Collective Punishments on Lambeth Citizens
Our long suffering citizens are being lined up for yet more punishment from our masters. First, our secondary schools are being starved of resources, except for a handful of institutions favoured by the 'Blair Babes' running the education service. One angry secondary school headteacher, who I interviewed last Friday, described some of our Council's officers as "incompetent" and told how she'd been hectored by a Labour councillor who told her Lambeth had no need for more faith-based school places, but needed more places for the children of the middle classes. The particular school in question is much favoured by parents from all walks of life especially our black community and has eight applications for every place. It is not likely to get any resources under the so-called Building Schools for the Future programme until 2009. Some of the metrics used here have been changed to protect the innocent from reprisals.In the Shrek movies, they had a particular name for the 'Blair Babe' fantasists in our Town Hall who think church schools are unpopular - 'the land of far far away'. But in the meantime, our customer friendly Comrades have been lining up collective punishments for those areas in the south of the borough that don't vote Labour at local elections. Gone is the proposed GB pounds 500,000 in Norwood lesiure facilities. Cut is the proposed GB pounds 1.387 million investment at the Vale Street recycling site, a popular facility that badly needs a makeover to keep local people satisfied about its green credentials. Slashed is GB pounds 500,000 of investment in street wardens and cut to GB pounds 100,000 are the budgets for the area committees which are especially well attended in Norwood and Streatham.Hardly any of these proposed 'deletions' from the budget have any impact on Brixton or Vauxhall, but motorists everywhere are not going to escape unscathed. Not only are there plans for differential charging based on the size of engines, but there are strong indications, leaked to Conservative members by some of our more upstanding officers, that the GB pound 60 parking permit will have its price at least doubled and perhaps put up even more. Our people are told that this will be offset by improvements in the parking service where courtesy and fairness are now the proper way of working. Yet only the other day I received a letter from a woman in Deronda Road who says she lived in Czechoslovakia under Communism. The sight of a marauding pack of traffic wardens (they operate in threes like buses) makes her wonder whether they are coming to get her or a neighbour. It can only be a matter of time before everyone is hammered.Labels: Area Committees, Education, Leisure, Parking permits, Parking wardens, Play areas, School places, Street wardens
Labour's First Big Test - We Can't Wait
Our citizens are waiting with nervous anticipation for Labour's big test at the autumn council meeting this week. If the Comrades succeed in their aim of denying our tenants a ballot over the Arms Length Management Organisation (ALMO), bonfires will be lit for the ritual burning of their election manifesto, which is silent on this contentious matter. None other than Comrade Kate Hoey, the feisty Ulster-born Labour MP for Vauxhall, thunders in her latest newsletter that tenants must have a democratic say in the future ownership of their homes through a proper ballot. How will the Houdinis of the Labour front bench wriggle out of this one?Labour hates Council meetings and Area Committees where our citizens can vent their spleen on their rulers. Whereas in their wildnerness years they brought delegations to the meetings now they are less keen on hearing the voice of our people. That is why the ALMO meeting was rolled into the regular council meeting to cut down the time for debate. In an almost incomprehensible document attached to Wednesday's agenda the popular Area Committees are to be scrapped: the smart money is a return to a 'local governors' system in Lambeth favoured by Labour in 1998-2002 and not dissimilar to how the Blair government runs southern Iraq. This extract from Scottish civil servant Rory Stewart's account of a year as a governor of a province in Iraq post Saddam is instructive: "It was vital that WE selected the right councillors, for they would have to guide the province through the first few months of independence [for this read Labour rule in Lambeth] with very little support from the centre."It would also be worth our people taking comfort by reflecting on Machiavelli's warning in The Prince Chapter 19 'What will make [the ruler] despised is being considered inconstant, frivolous, effeminate, pusillanimous: a ruler must avoid contempt as if it were a reef.'Another piece of stealth attached to the back of the council agenda is the huge pay hike Labour councillors are proposing to award to their leaders with the Leader himself drawing GB pounds 38k plus GB pounds 10k in ordinary allowances. It is unlikely, in my opinion, to be debated but nodded through at the end of the meeting. While some of the 'payroll vote' within the administration are jobless a few are being tempted to combine well-paid part-time jobs in the real world with these new allowances. Rumours, no doubt untrue, reach me that up to a dozen Labour members have reservations about the size of some of the new allowances. What is sure is that the doubters will not have the strength of mind to vote against this sleight of hand.Labels: Allowances, ALMO, Area Committees
Politicising Remembrance - Nothing is Sacred
In our borough of Lambeth nothing is sacred any more. Some of our Labour masters have now applied their rule book to even the most innocent of activities, such as laying wreathes on Remembrance Sunday. The 'Dear Leader' has decreed that at least one Comrade must attend every remembrance service and lay his or own wreath inscribed "from the administration." It seems that the cross party spirit of the Cenotaph no longer travels south of the river into our community. But, first some advice about the process. The administration Whip must ensure next year that his disciples are sent to the right places, especially to remote places far, far, away such as Gipsy Hill and Thurlow Park. It is also better to lay wreathes with red poppies not white, as some veterans feel strongly about the dangers of pacifism and appeasement Next, however, the Whip's highly-paid ambassadors need training in when to stand up and sit down in church since some of them are not believers. They also require mandatory A-Z Guides to find their way to places that have never seen Labour councillors in over a decade, such as the Peabody Estate. In these 'no go zones' for Labour it is not always possible to rely on the natives being friendly. Some of them have long memories of how their communities were always by-passed when resources were devoted to Brixton for the 30 years up to 2002.It was also remarkable how some of these new envoys wanted to scurry away home to Brixton and Clapham without even saying hello to the locals. Perhaps they sense there was less than a warm welcome for people who in previous years had never shown their faces in Norwood on Remembrance Sunday. I stood by as a local man removed the card on which was written 'from the Administration' and put it in the nearest rubbish bin.' To those who we remembered there is no longer any politics, and for those of us who remember them, perhaps that is a good thing.
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