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Tuesday, 3 December 2019

Uninsurable Coal

Coal becoming uninsurable reports the Guardian.  That is a natural and obvious effect of the increasing pressure to reduce carbon use, and will apply to other parts of the fossil fuel economy.  It also part of the explanation why I think the energy being put into the divest movement is misdirected.  Divestment should happen at a snowballing rate anyway as the increasing unacceptability of greenhouse gases becomes more and more obvious.  Smart money managers will work this out anyway and slide out of the market.

The same will apply to countries such as Australia and Poland that have economies that depend very strongly on fossil fuels.  The clever thing for their governments to do now would be to try to pivot their economies away from fossil fuel use rather than risk a sudden collapse and possible pariah status as the countries still producing climate change pollution when everyone else trying to get out.

As a final thought, I ccan't help that this kind of activism that relies on consumer pressure to achieve these changes rather than social action is itself misplaced, and a piece of misdirection by the vested interests of the carbon economy which would rather deal with individual consumer purchases than large scale government action.

Monday, 2 December 2019

Indian Art Exhibition



The Wallace Collection will shortly be opening an exhibition of eighteenth century Indian art connected to the East India Company.  This is another take on the Orientalism theme that suggests the whole thing is rather more complex and interesting that the standard Edward Said "colonial mastery" thing allows for.  Despite being notoriously exploitative even by eighteenth century standards, the EIC was a vehicle for creating a different style of art by Indian artists.

Sunday, 1 December 2019

RAF Intercept

Anyone woken by a loud noise at 4.20am this morning (as I was) should know that it was RAF fighters granted permission to break the Sound limit to intercept an aircraft they were worried about.  It seems that they eventually conclued that there was no danger.

I don't whether to find that reassuring or not.

Saturday, 30 November 2019

Kilburn District Heating Scheme

A commentator asks whether the district heating scheme in South Kilburn is proceeding.  To the best of my knowledge, it is.  I imagine that there was a delay for the ballot on whether the entire South Kilburn area was still being redeveloped.  It is also usual for these schemes only to go ahead once a critical mass has been put into place, so it may well be a while before it is fully operational.

Friday, 29 November 2019

Two Brent Council By Elections in Barnhill

The resignation of Cllr Mike Pavey in Barnhill which was announced shortly before the similar resignation of Cllr Sarah Marquis for the same ward is likely to lead to two Brent Council by elections, probably in January next year. 

Thursday, 28 November 2019

Pavement Surfaces and Trees

Following on from the burgeoning controversy over street trees in Furness Road, I thought I should add in something about what I know about their effect on pavement surfaces.  During the Harlesden Town Centre redevelopment, the group agreed that wanted standard paving and that trees should either have hoggin around them (which is a kind of sterile soil piled up) or resin coated gravel (as in the photo of Wembley Market Square below).  The advantage of this is that they still let the water in to feed the tree (and of course help its survival).



Examples of resin costed gravel are plentiful around Harlesden Town Centre, and tend to be favoured in the more urban sites.  These sites tend to be replaced by smaller trees because the bigger trees (e.g. London Plan) tend to undermine peoples' houses which can lead to successful insurance claims and if taken that far, a court order to remove tree.

The more suburban sites are more likely to have grass verges and wider front gardens are less likely to be affected by insurance wrangles as the distances from the housing is sufficient to avoid subsidence. 

Paving with gravel and paving stones in my opinion looks much nicer, but it can be hard to reconcile with bigger trees as the stones immediately around the tree tend to get lifted up.  A combination of paving and asphalt can be tried, but also looks somewhat unsightly (see the photo below), and can become cracked creating tripping hazards.  Of course that also applies if the paving is replaced entirely by asphalt.  There are alternatives to asphalt, such as the granite materials used in Hazel Road, although I believe that is more expensive. 



When Brent Council decided to move away from paving stones in 2016, I believe it was fundamentally a cost based decision, and I think the councillors should be more frank in acknowledging that. 



