31 March (Part 2) - Carefully chosen words
A new page appeared on the Bexley Conservatives’ website this morning. It puts a political slant on
the council’s move to their new Watling Street headquarters which
begins on 12th May. Not all of what they say is wrong.
As
noted on 26th April 2011 I think the decision to move to Watling Street was
probably the right decision but it wasn’t the cheapest option. That would have been
to redevelop the existing Broadway site but that might have led to Tesco supermarket
on the Woolwich site which is not an ideal spot for it.
The third alternative was to build in Erith but that would have put another £6
million on the bill for which the Conservatives criticise Labour who favoured it. If the
Tories were worried about six million why did they turn their backs on the cheaper
option which would have saved nearer £8 million? Council officers said a new
building would last 60 years compared to only 40 for the refurbished Woolwich.
Which was best value?
Cabinet
member Colin Campbell criticises Labour for voting for a new build Civic Centre
in Erith and claims that would have caused the loss of 700 new houses. That is a typical Tory lie -
unless you think Tesco was planning a store that would fill the entire Woolwich
site. In practice there would be little or no difference to the scope for new houses.
When the plan was approved Colin Campbell said that a single site
would save a million pounds a year and it would be funded by selling all the old
council sites. That didn’t actually happen, one site didn’t sell and has been leased, so
his figures no longer add up, especially with refurbishment costs going above
budget. To make the equation balance Campbell now claims that the move will save
£1·5 million a year. It’s a figure that is plucked from the air which no one can
check; all very convenient.
The Tory’s new web page goes on to compare itself with Labour Newham and an
unverified story that Newham spent £111 million on a new Town Hall. They should
be careful about comparing themselves with Newham. Bexley’s council tax is 15%
above Newham’s, parking permits are free there and £100 a year in Bexley and
rubbish like beds and sofas are collected free of charge - £30 an item in Bexley.
On the other hand I could lose my car in some of Newham’s potholes. Councils
have to prioritise their spending and in many ways Newham does a better job than
Bexley. Not that I would want to live there! My weekly visit is quite enough.
31 March (Part 1) - Conservative election News
The most recent addition to the Tory line up for May 2014 was missed from yesterday’s summary. See below.
The final piece of the jigsaw appears to have been filled in and unless one of them gets arrested for theft again
it should be safe to assume this is the definitive list of candidates. The
newest candidate is Slava Ibelgauptas hoping to represent North End. Fat chance
I would have thought but it illustrates how Tories gradually climb their greasy
poles. Next time he might get Lesnes and be in with half a chance, then, like
John Davey this year he may slip across to slightly safer Crayford, and from
there, like Melvin Seymour this year, to Northumberland Heath.
We have a fine pair in Northumberland Heath this year. Philip Read who made up a
cock and bull story about a resident which was enough to convince an obedient
police commander to get him
put in jail over night - fortunately the judge owed
nothing to Bexley council and let him out. And alongside Read is Melvin Seymour who
I watched spout nonsense in Woolwich Crown Court in an attempt to get the same
resident jailed for six months. Fortunately that judge noticed that the
documentary evidence said something rather different and ignored him. Seymour should
have been charged with perjury but maybe the electorate can give him four years
in the wilderness instead. Unfortunately the electorate may not be as astute as the judges.
Who is Slava Ibelgauptas? Ex-director of several
failed companies if Google is reliable. A description that would fit quite a
large number of Bexley Tories.
Previous Tory list.
30 March (Part 2) - Election News
The only changes detected during the past week is
a
new page
on UKIP’s Bexley website. It features Harbans Singh Buttar who at one time was
deputy mayor of Bexley under a Labour administration. Don’t click on his image
on UKIP’s website because it links to Lynn Smith who is up against
Mick
Barnbrook and Co. in Blackfen.
Labour seem to be relying on their Twitter accounts and door stepping. They
poked this leaflet through
my letter box this week. Best not to go to
their website.
