Sunday 5 September 2010

Canal Festival Success

We had a great day at the Canal Festival today. Our picture shows, from left to right, Cllr James Murray, Executive member for Housing, Emily Thornberry MP, Eleanor Riley, our canvassing organiser, myself, and Cllr Raphael Andrews (Clerkenwell). Lots of friends, supporters and members dropped by to say hello, including Ian Shacklock, Del Brenner, Chris Kenyon, Ben Bolgar, Avis saltsman, Joy Bailey, and many more.

We collected several hundred signatures for our petition to introduce cycle calming measures on the canal towpath.  Nearly everyone who spoke to us wanted to sign, and felt very strongly about the issue.  We will be presenting the petition to the next full Council meeting, and look forward to the Council working with British Waterways to help deal with the minority of aggressive, high-speed cyclists who are increasingly spoiling enjoyment of the towpath for everyone else, particularly along the Islington stretch of the towpath.

Interestingly, there was no sign of the Lib Dems at the Festival.

Wednesday 26 May 2010

Decisive election results in Islington

The picture says it all.  A 3.3% swing to Labour in both the North and South Constituencies in Islington, and a decisive Labour majority on the Council of 22 seats.  Labour now holds 35 seats and the Lib Dems 13. 

We no longer have any green Councillors, and the Tories failed to win any seats at all. Even in my ward, St Peters, which the Tories said they were targeting, they did not get anywhere close.  The picture shows Islington North MP Jeremy Corbyn and Islington South and Finsbury MP Emily Thornberry flanking Cllr Catherine West, the new Labour leader of Islington Council, shortly after the election results were announced.

As you can see from previous blogs we had massive amounts of support throughout what was an enjoyable, comradely and fun campaign.  We had a solid team of regular helpers, who came out several times a week in the run-up to the election, and on election day we had about 30 people out in St Peters alone.

After the results were announced the Lib Dems claimed we had "shipped in" help from other places which had helped us to win.  This is simply not true.  Nearly all the people who helped were members, supporters or friends who live in St Peters who wanted to see us get re-elected.  Together we contacted a huge number of people, and we had some very interesting and useful conversations on the doorstep.  We convinced our constituents to vote for us. In contrast, the Lib Dems were no-where to be seen, preferring instead to bombard people through their letterboxes with a huge quantities of dull, repetitive leaflets.  The result speaks for itself.

Monday 12 April 2010

Cycling, the towpath, and what's happening at Danbury Street Bridge?


Since I became a Councillor four years ago there has been a significant number of people starting to talk to me about the dramatic increase in the number of cyclists using the towpath. Their concern is not just numbers of cyclists, but also the way a minority of antisocial cyclists are intimidating people away from using the towpath, in particular parents taking young children to school. Many of these people find it ironic that TFL and British Waterways have actively promoted this use, to the point where it is now making them uncomfortable when they try and use the towpath. I make these comments in the light of British Waterways’ recognition that conflicts between pedestrians and cyclists are becoming an issue on the towpath, and which has lead to them commissioning the rather odd works now taking place at Danbury Street Ramp, of which more in a minute. I also speak as a regular commuting cyclist myself, and a parent.

I have a keen interest in achieving the right balance between pedestrian and cyclists’ interests in shared spaces, and during my time as a Councillor I have put a very large amount of time and effort into getting TFL to improve the junction at Goswell Road and City Road. This has now been done, more-or-less as I suggested, and has resulted in better and safer crossing conditions for pedestrians and cyclists, both of which groups were previously getting tangled with each other as they tried to cross two busy roads in close succession. I consider this scheme has achieved an acceptable balance between pedestrian and cyclist interests, making it fair for all.
Turning to the towpath, it is in many people’s view too narrow and too dangerous to take the weight of cycle traffic currently using it, particularly at peak times. More specifically, it seems to be cyclists in a hurry, presumably commuters, and people using their cycles for intensive exercise, that are making the towpath intimidating and unsafe for everyone else – peaceable cyclists and pedestrians alike.

