During the election I met a young man who I shall call Craig who has learning and physical disabilities. He is very enthusiastic about politics and has kept in touch with me since the election. A few weeks ago we agreed to meet up at dinner time in a local cafe, on the day his ESA was due to be paid into his account.
Just before the allotted time he texted me to say that he would not be able to eat when we met because he had no money. He had been to the bank but there was nothing in his account. A phone call to the DWP had revealed that his ESA has been stopped because they have deemed him capable of work after an assessment. Naturally I said I would pay for him and when we met we talked about his situation.
Craig is currently volunteering part-time at a youth club for children with learning disabilities like him, but has not worked since he left school, he is 22.
Of course he is going to appeal, with the help of his mum who is his carer, but in the meantime he has been obliged to report to the job centre. He has now told me that he has been asked to apply for fifty jobs a day, twenty five by leaving CVs with employers and twenty five online. I cannot believe he has that right, even fifty a week sounds like a lot but that is what he understands (and remember he has learning difficulties).
I very much hope that with the assistance of his Doctor who will provide written evidence of his various conditions, and his Mum, he is able to have his ESA restored. Otherwise I can only see benefit sanctions on the horizon for Craig. How is he supposed to find all of these jobs? And then how he is supposed to apply for them? Will an advisor be made permanently available to him to sit with him in the job centre and help him? He wouldn't be capable of doing it by himself. If he fails to meet these stringent targets - through no fault of his own, all of his benefits will be stopped for three months and ultimately for three years.
Employment opportunities for young men in Thornaby are few and far between at the moment, and competing with able-bodied people with qualifications will prove nigh on impossible. Even assuming that somehow he could secure work, I cannot see how he could actually perform on a proper and prolonged basis with his disabilities.
Is Craig really who George Osborne had in his sights when he said
Where is the fairness, we ask, for the shift-worker, leaving home in the
dark hours of the early morning, who looks up at the closed blinds of
their next door neighbour sleeping off a life on benefits?
Surely it is the job of social campaigners - and the Labour Party - to tell the real stories about benefit recipients, about those whom the safety net protects, rather than vote for reform in a populist way because it is what the public evidently want.
I feel passionately that it is their ignorance of the truth that needs to be changed, not our system of support. I am convinced that the average voter imagines benefits to be paid at a much higher rate than they actually are. We need to educate people, not acquiesce with views based on incorrect assumptions.
I have to admit to becoming yet more despondent as the reality for
vulnerable people in this country becomes ever more difficult.
Louise Baldock was a Labour Councillor in the city of Liverpool for two terms, 2006 - 2014. This was her award-winning blog, written mainly as a councillor about issues affecting Kensington and Fairfield ward, sometimes as a politician, and sometimes simply personal commentary. Although she thought she might rekindle the blog after May 2015, she has now changed her mind and leaves this as an archive and record.
Tuesday, July 21, 2015
Tuesday, July 07, 2015
Getting back in the blogging saddle
As a Parliamentary Candidate in my home town in Stockton South, it was not really possible to maintain a blog of social commentary. Candidates are representatives of their party and its manifesto; it is not for them to question the direction of policy but to present it to voters for their examination.
Furthermore, with a fully interactive candidate's website where I could talk about local issues, publish photos and encourage people to sign up for campaigns, I didn't need to run two sites simultaneously with the work involved and the potential confusion that could cause. Consequently I took the decision to suspend the blog during the election.
Now that I am once again free to write about subjects that interest me, I am restarting the blog although entries may be fairly sparse to begin with while I get back into the habit.
I look forward to the opportunity to engage with readers once again.
Furthermore, with a fully interactive candidate's website where I could talk about local issues, publish photos and encourage people to sign up for campaigns, I didn't need to run two sites simultaneously with the work involved and the potential confusion that could cause. Consequently I took the decision to suspend the blog during the election.
Now that I am once again free to write about subjects that interest me, I am restarting the blog although entries may be fairly sparse to begin with while I get back into the habit.
I look forward to the opportunity to engage with readers once again.
