30 April - Bexley Conservatives. Panic and desperation
When I attend a council meeting I go with a notebook and up to six colleagues
some of whom take their own notes. Any councillor who stands out by virtue of
idiocy or unexpected wisdom is likely to get a mention here a few hours later.
Two councillors who have never strayed beyond the middle ground are Seán Newman
(Labour, Belvedere) and Margaret ONeill (Labour, Erith), so their names have not
appeared on the Bonkers Blog before. Whats changed? What have they done now to warrant
inclusion? Err… nothing actually, but they are both the victims of totally
unwarranted Conservative party slurs.
At last Wednesdays extraordinary council meeting
to discuss where the new Civic Centre should be the Labour representatives were the only ones to put forward
the case for the Erith site. In doing so Seán Newman pointed out that the Erith site
had very good rail connections. There is a ten minute interval service which
would allow leader Teresa ONeill to be in Boris Johnsons office in
40 minutes and a half hourly service in the other direction if councillor Craske feels the
urge to screw up Sidcup again. Seán said that by contrast Bexleyheath didnt really
have its own railway station and Barnehurst station was closer. It was a clear
reference to Bexleyheath’s station being less than ideally placed for the town’s
centre. Google Maps confirms councillor Newman
is right, 1·4 miles against only 0·8. It wasnt worth reporting, non-controversial
facts dont generally get an airing here, theres no room for verbatim accounts.
I try to be factual on Bonkers, I dont believe readers would appreciate having
their time wasted by blatant misinformation. How would you feel if I spun Seán
Newmans comments as…
Councillors were left stunned by an outburst from Labour
Councillor Seán Newman when he claimed there was no
railway station in Bexleyheath! The news will come as a huge shock to the
thousands of commuters who use Bexleys busiest train station every day.
Then, because at heart I am a Tory myself I could make something up so as
to put the knife in and twist it.
Councillor Peter Craske commented,
“Improving public transport is rightly a major concern for our residents and a
key priority for Bexley Council, yet a Labour Councillor who
doesn’t even know trains run to Bexleyheath.
It would be a total misrepresentation of the facts, there was no
outburst, everything was calm, and it would probably reflect more badly on me
than councillor Newman because who would be so gullible as to believe he doesnt
know there is a railway station close to where he lives? But Bexleys
Conservatives think you are that gullible because that is exactly what they
have posted on their own website.
Take a look for yourself; they may make things up, Bonkers doesnt.
Bexley Conservatives dont stop there; Labour councillor Margaret ONeill spoke up for the
Erith site too. She may have said that she had not seen it, someone on the Labour side of
the chamber said that but I have no specific note about who it was. On the other hand I do
have a note that a Conservative councillor said it wasnt worth visiting the
Erith site because it was just open space filled with trees and nothing much to
see, while leader Teresa ONeill said that she and councillor Linda Bailey had
arranged an official tour and spent a morning there. I think the Conservative
who said it wasnt worth going was Katie Perrior (Blackfen & Lamorbey,
£22,650) but again I didnt note it as while it was a slightly amusing
contrast between two Tories it was too trivial to be worthy of a report.
Councillor Margaret ONeill said nothing else about the geographical location of
the site; she probably said she hadnt been in to explore it but neither had all
the Tories. So how do the Conservatives spin it on their website?
At the Extraordinary Meeting of the Council on 27th April, Labour
Cllr Margaret ONeill had no idea where the centre of Erith Ward was located and complained
that Council Officers had not taken the time to give her a personal guided tour. O’Neill who
has represented Erith Ward since it’s creation in 2002 then went on to support the building
of swanky new offices for councillors in the centre of Erith, which she claimed to be confused
about the exact location.
Except that an Erith councillor supported building in Erith - what else
would you expect of an Erith councillor? - every word of that is a complete
fabrication. Reporting idiocy is something I like to do; I have checked the
notes of all my colleagues and no one has anything about Margaret ONeill, she said her piece in
an unremarkable way and if it were not for Tory lies she would not warrant a
mention here.
Not content with attributing a totally untrue statement to Margaret O’Neill,
Bexley Conservatives compounded their lies with more manufactured nonsense…
Cllr Colin Campbell, Cabinet Member responsible for the consolidation of
Bexley’s property portfolio said:
“It is an utter disgrace that the Labour councillors for Erith have no idea of the geography of
the ward they have represented for many years. It is also unbelievable that they were then prepared
to support a major redevelopment project with no idea of the location, and ignoring the fact that
the cost of such a project would cost Bexley taxpayers millions in extra council tax. This shows
that Labour in Bexley are a complete shambles and cannot be trusted with the borough finances”
No Colin, it shows no such thing because you made up almost every word of that
and distorted the rest without a shred of supporting evidence. What it shows is that the Tories on
Bexley council are running around like headless chickens not knowing what to do
about the constant exposure of their dishonesty and maladministration by two local newspapers and two
local bloggers who will no longer keep quiet in the face of a near daily affront
to democracy. Is it any wonder that Bexley council has approved
a new Constitution
expressly designed to prevent residents from engaging in democracy in the way recommended
by central government? i.e. No recording of council meetings. When you next read the words
lie and Bexley council in the same sentence I hope you will accept that it doesnt
happen without good reason. They really are beyond the pale.
29 April - Planning. Full of surprises
I have just returned from a council planning committee meeting and by the
time this goes on line it will be very nearly Royal Wedding Day (hence the
slightly premature blog date) but my plan for the day failed to take account of the celebrations
and I wont have time for either TV or computer.
The last time I was involved with a planning application was in 1973 when mine
was won only on appeal and my solicitor told me too late in the day that the
usual procedure was to cross some palms with silver and save an awful lot of
time. Times I hope have changed.
This evenings meeting was chaired by councillor
John Fuller and I suppose the fact he acts in that capacity means the list of
allowances I obtained from the council and use on the site must be out of date.
Fuller was one of the councillors who rallied round to
protect
councillor Craske from one of his public lying outbursts so he is probably no
more trustworthy than any of his cronies but I cannot deny he handled the planning
meeting in a businesslike and fair manner. Having someone in charge of something
as sensitive as planning who is happy to do favours for his pals seems
potentially dangerous to me but Im all for giving the benefit of any doubt;
this evening he did a good job.
Theres no way I am going to get into debating the rights and wrongs of planning
decisions, that probably requires a lifetime of study of the relevant law, so
Im making no comment. Well maybe just this once!
Party divisions were not in evidence which is to be expected
(anything else would be worrying) and I saw councillor John Waters (Conservative)
speak what I thought were wise words and be immediately backed by councillor
Malik (Labour). That was a refreshing change. The only other notable speaker was
councillor Michael Slaughter (Longlands, £18,255) and if I hear him tell
everyone he has been a councillor for over 30 years even one more time I think I
may scream. I wouldnt mind if he spoke sense but if he ever does Ive
not heard it. Perhaps Im not the only one that thinks that because his
recommendations were roundly rejected.
The councils decision to go to the police to try to put a stop to the
Bonkers site was a mixed blessing; it provided heaps of free publicity but the
repercussions have taken up so much time that actually getting something on line
is getting to be problematical. I know I am neglecting some emails and maybe the
odd phone call too. If you find yourself a victim of that please dont be afraid
to make contact again, my filing system is probably not perfect.
To try to catch up with some recent events Ill shall attempt listing them here
in a shorthand fashion.
Harassment letter
The policeman who sent
the letter
was so interested in the case that he went on leave immediately afterwards without referring
it to any of his colleagues. Hes not back until next week but before he went said the
complainant wanted to keep his identity secret and didnt say what he found so alarming
about the site. We have an ex-police inspector on the Bonkers team
who recommended I complained to the Mets Professional Standards people, so I did. No
reply as yet.
An intermediary acting on my behalf extracted the information that the police
were worried about threats of physical violence. I am sure you will agree there
has never been any so it looks as though the council has lied to the police.
It wouldnt be the first time but that is another story.
In the news
The News Shopper kindly highlighted the councils accusation of harassment in their pre-Easter issue and returned to the subject this week. The monthly Bexleyheath Chronicle (and its sister papers) gave a little plug to the website this week and the editor dropped me a short email of encouragement. This morning a national newspaper has been sniffing around aspects of our stinking council so as you will appreciate, their stupidity has done them no favours so far.
NotoMob
NoToMob came to Bexley on the strength of my report on Craskes
reign of terror in Blackfen.
That in turn came about because a lady from Sidcup (hello Jo)
phoned me seeking help after being fined for backing out of SETyres and lingering on the
pavement for a few seconds to allow traffic to clear. Jo has every reason to be proud of
herself because she eventually had the fine cancelled but her victimisation by Craske has
led to this weeks Shopper splashing Notomob across
the whole of its front page.
Did you read in the national press at the beginning of this week about Richmond
council being found to be operating its gestapo wagons illegally? They didnt
have the correct certification for the cameras. Notomob were involved in that
landmark ruling by the Parking and Traffic Appeals Tribunal and I have known
for some while that they were investigating Bexley council too
for similar certification violations. This morning Notomob have
announced on
their website that Bexley council may be in the same boat as Richmond.
Craske must be even more purple than usual today.
Zero tolerance
During this year I have spoken to and met some of the people
whose idea of a good day out is to lovingly tend their allotment. A simple and
relaxing way of life one would have thought but Bexley council doesnt like
them. One suspects that has something to do with allotment holders occupying
ground which would be worth many millions as building plots but paying a
relative pittance in rent. Their devotion to their cause is impressive but their
trials and tribulations at the hands of Bexley council I have judged too
complicated to be reported on a blog. However an allotment holder was prompted
to call me after reading of my harassment letter in the newspapers for he had received
something similar, albeit not from the police.
Things came to a head when the Secretary of an Allotment Committee was
summoned to the council offices and as she was new to the job she asked if it
was OK to bring along an experienced member. She was told that was no problem
until she said who was coming along with her. The man in question had some
while ago fought the councils plans to sell off allotment plots, successfully as
it happens. but his card has been marked. Bexley council doesnt want to talk to
him and wont let him represent other allotment holders at a meeting. He has
received a letter from the council, the legal department apparently, which says
they operate a zero tolerance policy and refers to his behaviour. It
doesnt say whether his behaviour is bad or good, just that he must modify it. He has
asked what he has done wrong but they cannot or wont tell him. Ironically the
Committee Secretary who they are prepared to meet is not even a Bexley resident
while the campaigner against allotment sales is. Not being willing to state
what residents are supposed to have done to upset the council appears to be widespread policy.
And what is wrong with upsetting the council anyway? Are we all supposed to be
in such awe of their position that we should worship their every move?
Dare I mention what publicans say about the council officer who looks after licensing?
No I had better not, Ive managed to avoid swear words on this site so far and I
dont plan on starting now - unless a councillor says
tosser again.
Neighbourhood Watch
Someone drew my attention to the amount of money Bexley council is donating to Neighbourhood Watch, a registered charity. A Watch was formed where I live two years ago. Fewer than 30 people attended an exploratory meeting and that included the organisers and several policemen. Since then I have received one newsletter through my door and that was fully six months out of date - it included some sort of offer which was well past its sell-by date. I dont know who would donate money to a charity such as Neighbourhood Watch, I would have thought a small subscription for membership would be a better business model. Locally they are not big spenders, their accounts say that over the last five years theyve had an income of less than £20k. and spent most of it. I dont know how those figures come about as Bexley council has handed them £7·5k. in the last few months alone. The youve-been-cromwelled website has picked this up in more detail than I have and has sought an explanation via Freedom of Information request. Im sure you wont be surprised to know there is a link between the Watchs bosses and Bexleys Conservative party. The borough appears to be stitched up by one enormous clique.
