisation of public services.
Instead, it is proposed that Brent take over the Barnet services and run them on Barnet's behalf, which benefits the two Boroughs by a saving the region of £150,000 on a total spend of a little under £1 million. It doesn't seem to me to lead to any likely diminution in service. The more such genuine efficiency savings can be found the fewer cuts there will be.
Instead, it is proposed that Brent take over the Barnet services and run them on Barnet's behalf, which benefits the two Boroughs by a saving the region of £150,000 on a total spend of a little under £1 million. It doesn't seem to me to lead to any likely diminution in service. The more such genuine efficiency savings can be found the fewer cuts there will be.
Sunday, 1 December 2013
Automatic Library Membership Schemes
Given that libraries offer a free service, it is surprising that such a small proportion of the population use them, and one way I have been trying to get round this is automatically enrol school children in libraries. Brent actually formed part of an ACE pilot for this, but with only mixed success.
There seems to be a surprising reluctance by schools to engage with such a scheme. There is also a problem around the UK's data protection laws, which mean that you effectively have to use the school address as a home address. Thus, although you often see school parties at Brent libraries, the take up is patchy.
I still think that such schemes could have a part to play, however, and I am hoping Brent will be able to engage with a major employer or two to see whether automatic library membership could be extended to adults.
There seems to be a surprising reluctance by schools to engage with such a scheme. There is also a problem around the UK's data protection laws, which mean that you effectively have to use the school address as a home address. Thus, although you often see school parties at Brent libraries, the take up is patchy.
I still think that such schemes could have a part to play, however, and I am hoping Brent will be able to engage with a major employer or two to see whether automatic library membership could be extended to adults.
Saturday, 30 November 2013
Eternal Austerity and the Thinking Behind it
Yet another reminder of the sheer scale of cuts to local government here. I think that there are a number of points about this that are still not fully understood.
The cuts and virtual dismantling of large parts of local government are not a consequence of government policy. They are government policy. David Cameron's eternal austerity programme is designed to roll back the state more dramatically than Thatcher did, and that means cutting back local government to such an extent it will not be able to recover.
The annihilation of universal services is designed to persuade a greater and greater proportion of the population that they do not benefit from state spending, and therefore why should they pay for it? Strictly speaking of course, everyone benefits from public spending to some extent, but it is a key axiom of certain right wing ideologues that this is not so.
A key tactic in this onslaught is to attack the public sector as greedy and wasteful. This is partly to distract from the waste and greed of the bankers who pay for the Conservative Party, but also helps people to attack public sector organisations as a means of divide and rule.
What remains of the functions of the state will increasingly be run by quangos and shadowy private contractors. The secrecy of such operations may well lead to increasing corruption which discredits public spending still further.
The cuts and virtual dismantling of large parts of local government are not a consequence of government policy. They are government policy. David Cameron's eternal austerity programme is designed to roll back the state more dramatically than Thatcher did, and that means cutting back local government to such an extent it will not be able to recover.
The annihilation of universal services is designed to persuade a greater and greater proportion of the population that they do not benefit from state spending, and therefore why should they pay for it? Strictly speaking of course, everyone benefits from public spending to some extent, but it is a key axiom of certain right wing ideologues that this is not so.
A key tactic in this onslaught is to attack the public sector as greedy and wasteful. This is partly to distract from the waste and greed of the bankers who pay for the Conservative Party, but also helps people to attack public sector organisations as a means of divide and rule.
What remains of the functions of the state will increasingly be run by quangos and shadowy private contractors. The secrecy of such operations may well lead to increasing corruption which discredits public spending still further.
Friday, 29 November 2013
Some of the Problems of Recycling in Brent
I have recently been sent the league table of London Boroughs recycling record. Brent comes out quite well at joint seventh with Hillingdon at 43%. However, these kind of tables seldom look at the various factors that make the job harder in some areas compared to others. Once you take that into account, I think Brent's performance starts to look very impressive. Some of the areas where Brent struggles are:
1) Brent have a high proportion of flats (53%). That is much higher than any of the seven Boroughs above us, and 13th highest in terms of Boroughs as a whole.
2) Brent has the second highest proportion of households with language problems (after Newham). That has an obvious impact.
Despite this, our record has improved markedly from the less than 30% recycling rate we inherited in 2010.
UPDATE
The figures given are calculated using a standard methodology which excludes contaminated waste. As far as I know, the same methodology is used by all UK authorities.
1) Brent have a high proportion of flats (53%). That is much higher than any of the seven Boroughs above us, and 13th highest in terms of Boroughs as a whole.
2) Brent has the second highest proportion of households with language problems (after Newham). That has an obvious impact.
Despite this, our record has improved markedly from the less than 30% recycling rate we inherited in 2010.
UPDATE
The figures given are calculated using a standard methodology which excludes contaminated waste. As far as I know, the same methodology is used by all UK authorities.
Thursday, 28 November 2013
Wembley Library and the Virtues of Colocation
The benefits of Colocation are often cited in the libraries debate. I suggested this would be true of the new Wembley Library some time ago. The Civic Centre does after all colocate the new library with Brent's registry office, benefits advice, a major venue for all sorts of different groups to hire out, planning, other Council services and fairly soon some retail outlets as well. This no doubt helps underpin the spectacular growth in numbers at Wembley Library.
Although Wembley Library has long had the standard Brent offer of seven day opening, it has now opened the doors from 8am, not just the usual opening time of 10am. This is made possible by the need for the rest of the Civic Centre to be staffed at that time, and the availability of self service machines. Although the 8am to 10am slot is not fully operational since there are no staff, you can borrow or return a book, use the desks and read periodicals or other materials during that period, so it is a genuine expansion at effectively no cost.
