A New Deal – End Austerity Now as tens of thousands march in London

288F1DA9-7EE3-4B83-B04F-9BAAD9B7344EOn Saturday 12th May tens of thousands of people marched through central London to demand an end to austerity and call for a “New Deal” for workers.

Research by the TUC shows that Britain’s 17 year wage squeeze is the worst in modern history. The research says that this is the slowest wage recovery in two centuries. The report argues:

“The current period of wage stagnation is the worst for two centuries. Not since the beginning of the 18thcentury (when it took 24 years), has it taken so long for real wages to recover from a slump.

The TUC compared the current wages squeeze with every major earnings crisis over the past 200 years. Even during the Great Depression era (10 years) and revival from the Second World War (7 years) real wages recovered more quickly. ”

Councillor Alan Hall was asked by the Communications Workers Union to join them on the march. He said: “It is a huge honour to march with the hard working post men and women, communication workers and BT staff. Many are working today and the great sea of pink shows the commitment of ordinary people to come to London to show their support and fight for fairer pay and and end to tory austerity policies.”

 

The Leader of the Labour Party, Jeremy Corbyn MP addressed the crowds saying that austerity is a “political choice not a necessity” and pledged that a Labour Government  would deliver for public services and include taking rail, mail and water back into public ownership.

The marchers call for #TUCNewDeal

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Save Sydenham Crown Post Office campaigners take the fight to Number 10

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On Thursday, 26th April Councillor Alan Hall led a delegation to 10 Downing Street to present a petition to the Prime Minister, Theresa May MP to ‘Save Sydenham Crown Post Office’.

He was joined by Save the Sydenham Post Office Campaigners, Pat Trembath MBE, from the Sydenham Society, Cllr Liam Curran, Sydenham Councillor and Peter Meech from the Communications Workers Union (CWU).

They argue that this is the loss of a vital public service for an inferior franchise offer.

Home Office services like the Foreign Nationals Biometric Residents Permit will be lost.

The Communications Workers Union are campaigning for a successful post office networkincluding a new Post Bank. Mole Meade, CWU opposes the closure of Crown Post Offices saying that the closure of Crown post offices will have negative economic and social effects on high streets – even if moved just 500 yards into the back of a newsagent –  this happened in New Cross Gate – with the businesses left behind suffering and the area going into decline. The only thing driving this move is cuts to make profit.

The Sydenham Society’s Pat Trembath, MBE said: “The Crown Post Office is a vital part of a vibrant high street. It serves a wider community as the only Crown Post Office in the borough and this drastic cut will be a blow for the community.”

Labour Sydenham Councillor Liam Curran said: “Sydenham residents queued up to sign this petition in the few hours we had it on the high street. There are many things that you can’t do online and the withdrawal of the services of a Crown Post office is a blow to our community. This is compounded by the fact that the Santander Bank branch in Sydenham is closing and they have told their customers to go to the Post Office! A cheapo Post Office-lite will find it impossible to cope. We need a nationally-owned Post Office like they do in many other European countries.”

Peter Meech, CWU  said: “This is a very sad day for the staff that have served this community over many years. I hope that the Prime Minister will intervene to keep a Crown Post Office open in Sydenham.”

Councillor Alan Hall, Chair of Lewisham Council’s Business Panel said: “Sydenham Crown Post Office provides an essential public service and it is an important part of the local high street economy.”

He went on to say: “Sydenham Crown Post Office is under threat. Closure means there will be no Crown Post Offices within the London Borough of Lewisham – and the loss of a full range of services for our residents. The Prime Minister should ask The Post Office to think again.”

Councillor Alan Hall attended a parliamentary debate held at Westminster Hall on Tuesday 25th April 2017 – you can watch the debate here

Councillor Alan Hall requested a briefing on Lewisham’s Crown Post Offices from the CWU  – this is here

 

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Cllr Alan Hall collecting signatures for the Save Sydenham Crown Post Office petition

 

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End Poverty Pay in the NHS – Bring the cleaners and support staff back ‘in house’

IMG_8452Lewisham Councillor Alan Hall has joined Matthew Pennycook, MP (Greenwich & Woolwich) in signing a petition by the GMB trade union. The petition calls on the board of the Lewisham & Greenwich Hospitals’ Trust to end low pay and improve services like cleaning, waste management and security known as ‘soft services facilities management

 

 

 

The full text of the petition is:”We the undersigned, call for the Board of Lewisham and Greenwich NHS Trust to bring privatised soft facilities contracts at both the Queen Elizabeth Hospital (QEH) and Lewisham Hospital back in-house when the current contract expires later this year.