Monday, June 02, 2014
Reflections as a councillor and community champion
| 2006: Being sworn in as a Liverpool City Councillor |
This was the date when my successor, Labour's Sue Heron, was elected in Kensington and Fairfield with 68% of the vote.
The eight years I served have been full of highs and lows; great achievements alongside disappointments and heartaches; huge learning curves and tremendous experiences.
My election came as a surprise to most people who had not expected to see a Labour victory in a ward where the three sitting Liberal Democrats had served sixty years between them. It was not a surprise to me or our small Labour team though because we had spent six months knocking on doors and listening to residents about their concerns; I found out precisely which issues people were concerned about in the local area and then I campaigned to make a difference for them. It is fair to say that when I arrived in Liverpool there was not really a history of knocking on doors outside of election times and not much of one during elections really either but it is something I believe strongly in and I was determined to pull together a small team of people who were prepared to give it a go. I remember visiting a house on Laburnum Road where the woman said she had waited over twenty years for Labour to call. At a house on Minto Close a couple said it was the first time they could recall anyone calling. "In this election?" I asked, "No. Ever", they said, adding they had lived there 25 years.
It made all the difference and helped me to win the seat with a tiny majority. All year round campaigning ever since has ensured that Labour went on to win and hold the other two councillor positions and it is now one of the wards with the highest percentage of voter contact in the city.
The issues that most people were concerned about back in 2006 were
1. The lack of a fee free cash machine. People who have easy access to banks and free cash machines in their more affluent neighbourhoods cannot imagine how difficult it is to have to pay upwards of £1.85 for the privilege of drawing out your own money, especially if you only want £10. It is a massive tax on the poor. It was to take me 5 years to achieve in the ward and even when I was chairing my final Finance and Resources Select Committee in April this year the council was still working on plans to secure fee free machines for parts of West Derby constituency.
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| Free cashpoint machine arrives February 2011 |
2. There wasn't enough for young people to do and there was a worrying rise in anti-social behaviour. I quickly became involved with Central Youth Club and discovered they were only able to find funds to open on limited days each week. Over the next eight years, working with Wendy and then Liam we were able to make sizeable donations from our locally devolved budget to keep the youth club open 7 days a week and also provide outreach workers who could go out on to the streets where young people gathered and talk to them about what they wanted to do with their leisure time. We also funded choirs, parties at Halloween, made donations to Edge Hill Youth Club in the next ward and set up and helped fund the Youth Forum which brought together everyone providing activities for young people in Kensington and Fairfield so they could plan their programmes without clashing with each other.
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| Presenting certificates at an awards night at Central Youth Club |
3. There were lots of calls for more and better shops back in 2006. The south side of Kensington was mostly boarded up and derelict, the old skating rink was a cleared site surrounded by hoardings, and the choice available was essentially hot food takeaways, betting shops and off licences. I can't personally claim credit for the demolition, the tidying up of shop fronts or the building of new shops along Prescot Road but certainly it was facilitated by the Labour Government through New Deal for Communities and HMRI. I was very proud that at one of my final council meetings of 2014 I was at last able to speak in favour of a policy to restrict the further opening of any more takeways and off licences. It is easy to forget how bad things were before but here are a few of the "before" photographs.
| Boarded up shops and pub fronting Pythian Park 2006 |
| Rear of shops and pub on Kensington awaiting demolition 2007 |
And these are some of the new shops on Prescot Road now.
![]() | |
| Kensington Neighbourhood Centre |
Eight years is a long time and there were a rich wealth of experiences that I could share, but most of them feature here on this blog so you don't need to look too far.
Something that really made a difference was being able to secure victory for Wendy Simon and Liam Robinson in 2007 and 2008 so that we had a full Labour team taking the ward forward, sharing ideas, expertise, tasks and responsibilities. We have worked brilliantly well together and I owe them a great deal - as do the people of Liverpool.