Although Wembley Library has long had the standard Brent offer of seven day opening, it has now opened the doors from 8am, not just the usual opening time of 10am. This is made possible by the need for the rest of the Civic Centre to be staffed at that time, and the availability of self service machines. Although the 8am to 10am slot is not fully operational since there are no staff, you can borrow or return a book, use the desks and read periodicals or other materials during that period, so it is a genuine expansion at effectively no cost.
Wednesday, 27 November 2013
Shocking Figures for Brent Council Budget
I have recently received some information for a query I raised at a Scrutiny meeting in July. Leaving aside the extraordinary tardiness of the response, the figures themselves are shocking. Brent Council expects to spend £17.93 million this year on agency staff and consultants. Whilst it is claimed to be a 10% drop on the previous year, it strikes me as appallingly high and suggestive of a serious managerial problem in the organisation.
An organisation that has shed so many permanent staff should not need to drag in temporary labour to top up the establishment. Either mistakes have been made in the anticipated workload, or temporary labour are being hired without sufficient checks. Either way it is unacceptable.
An organisation that has shed so many permanent staff should not need to drag in temporary labour to top up the establishment. Either mistakes have been made in the anticipated workload, or temporary labour are being hired without sufficient checks. Either way it is unacceptable.
Tuesday, 26 November 2013
The Future of Local Government
Today I got one of those reports one gets, this one from Deloitte. It is a survey of local government people saying they want to focus on prevention and so on. All very good in theory. In practice I suspect local government will be forced more and more down the fire fighting route, until eventually authorities start going bankrupt, and central government says far too late: " What have we done?"
Although I am something of a heretic on this subject, I suspect the best answer will be authority mergers.
Although I am something of a heretic on this subject, I suspect the best answer will be authority mergers.
Standing Up for Libraries
I have been perusing the notes by Public Libraries News about the Stand Up for Libraries Conference at the weekend. The suggestions on best practice and so on seem to be very similar to what Brent Council is actually doing, and indeed the approach I advocated on Public Libraries News quite a while ago.
Monday, 25 November 2013
Universal Credit and Ministerial Stupidity
The FT carries an interview with Francis Maude in which he more or admits that ministers don't understand their departments. He particularly cites the government's failings on Universal Credit and claims that civil servants should "speak truth to power". He then illustrates why they probably won't by trying to blame them for the failures on the universal credit policy.
The inadequacy of the political leadership in this government is breathtaking.
The inadequacy of the political leadership in this government is breathtaking.
Computer Use in Libraries
I argued before that computer provision is part of the statutory duty for public library provision. If so, that implies that local authorities need to adopt some sort of standard to show what sort of provision that they are making. Such a standard would be complicated by the wireless revolution.
The alternative view, apparently held by the Secretary of State, is that computer provision is not part of the statutory requirement. In other words, a local authority that wanted to reduce its library service to the bare statutory minimum, as Herefordshire appears to, could save money by stripping out all the IT from its libraries. This is not an abstract idea. Many councils are talking about being forced down the road of providing only those services they are legally obliged to.
Were the bare minimum model to be followed, it would have serious effects on the roll out of universal credit, and no doubt other services since a certain proportion of the population only have Internet access through public libraries. Whereas the long term outlook is for this proportion to diminish, that is the situation at the moment.
The DCMS stance on libraries can therefore be seen as fundamentally undermining the government's welfare "reform" programme. I suspect that this is not the only case where the government simply does not understand what it is doing.
The alternative view, apparently held by the Secretary of State, is that computer provision is not part of the statutory requirement. In other words, a local authority that wanted to reduce its library service to the bare statutory minimum, as Herefordshire appears to, could save money by stripping out all the IT from its libraries. This is not an abstract idea. Many councils are talking about being forced down the road of providing only those services they are legally obliged to.
Were the bare minimum model to be followed, it would have serious effects on the roll out of universal credit, and no doubt other services since a certain proportion of the population only have Internet access through public libraries. Whereas the long term outlook is for this proportion to diminish, that is the situation at the moment.
The DCMS stance on libraries can therefore be seen as fundamentally undermining the government's welfare "reform" programme. I suspect that this is not the only case where the government simply does not understand what it is doing.
Sunday, 24 November 2013
Graves
The Guardian recently published a book review about the dead of the First World War in a way that was new to me. Essentially, the First World War was one of the first occasions when private bereavement was scaled up to a national scale. The article covers this in terms of government decisions to treat all the dead equally. At the time, that must have been radical. It would very much have been the era of officers and "other ranks".
It seemed to me to cast a reflection on modern problems. In our cemetery service, but also many others, Brent Council has to find ways to combine effective mass provision with personalised care. The graves service is simply one of these, although perhaps more sensitive than most.
It seemed to me to cast a reflection on modern problems. In our cemetery service, but also many others, Brent Council has to find ways to combine effective mass provision with personalised care. The graves service is simply one of these, although perhaps more sensitive than most.
Saturday, 23 November 2013
Falling Standards in Local Government
The BBC covers ongoing crises in Kent around the standard of local democracy. I posted on one small part of Transparency International's recent report on the subject.