At present, soft services are run by ISS at QEH and Interserve at Lewisham Hospital. We believe, particularly in light of the recent collapse of outsourcer Carillion, that to continue to rely on private companies to run these essential services presents an unacceptable risk. We also question whether the current contracts represent good value for money.

The hard-working individuals currently employed by ISS and Interserve also deserve better. Under these two companies, the workforce has seen its pay held down and its terms and conditions cut to the bone to maintain company profit margins. The demoralisation of the workforce, combined with a sustained under-investment in equipment, has made it harder to deliver a first-rate service.

We full appreciate that eight years of chronic under-funding and the burden of a substantial PFI debt mean that the Trust is in a precarious financial position. However, we believe that there is robust evidence to suggest that bringing soft facilities back in-house could result in an overall financial saving and improved service delivery.

There are recent examples of Trusts successfully bringing services back in-house. For example, Nottingham University Hospitals (NUH) brought cleaning services back under their control last year. The move has resulted in a marked improvement in service standards.

Lewisham and Greenwich Trust are now in discussions with Meridian Hospital Company (The PFI company responsible for QEH) to end the soft facilities part of the PFI contract at QEH. Were this to transpire there would be nothing preventing the Trust from determining not to put the contract out to tender and bringing it back in-house instead. We urge the Board to do so, for the benefit of the workforce and the long-term sustainability of these essential services.”

 

Lewisham Councillor Alan Hall said: “I am supporting this petition to improve pay for low paid hospital workers and for real improvements in the services provided to help patients and clinical staff. These are essential services for our NHS.”

He went on to say: “I am urging Lewisham and Greenwich residents to join me by signing this petition to keep the pressure up ending poverty pay locally ”

The GMB Southern Region petition can be found here: https://www.gmb-southern.org.uk/petition-board-lewisham-greenwich-nhs-trust

 

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Root and Branch Strategic Review for Beckenham Place Park referred to Mayor of Lewisham

Beckenham, Place Park LandscapeMasterplanLargeFollowing consideration of a contract for Beckenham Place Park landscaping works restoration contract award to ID Verde on 10th April 2018, Lewisham Council’s Business Panel has decided to request that Mayor Steve Bullock agree that there be a root and branch strategic review of the Beckenham Place Park and Mansion Regeneration Strategy to ensure there will be greater public involvement in, and support for, the development of proposals for Lewisham’s largest park.

Business Panel Chair, Councillor Alan Hall said: “Beckenham Place Park is a magnificent park and one of London’s largest. Let’s be ambitious for Lewisham and ensure that local residents, park users and local community groups are fully behind any plans for the buildings and activities in this park.”

He added: “I hope that whilst not everyone will agree with every change proposed that support for increasing public usage and bringing the buildings including the historic Mansion House will be welcomed.”

A brief history and photographs of The Mansion is here

Famously, David Bowie lived nearby he was a regular visitor to the park.

 

More in the newsshopper here

New Bermondsey or Surrey Canal Report by Lord Dyson published – No legal assistance for scrutiny chair

The full report by the retired judge, Lord Dyson  into matters concerning the New Bermondsey or Surrey Canal regeneration scheme including the land around Millwall FC ground The Den and Lewisham Council is here: new-bermondsey-inquiry-final-report-november-2017 Lord Dyson

A correction to the report was issued on 1st December 2017:

At paragraph 79 of the Report, Mr Andrew Barrow is described as a “property lawyer who was acting as consultant to MFC”. By way of clarification, Mr Barrow was a practising solicitor from 1978 until 2009 when he retired from law and became a property consultant. He was acting as a property consultant to Millwall FC, not as a legal adviser.

Paragraph 31 of the report states that Millwall Football Club or MFC witnesses who attended an oral hearing had the benefit of the presence of a legal representative. This was in error. Mr Barrow attended the hearing but in the capacity of property consultant to MFC, not at as a legal adviser.