Tories are placing their faith in misinformation and gullibility. It would seem,
if Mick Barnbrook’s experience in Blackfen is representative, that far too
many people are convinced that Bexley has the lowest council tax in London. The
truth is that only eight boroughs out of 32 pay more than Bexley. Joseph Goebbels
would have been proud to be on Teresa O’Neill’s team.
30 March (Part 1) - Bexley council’s promises come to naught. Pray a child is not injured
I
think I am going to have to compile a list of what Bexley Conservatives have done for us.
It will probably start with ‘closing all the public toilets’ but today I shall content myself
with ‘deliberately putting your child at risk’.
Ignoring bad parenting has been the norm for Bexley
council. Twice in recent years it has led to children
dying needlessly, but it is not only bad parents whose children are put at
risk of death as the parent of a child at Bedonwell Infant & Nursery School discovered.
Yesterday he brought the story up to date on
his own website;
his original piece
having been posted last December.
The problem is the dangerously narrow footpath flanked by parking bays which
does not allow safe passage to the school entrance. The parent currently
pursuing a resolution is Chris Attard, the Lesnes ward UKIP candidate for May 2014,
but he wasn’t planning on being a councillor when the situation first came to light.
The problem was
first mentioned
on BiB 13 months ago
and most recently on
17th December 2013
but is said to have been a thorn in the side of school and parents for around 20 years. I have access to correspondence going
back at least five years.
Councillor Peter Craske is one of several to have looked the other way.
During
those five years Craske was far from being the only uninterested person at Bexley council and needless to say
Lesnes councillor and Bedonwell School governor, John Davey, was every bit as useless as we have come to expect.
He has done a runner to Crayford hoping his record will not follow him.
Nevertheless, with a 439 signature petition and his MP behind him, Chris Attard attracted the attention of
The News Shopper and eventually the support of cabinet member Gareth Bacon.
Parking was prohibited adjacent to the road crossing point by the
addition of yellow lines, improving sight lines and losing one car parking space in the process, and,
after a meeting or two, the cabinet member agreed that the only sensible course
was for the footpath to be widened.
The proposal was that the school boundary fence should be moved to allow a wider footpath and the
work was supposed to be done during the 2013 Summer holiday. It wasn’t. Then it
was supposed to be done at half-term, and finally Christmas came and went with
another promise broken.
Bexley
council has now decided not to widen the footpath at all. The Department for Education asked,
not unreasonably, why Bexley couldn’t solve the problem by removing the parking bays. All the nearby houses
have off-street parking facilities and it would encourage the walk to school
campaign which Bedonwell School already supports - see the notice taped to a lamp post in Woolwich Road.
Would Bexley council cooperate for the benefit of the children? Of course not.
Mr. Frizoni, £131,000 per annum including pension contribution, and the man who puts his name to all
the road planning disasters that
threaten to bring the borough to a standstill, has told Chris unequivocally that
he absolutely will not now widen the footpath which cabinet member Gareth Bacon
thought to be essential for the safety of school children.
Councillor
Bacon has young children of his own and is concerned about their
safety en-route to school. He was happy to tell us that at
the
last Public Realm meeting, the one which
his wife failed to chair last month.
He is however not going to do anything to ensure the safety of other people’s children.
Chris Attard decided to become a UKIP candidate after seeing Gareth Bacon and
his ilk at work. Ironically that decision has probably deprived the children of
Bedonwell School safe passage. There is no way that a Bexley Conservative would
allow a UKIP man to claim a success, they would rather see a child injured than
lose a political point.
To avoid that possibility, parents in Lesnes ward are going to have to vote
UKIP; although in the interests of political balance I should mention that
Teresa Pearce, Chris’s Labour MP, was prepared to put politics aside and back
her constituent.
Note: The first and final photographs are from Chris Attard's collection.
He has kindly provided
a larger version of his graphical description of the past and current situation
outside the school than is available on his own web page.