I was fortunate to have been elected in a variety of council positions; chairing our Neighbourhood Committee, shadow Executive Member, Assistant Executive Member, Chair of Newsham Park Forum, Chair of Finance and Resources Select Committee and city lead for Equality and Diversity. I also took scrutiny forward outside of the Council, by working with the Guild of Students where I shared an award from CfPS, at Venture Housing Association as its Vice Chair and as an active member of St Hilda's CE Girls High School. In all of those positions I learned much about how to deliver for the people of the city.
It wasn't all easy going though. I think I would describe my time in Local Government as a story of two halves. Before 2010 resources were plentiful but we had a Liberal Democrat led council and although I managed to get into a good position chairing the Neighbourhood Committee and also had a big chunk of locally devolved budget to spend on environmental improvements and other good projects, many of the changes I wanted to see for residents were stubborn in arriving. I could not persuade the leader of the council to fine dog foulers or fly tippers, selective licensing of private landlords was turned down time and again for our area and Fairfield Community Centre was regularly under threat of closure.
After 2010 with a Labour majority on Liverpool Council again, we had the power to effect change but very quickly lacked the resources with which to make a difference. It was a very dark day when the Area Based Grant was abolished with a stroke of the pen; it had funded Family Intervention Projects, Community Cohesion work, free fruit for kids at school, Domestic Violence Projects, community skips galore, advice centres and youth projects and much more; suddenly it was all gone. Our local budget had to start stretching to meet things we had never had to fund before. Then once the austerity cuts to the revenue budget started to come along things went from bad to worse and we lost a lot of good quality local projects in the area.
However, we made the best with what we had and with a huge amount of goodwill on all sides.
I think my proudest legacy surely must be the level of partnership working we have achieved.
There is the Kensington and Fairfield Problem Solving Group which brings together all the partners, agencies and organisations providing a service in the ward along with residents and church groups. Working together we have tackled some very serious issues facing local people, steadfastly tackling obstacles, pooling together slender resources and ruthlessly targeting crime and anti-social behaviour, environmental blight, youth unemployment, the establishment of a food bank, Respect weeks, supporting community cohesion with European Neighbour's Day and establishing "Love my Street" initiatives in particularly run down roads. And of course there is the Newsham Park Forum which I wrote about after my final meeting, the Youth Forum and all the Tenants and Residents Groups we have supported over the years.
It has been a wonderful experience, enriching, empowering, deeply satisfying and very fulfilling. I have seen some big projects through to fruition - like the restoration of the wonderful Victorian Jewish Cemetery on Deane Road but also I have helped individuals with their own cases. There is nothing better than achieving a result for someone who has been struggling alone for a long time and have come to see their councillor in final desperation.
If the opportunity to stand for Parliament in my home town had not arisen last year, I would have been standing for council again last week, keen to take on another four year term and carry on tackling priorities and issues, for the ward and for the city. However, the chance to go to Parliament hopefully as part of a Labour government voting to abolish the bedroom tax, to increase the minimum wage substantially and to introduce a jobs guarantee for young people is something I feel I need to do. My focus now is on winning back Stockton South for Labour but I go knowing that if I am successful, I will be voting to bring about change for Liverpool too.
I want to thank everyone who I have worked with over those eight years, those who were there at the beginning but have since moved on to other jobs (or sadly died), those who were there at the end having newly arrived and those who stayed the course with me. I have been given friendship, love and support in abundance.
The ward of Kensington and Fairfield is a wonderful part of a wonderful city with fantastic residents; it might not be affluent and people might be struggling but they are rich in spirit. Serving them has been an honour.
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| Some of the fab residents and comrades who came to wish me goodbye a few weeks ago at my leaving party |
Thursday, May 01, 2014
'My ticket' - all day bus pass for £2 per day for young people
Email from Liam Robinson, chair of Merseytravel and Labour councillor for Kensington and Fairfield
Please spread
the word about a new £2 all-day bus ticket, ‘My Ticket’, which Merseytravel are launching
on 1 May. The ticket is available to buy on the majority of buses operating
within the Merseyside area for those aged 15 and under and could help reduce travel
costs for young people by more than 50 per cent.