On 15th December, Lord Dyson wrote in reply to the Chairman of Millwall FC, Mr John Berylson’s letter of 6th December 2017: 

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In paragraph 29 Lord Dyson mentions that Cllr Alan Hall refused to attend an oral cross examination although he gave a written statement without formal legal advice.

Barry Quirk, Chief Executive wrote to Cllr Alan Hall explaining why no legal assistance was available to him from the Council New Bermondsey Advice from BQ refusing External Legal Advice 06.02.17

Cllr Alan Hall received no formal legal advice at all. Informal advice recommended not attending an oral hearing in front of the former Master of the Rolls. He reported this to Lewisham Council by way of personal explanation in accordance with the Council’s constitution on 17th January 2018.

Some background on this can be found in an earlier post here

 

 

 

 

Falcon spotted on threatened Sydenham gas holders at Bell Green as demolition refused

The campaign to save the historic Bell Green Gas Holders was given an unexpected boost as Peregrine Falcons have been spotted on the Victorian structures and the application to demolish them has been refused by Lewisham Council.

The formal grounds for the refusal are that ‘prior approval’ for demolition is required due to the provision of insufficient information relating to traffic management and land remediation, contrary to Schedule 2, Class B, Part 11 of the Town and Country Planning (General Permitted Development) England) Order 2015

Annabel McLaren, Chair, Sydenham Society said:  “A sharp eyed local resident has spotted peregrine falcons perched on top of one of the Bell Green gas holders. As these birds are an endangered species, and it is a criminal offence to disturb them, the Sydenham Society is calling upon Lewisham Council to undertake a full ecological report on the wildlife and biodiversity of the gas holders before any decision is taken to demolish them.”

Local Bellingham Councillor Alan Hall said: “The diversity of wildlife in Bell Green is amazing and I have asked the Council not to fly in the face of local opinion and keep an eye on the birds of prey on Gas Holders and make an new assessment of their habitat.”

In a letter sent to Lewisham Council’s Head of Law, Kath Nicholson, the Sydenham Society state:

The following are criminal offences in relation to “Schedule 1” birds:

Disturbing any Schedule 1 wild bird whilst it is building a nest or is in, on or near a nest containing eggs or young

Disturbing dependent young of such a bird Schedule 1 – Birds which are protected by Special Penalties include  Peregrine (Falco peregrinus)

Workers and others that need to access areas in proximity to peregrine nest sites need to consider the effect of their activities.

The level of protection afforded to peregrines extends to the adult birds near a nest containing eggs or young. Peregrines are noisy aggressive birds when threatened and will attack humans near the nest site. Once it is apparent that a nest site or adult bird has been disturbed, the cause of the disturbance must cease immediately.

The London Peregrine Partnership advise that all roof maintenance, including aerials, masts, water tanks, etc, should be completed outside the breeding season. This also applies to demolition and redevelopment of any buildings where peregrines are nesting.

A planning application for demolition of the locally listed Gas Holders was submitted to Lewisham Council see: https://alanhall.org.uk/2018/03/25/bell-green-gas-holders-demolition-planning-application/

Statue of Sir Henry Cooper in Bellingham planned

The three Labour Councillors for Bellingham, Councillors Alan Hall, Sue Hordijenko & Jacq Paschoud have written a letter in support of a Statue to Sir Henry Cooper  to Lewisham Council.

The proposed life-sized, bronze-cast statue is to be erected in Bellingham on the corner of Randlesdown Road and the A21 Bromley Road, halfway between Catford and Downham.

Known to all as “Our ‘Enery”, Henry Cooper represented Great Britain at the 1952 Olympic Games and was the first man to win three Lonsdale belts becoming British, Commonwealth and European heavyweight champion.  In 1963, heavyweight boxer Henry Cooper lived and trained at the The Fellowship Inn next to Bellingham station in the lead up to his first fight with Muhammad Ali at Wembley Stadium.

These achievements are represented in the statue designed by Carl Payne – a limited number of  miniature replicas of the proposed statue have been sold to fundraise for the monument.

Councillor Alan Hall said: “We have been working with the London Ex-Boxers’ Association and Phoenix Community Housing since 2015  to support this. The erection of the statue will complement the restoration of the historic Fellowship Inn opposite, where Henry Cooper trained as a young man. Indeed, if Sir Henry’s statue faces in the right direction he would see it!” 