29 March (Part 2) - More lies by senior council staff to protect a lying councillor
I thought the business of
cabinet member Colin Campbell saying “crap” in the
council chamber had gone away. I am absolutely positive he described
Bexley-is-Bonkers as crap, which wouldn’t matter at all,
except that he chose to deny it later. If you approach any Bexley councillor apart from the
hard core of possibly 20 who are habitual liars and ask if Campbell said “crap” you will get
confirmation and, if you are lucky, some comment like “everyone knows it”. I know because I have.
Everyone may know it but more importantly, some councillors are happy to tell you so.
Rather to my surprise another council document on the subject has come my way.
It relates to a complaint that the original investigation into Campbell’s use of
the C word was inadequate. Just as in the case of
the
ill-advised Cheryl Bacon, no
witnesses to the events were consulted. Naturally Bexley’s joke of an investigation
and joke of an Independent Person, Rebecca Sandhu, were vigorously defended.
It’s all a bit ‘technical’ and you don’t have study it too hard or even
understand it beyond Mr. Alabi conducted the investigation and Mr. Paul Moore,
Director of Customer and Corporate Services, the writer of the latest letter,
supports his investigation absolutely.
So why bother you with this after all this time? It’s because the incident under discussion
took place at a Full Council meeting. Alabi and Moore attend full
council meetings. Not only do all the councillors know what Campbell said
but Alabi and Moore were witnesses to him too, along with Tuckley and the rest of the
expensive clowns. They must know that Campbell lied just like councillors know he lied.
In the Cheryl Bacon case none of the council officers who queued up to say six
members of the public were all liars (plus the councillors who have since
written to me about it) were witnesses to the events and might be considered to
be retellers of lies rather than liars themselves. However in the Campbell Crap
Case no such excuses can be made. I suppose when taxpayers are filling your
boots to the tune of £156,800 (including the 20% pension contribution)
each year then if the council leader tells you to lie, you grit your teeth and
lie, however obvious what you are doing is to everyone who takes an interest.
Such people have no morals whatsoever.
The money wasted on defending trivia is beyond belief. Perhaps it goes some way to explain the fact that
only eight London boroughs pay more council
tax than Bexley residents.
29 March (Part 1) - Very little to show for two weeks’ work
It’s
two weeks since the first signs of work
were in evidence in Sidcup High Street, a job that supposedly started on 20th January.
Unfortunately those two weeks have shown close to zero progress.
There are about ten additional square metres of paving outside Bexley council’s own
shop, Sidcup & Co and the area of Hadlow Road that is not a mud patch has
doubled - to put it generously. If the next two weeks sees the same advances it
may be close to being half finished. The revised and delayed completion date is
14th April. Someone must use a calendar, a blindfold and a pin as their
preferred scheduling tools.
It looks like another Welling in the making. Incompetence rules OK!
The traffic at the Station Road junction was jammed solid as usual with the queue
from Queen Mary’s Hospital disappearing out of sight, and my bus trip to the
station revealed traffic at a standstill all the way back to to Longlands Road.
How much damage is being done to the Sidcup economy by this dilatory progress?
The photographs were taken at 1:15 yesterday afternoon. Seven yellow suited men were in evidence.
28 March (Part 2) - Planning decisions
I attended last night’s planning meeting only because one of the applications to be
considered was from councillor Margaret O’Neill (Labour, Erith) who hoped to be able to
build a small house at the end of her long garden in Bexleyheath. The application had been
featured more than once in the News Shopper and
personally I couldn’t see why - apart from the councillor’s involvement. It was a perfectly ordinary
proposal, no different to many others and in accordance with the rules would be considered
by the planning committee in the absence of councillor O’Neill who is the lone
Labour member on the committee. The application was likely to be considered in a
straight forward manner and in my view would become interesting only if it
wasn’t. I went along to make sure that everything appeared to be above board.
On arrival the doorman, Mal Chivers, asked if I would like to be provided with a
table but I declined his kind offer. Once inside the chamber Mike Summerskill,
the Committee Officer who organises the planning meeting, was equally attentive making sure I was
content to sit among the 30 or so ‘protestors’. Through him I passed a message
to the chairman, councillor Peter Reader, that I would not be taking any
photographs but I would use my audio recorder as a notebook. This is a far cry
from the sort of treatment that used to be meted out by officers working
for different chairmen and it definitely helps to make one feel better
disposed towards Bexley council.