Monday, 25 November 2019

Harlesden Neighbourhood Plan and Trees

Following yesterday's post, I thought it would be worth adding the tree guidance that appears in the Harlesden Neighbourhood Plan passed at the end of May.  This says:



“8.27. It is realistic to provide new areas of public open space only on development or redevelopment of large sites. Given the lack of breaks in the urban environment, and of opportunities to provide new ones, greening of streets through tree planting is a way of improving the environment of the area. As well as improving the visual attractiveness of streets, trees help to mitigate the effects of climate change. Trees also reduce pollution and the impacts of pollution on health. Trees can act as both a visual and an acoustic barrier, softening the hard edges of the built form, screening residential properties from road traffic and absorbing traffic noise. It is also accepted that it is important to continue removing and replacing existing trees where these may be causing a nuisance or result in excessive maintenance.

8.28. London Plan policy for development is that existing trees of value should be retained and any loss as the result of development should be replaced following the principle of ‘right place, right tree’.”

The wording of the policy is:

Policy E8 – Tree provision
There should be appropriate mitigation for the loss of trees on development, including a contribution towards the planting of new street trees locally if new trees cannot be provided on site.
One of the priorities for any CIL funding in the Neighbourhood Plan area will be for the provision of new street trees.

These policies cover the current controversy over trees in Furness Road, which is a road that has also been subject to concern over the quality of its pavements and "walkability" 

Sunday, 24 November 2019

Green Party Claims on Street Trees in Brent

The Green candidate in Brent Central is trying to stir up controversy around street trees in Brent.  Frankly he seems to me to be coming quite late to the issue, and from a narrow point of view.

Firstly he is talking about a handful of trees when the Borough has many thousands.  Each year a few hundred are lost to disease, age, storm damage, accidents and building works.  Where they are lost to building works, Brent has a policy of always replacing them as closely near by as possible.

There are a number of schemes to pay for replacement plantings, as well as in new developments such as the redevelopment of Harlesden Town Centre.  Nonetheless, they sometimes need to be replaced for safety or insurance reasons.  The Greens talk simply of trees as a kind of carbon capture, which they are.  Yet it would be nice if their role in flood control, air quality, mitigation against rising temperatures and enhancing the "livability" of streets was also acknowledged.

As always the value of the trees has to be considered along side other needs such as ensuring that the pavements are walkable.

Saturday, 23 November 2019

Alex Salmond in Government

By now it is well known that Alex Salmond has been charged with a number of sexual assaults on women (claims that he denies).  These offences are alleged to have taken place when he was First Minister.  Is it not cause for reflection in Scotland and elsewhere that such serious charges can be brought about a time when he was such a senior politician?

Friday, 22 November 2019

Labour's Manifesto Doesn't say Enough on Libraries

I notice that yesterday's Labour manifesto included a pledge to "preserve libraries" and reintroduce national standards.  I welcome the second part of that promise, but I am always rather disappointed that library debates all seem to be somewhat conservative in talking about preserving the past rather than developing the future.  Libraries should be reacting to changes in their communities and in society.  The obvious example is digitalisation, although one could also pick other such as increasing demand for social space and interaction.

I always feel that these debates tend to be intellectually thin.

Thursday, 21 November 2019

The Queensbury Redevelopment

The redevelopment of the Queensbury pub in Willesden has finally gone ahead after a long saga of different applications.  The final scheme is substantively different from the one I voted against in 2014.  In that sense long standing opponents can claim a kind of victory, but the idea that you can just block redevelopments forever is not realistic.

Monday, 18 November 2019

Sunday, 17 November 2019

What is the UK Library Sector Like?

This is a handy summary of where public libraries in the UK are and how they match up to other parts of Europe.  Despite central government cuts, still fairly high.  Other countries are also available

Saturday, 16 November 2019

The Wife of Willesden

The Kiln Theatre is staging an updated version of the Wife of Bath's Tale by Zadie Smith who likes using Brent as a location.  It will be interesting to compare it to Wife, which was staged earlier in the year.

The latter was a play set in 1959, 1989 and 2019 with three different scenarios taking Ibsen's A Doll's House as a starting point.  Indhu Rubasingham record includes directing a production of a Doll's House in the past.  The Chaucer tale is a reminder that depictions of assertive women are nothing new.

It is being produced as part of the wider Borough of Culture programme.  

Friday, 15 November 2019

Frank Dobson's Death

Sadly, Frank Dobson has died.  Frank was the long serving MP for Holborn and St Pancras, Health Secretary in Tony Blair's first Cabinet, a Leader of Camden Council and Labour's first London Mayoral candidate in 2000. 