The Bonkers Team. Who are they?
Ive
mentioned this before
but we have a lot of new readers so I will say it again. I, Malcolm Knight, started
this website because Bexley council didnt want to discuss a local issue with
me and when they eventually did they showed themselves to be neither truthful nor
competent. In the 19 months since then the site has attracted others who have ploughed
a similar furrow and now we all meet at least once a week to discuss strategies.
We have been accused by a few councillors of being extreme right wingers and I
suspect some readers may believe we are Labour supporters. Neither would be accurate as
politics doesnt usually enter our conversation. None of us really care who runs Bexley
as long as they live up to its slogan, Listening to you, working for you; at the
moment that is just a very bad joke.
For the record, the team includes voters for all the parties you are likely to
have heard of. Im the life-long Conservative whose X on any
first-past-the-post
election ballot paper has always gone in the same place even though Ive been
less than enthusiastic about it in recent years. I thought it would be a record Id
take to my grave unless Bexley council has me bumped off before 2014 but it looks
like I am going to have to change. Someone said to me yesterday that Idi Amin
could put on a blue rosette in Bexley and he would be elected but that is south
Bexley talk. Up here in the north Eleanor Hurt (Lesnes Abbey, £9,543) was
elected on a margin of six votes. It would only take another three of my
neighbours to be swayed by what they read on Bonkers and it will be
bye-bye Eleanor. Personally Id rather see the back
of John Davey (£9,543 + £7,782 from the Bexley Care Trust) any day.
28 April (Part 1) - Under the Jackboot
Yesterday evening a small group of council dictators (the Constitutional Review Panel) met to
rubber stamp their draconian proposals to strangle yet another avenue for open democracy in this
thoroughly disreputable borough. The councillors concerned were Graham DAmiral (Blendon &
Penhill, £9,543), Caroline Newton (St. Michaels, £9,543), June Slaughter
(Sidcup, £22,650), Simon Windle (Barnehurst, £27,048) and Teresa Ann Jude
ONeill (Brampton, £35,844) who chaired the meeting. Councillor Chris Ball,
the Labour opposition leader was also present but as his was the lone voice against an
arrangement designed solely to erect a barrier between residents and the dictatorship
which is Bexley council I will not include his name in the same sentence as the bunch of
cowards who want to hide themselves as much as possible from public scrutiny.
I reported the proposals
when they first leaked out nearly two weeks ago and the News Shopper devoted
page 2 of yesterdays edition to the further restrictions on open and
transparent governance. It was proposed that any resident who dares to ask a
question of the council will have to stand before the council but not be allowed to state his question.
It would be answered by any old tripe the council came out with, and very often the
answer is a load of old tripe, and then withdraw totally silently. For this privilege,
and as a deterrent to asking a question in the first place the resident must agree to
having his address published on the councils website.
As stated, councillor Ball was the only voice on the side of the people. He said it was
unreasonable to publish residents addresses, it was only necessary to check
that the questioner was a resident. Councillor June Slaughter said her address
was well known and she didnt see why residents addresses should not be just as
well known, totally ignoring the fact that she has decided to make herself a public figure
and residents have not. Councillor Ball tried to explain this simple fact to her but she
wasnt bright enough to spot the flaw in her argument. Councillor Windle claimed to
be able to see the point but that didnt stop him voting for addresses to be published.
Similar flawed logic was applied to confirm the intention to defy government
guidance by banning any form of recording at council meetings. Once again
councillor Ball attempted to inject some sense into the assembled thick skulls
by pointing out that blogging and tweeting was now a fact of modern life but the
thought of the mayor being caught out
malevolently manipulating Standing Orders
again was too much to contemplate.
In a little over 20 minutes this bunch of hypocrites (all but one of those present
wont allow their own addresses to appear on the councils website) signed off
the proposals with one concession, that questioners do not have to walk silently
away after their question is answered, they will be allowed to make a secondary
one. If it is deemed to be disrespectful by the mayor, that person will not be
allowed to ask any more questions ever again.
I dont much care if my address is published on the councils website, with a
little lateral thinking Google will provide it with a few clicks and its in the
telephone book, but I am aware that a lot of people will regard publication as a
deterrent. Several times when researching features for this website I have had to
find the address of a councillor but chose not to publish it for reasons of
privacy. The most recent example was when revealing councillor Alex Sawyers
secretive marriage
to Priti Patel MP. Before that there was the examination of councillor Waters links to a
council funded nursery
and leader ONeills directorship of that hotbed of criminality, the Thames Innovation Centre.
It seems to me that what is sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander
and when the first resident has his address published it will not look
unreasonable if more councillors' addresses found their way into the public domain.
27 April - Thames Innovation Centre Whistleblower 1 : Bexley council nil
I have followed the saga that has unfolded at the
Thames Innovation Centre
with great interest for it appears to have most of the ingredients of a good
crime thriller. No deaths as far as I know but sex, misappropriated money, the police,
disappearing suspects and possibly drugs too, all with intriguing Bexley council
connections. However Ive felt it unwise to get into the detail pending an
Industrial Tribunal case being brought by the whistleblower who got the sack for
her pains. This morning there was a pre-trial hearing in Ashford and I attended
the Court as an observer along with Mick Barnbrook, valuable for his experience
of the law and experienced campaigner for honesty in politics as a number of
convicted MPs and our own ex-council leader Ian Clement are only too well aware.
Needless to say, Bexley council is not happy with the prospect of having their
dirty washing hung out for public scrutiny and attempted to have the case thrown
out, but they failed. There will be a full trial. Having been privileged to look
through some of the evidence and witness statements I am looking forward eagerly
to Bexley councils day before the Adjudicator. There are ten directors at Bexley
councils Thames Innovation Centre and only five employees, did they really fail
to notice that something was awry? We shall have to wait for the 28th June which is plenty of
time for the cabinet member in charge, Colin Campbell (St. Marys, £22,650)
to go out and buy a tie, the absence of which makes him so conspicuous at council
meetings. Bexley council might not give a damn about maintaining professional
standards but it looks like the Court does.
26 April (Part 2) - Tesco deal approved
There
have been two meetings this evening at the Civic Centre, the cabinet and
the full council. Why two I am not quite sure as both had only a single topic, the
site of the new council offices. Three proposals were on the table; rebuild on the
present site, build new on a triangular plot immediately north of Eriths fish
roundabout, or refurbish the old Woolwich building. Under each scheme either part or
all of the existing site would be sold and Tesco is the favoured buyer. The deal
isnt signed yet but Tesco is definitely front runner. There were others but the
public is not allowed to know who nor how much was on offer. Bexley council is not
renowned for transparency and tonight was no exception, when the subject of money
cropped up the public was excluded. The council has its aura of secrecy to maintain
encouraging thoughts of corruption. The presentation included the slightly worrying
phrase transparency must be traded for speed. To prove transparency
was the order of the day the public was excluded for ten minutes while financial
questions were asked, no answers were forthcoming according to several
councillors.
The Labour group clearly preferred the Erith option but it probably wasnt the
cheapest, in fact councillor Gareth Bacon may have strayed a little from the
official script by confirming that Erith would cost more and in the present financial
circumstances that is what counts.
A group of residents from near the Woolwich building were very concerned about the
lack of parking spaces on that site; only 65 against a requirement the council
estimated to be in the region of 300. It was suggested that public car parking space
might be taken. e.g. the cinema multi-storey.
The council meeting was familiar in some respects, we got the usual diatribes
which served no purpose other than to score points against the opposition party.
Councillor Don Massey (Cray Meadows, £18,301) and Mike Slaughter (Longlands,
£18,255) were the worst offenders and councillor Linda Bailey (Danson Park,
£22,141) took a different tack by repeatedly describing Labour party opinion as
rubbish. It wasnt picked up by the chairman mayor but as she is
happy for Labour councillors to be called
tossers
that comes as no great surprise.
Councillor Campbell said refurbishing the Woolwich building would cost nothing
once the old buildings were sold and so the vote inevitably went totally along
party lines. Probably the correct decision; money is in short supply but maintaining
an old building not designed for modern technology and its high power requirement
eventually becomes far too expensive if not impossible; and council staff are as
entitled to enjoy modern facilities, such as air conditioning, just as much as any
other office staff. If it wasnt for the fact that it has been agreed that contract
procedure rules and financial regulations can be waived and already every financial
question is deemed to be secret I might be tempted to say I was persuaded the best
compromise was achieved this evening, but the secrecy and stated intention of
trading transparency contrives to makes things look underhand as things
usually are in Bexley.
26 April (Part 1) - Does the Tesco deal checkout?
The
council seems to be cock-a-hoop at the prospect of moving from the Civic
Centre to the Woolwich Building Society headquarters building that has lain
empty for five years. It is likely to be a popular move but if it is such good
business for Bexley council why was it ever necessary for a campaign group to
fight the original plan for Tesco to open a major store in a residential area?
The councils own report identifies many problems with the Woolwich building.
The main entrance atrium is not suited to a modern council building
and the Woolwich hacked off the cabling on vacation. The double
height former basement requires conversion to be useable office space. Its
going to cost £36 million to fix it and extend it. The council was prepared to
inflict a lot of damage on local services to save £35·4 million; and now they spend it on themselves.
Redeveloping the existing site would provide a highly efficient purpose built Council
office. Their words not mine and it was by far the cheapest option, said to be under £30 million.
There must be more to this than meets the eye. Perhaps that is why the meetings to rubber
stamp the latest proposals are to be held in secret. No press, no public. Much of the
councils written report is unavailable (the Confidential Appendix) but what can be
read says that moving to the Woolwich building will save a million pounds a year. Not much
is it for an outlay of £36 million? Some of the small savings will have been lost
through expenditure on the originally preferred but now abandoned scheme (consultants fees etc.).
Removing the council offices to Erith Road/Watling Street may well be a popular move but the
dithering will have cost a lot of money and very little is going to be saved. Tesco
will have been promised everything they want which will explain why the council
proposes that the Director of Finance and Resources be authorised to agree any
waivers to Contract Procedure Rules or Financial Regulations to ensure no obstacles get in the way.
The campaign group that has been fighting the prospect
of a Tesco superstore in Erith Road says it is determined not to be pushed into
accepting something unsuitable and will follow planning applications closely.
Call me a cynic but all the signs are of a deal stitched up pretty tightly already what
with public meetings going into closed sessions and the waiving of rules. Anything
other than a faît accompli would not be Tescos way. At least they aim to provide another 550 town centre parking
spaces; just think what that will do to Craskes parking revenue projections.
21 April - Bonkers is closing down - but only for the Easter break
The main anti-democratic event of the past week in Bonkers Bexley has been
the proposal to stifle questions
at council meetings. The effect will be that the council need not answer any
question that it doesnt want to and allow those who have asked difficult
questions and been dissatisfied with the answer to be permanently banned from
asking more. One of the Bonkers team had put forward the
revolutionary idea that the next constitutional review meeting should consider
recommending that councillors answered questions at council meetings instead of
giving irrelevant speeches but there is no sign of that being adopted.
Someone who questioned
the powers that be on that issue and the new restrictions was immediately rebuffed with, No
decisions have been made in relation to changes to the Councils Constitution.
True, but that disguises the fact that the proposals are known only because of
a leak and that there is no opportunity for objections to residents being silenced again.
In yet another example of council deviousness, it proposes to suspend the
existing constitution and immediately substitute the new one. All this to be
decided by leader ONeill, four of her co-conspirators and the leader of
the Labour opposition Chris Ball. If he does object what chance does he stand?