An increasing number of people are of the view that it is time to try and restore the balance between pedestrians and cyclists on the towpath, and I support this view. A 'parallel route' for cyclists has now been identified heading East, running along roads close to the canal, many of which are closed to car traffic. This route would be more appropriate for cyclists in a hurry or commuting, and I think the existence of this route should be more widely promoted. In combination with this, British Waterways could then take further measures to encourage cyclists to slow down on the towpath: the most practical approach in my view being the introduction of 'kissing gates' either side of dangerous bridges, at the top and bottom of ramps, or at other dangerous points. This would mean cyclists would almost certainly have to dismount at these points, slowing them down, and thereby encouraging the ones in a hurry to prefer the parallel route – a ‘stick and carrot' approach. Ideas I have heard suggested to ‘build out’ the towpath at bridges and other narrow spots would make it easier for cyclists to maintain their speed, and is to my mind the wrong approach.

Which brings me to the construction activity at the Danbury Street ramp:

I was first made aware that British Waterways had ideas to ‘improve’ the ramp after a meeting last summer of the ‘Friends of Regents Canal’. British Waterways were aware of pedestrian/cyclist conflicts on the ramp, and had attempted to solve this by putting a ‘kissing gate’ arrangement half way down the ramp. They soon decided that this arrangement was unsafe and removed it again, partly because cyclists continued to travel down the ramp at speed and then had to brake suddenly when they reached the obstruction halfway down. They had therefore come up with a scheme to extend the ramp, which addressed their stated concern, which was that the ramp was not ‘DDA compliant’, which is a rather daft argument for a 200 year old structure in a conservation area. These proposals looked cumbersome and expensive to me, and didn’t really address the issue of conflicts.

I heard nothing more about this scheme, until I received a forwarded email from Gillian Comins, the very energetic and conscientious former secretary of Islington Living Streets. The email was advising her that British Waterways would be starting improvement works to the ramp in less than two weeks. No-one else locally knew anything about it.
I contacted British Waterways, to ask why local Councillors had not been consulted about this, and the project manager admitted to me that “consultation with the local council was not done in this instance”. But he said the contract was placed and that they were going ahead anyway. I also found out that Islington Planners had not been consulted about the scheme, and that it involved felling two large trees to make way for the changes. The tree service advised me they had consented to the removal of the trees on the basis that British Waterways had assured them they had consulted locally on the proposal, which they hadn’t. The trees have already gone.

The scheme they are now going to build has been significantly watered down from the original proposal, to the point where it now provides separate shallow steps for pedestrians, with the ramp rebuilt at the existing gradient. And whilst this resolves the conflict between able-bodied pedestrians and cyclists, wheelchair users and parents with buggies will still have to use the ramp, which is as steep as it was, and which will now be mainly a cycleway. So in short, the scheme is a huge expense, which fails to properly solve any of the problems originally identified.
This is another example of a large public agency which is meant to serve the public (as are TFL) doing pretty much what they like, and just not bothering to consult local people. What I don’t think they realise is that by consulting locally; residents, cyclists and pedestrians, they could probably have got a much better scheme.
I am passionate about proper local consultation and involvement, and If I am successfully re-elected on May 6th (which is quite soon) one of my main priorities will be trying to restore some level of accountability and transparency with organisations such as, TFL and British Waterways, the PCT, HFI, Enterprise, etc. I have begun this process with the PCT in the last year as Chair of the Health and Wellbeing Scrutiny Committee, but this is not much more than scratching the surface of the issue. I should also add that the Labour Group has made a specific manifesto commitment to tackle anti-social cycling, which gives all other cyclists a bad name.

A footnote to the Danbury Street issue is the total road closure on Danbury Street Bridge, which has been given to the contractors whilst the work goes on. Local residents, motorists and cyclists are incensed that this seems to be almost entirely to provide free car parking for contractors visiting the site. So whilst the contractors get free car parking, local people have to drive all round the auction. Except that cyclists are now hopping onto the narrow pavement that is left, and risking accidents with pedestrians. I have spoken to Highways about the cycling issue, and suggested that they reduce the width of the compound sufficiently to allow cyclists to use part of the road – which would eliminate conflict and make it safe for both. They have said they will consider this. Lets see if it actually happens.