I was his election agent in 2005 and his reputation across the constituency was extraordinary.  He had served there from 1979, and by the time I got there he was extraordinarily well known for all the work he had done as a constituency MP.  People would thank him for things he had done from them twenty years before, and that was no part of the community that he hadn't touched in some way.

Thursday, 14 November 2019

Brexit Climbdown

What bemuses me about Nigel Farage's standing down of more than 300 of his candidates for the Brexit Party is that none of them get any say in the matter.  He just announces it and none of them are quoted as saying anything.  This is almost as odd as their original launch when their names were not announced.  To add to it all Arron Banks is apparently instructing Farage to remove even more of their "candidates".

It is almost as if they were not a real party, and Farage was a Leader in name only.

Wednesday, 13 November 2019

Oliver Sacks and Links to Brent

It may not be widely known that the noted neurologist grew up in Brent.  His home was the now non-residential 37 Mapesbury Road.  In his works he makes occasional references to Brent.  His father was a member of a sailing club on the Welsh Harp.  He enjoyed frequenting Willesden Library, which would have been the original 1894 building. He worshipped at the now defunct Cricklewood Synagogue in Walm Lane.

I hope some day he gets a blue plaque recognising his links to the area

Tuesday, 12 November 2019

Brent Local Plan Review

Brent is now (until 5 December) reviewing its Local Plan.  This is an important document that underpins all the Borough's Planning Application decisions.

Monday, 11 November 2019

Fanny Mendelson at Willesden Library

Willesden Library is hosting an unusual event about Fanny Mendelsohn on 21 November, whose more widely known brother was Felix Mendelsohn (and both of them grandchildren of Moses Mendelsohn).  Among other things it is an interesting example of how Herstory aproaches can provide a new angle to familiar stories.

Sunday, 10 November 2019

Optimism on Climate Change

Away from the rhetoric of gestures such as having a climate assembly, there is actually good news coming on carbon emissions.  Advances in wind technology should lead to a huge rise in production, and if the battery problem can be solved, this could contribute to baseload production.  Even aviation appears to be making progress with possible small electric only aircraft.

Saturday, 9 November 2019

Reconfiguring Willesden Library

I suggested a little while ago reconfiguring Willesden Library to create a cafe directly on Willesden High Road in the "Reading Room".

The next question would be what to do with the current cafe space.  One option might be to see if some one else wants to rent it.  A second might be to see if the library wants to use it?  For instance, it might make a good semi-detached space for the Council advice services currently towards the back of the library.  It could also be used for the childrens sessions, which (because of the noise) can sometimes irritate other users.  It could be used as exhibition space by the Brent Museum.  It might have some entirely new use as a maker space for example.  It could also be used as a hiring space for events in general, including live music.

I see no inherent barrier to any of these purposes.

Friday, 8 November 2019

Orientalism at the British Museum

It is worth trying the new Orientalist painting exhibition at the British Museum, although the items are restricted to those of the Museum itself and some items from Malaysia.  Orientalism as an idea really needs updating from the Edward Said perception.


The exhibition and its aims are described in a blog by its curator

Thursday, 7 November 2019

Tory Cock Ups

The line on the Tory launch appeared to be that someone had just "cocked things up".  It is come to something when you think that the best line of defence for your Party is that you are the Party that cocks stuff up.

In fact, it is much worse.  Aside from the Keir Starmer film being not just a mistake as James Cleverly appeared to be trying to argue it was a deliberately false piece of footage.  It was not just "shortened" but edited in a way that was manifestly false. 

When your Party is led by a man who has repeatedly been associated with lying to everyone including his employers, the voters and even the Queen, the circulation of deceptive videos is really not good.  The resignation of the Welsh Secretary and the prior endorsement of Donald Trump risks this current Tory campaign in danger of making Theresa May's 2017 effort look like a triumph.

Wednesday, 6 November 2019

New Referendum on Brexit

I am surprised by those politicians who have been telling us for ages that a new referendum might lead civil unrest seem to have no such worries about a new General Election just over two years into a five year Parliament.  Why one but not the other?

Perhaps they have been influenced by the expected riots by people after the delay of 31 October were apparently limited to somewhat diminutive rioters going from door to door.

Tuesday, 5 November 2019

The Kiln and Community Engagement Again

Following my praising the Kiln Theatre's efforts at community involvement, I note that it is now being subjected to criticism on the grounds that the people in the production were not paid.

