Search This Blog
Thursday, 10 January 2013
Falling Police Numbers
Boris Johnsonhas released his new policing plans. Navin Shah has suggested these will reduce police numbers in Brent by 35, with Safer Neighbourhood Teams particularly hard hit. Given Johnson's record, I find the sight of him breaking his promises on police numbers unsurprising.
Wednesday, 9 January 2013
Green Charter and Carbon Emissions
I mentioned Brent Council's Green Charter briefly on Monday. The various issues in it strike me as deserving a longer treatment, so I propose to do a series of posts.
The Charter points to impressive progress in cutting carbon emissions. The ones it considers are mostly building related. Although we have yet to move to the Civic Centre, some of the gains are already happening. The Civic Centre project has driven a lot of the IT related cuts in carbon emissions as well as some building and travel related reductions. We have also seen a noted reduction in energy use at Sports Centres, and in the recent Kilburn Library refurbishment.
We move in to the Civic Centre in April, and finish the Council's total move in June. The full carbon benefits won't be felt for a while, as some of them can only be maximised as the Centre is used.
For the future, we will have to do more on employees' travel arrangements, but the next big target for cutting greenhouse emissions in Brent Council itself is street lighting, where the advance of technology makes carbon reduction ever more viable.
Of course, all this is in addition to lots of other things the Council does in reducing emissions, such as the effect of increased recycling in curbing greenhouse gases, but it is important that as a major employer in Brent we show the way if we are to have any credibility in getting others to follow.
The Charter points to impressive progress in cutting carbon emissions. The ones it considers are mostly building related. Although we have yet to move to the Civic Centre, some of the gains are already happening. The Civic Centre project has driven a lot of the IT related cuts in carbon emissions as well as some building and travel related reductions. We have also seen a noted reduction in energy use at Sports Centres, and in the recent Kilburn Library refurbishment.
We move in to the Civic Centre in April, and finish the Council's total move in June. The full carbon benefits won't be felt for a while, as some of them can only be maximised as the Centre is used.
For the future, we will have to do more on employees' travel arrangements, but the next big target for cutting greenhouse emissions in Brent Council itself is street lighting, where the advance of technology makes carbon reduction ever more viable.
Of course, all this is in addition to lots of other things the Council does in reducing emissions, such as the effect of increased recycling in curbing greenhouse gases, but it is important that as a major employer in Brent we show the way if we are to have any credibility in getting others to follow.
Tuesday, 8 January 2013
Are the Liberal Democrats Weak or Stupid?
Red Brick blog publishes a diatribe against the Liberal Democrats for agreeing to all kinds of viscous policies on housing and benefits without a mandate or even any explicit deal with the Tories. This critique puts Sarah Teather in a curious light. Having been part of a government that supported policies she regarded as immoral, she is now trying to backtrack. Is her attitude better described as immoral, hypocritical or just a cowardly attempt to save her seat?
141 - 153 High Street Harlesden
There is yet another planning application at 141-153 High Street Harlesden, which was formerly a service station. I am currently trying to get greater detail, although the report at present makes no mention of the effect on outlook for 139 High Street, which stymied the last proposal.
Waste Figures in Brent
A commentator has asked about recycling definitions. The definitions used by Brent are the same as those used by other local authorities. This is a good idea, as it makes comparison straightforward.
UPDATE
I don't know what the below commentator is referring to, as I have published all recent comments. Of course, if people sign their comments it would be easier to trace them and see if they have been published.
UPDATE
I don't know what the below commentator is referring to, as I have published all recent comments. Of course, if people sign their comments it would be easier to trace them and see if they have been published.
Monday, 7 January 2013
Green Charter Reviewed
I have one report at Brent's next Executive, but it is a wide ranging one. It reviews all the progress on Brent Council's green charter. This covers a whole gamut of activities, and I am glad to say there has been substantial progress on cutting carbon emissions, promoting food growing, promoting Fairtrade, improving air quality, encouraging the sustainable use of water, reducing and recycling waste, supporting animal welfare and supporting biodiversity. All of this when the financial problems of Brent Council are far greater than at any point in the Borough's history.
Sunday, 6 January 2013
Brent Libraries
Yet another anonymous blogger has asked for a comment on Brent's Libraries Transformation Project in the light of the CIPFA figures. In fact I provided an extensive set of opinions based on more up to date figures already. I also provided a brief comment on the CIPFA figures here.
Perhaps any would be anonymous commentator might think of leaving their name next time?
Perhaps any would be anonymous commentator might think of leaving their name next time?
LGiU and Local Government
The LGiU has been getting exercised about local government reducing obesity. One might question how far councils will be able to pursue this agenda given the coalition government's numerous budget cuts.
In the meantime, I wonder if they have approached Eric Pickles to inform him that obesity is not acceptable?
In the meantime, I wonder if they have approached Eric Pickles to inform him that obesity is not acceptable?
Saturday, 5 January 2013
3D Printing and Libraries Again
Phil Bradley has some interesting thoughts about 3D printing and libraries here. I am quite interested in seeing whether Brent can do something in this area although I suspect it would be better linked to the Brent Museum.
Friday, 4 January 2013
New Sports Pitch
This morning I went up to the Vale Farm Sports Centre, where a new artificial pitch was opened by Trevor Brooking. It was paid for by the Football Foundation and Brent Council. It is good to see positive stories like this amidst all the doom and gloom.
Too Much Generosity for Teather
I think the Red Brick blog is too generous to Sarah Teather here. Ms Teather's recent attacks on the government she used to be part of strike me as simply an attempt to save her own political skin in a Labour area that has finally seen through her.
Thursday, 3 January 2013
Brent Archives' Untold Story
One of the nicest things about being a councillor is that it gives you an insight into often unappreciated part of how local government works. One such area is Brent Archives and Museum.
The Archive and Museum has had a complicated history. It was based in the Grange, at Neasden roundabout. The move to Willesden Green Library Centre is generally agreed to be a big improvement. It was achieved via a Lottery grant.
The archive and Museum are now being rehoused again. Both will be in the new Willesden Green Library development. During the building period, an interim appointment service will be housed across the road at the Council's Grange Road offices. the Museum will do a series of outdoor and outreach services.
I know these will strike many people as less than ideal, but I think they have the potential to be constructive. Certainly, the outreach services during the Kilburn Library refurbishment seemed to help reach new audiences, and I don't see why the same may not be true for the Willesden facilities.
The Willesden project wil also allow us to further develop the online services that are already an important part of the Archive, and could be a more effective part of the Museum.
The Archive and Museum has had a complicated history. It was based in the Grange, at Neasden roundabout. The move to Willesden Green Library Centre is generally agreed to be a big improvement. It was achieved via a Lottery grant.
The archive and Museum are now being rehoused again. Both will be in the new Willesden Green Library development. During the building period, an interim appointment service will be housed across the road at the Council's Grange Road offices. the Museum will do a series of outdoor and outreach services.
I know these will strike many people as less than ideal, but I think they have the potential to be constructive. Certainly, the outreach services during the Kilburn Library refurbishment seemed to help reach new audiences, and I don't see why the same may not be true for the Willesden facilities.
The Willesden project wil also allow us to further develop the online services that are already an important part of the Archive, and could be a more effective part of the Museum.
Wednesday, 2 January 2013
Comprehensive and Efficient
I have argued before that including electronic information in the definition of a comprehensive and efficient library service is essential is public libraries are to survive. Currently, there appears to be a widespread body of opinion that all electronic means are not included in the legal duty. The Secretary of State appears to be among those who accept this. If that is the legal position, it had better change soon or no libraries will be left.
However, rereading paragraph 116 of Mr Justice Ouseley's judgement in the Brent case (on the sidebar) makes me think again. He seems to think that Internet access is implied. I assume, from my memory of the court case, that this is by the reference to gramophone records in the wording of the Act. He is inferring a duty from those intermediate devices. A reference to gramophone records gives you some indication of how out of date the 1964 Act is.
In any case, don't we desperately need Parliament to look at this again?
However, rereading paragraph 116 of Mr Justice Ouseley's judgement in the Brent case (on the sidebar) makes me think again. He seems to think that Internet access is implied. I assume, from my memory of the court case, that this is by the reference to gramophone records in the wording of the Act. He is inferring a duty from those intermediate devices. A reference to gramophone records gives you some indication of how out of date the 1964 Act is.
In any case, don't we desperately need Parliament to look at this again?
Tuesday, 1 January 2013
Hollowing Out Libraries Again
Over Christmas, there has been a surprising amount of activity around a post on Brent libraries I did back in October. A more up to date post on my position on libraries is here. I hope people find it illuminating.
New Year
Welcome to the New Year!
For Brent Council, this is going to be a bit of a lull before the storm.
This year's budget, has fairly limited cuts but the failure of George Osborne's economic policy and the Conservative Party's hatred of local government mean that we will face massive fiscal pressures for years to come.
Brent Council is likely to respond to these by having a much tighter economic focus on everything we do. This means that Council services will need to demonstrate a much more direct effect on economic well being than hitherto. Local government has never had a challenge like it.
For Brent Council, this is going to be a bit of a lull before the storm.
This year's budget, has fairly limited cuts but the failure of George Osborne's economic policy and the Conservative Party's hatred of local government mean that we will face massive fiscal pressures for years to come.
Brent Council is likely to respond to these by having a much tighter economic focus on everything we do. This means that Council services will need to demonstrate a much more direct effect on economic well being than hitherto. Local government has never had a challenge like it.