Sunday 7 March 2010

Save the Whittington Hospital!

Residents of Islington, Haringey and Camden are enraged and alarmed at the prospect of losing the Whittington Hospital.  Everyone, but everyone has a story to tell about how the Whittington helped them, whether it was a heart attack, diabetes getting out of control, a child splitting it’s head open, or where you were born, the Whittington was there.  The Hospital is a source of an immense sense of security to everyone who thinks of it as ‘their’ hospital, and those same people feel deeply threatened and upset at the possibility they might lose it. 

Local feeling about the hospital was in no doubt on Saturday 27th February when around 5,000 people turned out to march up the Holloway Road and demonstrate against the closure.  The feeling as we walked up the Holloway Road from Highbury was uplifting, with many of the cars passing the demonstration beeping their horns in support.  Interestingly, the nearer we got to the hospital, the more beeps we got from cars coming the other way.  David Lammy, Emily Thornberry, Jeremy Corbyn, Union representatives, campaign organisers and many more all spoke eloquently and passionately about the vital importance of the Hospital to the area.

The question is, with all local political parties appearing to oppose closure, how come it is still being suggested?  Well the answer is, that NHS Bureaucrats have decided, behind closed doors, that according to the theory that we have too many hospitals, they need to close some of them.

But why doesn’t anyone have any control over these Bureaucrats? The answer to this, is that under the Liberal Democrats laissez-faire attitude, for the last eight years, all of the ‘arms length’ organisations overseen by the Council (eg HFI, the PCT, CEA, all the myriad subcontractors, etc tc) have been lulled into an attitude that they don’t need to worry about consultation or accountability.  For example, when the Lib Dems first got into power they put the bullying leader of the Council onto the PCT Board, as vice-chair, leaving the PCT with the impression that they are in direct communication with the Council and its views.

Unfortunately, in 2006, when the Lib Dem Leader of the Council lost his seat (to us), he didn’t lose his seat on the PCT Board, and he has remained there until very recently, which may help to explain why the increasing power of Labour in the Council has failed to bring about any kind of culture-change at the PCT.

The Lib Dems love this cosy little arrangement whereby they can sit in the Town Hall and preside over wonderful statistics about how well the Borough is performing, without actually having to be accountable for the delivery of services.  Since Labour increased the number of seats we hold on the Council by over 100% in 2006, we have been struggling to force the Lib Dems to give us control of the Scrutiny Committees, which we should by rights be given, since we have as many seats as they do.  Last year we were able to place Independent Lib Dem and whistle-blower Andrew Cornwell in the Chair of Overview, and I was asked to Chair the Health Scrutiny Committee. 

During this year, I have been endeavouring to use the powers of the committee to call to account the PCT regarding their fudged plans for selling off Finsbury Health centre, and I have also required that all the Trusts providing healthcare services to residents in Islington appear at the committee to report on their progress during the last year. When the Trusts have appeared, it has given us the chance to put some awkward questions to them, providing the first step in restoring accountability, which will lead to service improvements that residents, not the bureaucrats, want.

It may seem like all parties oppose the closure of the Whittington. But if you want to vote for a party that has the strength and the determination to see accountability, fairness and quality of services restored, the only party to vote for is Labour.

Sunday 17 January 2010

Labour leading as campaign steps up

Labour activists throughout Islington are upbeat as campaigning efforts step up ahead of the local elections. Canvassing teams are busy all round the Borough, and contact on the doorstep is showing strong support for Labour, for our approach to making Islington a fairer place for everyone to live, and in particular for our policy on free school meals for all primary school children.

Voters are pleased to see Labour out in force, and are fed up with the ineffectual and indecisive Lib Dems', who run the borough as if the only thing that matters is statistics. The "fastest improving borough" means nothing to people who are still living on overcrowded estates, who can't get their bins emptied, and can't even get the Council to put a new lightbulb in the streetlamp outside their home.

This picture shows one of our St Peters teams, who were out on the Popham Estate this weekend. From left to right, activists Henry, Jack, Felix and Kate, with myself and Cllr Catherine West, Leader of the Labour Group. Lots of fresh air, and the scent of a wind of change.