I think this is to misunderstand the long tradition of community engagement that is being invoked here.  This production is more in the tradition of Noye's Fludde and other "Peoples' Theatre".  Complaining about it is a bit like complaining about Amateur Dramatics, or amateur musicians giving recitals, or Brent Dance Month.  It ignores part of the country's long tradition of occasional arts participation.

The principle of paying people who doing a professional job is an important one, and one that undermined many of the pitches for "Big Society" volunteer libraries.  Although I had to examine these during the Libraries Transformation Project, it was never satisfactorily resolved as to when being a volunteer passed into effective employment and therefore demanded things like minimum wage employment, insurance and so on.

Monday, 4 November 2019

Kensal Rise Library Opening Hours

Kensal Rise Library is now operating.  Its opening hours are for three and a half days a week starting 10am, ending at 8pm on Wednesdays; 5pm on Thursdays and Fridays and 1pm on Saturday.  One of the big problems with running a volunteer service is that it will be difficult to keep this up on a long term basis, as the mix of volunteers will change. 

At the time of writing, there appear to be no events planned.

Sunday, 3 November 2019

Climate Assembly

A group of elect Committee chairs have decided to invite people to a Climate Assembly.  I don't know how effective this will be although I have been told the Irish experience over their abortion referendum was positive using similar techniques. 

Saturday, 2 November 2019

Kingsbury Library Temporary Closure

Kingsbury Library will be closed for refurbishment between 11 November and 15 December before reopening.  The refurbishment is somewhat overdue, and decided back in early October.  I recall that with previous refurbishments, some "campaigners" made great play of the need for interim measures, but I haven't heard anyone argue that here.  I wonder why that is.

Friday, 1 November 2019

When the Crows Visit at the Kiln Theatre



I saw when the When the Crows Visit at the Kiln Theatre this week.  Reviews are now out and they rightly point out that it is much tougher going than more feelgood shows such as White Teeth.  Given the subject matter of extreme violence against women, that is not a surprise.  Nonetheless it is an extremely powerful piece of drama and well worth a visit. 

Thursday, 31 October 2019

Council Officers in Libraries

I saw this tweet from my home County of Essex, which currently has a major controversy going on about public libraries and whether they should be closed (i.e. handed over to "volunteers" in the standard euphemism).  It does something that "campaigners" like to do, but which I consider is quite misleading.


The writer refers to the Cabinet and the CC officers as if the library staff were not Council officers.  Of course they are Council officers as they are employed by the Council.  That is actually one of the points of the Essex campaign, that libraries should continue to be staffed by paid properly trained staff.  I suspect the reason that "campaigners" seek to engage in this kind of sleight of hand is that they like to pretend that all the decisions are being made by some shadowy group of malignant people who know nothing of the services that the Council provides.  Actually admitting that the staff recommending the details of the Essex budget are not in a continuum with the same staff that meet on entering the library cuts across that idea.

It is a dishonest tactic in my view.

Wednesday, 30 October 2019

Disabled Access to Libraries

Despite being a Scots MP, Ian Murray (MP for Edinburgh South) has asked a question about access to digital technology in libraries.  Too often people think in terms of libraries being accessed as simply one of physical transport, whereas of course it is important the materials are accessible as well.  However it is disappointing that the question did not elicit the statistics that were being sought. 

Tuesday, 29 October 2019

Reproviding the Willesden Library Cafe

There is now a petition to Brent Council to reprovide the Willesden Library Cafe by reducing the rents.  I am not sure that would actually be effective.  This is not least because the cafe had a period without rent at the beginning of the tenancy, and I don't think it is necessarily paying rent now.

Those of us who have followed the attempt to let the space over the years can attest the economics are tricky, but there is no doubt that this sort of colocation is effective in helping the Library and Willesden High Road.  My own suggestion is reconfiguring the building with the cafe at the front to make any cafe a more obvious feature of the site.

By the way, although the petitioners (whoever they might be) think that:

"After countless years of neglect, Willesden Green has recently started to show signs of growth and development; this is in large part due to the work of community minded individuals within the community coming together."

Those of us who recall building the library can remember when a number of people who claimed to speak for "the community" were hotly opposed to the plans which made the current cafe space possible.  Here are some of them protesting against the library back in 2013:



Still, it is nice to see that the petitioners consider the Library to be a "highly valued and much-loved facility." 