Thanet has had one of its former Leaders convicted of using his position to illegally profit in a property deal. The new problems seem to be more about the general culture of the authority with accusations of threats, and indeed councillors simply not taking their responsibilities serious enough. I suspect that these are more common problems in UK local democracy, with problems around gesture politics, misdirected energies, lack of attention to the value of taxpayers' money and poor quality decision making being far more common than outright corruption. However, I suspect that such issues have the potential to do far more damage to an authority than outright corruption by a particular individual.
However, all of these areas are seeing the safeguards against abuse steadily dismantled, as Transparency International detailed in their recent report.
Thanet has had one of its former Leaders convicted of using his position to illegally profit in a property deal. The new problems seem to be more about the general culture of the authority with accusations of threats, and indeed councillors simply not taking their responsibilities serious enough. I suspect that these are more common problems in UK local democracy, with problems around gesture politics, misdirected energies, lack of attention to the value of taxpayers' money and poor quality decision making being far more common than outright corruption. However, I suspect that such issues have the potential to do far more damage to an authority than outright corruption by a particular individual.
However, all of these areas are seeing the safeguards against abuse steadily dismantled, as Transparency International detailed in their recent report.
Friday, 22 November 2013
David Cameron Rejects Environmentalism
David Cameron is reported to be rejecting environmentalism. I am surprised people thought he genuinely embraced it to begin with. Despite his best efforts to put his past down the memory hole, I always thought David Cameron was summed up in his photo op of cycling to the Commons with a chauffeur behind bringing his work clothes.
Thursday, 21 November 2013
Outsourcing Services
The Guardian has a cautionary tale from Warrington. The authority there outsourced speech therapy to the NHS, which subsequently decided to axe this statutory service without telling Warrington Council. It is a good illustration of one of the potential problems in partnership working. There is always a danger of your partner, whether it is a private provider or another public authority like the NHS, letting you down. The only way to deal with that, of course, is to ensure you are completely clear on the agreement and that you rigorously keep track that whatever you want is actually being done.
Wednesday, 20 November 2013
Boris Johnson Foundering on Cycle Safety
Boris Johnson's rather useless flapping about after the death of several cyclists has culminated in a typically headline grabbing intervention about headphones. What irritates me about Johnson's whole approach is that it is so superficial. As with his campaign against bendy buses, it seems to be based on personal anecdote and wishful thinking rather than sustained effort over time.
Meanwhile, more serious people than the London Mayor are making genuine progress on road safety for cyclists. Both the Lohac contract and the new public realm contract that Brent has just signed, for instance, have provision for the heavy vehicles employed to have various cyclist friendly measures. These are largely directed at making cyclists as visible as possible to drivers. The ideas involved have been known to transport professionals for years, whilst Boris Johnson was simply not paying attention.
It would also be nice if the London Mayor could pay attention to road safety more generally. Pedestrian safety in London is often woeful, with some real blackspots easy to find. There is ample evidence that twenty mile zones would make a real difference to the number of killed and seriously injured.
It would be useful if the London Mayor would pay attention to those issues.
Meanwhile, more serious people than the London Mayor are making genuine progress on road safety for cyclists. Both the Lohac contract and the new public realm contract that Brent has just signed, for instance, have provision for the heavy vehicles employed to have various cyclist friendly measures. These are largely directed at making cyclists as visible as possible to drivers. The ideas involved have been known to transport professionals for years, whilst Boris Johnson was simply not paying attention.
It would also be nice if the London Mayor could pay attention to road safety more generally. Pedestrian safety in London is often woeful, with some real blackspots easy to find. There is ample evidence that twenty mile zones would make a real difference to the number of killed and seriously injured.
It would be useful if the London Mayor would pay attention to those issues.
Tuesday, 19 November 2013
Illegal Money Lending Team
Last night's Full Council meeting was longer on noise than on achievement, so I thought I would mention the Illegal Money Lending Team (ILMT) instead. This is coming up for discussion at the next Trading Standards Board. It is a specialist team based in Birmingham and funded through a specific government grant (when central government wants something the money mysteriously becomes available despite austerity).
It concentrates on what can often be the very complex business of prosecuting unlicensed money lenders. I have occasionally come across such cases, and it is horrible to see how they can fleece people. They are in fact much worse than Wonga and other payday lenders, although I would not defend payday loans either. The Birmingham team is being empowered to pursue cases in Brent that meet their specialist skills, and I wish them every success.
It concentrates on what can often be the very complex business of prosecuting unlicensed money lenders. I have occasionally come across such cases, and it is horrible to see how they can fleece people. They are in fact much worse than Wonga and other payday lenders, although I would not defend payday loans either. The Birmingham team is being empowered to pursue cases in Brent that meet their specialist skills, and I wish them every success.
Monday, 18 November 2013
Street Gritting over the next Week
London is expected to avoid the worst of the cold snap expected this week, but Brent has 2,160 tons of salt and 326 grit bins ready just in case.
Sunday, 17 November 2013
A and E at Central Middlesex
There has been justified concern over A&E at Central Middlesex, but I have found it frustrating that the debate seems to have been carried on in isolation. That is not very useful if we actually want to help get people timely medical treatment rather than just a load of publicity. The Bruce Keogh proposals offer a chance to move to a more rounded debate.
Anecdotally, and with some statistical evidence, much of the potential overload seems to come from the difficulties in other parts of the NHS. People find it very hard to get a GP appointment, and the number of walk in centres is reducing. Therefore, increasingly people treat AE as a first resort. There may also be something in cultural change and GPs not working convenient opening hours.
There is also the worrying issue of cuts to the ambulance service at least in London. As I understand it stabilizing someone quickly is usually more important to their health than the time it takes to get to a hospital once they are in the ambulance.