One cannot help but wonder if the rush to introduce these changes has anything
to do with the fact that the Bonkers team intends to attend planning meetings in
future and had formally requested to be informed of the questioning procedure.
The next planning meeting is scheduled for 28th April, the day after the
constitution is likely to be changed. Never mind, we can sit and take notes and
see if we can eventually make sense of any funny business that may
be going on.
Maybe the loss of question time will be no great loss after all. One of the
questions at last months meeting was to request a breakdown of councillor
Craskes estimated £783,200 cost of operating the boroughs Controlled Parking
Zones, to see where the money was going. Craske either answers questions
untruthfully - No £4m. contract, parking enforcement costs less than
answering FOIs etc. - or doesnt answer them at all. This time he chose a
combination of the two. The full and thorough written reply from Craske was This
information has been provided already. I can understand this particular
response, he has fudged so many figures in the past that their contradictions became a
huge embarrassment. Best to say nothing. Soon it will in effect be official policy and all
questions will have to take the FOI route.
The blog is going to take a few days off over Easter; I shall be spending the
weekend with the head of the Transport Research Laboratory department that
issued the report that Bexleys road planning department told me justified one
of their mad-cap schemes. I got it straight from the horses mouth
that that was another Bexley council lie. My road safety expert friend after looking around
town once said that whoever planned this is either incompetent or malicious. I
think he was wrong and Bexley council is both. Just to be absolutely fair to Craske as I always am, this comment was made in the very earliest days of
his reign of terror, when most of what my friend saw was the result of
someone elses incompetence.
Before I disappear I must mention that Bexley council had second thoughts about releasing
the electoral registration details
for Alex Sawyer and produced the information. If they hadnt blocked the website from
their server they would have known that the required information had already been extracted
from another source. Also some news which I have only just been authorised to place here, the
Industrial Tribunal pre-hearing of the
whistleblower sacked from the Thames Innovation
Centre is to be heard at Ashford House, County Square Shopping Centre,
Ashford on Wednesday 27th April at 10:00 am. Case No. 1102704.
I hope everyone has a happy holiday, Craske included for who needs Redemption
more than him? Bonkers will be back,
probably by Easter Monday.
20 April - Bexley councils complaints procedure. Another sham
You may be wondering, having read of Bexley councils involvement with criminals and its atrocious record with transparency, not to mention its self-serving nature, why more people dont take their complaints beyond the newspapers letter columns and the boroughs watering holes. Maybe its the way the council deals with complaints. From the Standards Board for England website
The Government should
introduce, as a matter of urgency, secondary legislation to require a majority
of independent members and an independent chair for Standards Committees and
sub-committees in England. This is a critical element of our proposals to
improve the existing system and to lay the ground for the subsequent
introduction of the locally based system.
Obviously they must know the existing system isnt working properly, it
certainly isnt in Bexley where the rules are outrageously exploited and to
my mind even the proposed amendments would not be enough to defeat the
anti-democratic forces that are present in Bexley council.
When the standards legislation was introduced the intention was to have independent people
on the boards and assessment sub-committees to ensure there were no political fixes. I know
a few people who applied for the position in Bexley; they were told they would have to be
interviewed by the council leader but inevitably they didnt get to that stage; far
too dangerous to have someone with no party loyalties in a position of power.
Far more sensible to hire in one of their own to ensure the Bexley Standards
Board is nothing for Bexley council to worry about. I once put in a
complaint about councillor Craske.
The assessment sub-committee came back with a nonsense excuse discredited
by the councils own meeting minutes. An appeal against that decision came back with
an entirely different unbelievable excuse.
They can make up any excuse they like and with the Standards Board for England being wound up there is nothing that can be done about it.
My only other complaint was
against the mayor reducing residents question
time six weeks ago and the council knows that there is video evidence to support it. Their response
is simple; dont meet to discuss the complaint. They can play almost any game they like.
My complaint against Craske was heard at a meeting of two Conservative
councillors and chaired by the independent Mrs. Sue Threader. The assessment
sub-committee is not always made up of two Conservative councillors, every sixth meeting has
one Conservative and one Labour. A one to eleven ratio between the parties
doesnt reflect the councils political make-up. Goodness knows where the numbers came from.
Obviously two Conservative councillors hearing a complaint about another
Conservative councillor is far from being an unbiased jury and the chairman,
independent or not is unlikely to have any influence on the result. But just to
make sure, Bexley have selected not a local resident, a solicitor, clergyman or
someone of similar standing, but one of their own. Mrs. Threader was formerly deputy chief
executive of Conservative controlled Mole Valley District Council (Surrey).
The chairmen and their deputies dont
do this very occasional job out of the goodness of their hearts of course, the
chairmans job attracts a nice little allowance of £2,133 a year.
The Government keeps saying it is handing power back to local people when in
practice they are doing no such thing. They are handing power back to the
political classes to abuse in any way they think fit. A standards board filled
with political appointees ensures that complaints about misbehaviour of
councillors can be dismissed on any pretext and as
developments earlier this week
have shown, they are free to change their Standing Orders and Constitution
to choke off any attempt to expose them. Finally they are free to falsely accuse
me of threatening physical violence against them. I am a threat to individual
safety were the words conveyed to me from the police by an intermediary.
Bexleys disreputable council is hell-bent on taking every legal step to restrict
freedom and transparency in the borough and a few which may step beyond those boundaries.
19 April (Part 3) - Sham consultations
One reason for launching this website 18 months ago was
a badly run consultation
by Bexley council so it is not inappropriate that my short history of Bexley straining credibility
should examine another sham consultation, albeit a rather more important one. The 2009 consultation on
whether Bexley council should have a Mayor elected by residents and separate cabinet
or the present system of councillors who elect a leader (who selects the cabinet) and Mayor.
The former allows an elected Mayor to be independent and non-political, the current system, given
party politics, never could. So an elected Mayor is not likely to be popular among local politicians.
Residents however may see an advantage. Hartlepool Football Clubs mascot (he dresses as a monkey)
was made Mayor of that town in 2002 and has topped every reselection poll since.
The most recent Mayoral consultation in Bexley took place in 2009. Well not really a
consultation as we shall see. The Bexleyheath Chronicle ran its own poll and
found that 85% of respondents fancied the idea of an elected Mayor. Bexley
council ran a poll via the Bexley Magazine delivered to every household, put
out adverts on its own advertising sites and asked the News Shopper to make a
big front page splash of the Mayor proposals as part of its quest for true
democracy. You believe it? Then youve not been paying attention. Of course they
didnt, they did none of that. They put a short notice in the public
announcements section of the News Shopper and hid an on-line poll on its
website. At the end of it they said that 99 people had taken part, 81 of them
on-line and 81 of the 99 in favour of the status quo
- and the council had got what it wanted.
Linda Piper, Chief Reporter for the News Shopper summed it up rather nicely in
her headline of 11th November 2009. Poor response to online vote but council is
satisfied. Do I detect a note of sarcasm there?
Mr. Barnbrook who has been instrumental in unseating dishonest MPs and is
not usually unaware of council activities knew nothing of the consultation
until he read the News Shopper headline and was not best pleased by it. He made
a Freedom of Information (FOI) request about the consultation but was refused by
the council saying personal details could not be disclosed. On appeal
it was agreed he could have a note of all the 99 responses with personal
information redacted, but he received only 32, all from the
on-line lists. His request for the whole set was ignored.
I have the 32 responses before me now. Four made at one minute intervals on 8th
September 2009 are word for word identical. Suspicious that. The redacted
answers arent marked as to which Mayoral option they are voting for. Is Less
costly, Only way forward, Less corrupt a vote for or against an elected Mayor?
Mr. Barnbrook complained that the on-line poll was too easily fiddled and had not
been advertised except as a short legal announcement in one local newspaper that
isnt distributed to every address as the Bexley Magazine is. He got nowhere with
his complaint of course, the council had got what it wanted on the strength of 99
votes and maintained that was a pretty good result. However along the way the
following facts tumbled out of the correspondence.
The council said that responders personal information was deliberately not
requested for the consultation. So why was the FOI request turned down on 16th
January 2010 because of Personal Information?
There was no check on whether non-residents could vote on-line but a check was
made for duplicate IP addresses. Technically that is easily circumvented and in
any case the four identically worded responses in four minutes suggests the
check didnt work - or the councils claim was not truthful.
I cant help but wonder if the reason Mr. Barnbrook only got hold of 32 of the
81 on-line responses and none of those received in other forms has something to
do with the number of Conservative councillors. The numbers match quite closely and there was
certainly no check against 49 councillors swinging the vote; or a lesser number voting several times.
A complaint of maladministration was made to the Local Government Ombudsman but
it was rejected on the grounds that everyone in the borough had been adversely
affected by Bexley councils actions and LGO rules allow them to investigate
only if the individual complainant is disadvantaged. The whole system is
contrived to permit widespread malpractice as will be seen when Bexleys
Standards Board comes in for examination - maybe tomorrow.
19 April (Part 2) - Time bomb. Tick, tick
On 13 April when someone
within the Civic Centre told me that his access to this website had
been blocked I added, in parenthesis libraries too probably, to the blog. I
have had two reports within the last couple of days that that isnt the case.
Apologies if my speculative comment caused confusion.
Speaking
of confusion, Adam White, when writing for Time magazine last year was thoroughly
confused by English geography, but something he saw or was told must have caused
it. I wonder what that could be.
Adam told his readers that Priti Patel was MP for Witham in South East London. A journalistic
mistake possibly but it seems an odd coincidence bearing in mind what we now know. All these
facts have been brought together here in case someone else is looking into this mystery. Why on earth
was Alex Sawyers marriage to Priti kept under wraps and require a Civic Centre leaker to
bring it to light? Its not something to be ashamed of is it? But perhaps there is
something fishy going on. Maybe Alex and Priti live apart. They occupy two
homes, that might explain everything.
Bexley council is currently refusing to release the electoral registration
details for Alex Sawyer (Northumberland Heath, £9,543) which is in itself odd
but it’s amazing what you can find on the web, so I now have an address.
19 April (Part 1) - Dirt. Diversions. Development. Dishonesty and Dames. (Pantomime Dames)
Bexley
councillors may choose to wallow in dirt but its residents may have
little choice. A correspondent from Sidcup reports how he sat in the park at
Sidcup Place surrounded by empty crisp packets and discarded beer cans when the
litter man came by, so he asked why the park was so filthy. The man (a Serco
employee presumably) said to save money a full litter pick of Sidcup Place will
now only happen once a week. No cuts to councillors allowances or fat cats pay of course.
Another Sidcup resident complains about the constant disruptions in Station Road
and the idiocy of closing off St. Johns Road, Craybrooke Road and Church Avenue.
Craske gets an unflattering mention but the madness in Sidcup predates his
arrival on the scene. Complaints about Sidcup and its roads are nothing new of
course and it is remiss of me not to have got there with my camera. Keyboard
bashing has become my major occupation unfortunately.
The council has announced that it plans to buy the old Woolwich Building Society
Headquarters and develop a new Civic Centre there and allow Tesco to have the
existing Town Hall. How much money was wasted on consultancy fees before someone
with a bit of common sense backed down and did what many local residents will prefer? See
the councils announcement.
Someone, referring to Bexley council, asked me yesterday Why dont they just
start telling the truth and be honest with people? Good question. Not such
an easy option if youve done neither for many years and have so many skeletons to keep buried.