In January, we held an event entitled
“Fare Deal for Young People”, along with Louise Ellman MP, Chair of the Commons
Transport Select Committee, when we pledged to work together with operators to
bring down the cost of travel and help remove a potential barrier to education,
work and leisure opportunities. After further work with bus operators, the ‘My
Ticket’ is the result of this commitment and is the first step forward in
getting a fair deal for our young people. According to the Campaign for Better
Transport in 2013, young people listed the cost of transport as their number one
concern.
We hope that ‘My Ticket’ will make a difference to many young
people. A young person at one of our customer forums told us he uses three
buses to get to and from school, costing over £6 per day because his mum doesn’t
have the money at the beginning of the week to buy a weekly ticket. The £2
ticket will reduce his travel costs and will mean he can meet up with his
friends or go to the local youth club in the evening as well.
We would be grateful if you could help us to promote this
ticket through your networks. It will no doubt be of interest to those who work
with young people, but I’m sure will be of interest to anybody with children
and grandchildren within Merseyside.
You can find out more information at http: www.merseytravel.gov.uk/Tickets/Pages/My-Ticket.aspx
.
If you would like additional materials, Posters or leaflets, or you require
any additional information to promote the ticket, please contact our Young
Person Engagement Team on 0151 330 1185
Wednesday, April 23, 2014
Feel the love - Newsham Park May 10th 2014
Email from Christina Ashworth for your interest
Remit for Photography
group
The purpose of the day is to provide
us with an opportunity to celebrate our community’s past, to reflect on and
discuss its present and then to plan how we might work best together to secure
its future.
Your brief is to help us do that by
creating a portrait of Newsham Park and its surrounding community in the
present day which helps to inspire and inform those discussions.
Remit for planting
party
The purpose of the day is to provide
us with an opportunity to celebrate our community’s past, to reflect on and
discuss its present and then to plan how we might work best together to secure
its future.
Your brief is to help us do that by
designing a new bed for the rose garden in the park. The bed needs to be designed in a way which
pays its respects to the design and history of the park but takes into account
the current pressures and future possibilities.
Therefore the design has to also offer seasonal interest, be easy to
maintain and contribute to the environment by being bee and butterfly friendly.
The finished design will be on display
on the 10th of May to help inspire a future vision of the park and
engage others in helping to realise it.
Remit for the cooking
party
To make and
or contribute to a ‘food revolution’ afternoon tea for the community to be held
at 3pm on the 10th of May.
This needs to celebrate the past and the memories and contribution of
people who have cooked before us as well as reflect the understanding we have
today about the costs and consequences of too much sugar and fat in our diet so
that we can work towards a healthier and happier future.
|
When
|
What
|
People
needed
|
Help
needed
|
|
8.30
am
|
Litter
pick in Park
|
Volunteers
|
Litter pickers and bags provided by LCC
Skips
|
|
11am
|
Planting
in the park
|
Participants
|
Promote
opportunity – small red heart planted in the Rose Garden to commemorate
WW2 - sow country lane mixture in pre prepared areas
|
|
|
Teddy
Bear’s Picnic
|
Participants
|
Promote
opportunity – Families with small kids – bring your child if you find a
bear in the woods its yours to keep
|
|
|
Activity
on West Derby Road – Flash Litter Mob
|
Participants
|
Recruit
activists
|
|
Afternoon
|
Activity
in the Adult Education Centre
|
||
|
1 pm
|
Consultation
on the planting plan for the park
|
Volunteers
stewards
Participants
|
flip
charts etc
|
|
3 pm
|
Tea
Dance
|
Participants
Suggestions
for the play list
|
This
is being facilitated by Jigsaw dance so that everyone can get involved – even
those too frail to stand - need help to promote the event to these groups and
support them to attend
Suggestions
for the play list
|
|
3pm
|
Afternoon
Tea
|
Cooks
|
Need
more help either to bake on the day or provide a plate of food for the day – all food must be home cooked.
|
|
|
Photographs
|
Old
Swan photography club
|
Participants
|
|
|
Consultation
about planning plans and the floral tribute to the Giant Girl
|
Project
Group with support from Karen B
|
Participants
|
|
5 –
7pm
|
The
Debate - consultation and discussion about how to better address
antisocial behaviour – including littering, dog mess, and vandalism – in the
park.
|
Facilitator
|
Participants
|
Wednesday, March 05, 2014
My final Newsham Park Forum meeting
Last night I chaired my final Newsham Park Forum; the next one won't be until June when I will no longer be a councillor.