Finally, there is the argument about the actual quality of the A&E once the patient actually gets there. Everyone I know with clinical expertise seems to think that the range of specialisms available is hugely important, and that a certain throughput of patients is crucial to that.
Sadly, none of these points have really featured in the public debate.
Anecdotally, and with some statistical evidence, much of the potential overload seems to come from the difficulties in other parts of the NHS. People find it very hard to get a GP appointment, and the number of walk in centres is reducing. Therefore, increasingly people treat AE as a first resort. There may also be something in cultural change and GPs not working convenient opening hours.
There is also the worrying issue of cuts to the ambulance service at least in London. As I understand it stabilizing someone quickly is usually more important to their health than the time it takes to get to a hospital once they are in the ambulance.
Finally, there is the argument about the actual quality of the A&E once the patient actually gets there. Everyone I know with clinical expertise seems to think that the range of specialisms available is hugely important, and that a certain throughput of patients is crucial to that.
Sadly, none of these points have really featured in the public debate.
Saturday, 16 November 2013
Implications of the Ouseley Judgement
A couple of weeks ago, I mentioned that the Brent Libraries judgement seemed to say that electronically distributed materials formed part of the statutory comprehensive and efficient library service. This was picked up by Public Libraries News, but the implications aren't really clear.
I should point out that my interpretation does not seem to be widely shared, but, assuming I am right that implies:
A) Charging for ebook lending, as say Nottinghamshire does, may be illegal.
B) Charging for PC access, as I believe some libraries do, may also be illegal.
C) The long standing practice of many libraries in charging for DVDs may also be illegal if these fit in the section 7 definition.
D) The number and quality of IT points is a relevant consideration in determining whether or not a library authority is meeting its statutory duty.
I should point out that my interpretation does not seem to be widely shared, but, assuming I am right that implies:
A) Charging for ebook lending, as say Nottinghamshire does, may be illegal.
B) Charging for PC access, as I believe some libraries do, may also be illegal.
C) The long standing practice of many libraries in charging for DVDs may also be illegal if these fit in the section 7 definition.
D) The number and quality of IT points is a relevant consideration in determining whether or not a library authority is meeting its statutory duty.
Friday, 15 November 2013
Corruption in Local Government
Transparency International has a report out about corruption in local government, which has plenty of meat in it, and possibly deserves several posts.
One narrow point it makes is the government's suggested removal of the statutory protection for Chief Executives, Finance Directors and Monitoring Officers. This affords an extra level of protection from being sacked on the grounds that all three are senior posts that deal with politically sensitive matters. Allowing their holders to be removed without clear justification would open the doors to an unscrupulous political leadership clearing the way for all kinds of dirty work.
It quotes an example of a Chief Executive in Lincolnshire calling in the Police to investigate the Council Leader. The Leader was subsequently convicted. The Chief Executive emphasizes how important it was that he had statutory employment protection against being dismissed. Yet this is precisely what the current government is proposing.
Of course, any organization where lots of people are being made redundant may find staff reluctant to stand up for ethical standards, as widespread redundancies may create a climate of fear, so it is important to look beyond the formal protections to the wider ethos of the organization.
One narrow point it makes is the government's suggested removal of the statutory protection for Chief Executives, Finance Directors and Monitoring Officers. This affords an extra level of protection from being sacked on the grounds that all three are senior posts that deal with politically sensitive matters. Allowing their holders to be removed without clear justification would open the doors to an unscrupulous political leadership clearing the way for all kinds of dirty work.
It quotes an example of a Chief Executive in Lincolnshire calling in the Police to investigate the Council Leader. The Leader was subsequently convicted. The Chief Executive emphasizes how important it was that he had statutory employment protection against being dismissed. Yet this is precisely what the current government is proposing.
Of course, any organization where lots of people are being made redundant may find staff reluctant to stand up for ethical standards, as widespread redundancies may create a climate of fear, so it is important to look beyond the formal protections to the wider ethos of the organization.
Thursday, 14 November 2013
Library Use Debate
Interesting blog here about library use by an Australian library user. Her points apply just as well to the UK. The post and subsequent comments give a flavour of how diverse library use can be. It is also the kind of debate that we should have more of in the UK, rather than a succession of anecdotes about someone's childhood, or an evidence free series of assertions about the needs of people who haven't been asked.
She is right that libraries are only just catching up with the impact of the Internet, let alone the impact of wireless technologies.
I think she is also right that library services, including Brent still haven't really caught up with some fairly obvious marketing techniques. As she says, why don't we do author recommendations to people? The trend to a more informal reading environment of soft furnishings and a coffee, rather than desk bound and formalised reading is important too.
That said, I think Brent libraries have gone a long way towards meeting these demands in the past three years.
She is right that libraries are only just catching up with the impact of the Internet, let alone the impact of wireless technologies.
I think she is also right that library services, including Brent still haven't really caught up with some fairly obvious marketing techniques. As she says, why don't we do author recommendations to people? The trend to a more informal reading environment of soft furnishings and a coffee, rather than desk bound and formalised reading is important too.
That said, I think Brent libraries have gone a long way towards meeting these demands in the past three years.
Wednesday, 13 November 2013
David Cameron's Mask Slips
David Cameron has shifted his justification of austerity away from necessity and towards ideological desire. When elected in 2010, he pretended the budget cuts had been forced by the economic crisis, rather than being a means of prolonging it. Now he is plainer that he wants the old Thatcherite ideal of a smaller state. I suspect that this also the real desire of Nick Clegg and the "Orange Book" Liberals.