Monday, 28 October 2019

Climate Emergency and Brent Friends of the Earth

The Kilburn Times has chosen to highlight the climate emergency using a national Friends of the Earth document that doesn't really pay attention to Brent's characteristics as an area.

Naturally, it includes a quotation form Brent's Friends of the Earth who opposed Brent Council's improvements to recycling despite the positive improvements to carbon emissions.  The same group also opposed the Council's introduction of "polluter pays" parking permits.  Indeed many of them as individuals have also protested against the many actions that Brent Council has taken to reduce carbon emissions, including the Civic Centre.

The story quotes the current Chair, who says: "One of the things Brent tells us about is what a good sustainable Civic Centre they have...It's got a lot of stuff in it that makes it energy efficient but it's surrounded by a concrete desert of high rises in an unnatural environment. We don't doubt Brent's sincerity in wanting to do it but it really needs to start upping its game and moving much more quickly."

I take it that he is simply unaware that new housing in the Borough's five growth areas (which include Wembley) meet higher environmental standards (CSH4) than the Borough as a whole (CSH3).  The CSH stands for Code for Sustainable Homes, and is a standard measure.  On the street tree issue I find it hard to believe that he hasn't noticed the widespread planting of trees across Brent, which is actually not bad for an urban area

He is presumably also blissfully unaware that Brent Council has been monitoring its environmental performance for many years (as it did when I was Lead Member).  Some of these items fall by the wayside, largely because of central government cuts, but the big ones are in place.

Sunday, 27 October 2019

Willesden Library Cafe Closes

Sadly the Willesden Library Cafe opened for the last time yesterday.  When I think back to how long it took to establish, this is deeply disheartening.  Brent Council probably now needs to consider whether it needs to reconfigure the building.  If the cafe were in the "Reading Room" it would have a more natural frontage to appeal to the passing trade on Willesden High Road.

Martin's Lament
Meanwhile, the closure has given Martin Francis an opportunity to showcase his negativity about Willesden Library.  It is such a good demonstration of his techniques that it is worth quoting in full.  He writes:

 "When Brent Council decided to demolish the 1980s Willesden Green Library and sell the car park to a private developer  they renamed its successor a 'Library and  Cultural Centre.' In the course of the redevelopment they closed the cinema and denied any space to the well-loved and well-used Willesden Bookshop. The bookshop could not afford the high rent and overheads that would have been demanded by Brent Council even if an adequate space had been made available. The cultural offer was limited by a closure time of 8pm and a demand that any event going on after that time should pay an additional sum for security.


Now the Delipod Hub cafe, on the ground floor of the building, which has been attracting a local following, especially for its Friday night music sessions, has thrown in the towel in after a valiant attempt to keep going."

Firstly, it is wrong to say that the cinema was closed "in the course of redevelopment".  In fact the cinema ceased to show films round about 2000, because it was not commercially successful and could not afford digitalisation.  The Willesden bookshop was charged very little in the old centre because the space that was built there had inadequate storage for a retail use.  Had the bookshop wanted to continue as a bricks and mortar enterprise, Willesden High Road has a number of shop fronts of varying sizes.  The fact that the same owner closed their Kilburn bookshop branch at the same time hints that they were responding more to the rise of the Internet, which has been devastating for the physical book trade.

The final point about opening times is valid and I have raised it myself, although Martin doesn't really make any allowance for the financial pressure on the Council from the Tory cuts.

He also doesn't mention that the old Cafe Gigi also closed down some time in the first decade of this century, so it is clear that the whole sector is a tough one to operate in.  It is not just a matter of Brent Council being somehow just malignant.  I notice he also doesn't mention the presence of the art gallery, the Brent Museum, the small scale occasional dramatic/artistic/musical/film and book reading events in the library, the smaller exhibitions or the other art works on Willesden High Road in his dismissal of the "Borough of Culture".  He also seems to have forgotten that his own opposition to rebuilding the Willesden Library would have meant it continuing without any cafe at all.
 

Saturday, 26 October 2019

Legal and Administrative Difficulties of a 2019 Election

With so much talk of an early election, I wonder whether anyone in Parliament is thinking about the practical and legal difficulties of having an election on 12 December, when the new register comes into force on 1 December?