People were very kind and generous with their parting words and I was delighted with a lovely card. There were lots of hugs and wishes of good fortune on all sides.
It got me thinking about what we have actually achieved over the last 8 years
I started by reflecting back to April 2006 before my first election when I planted roses with the Friends of Newsham Park This was my first real exposure to the park and it was quite a sorry place really, unloved, dirty, broken and crime ridden.
Later that year, after my election, I became chair of the council's Parks and Lakes Scrutiny Panel and we took a tour of Newsham Park with residents, police, gardeners, fishermen and others as part of our work We created a long wish list of work and improvements we all wanted to see. We had learned that our HLF bid was unsuccessful so we worked hard to find alternative ways to fund them.
And now here we are, 8 years on, with the most incredible list of achievements.
A pavilion and changing rooms for new football pitches
A kiosk selling refreshments - and acting as a key information point for the park with the excellent Rob on duty
Youth play equipment
Exercise equipment
Tree planting
Cricket wicket and a great local cricket club
Ping-pong table
Boating lake renewed
Return of the Liverpool Model Boating Club
Platforms in the lakes for the ducks and water birds
Wildflower planting in Denham Gardens
Bins
Picnic tables
Signage welcoming people to the park
Renewal of entrance gate posts
The birthday wood
There will be other improvements and enhancements I have forgotten...
And people are using the park for their leisure so much more often now too. Newsham Park Arts Festival, Shakespeare in the Park, Spring Fling, Sports Festival, Bonfire night firework events...
And it hasn't finished there; we took lots of progress reports last night including plans for a skateboard and BMX facility, a new Multi Use Games Area (MUGA), a new fountain and aerators in the lake nearly ready to be installed, the bicycle health project hopefully ready by Whitsun half term and upcoming events in the park being prepared (including one which will truly put the Park on the map!!).
I want to pay tribute to so many people for their help and support; the Forum epitomises the best of partnership working; Paul, Derek, Nigel and Tom from the council who have driven through and delivered on residents aspirations; the Friends of Newsham Park through its various incarnations; Pamela and Mark Boardman for spearheading so many of the residents groups; JB for never ceasing to push for change; Richard Milligan for his wonderful work on Wildlife Photography and the group determined to save our water birds; the Model Boat Club who have returned from Walton Hall Park to their original home and who celebrate their 50th anniversary this year; Glendale the gardeners; Academy of St Francis of Assisi for their enduring enthusiasm and hard work; Norah Burns and other residents for continuing to demand the best from their representatives; all the councillors who have represented the park for putting in funds from locally held budgets and recognising the value of the park; Christina and Althea and their volunteers who have picked litter, planted bulbs, painted railings and shown the true nature of people power; Steve and the group determined to see the Orphanage brought back into use; all the sportsmen and women who now play or train in the park; Citysafe for patrolling; Rob in the kiosk for acting as our unofficial Parky;
I am sure I have missed people from the list but that only goes to show just how many are involved.
There is always talk of legacy at the end of a political time in office and I like to think this granddaughter of a Corporation Gardener has helped to steer and guide some real improvements in a park I am sure he would have admired.
Good luck to whoever takes this work forward and don't ever let the lack of funding stop you from aiming as high as possible.
People were very kind and generous with their parting words and I was delighted with a lovely card. There were lots of hugs and wishes of good fortune on all sides.
It got me thinking about what we have actually achieved over the last 8 years
I started by reflecting back to April 2006 before my first election when I planted roses with the Friends of Newsham Park This was my first real exposure to the park and it was quite a sorry place really, unloved, dirty, broken and crime ridden.