I think the best way to respond to this is to say: what we need is an effective state, which demonstrates value for money in doing what we want it to do. One example of this would be in waste collection where the amount of money spent is reduced dramatically by switching from landfill towards more recycling, or other higher rungs in the waste hierarchy.
Sadly, some of the people I speak to have what might be seen as an ultra conservative approach of just resisting any form of change. Particularly people on the Looney Left seem to think that spending more and more public sector money should be seen as a good in itself, which seems to me just as silly as the Thatcherite idea that public spending is bad in itself. I also think that adopting such a line plays into Cameron's hands because it sounds like a defence of waste rather than a defence of value.
I think the best way to respond to this is to say: what we need is an effective state, which demonstrates value for money in doing what we want it to do. One example of this would be in waste collection where the amount of money spent is reduced dramatically by switching from landfill towards more recycling, or other higher rungs in the waste hierarchy.
Sadly, some of the people I speak to have what might be seen as an ultra conservative approach of just resisting any form of change. Particularly people on the Looney Left seem to think that spending more and more public sector money should be seen as a good in itself, which seems to me just as silly as the Thatcherite idea that public spending is bad in itself. I also think that adopting such a line plays into Cameron's hands because it sounds like a defence of waste rather than a defence of value.
Tuesday, 12 November 2013
Food Waste Bans
A new report emphasises the importance of dealing with food waste, which is certainly true. Weekly food waste collections are crucial to this. The mention of banning food waste in landfill strikes me as misguided, however. Banning a material means that relying on the people getting rid of it, in this case the public playing ball by not putting it in the bin in the first place. If they do, you either have to refuse to collect it at source, or refuse to allow it to be deposited in landfill. In which case, what do you do with it?
Monday, 11 November 2013
Stop More Betting Shops
The Tories and the Lib Dems have reportedly assured betting shop companies that local authority powers to stop their spread will be be limited. This is the absolute opposite of what I get whenever I talk to anyone on this issue. People at large very much want betting shops and other anti social shops like fast food shops to be curbed.
Sunday, 10 November 2013
Basements and Planning
Dan Filson asks about basement applications here. My colleague Cllr James Denselow has been pursuing the basement issue for a long time. It seems to particularly affect Queens Park. Brent's most recent statement on basement policy is right at the back of the May Planning agenda here.
Saturday, 9 November 2013
Planning Site Visits
Just back from a series of Planning site visits on this very wet morning. It is interesting the number of basement applications that have started coming up.
UPDATE
A response on the question on basement developments is here.
UPDATE
A response on the question on basement developments is here.
Friday, 8 November 2013
Harlesden Incinerator Application Delayed Again
The Incinerator application for a site just south of Harlesden has been delayed again. The planning objections to this development are sound. In particular, it is not one of the areas earmarked for waste purposes under the West London Waste Plan. I would prefer it if rather than deferring it all the time, the application were simply rejected.
Thursday, 7 November 2013
Council Tax Summons in Brent
Along with many other Brent Councillors, I recently got an email about the effect of the government's foisting of Council Tax relief on to local authorities.
There seem to me to be two essential questions. Firstly, did central government give Brent a reasonable choice in adopting a local scheme or not? Secondly, did Brent follow a considered process in trying to minimise the problems caused?
As I understand it Brent is one of the worst affected authorities in London. Simply adopting the national scheme, on the much lower funding provided by central government, would result in a £5.5 million shortfall. That could only be made up by spending cuts, and £5.5 million is a lot of money. For example, it is more than the entire libraries budget. No one in the Council has much appetite for more cuts than we already have.
Remember central government is expected to give us another £65 million of cuts over the next three years. It is widely predicted that many local authorities will simply collapse.
The second question is did the Council try to deal with this sensibly, and I think we did. As an Executive member, I was asked to join an informal working group of members and officers. It included Cllr Mo Butt, when he was still Lead Member for Finance. He stayed on when his successor as Lead Member for Finance Cllr Ruth Moher joined. It also included Cllr Zaffar Van Kalwala as a Scrutiny Chair with a particular interest in Council Tax issues. Therefore we can say the problem got a lot of political attention as well as input from senior officers such as the then Finance Director. I think that group produced useful results.
Far from the suggestions in press reports, a court summons is very much a last resort. As well as a general publicity programme in the Brent Magazine and specific communities, the Council has been specifically contacting individuals. This was both by phone and on the doorstep. Anyone in difficulty should contact the Council as soon as possible, and agree a payment plan.
It is not the intention of the Council to make anyone's life difficult, but the Council itself is being put in an impossible position.
There seem to me to be two essential questions. Firstly, did central government give Brent a reasonable choice in adopting a local scheme or not? Secondly, did Brent follow a considered process in trying to minimise the problems caused?
As I understand it Brent is one of the worst affected authorities in London. Simply adopting the national scheme, on the much lower funding provided by central government, would result in a £5.5 million shortfall. That could only be made up by spending cuts, and £5.5 million is a lot of money. For example, it is more than the entire libraries budget. No one in the Council has much appetite for more cuts than we already have.
Remember central government is expected to give us another £65 million of cuts over the next three years. It is widely predicted that many local authorities will simply collapse.
The second question is did the Council try to deal with this sensibly, and I think we did. As an Executive member, I was asked to join an informal working group of members and officers. It included Cllr Mo Butt, when he was still Lead Member for Finance. He stayed on when his successor as Lead Member for Finance Cllr Ruth Moher joined. It also included Cllr Zaffar Van Kalwala as a Scrutiny Chair with a particular interest in Council Tax issues. Therefore we can say the problem got a lot of political attention as well as input from senior officers such as the then Finance Director. I think that group produced useful results.