 

 Sir Henry Cooper was born in 1934 and started his amateur career in 1949. He and his identical twin brother, George, grew up in their council house in Farmstead Road on the Bellingham Estate, before they were evacuated to Lancing on the Sussex coast during the second world war.

 

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Cllr Alan Hall with a minature version of the Sir Henry Cooper statue outside the Fellowship Inn in Bellingham where the boxer trained. His old Ferrari is parked outside.

 

An artist’s impression of the statue in situ

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The video below shows Sir Henry Cooper returning to his Bellingham council home

 

The London Ex Boxers Association have submitted a planning application and architects plans and drawings are here

To buy one of the limited edition replicas of the statue and help raise funds please see the London Ex Boxers Association leaflet here

 

Fabian Society Publishes – Attention to detail – effective scrutiny is crucial

ATTENTION TO DETAIL

Effective scrutiny plays a crucial role in ensuring councils deliver for their residents, writes Alan Hall.

OPINION

Speaking the truth to power is always a risky business.  No more so than when considering how millions of pounds of public money should be shovelled into developments and contracts.

Local government overview & scrutiny has been with us since the Local Government Act 2000 and the advent of the cabinet system and executive mayors. In the case of executive mayors –  a single politician making the decisions to spend millions of pounds of public money albeit with the advice of officers and an appointed cabinet – it is easy to see how local councillors could feel disempowered if they are not allowed a proper say on the decisions taken. Overview and scrutiny committees can provide a proactive, pre-decision mechanism for proper political involvement and public engagement. This scrutiny system improves and refines decisions, weeds out poor proposals and advances evidence-based policies.

Good council scrutiny can also allow for challenge to government too. Following the roll-out of austerity and public spending cuts led a review of the London Borough of Lewisham’s emergency services which reported in 2013.

The review showed that significant funding cuts had put services under severe strain, with an impact on preventative services and areas like probation too.

The process allowed for proper scrutiny of these changes both by the council and external public agencies and, during the review, Lewisham Council successfully challenged Jeremy Hunt, secretary of state for health over the proposed closure of Lewisham hospital’s A&E department.

An example of proactive scrutiny came after the tragic Grenfell Tower fire. All housing authorities rightly reviewed their housing stock and hopefully their policies. As a matter of urgency, I wrote to Barry Quirk the then chief executive of Lewisham council to ask that a fire and risk assessment be made of all tall buildings and I invited the borough’s fire commander to address us to give the public and the council the assurances it needed.

Party politics will, of course, play a part in any local government setting and it is naive to think that elected politicians forget their party in scrutiny. But, as a recent Communities & Local Government Select Committee report on local authority scrutiny says, council leaderships have a responsibility to foster an environment that welcomes constructive challenge and debate. I have always held that scrutiny meetings can provide a platform to explain and publicise good policy initiatives and challenge assumptions or ‘group think’.  Let’s imagine the alternative – complete, untrammelled power of the executive.

Instructing scrutiny members how to vote and threatening them with the whip does not foster the constructive challenge we need. Scrutiny committee members need to be able to hold their cabinet colleagues to account.

But if proper scrutiny is to play a full part in effective local government, we will need a culture shift.  The scrutiny process – sometimes seen as the trainspotting of the council world – needs to be valued every bit as much as executive decision-making. This parity of esteem should mean getting access to the resources needed to do the job – including professional and independent advice.

The Financial Reporting Council and the Institute of Chartered Secretaries & Administrators advise that a company’s board should make funds available to their audit committee to enable it to take independent legal, accounting or other advice when the audit committee reasonably believes it necessary to do so. However, scrutiny committees have no such right. Indeed I have requested independent legal advice in the past and an eminent QC has given an opinion supporting a refusal of this request. I believe this change would help proper scrutiny when a council’s legal officers are advising the executive on hugely complex and controversial developments and contracts. It would solve an inherent conflict of interest.

Meanwhile, the government has responded positively to the select committee’s recommendations that overview and scrutiny committees should report to their full councils and not just the executive and that officers should provide impartial and professional advice. That after 18 years of local government scrutiny these recommendations need to be made at all is telling. There is a long way to go before there is anything like parity of esteem between the executive and scrutiny functions.

