Labour Only Do It In The Afternoon
Our citizens curious for knowledge about what our Labour masters and mistresses have in store for them will now have to flock to the Town Hall in the afternoons to hear words of wisdom from their leaders. Cabinet meetings for the next three months will start at 2.30 p.m. to enable Labour bosses to 'nod through' the business without the unnecessary presence of our citizens most of whom will be at work or caring for relatives or children. Our highly paid officers will be able to have the evening off watching soccer or getting to know their families.Not since the dark days of the Blitz has the Cabinet, or its previous incarnation, met in the daytime. Any elected Opposition member, or citizen for that matter, who works in a school or in a job with fixed daytime hours is disenfranchised. Clearly, we won't be seeing mobs of sinister tee-shirted children marshalled by aggressive stewards jeering at the Cabinet as used to be the case when Labour were in opposition. Remember when they dressed children in bin liners to shout abuse at H.M. The Queen much to the anger of one of our head teachers who silently wrote down the names of the children from his school who he recognised on TV?Sadly, the past is also no guide to our future. With budget making fast approaching and stealth taxes on the horizon it seemed a good moment to review what our masters proposed just 12 months ago. Lo! They advocated the demise of Lambeth Life, our monthly information bulletin from the Town Hall, whose newsprint is so costly you can't even light a fire with it. The elimination of jobs in the press office was another cut proposed by Labour's veteran finance guru who works for The Times business pages and vast reductions in agency staff as well as IT projects being put on hold plus job cuts in policy and performance. When May 5th dawned, of course, all these initiatives were forgotten in the grab for power. The Times business journalist had returned to his role of writing about capitalism. Lambeth Life still comes through some of our letter boxes with pictures of our new leaders adorning every page. Curiously, the same department who publishes it used to say no pictures could appear of politicians. New posts have been created in the miscommunications department and that temp somewhere in the town hall who came from an agency to do the photocopying last summer was still here at Christmas. New figures show that it costs more than GB pounds 2,000 a year to pay for every paper pusher working in the town hall - and that doesn't count the new offices refurbished over Christmas at vast expense to the tax payer.Our tax payers are in for a hard time with Labour extracting the maximum council tax increase permitted by their government of 4.99 per cent with an extra two per cent to cover Mayor Livingstone's foreign policy initiatives in Venezuela. In the meantime waste and excess is tolerated. The cost of borrowing a library book in Lambeth, if you can find one in any of the libraries, is GB pounds 10.29 compared to GB pounds 3.64 in neighbouring Wandsworth where it is rumoured there are books. The figures, courtesy of CIPFA, were published last week although data from the most efficient library at Upper Norwood was not included, despite the authority spending GB pounds 1.1 million a year on headquarters library mandarins.Labels: Cabinet, Council tax, Democracy, Libraries
Celebrating Conservative Success in London
Conservatives are often rather backward in coming forward to celebrate their progress in local government. London is no exception. Yet it is becoming clearer by the day that Labour realises we are now the dominant party in both London and local government nationally for the forseeable future. The actions of the Labour government in adding to Mayor Livingstone's powers show how desperate they are - only through Livingstone's mayoralty can they retain any dominance over London politics.But Labour is also losing its grip. At last week's meeting of the London Fire Authority Livingstone's chairwoman - the GLA Assembly Member for Lambeth and Southwark - had the rug pulled out from under one of her pet projects - the GLA Labour Brussels Office. Taking advantage of an absence of two Labour members, Conservatives voted to withdraw funding on the basis that the authority is about fire and rescue services in London not Belgium.Indeed Conservatives now control 16 out of the 32 London town halls with a joint Conservative administration with the third party of national politics in three more. If you look at the political map of London, Labour has retreated into its fortress boroughs in parts of East and North London. In East London they are under threat from an extermist nationalist party, largely because of decades of taking absolute power for granted. There is no Labour council west of a line drawn between Sutton and Barnet.As for the 'Ming Emperor', his Party has very little to celebrate. In May, in their three flagship boroughs, Liberal Democrats narrowly held Sutton and Kingston, but lost overall control of Islington. As the Kingston and Sutton results show, Conservatives can go head to head with Liberals and win.Londoners have only a bleak outlook to face from City Hall with a huge increase in fare rises on public transport in London - 33 per cent in the past year alone. Essentially, by shunting NHS costs onto London's boroughs, the Government has turned the council tax into a health 'stealth' tax.In Lambeth, the elderly are facing a 132 per cent increase in the cost of social care. The new Labour zealots at the town hall are enthusiastically enforcing the philosophy of Gordon Brown before he has even moved next door to No 10. It won't take long before the voters see that the promises made last May were as worthless as the manifesto they were written on. And as for the Labour MP for Dulwich and West Norwood, instead of living in South Africa under the stars for her long Christmas holiday working on a sports project, it might be a good idea to spend the odd night in her constituency visiting a multi use games area.Labels: Elderly, GLA, Ken Livingstone, Labour Lambeth, NHS, Val Shawcross
Family Friendly Labour - Never on a Friday Night
Our leaders have followed their massive pay hikes by adopting new 'family friendly' policies - the Cabinet Member for Housing has taken an enthusiastic lead by telling the Lambeth Tenants Council that he couldn't attend their most important meeting of the year because Friday was 'family night.' It rather begs the question as to why everyone else had to turn out on a wet January night - perhaps they don't have families' - but our masters often tell us 'do as I say, not do as I do.'