Far from the suggestions in press reports, a court summons is very much a last resort. As well as a general publicity programme in the Brent Magazine and specific communities, the Council has been specifically contacting individuals. This was both by phone and on the doorstep. Anyone in difficulty should contact the Council as soon as possible, and agree a payment plan.
It is not the intention of the Council to make anyone's life difficult, but the Council itself is being put in an impossible position.
Wednesday, 6 November 2013
Welcome to the Library Press
I thought I should just briefly welcome the Library Press. Brent is one of the partners in this effort to help people who want to self publish. This is exactly the kind of innovation that libraries need if they are to continue to be valued as services.
Tuesday, 5 November 2013
Immigration Checks for Housing
The way this government blithely sails into entirely predictable disasters has been demonstrated by Iain Duncan Smith and the growing Universal Credit debacle. Red Brick is giving warning of another crisis coming down the road, the imposition of immigration checks by private landlords.
The government plans to make all landlords check their tenants' immigration status. They estimate this would take ten minutes which is a hell of a lot quicker than the Home Office are able to manage. They also seem to take no account of missing documentation, poor language or "officialdom" skills or simple human impatience. As Red Brick suggests, many landlords are likely to ignore certain tenants simply to avoid the risks and effort involved.
We recently had a reminder that racist practices are still commonplace in private lettings, with an example highlighted in Willesden. Is this bill likely to help that?
The government plans to make all landlords check their tenants' immigration status. They estimate this would take ten minutes which is a hell of a lot quicker than the Home Office are able to manage. They also seem to take no account of missing documentation, poor language or "officialdom" skills or simple human impatience. As Red Brick suggests, many landlords are likely to ignore certain tenants simply to avoid the risks and effort involved.
We recently had a reminder that racist practices are still commonplace in private lettings, with an example highlighted in Willesden. Is this bill likely to help that?
Monday, 4 November 2013
Bob Keslake and Politicisation
The Permanent Secretary of the Department of Communities and Local Government has been criticized for making some politicised comments on a recent Public Accounts Committee report. It follows suggestions over the past year that he has lost the confidence of ministers. Eric Pickles is usually very sensitive to any suggestion of local authority resources being used for party political purposes. Should he not be concerned by political interventions by his own head of department?
Sunday, 3 November 2013
What is the Statutory Library Duty
As an aside this Sunday morning, something no one seemed to pick up on during the libraries controversy was that the Bailey case seemed to clarify the nature of the "comprehensive and efficient" duty to provide library services. This is widely assumed to refer to printed materials and nothing else.
However, if you read paragraph 116 of the High Court judgement, you find the judge saying:
This view, in a judgement that was subsequently considered by the Court of Appeal and found sound seems very important to me. "Section 7" is the part of the 1964 Act that refers to the "comprehensive and efficient" duty.
This seems to me to be rather different to the Secretary of State's view of the s7 duty expressed in her letter to Brent. In that, she states that the provision of public access PCs is not part of the s7 duty.
However, if you read paragraph 116 of the High Court judgement, you find the judge saying:
"In reality, a service which includes the provision of books and other materials by technology and goes beyond the loan of books or other physical items, or the provision of reading facilities on the printed page, falls within the scope of s7, which is not confined to the loan or use of physical items."
This view, in a judgement that was subsequently considered by the Court of Appeal and found sound seems very important to me. "Section 7" is the part of the 1964 Act that refers to the "comprehensive and efficient" duty.
This seems to me to be rather different to the Secretary of State's view of the s7 duty expressed in her letter to Brent. In that, she states that the provision of public access PCs is not part of the s7 duty.
Saturday, 2 November 2013
Ealing Waste Incinerator
Ealing Planning Committee will be considering the proposal for a waste Incinerator in Harlesden on Wednesday. They have written a standard letter to myself and other objectors saying "where your response was not in total support..." I would be surprised if they have had any letters giving any support.
Friday, 1 November 2013
Former Cllr Len Snow
I am sad to report that former Brent Councillor and Mayor Len Snow has died. My thoughts go to his family, and I will post at greater length at a later date.
Changes to Kilburn High Road
Brent's Highways Committee is one of those Council backwaters that occasionally has interesting schemes in front of it. One such was the proposed safety scheme at the northern end of Kilburn High Road. This is still at a fairly early design stage, and has to be worked out in conjunction with Camden.
Naturally, most of the attention is focused on improving road safety, which is extremely poor even for such a busy road. However improving the walkability and the look of the street could also help build it up as a shopping centre. It actually is seen as one of Brent's key shopping centres, but people have been complaining about its decline for as long as I can remember. Whereas a single scheme cannot work miracles, there is potential for incremental improvement.
Naturally, most of the attention is focused on improving road safety, which is extremely poor even for such a busy road. However improving the walkability and the look of the street could also help build it up as a shopping centre. It actually is seen as one of Brent's key shopping centres, but people have been complaining about its decline for as long as I can remember. Whereas a single scheme cannot work miracles, there is potential for incremental improvement.
Universal Credit Staggers On
It seems that the government is finally facing up to the universal credit debacle behind the scenes. I still find it surprising that this incompetent policy has not attracted more criticism, not least for Iain Duncan Smith's dishonest presentation. There really is something wrong in our political culture when foul ups that cost hundreds of millions have no consequences for the culprits, whilst personal shortcomings or even verbal gaffes lead to resignations.