Cheryl Bacon please note. Having said that I find Peter Reader’s chairmanship to be
consistently somewhere between the strict and the downright aggressive.
The
first item on the Agenda was the demolition of The Woodman public house in
Watling Street, Bexleyheath which closed a year ago. The proposal was to build a
nice looking small block of flats and a couple of bungalows on the site. There
were no objections so it should have been pretty much an open and shut case but
that would be to discount the inquisitive minds of councillors Mike Slaughter
and Simon Windle who can be relied upon to probe where others fear to tread.
They began by asking for the distance between the new structures and the existing neighbours. “15·3 metres”
said the council’s planning officer knowing full well that the guidelines
dictate a 16 metre minimum when one is a blank wall and therefore does not have
privacy implications. However further questioning revealed that the true
distance was only 12·4 metres because no one was considering the existing
neighbour’s conservatory. This was dismissed as inconsequential as a
conservatory is not a habitable room. Earlier this month
a kitchen was ruled
to be uninhabitable.
Things then got even sillier. Apparently the new flats do not present a blank
wall to the existing houses, for the walls include windows! However they weren’t being
counted because they were going to be opaque. Opaque windows in a main living
room? That’s a new one on me. Councillor Windle said that allowing such things
was a “slippery slope” designed to get around the regulations. That didn’t stop
councillor John Waters jumping in with a proposal that the plans be passed which they duly were.
I’m beginning to think that John Waters is there only to propose a vote as soon
as decently possible and get the business over and done with as quickly as he
can. I am also becoming a lot less sure than I used to be that “funny business”
does not lurk just below the surface in the planning department.
Next
up was the main event and councillor Margaret O’Neill left the chamber. Her
house in Garden Avenue has a very long garden which extends through to Palmar
Road which is a cul-de-sac. The proposed dwelling would have access to the
hammerhead at the end of Palmar Road with its own off-street parking. It is a two bedroom
design cunningly designed to have a lower than usual roof line and its own rear
ten metre garden.
The objections were principally that the new house would restrict sunlight into
the recreational areas of the gardens to the rear of Garden Avenue and make
parking and garage access difficult for residents of Palmar Road. Concern was
also expressed for the local sparrow population.
The supplied map was a puzzle to me as it showed the new house to be north (NNW
for the pedants) of Garden Avenue and I failed to see how it could block light
to the south. Even if the map had been misinterpreted the elevation of the summer sun would be
high enough to get into all but the far end of existing gardens and as they are
very long the simple solution would be to move the sun loungers.
Few of us likes change and probably I would be apprehensive if someone tried to
squeeze an extra house into my own small cul-de-sac
but I just couldn’t see any legal reason for this application to be refused.
The councillors had similar views to my own regarding sunlight and were not at
all interested in the sparrows. There was some debate about parking in Palmar
Road sparked off by councillor Slaughter but photographs suggested that
residents might be expecting to park where they shouldn’t and it was agreed that
it might be better to slightly move the vehicle access to the new building.
With that in mind councillor John Waters proposed approval and everyone raised their hand. Thanks
John, I was home by nine o'clock.
Probably my report will not be popular in Garden Avenue but however high the
emotions may be running, the planning process is a largely statutory affair and
there was nothing in the long list of objections (page 65 of the Agenda) which
got anywhere near being a show stopper. “A colony of sparrows is suspected of
nesting in the vegetation” and “the proposals may affect my pond which is home
to various animals” are not going to win the arguments. Next time make it
Avocets and Great Crested Newts. That might do the trick.
Yesterday’s News Shopper report.
Today’s News Shopper report.