Finally a female well-wisher sent me a parcel. In it was a copy of
Citrines ABC of
Chairmanship marked three shillings and sixpence and apparently bought at a boot
fair for slightly less than twice that. Perfect condition and complete with dust
jacket. If I have interpreted the Roman numerals correctly it was published in
the year of my birth. So it started life when the population was fighting a
tyranny in jackboots and in its seventh decade it finds itself engaged in
fighting tyranny again. The female donor wasnt mayor Val Clark.
I shall return to weightier matters later today.
18 April (Part 3) - Dont tell Audit
I think I promised a bit of a history lesson for today about Bexleys unenviable record in the
honesty stakes to satisfy all the new readers that the council very
kindly directed my way. Its not an easy job; I have before me a pile of papers
22 millimetres thick when compressed, all concerned with the Ian Clement expenses
cover-up alone. Far too much to put on line, I am going
to have to attempt a different tack.
There have been two local government scandals in London in recent years that
kept the national press occupied for a long time, one still rumbles on and I had
one of the Sundays ask for information for their new investigation only last week.
Both scandals involved Bexley. Coincidence? Probably not. Dishonesty and
scheming has been and continues to be endemic in our benighted borough. Just
look at the latest attempt to subvert democracy.
Probably this short extract from an email, redacted under Freedom of Information rules, but telling just the same,
sums it all up. (Click image for complete email.)
It is pretty well known that
former Bexley council leader Ian Clement left to work for Boris Johnson (Mayor
of London) and while there misbehaved with his mayoral credit card. It wasnt a
huge amount of money, just £227 if I remember correctly, but he was given a
suspended prison sentence for it just the same.
Back here in Bexley our Ian had a council credit card too, no one of any note knew about
it according to our current leader. Believe that if you like. An investigation
showed that Mr. Clement had spent £2,087.85 that couldnt be justified. If the councils
website is up to date it has not been recovered 20 months after the
investigation was completed.
Mr. Clement got up to all sorts of tricks like staying
at hotels overnight when an early morning journey would have been easy enough, but mainly
it was wining and dining. One lunch bill was settled after ten in the evening.
Quite some lunch and quite some bill but no one at all at Bexley council knew anything about
anything. Not his deputy, the current leader Teresa ONeill, not the top brass, no one.
I wonder who signed off the council cheque. Presumably whoever it was who sent the email above.
Among the many people entertained at public expense was the then Chief Executive
Nick Johnson and the incoming replacement Will Tuckley. Nick went off on a
sickness pension of £50,000 a year and a golden goodbye said to exceed
£300,000. Hes been in the news on and off ever since because this sick man
charged straight into a new £260k. job with Hammersmith and Fulham council. Bexley tax
payers continue to fund his pension and it is all legal. There is a detailed report of these
shenanigans on
the Daily Mail website. The Sunday paper journalist who said he was working on
another exposé asked if I knew what sickness afflicted Nick Johnson. He
should have looked at the
Hammersmith & Fulham Conservatives website which says that Nick Johnson suffered a heart attack while working for
Bexley council and that he didnt really want to leave. I suppose that is
why he needed such a large sum to persuade him that he should.
A few paragraphs here is a totally inadequate summary of the events of 2009 but
the local press summarised it quite well.
The News Shoppers report is worth a read and some newspaper
cuttings which have otherwise disappeared from view are indexed on this site.
For in depth research a complete list of the queried expenditure is
available here
and Bexley councils final report on credit card use is also available on-line.(PDF file.)
18 April (Part 2) - Tape evidence frightens council
The complaint about mayor Val Clark curtailing public question time at the meeting she chaired on 2nd March was due to be heard by the local Standards Assessment Sub-Committee on 14th April. The Members Services Manager (nice bloke with a difficult job) has today announced the meeting was postponed. I wonder why; I dont think anyone will be disputing the mayor went badly off the rails that night. The Standards Sub-Committee is heavily biased against public complaints and they are usually quite inventive with their cover-ups. An outbreak of honesty doesnt seem very likely.
18 April (Part 1) - Funny money
The list of things costing more than £500 which Bexley council has to publish
because Mr. Pickles says so is a rich source of amusement, amazement and mystery.
It shows we are still bunging the Thames Innovation Centre eighteen thousand most months to do things
that could be done within the Civic Centre but at least this way the TIC may show a
profit. The company that has the leisure centre contract (Boxwood Leisure Ltd.)
runs off with best part of a quarter of a million every month and for some
unknown reason a Maidstone firm of solicitors (Brachers) got a grant of £802,667.
Nice for them.
Devon County Council was paid £101k. and the Royal Borough of Kensington and
Chelsea received more than half a million.
Nearer to home Bromley council was paid £8,086 for gritting our roads. Looks
like Craskes planning wasnt up to the job again. Why Price Waterhouse Coopers
had to give ninety thousand pounds worth of advice to Bexley council is anyones guess. Maybe it
was them that recommended saving £68k. by not paying for terrorist insurance in future.
An accountant friend doesnt think much of Bexleys £500 listing, he says it
barely complies with government regulations. The Payments Manager has admitted
that Bexleys data complies only with the mandatory elements of the legislation
and any extras that might provide a complete paper trail are omitted.
There is no Invoice number, just a near random number meaningless to anyone
outside the council and maybe to them too. Tracking refunds against invoices is
impossible. The Payments Manager, in a weak moment perhaps, promised to have the website
amended to better explain refunds but nearly two months have passed since then
and nothing has changed.
About Boxwood leisure the council had this to say
In Spring 2008, Bexley opened Sidcup Leisure Centre – the third and final facility of a £30 million
3-centre scheme delivered on time and to budget through a Public Private
Partnership (PPP) between the London Borough of Bexley and Boxwood Leisure
consortium. A key strength of the Partnership is its win-win nature -
embracing often competing public/private sector drivers of increasing
participation and generating profit.
Win-win and generating profit? Who for?
17 April (Part 2) - Hang em and flog em
Not my words of course, I might get arrested for them, but from the Daily
Mail when reporting a speech by the wife of councillor Alex Sawyer (Northumberland Heath, £9,543).
Ive a feeling this blog will be long and wide ranging; blame it on
ex-councillor Leaf who connived with Bexley councillors to restrict residents
question time at the meeting on 6th April, for it is he who prompted the
enquiries which have led to todays jottings. When I got home that evening I Googled
David Leaf and found he was still claiming to be councillor for Belvedere.
Welcome to Cllr David Leafs Website. I should have taken a copy for it had
gone two days later, but
Googles cache came to the rescue.
From that undemocratic episode flowed information that ex-councillor Leaf was
research assistant to Priti Patel, Conservative MP for the
very safe seat of Witham, Essex and then the revelation that she is
married to Alex Sawyer, councillor for Northumberland Heath.
Ms. Patel gives every impression of being a proper Conservative, not the
namby-pambies most are now, almost indistinguishable from any other
main-stream politician. At her Witham constituency selection committee meeting in 2006
she wowed her inquisitors and trounced the candidate who was favourite to
win, one James Brokenshire. Cant say I am surprised. I have a friend who is a
Ugandan Asian (morning Tariq) and to listen to him youd think he is more
British than I am. Ms. Patel comes from the same mould. I said I would
never vote for the euro because I want to see a Britain that is governed by the
British for the British.
So Priti is no Liberal Democrat, good for her, we need a choice of politicians not uniform colourless nonentities, but is she,
excuse me, whiter than white? Her website says
She lives with her husband and son in the heart of her new constituency Witham? How many husbands has she
got? The husband we know about says something entirely different on the Bexley council website
Alex Sawyer says he lives in Welling. This may not be a scandal of Daily
Telegraph Expense File proportions but both cant be right. But did you expect
the truth? Probably not.
James Brokenshire must have been very upset by being shoved aside by Essex Man
in favour of the aptly named Priti. Essex Man said of him, James was slick but
he tried to be too clever by qualifying every statement, whereas Priti jumped
straight in and told them what they wanted to hear. Qualifying statements and
by implication sitting on the fence. Sound familiar?
The Queen Mary Hospital campaigner John Hemming-Clark,
labelled Brokenshire a liar which I thought was more than a bit OTT on the evidence available
but there is not much doubt that James Brokenshire MP faces an uphill struggle to prevent the
demise of Queen Marys. He was quoted in the News Shopper of 30th March 2011 as
saying he is pressing for Queen Marys to be taken out of the South London
Healthcare Trusts hands and two weeks later (12th April) the Trust says (I have the letter)
Queen Marys Sidcup is one of South London Healthcare NHS Trusts main sites. There
are no plans for this to change.
I think the MP is probably living up to the reputation he
earned at the Witham selection meeting. Qualifying everything and facing both ways at once. Hes
in a difficult position, facing an angry electorate and looking over his shoulder for his ministerial
career. It would be surprising if the odd fib didnt pass his lips. In fact I
am sure they do.
When one of his constituents pressed him for an appointment to discuss his Queen Mary concerns he
found all the MPs surgery time had already been booked, but five minutes later James happily made an appointment
with a substitute constituent hastily arranged by the first one. Is no one honest any more?
With thanks to ex-councillor
Leaf and his co-conspirators
for being instrumental in exposing the Sawyer/Patel link and the unusual stated
living arrangements.
17 April (Part 1) - Under the Jackboot again
Yesterdays blog
on this subject was dashed off in a hurry to bring news of
these most horrendous proposals by Bexley council at the earliest possible
opportunity, but it is possible it makes little sense to residents unfamiliar
with council procedures. At the moment the council allows a resident to ask a
question and if it is approved that resident can stand in the council chamber,
not to ask the question as you might expect, but to have his question answered. The
audience in the public gallery may not know what the question is and cannot tell if
the answer has any relevancy to the question. Very often it doesnt; sometimes
it is blatantly untruthful. Under the current procedure the resident, if he is
quick witted enough, can ask a secondary question which may go some way towards
getting an answer or exposing the original answers untruthfulness.
Under the new proposals the resident will have to stand mute before the
council while a cabinet member can filibuster or lie to him. At the end he will
have to walk silently away even if provided with a blatant untruth. e.g.
There is
no £4m. contact with Parsons Brinckerhoff or
We spend less on parking
enforcement than we spend on answering Freedom of Information requests. If the
resident doesnt remain silent he can be labelled disrespectful and banned from asking
questions ever again. The Mayor may rule as out of order any question which
(is)
submitted by someone who has been the subject of a warning from the London
Borough of Bexley regarding their behaviour. The mayor not so long ago selected
a resident for a warning for
parsimonious appreciation. Not clapping
often enough in the council chamber. If adopted these proposals will spell the end of
all questioning of the council as everything apart from questions of
the David Leaf variety
can be ruled against Standing Orders. Its a proposal worthy of The Third Reich.
16 April (Part 3) - Too generous by far
I am told I was far too generous in putting forward the theory that Bexley
cabinet members didnt claim for subsistence when they went off on a
pre-Christmas jolly to the Flackley Ash Hotel in Rye. I didnt think I was all
that generous as it would mean that councillors consider it normally OK to have
everything paid for them by you and me and then claim ninety pounds a night on
top. But it was the only theory I could come up with which fitted the available
facts that an invoice came in for £2,585, the council paid it (see above) and
the Payments Manager said that it really cost £900 less than that.
Clearly something doesnt add up but mine was a relatively simple explanation.
It seems it may have been wrong. While researching another matter I came across this. It comes from the papers which
led to former council leader Ian Clements fall from grace and ultimate conviction.
It
clearly states that councillors cant claim subsistence when everything
has already been paid by the council. So maybe the cabinets claim to
have saved tax payers money by paying for themselves (which I interpreted
as not claiming subsistence) is a bigger deception
than I suspected. Or it could be that the Payments Managers email is not all
that it seems, or that the payments listed on the council website are not true
either. Actually that is not entirely unthinkable. A friendly accountant has
sent me an explanation as to why they are unreliable at least. When I have got
my head around the jargon I may be able to share the information here.