Thursday, 31 October 2013
Fairtrade and Corporate Strategy
In the Summer, we rather strangely had a vote on a revamped corporate strategy for the Borough. I say this is strange, because there doesn't appear to be any good reason to revamp th3e corporate strategy. We subsequently had the Chief Executive in to explain the document, and I was rather surprised to find that she didn't seem to know what the targets referred to. If no one knows what the targets are about, it is hard to see how anyone is going to know if they have been met.
Where a Strategy document such as this can be useful is in cascading changes through an organisation, and it struck me that Fairtrade is a good example.
The 2010 Brent Labour Party manifesto had a commitment to promoting Fairtrade, and that got into the Corporate Strategy passed after we won the election. This helped me to push the issue with officers, who had rather given up on it following the failure to attain Fairtrade status by the Liberal Democrats and Tories in 2008. This helped the Borough to finally attain status as a Fairtrade Authority.
However, it also helped drive Fairtrade further into detailed decision making. For instance, it helped me persuade the head of procurement that Fairtrade should be part of the specification for the cafe franchises at the Civic Centre. The fact that you can drink Fairtrade coffee is directly attributable to that specification. It also helped when I wanted to make provision of Fairtrade goods a condition for Ward Working funding for the Night Shelter project, and for the Fairtrade artwork in Hazel Road Open Space.
Somehow, I can't see the revamped strategy being used in the same way.
Where a Strategy document such as this can be useful is in cascading changes through an organisation, and it struck me that Fairtrade is a good example.
The 2010 Brent Labour Party manifesto had a commitment to promoting Fairtrade, and that got into the Corporate Strategy passed after we won the election. This helped me to push the issue with officers, who had rather given up on it following the failure to attain Fairtrade status by the Liberal Democrats and Tories in 2008. This helped the Borough to finally attain status as a Fairtrade Authority.
However, it also helped drive Fairtrade further into detailed decision making. For instance, it helped me persuade the head of procurement that Fairtrade should be part of the specification for the cafe franchises at the Civic Centre. The fact that you can drink Fairtrade coffee is directly attributable to that specification. It also helped when I wanted to make provision of Fairtrade goods a condition for Ward Working funding for the Night Shelter project, and for the Fairtrade artwork in Hazel Road Open Space.
Somehow, I can't see the revamped strategy being used in the same way.
Wednesday, 30 October 2013
Make Willesden Green
I notice that there are moves afoot to put up an independent candidate(s) in Willesden Green. I think on the whole that is quite healthy. Until people actually try it, they don't realise that standing for election is quite difficult.
Looking at the candidates' manifesto, I am struck that a lot of what he is talking about is fairly obvious stuff that is currently moving forward. For instance, the call for a better public realm or traffic calming. He also calls for development of the Genesis site near Kingsley Court, something I might say myself. As my own experience with Willesden Social Club shows, this tends to take a long time. He also doesn't seem to get how councillors involved in planning applications have to be careful about what they say. Or that a single independent councillor may have difficulty influencing Council policy, which is afterall one of the main reasons we have political parties in the first place.
Looking at the candidates' manifesto, I am struck that a lot of what he is talking about is fairly obvious stuff that is currently moving forward. For instance, the call for a better public realm or traffic calming. He also calls for development of the Genesis site near Kingsley Court, something I might say myself. As my own experience with Willesden Social Club shows, this tends to take a long time. He also doesn't seem to get how councillors involved in planning applications have to be careful about what they say. Or that a single independent councillor may have difficulty influencing Council policy, which is afterall one of the main reasons we have political parties in the first place.
Tuesday, 29 October 2013
St Jude Storm Damage and Street Trees
The St Jude storm has damaged a lot of our street trees. Above is a tree I photographed in Palermo Road yesterday. Currently, the Council estimate that the damage is worse than at any time since 1987. The Council is estimating about 150 trees lost but there may well be trees that are still unknown.
Given the scale of the problem, it is taking a while to get around all the trees to clear them. The Council is prioritising areas where a fallen tree is blocking someone in their home, or blocking a road. I gather they were working up to midnight last night and from the early hours this morning.
Surprisingly, it does not always seem to be the youngest trees that get damaged the most. I had a look at some of the new trees planted around Park Parade this morning and they seemed intact. I recall that in the Kensal Rise tornado of a few years back, the hundred year old trees in the tornado area were destroyed. Nearby the then very recently planted saplings on Buchanan Gardens were fine.
UPDATE
There is a list of street trees that the Council knows about here.
FURTHER UPDATE
The relatively limited damage to Southern English woodlands is covered here.
Business rates and High Streets
There is a piece here about business rates strangling high streets, rather than parking charges. This could well be true. Certainly given most shoppers in places like Harlesden Town Centre come by means other than car, reducing business rates sounds like a better route than tinkering with parking charges.
Monday, 28 October 2013
Cllr Paul Lorber and the Downgrading of Wembley Library
The success of the new Wembley Library, Brent's first new library for twenty five years, causes me to reflect on how hard it was to achieve. One of the striking things about the controversy over libraries was the deep seated hostility to change, even when it was obviously beneficial.
I have blogged before on Paul Lorber's numerous reversals of policy on the subject. However I didn't mention that he actually proposed scaling back or perhaps entirely removing the new Library in Wembley in a letter to the then Chief Executive.
After criticising the new Wembley Library for being bigger and better than the old Town Hall Library, he goes on to say that:
"It is clear to me that the smaller local libraries are being sacrificed to fund the new and substantially larger Civic Centre Library which for many years will not be situated in a residential area and which will require a journey to get to.