Later that year, after my election, I became chair of the council's Parks and Lakes Scrutiny Panel and we took a tour of Newsham Park with residents, police, gardeners, fishermen and others as part of our work We created a long wish list of work and improvements we all wanted to see. We had learned that our HLF bid was unsuccessful so we worked hard to find alternative ways to fund them.
And now here we are, 8 years on, with the most incredible list of achievements.
A pavilion and changing rooms for new football pitches
A kiosk selling refreshments - and acting as a key information point for the park with the excellent Rob on duty
Youth play equipment
Exercise equipment
Tree planting
Cricket wicket and a great local cricket club
Ping-pong table
Boating lake renewed
Return of the Liverpool Model Boating Club
Platforms in the lakes for the ducks and water birds
Wildflower planting in Denham Gardens
Bins
Picnic tables
Signage welcoming people to the park
Renewal of entrance gate posts
The birthday wood
There will be other improvements and enhancements I have forgotten...
And people are using the park for their leisure so much more often now too. Newsham Park Arts Festival, Shakespeare in the Park, Spring Fling, Sports Festival, Bonfire night firework events...
And it hasn't finished there; we took lots of progress reports last night including plans for a skateboard and BMX facility, a new Multi Use Games Area (MUGA), a new fountain and aerators in the lake nearly ready to be installed, the bicycle health project hopefully ready by Whitsun half term and upcoming events in the park being prepared (including one which will truly put the Park on the map!!).
I want to pay tribute to so many people for their help and support; the Forum epitomises the best of partnership working; Paul, Derek, Nigel and Tom from the council who have driven through and delivered on residents aspirations; the Friends of Newsham Park through its various incarnations; Pamela and Mark Boardman for spearheading so many of the residents groups; JB for never ceasing to push for change; Richard Milligan for his wonderful work on Wildlife Photography and the group determined to save our water birds; the Model Boat Club who have returned from Walton Hall Park to their original home and who celebrate their 50th anniversary this year; Glendale the gardeners; Academy of St Francis of Assisi for their enduring enthusiasm and hard work; Norah Burns and other residents for continuing to demand the best from their representatives; all the councillors who have represented the park for putting in funds from locally held budgets and recognising the value of the park; Christina and Althea and their volunteers who have picked litter, planted bulbs, painted railings and shown the true nature of people power; Steve and the group determined to see the Orphanage brought back into use; all the sportsmen and women who now play or train in the park; Citysafe for patrolling; Rob in the kiosk for acting as our unofficial Parky;
I am sure I have missed people from the list but that only goes to show just how many are involved.
There is always talk of legacy at the end of a political time in office and I like to think this granddaughter of a Corporation Gardener has helped to steer and guide some real improvements in a park I am sure he would have admired.
Good luck to whoever takes this work forward and don't ever let the lack of funding stop you from aiming as high as possible.
Wednesday, February 05, 2014
Liverpool City Council introduces freephone numbers for benefits queries
Supporting local people in poverty, Liverpool City Council has introduced a new freephone system to at least save people having to pay big phone bills just to get advice.
Introduced from Monday 3 February, this will cover enquiries for issues including housing benefit, council tax support, free school meals and benefits maximisation advice.
The numbers and the services are:
0800 028 3686 Council tax, community charge, business rates, corporate debt, overpayment of housing benefit, Business Improvement District
0800 028 3697 Benefits, free school meals and Benefits Maximisation Service
0800 121 8805 Benefits Fraud Hotline
0800 456 1523 Liverpool Citizen Support Scheme
0800 028 3707 Fairer Charging and Direct Payments for adult social care
The council’s letters, bills and website are being updated with the new information on.
People telephoning the Freephone numbers from mobile networks will get an automated message informing them they may be charged for the call and be given the option to dial a landline number if they prefer. All the existing numbers will remain in use for three months.
Introduced from Monday 3 February, this will cover enquiries for issues including housing benefit, council tax support, free school meals and benefits maximisation advice.