I reproduce below the Payments Managers email to help convince readers
further that the Bonkers Team does not go around making things up.
The payment was for an annual two-day strategy session attended by the
Councils Cabinet, Management Board and two senior managers. The meeting took
place from Friday lunchtime, involved working on Friday evening and on Saturday
morning until lunchtime.
The cost covered all conference facilities, food and accommodation.
Cabinet members decided in advance of the meeting that they would meet the full
cost of their food and accommodation, which reduced the actual cost to the
Council to £1,685.92 for the 19 people who attended.
No overtime or additional hours payments were made to any of the managers who
took part.
Regards
Miss Bel Temel
Payments Manager
It wasnt really a two day session. It ran from mid-day Friday until
mid-day Saturday.
It probably needs an FOI request or two to sort this one out properly.
16 April (Part 2) - The disabled are buggied in Bexley
While
councillors spend their time plotting against residents the disabled among us have to
get on with their lives as best they can and suffer the cuts the council so readily
inflicted. I have been in the habit of reporting the experiences of my disabled friend
Carole on Saturdays especially her problem in getting a four year old to and from school
on a crowded bus with an eight month old baby in a buggy too. With schools on their Easter break
this week there have not been any new problems but correspondence with TfL continues and will be
reported here if it ever reaches a conclusion. Councillor Fuller (Lesnes Abbey, £9,543)
has not completely lost interest and is still lurking on the sidelines and may yet prove helpful.
What concerns me most is the effect the buses and school have on an impressionable
four year old mind. The young lad has always been well behaved in my presence
but it is clear that he regards bus drivers as some sort of enemy of his mum. I
dont expect bus drivers to be well versed in child psychology but you would
expect school staff and governors to be better informed. When the buses let
mother and child down both get sent to the head teachers office and made to
sign a form with disabled mum could not get to school on time because of bus
trouble. Then the four year old is made to be a spectacle before his class mates
by being taken into class via the back door. Goodness knows what a four year
old makes of all this humiliation but it could scar him for life. Carole says
the Educational Welfare Officer has refused to speak to her. Youd think the
head teacher, Ms. Brooks, would know better wouldnt you?
Finally, for those awaiting the appearance of NoToMob on the streets of Bexley
today, they are dividing their time between us and Westminster. They will be along shortly.
16 April (Part 1) - Under the Jackboot
Your listening council has tried giving false answers to questions, it has
tried not answering questions, it has tried losing questions, it has tried
rejecting questions, it has tried cutting question time and it has tried
planting fake questions. This week they tried forcing closure of this website.
They have tried hiring bouncers at council meetings, they have surrounded
themselves with their military wing, Bexleys police, they have rejected
advice from the Under Secretary of State at the Department of Communities and
Local Government (Bob Neill, MP) to open up meetings to “Citizen Journalists” and now they are
going to attempt a near total clamp down on questioning. Anything to prevent scrutiny.
On 27th April 2011 this thoroughly disreputable council is meeting to discuss
amendments to the questioning procedures. Among their recommendations and proposals are
• To disallow filming of meetings because the result may be
edited. Presumably Bob Neill was entirely unaware that videos could be edited when he made his recommendations.
• To recommend web casting once the new Civic Centre is ready. i.e. kick the idea into the long grass.
• That the mayor may disallow questions from anyone he/she may have taken a dislike to.
• That questions which are in any way similar to another asked within the last six months will not be permitted.
• Residents whose questions are accepted will have their personal details, name and address etc. published.
• Questions relating to staffing levels and salaries will not be permitted.
• The mayor will be given permission to throw out any questioner who she deems disrespectful, the judgment being entirely his/hers.
• If the questioner fails to attend the meeting his/her question will be rejected.
• If any question is accepted but rewarded with a non-answer or falsehood the questioner will not be allowed to raise a secondary question.
They really are worried that too much information on their dishonest
practices is leaking out into the big wide world arent they? They appear to be
prepared to stoop to the lowest levels in their rush to put as many obstacles as
possible in the way of democracy and accountability. Can there be any more proof
that Bexley council has something that it is desperate to hide?
Can you imagine the result of these changes? Nick Dowlings questions all rejected because the
mayor says he doesnt applaud loudly enough at meetings. Mr. Bryants questions
all rejected because he got up councillors noses by standing as an independent
councillor. Mr. Barnbrook is definitely persona non grata because councillors already
refer to him as a Nazi to his face. My questions ruled out because it is pretty obvious
I am no friend of the council.
All contentious issues can be ruled out by getting Ms. Priti Patel MPs research
assistant and ex-Bexley councillor David Leaf to sell
himself out again with a series of fake and innocuous questions on as many subjects as possible.
Result? No other Bexley resident is able to enquire about the same subject for six months.
Repeat ad-infinitum. Its not Mick Barnbrook who is the Nazi is it?
This is a quick summary of the councils proposals to stamp on local democracy hard. The
full document is on line.
15 April (Part 2) - Residents showered with TLC again
The
harassment issue has been referred to the Met. Polices Directorate of
Professional Standards and for that and other reasons is unlikely to surface
again until next month so it would appear I must return to the routine
reporting of councillors peculiar relationships with the truth. Inevitably the name Craske comes to the fore.
Last November, and recorded in a blog two months ago, councillor Craske in one of his intemperate outbursts at a council meeting
offered to remove the Controlled Parking Zone
(CPZ) from Albert Road, Bexley. It never happened of course, it was just Craske losing his cool again.
The outburst had been directed at Nick Dowling who has been asking Craske to justify his soon to triple CPZ charges for a very long time. At
the next council meeting
Nicholas asked Craske why he hadnt removed the CPZ. It was perhaps a slightly cheeky question but
Craske made the offer so why not follow up on it?
Craske said he had arranged a survey. You can see his full response in the
official council minutes reproduced here. Rather oddly the minute writer failed
to record the fact that Craske said that residents didn’t want the CPZ removed
and neither for that matter has Nicholas run a campaign for removal of any CPZ.
That was Craskes offer and came straight out of the blue because Craske cannot
control his own tongue.
Mr. Dowling was surprised to hear that a survey of residents had taken place as he had heard nothing
about it from his neighbours or anyone else. So Nick decided he should find out
more. He put in a Freedom of Information request (FOI) to discover what
questions the residents of Albert Road were asked and what they said in reply.
The FOI question and answer is reproduced below.
Surprise, surprise, the council does not have any answer.
How would you interpret that given Craskes unenviable track record in the truth
and integrity department? No one in Albert Road knows about the survey, no one
in the council has any evidence that there was a survey. You can be pretty sure
there was no survey, yet councillor Craske is prepared to stand up at a council
meeting and swear there was. Listening to you, working for you, deceiving you at every opportunity.
15 April (Part 1) - The police state of Bexley
Forty three minutes after putting
that harassment letter
on-line last Monday I received an email from an influential
Bonkers reader offering to make enquiries on my behalf. Four hours later Bexley Police Borough
Commander Dave Stringer found that enquiry on his desk. My influential reader felt the whole
thing was mad and sinister.
Yesterday I received a little bit of feedback. Among the things said was
They do not intend that you should have to stop blogging or reporting on council meetings.
They confirmed that name calling etc. is not a police matter."
They feel that there has at some point been something written that amounts to a
threat to an individuals personal safety.”
My esteemed reader said I would be very surprised if you had ever made such a
threat as it’s not your style at all but the police made it clear that this is
the reason for you being issued with the harassment letter.
It certainly isnt my style. I have gone through 67 years of life without
getting involved in a serious argument, let alone violence. Well not if you
ignore the time I was beaten up by a Bexleyheath policeman on my own doorstep in a
case of mistaken identity. The then Borough Commander was very apologetic indeed. In fact
he referred his own officer to the complaints authority. But apart from that
nothing. Not so much as a parking ticket or a speeding fine, certainly no
criminal record or even the most minor of brushes with the law.
Ive racked my brain for anything on the site that could be construed as
a threat and the best I could come up with was
the blog
that suggested councillor Craske was ill-advised to make his route to work public on the web.
I specifically advised that he had the reference removed. It is still there so
Craske cant have taken my little tease too seriously. On the other hand the
Craske theory is attractive if you can believe the councils leaks machine.
My ultra-helpful reader went on to say What they propose is that they talk to
you one to one about what the actual problem is and they have tried to contact
you. I dont think they tried very hard. I have one phone number on the Contact page and another in the phone book.
Lots of other people have found my email address on the site but a Detective
Inspector hasnt been able to detect it.
However, as my special reader had encouraged me to help the detective to make
contact, I emailed him this morning
Dear DI Marshall,
As you will know, within an hour or two of receipt of your letter, Xxxxxxxxx
contacted me to offer to intervene on my behalf with Borough Commander Stringer and yesterday
reported back certain information and that you have been trying to contact me.
Your letter not only attracted the immediate attention of Xxxxxxxxx but also that of the
press and has been widely discussed on a variety of websites across the country.
Such near unique action by yourself implies a complaint of a very serious nature and
that published comment has gone well beyond the normal bounds of what is commonly
found on the net. If I am to address the problem I must know who I have offended
and where on the site the problem is. Upon receipt of this information two members
of the Bexley-is Bonkers team will be happy to see you at a mutually convenient
venue. An afternoon next week (not Thursday) would be convenient.
I hope to hear from you soon.
regards,
Malcolm Knight
It took exactly 30 minutes for DI Marshall to reply. His short email
included I am unable to provide personal details of those who have contacted
police regarding your web site as they have stated they do not wish to be named
at this stage. I am duty bound to comply with their request unless or until
legal action requires such information to be revealed.
So we have a dilemma which defies logic. The police dont want me to stop
blogging but tell me if I offend some anonymous coward again I will be subject
to criminal proceedings. Only at that stage will they reveal who the coward is.
So they sort of encourage me to carry on blogging but if I say boo to the wrong
person they may come and arrest me. I dont see what else I can do, Ill just
have to carry on regardless and see where this madness goes next.
14 April (Part 2) - A taster for things to come
For the benefit of my many new readers I shall regurgitate an old story to illustrate
the depths to which Bexley council is prepared to sink to persecute its
residents and why so many people have come to believe
Bexley council is severely lacking in the honesty and integrity department.
When Bexley council made a false demand against a Bexley taxpayer for £1,250,000,
yes you read that right, £1·25 million! Senior High Court Judge Lewison
threw their case out in no uncertain terms.
The precise words the High Court Judge used to condemn Bexley Councils conduct was
unconscionable and that they had effectively set a trap. You can
read the full judgment here.
Unconscionable is very strong language for a High Court Judge and defined in the
dictionary as monstrously extortionate; unscrupulous; having no conscience; irreconcilable
with what is right. Judge Lewison didnt mince his words did he?
Councillor Colin Campbell, Cabinet Member (St. Marys, £22,650) and councillor Nigel Betts
(Falconwood & Welling, £13,173) both refused to support an inquiry into which Bexley Council
employees were responsible for making this false demand. More recently they have worked together
to try to deprive residents of their statutory right to make Freedom of Information requests. This
is typical of Bexley councils attitude to good management and governance and I shall be
spelling out a few more recent examples over coming days.
There are a couple more snippets of information to pass on before I close down
for the day, The repercussions of Mondays harassment letter are still rumbling
around the net. It is mentioned on the
EU referendum forum
now and although I think I have replied to all the support emails I have received I would
like to offer sincere thanks for all the helpful advice. A very helpful intermediary
went to the police on my behalf and I shall report more fully on this tomorrow,
not that there is a huge amount to say yet but there may be a sign that common sense
is about to break out - on the part of the police anyway; too much to hope for the council too.