Monday, 31 December 2012
Stagnating Economy
Ending the year with Robert Skidelsky's assessment of where economic policy went wrong. I think he overestimates the universality of the error. A lot of people saw the likely effect of austerity but George Osborne persisted anyway. Less obvious was the limited effect of quantitative easing which has failed to stimulate the economy or lead to higher inflation.
Sunday, 30 December 2012
Clues Criticised
This week's Willesden and Brent Times carries a letter criticising David Clues for suggesting that the Anglican Church "transferred" him to Brighton as if he had no choice in the matter. The letter suggests, I believe correctly, that Anglican ministers normally apply for jobs. They don't simply get put in another diocese.
As he sips a pre-prandial sherry, perhaps the Rev. Clues might reflect that staying on as a Brent councillor having moved to Brighton really just isn't worth it, and it would be better for his own reputation if he just stood down.
As he sips a pre-prandial sherry, perhaps the Rev. Clues might reflect that staying on as a Brent councillor having moved to Brighton really just isn't worth it, and it would be better for his own reputation if he just stood down.
Tubbs Road Pocket Park Water Supply
I understand that Tubbs Road pocket park has finally had a water supply connected. It is quite extraordinary how long you have to persist with these things before something happens.
Saturday, 29 December 2012
Bookshops and Libraries
A BBC report suggests that bookshops are used by many customers for window shopping before they go home to buy the same books online for much lower prices. If so, this would be very sad. However, it does make me wonder about the future role of libraries.
I know of some American evidence that libraries in the USA perform a similar function. Users that a first look at a book in a library, and subsequently purchase it from a retailer. I am not aware of any UK research on this, but it is a key argument in suggesting that the book industry should see libraries as allies in building demand for books rather than as enemies seeking to cannibalise their sales. Libraries have Ben particularly attacked for this in terms of ebook sales.
If one were to accept such a view of the role of libraries, it would be confirmation of the rightness of Brent in maintaining its book stock (and substantively increasing it in Kilburn Library). It might also help inform the design of libraries.
I know of some American evidence that libraries in the USA perform a similar function. Users that a first look at a book in a library, and subsequently purchase it from a retailer. I am not aware of any UK research on this, but it is a key argument in suggesting that the book industry should see libraries as allies in building demand for books rather than as enemies seeking to cannibalise their sales. Libraries have Ben particularly attacked for this in terms of ebook sales.
If one were to accept such a view of the role of libraries, it would be confirmation of the rightness of Brent in maintaining its book stock (and substantively increasing it in Kilburn Library). It might also help inform the design of libraries.
Friday, 28 December 2012
Walking and Planning
The Guardian has piece on walking today. This is a much neglected area of urban planning. One of the key intentions of the Harlesden Town Centre development is to make the Centre friendlier to pedestrians.
It's animating principle is the "road user hierarchy" which tries to arbitrate between the many groups that use a universal service like a street. The hierarchy puts pedestrians first and motorists at the bottom. This is obviously quite a stark choice, but then decisions about a finite universal resource frequently are.
The consequences of ignoring pedestrians in street design can be seen in places like South Kilburn, where the big tower blocks put up in the 1960s completely fail to create a sense of place. An artist told me that she reacted very well to them as sculptural forms, which is no doubt what the designers intended, but they simply do not work as places to live. Because, the streets are inherently unwelcoming, people simply use them for transit from A to B. This means that they effectively disintegrate the community, which has no natural points of interaction_ feeding into all kinds of social degeneration.
A separate issue is the relationship between motor traffic and pedestrians. Currently, many of our urban areas are designed around cars, and the intention of developments like Harlesden is to shift the emphasis back towards people. Sometimes indeed, measures like guardrails that are intended to safeguard people, actually endanger them. The worst example I know of are the rails on Station Approach by Willesden Junction station, which force people to walk into the road. Hopefully, these will be gone by June.
We have a policy now to try to ensure these kind of quality of life issues are taken into account, but it becomes more and more difficult as the resources available to the Council diminish.
It's animating principle is the "road user hierarchy" which tries to arbitrate between the many groups that use a universal service like a street. The hierarchy puts pedestrians first and motorists at the bottom. This is obviously quite a stark choice, but then decisions about a finite universal resource frequently are.
The consequences of ignoring pedestrians in street design can be seen in places like South Kilburn, where the big tower blocks put up in the 1960s completely fail to create a sense of place. An artist told me that she reacted very well to them as sculptural forms, which is no doubt what the designers intended, but they simply do not work as places to live. Because, the streets are inherently unwelcoming, people simply use them for transit from A to B. This means that they effectively disintegrate the community, which has no natural points of interaction_ feeding into all kinds of social degeneration.
A separate issue is the relationship between motor traffic and pedestrians. Currently, many of our urban areas are designed around cars, and the intention of developments like Harlesden is to shift the emphasis back towards people. Sometimes indeed, measures like guardrails that are intended to safeguard people, actually endanger them. The worst example I know of are the rails on Station Approach by Willesden Junction station, which force people to walk into the road. Hopefully, these will be gone by June.
We have a policy now to try to ensure these kind of quality of life issues are taken into account, but it becomes more and more difficult as the resources available to the Council diminish.
Thursday, 27 December 2012
Mixing Traditions
Modern Christmas appears to be becoming ever more of a mélange of different cultural traditions. According to the Economist, American Jews are adopting Christmas In there own ways. Muslim families have long eaten turkey at Christmas, and I have noticed that the British Christmas appears to be becoming ever more Americanised. Well before the day this year, I saw cranberry sauce on sale everywhere. For much longer "Santa Claus" has been easing out the English "Father Christmas". I suppose this has been going on for centuries, not least with the many different roles Christmas trees have played down the years.
Wednesday, 26 December 2012
The Alternative to Hollowing Out Libraries
I see that Derbyshire County Council have made the opposite choice to Brent in deciding to "hollow out" their services as an alternative to closure. This will be much easier for them politically, but lead to a long term decline, as I have argued before.
For a while they can get along with cutting opening hours and book stock, as they are currently doing. They can also reduce wider services, for example lower grade computers, fewer electronic materials and higher charges for discretionary things like ebook lending. They can also increase fines for late books, and safeguard their revenue by making those books harder to renew (for example, by not allowing online or telephone renewals). All these are short term measures that can keep them going for a bit, but they all erode the quality of the library experience for the user. They also create a new baseline of lower expectation. In the pattern of savage cuts to Council funding, it will be difficult for any future administration in Derbyshire to restore book buying to the previous level; lower book stock will simply become the new norm. Indeed I believe Gloucestershire had already cut back it's book buying dramatically. I suspect that they then decided to start closing branches because they could no longer obtain savings from the book budget. In other words, this pattern of across the board cuts in services may well simply delay branch closures rather than prevent them.
At the same time, the technological changes that the book industry and society are going through are as dramatic as the rise of printing itself. If libraries don't engage with the ongoing spread of digital information in every walk of life, they will simply become irrelevant. Libraries without up to date technology will not be able to help people into the job market or to help people with educational requirements because they simply won't have the technology that education and increasing numbers of companies need.
All this brings me back to the Brent answer to these problems. Instead of salami slicing across the service we are concentrating our increasingly limited resources on a smaller number of buildings. Each of these buildings will be in a transport node, preferably co-located with other services, and with an excellent range of library services available for as many hours as possible. We will also use an outreach service and other means to try to draw in as many users as possible to make maximum use of library resources, and (incidentally) maintain public support for the service.
UPDATE
Comments below seem to be on a different subject to the post. I was interested that Derbyshire, and earlier Southampton, both framed the problem in the same way as me independently. The real choice facing authorities bearing the brunt of Eric Pickles brutal attack on local government is should their library services absorb the pressure through cuts in staff and services (as Derbyshire and Southampton have chosen to do), or by prioritising services at the expense of buildings?
For a while they can get along with cutting opening hours and book stock, as they are currently doing. They can also reduce wider services, for example lower grade computers, fewer electronic materials and higher charges for discretionary things like ebook lending. They can also increase fines for late books, and safeguard their revenue by making those books harder to renew (for example, by not allowing online or telephone renewals). All these are short term measures that can keep them going for a bit, but they all erode the quality of the library experience for the user. They also create a new baseline of lower expectation. In the pattern of savage cuts to Council funding, it will be difficult for any future administration in Derbyshire to restore book buying to the previous level; lower book stock will simply become the new norm. Indeed I believe Gloucestershire had already cut back it's book buying dramatically. I suspect that they then decided to start closing branches because they could no longer obtain savings from the book budget. In other words, this pattern of across the board cuts in services may well simply delay branch closures rather than prevent them.
At the same time, the technological changes that the book industry and society are going through are as dramatic as the rise of printing itself. If libraries don't engage with the ongoing spread of digital information in every walk of life, they will simply become irrelevant. Libraries without up to date technology will not be able to help people into the job market or to help people with educational requirements because they simply won't have the technology that education and increasing numbers of companies need.
All this brings me back to the Brent answer to these problems. Instead of salami slicing across the service we are concentrating our increasingly limited resources on a smaller number of buildings. Each of these buildings will be in a transport node, preferably co-located with other services, and with an excellent range of library services available for as many hours as possible. We will also use an outreach service and other means to try to draw in as many users as possible to make maximum use of library resources, and (incidentally) maintain public support for the service.