This will be hard for the political parties who would have to spend most of the campaign with the old register before suddenly switching to the new one.  There will be a similar problem for returning officers sending out polling cards in November, only to find that some of the people given them will have dropped off the register, some will have come on and everyone polling numbers will have changed on polling day.  People may even be sent a notice to vote only to be turned away when they get there.  There will be similar issues around the dispatch of postal votes and proxy votes.  This will certainly cause confusion and possibly legal problems.

Friday, 25 October 2019

Kiln Theatre and the Community

I was sorry to have missed the Seven Ages of Patience at the Kiln Theatre, which was sold out.  It certainly got a good review in The Stage, and the Director shared some of the challenges and benefits of producing it with the Kilburn Times.

It is also a vindication of the new direction that Indhu Rubasingham has brought to the Kiln Theatre in terms of linking it to the Brent community.  This is a story told by and about that community and is in a fine UK tradition of popular theatre.  It demonstrates that some of the criticism directed at her for not linking to the local area is seriously off the mark.

Wednesday, 23 October 2019

Children Centre Closures

Brent is being forced by central government cuts to close another six of its childrens centres, as local government cuts continue to bite despite the warm words of the Conservative Government.  This is part of a wider pattern that has been going on for years.  The six centres that are closed are: Barham Park, Harmony, Mount Stewart, Treetops, Wembley Primary and Wykeham.  Some of these sites are near schools which may be able to use them for educational purposes, and there is a private user at Treetops, that may may be able to use the whole building. 

Tuesday, 22 October 2019

Architects Climate Action Network (ACAN)

I was interested to see in the Kilburn Times that there is a new group of architects called Architects Climate Action Network (ACAN) formed to work out techniques to decarbonise the built environment.  They want to prioritise retrofitting.  Whilst it is important that this area be tackled since it many of the buildings in the UK are old and need to be improved, they should not ignore the possible use of new techniques in completely new buildings such as Brent Civic Centre.

Monday, 21 October 2019

Brent Central Labour Party Marching for a New Referendum


Saturday's People's Vote March, which a group from Brent Central CLP attended (photo courtesy of Martin Francis) demonstrated once again that a substantial body of people want a final say on any proposed Brexit deal.  The only argument I have heard from Boris Johnson on this is that he sees his interpretation of the 2016 referendum result as binding pretty much forever.  I notice that seems to apply a different judgement to the results of the 2017 General Election, where he wants Parliament's mandate renewed by a new General Election.

Is it possible that he adjusts his arguments according to what he finds convenient at any given moment?


Sunday, 20 October 2019

Kilburn Rebuild Approved

South Kilburn residents have approved the regeneration of the area with 72% of the residents voting in the referendum.  However, I would suggest that this leaves a lot of key issues in doubt, such as tenure mix and so on. 

Saturday, 19 October 2019

Go Further than Extinction

I see that some people are beginning to voice the view that the "Extinction Rebellion" activists have "gone too far".  Of course, if you follow their extinction of the human race rhetoric, it is hardly surprising that they go to extremes.  Those who indulge in such rhetoric are hardly free of responsibility for what follows.

What I still find striking is the lack of knowledge and focus.  I saw one protester quoted in The Times who said he was furious that the mainstream media did not report on environmentalism adequately.  Asked for evidence he said he didn't have any because he did "not read newspapers."  I would have thought that if you really believe what the protester say they do, a little bit of research might be appropriate.

Mind you, I don't believe that real progress on climate change will actually come from all these protests.  Real change will come from people in committee rooms passing new regulations and creating new technologies to solve the problems.

Friday, 18 October 2019

Haringey Momentum Learns Local Government the Hard Way

Haringey Momentum influence a decision to block a scheme in the Borough.  This decision is now overturned.   The Planning Inspector has the power to levy costs on Haringey Council if he thinks the previous decision unreasonable.  This is why you cannot have political caucases simply issuing dictats on planning applications.

Thursday, 17 October 2019

March for a Confirmatory Ballot

The time for a Peoples Vote March this Saturday is fast approaching.  I also suspect that support for a confirmatory ballot is growing, not least because a further Brexit delay is inevitable given that much of the necessary legislation has simply not been passed.  I also find it rather ridiculous that MPs are expected to examine and pass whatever Johnson's deal is with such little time to study it.

Wednesday, 16 October 2019

Not What it Seems on the Tin

The £250 million for Creative industries and culture recently announced is one of those numbers designed to sound big whilst actually not being that great.