During the last week or so Bonkers has been on the receiving end of rumours
about Bexley councillors. Bonkers doesnt deal in rumours so there has been no hint
of anything here but since it may now be found on the web I suppose I must give it
a link if only not to appear behind the times. The more scurrilous aspects
of it I doubt very much but if true are nobody elses business. On the other
hand if the big cabinet row story is true I know whose side I would be on.
The Harassment letter banner has now gone from the blogs for technical
reasons and it wasnt attractive to look at.
14 April (Part 1) - Where next?
I am soft pedalling on Bonkers for a few days; it is because of the infamous
letter but not in the way that Bexleyheath (sic)
council will have hoped for. While certain unspoken developments drift towards
their conclusion I am busy assembling a collection of documents you havent seen before which
should make Bexley council squirm. Episode one by Monday with any luck.
Until this week I found myself fielding relatively straight-forward
questions about parking tickets and the like hoping that one of them
might make an interesting story for the blog; now thanks to Bexley councils
assistance on the site publicity front I find myself in conversation with Sunday
Newspapers and hoping that Bexley council will make an interesting story for
their front page. Pandoras box got opened!
There are moves afoot to arrange a local referendum, probably to call for a
reduction in councillors allowances and fat cats pay. Personally I think
Id prefer the toilets vote mentioned in the Shoppers letters columns this
week. The opening salvo will be sent in the direction of council leader ONeill quite soon. Under the Local
Authorities (Referendums) (Petitions & Directions) Regulations 2000, 8,653 signatures
are needed to force a referendum. Not my scheme but I will lend support
obviously. Expect every conceivable obstacle to be put in its path by Bexley council.
Returning to the subject of the infamous letter I hear that I am not the only
local blogger to have received one. His is even weirder than mine, didnt even
get his name right apparently. If you are happy to have your computer screen
peppered with bad language you can read what he has to say about it
here but
the basic complaint is that this blogger is accused of putting stuff on the
Bonkers site. Totally untrue. I have used
someone
elses input on the Bonkers blog but that was someone completely different.
The local CID have done a grand job of investigating this one; Im inclined to
think they dont really want anything to do with it.
Before the end of the day I shall revert back to the old banner heading for the
blog. The harassment letter may show as a scrolling strip in your web browser
but in its raw state on my computer it displays full size and leaves me with
very little screen space to write the text. So just because it is a thorough
nuisance to me it has to go. It will remain on non-blog pages for a while longer
because I dont have to edit them very often so its currently doing no harm.
13 April (Part 2) - Everywhere has gone Bonkers
Nearly every madcap idea from Bexley council has a tendency to come back and bite them on the bum.
They have closed down access to the bonkers website for council staff (libraries too probably) but in
doing so have sent news of their carryings-on nationwide. I picked
up these two items from a business discussion forum where my harassment letter was being discussed
and for good measure Bexley is Bonkers now gets a mention on the Daily Express website. And to think some of
us were thinking of paying for flyers and handing them out in the Broadway.
There has even been a whisper that Bonkers has been mentioned in the
tea-rooms of the House of Commons.
13 April (Part 1) - Fame at last!
Its been a good week. On Monday there was confirmation that Bexley councillors
read the blog, yesterday the story was picked up by several other bloggers
which boosted the number of Bonkers readers very nicely thank you, and today I must say a
very big thank you to the News Shopper (Bexley edition) which runs the story on page 3.
They dont give the actual web address but mention the site by name and my
name too. Google either and the site is available for all to see. More readers! Lovely.
The Shopper carries a readers letter which ends Lets have a vote. Councillors or
toilets? Actually that is not as silly as it sounds and it is one of several
things that will be discussed at this evenings meeting of the Bonkers
supporters club. One thing we can take off the agenda is how to increase the number
of hits on Bexley is Bonkers. Thanks to Bexley council generating so much free
publicity for the site, that is something which can be deferred for another time.
12 April - Harassment and alarm. Headless chicken syndrome - click image to read full version
So Bexleyheath council (who might they be?) claim I am harassing councillors and alarming them. I suppose I would be alarmed too
if I was shown to be incompetent and worse on a daily basis, but harassing them; how come?
The last time I sent an email to a councillor was on 17th September 2009 when I
advised John Davey (Lesnes Abbey, £9,543 + £7,782 from the Bexley Care Trust) of the existence of this site, then
no more than a page or two. I have made none of the Freedom of Information
requests which are admitted within council to be giving them so many
headaches. I wrote to the mayor after my very first attendance at a council
meeting because having come from a business background myself and not unfamiliar
with high-level meetings I was absolutely appalled that her chairmanship skills
were so obviously lacking. The mayor told me that she was wonderful and I did no more about
it. No point; people that deluded dont listen.
I did send an official complaint when councillor Craske made
personal remarks
about Mr. Elwyn Bryant and when the reply came up with an excuse which was
proved false by the councils own minutes I sent it back under the appeals
procedure. That came back with another obvious lie but as I had in the
meantime seen a letter from the Standards Board for England saying that they
were themselves being closed down and in future there would be no sanctions
against any local Standards Board however corrupt it might be I felt I had
better things to do than pursue a lost cause.
A complaint I made against the mayor when she blatantly played fast and loose
with Standing Orders and the timing of questions wasnt even acknowledged. I
havent gone out of my way to be awkward with formal questions at council
meetings either. I have asked if any precautions have been taken against the councils website
going down during a major power cut as it did when EDF cables were vandalised in
July 2009 and I asked what if anything was being done to retrieve the £1,931.95
that the councils website says is still owed by convicted Conservative
fraudster and ex-council leader Ian Clement. I left my questions late so that
the council had the option of replying privately by post and was rewarded with no answer at all.
So how else might I have been harassing them? If examining the inner workings of
council, much of which they should be ashamed of, is harassment then I suppose
they may have a point, but none of it has been made up and I frequently link to
original documents or put things within quotation marks to indicate
authenticity. If I was fundamentally wrong about anything a reasonable council
would have sought corrections but they have said nothing; presumably because
they know what is written here is always basically true.
Not really harassment in the accepted sense of the word is it and unlike some others in
the council chamber I stand up when requested while the mayor enters the chamber
although I must point out it is to show respect for the office, not for her.
Where else should I look for signs of harassment?
Councillors’ addresses are mainly on the council’s website when I’ve published a freely available email address I
took care to encode it in such a way that it would not attract spam.
Could it be NoToMob
thats upset them? The council wont be liking their
attentions and NTB told me (and its on their website) that it was Bonkers
that attracted them to Bexley and it was me who provided contact
details (including phone numbers with permission) of unfairly penalized residents.
Saving motorists a pound or two is bound to get up councillors noses. How will
they fund their Christmas outings?
What finally tipped this utterly brainless council into showing their hand and proving
they read Bonkers so that it becomes worthwhile addressing them directly via its
pages? My guess is that the last straw was when I turned up at
Boris Johnsons little publicity stunt down at Erith station last week. I
was the only nobody there and got the beady eye from Leader O’Neill. I was
there because her office leaks and because Erith Station car park is publicly
accessible property and the council had not spent £1,320 on a team of bouncers
to cut the riff-raff down to size
as she was advocating at a council
meeting only two days later.
I never use bad language except when reporting
insults
traded between councillors. If they dont like that sort of heat they shouldnt
be in their chosen kitchen - and I dont make them read the comments anyway - but
thanks council for making it appear more influential than it probably is. But
there again I may be wrong on that. Mayor Clark wont like to hear it but the site
is not entirely without friends in high places. I shouldnt put this one in
quotations marks because I cannot reveal the source but I will say that someone
deeply into Tory politics in Bexley said your blog is the best thing there has
ever been for democracy in Bexley and went on to tell how councillors read it
and are running around like headless chickens not knowing what to do about it.
He certainly got that right!
Oh, the alarm thing. Yes O’Neill and co. should perhaps be alarmed. Maybe they
would feel alarmed if they knew just how much information flows into me about them.
11 April (Part 3) - ello, ello, ello. Whats goin on ere then?
Do
you remember the case I picked up from the
Bexleyheath Chronicle on 23 March?
The one where ten Bexley cabinet members and nine members of staff took
themselves off to Sussex for a few days before Christmas and lo and behold a bill for
£2,585 showed up in the councils accounts. No one has been allowed to
know why The Flackley Ash Hotel in Rye was so much better than somewhere closer
or even the Civic Centre but lets accept for a moment it was.
At the last council meeting I heard Council Leader ONeill bragging about how Bexley
councillors are so much more careful with money than their counterparts in other
boroughs and that they didnt claim some things they are entitled to. I have
no notes of the context and mayor Val Clark doesnt allow recordings but I
remember it was said, just not sure about what. Maybe it was a reference to the
Christmas jolly, maybe it wasnt but I have nevertheless been gathering
information about how much that little beano cost. You see, the council
department that stuck that £2,585 figure on the web now says it didnt cost that
at all because Cabinet members decided in advance of the meeting that they
would meet the full cost of their food and accommodation, which reduced the
actual cost to the Council to £1,685.92 for the 19 people who attended.
There is something funny with the arithmetic there. £2,585 for 19 people is £136
each but reducing the cost by £900 because ten cabinet members decided in
advance to pay for themselves can only be squared if we accept that those
councillors accepted a much lower standard of accommodation than other guests. I
think we can rule that out and there is no getting away from the fact that the
hotel sent a bill for £2,585. I did wonder if the hotel billed the cabinet
members individually and separately but it cant be that either because that wouldnt
have reduced the published bill by £900 as stated by the councils own Payments
Manager. So its a mystery that doesnt quite add up. Or does it?
Buried on the councils website is the fact that cabinet members are entitled to
claim ninety pounds subsistence for an overnight stay. £90 each for ten people?
It looks like we have found our missing £900. It would appear that the cabinet
didnt decide that they would meet the full cost of their food and
accommodation but decided not to put in a subsistence claim. Does anyone think
they should? When I was at work and needed to be away overnight I was given an
allowance which would be enough to cover a room in a cheap hotel. If I was sent
on a training course involving an overnight stay and food was provided I didnt get
anything. However it seems that our esteemed cabinet members think its the norm
to get all their board and lodgings paid for at our expense and get subsistence
on top and when they dont claim the extra ninety quid we are supposed to
be grateful. They set themselves up as whiter-than-white
and the council sends out a letter saying they paid for the Christmas jolly themselves
and I dont think it is true at all.
I suppose the disreputable crew that runs Bexley council will say I am harassing
them again but if they wont tell the whole story we have to try to work it out
for ourselves. As always, if I am wrong then I am ready with the Delete key at any time.
11 April (Part 2) - I thought they were cleverer than that
Although the object if this website is to inform Bexley residents of some of the murkier
goings on in council I would be less than human if I didnt wonder what
councillors and staff think about it, but the fact is I dont (or didnt!) really know. I have never used
any leaked information from current council employees, I wouldnt want to be responsible
for anyone losing their job, and the number of leaks from councillors can be counted on the
fingers of one hand so the truth is I really didnt know what they think of Bonkers or
even if they read it. The Tory grandee who reads it every day and said that mayor
Val Clark was about as useful as a chocolate teapot was as good as it got.
I thought their silence was a clever policy as far as the council is concerned.
The quieter they are the more difficult my job is, but now the councillors have
shown they do read Bonkers as anyone who reached this blog today via the sites
front page will
know. Bexley council have at long last acknowledged the existence of
Bexley-is-Bonkers and additionally banned their employees from looking at it.