UPDATE
Comments below seem to be on a different subject to the post. I was interested that Derbyshire, and earlier Southampton, both framed the problem in the same way as me independently. The real choice facing authorities bearing the brunt of Eric Pickles brutal attack on local government is should their library services absorb the pressure through cuts in staff and services (as Derbyshire and Southampton have chosen to do), or by prioritising services at the expense of buildings?
Monday, 24 December 2012
Welfare Change Delays
On the eve of Christmas, we learn of delays and disfunction in the Colition government's welfare changes. Aside from the sheer brutality of the changes, the speed with which the government is trying to push them through is likely to lead to bureaucratic chaos. By the way, I notice that Ms Teather is continuing her u-turn on the issue. I suspect that had Mr Cameron chosen to keep her in a ministerial job she would now be quite happy to stay silent as her constituents suffered.
Sunday, 23 December 2012
Father Christmas Under Modern Management
Flip Chart Fairy Tales imagines Father Christmas using modern management techniques here. Unfortunately, Father Christmas still seems to use off fashioned face to face when he should be seeking channel shift to more cost effective online mechanisms.
Shopping
The last couple of days have seen queues of extraordinary length outside John Line the butchers in Harrow Road. It sets me thinking about how to promote the health of shopping areas, which are being doubly hit by the rise of Internet shopping and the ongoing recession.
I don't think that there can just be one solution. Looking at Harlesden Town Centre we do have a major advantage in the range of our food shops and we should seek to capitalise on that. Brent Council is also promoting a number of other measures, such as the use of meanwhile space and encouraging networking among businesses, but there is no doubt that the government's austerity and technological change give major headwinds.
I don't think that there can just be one solution. Looking at Harlesden Town Centre we do have a major advantage in the range of our food shops and we should seek to capitalise on that. Brent Council is also promoting a number of other measures, such as the use of meanwhile space and encouraging networking among businesses, but there is no doubt that the government's austerity and technological change give major headwinds.
Saturday, 22 December 2012
More Council Budget Cuts on the Way
Eric Pickles announcement of local government funding looks as if the funding of Brent will continue to fall. It is difficult to be clear at this stage, as the government deliberately makes the announcement in a way to make the details as obscure as possible, But it looks as if a fall in 2013 will be followed by a much bigger fall in 2014. This will also be true for lots of other Councils in poor areas, although much less so for Councils in richer areas.
There is no doubt that this is driving some Councils towards collapse, and that before long they will be unable to carry out their statutory as well as non-statutory services.
There is no doubt that this is driving some Councils towards collapse, and that before long they will be unable to carry out their statutory as well as non-statutory services.
Friday, 21 December 2012
Another Coalition Power Grab
Our mendacious government continues to pretend to be devolving decision making whilst doing the opposite. The latest proposal, now out to consultation, is to allow the Secretary of State to designate certain planning authorities as too slow to make decisions and then take over their planning powers for major applications (more than about 10 properties).
I suspect the main effect of this power grab would be that the SoS wold find that he was being asked to decide far more cases than he had staff to deal with, and decisions would have much longer delays and probably worse quality decisions.
I suspect the main effect of this power grab would be that the SoS wold find that he was being asked to decide far more cases than he had staff to deal with, and decisions would have much longer delays and probably worse quality decisions.
Thursday, 20 December 2012
Ebook Lending in Brent
Our ever entrepreneurial library staff are using Christmas to advertise our ebook lending service. Only about a third of English library services lend ebooks, and some of them charge for loans. Brent's service is free.
Andy Gale and Government Mendacity
An extraordinary tale of government mendacity is told by Patrick Butler here. There is surely something desperate in the DCLG trying to deny its links to an adviser as soon as he is quoted explaining the obvious effects of the government's housing policy.
Wednesday, 19 December 2012
Murad Qureshi on Air Quality
I am not sure the photo op was well advised, but Murad Qureshi raises a serious point about air quality. It is greatly to Murad's credit that he has persisted on the air quality issue for such a long time.
Tuesday, 18 December 2012
Town Centre Problems
Out door knocking on Sunday, I came across a number of issues around crime, anti-social behaviour, prostitution and noise pollution. Some of these are already under investigation, but the nature df these things tends to be intractable. Just as I did with Willesden Junction's Station Approach, I Intend to pursue these, but it will take time.
Monday, 17 December 2012
Kilburn Library Resident Artist
I am just back from a talk given by Anya Beaumont on her experience as a resident artist in Kilburn Library. I got a real sense that, if money can be found, resident artists could add an enormous amount of value to our libraries. Anya spent a lot of time in the library itself, but also went out to the Granville Centre and St Mungos in Chichester Road.
Futures for Local Government
I still get the impression that many people just don't get the extent to which the current government's cuts aren't just temporary. Although it had no mandate for such a change at the General Election, the coalition really is trying to enforce a complete transformation, possibly without understanding what it is trying to transform us all into. The Guardian has some interesting speculation about possible futures here.
Sunday, 16 December 2012
Comments
Just approved a couple of comments to this blog. My policy is to approve unless there is a positive reason not to e.g. Libel, offensiveness etc.
However, I am often struck by the certainty of the comments and their anonymity. They often make factual statements without evidence (for example, the idea that I or other members did not challenge the WLWA accounts, which is flatly untrue). They are also remarkable in that the people making them fail to identify themselves. The comments I post here are clearly attributable to me. Why don't other people choose to stand up for what they say they believe in?
However, I am often struck by the certainty of the comments and their anonymity. They often make factual statements without evidence (for example, the idea that I or other members did not challenge the WLWA accounts, which is flatly untrue). They are also remarkable in that the people making them fail to identify themselves. The comments I post here are clearly attributable to me. Why don't other people choose to stand up for what they say they believe in?
Social Networking and it's Annoyances
I recall many years ago I set up a Facebook account in order to access a particular site. My usage (such as it was) ceased with that site. Nonetheless, I continue to get a stream of marketing rubbish from Facebook to this day. I am sure that the same would be true of twitter and so on.
With phone numbers, which also used to be plagued in this way, one could sign up for tpsonline.com. This stands for telephone preference service and allows the user to block out much of this annoyance. Indeed, even the companies themselves appear to have worked out that the calls are counterproductive and given up. How much longer before Facebook wakes up to the same message?
With phone numbers, which also used to be plagued in this way, one could sign up for tpsonline.com. This stands for telephone preference service and allows the user to block out much of this annoyance. Indeed, even the companies themselves appear to have worked out that the calls are counterproductive and given up. How much longer before Facebook wakes up to the same message?
Saturday, 15 December 2012
Labour's Housing Review
The Labour Party has launched a new review into improving the private rented sector for housing. Such a review is long overdue. Having said that the document appears longer on diagnosis than on solutions, but at least Labour is trying to address a problem that affects large numbers of people living standards.
Friday, 14 December 2012
Multi-layered Democracy in London
Yesterday I went to the London Councils Transport and Environmental Committee, and later today I am going to the West London Waste Authority. I doubt whether even councillors and Council officer fully understand all the various layers of London government and how they interlink, which cannot be good for transparent local democracy.
Incidentally looking round the room yesterday, at London TEC, I saw only two women members including the Chair Catherine West and very few non-whites.
Incidentally looking round the room yesterday, at London TEC, I saw only two women members including the Chair Catherine West and very few non-whites.
Thursday, 13 December 2012
David Miliband on Marine Biodiversity
David Miliband reminds us of the importance of marine biodiversity here. He tackles it from the angle of protecting dwindling resources, which is fair enough. Personally, I would be inclined to a more Romantic view of preserving the wonders of nature.
Wednesday, 12 December 2012
Effective Street Gritting
A quick look around Kensal Green this morning suggest to me that the Council contractors have been very quick in getting gritting out on to the pavements. Well done.
Library usage Roundup
The Guardian has a useful roundup on library usage around the UK. Most striking for me is the dramatic fall off in web site visits, which is completely contrary to my expectations. After rapid rises up to a couple of years ago, web site visits have gone into a sharp reverse at the same time that most services become ever more active online.
Tuesday, 11 December 2012
Council Tax Support Scheme Decided
Last night, Brent Council decided on its new Council Tax Support scheme to replace the national scheme that the government is abolishing. This is a particularly outrageous example of the Liberal Democrats and Tories hitting the poor. Not only are Councils told to design their own scheme, but the funding to pay for the scheme is automatically reduced by 10%. There is no offer of increases in future years so we can expect the finance to be further reduced as inflation bites.
This forces Councils either to cut spending by even more, or to recover the reduced revenue by widening the Council Tax to people who have hitherto been exempt.
Last night, I thought even some of the Liberal Democrats felt ashamed as they listened to Cllr Paul Lorber's posturing on the subject.
This forces Councils either to cut spending by even more, or to recover the reduced revenue by widening the Council Tax to people who have hitherto been exempt.
Last night, I thought even some of the Liberal Democrats felt ashamed as they listened to Cllr Paul Lorber's posturing on the subject.
Monday, 10 December 2012
Street Gritting Update
As cold weather is forecast, I thought I would do a quick update on Brent Council's preparations. Brent has about 2,400 tons of grit in stock, which is more than the Borough has ever had to use. 326 street bins are available. Further details on dealing with winter problems in Brent can be found here.
Sunday, 9 December 2012
Councils And the Arts
Newcastle is going through an unwelcome experiment in cutting the Council's entire arts budget. I imagine that is heartbreaking for all the people who having building up Newcastle's arts infrastructure over the years. The buildings may remain, but what. Use are they without money to pay for the activities within them? Making up the shortfall from elsewhere is likely to be difficult. Areas outside London struggle to achieve outside funding, and Council funding often provides a stamp of approval and some seed money that can be essential to drawing in additional resources.