The numbers and the services are:
0800 028 3686 Council tax, community charge, business rates, corporate debt, overpayment of housing benefit, Business Improvement District
0800 028 3697 Benefits, free school meals and Benefits Maximisation Service
0800 121 8805 Benefits Fraud Hotline
0800 456 1523 Liverpool Citizen Support Scheme
0800 028 3707 Fairer Charging and Direct Payments for adult social care
The council’s letters, bills and website are being updated with the new information on.
People telephoning the Freephone numbers from mobile networks will get an automated message informing them they may be charged for the call and be given the option to dial a landline number if they prefer. All the existing numbers will remain in use for three months.
Jobs Fair in Liverpool Town Hall
The Plus Dane Group are hosting a Jobs, homes and enterprise Fair on Thursday 27th February from 10am-4pm in Liverpool Town Hall.
The Living Local- Working Local event will give hundreds of people the opportunity to meet with businesses offering vacancies and apprenticeships, as well as get advice and support from agencies on securing employment, welfare reform and managing debt.
Attendees will also be able to view a number of Plus Dane’s vacant properties available in the city to rent or buy and get advice on setting up new businesses.
This event is open to all on Merseyside.
The Living Local- Working Local event will give hundreds of people the opportunity to meet with businesses offering vacancies and apprenticeships, as well as get advice and support from agencies on securing employment, welfare reform and managing debt.
Attendees will also be able to view a number of Plus Dane’s vacant properties available in the city to rent or buy and get advice on setting up new businesses.
This event is open to all on Merseyside.
Friday, January 17, 2014
Finally! An end to more off licences and takeaways in Kensington and Fairfield
On Wednesday night I was proud to address the Town Hall Chamber on a proposal before us to stop any more off licences and fast food takeaways opening in our ward.
This is an abridged version of the speech I gave.
This is an abridged version of the speech I gave.
We have been talking a lot about poverty tonight
One clear sign of poverty in a neighbourhood is to
look at the types of shops and businesses that predominate on its High Street.
In my ward, Kensington and Fairfield, we have far too many of four particular types of businesses; there are off-licences where people buy cheap strong
alcohol to drink themselves into oblivion so they don’t have to face terrible lives. We have dozens of hot food take-aways selling quick
gratification for the miserable; we have betting shops for people whose lives
are so bereft of positive experiences that their only enjoyment comes from
praying for a big win on the horses or the slot machines. And of course we have
lots of payday lenders and pawnshops for those who can’t pay the leccie this week.
It would be very easy as Councillors to become
depressed at the futility of it all and at our inability to change anything but
that’s not Labour’s way is it. We burn with the need to make a difference.
So we have been busy establishing foodbanks, supporting
the credit union movement, paying for debt advice for our residents and trying
to devise ways to limit people’s exposure to gambling.
There is another big project that has taken years to
come to fruition but is finally going to happen tonight with your support. Ever
since I was elected I have been fighting the excessive number of off licences
in our ward.
7 years ago to this very day, January 15th
2007, I stood in front of the licensing committee begging them not to pass an
application to extend the hours of an off licence on Prescot Road called,
believe it or not, “not drunk enough”.
They had been caught selling alcohol to underage kids, there were
stories of people lying in the gutter outside and they had been accused in the
local press of giving taxi drivers money to
encourage them to bring drunks to their shop to buy more alcohol. The
licensing committee were sympathetic but said their hands were tied and despite my very best efforts,
passed the application to allow it to open until 4am.
That was
the day I realised that the law as it stood was not on our side and we had a
big fight on our hands.
Over
subsequent years we have heard some stories of young women and girls being found
drunk and unconscious in our parks, vulnerable to sexual attacks or robberies,
having persuaded adults to buy cheap vodka for them locally; We have regular reports
of anti-social behaviour where people’s neighbours are screaming and shouting
up the street in the early hours of the morning full of drink they have been
able to buy on the corner, even so late at night.