One of my friends at Bexley
council contacted me to say the site has just been barred on the councils
webserver. Its a milestone in Bonkers development but what is it that they are trying to hide?
The council broke their silence by getting their friends in
the CID to send a letter
warning me about the way I criticise the way Bexleyheath Council is run by Councillors.
They say it is harassment. We are prevented from asking councillors questions
because they plant their own, we are not allowed
to take photos and now we are not allowed to criticise them. It really
is The Police State of Bexley.
How is criticism harassment? If I get things wrong I correct them. The
About page has said as much since the day the site was created.
On one occasion I quoted the News Shopper which was quoting a councillor. That councillor
asked me if I could amend his quoted words because the News Shopper had it wrong. I
took his word for it and gladly did so. That facility is open to anyone but no one else has ever
made contact to say Bonkers was anything but truthful. Should I assume
they dont like being mentioned at all? Some London blogs label their councillors with words which would get the
**** treatment in even the most scurrilous of newspapers. I once called the mayor a
Lemon. Oh, goodness me, whatever next?
One could say that if councillors feel harassed by such low level
mickey-taking they
shouldnt go out of their way to read the blogs as they clearly have been. It seems
altogether more likely that councillors want to have the site closed down because they dont
like their comfy and lucrative little world disturbed by modern communication methods and
the sentiment that elected representatives who have put themselves up for public office should
be prepared for their decisions
to have a direct line of communication to
their electorate. Both quotations being words of wisdom from the Parliamentary
Under Secretary of State at the Department of Communities and Local Government.
Unfortunately Eric Pickles (the Minster) and Bob Neill MP both seem to have this quaint
idea that Bexley councillors harbour the same ideas about democracy as they do.
More revelations about Bexley councils financial fiddling coming just as soon as my
email inbox can be dealt with!
11 April (Part 1) - Ghost riders
I
thought this ghostly image of a cyclist on the pavement in Abbey Road, Belvedere
was mildly amusing when I photographed it last year but its nothing like as
funny as the video a Welling resident has posted on YouTube about Bexley
councils (and TfLs) madcap cycling schemes.
Take a look for yourself, its hilarious, well it would be if they hadnt cost you a fortune.
The author said he never saw a cyclist while making the video. More ghost riders perhaps?
The same author
has done another; this time it illustrates the decline of Welling caused by
political decisions. Its amazing how many people despise Bexley council and
everything it stands for. The more critical I am the more support rolls in; probably
it is not going too far to say there is widespread hatred for Bexley council. Only
once have I received a contrary email and that writer is so obsessed with this
site that he accused a contributor to the News Shopper forum who criticised Bexley
council of being me! No one else has ever had a good word to say about anything
Bexley council has done. On the contrary, one serving councillor congratulated me
for scrupulously accurate reporting and an ex-councillor said you are
fast becoming the only way to know whats going on in meetings. And then there
was the councillor who liked Bonkers so much he
tried to set up
a Bonkers of his own. Absolutely bonkers, but nice to know he cared.
10 April (Part 2) - Marriage of convenience
Convenient
for question planting that is, not to mention the odd bit of Nick Clegg style nepotism and string pulling.
A well-wisher within Bexley councils political classes dropped this little morsel into my inbox today after having second thoughts about his fellow
councillors stitching up question time
at last Wednesdays meeting: the one where ex-councillor David Leaf addressed fake questions
to the council so as to deprive genuine residents of the opportunity to hold the council to
account. I have to be extra careful when handling leaks from council sources because they might
be false in the hope of compromising Bonkers by encouraging circulation of bad
information. However this leak seems to check out.
The images shown are extracts from publicly available on-line marriage records.
It shows that Ms. Priti Patel
(MP for Witham, Essex since May 2010) married Alex Sawyer in Bexley seven years ago. Ms. Patel
is, as I discovered last week, ex-councillor David Leafs employer, but
who is Alex Sawyer?
Well for those who dont know, he is Conservative councillor for Northumberland Heath (£9,543).
So the stitching up and deceit goes rather further than I first thought. All
concerned probably think that they have been very clever to get one over Bexley
residents by manipulating council procedures. Poor Priti, probably innocently linked to Bexleys
corruption but councillors need to learn that subverting democracy is not a good idea.
10 April (Part 1) - Scamera hunting - (The NoToMob call it $chunting
After
finding no scamera cars in Bexleyheath or Welling over three hours yesterday I
wondered if they had been scared away from two of their most profitable areas.
Later my NoToMob contact told me one had been in Welling until about 08:30 but
that was before he got on the scene. I think there is a network of helpful
contacts living or working close to favoured scamera sites (the NoToMob jargon
is honeypots) but all of them reported a blank, even
Blackfen Road. They were still reporting no cars when I spotted the three
motorcyclists who had decided to tour the lesser known honeypots after finding
three cars missing from the pigpen (more NoToMob jargon). They got lucky in Long
Lane but the scamera operator immediately radiod
NSL
for instructions and then went on a slow
time-wasting tour of residential streets which eventually led to
Walnut Tree Road, outside the old Erith Town Hall where there is a bus stop to
be watched. (See picture.) At 2:30 they escorted the gestapo wagon back to base
and NoToMob left for an appointment in Medway. NSL
knew that schunting was to finish at 2:30 and a gestapo wagon went to park outside
KFC in Welling immediately afterwards.
There have been more strange anti-motorist activities in other parts of town.
Tomorrow Bexley council is increasing parking charges and extending charging
periods to all night and Sundays in most car parks. All of that is documented in
official documents, but I am told that street parking signs that used to say
08.30 to 17:30 have been augmented by more that say 08:30 to 18:30 - and
then a few days later the new signs, but not their poles, were taken away. Such
a time extension is not listed in any of the councils recent price hiking documents so I
have no idea why new signs should have gone up and then disappeared. Maybe Craske is due another
FOI.
9 April - The NoToMob returns to Bexley - click any image for photo gallery (4 images)
NoToMob were unable to spend long in Bexley today but I thought I would try my luck at an interception somewhere, however a bus and Shanks Pony are no match for a motorbike, nor a gestapo wagon come to that. I started in Bexleyheath Broadway around 10:30 a.m. but it was clear and a short bus ride showed Welling to be the same. I hung around there for an hour and briefly spoke to an NSL lady putting a penalty notice on a car displaying the payment receipt face down. Are people really that careless or do they flip over in the draught caused by the shutting door? The parking attendant was perfectly civil to me but when I spied a gaggle of four and took a photo from far too far away they immediately ran over and surrounded me, saying I wasnt allowed to take photographs of them. I said I am actually and if you dont believe me call a policeman. While one used his phone another demanded I show him the picture. It was going to be useless at the range I took it but I didnt see any reason to prove it. I told them where I was going next and walked away. I didnt hear from them again and the very much magnified photo is in the gallery section.
Just as I was about to get back on a bus to Welling I spotted three NoToMob
riders heading towards Welling and just managed to grab a photo as they swept
by, but when I got to Welling the cupboard was bare. I didnt see a gestapo
wagon during the three hours I was looking. Maybe NoToMob have driven them away already.
While in Welling I looked in the library and saw it advertised Refreshments
but found none. One of the librarians said there had never been any refreshments
available and was surprised to hear the sign outside indicated otherwise. While
back in Bexleyheath I looked in the Central Library because that advertised
Refreshments too but there was only a chocolate bar dispensing machine. Should
I find it odd that one centre of learning encourages me to eat chocolate and
another, Bedonwell School,
confiscates chocolate buttons from four year olds? Probably not; one represents
an opportunity for Bexley council to extract money from the public and the other
represents an opportunity to show who is boss.
Yesterday I took a phone call from someone who asked why some words appear in red on the
blog. It’s simple enough. Your web browser displays text in red if the words are set to
do something when clicked on. Most of the time clicking on the red will take you to
another part of the site which has more information on the subject matter
highlighted. Sometimes a click will take you to another website. You may also get
a little pop-up explanation to tell you exactly what will happen.
Abbreviations may provide a pop-up explanation too.
Just hover your mouse pointer (or click) over the text.
There is no report on Caroles trip to school on the B11 bus this week because
nothing much has happened, one slightly too fussy bus driver and no contacts
with officialdom. As the Easter holidays have started I have taken the
opportunity to turn off my alarm clock.
8 April (Part 2) - Predatory Peter
There
were two items on the Agenda of last Wednesdays council meeting that caught my eye which I didnt mention in
yesterdays blog. Both were Craske related and I
would have been interested in what he had to say on one of them. The plan was
that he put forward a motion on the forthcoming referendum. The London
Borough of Bexley notes the implications for local residents of the referendum
on the alternative vote system, and urges all residents who oppose changing the
voting system to vote No on 5th May.
Unfortunately it was ruled out of order as it fell foul of the Political
Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000. A pity because I would have liked
to have heard councillor Craskes views on the Alternative Vote system, no really I would! I
know that Nick Clegg described it as a miserable little compromise, I know that
only three countries world-wide use it and one of those is in the process of abandoning it
and I know a collection of luvvies and second rate comedians is keen that we should vote
for it - which seems to me a pretty good reason to vote No. Why should anyone
care what a collection of actors, poets and athletes think about AV?
As we werent able to hear councillor Craske tell 200 odd people why he
thought AV was bad Ill make up for his disappointment by referring rather more
than 200 people to what twenty new MPs had to say about it. Their views were
recorded by Daniel Hannan, MEP.
Craske strikes me as the sort of old fashioned Tory that brought his party into
such disrepute during the nineteen eighties. No humility for anyone other than those in privileged positions, or to put it
more simply wickedly selfish and deceitful. One bit of deceit practiced by
Craske was detailed in the Strategy 2014 document (the proposed cuts) put before the cabinet on 3
November 2010. He said that he planned commencement of enforcement of moving
traffic contraventions using Mobile In-car Camera Enforcement and fixed CCTV.
Also use fixed CCTV for no stopping parking contraventions. He said that
the reason was to get more value for money from the systems. Weasel words to
avoid saying to raise extra revenue which would be illegal.
The version of Strategy 2014 put out for public consumption in February pushed the proposal
to persecute motorists even more than in the past back to
the year 2012/13. Since then more revenue streams have been sought and
Craske is nothing if not devious, so hidden in last Wednesdays meeting Agenda
were proposals to Accelerate expenditure reductions and one of them was to
bring forward the stepped-up CCTV attack on motorists to this year 2011/2012. No
formal warning to residents, just attack them without warning. Accelerate
expenditure reductions is a very odd way of describing a revenue hike but then
if you expect honesty from Bexley council you must be very new to the borough.
Craske anticipates robbing motorists of an extra £81,000 this year. He doesnt
say which day this new imposition starts (probably wants to keep it an unpleasant surprise)
but it is safest to assume it is right now.
The NoToMob continue to be active in Bexley. Today their representative went to the Civic
Centre to ask to see evidence that Bexleys CCTV systems had the correct certification
for parking and bus lane enforcement. The Listening council refused to
see him and under pressure (and only via an intermediary on an internal telephone) insisted
that if he wanted to know he must make a Freedom of Information request. How ridiculous is that?
Craskes department cannot confirm they are acting lawfully and insist on a time consuming procedure which
Craske himself
was complaining about only two days ago. You couldnt make it up!
8 April (Part 1) - Priti Pathetic
So who is this David Leaf who was so keen to sell himself on Wednesday evening at the behest of mayor Val Clark and do his bit for suppression of democracy in this borough? A bit of research shows that the former Conservative Bexley councillor came 5th in the vote for his former Belvedere seat in May 2010. Must have been really popular to sink that decisively. His own website describes himself as formally (sic) a Conservative councillor but still involved in local politics. Actually that isnt the whole truth; he has a job in Westminster as researcher to Conservative MP for Witham, Essex, Priti Patel. Incongruously Ms. Patel claims on her website that she believes in the principles of accountability, transparency and fair play. Maybe someone should tell her that her research assistant doesnt.