Firstly, is is a five year grant so it is actually £50 million per year.  Secondly, the £125 million for "libraries and museums" is not that much per authority even if it were evenly spread across England's c. 150 library authorities.  Thirdly it won't be, it will be awarded by ministers on who knows what criteria to whoever they pick.  One Museum, like the National Rail Museum for instance, could easily suck up a good deal of it in one go.  Fourthly, as non revenue spend, it will have to go into capital expenditure, and such relatively small sums can be used up very quickly.

Tuesday, 15 October 2019

Community Infrastructure Levy

Brent is now open to community bids for grants for Community Infrastructure Levy projects.  These tend to be one off projects to improve local areas.  As they use taxpayers money they have to be responsible in terms of using the money.

Monday, 14 October 2019

Is Labour's NEC Personally Liable for Damages Arising from the Antisemitism Claims?

Is Labour's NEC Personally Liable for Damages Arising from the Antisemitism Claims?  That is the question raised by the Independent.  I have no idea what the legal position is, although it may well be different from that of a charity.

It will also be crucial to see whether the Labour Party was following its own rules, reasonably relying on officer advice, and whether NEC members were trying to make judgements conscientiously of simply on a factional basis.  It would be interesting to discover whether NEC members would have been less cavalier over claims of antisemitism and sexism if they were themselves subject to personal penalties.

Sunday, 13 October 2019

The Daily Mail and Vaccination

The Daily Mail has recently been praised by Matt Hancock and others for coming out against the anti-vax campaign.  That is good news, but those with longer memories than Mr Hancock can remember that it was not always so clear. 

Take this story from as an example.  Under the heading "New MMR link is found with autism" it is distinctly favourable to Mr Wakefield, calling him a "specialist" who was "forced out of his job".  As I understand it he was a surgeon so not sure he can really be called a "specialist" in a story about autism.  Over the years the Mail published a number of articles with a similar line, implying some kind of unreasonable cover up, like this one, or this one. 

In 2003 Melanie Philips was particularly insistent along these lines (11 March 2003). 

Saturday, 12 October 2019

Cuts in Overground Ticket Offices

It is reported that train station ticket office operating hours are to be reduced at Brondesbury, Brondesbury Park, Kensal Rise and Kilburn High Road.  Whatever the other effects, this is likely to inflict damage on the Kilburn High Road economy since the cuts are in the evening and most of the day.  This should be a major concern for Brent Council and I hope some one is raising the matter with TfL.

On the plus side, I welcome a new lift at Brondesbury, although I recall that the Kilburn station lift up the road always used to be closed because there were said to be no staff to help passengers.  Does the left hand know what the right hand is doing?

Friday, 11 October 2019

Labour Party Selections

Currently, the Labour Party NEC have closed down parliamentary selections in seats without a candidate despite the fact that a General Election (whilst imminent) has not been called.  This is the first time I have ever known this to happen.  Previously NECs have certainly truncated the process once an election is called.  Something of that kind happened when Dawn Butler MP was selected for Brent South in 2005, but even in that case members got a vote.

Where no candidate is in place candidates have sometimes been imposed, but every effort has been made to make sure that members have been involved to the maximum logistically possible, not least because members will be unlikely to feel motivated to campaign for a candidate simply imposed by the NEC.

The current NEC, which is made up of a faction of people who claim to be interested in extending democracy within the Labour Party are doing more than anyone has ever dared to close it down.  The likely result will be a number of legal actions, that will knock back the Party's General Election message from day one.

Thursday, 10 October 2019

Heidi Allen MP in South Cambridgeshire

I must say I have some sympathy for candidates who have got themselves selected in particular seats only to be elbowed aside by johnny-come-latelys from another party, as in the case of South Cambridgeshire where Heidi Allen is now standing for the Liberal Democrats. 




Wednesday, 9 October 2019

Nuclear Change

Peter Hennessy has unearthed documents suggesting that the UK's nuclear deterrent use during Harold Macmillan's premiership relied on finding a nearby telephone box and ensuring he had sufficient loose change to get through to Number Ten to authorise nuclear retaliation in the event that the Soviets were dastardly enough to attack us when he was outside London.  This system persisted to 1970.