I helped pilot scrutiny arrangements in Lewisham in 2001 and more recently I am pleased to have had the endorsement of Lord Kennedy – and, somewhat to my surprise a government minister Lord Young – when I led the questioning of a compulsory purchase order around Millwall Football Club’s ground in South East London. The lesson I have learnt is that scrutiny is best when gathering evidence from beyond the usual officers and paid advisors. In the words of an Ofsted inspector who I gave evidence to recently: “Triangulate – don’t only listen to your officers.”

Council scrutiny is a crucial part of our local democracy. It benefits councils and residents alike, contributing to better decisions, better use of public resources, better public engagement and – ultimately – better services.

 

AUTHOR

ALAN HALL

Alan Hall is the lead labour non-executive member on Lewisham Council since 2006 and has chaired its overview and scrutiny committee since 2010. He is a Fabian Society member.

This article was published by The Fabian Society on 26th March 2018 at https://fabians.org.uk/attention-to-detail/

A history of The Fabian Society is here

 

The Greyhound pub in Sydenham Re-opens after a long campaign

The Greyhound public house in Sydenham is near Cobb’s corner and Sydenham railway station re-opened its doors to the Sydenham Society and local community on Thursday, 22nd February 2018. This followed a long campaign of over a decade.

The Newsshopper newspaper reported of the campaigners’ success in preventing demolition of the 18th century hostelry on 8th September 2007. In that report Sydenham Councillor Liam Curran said that this was just one step in the battle and how right he was.

Greyhound pix old 2007

The long and winding road included a trip to Bromley Magistrates Court  in 2013 where the developer Purelake was fined £5,000 with £13,000 costs after pleading guilty to unauthorised demolition a year before.  The news report states that

“Last March [2012], the Greyhound in Kirkdale was knocked down, leaving just the front wall intact, despite it being in a conservation area banning demolition without council consent.”

The Sydenham Society has campaigned tenaciously for The Greyhound and enlisted the help of the late Professor Gavin Stamp an architectural historian. The minutes of a Lewisham Council Mayor & Cabinet show their success in making the pub part of a conservation area:

“The Mayor received representations from Pat Trembath, Chair of the Sydenham Society and Annabel McLaren, Chair of the Sydenham Society’s Conservation and Planning Sub Committee who called for the creation of a Cobbs Corner and Central Sydenham Conservation Area. They referred to a letter of support from Architectural historian Professor Gavin Stamp and outlined in detail the architectural significance of properties in Kirkdale, Spring Hill, Peak Hill Gardens, Peak Hill Avenue, Kinver Road and Peak Hill.
Councillor Alan Hall praised the work of his colleague Councillor Ami Ibitson in campaigning generally for the preservation of public houses in Lewisham and he referred to the motion passed at Council on this subject. He urged officers to consider formulating policies for inclusion in the Lewisham Development Framework which afforded greater protection to public houses.” 

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The Greyhound in Sydenham has been totally transformed and it is now open to the public. It is a successful venue in the local area see: https://www.thegreyhoundsydenham.co.uk/        and see what’s on now! Cheers…

 

 

 

Bell Green Gas Holders – Demolition Planning Application

A planning application submitted by SGN – the natural gas network supply company – has been received by Lewisham Council for the ‘prior notification of the demolition of the two existing gasholders and ancillary buildings at Bell Green Lower Sydenham, SE26’. The documents can be viewed here

The two gas holders were Locally Listed by Lewisham Council recently at a meeting held in October 2017 as “the gasholders, by way of their historic, townscape and architectural qualities meet the criteria”

More recently, the Gas Holders survived a planning application to have them demolished in favour of a supermarket at the end of November 2017. A full report is here

Greenwich Council recently refused an application to demolish a gasometer in East Greenwich stating that more information was required from SGN. The story is here

 

IMG_1945Bellingham Councillor Alan Hall said: “The Gas Holders have survived world war bombers a skirmish with Lewisham Council’s planning committee recently and they are now under threat of demolition by SGN again. There is a planning application and objections can be sent to planning@lewisham.gov.uk under the reference Sydenham Gas Holders DC/18/106293.”