And as
you will see in the report before you tonight, we have had many responses to
our consultation describing the behaviour of a small group of hardcore
alcoholics who drink out on the street all day from 9 o’clock in the morning,
intimidating passers-by, begging for money and staggering into the traffic,
they urinate and defecate on the street and lie collapsed by entry gates for
our local children and families to see.
They are
being facilitated by the proliferation of shops open around the clock selling
the cheapest strongest stuff.
Ever
since Allerton Road and Lark Lane were given local powers to oppose the opening
of more bars and restaurants it has been the aim of me and my ward colleagues to find
a way to utilise the same powers to stop any more off licences from opening in
our area and to challenge the work practices of those we are already stuck with.
Finally
we are able to put a plan before you to change our local licensing law. If you
pass this recommendation then in future the presumption will always be to
refuse any applications unless there is a very good reason.
And in a
stroke of genius, Councillor Robinson who has done so much of the leg work for
this excellent initiative has also been able to include hot food takeaways into
the same policy.
This
Cumulative Impact Policy is not the only measure we are taking of course;
We
continue to engage with the council’s Alcohol and Tobacco Unit to ensure that
underage drinkers are not buying directly from our local shops
We work
with property landlords to persuade them to help manage the behaviour of their
tenants
We work
with the police to manage the crime and anti-social behaviour and are currently at work on a proposal for a complete ban on alcohol on the streets of our ward
We work
with Public Health, the Whitechapel Centre, the YMCA and organisations like the
marvellous Basement Project who send outreach workers to engage with our street
drinkers. Only this week we heard at our Problem Solving Group that two of them
have been persuaded into a drying out facility in North Wales next week.
Our aim is the provision of a better and more
healthy range of shops and local businesses. We want to see something on offer
to our residents other than off-licences, takeaways, pawn shops and bookies.
We need
to give people better choices that won’t destroy their physical or mental health or drive them further into poverty.
Passing
this policy tonight will be a big step in the right direction.
Tuesday, December 17, 2013
Christmas Fire Safety Tips from Merseyside Fire and Rescue
Fire Safe at Christmas Tips
Merseyside Fire & Rescue Service is urging people to
enjoy a happy and safe Christmas this year by following some simple fire safety
advice.
When the celebrations take place over the festive period
people sometimes forget about fire safety in the home.
Cooking
Most house fires start in the kitchen and people are
asked to take care when cooking the Christmas dinner.
Food should never be left cooking on the hob unattended
and people should not cook while under the influence of alcohol.
People should avoid cooking while tired and should be
careful not to fall asleep while food is cooking in the oven.
Decorations
Christmas decorations and stray wrapping paper can burn
easily and cause a fire. Decorations should never be attached to lights or
heaters and should be kept away from candles.
Candles should not be lit near curtains or combustible
materials and keep them away from the Christmas tree. They should also be kept
out of the reach of children and pets. Ensure candles are put out when leaving
the room and they should be placed in a correct holder.
Christmas tree lights should always be switched off when
going to bed or when leaving the house and people should never overload plug
sockets. People are also advised to check that Christmas lights carry the
British Standard Safety sign.
Heating
Heaters should be kept away from curtains and furniture. They
should be switched off after use and should not be used for drying clothes.
People should ensure open fires are out properly when
they go to bed and they are advised to use a fire guard. Never hang decorations
over an open fire.
Electric blankets should be unplugged before going to bed
and hot water bottles should not be used with electric blankets.
People should also close the doors to each room when they
go to bed.
Vulnerable
People
People are advised to check on older relatives or
neighbours during the winter period and ensure they have working smoke alarms.
Residents are also asked to check on vulnerable people in
the community, particularly those who live alone.
Smoking
People should ensure cigarettes are completely stubbed
out in a proper, heavy ash tray that will not topple over.
Residents should never smoke in bed and should take care
when tired.
Smoke Alarms
It is advised that people have a smoke alarm fitted on
every floor of their property and smoke alarms should be tested every week.
A smoke alarm can give a vital early warning to escape a
fire. In the event of a fire people should get out, stay out and call 999.
For free fire safety advice call Merseyside Fire &
Rescue Service on 0800 731 5958.
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