As forecast, our long suffering citizens are in for a 'double dunning' in the Spring with parking permits for residents living around commuter stations rising by nearly 100 per cent to GB pounds 115. This 'stand and deliver' strategy has already been described by many residents as 'highway robbery' especially as it's disguised in the fig leaf of 'green policies.' Although gas guzzlers will pay more in controlled parking areas, most people with bigger vehicles live in areas where there is either no controlled parking zone or abundant off street parking.
If the Cabinet Member for Housing was instantly unpopular for ducking out of a showdown with tenants over proposed rent rises, the Cabinet Member for the Environment was at least blessed with a rush of blood to the head and had an honest moment or rather a 'Ratner Moment.' Talking to what will be described as an 'informed source' to protect the innocent she admitted that it was fairly breathtaking to increase the charges at Lambeth's leisure centres by 25 per cent. The Ratner link? Although widely regarded as 'tacky', the Ratner shops and their wares were nevertheless extremely popular with the public, until Gerald Ratner made a speech at the Institute of Directors in April 1991 describing them as 'crap.' You've guessed it the unlucky Cabinet member described Lambeth Council's leisure centres as 'crap.' That will go down very well with the people who work there, one of whom reads this blog.Labels: Leisure centres, Parking permits, Tenants Council
We Waited Until After Xmas for the Bad News
It's a New Year for our citizens here in the south east Lambeth, but the same old rotten service from Labour Lambeth Council. You're not surprised? Well the sting in the tail is that it's going to cost you more. The Lambeth chunk of the Council Tax is set to rise by 4.99% in April, while the Mayor of London is taking another 5.3% off Lambeth to pay for his bloated bureaucracy at City Hall and plans to celebrate Fidel Castro's golden anniversary.Needless to say, the builders have been at work over the Christmas holidays at Lambeth Town Hall creating luxury office suites for a total spend of GB pounds 52,000 with furniture worth GB pounds 28,000 thrown in. As if to make it sound better, officers say the Chief Executive is going to have a smaller office. Perhaps this is because on the face of it he spends less time in the Town Hall than most of his predecessors since Heather Rabbatts. I feel sure that's because he is working wonders in Whitehall on behalf of the Labour administration.Either way, Lambeth is a soft touch for building contractors judging by the amount of time I observed their operatives actually spend on the job while not smoking outside the building. However, at least one of them must have a big heart because the Town Hall cat resident in the basement is receiving regular cat food. The press office deny that 'Puss' is resident there - my digital photos prove otherwise. Labour Lambeth has the kind of spin doctors who would have denied that the holy family was in Bethlehem 2,000 years ago.What does make me angry though is that while holidaying senior officers get better office equipment and furniture, the elderly residents of Skiffington Close in Tulse Hill have recently been told that there are no plans to decorate or refurbish their bungalows, which have not been painted for 25 years.The only antidote is to get out there and do something about it. This afternoon, I delivered among hundreds of others two leaflets to the spruce and well decorated home on Gipsy Hill of one 'Edward Knight' former left wing firebrand leader of the Council in the 1980s and intimate of the current Mayor of London. One of the uncelebrated events of 2006 was the 20th anniversary of 'Red Ted's' resignation on the instructions of the District Auditor for failing to set a rate. Judging by the smart and well lettered 'Edward Knight' on his nameplate, he can't have done badly from his disastrous tenure of office. The leaflet was all about saving the Upper Norwood Library. I wonder what Ted'll make of our criticism directed at Labour's Councillor on the library committee for 'failing to vote to set a budget?' Leopards don't change their spots do they.Labels: Council tax, Puss, Skiffington Close, Upper Norwood Library
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