7 April - Cuts are for the riff-raff not for us says the Council Leader
I
didnt expect a large turnout for last nights council meeting, but I was
wrong, the Bexley Council for Equality and Diversity (BCED), no longer supported
by Bexley council, turned out in force and swelled the numbers in the public gallery to at least 150.
When the meeting started chairman Mayor Clark’s first priority was to remind everyone that she had no intention of following
government guidelines on open and transparent local government and had banned
filming of meetings nor would she ever grant permission to anyone who sought it. She said this
was to protect members of the public from being filmed without their permission.
So now we have two liars, Craske and Clark. When a video camera
was used in the council chamber a few members of the public had the backs of
their heads captured on tape; if Clark is so concerned for public
privacy maybe she should turn off the towns CCTV system.
There were deputations from the BCED and on behalf of parents and carers of
adults with learning disabilities whose activities have been slashed by the
councils cuts programme. A Mr. John Stanton spoke movingly of the impact on
people whose lives had revolved around the lost social activities while I
surveyed all the councillors to try to judge by their expressions if they were
in the slightest bit interested in what was being said. Most I will give the
benefit of the doubt but councillor John Davey (Lesnes Abbey, £9,543 + £7,782 from the Bexley Care Trust)
appeared to be in a dream-world staring into space every time I looked. Another exception was
Clark herself whose eyes were darting all around the chamber at councillors and public alike
as if she was a bag of nerves and after the mess she made of last months
meeting that might be understandable.
Following the charade of deputations the meeting moved on to questions from the
public. My view of this section is that it is another waste of time, the answers
are worthless but the antics surrounding them may be entertaining. The
procedure is that 15 minutes is devoted to reading out answers to questions that
(in contravention of
the mayors favoured book on chairmanship)
are not read out. If the questioner is present he is allowed to ask a subsidiary question
after his first one is answered and if a question is unanswered because of lack
of time the questioner gets his answer in the post. That procedure, inadequate
as it may be, is abused. Clark doesnt accept questions which are too
difficult to answer. One of my associates had his rejected totally this month
and Clark didnt have the courtesy to let him know. Mine was watered down to
the point that a simple fobbing off answer will be possible without getting to the heart of
the matter. Last month my question which should have been answered by post is still unanswered
and questions that do get through are often not answered properly at the meeting. In
all the time I have attended council meetings Craske has never yet answered a
question and instead filibusters, prevaricates, throws around insults and lies.
Yesterday the council tried a new trick, the planted question, and its
associate, the queue jump. Last month my contributor
Phil thought the council might be shuffling the order of questions to ensure
only the easiest got an airing at meetings. I still dont believe this is the
norm but there may be signs of change. Do you really believe that any ordinary
Bexley citizen would be so concerned about the prospect of Ken Livingston
becoming Mayor of London again that he would write in with a question about the
likely effect on Bexley and stand at the lectern to hear the answer?
Do you believe that any ordinary citizen would ask how well the borough has
worked with the Mayor of London on transport issues? Does a question asking what
discussions the council leader has had with government ministers on the Localism
Bill sound like the sort of genuine question a Bexley resident might ask? No,
neither do I and the game was carelessly given away by mayor Clark who
addressed the questioner as
councillor Leaf.
Yes, they are so desperate to avoid answering questions that they dragged an ex-councillor into the chamber to
pose fake questions and cause genuine ones to go unanswered.
There was just time for resident Michael Barnbrook to get in two questions. He
asked Leader ONeill if councillors should not cut their allowances so
as to suffer the same pain they are inflicting on the public and when she indicated that pain
was reserved for the public and not the ruling classes he asked Do you have no
shame? I did not hear the answer because the public applause was too loud.
Mr. Barnbrook also addressed a question to councillor Craske (TLC)
to the effect that the one thing the recent public consultations had shown clearly is that
residents (74.2% of responses, the highest level of consistency for any response) wanted to see a reduction in the spending on
parking controls and made reference to Bexleys fatuous slogan Listening to
you. Craskes downfall is that he has lied so often (and so differently on
occasions) that he knows that every figure he offers will be contradicted by one
he has given earlier so he had little option but to fall back on the tried and
tested I refer the gentleman to the answer I gave earlier. When pressed a bit
harder he couldnt resist an outright lie. He said that he was now spending less
on parking controls than what was spent on answering Mr. Barnbrooks questions
under Freedom of Information legislation. This is typical of the irreverence
with which the council treats public question time. As I said at the outset, I
am more interested in the way the questions are answered and their excuses for
avoiding them, than the answers themselves; by and large they are lies.
Was there anything good to report? I have to admit there was. Clark had made
good use of her stop-watch and the timing of questions
was meticulous. She even cut off a councillor in mid flow when he ran out of time; that has never
happened before. Councillor Campbell (St. Marys, £22,650) seemed to make a decent job of explaining
why there is a £100,000 loan facility for the Thames Innovations Centre and said
that it had made a profit this year. Given the amount the council itself spends
there I would expect nothing less. Councillor Campbell also spoke in praise of
the co-operation given by MPs and how it was a
two-way operation which provoked
councillor Deadman (North End, £12,114) into making a very strange comment. He bemoaned
the fact that the borough was not represented by any Labour MPs. I expect the
MP
for Erith & Thamesmead, Teresa Pearce, will be having a quiet word in his
shell-like.
Photograph taken at a Cabinet meeting before Mayor Clark’s latest attack on democracy.
6 April - The Inspire Community Trust
The Inspire Community Trust (ICT) is yet another of those quasi-quangos
registered as charities to which Bexley council has sub-contracted so many of its services.
One must wonder why Moneybags Tuckley has to be paid as much money as he is when
so few of the councils responsibilities are left for him to manage. Olly
Cromwell, famed for being banned from council premises for filming there, has
extracted information from the Charities Commission which shows that the ICT spends
nearly 70% of its donations on staff wages. Not what most people expect of a
charity, but then you are not supposed to know that; the ICT and Bexley council try to keep
it under wraps. The ICT website doesnt say a word about its charity status.
One of the things the ICT does is issue (via the Post Office) Freedom passes for disabled
people. Carole (who I escort most days on the
school run) got hers from ICT and was referred back there because her four year old son was
judged to be her carer when it was him who called for assistance when his mothers
disability caused an emergency on the way to school. One part of ICT said they
couldnt help the son in his role of carer and referred Carole to another part of
ICT which couldnt give assistance because the son was not disabled. So ICT
achieved absolutely nothing; which is not a lot for the near £200,000 it costs
Bexleys taxpayers every month.
Olly Cromwells website
has more details on who runs The Inspire Community Trust and he is attempting to find out who
exactly does benefit from it. The employee on eighty grand a year is one; who are the others?
5 April - The police state of Bexley
The 9th of March was
the day that Bexley council showed its true colours. A man who
goes by the name Olly Cromwell (photo far left) had given Mayor Clark advance notice of his
intention to take a video camera into the council chamber. Only a week earlier
he had done so with great effect and caught our incompetent
Mayor breaking Standing Orders and generally manipulating the meeting to the
disadvantage of the public in attendance. She had been caught
on tape red-handed and wasnt going to risk that again.
A month later the council still hasnt managed to dream up a
half-plausible lie to cover themselves following the inevitable
official complaint to their Standards Board, even though they have the advantage of a
constitution which doesnt follow government guidelines and allows the Standards
Board to be rigged against honesty and democracy.
Clark’s attitude to open and transparent local government, poking two
fingers in the direction of the Under Secretary of State at the Communities Department, banning
photography and enforcing her anti-democratic tantrum with 27 police officers and
about a dozen bouncers doesnt come cheap. I can now report thanks to the FOI legislation that the Mayor spent £1,320 on the heavy mob. The cost of the police operation is unknown.
Another public council meeting is scheduled for tomorrow. It will be interesting
to see if Clark has learned anything from her many mistakes.
FOI request by Olly Cromwell.
4 April - Johnson and O’Neill; together again
Thanks to Civic Centre leaks, Bonkers was able to be at Erith railway station at 10 this morning to see Mayor Johnsons photocall publicizing the extension of the London Low Emissions Zone regulations to small vans from January next year. It clearly wasnt intended for public consumption as apart from Council Leader ONeill and Moneybags Tuckley there were only a few press photographers, some representatives from the motor trade and a couple of Boriss aides present. Unlike Bexleys fat cats, Boris didnt see the need for police protection or hired bouncers. The aides asked everyone with a camera who they represented and when told, asked if there was anything they could do to help. Bexley council please note.
The
Leader, coincidence or not, had her back towards me nearly all the time and I shall
spare you the photo of that view, but her young companion may be easier on the eye. See photo gallery.
If you are asking yourself what has this event got to do with Bexley you are not
alone. I put the same question to one of Boriss aides. She said nothing. One can only assume that it is because
Boris admires”
Teresa and the fact she has agreed to bumble around London for him paid solely by Bexleys taxpayers.
2 April (Part 2) - Caroles battle with TfL and the money grabbing Craske
There is not a lot to say about Caroles school run this week as her son has been
unwell and off school; at least it ensures he gets a decent meal at lunchtime
and doesnt have it taken away by a
nutty school teacher.
Im not sure if I said before but Carole is learning to drive, its the only
complete solution to getting to school reliably and she has already been
provided with a Motability vehicle in which she is taking driving lessons.
Getting it and a Blue Badge proved to be very simple, however Bexley council
knows how to cause a problem. There is a yellow line outside Caroles house so
she has to keep her badge on display. Every day the gestapo man comes down
Caroles cul-de-sac to look at the badge, he must know the car by now, every day it’s the
same one outside the same house in a road only 50 yards long. But yesterday the
inevitable happened and the Blue Badge had fallen from its normal position so
Carole got a parking ticket.
A Motability car with the appropriate disability
tax disc on the windscreen can go across the Dartford bridge for nothing because
the authorities know that Motability cars are by definition for the severely
disabled. The same applies to the London congestion zone, but on a yellow line
one slip - literally - and councils issue a £100 fine on a vehicle displaying
a tax disc only available to the disabled and accepted elsewhere without question.
2 April (Part1) - The NoToMob comes to Bexley
The NoToMob will be out and about again in Bexley today. Maybe not as many as last week but some will be. As before, please dont do anything that may impede their progress as Craske will be very keen to give them a ticket if he can.
1 April - Mayor Val Clark. Serial offender against local democracy
Mad Mayors month of shame - March 2011
•
Curtails public question time.
• Bans questions which might expose her incompetence.
• Surrounds herself with police protection at public council meetings. More police than public!
• Hires gangs of bouncers to impose her undemocratic decisions.
• Institutes bag searches on entry to public council meetings.
• Bans entry to the Civic Centre by anyone carrying a camera under threat of arrest by police.
• Bans entry to the Civic Centre by anyone carrying a placard or slogan.
• Refuses requests for exemption from restrictions. (Requests for exemption being permitted under council standing orders.)
• Fails to follow basic rules of chairmanship.
• Refuses to correct minutes of meetings.
• Writes to members of the public to admonish them for perfectly reasonable behaviour at public meetings. e.g. Not applauding enthusiastically.
• Allows councillors to abuse each other at meetings verbally. e.g. Tosser.
• Allows councillors to insult and abuse members of the public at council meetings; including laughing, jeering and gesturing.