That is why I am keen to avoid a similar fate in Brent. Our arts programme is much more modest than that of Newcastle, but it does a huge amount of good out of all proportion to its funding. Most important, however, in these times when all services need an economic justification, the arts have potential to generate employment and wider regeneration that is becoming increasingly important to urban areas. The main trouble in making this argument is that it draws heavily on softer measures rather than hard data.
That is why I am keen to avoid a similar fate in Brent. Our arts programme is much more modest than that of Newcastle, but it does a huge amount of good out of all proportion to its funding. Most important, however, in these times when all services need an economic justification, the arts have potential to generate employment and wider regeneration that is becoming increasingly important to urban areas. The main trouble in making this argument is that it draws heavily on softer measures rather than hard data.
Saturday, 8 December 2012
Cutting Business Rates
Friday's posting on the government's cynical offloading of Council Tax Support to local Councils has put me in mind of some of the other wheezes that the Tories and Liberal Democrats are using to deflect criticism for the failure of their austerity policies.
One of these, which has been covered elsewhere, is the ability to vary business rates. The government is actively suggesting that Councils should do this, but at the same time ministers know there is record in raising those rates year after year, and that the areas in most need are in local authorities that have been worst hit by changes to the government grant.
If only ministers would direct the ingenuity they display in blaming others to actually helping to revive economic growth.
One of these, which has been covered elsewhere, is the ability to vary business rates. The government is actively suggesting that Councils should do this, but at the same time ministers know there is record in raising those rates year after year, and that the areas in most need are in local authorities that have been worst hit by changes to the government grant.
If only ministers would direct the ingenuity they display in blaming others to actually helping to revive economic growth.
Friday, 7 December 2012
Council Tax Changes on Monday
One of the many ways in which the Tory and Liberal Democrat government is hitting people by stealth is through changes to the Council Tax. It "allows" each authority to design its own discount scheme in place of the existing national scheme. However, the funding is being cut by 10%. In Brent that is about £5 million. That either has to come from cuts in spending or reducing the amount of discount available.
Brent Council will be making this decision on Monday evening.
The Guardian gives a rather generous interpretation of very late changes that the government has announced. In practice, these changes, which in some ways seem to go against the professed objectives of the scheme, are so late in the day that it would be enormously difficult to take them on board. The Guardian rightly observes that they came too late for an effective consultation. They are also very late for software to be changed and properly tested.
They are also very late in terms of getting people who have never paid Council Tax before engaged in the process. The Council estimates that, if the draft scheme to be debated on Monday is voted through, this would amount to more than 20,000 people. The Council is likely to set up a phone bank to contact as many of these people as possible before the Council Tax bills start arriving in mid March. There is also a major programme to try get the message though via wider publicity and door knocking, as well as a team of people for one to one sessions at the One Stop shops. All that is best organised with as much notice as possible.
Of course, it is also coming on top of all the government's other benefit changes in 2013. Either the government don't understand how difficult it is to implement its demands, or it is indifferent to the consequences for people on the ground.
Brent Council will be making this decision on Monday evening.
The Guardian gives a rather generous interpretation of very late changes that the government has announced. In practice, these changes, which in some ways seem to go against the professed objectives of the scheme, are so late in the day that it would be enormously difficult to take them on board. The Guardian rightly observes that they came too late for an effective consultation. They are also very late for software to be changed and properly tested.
They are also very late in terms of getting people who have never paid Council Tax before engaged in the process. The Council estimates that, if the draft scheme to be debated on Monday is voted through, this would amount to more than 20,000 people. The Council is likely to set up a phone bank to contact as many of these people as possible before the Council Tax bills start arriving in mid March. There is also a major programme to try get the message though via wider publicity and door knocking, as well as a team of people for one to one sessions at the One Stop shops. All that is best organised with as much notice as possible.
Of course, it is also coming on top of all the government's other benefit changes in 2013. Either the government don't understand how difficult it is to implement its demands, or it is indifferent to the consequences for people on the ground.
Thursday, 6 December 2012
Where George Osborne went Wrong
Not the Treasury View has the most incisive analysis of the Autumn Statement I have come across. It is naturally gloomy. The present government made fundamentally wrong decisions a couple of years ago, and now people at large are paying the price. I think even Osborne knows this, but cannot admit it for political reasons. Would that some of his cheerleaders became as realistic.
Air Quality and Boris Johnson
Dave Hill gives us an update on Boris Johnson's evasions over poor air quality. Brent's air quality has actually improved over the past few years. This is largely down to transport and planning policies that promote virtually any form of transport other than the car. Boris Johnson's programme of hiking public transport fares by eye watering amounts seem to go in the opposite direction. Meanwhile, he engages in subterfuges of the kind Dave Hill describes to avoid confronting the problem. That may work for Boris Johnson as a short term political fix, but just allows poor quality to persist and thousands of Londoners to die or fall ill unnecessarily.
Wednesday, 5 December 2012
Improving Gully Cleaning
I often get complaints about the quality of gully cleaning in Brent. I always pass these on, and various individual gullies are cleaned as a result. However, it has long seemed to me to be a systematic problem, especially in the south of the Borough. I am particularly thinking of Kensal Green, Queens Park, Harlesden, Kilburn and Willesden, but there may well be others.
Does anyone have specific examples of problem areas where gullies are blocked?
Does anyone have specific examples of problem areas where gullies are blocked?
Tuesday, 4 December 2012
Southampton, Brent and library opening hours
Over in Southampton the local authority has opted to cut back library opening hours. The reaction is very hostile, but there still seems to be no recognition that central government cuts are forcing these kind of decisions on Councils. The Southampton representative poses the question in very similar terms to the way I responded to Cllr Paul Lorber. The difference is that we chose fewer locations; they are spreading their resources more thinly over their existing locations.
That really is the kind of stark choice local authorities face.
That really is the kind of stark choice local authorities face.
Monday, 3 December 2012
David Cameron and Selective Judicial Review
Speaking to someone recently, she said that David Cameron wanted to restrict judicial review. I think a closer reading of his comments is that wants to restrict judicial review of central government (I.e. his decisions). There is no indication of him wanting to restrict judicial review of other bodies.
This surely indicates the present government's them and us mentality.
Rules that they find burdensome are unacceptable. The same rules can happily be imposed on others.
The comments on equality are almost self parody. We no longer wil have a legal requirement for equality impact assessment (we never did), because "smart people in Whitehall" decide. We seem to be going all the way back to Patrick Gordon Walker and "The Man in Whitehall really does know best".
I wonder what happened to localism?
This surely indicates the present government's them and us mentality.
Rules that they find burdensome are unacceptable. The same rules can happily be imposed on others.
The comments on equality are almost self parody. We no longer wil have a legal requirement for equality impact assessment (we never did), because "smart people in Whitehall" decide. We seem to be going all the way back to Patrick Gordon Walker and "The Man in Whitehall really does know best".
I wonder what happened to localism?
Sunday, 2 December 2012
Boris Johnson Hypocrisy on Housing
Dave Hill has a piece on Boris Johnson's hypocrisy on housing here. The rocketing price of housing all over London is leading to massive overcrowding problems and will also create knock on effects for health, educational achievement, domestic violence and so on.
Saturday, 1 December 2012
Update on Willesden Junction Station Approach
Yesterday morning I met with a Brent Transport officer about local transport matters. There has been a rumour going around that the work to Station Approach might be delayed or even abandoned, but he assured me that this was not so.
The design team are still working on the exact design. The current version has a pavement on both the Brent and Ealing sides although the Brent side will be wider. However details are still subject to change.
UPDATE
The comment below asks for clarification. My understanding is that, at the moment, the southern pavement is to be narrowed and the Brent side pavement to be widened. This should allow more room on the northern side for pedestrians (especially after the removal of those absurd guardrails) but also sufficient room for buses (not least to avoid them mount the pavements). Since more than 90% of users come along the Brent side, it seems obvious to me that that is the side that needs the wider pavement.
However, detailed design is still being worked on and therefore there may be changes.
The design team are still working on the exact design. The current version has a pavement on both the Brent and Ealing sides although the Brent side will be wider. However details are still subject to change.
UPDATE
The comment below asks for clarification. My understanding is that, at the moment, the southern pavement is to be narrowed and the Brent side pavement to be widened. This should allow more room on the northern side for pedestrians (especially after the removal of those absurd guardrails) but also sufficient room for buses (not least to avoid them mount the pavements). Since more than 90% of users come along the Brent side, it seems obvious to me that that is the side that needs the wider pavement.
However, detailed design is still being worked on and therefore there may be changes.
Friday, 30 November 2012
The Hardy Ash Tree
A little while ago I was in St Pancras churchyard, where there is something called the Hardy ash tree. When Thomas Hardy, the novelist, was a young man he was employed to clear part of the churchyard to make way for the new railway. The gravestones were taken together and placed around the eponymous ash tree. The Internet has lot of photos such as these.
The effect is a poignant memorial to death, rather more affecting than most modern art I have seen. Of course, if the tree suffers from ash dieback, it will add another layer to the story.
The effect is a poignant memorial to death, rather more affecting than most modern art I have seen. Of course, if the tree suffers from ash dieback, it will add another layer to the story.