28 March (Part 1) - Mrs. Jackie Evans
Mrs. Jackie
Evans has sadly died after a long and distressing illness. Mrs. Evans was
one of the three councillors for Sidcup until December 2013 but had been too
unwell to perform her duties from a much earlier date. She had been cruelly
retained as a councillor by council leader Teresa O’Neill who was intent on
avoiding a by-election and was allowed to resign only when
the election was within the statutory six months during which one could be legally avoided.
We offer our sympathy and condolences to her friends and family.
27 March (Part 2) - Dear Bexley council
It’s the time of the year to start paying the council tax bill. The council
would like me to pay by Direct Debit but I won’t. A Direct Debit implies a level
of trust with the payee and that simply doesn’t exist.
The only instructions on my tax demand is to send a Direct Debit instruction to
my bank or “Please visit our website for details of alternative ways to pay your
council tax bill”. So I went there expecting to find a bank sort code and
account number so that I can set up a standing order. But no, there is nothing
there apart from an online form to pay by debit card. Can’t they get even the simplest things right?
I was on the point of sending a letter but fortunately I found last year’s bill
and that has the necessary details clearly printed on the reverse. Let’s hope
they haven’t changed their banker within the
past 12 months. The numbers I have are Sort Code 51-70-14 and account number 21101183.
27 March (Part 1) - Another Adonis
This
time it is Lord Adonis, the last Labour government’s Transport Secretary, rather than
the bare bottomed variety. He has said that
building a Thames crossing
between Beckton and Thamesmead is a ‘no brainer’.
I’m inclined to agree if only because I cannot imagine this outpost of Greater
London remaining relatively isolated for the next 50 years. A bridge is not a
totally problem free solution but sooner or later one will have to be built, so why not
solve the problems and get on with it now? If it were not for Boris Johnson and
his favourite council leader it would have been finished last year.
Lord Adonis refers to both the Nimbys currently running Bexley council and the fact the last public survey showed that
68% of Bexley residents polled were in favour
of a bridge - a higher proportion than backed Bexley council’s latest round of budget cuts.
At the moment the only party acknowledging that the north of the borough needs better transport
infrastructure is Labour.
UKIP said they were against
it last year but have more recently indicated they are reconsidering. UKIP’s
Bexley manifesto is due out next week.
As usual. Bexley Conservatives are not very interested in anything more than half a mile north of
the Barnehurst to Welling railway line.
26 March (Part 2) - Saucy Sharon
One
of the Twitter accounts I keep my eye on is that of Bexley’s mayor councillor
Sharon Massey and what struck me when I first followed @Mayor_of_Bexley was the amount of time she spent in
pubs and restaurants. Sharon seemed to be quite the party girl.
I considered doing a blog about it and started to collect copies of her Tweets
but thought better of it. Most of the mayor’s partying is in connection with fund raising for her chosen charity.
Also, as I have said before, the current mayor has never gone out of her way to be
difficult with residents as was the norm with two of her recent predecessors.
Nevertheless it was a little surprising to see her lending her name to the Strip
Show held at her deputy mayor’s pub,
The Charlotte in Crayford, last Friday.
The entertainment came from
The Adonis Cabaret.
Those
lucky enough to get a front row seat have reported that strippers were in
evidence and that a thoroughly good time was had by all.
I suspect most readers will not take too sanctimonious a view of the manner in
which our councillors decide to raise money for good causes but perhaps it would
be worthwhile checking if The Charlotte had sought all the necessary licences
for such an event. If memory serves correctly, landlady
councillor Lucia-Hennis has form when it comes to “full nudity” at her pub.
It’s probably not a good idea to close your eyes and imagine one of Adonis’s hunks
gyrating in front of Teresa O’Neill, Linda Bailey and Val Clark, probably not any other councillor either!
26 March (Part 1) - Geraldene strips to the bare essentials for a well oiled 15 minute routine
The last General Purposes Committee meeting I attended lasted half an hour and I spent twice as long as that on the bus getting there and back. So when I was presented with an alternative attraction last night I asked Nicholas Dowling if he could possibly take my place at the Civic Centre. Fortunately he responded with very little arm twisting, this is his account of what happened.