It is all rather reminiscent of that scene in Dr Strangelove when Group Captain Mandrake has to persuade Colonel Bat Guano to shoot the lock off a Pepsi machine to make a call to the White House to tell them the recall call for the Bombers.  Except that was supposed to be a farce.

I wonder if one of Kubrick's script writers knew something?

Tuesday, 8 October 2019

What is Going on in Park Royal?

The legal problems in Park Royal, with the suggestion that the removal of Cargiant is financially unviable, is on of the big problems that is currently not getting the attention they need.  As usual, I haven't seen any comments by Brent Council on this one way or another despite it being of vital importance to both Harlesden and Kensal Green wards.

Monday, 7 October 2019

Will the 31 October Deadline Be Extended?

Boris Johnson continues to make the contradictory claims that he will abide by the law but the Article 50 deadline will not be extended.  He appears to get this past his supporters by hinting there is some plan of Baldrick-like cunning to evade Padfield to reconcile the two objectives.  As the Waugh report said last week:

"No.10 still have things up their sleeve to try to get out on October 31, yet as I wrote earlier this week there are some around Johnson who now reluctantly admit that he may be forced into an extension to Article 50, as long as it paves the way for a quick general election soon after."

I suspect that all this is pure wishful thinking and that there is no plan at all just a vague hope that something will turn up.

UPDATE

Meanwhile Peter Kellner has some actual research on what voters actually think.

Sunday, 6 October 2019

Northern Ireland Border

There is a story being spread on the Eurosceptic Right that the whole concern over the Northern Irish border is confected and artificial.  In fact, as anyone who remembers the Troubles will know, a closed border was a major barrier to the people living there, and a significant drag on the local economy.  The area below is inhabited by around 625,000 people.


Saturday, 5 October 2019

The 25th Anniversary of the Fairtrade Mark

The 25th Anniversary of the Fairtrade Mark is being celebrated at St Martin-in-the-Fields church in Trafalgar Square today.  This will start from 11am.

Friday, 4 October 2019

Special Majorities

The prorogation controversy has led some to renew calls for a written constitution.  I find this odd as it would undoubtedly create more occasions where the Courts would be required to decide questions that have been traditionally kept to politics, which is generally contrary to what such people want.

Secondly, it would require a form of special majority decision making where the situation would not as now be decided by one decision making process but be more than one, whether the immediate decision was compatible with a written constitution.  It is arguable that this has been a key part of creating the Brexit mess since Brexit has been treated as a single decision through the referendum and then been subjected to a second decision making process through Parliament.

Much of the fury at the decisions made by Parliament are generated by the assumption that it should be subordinate to the decisions presumed o have been made in the Referendum.

The same problem would arise with all those who argue that the referendum should have a special majority of some kind, whether (say) a 60% majority or a quorum as in the 1979 Scottish devolution debate.  Those who wanted a 50% majority regarded as binding would regard any blockage based on a higher majority as illegitimate.

Thursday, 3 October 2019

Internal Labour Rules

For those interested in the extremely dreary internal rules of the Labour Party, Luke Akehurst has pointed out that, following this year's Conference:


"New LGCs all have to be one third councillors, one third affiliates, one third CLPs. So in Hackney the 2 CLPs have to give up half their seats to the unions, in most places it gives far more seats to the Labour Group (Hackney unusual in already having 1/3 cllrs)"

As he observes this tends to work to the disadvantage of Momentum.  Given the abject failure of Brent Momentum slate over ward boundaries that is probably something to be thankful for.

What is called a LGC, or in Brent a LCF, is a Borough wide body that Brent Momentum appears to have decided to try to use as a platform to foist its agenda on Brent Council.  The Labour Party, borne of bitter experience, has a tradition of new allowing this to happen, but using it for campaigning instead.  Brent Momentum, perhaps unaware of Labour Party history in this respect as many of them are only recent members, seem to want to discover this the hard way.

Wednesday, 2 October 2019

Public Toilets and Business Rates

One of the effects of the Supreme Court's voiding of prorogation is that the Bills that would have been lost are still in the Parliamentary process.  One of these is an otherwise obscure measure to allow buildings with public toilets to claim exemption from rates.

If this comes into force, Brent Council should investigate whether it can claim exemption for its own buildings.  The Civic Centre, and all the Council libraries have publicly available toilets which meet disability access requirements.  Savings on business rates could be substantial. 

Tuesday, 1 October 2019