Thursday, 29 November 2012
Centralised Education
Simon Jenkins has a well directed tilt at over centralisation in education here. I understand that the department of Education, having almost abolished local eduction authorities, is now considering constructing a middle tier between themselves and schools. Apparently, they have realised that there are too many schools in England to be run centrally. Perhaps the middle tier might be known as local education authorities?
Wednesday, 28 November 2012
Tough Times for Councils
The Audit Commission has published a report showing just how bad the financial situation is for local Councils.
I suppose the first point to note is the unfairness. The government has concentrated the cuts on the poorest areas, in London and the north of England. The most deprived areas of England saw a cut of just over 14%, compared to a bit over 4% in the richest areas. The poorer areas tend to be more dependent on central government grant, making the impact even worse as it accounts for a greater share of the spending. I don't believe it is coincidental that the worst hit areas tend to be Labour.
Administratively, the Councils have been fairly successful in holding together, but over time it will get worse and worse. As time goes on, future savings will become more and more dependent on shared services and partnerships that are inherently harder to deliver. The Audit Commission regard more than a tenth of Councils not to be "well placed" to cope with next year, let alone the longer term.
I wonder what Eric Pickles will do when some start to just collapse?
I suppose the first point to note is the unfairness. The government has concentrated the cuts on the poorest areas, in London and the north of England. The most deprived areas of England saw a cut of just over 14%, compared to a bit over 4% in the richest areas. The poorer areas tend to be more dependent on central government grant, making the impact even worse as it accounts for a greater share of the spending. I don't believe it is coincidental that the worst hit areas tend to be Labour.
Administratively, the Councils have been fairly successful in holding together, but over time it will get worse and worse. As time goes on, future savings will become more and more dependent on shared services and partnerships that are inherently harder to deliver. The Audit Commission regard more than a tenth of Councils not to be "well placed" to cope with next year, let alone the longer term.
I wonder what Eric Pickles will do when some start to just collapse?
Tuesday, 27 November 2012
Library Musings
One of the things that distresses many municipal librarians is that the general image of their role is so outdated. It is a little like education in that many people seem to feel that the way they remember things working in their childhood is the only "real" way in which they can work. In fact, like anything else, libraries evolve all the time. It is quite possible that modern technological developments are making them change faster now than they have for decades, but some kind of change is inherent in any living service.
An idea of how extensive these changes can be can be found on this website. Some of it is about good architectural practice; some the impact of radio frequency identification technology (RFID), 3D printing, ereaders of various kinds and so on.
The frustrating thing is that the political debate really just hasn't caught up with any of this at all.
An idea of how extensive these changes can be can be found on this website. Some of it is about good architectural practice; some the impact of radio frequency identification technology (RFID), 3D printing, ereaders of various kinds and so on.
The frustrating thing is that the political debate really just hasn't caught up with any of this at all.
Monday, 26 November 2012
Krugman Compares
I greatly admire Paul Krugman and his works. The Nobel Prize is a bit of a distraction. The important thing is the intellectual rigour and honesty. Both of these are important, and probably linked. In two recent posts he compares the USA and the UK (here) and rigour. What worries me is how few people listen to these messages.
Building More Housing
A summary of the case for building more housing can be found here. The failure to supply adequate housing in this country is one of the great political tragedies of the past thirty years.
Sunday, 25 November 2012
Sarah Teather No Longer Credible
I see that Sarah Teather is denying rumours that she plans to defect. She refers to the people suggesting this as "twits", but is it so odd people believe this? After all she hardly has a rock solid record of principle does she? She has back tracked on lots of things,; I suppose tuition fees would be the biggest example, although one might choose economic policy. I suppose in personal terms her biggest betrayal would be sticking the knife into Charles Kennedy.
She always seems to be motivated by whatever pleases people at that moment. Hence she always demanded more spending.
She has recently lost her ministerial job, no doubt as a result of some back room deal. Since then she has suddenly decided the government is immoral, after defending it thoroughly before. Is it any wonder no one trusts her?
She always seems to be motivated by whatever pleases people at that moment. Hence she always demanded more spending.
She has recently lost her ministerial job, no doubt as a result of some back room deal. Since then she has suddenly decided the government is immoral, after defending it thoroughly before. Is it any wonder no one trusts her?
Saturday, 24 November 2012
Acton Lane Cleaning
At the recent KG residents meeting, an issue was raised around blocked gullies in Acton Lane. Cllr Lincoln Beswick and I have both raised this with Brent Council's Transport department, and I understand the blocked gullies have now been cleared.
London Ambulance Services
My Labour colleague makes the excellent point that, in the publicity surrounding hospital services, the vital ambulance service is being overlooked. The speed at which paramedics can reach you is often a vital part of ensuring your survival. Yet the ambulance service in London is facing cuts despite David Cameron's promises to protect health spending.
Friday, 23 November 2012
Croydon North by election
I spent today In Croydon North, where Steve Reed is standing. Steve is well known in London local government as a former Council Leader. He should make a really good MP.
Eric Pickles Blusters
Eric Pickles is once again blustering about weekly bin collections. I am surprised that the Guardian fails to point out that hardly anyone is trying to use his vaunted £250 million fund to restore bin collections because it is well known that they are ineffective in increasing recycling. The five year timescale also means that that scheme isn't really long enough to merit a new contract. However, Mr Pickles continues to repeat his obsession. I don't think he believes it himself any more.
Thursday, 22 November 2012
Ash Tree Dieback in Brent
People have been asking me about Ash tree dieback. This has yet to reach Brent, although as the spores are airborne, I imagine it will only be a matter of time.
Brent has about 7 or 8 hundred street trees that are Ash, and an unclear number of ash trees in our parks. Unfortunately, there is currently no known treatment for the dieback disease, which has wiped out most of the Ash trees in the countries where it has struck.
It is therefore fair to say that the outlook is gloomy.
Brent has about 7 or 8 hundred street trees that are Ash, and an unclear number of ash trees in our parks. Unfortunately, there is currently no known treatment for the dieback disease, which has wiped out most of the Ash trees in the countries where it has struck.
It is therefore fair to say that the outlook is gloomy.
Your Square Mile
What amounts to an obituary for David Cameron's Big Society can be read here. What is more interesting are the suggestions in the piece about enriching communities. Despite the discrediting of volunteering by the inadequacies of the Big Society, this kind of thing is still needed. Perhaps it is needed all the more as a result of the policies of the present government.
Wednesday, 21 November 2012
Kensal Green Residents Meeting
I felt the ward working meeting of Kensal Green residents last night went very well. We had a much better turnout than we expected at the back of Casa Nossa on Park Parade, and the atmosphere struck me as very positive so let's hope we can move things forward.
Tuesday, 20 November 2012
Council Last Night
Brent Council managed a very low quality debate on the budget last night. Perhaps the most interesting feature of a dreary night was a complete absence of Sarah Teather's "immoral" attack line on the present government's course. Indeed none of the liberal Democrats mentioned the forthcoming burdens in housing benefit, universial benefit or council tax support that Ms Teather's argued would lead to a "Jarrow March in reverse" only on Sunday. Does this show a waning of influence even in her own party, or a deliberate distancing.
Monday, 19 November 2012
Barham Park Trust Committee
Full Council meets this evening. One of the items is the changes to the Council's constitution necessary to follow up the proposals on the Barham Park Trust outlined at the last Executive. To recap, Barham Park was bequeathed to the Council in the 1930s as a charitable trust. The Executive are given decision making powers as Trustee. This means that their decisions about the Park are made solely with regard to the objectives of the Trust, rather than as part of the Council's overall strategy. The position is analogous to my position on West London Waste, where I am required to follow the interests of West London Waste rather than those of Brent Council. In both cases, however, the interests of the different bodies (WLWA and Brent Council or the Barham Park Trust and Brent Council) are likely to be reasonably closely aligned. However, it certainly is administratively neat to have a specific sub-committee for the Barham Park Trust to further emphasise that the requirements of the Trust are not necessarily those of Brent Council.
Brent Libraries and Emagazines
One of the most striking findings of the Libraries Transformation Project was that more than 50% of respondents used the library to access periodicals. I was very surprised that the proportion was so high.
Brent Libraries is now integrating this element into its electronic offering by allowing people access to 41 titles electronically. As with ebooks, we have constraints as to which titles can be made available. The format is compatible with iPhones, iPads, Windows and various tablets.
You can learn more about Brent Council's online library resources here.
Brent Libraries is now integrating this element into its electronic offering by allowing people access to 41 titles electronically. As with ebooks, we have constraints as to which titles can be made available. The format is compatible with iPhones, iPads, Windows and various tablets.
You can learn more about Brent Council's online library resources here.
Sunday, 18 November 2012
Sarah Teather Discovers Morality
Sarah Teather is interviewed by The Observer and claims to have discovered an interest in the immorality of the government's welfare reforms. How curious that this interest should only emerge after her sacking as a government minister. She is presumably hoping that words of sympathy for the victims of the government she continues to support will help her to save her seat at the next election.
Somerset Shows the Way of the Future
A Council in Somerset has questioned its own long term viability. We are likely to see more and more of this as the "graph of doom" moves forward. At some point even the government will have to notice.
Saturday, 17 November 2012
Housing and Hypocrisy
Red Brick relates the sad tale of government hypocrisy with regard to homelessness. Government cynically set standards that they know their own policies make it impossible to meet. It is now inevitable that large numbers of people will face upheaval as they are forced out of London.