Malcolm
was lucky I had nothing better to do than wander up to the Civic Centre for seven thirty to watch local
democracy in action. It started well because I was particularly impressed by the seating arrangements in the
Council Chamber. For the first time that I recall - comfy seats! Perhaps they’d been acquired
from the nearby Boardroom and it’s a pity they aren’t proffered more often. I and the other two
members of the public present could rightly consider ourselves spoiled.
Despite there being only two items on the agenda, both of which looked inconsequential to me,
councillor Geraldene Lucia-Hennis had dragged herself away from organising
strip shows at her Charlotte public house in Crayford. Like me she probably thought the meeting was
likely to be over and done with quickly.
The proposed ‘Diversion to Part of Public Footpath 2’ was considered in virtually no depth at all;
and perhaps rightly so.
Footpath
2 runs close to Crossness Sewage Works and has a long, if less than
exalted, history. Mr. Dave Green, Head of Engineering Services, informed the
committee that the question was one of simply regularising what the public has already put into effect.
There was only one question and it came from the ubiquitous Labour councillor Alan Deadman.
He enquired how the public could follow the current route of the path. Mr. Green conceded
that it was currently impossible for them to do so, thus revealing how Bexley council had clearly
been remiss in its duty to maintain a public right of way. Neither should they be too proud of
the fact that it has taken them so many years to regularise the fait accompli. The amended route
and alterations to Bexley’s definitive map were duly agreed.
It was an intriguingly transparent process regarding a public right of way. Not at all like
Mike Frizoni, Deputy Director of Public Realm Management and his decision to close the bridleway
running through Mount Mascal stables.
Perhaps Dave could give his boss Mike a session or two on how to correctly deal with this sort of
affair. Best practice should be encouraged rather than deciding to deliberately exclude residents
while concocting dodgy deals and perhaps seal it all with a secret handshake.
The second and final item related to the Local Government Pension Scheme Regulations 2013 and
the statements of policy about exercise of discretionary functions. Pretty much enough said; and
thankfully the committee members had little appetite for it either.
Councillor Deadman wanted Bexley council to ensure that ‘member level
appointments with flexible retirement options’ agreed by members (that’s councillors to me and
you) should be discussed by the full pension committee. It was the first instance that I can
recall in my four years of attending council meetings that a Conservative cabinet member (Colin
Campbell – Finance) largely agreed with the opposition and an amendment was duly tabled and passed.
Shock, horror it appears democracy can be meaningfully practised in Bexley after all.
I am not sure that Colin’s glorious leader will thank him but as he is not standing for
re-election in May perhaps her displeasure will not overly bother him.
Why the fuss I hear you say? Well I can only assume that councillor Deadman had the infamous duo of
Nick Johnson and Ian Clement
in mind and wanted some sort of guarantee against overly cosy and unscrutinised deals being far too
easy to accomplish amongst dishonest and corrupt individuals. Well done him, and it would be unfair
not to personally thank the chairman Geraldene Lucia-Hennis and her fellow
Conservative committee members Maxine Fothergill, Graham D’Amiral and Aileen Beckwith, who also fully
backed the amendment. I’m sure that you all will have made your leader proud!
Well with that brief moment of Bexley’s political history rapidly receding the clock reached
7:45 p.m. and the meeting was duly closed. Thankfully it had indeed been a very quick one.
25 March - 24th place confirmed
Not much time and not much news but yesterday the last of the outer London
boroughs to post its new council tax rates on their websites did so. It
confirms Bexley’s 24th position overall and in the bottom half of the outer London boroughs.
Click to see the 2014 list.
Bexley’s nearest neighbours, financially speaking, Barnet and Merton, both managed
to reduce tax levels. Bexley Conservatives merely froze them at their traditionally high level.
If you are thankful for small mercies, spare a thought for this poor fellow.
I have just received my council tax bill for this year.
I am a disabled retired person who two years ago did not have to pay any due to
the benefits received. Last year my tax bill was £63·63p due to new government
legislation. this year, and nothing has changed, it is £126·90p. Yet there has
been an overall reduction across the board of 1·6% to the Council. This is an
approximate increase of just over 100%. surely this cannot be right?