This is not an approach that my group can support. If existing libraries are under threat of closure then the size and capital and revenue cost of the proposed Civic Centre Library must be substantially scaled down.
The Civic Centre Library must therefore make a contribution towards the £1 million revenue savings target being set for the libraries by substantially scaling down the new library proposed for the Civic Centre both in terms of revenue and capital costs."
I find the psychology at work here interesting. Of course, had we followed this course, it would almost certainly have cost money rather than saving it. The architects could have done a redesign, and the contractor rescheduled the building works, but they would no doubt have asked for compensation for the extra work involved. Assuming the Civic Centre building remains the same size, I am not sure there would have been any saving in the overall running cost, we would have ended up with a much worse library.
More seriously, Cllr Lorber appears to be objecting to the very quality of the library, which we now know is one of its great attractions. Granted, he made the unwarranted assumption that people would not travel to the Wembley Library, which we now know to be untrue.
At roughly the same time I recall him suggesting that Kilburn Library should be closed so I suppose one should not be surprised that headlines seem more important than reality.
I have blogged before on Paul Lorber's numerous reversals of policy on the subject. However I didn't mention that he actually proposed scaling back or perhaps entirely removing the new Library in Wembley in a letter to the then Chief Executive.
After criticising the new Wembley Library for being bigger and better than the old Town Hall Library, he goes on to say that:
"It is clear to me that the smaller local libraries are being sacrificed to fund the new and substantially larger Civic Centre Library which for many years will not be situated in a residential area and which will require a journey to get to.
This is not an approach that my group can support. If existing libraries are under threat of closure then the size and capital and revenue cost of the proposed Civic Centre Library must be substantially scaled down.
The Civic Centre Library must therefore make a contribution towards the £1 million revenue savings target being set for the libraries by substantially scaling down the new library proposed for the Civic Centre both in terms of revenue and capital costs."
I find the psychology at work here interesting. Of course, had we followed this course, it would almost certainly have cost money rather than saving it. The architects could have done a redesign, and the contractor rescheduled the building works, but they would no doubt have asked for compensation for the extra work involved. Assuming the Civic Centre building remains the same size, I am not sure there would have been any saving in the overall running cost, we would have ended up with a much worse library.
More seriously, Cllr Lorber appears to be objecting to the very quality of the library, which we now know is one of its great attractions. Granted, he made the unwarranted assumption that people would not travel to the Wembley Library, which we now know to be untrue.
At roughly the same time I recall him suggesting that Kilburn Library should be closed so I suppose one should not be surprised that headlines seem more important than reality.
Sunday, 27 October 2013
Bad Pharma
I have been reading Ben Goldacre's Bad Pharma, which is in general a distressing take on the abuses not just of pharmaceutical companies, but also by academics, regulators and politicians. However, it has a footnote on an experiment relating to titles. A series of letters were sent out at random by a newly knighted doctor. Some referred to him as "Sir"; others did not. It made no difference to the likelihood of a response. Somehow, the idea that someone thinks of doing such research gladdens me.
Saturday, 26 October 2013
Street Lighting in Brent
It was interesting to see a new product that might have the ability to do away with conventional street lighting (here). I don't know whether Starpath is practical, but Brent will certainly have to do something about its street lighting. In money terms, likely rises in electricity prices will make the bills for street lighting rise. In carbon emissions terms, the success of the Civic Centre in cutting carbon emissions mean that street lights are representing a bigger and bigger proportion of the Council's carbon footprint.
Friday, 25 October 2013
Free School Failure
The LGiU has a blog asking whether there is a need for a "middle tier" to supervise schools, and whether local authorities should do the job. The answer to both questions is surely yes. Central government simply doesn't have the resource to supervise more than 24,000 schools effectively. The policy of hollowing out local authority powers whilst leaving them with responsibilities simply means that necessary jobs, like providing school places do not get done.
Thursday, 24 October 2013
Weekend Cleaning in Brent Parks
Another planned improvement in the new Public Realm contract is weekend cleaning at selected Brent parks in the Summer. The parks that are felt to particularly need this are: Roundwood Park, Welsh Harp Reservoir, Barham Park, Roe Green Park, Woodcock Park, Butlers Green and King Edwards Park Wembley. These are felt to be the most in need. It shows you can still have improvements even within an overall context of reducing budgets.
Wednesday, 23 October 2013
Wembley Library Growth Not Unprecedented
My Sunday post on the growth of numbers at Wembley Library, which has been picked by the Kilburn Times, has led some to express surprise.
It is actually not that surprising if you consider the precedent of Kilburn Library. Kilburn had a major refurbishment followed by opening on 10 September 2012. The subsequent visit and loan figures are on the Brent Council web site here. The relevant comparison is Quarter 3, which was the first full quarter after re-opening. Visits went up by 226.9%, and loans rose by 71.7% in that Quarter.
A major refurbishment really does have a beneficial effect on the number of people using the library. Such precedents bode well for the prospects of the new Willesden Green Library Centre in 2015.
It is actually not that surprising if you consider the precedent of Kilburn Library. Kilburn had a major refurbishment followed by opening on 10 September 2012. The subsequent visit and loan figures are on the Brent Council web site here. The relevant comparison is Quarter 3, which was the first full quarter after re-opening. Visits went up by 226.9%, and loans rose by 71.7% in that Quarter.
A major refurbishment really does have a beneficial effect on the number of people using the library. Such precedents bode well for the prospects of the new Willesden Green Library Centre in 2015.