What happens next? The way I imagine it, large numbers of people get dumped in the poorer parts of the UK. As these parts have fewer jobs available, they are more likely to get trapped in a cycle of poverty and benefit dependency, the opposite of what the government says it intends. Poverty also tends to encourage greater use of many public services, putting those services under greater strain. This is likely to lead to resentment among the indigenous population, and social conflict including violence which no doubt the ministers will condemn.
Meanwhile, London will see parts of its population unable to afford decent housing, but unwilling to move out to part of the country where it will be impossible to earn a living. This will encourage a black economy of overcrowded housing with probably extremely poor standards in terms of building controls, fire safety and so on. The problems of overcrowding will also encourage wider effects such as declining educational standards, poorer health and so on. This will create more problems within London's public services.
These possibilities must have occurred to government ministers. One assumes they simply don't care.
What happens next? The way I imagine it, large numbers of people get dumped in the poorer parts of the UK. As these parts have fewer jobs available, they are more likely to get trapped in a cycle of poverty and benefit dependency, the opposite of what the government says it intends. Poverty also tends to encourage greater use of many public services, putting those services under greater strain. This is likely to lead to resentment among the indigenous population, and social conflict including violence which no doubt the ministers will condemn.
Meanwhile, London will see parts of its population unable to afford decent housing, but unwilling to move out to part of the country where it will be impossible to earn a living. This will encourage a black economy of overcrowded housing with probably extremely poor standards in terms of building controls, fire safety and so on. The problems of overcrowding will also encourage wider effects such as declining educational standards, poorer health and so on. This will create more problems within London's public services.
These possibilities must have occurred to government ministers. One assumes they simply don't care.
Friday, 16 November 2012
Liberal Democrats Against Libraries
I see that, over in Islington, a Liberal Democrat councillor is complaining bitterly at the refurbishment of a library by Islington's Labour administration.
The situation is not unique. In Brent none other than the Liberal Democrat leader on Brent Council, Cllr Paul Lorber, has objected to investment in Kilburn Library. Specifically, at the Forward Plan Committee in May 2011, he suggested that we should have closed Kilburn Library in Salusbury Road and left Local residents to rely on Camden's facilities instead.
The situation is not unique. In Brent none other than the Liberal Democrat leader on Brent Council, Cllr Paul Lorber, has objected to investment in Kilburn Library. Specifically, at the Forward Plan Committee in May 2011, he suggested that we should have closed Kilburn Library in Salusbury Road and left Local residents to rely on Camden's facilities instead.
Martin Francis on Brent Civic Centre Again
I assume picking up on this post, Martin Francis of the Brent Green Party seems upset that I suggested that Brent Greens were reactionary and not very interested in climate change issues.
Commenting on the Civic Centre, he goes on to suggest that, for him, "how green it may be is not the main issue". That was what I was pointing out as counterintuitive. Most people would expect that anyone describing themselves as green would consider the environmental effect of the Civic Centre as the main issue.
I have pointed out before that the new Civic Centre building will be one of the greenest in the UK. Indeed it is the main hitter Brent Council has in reducing its own carbon emissions, and improving its property estate in other beneficial ways, such as water conservation. In doing so, it also enables Brent Council to credibly go to other partners and argue for them to improve their environmental performance as well.
Martin's response appears to be to argue that a new building must have greater effect on carbon emissions than retrofitting a series of old ones. There is no evidence for this , and plenty against. The Civic Centre, as I have observed before, has specific measures to limit the carbon emissions of building by local sourcing and innovative building techniques, which are a key part of the BREEAM accreditation.
A fuller record of the environmental benefits of the Civic Centre can be found here, for those who do consider it the main issue.
For those who think environmental issues a bit passé, there are a wide range of other benefits. Again I have described these before.
The one that engages Martin is the direct financial cost, seeing that in its narrowest sense. The net reduction in costs to the Council is of the order of £3 or £4 million every year. That is the savings minus the cost.
One could also look at the wider outlook of course. Ed Balls has argued plausibly that the present government cut too far and too fast. I have long held this view, that in a recession the UK and other economies needed to boost demand through fiscal expansion rather than George Osborne's programme of fiscal contraction.
There is a legitimate argument about how best to do that, with many people critical of simply increasing consumption. However, most people agree that investing in public infrastructure is exactly what we should be doing, most noticeably in housing. Borrowing costs are low, so the direct cost to the taxpayer (not counting the benefits of keeping people and firms employed rather than idle) would be maximised. Construction costs are currently relatively low, although if a macroeconomic policy of boosting the construction sector worked, that might reverse.
Cancelling infrastructure spending is in fact what the government has been doing, which brings us back to Martin, who feels that the Civic Centre might not be "necessary" or "desirable" in an "era of austerity". We therefore have the bizarre spectacle of Martin, who I am sure considers himself a man of the Left, supporting cuts in infrastructure spending on the same lines as George Osborne!
That makes Martin reactionary not just in a general sense, but also in the quite specific one of supporting George Osborne's austerity policy, even as Osborne himself sidles away in view of the mounting evidence of failure.
UPDATE
Martin has replied below whilst apparently missing my main points. Firstly, environmental benefits are not a useful add on for good times; they are essential, as one might expect a Green Party candidate to know. Second, the Civic Centre actually saves us money to the tune of £3 or £4 million a year. Not going ahead with the Civic Centre would have meant £3 or £4 million cuts in public services on top of what the government has imposed on us. Finally, the Civic Centre is a good example of how we can use procurement by public bodies to re-orientate towards a less carbon intensive economy, and that is a long term route to better living standards.
Commenting on the Civic Centre, he goes on to suggest that, for him, "how green it may be is not the main issue". That was what I was pointing out as counterintuitive. Most people would expect that anyone describing themselves as green would consider the environmental effect of the Civic Centre as the main issue.
I have pointed out before that the new Civic Centre building will be one of the greenest in the UK. Indeed it is the main hitter Brent Council has in reducing its own carbon emissions, and improving its property estate in other beneficial ways, such as water conservation. In doing so, it also enables Brent Council to credibly go to other partners and argue for them to improve their environmental performance as well.
Martin's response appears to be to argue that a new building must have greater effect on carbon emissions than retrofitting a series of old ones. There is no evidence for this , and plenty against. The Civic Centre, as I have observed before, has specific measures to limit the carbon emissions of building by local sourcing and innovative building techniques, which are a key part of the BREEAM accreditation.
A fuller record of the environmental benefits of the Civic Centre can be found here, for those who do consider it the main issue.
For those who think environmental issues a bit passé, there are a wide range of other benefits. Again I have described these before.
The one that engages Martin is the direct financial cost, seeing that in its narrowest sense. The net reduction in costs to the Council is of the order of £3 or £4 million every year. That is the savings minus the cost.
One could also look at the wider outlook of course. Ed Balls has argued plausibly that the present government cut too far and too fast. I have long held this view, that in a recession the UK and other economies needed to boost demand through fiscal expansion rather than George Osborne's programme of fiscal contraction.
There is a legitimate argument about how best to do that, with many people critical of simply increasing consumption. However, most people agree that investing in public infrastructure is exactly what we should be doing, most noticeably in housing. Borrowing costs are low, so the direct cost to the taxpayer (not counting the benefits of keeping people and firms employed rather than idle) would be maximised. Construction costs are currently relatively low, although if a macroeconomic policy of boosting the construction sector worked, that might reverse.
Cancelling infrastructure spending is in fact what the government has been doing, which brings us back to Martin, who feels that the Civic Centre might not be "necessary" or "desirable" in an "era of austerity". We therefore have the bizarre spectacle of Martin, who I am sure considers himself a man of the Left, supporting cuts in infrastructure spending on the same lines as George Osborne!
That makes Martin reactionary not just in a general sense, but also in the quite specific one of supporting George Osborne's austerity policy, even as Osborne himself sidles away in view of the mounting evidence of failure.
UPDATE
Martin has replied below whilst apparently missing my main points. Firstly, environmental benefits are not a useful add on for good times; they are essential, as one might expect a Green Party candidate to know. Second, the Civic Centre actually saves us money to the tune of £3 or £4 million a year. Not going ahead with the Civic Centre would have meant £3 or £4 million cuts in public services on top of what the government has imposed on us. Finally, the Civic Centre is a good example of how we can use procurement by public bodies to re-orientate towards a less carbon intensive economy, and that is a long term route to better living standards.
Thursday, 15 November 2012
Barnet Losing its Marbles
Barnet has a continuing series of complaints all around misgovernance of various kinds. Given this record, I am not surprised at the disquiet around large scale outsourcing. Major outsourcing needs central services in procurement, clienting, legal advice and maybe even communications to dramatically up their game rather than reduce it. Barnet seem to just have a vague assumption that outsourcing costs less so it must be the way to go.
Public library User Survey
People can access the Public Library User Survey forms from Brent Library service at the moment. This is a national survey designed to find out more about user attitudes and needs. It's predecessors helped inform our own Libraries Transformation Project.
Climate Change Gloom
Looking beyond Brent, the Economist has some gloomy thoughts on climate change. It suggests that the world is unlikely to adopt measures to stop global warming at a two degree rise, which itself would be fairly disastrous. It also suggests the USA's commitment to limiting climate change is likely to diminish.
Wednesday, 14 November 2012
Happy Diwali
The Economist wishes us Happy Diwali with a quick reminder of the links between European and Indian languages here.
Willesden Junction Station Approach Details
Harlesden town website provides more detail on the Station Approach proposals at Willesden Junction.
Automatic Library Membership
Good to see today the announcement by the Arts Council has up that Brent has one of a number of projects promoting library usage among school children. The constant budget hits are deterring many authorities from new initiatives, but I am proud that Brent is still going forward with innovations.