Unfortunately it is right.
Here’s
Bexley’s web explanation - in need of updating for 2014.
Note: Tweets for amusement only. The message is getting around!
24 March (Part 2) - Nobody loves him
Mick Barnbrook didn’t only
apply to be one of Bexley’s Community Champions,
he thought he could make a valuable contribution to the fledgling Bexley Safer
Neighbourhood Board. This is the successor to the
Bexley Community Policing Engagement Group
(BCPEG) which ran occasional public meetings but which the
Mayor’s Office for Policing and Crime (MOPAC) decided to do away with, and it
advertised for volunteers, hence Mick Barnbrook’s interest in becoming a member.
He was rejected of course and on 22nd February 2014 Mick asked BCPEG for a copy of
“MOPAC’s guidelines setting out the criteria for membership of the Board”.
When three weeks later he had received no acknowledgment he sent a reminder to
Joyce Sutherland, the chair of the BCPEG, and added that if she continued to
ignore him he would seek the information via a Freedom of Information
request to the Mayor’s Office. Three days ago Ms. Sutherland deigned to reply,
not that she answered Mick’s question of course. She also went further than that
by defiantly stating that she wasn’t subject to the Freedom of Information Act.
As an organisation fully funded by the Greater London Authority via MOPAC I
think madam Sutherland is in for a rude awakening. The Information
Commissioner’s Office makes it pretty clear who is subject to the FOI Act
and you don’t escape it just by being not totally included in the parent
organisation. General Practitioners doing NHS work are subject to the FOI Act as are
governors at publicly funded schools. Madam Sutherland being fully funded by
MOPAC is unlikely to be any different.
MOPAC have been happy to accept Mick’s FOI request. We shall see. Will it be
another case of councillors interfering?
The BCPEG will cease to exist on 31st March 2014.
24 March (Part 1) - Desperate measures
A
couple of months ago Bexley cabinet member Gareth Bacon announced a ‘Community
Champions’ scheme. The idea is that residents should be officially
encouraged to report graffiti and fly tipping as they go about their business -
as though people are not able to volunteer such information anyway.
It’s a job that might appeal to retired people and Bexley’s waste contractor,
Serco, were prepared to sponsor the scheme by issuing mobile phones to the
selected ‘champions’. Mick Barnbrook thought he’d apply. As a retired police
Inspector he should have had as good a chance of being selected as the next man.
Except of course that Bexley council doesn’t like his constant exposure of their dishonesty.
The fact that his application was rejected was far from unexpected but as
always, it is the excuses that Bexley council dream up to justify their decisions that provide the interest.
So what was the excuse this time? Is it that he doesn’t own a dog that needs
walking, is it the fact that he doesn’t wear a William Hague style baseball cap
as shown in the council’s announcement or does he live in an area that might be
oversubscribed with would-be champions?
No, it’s none of those. It is because he plans to stand for
election as a
councillor in Sidcup and Lamorbey. It sounds as though Bexley council could
find no good reason not to accept Mick’s application so they had to make up something Barnbrook
specific. Currently the Conservatives have no candidates standing for election,
they only have Action Team Members. It’s a neat trick that confers several
electoral advantages, including to be able to claim that they have not lost a candidate when one of them is
caught thieving.
Now Mick will have to go through the FOI procedure to see what the criteria for
selection were and who sat on the selection panel. My money is on the panel
being chaired by a councillor, probably Gareth Bacon himself.
Click first image for Bexley council’s Community Champions announcement.
23 March (Part 3) - Not exactly a mini-Holland
It is sometimes quite amazing how quickly readers respond to blogs, a little
over a month ago a councillor emailed me about something I’d written only 14
minutes after I’d posted it but I had better not go into that for fear that St. Teresa
explodes; yes it was a Conservative councillor.