What Interests People Politically?
UKpollingreport has an interesting post on what people pay attention to in politics. Much of the time the answer appears to be not much. Many people simply aren't interested most of the time. There also appears to be a bias towards paying attention to the picturesque, such as "pleb gate", rather than the more important but less easy to grasp, such as the utter failure of the government's economic policy.
I would add that small local issues can be very important but the effect if often extremely localised. Out door knocking in recent weeks, I found a lot of different interests in different parts of Kensal Green. Napier Road residents were interested in their seven day parking zone, which was of no interest to people living on Springwell Avenue. Springwell Avenue residents were more excited by the local littering and environmental problems around Park Parade. Similarly residents in High Street Harlesden have lots of concerns about the noise nuisance from the nearby bars. In other words, the residents are concerned by things that impact upon them directly; much less by important issues that seem more abstract.
I would add that small local issues can be very important but the effect if often extremely localised. Out door knocking in recent weeks, I found a lot of different interests in different parts of Kensal Green. Napier Road residents were interested in their seven day parking zone, which was of no interest to people living on Springwell Avenue. Springwell Avenue residents were more excited by the local littering and environmental problems around Park Parade. Similarly residents in High Street Harlesden have lots of concerns about the noise nuisance from the nearby bars. In other words, the residents are concerned by things that impact upon them directly; much less by important issues that seem more abstract.
Cuts for Labour Councils rather than Tory Councils
The Guardian tells us what most of us already knew today. The Tory and Liberal Democrat cuts have been deliberately skewed to hit Labour, and poorer, areas harder than Tory (and richer) areas.
Tuesday, 13 November 2012
The Costs of Legal Action
The recent Birmingham experience underlines the importance of local authorities getting the legal things right. Birmingham now have a bill of hundreds of millions that it will take twenty years to repay. The repayments will have to come from money that would otherwise have funded public services.
Of course, before, we sympathise to much with the Council and the taxpayers, we should remember that the women who claimed were entitled to equal pay, and whoever (probably long ago) failed to pay them properly did them a serious injustice.
Of course, before, we sympathise to much with the Council and the taxpayers, we should remember that the women who claimed were entitled to equal pay, and whoever (probably long ago) failed to pay them properly did them a serious injustice.
Brent Council Executive Disrupted
Last night the Brent Council Executive was disrupted and had to decamp to another part of the building. This is becoming routine. What is appalling is that the two police officers present simply stood there and made no effort to intervene.
Once we reassembled downstairs we went through the business on the agenda. I had three reports. The first was a brief update on the public realm contract". This is to replace our current contract with Veolia, which will also include grounds maintenance. We had been hoping for joint working with two other Boroughs. Unfortunately, Barnet and Hounslow have now dropped out.
We also had a short report on the possible resale of the dry recyclable that people put in their blue top bins, and to declare Masons Field (an area at the northern end of Fryent Country Park) as a nature reserve.
Once we reassembled downstairs we went through the business on the agenda. I had three reports. The first was a brief update on the public realm contract". This is to replace our current contract with Veolia, which will also include grounds maintenance. We had been hoping for joint working with two other Boroughs. Unfortunately, Barnet and Hounslow have now dropped out.
We also had a short report on the possible resale of the dry recyclable that people put in their blue top bins, and to declare Masons Field (an area at the northern end of Fryent Country Park) as a nature reserve.
Monday, 12 November 2012
Changes at Furness Pocket Park
On Saturday, I gathered with Cllr Bobby Thomas, some officers and a couple of residents to consider what could be done to brighten up Furness Pocket Park. It doesn't look likely that much will be possible this financial year, although some bulb and hedgerow planting is possible. Longer term, it would be good to improve the boundary treatment on to Furness Road.
Sunday, 11 November 2012
Buildings and Carbon Emissions
Comments on the brief post I did on Willesden Green Library Centre argue that retrofitting an old building must be more carbon efficient than building a new one. I have never seen any evidence for that assertion.
Given the sheer number of older buildings in the UK, effective retrofitting is clearly going to be an important set of techniques to develop. However, raising an old building to the kind of performance one sees in a completely new one may well be impossible. If we look at the refurbishment of Kilburn Library as an example, we find inherent obstacles. Kilburn Library is a Victorian building and the Victorians did not build walls with cavity insulation. The revitalised building now has more efficient lighting and heating, which both can be put in an old shell, but I find it harder to imagine how one could use some modern techniques, such as an extensive system of grey water harvesting for instance. With a new building, the entire edifice can be designed to minimise the use of mechanical heating and ventilation. There is also the question of expense, which in the case of Kilburn Library made installing double glazing prohibitive. Finally, an old building in a conservation area, such as the Kilburn Library, is subject to various planning restrictions which can inhibit certain techniques. I remember back in 2010, there were a number of issues with the use of passivhaus techniques in a property in Mapesbury.
The "you can't have new buildings" argument is one most associated with Brent Green Party in their struggle to denigrate Brent's new civic centre. To me, it seems that the Brent Greens are taking an ultra conservative approach, and that they don't seem to care about the carbon emissions performance at all.
Given the sheer number of older buildings in the UK, effective retrofitting is clearly going to be an important set of techniques to develop. However, raising an old building to the kind of performance one sees in a completely new one may well be impossible. If we look at the refurbishment of Kilburn Library as an example, we find inherent obstacles. Kilburn Library is a Victorian building and the Victorians did not build walls with cavity insulation. The revitalised building now has more efficient lighting and heating, which both can be put in an old shell, but I find it harder to imagine how one could use some modern techniques, such as an extensive system of grey water harvesting for instance. With a new building, the entire edifice can be designed to minimise the use of mechanical heating and ventilation. There is also the question of expense, which in the case of Kilburn Library made installing double glazing prohibitive. Finally, an old building in a conservation area, such as the Kilburn Library, is subject to various planning restrictions which can inhibit certain techniques. I remember back in 2010, there were a number of issues with the use of passivhaus techniques in a property in Mapesbury.
The "you can't have new buildings" argument is one most associated with Brent Green Party in their struggle to denigrate Brent's new civic centre. To me, it seems that the Brent Greens are taking an ultra conservative approach, and that they don't seem to care about the carbon emissions performance at all.
Saturday, 10 November 2012
Yesterday at the Amber Grill
Yesterday, I was down at Station Road, where TfL had asked for a short event to celebrate the makeover of Station Road as part of the Harlesden Town Centre development. Afterward, we repaired to the Amber Grill (any carnivores who haven't been there will find it a treat, although it is not so great for vegetarians). I had a number of concerns expressed about the proposed Harlesden waste plant to the south and the effect of traffic movements and so on. Let us hope that Ealing Planning follow our concerns. Brent Planning, myself and many others have written to object.
Friday, 9 November 2012
A Missed Library Opportunity
Having now read the House of Commons Select Committee Report on libraries, I must say I find it disappointing. Given that the ebook lending review is underway, perhaps it would be too much to expect the MPs to try to pre-empt it, but some greater awareness of the ebook issue would be welcome. Inparticular, the 1964 definition of comprehensive and efficient is crying out for updating to include electronic media. Many of the witnesses to the committee appear to have emphasised the importance of internet use at libraries, yet it doesn't come across in the report. A missed chance to modernise libraries.
The views of a number of library campaigners are summarised on public libraries news. I think Alan Gibbons is right in saying that many of them probably had unreasonable expections of what the Committee was likely to produce, but I think it could and should have produced an attempt to update the definition of what a comprehensive and efficient library service is, and especially that it covers electronic information as well as printed materials. Without the definition being widened for the modern age, the library service will slowly slide away.
The views of a number of library campaigners are summarised on public libraries news. I think Alan Gibbons is right in saying that many of them probably had unreasonable expections of what the Committee was likely to produce, but I think it could and should have produced an attempt to update the definition of what a comprehensive and efficient library service is, and especially that it covers electronic information as well as printed materials. Without the definition being widened for the modern age, the library service will slowly slide away.
Thursday, 8 November 2012
South Kilburn Developments
A rather hurried photo I took of the flats demolition now underway in South Kilburn, that I took from the Watford to Euston line. These buildings are close to Kilburn High Road. It is a great relief that the redevelopment of South Kilburn is finally underway despite the economic crisis.
Wednesday, 7 November 2012
Review of Past Six Months
It is time to do another of my reviews of the past six months, starting with waste and recycling. The new recycling system appears to have confounded its critics, and led to a substantial improvement in recycling. This saves the Council money, reduces greenhouse gas emissions and appeals to most people as a more rational use of resources. Of course, there is still ongoing work in terms of getting landlords to educate their their tenants better, cracking down on trade waste and dealing with house of multiple occupation in particular. One of the big projects for the next six months is to start designing a new contract for waste, street cleaning and grounds maintenance. This will replace the current contract held by Veolia, which runs out on 31 March 2014. That may sound a long way away, but the procurement timetable is actually quite tight.
Ancillary to this Is a whole saga around the doings of the West London Waste Authority. However, as with the giant rat of Sumatra, this is a tale for which the world is not yet prepared.
We also had the Olympics, which passed off without any major hitches. This is easy to take for granted, but the complexities of maintaining the Borough's day to day operations were really quite complicated. Things like cleaning, rubbish disposal, keeping transport flowing needed a lot of planning. There will also have to be a lot of follow up work in services like Trading Standards, and of course the sports service.
The third controversial issue of the past six months was the final implementation of the Libraries Transformation Project. Although the old buildings were closed in October 2011, we only got full access to the bookstock in late May, and the various strands of the project have only really started to come into their own during the past six months. These include: the Summer Reading Challenge, the Kilburn Library refurbishment, home delivery improvements, the school library card scheme, free legal advice, homework clubs, our first artist in residence scheme, online courses and so on. It will be interesting to see how the success of our service compares to authorities that have gone down different avenues.
We have also seen lots of progress on less high profile issues. Falling carbon emissions is perhaps the most obvious, especially given the recent experience with Hurricane Sandy. Gearing up for the move to the Civic Centre is probably helping us achieve this. We have also seen the Dollis Hill House saga finally end, a new food growing strategy, a minor variation in leaflet regulation that led to accusations that I was Stalinist, progress on animal welfare in Brent, the start of work on a new park in Chalkhill and the approval of outdoor gym equipment in some Brent parks.
In the ward, there have been a number of issues. These include the installation of artwork in Hazel Road Open Space, improvements to Station Approach (at last), the successful resolution of another longstanding issue at the former Willesden Social Club, progress on The Green Man, further work on the redevelopment of Harlesden Town Centre (especially dealing with the waste and street cleaning issues), and road safety improvements at Princess Frederica School. Best of all, we have the opening of the Roundwood Youth Centre, that almost didn't happen as a result of the Tory/Liberal Democrat government.
Ancillary to this Is a whole saga around the doings of the West London Waste Authority. However, as with the giant rat of Sumatra, this is a tale for which the world is not yet prepared.
We also had the Olympics, which passed off without any major hitches. This is easy to take for granted, but the complexities of maintaining the Borough's day to day operations were really quite complicated. Things like cleaning, rubbish disposal, keeping transport flowing needed a lot of planning. There will also have to be a lot of follow up work in services like Trading Standards, and of course the sports service.
The third controversial issue of the past six months was the final implementation of the Libraries Transformation Project. Although the old buildings were closed in October 2011, we only got full access to the bookstock in late May, and the various strands of the project have only really started to come into their own during the past six months. These include: the Summer Reading Challenge, the Kilburn Library refurbishment, home delivery improvements, the school library card scheme, free legal advice, homework clubs, our first artist in residence scheme, online courses and so on. It will be interesting to see how the success of our service compares to authorities that have gone down different avenues.
We have also seen lots of progress on less high profile issues. Falling carbon emissions is perhaps the most obvious, especially given the recent experience with Hurricane Sandy. Gearing up for the move to the Civic Centre is probably helping us achieve this. We have also seen the Dollis Hill House saga finally end, a new food growing strategy, a minor variation in leaflet regulation that led to accusations that I was Stalinist, progress on animal welfare in Brent, the start of work on a new park in Chalkhill and the approval of outdoor gym equipment in some Brent parks.
In the ward, there have been a number of issues. These include the installation of artwork in Hazel Road Open Space, improvements to Station Approach (at last), the successful resolution of another longstanding issue at the former Willesden Social Club, progress on The Green Man, further work on the redevelopment of Harlesden Town Centre (especially dealing with the waste and street cleaning issues), and road safety improvements at Princess Frederica School. Best of all, we have the opening of the Roundwood Youth Centre, that almost didn't happen as a result of the Tory/Liberal Democrat government.
Tuesday, 6 November 2012
Fireworks at Roundwood Park
Congratulations to Brent officers for the fireworks last night. I understand something like 15 or 16 thousand people attended. Despite the austerity visited on us by George Osborne, it is important to celebrate places like Roundwood Park.
Green Man Revisited
Some time ago the Green Man in Harlesden High Street was given permission for a redevelopment. In fact this was to rectify illegal alterations that had already taken place. So far, nothing appears to have been done to implement the planning permission, so I have checked with the Planning Department who are writing to the owner to chase him up. Obviously, if he doesn't implement the changes he has agreed to, he will be subject to enforcement action.
Commons Select Committee Report on Libraries
The House of Commons DCMS Select Committee has now published on its report on libraries. I haven't had a chance to read it, still less digest it yet, but I shall be interested on the MPs take on the issues.
Monday, 5 November 2012
Outreach and Colocation
Co-location is something of a buzzword in public libraries. This is generally taken as keeping a traditional library in a building alongside other services, such as Council advice. The theme has actually been around a long time, with the Willesden Library Centre being Brent's best known (if poorly executed) example.
However, I think this idea needs to change from bringing other services into a library building to bringing library services out to other buildings. This is more or less what has been happening with Brent's outreach service (which now lends more books than Harlesden Library). Over the past two quarters, the outreach service has gone to 77 locations away from Brent's traditional library buildings. These have sometimes been aimed at attracting different audiences and sometimes giving better geographical coverage. Thus we had library stalls at the Olympic celebrations as one-offs, but also had a book collection in one of the Salusbury Road coffee shops during the Kilburn Library refurbishment. Customers who might not normally interact with the library service might come across it as they went for a coffee, which is a reversal of the usual model of adding a coffee shop on to a library. Geographically we have used outreach to get to parts of the Borough that have never had their own services. For instance, library outreach has occurred in a children's centre on the St Raphael's estate, which has never previously had a library, and is fairly hard for people to travel from.
Another aspect of this mixing is the use of library buildings on a temporary basis, as happened during Brent Dance month, when Brent libraries were used for hosting dance events that possibly draw people into Brent libraries who may never have used them before.
Co-location in this sense is a much more fluid and changeable concept than is generally recognised.
However, I think this idea needs to change from bringing other services into a library building to bringing library services out to other buildings. This is more or less what has been happening with Brent's outreach service (which now lends more books than Harlesden Library). Over the past two quarters, the outreach service has gone to 77 locations away from Brent's traditional library buildings. These have sometimes been aimed at attracting different audiences and sometimes giving better geographical coverage. Thus we had library stalls at the Olympic celebrations as one-offs, but also had a book collection in one of the Salusbury Road coffee shops during the Kilburn Library refurbishment. Customers who might not normally interact with the library service might come across it as they went for a coffee, which is a reversal of the usual model of adding a coffee shop on to a library. Geographically we have used outreach to get to parts of the Borough that have never had their own services. For instance, library outreach has occurred in a children's centre on the St Raphael's estate, which has never previously had a library, and is fairly hard for people to travel from.
Another aspect of this mixing is the use of library buildings on a temporary basis, as happened during Brent Dance month, when Brent libraries were used for hosting dance events that possibly draw people into Brent libraries who may never have used them before.
Co-location in this sense is a much more fluid and changeable concept than is generally recognised.
Sunday, 4 November 2012
Carbon Emissions at Willesden Green Library Centre
I have recently seen a study of carbon emissions at the existing Willesden Green Library Centre (by this I mean the 1980s building). They are dire. They meet a pass mark under BREEAM, but that is it. A new building reaching BREEAM Excellent status is bound to be a massive improvement in climate change terms.
Saturday, 3 November 2012
Cllr Mike Pavey Website
Cllr Michael Pavey is the latest Brent Labour Councillor to add a website, which you can see here. Cllr Pavey was elected in May for Barnhill ward, following the resignation of Cllr Judy Beckman. I have a list of Labour councillors from Brent on the sidebar. Oddly, I don't know of any Tory or Liberal Democrat councillors with a site. Is that not odd in this day and age?
Roundwood Youth Centre
Here is Roundwood Youth Centre in all its modernist glory. More pictures are available on the architect web site.
Friday, 2 November 2012
Objecting to the Harlesden Waste Plant
Having gone into more detail on the proposed waste plant to the south of Harlesden, I have now written to Ealing Planners objecting to the plans. The objections that I consider valid on planning grounds are:
I) the proposal ignores zoning of waste activities outlined in the West London Waste Plan
2) the proposal claims reduced vehicle movements, but this is very implausible, and Harlesden Town Centre suffers from this to an extreme in any case
3) there are significant odour pollution issues that are not clearly deat with
4) there are also noise pollution issues yet to be addressed
5) air quality is likely to suffer.
I encourage all other Kensal Green and Harlesden residents to object. The Ealing officer responsible is Peter Lee at leeP@ealing.gov.uk.
I) the proposal ignores zoning of waste activities outlined in the West London Waste Plan
2) the proposal claims reduced vehicle movements, but this is very implausible, and Harlesden Town Centre suffers from this to an extreme in any case
3) there are significant odour pollution issues that are not clearly deat with
4) there are also noise pollution issues yet to be addressed
5) air quality is likely to suffer.
I encourage all other Kensal Green and Harlesden residents to object. The Ealing officer responsible is Peter Lee at leeP@ealing.gov.uk.
Thursday, 1 November 2012
Brian Coleman Condemns Outsourcing at Barnet Council
The colourful nature of Barnet's local politics amazes me. Here we see recently suspended Tory politician and controversialist condemning his own Council's outsourcing policy. It takes quite some chutzpah to condemn the driving impetus of your own administration, and simultaneously to pretend that the Tory Party has never supported outsourcing. I doubt whether even Mitt Romney could manage that kind of amnesia.
Roundwood Youth Centre Opens
Roundwood Youth Centre finally opens today, after a £5 million rebuild. The rebuild almost never happened as the Tory government froze the spending grant as soon as it took office. This was in line with many of the unwise austerity measures put in by George Osborne, who has concentrated the cuts on infrastructure spending that everyone but him knows is economically beneficial. Happily the project was restarted, and is finally complete.