Today I have had three such emails. Two to tell me that I had made a mess of
dating the Part 1 photographs
- and I had - and another from a cyclist to tell me I had told only half the
story in that same blog. He urged me to get back down to Knee Hill and look at the
situation through a cyclist’s eyes. So, dodging the hail storm, I did. And things
are every bit as ill-thought through as you would expect
from Bexley council’s £100k plus managers.
You will see from the first photograph that Bexley council encourages cycling on
the footpath, starting at the Knee Hill junction, and along the southern side of
Abbey Road. I’d never noticed before but underneath the viaduct there is a much faded
‘bicycle’ painted at another dropped kerb.
Cyclists who have come from Abbey Road are expected to cross Knee Hill at the point
marked out for them while totally hidden from traffic coming around the blind bend.
Maybe it would be better not to have the green screen after all.
Is it just me or are the angles shown on that direction sign post (picture 4) all wrong?
The A206 to Plumstead goes off at a normal right angle does it not?
Note. Mini-Holland was the grandiose £30 million plan for
Bexley that is not going to happen. We are going to get three million quid’s
worth of paint instead.
23 March (Part 2) - ‘Putting Bexley First’ and putting Lesnes last
The Lesnes Action Team poses with Boris in front of their ‘Putting Bexley First’ slogan at their
manifesto launching party. ‘First’ when measured against what has not been made clear. Not first in
the
low tax tables because Bexley Conservatives have failed to rescue the
borough from the 24th position achieved eight years ago by the Labour
administration. Where does all that extra tax go, not to mention the £7 million
a year additional stealth taxes? Management inefficiency is very obvious when
the Public Realm is involved but how much more goes on behind the scenes? Why do
so many people have to be paid in excess of £100,000 a year when so much
incompetence is on public display?
In my corner of the borough I really cannot think of any improvements for which one
can thank the present council. I’ve heard council leader O’Neill claim to have
brought Crossrail to town and nearly everyone thinks it will prove to be a good
thing, but it is ridiculous that Teresa claims any credit. Strictly speaking the
only part of it in Bexley will be the pedestrian access from Harrow Manorway
and a single track extending towards Belvedere to provide a link to the existing North Kent line.
I can think of two things that have come to Lesnes ward during the Conservatives’ time in office.
A £74,995 railing
around Lesnes Abbey park
supposedly to stop motorcyclists
getting in but at only nine inches high in places it was effective mainly against wheelchairs.
Installed in 2009 cabinet member Gareth Bacon blamed it on Labour who left office more than
three years earlier. And there was
the narrowing of Abbey Road
and the installation of a cycle track on the pavement, something which the current cabinet member for Public Realm says is
a
bad idea. In 2009 councillor John Davey blamed TfL. So if left to the Conservatives there
would be no change in Lesnes ward, for better or worse, at all!
This is what John Davey said on 10th May 2009…
Due to the inherent slowness in the way that local government works, it is indeed
the case that appalling traffic schemes that are costly and useless and were designed
a couple of years ago by TfL have just come to be installed.
Some people might
say exactly the same about the Bexleyheath Broadway and Sidcup changes.
Maybe Lesnes has been blessed with too many complacent councillors. John Davey
must know he has not served Lesnes well because he has done ‘the
chicken run’ to Crayford and his intended replacement, Kerry Allon, seems to be cast in the same mould.
Of course he doesn’t live anywhere near Lesnes ward which is probably why he was against an ASDA
store in Belvedere which I find to be so crowded at times that I’ve had to queue both for the self service
tills and to get out of the car park. Maybe that explains why he describes the fence you see here as
“a big improvement”. It may be an improvement but it’s nothing to be proud of is it? Maybe it really is
time for someone different to look after our interests. Eight years have provided Lesnes ward with nothing
but a silly fence and more parking restrictions.
23 March (Part 1) - More unexplained neglect of what councils call the public realm
Walking away
from unfinished road projects is not confined to
major reconstructions like Welling Corner, it happens
even with minor jobs which one might expect to be completed in half a day.
The first of the associated photographs shows the pedestrian crossing outside
the notorious
Harrow Inn site in Abbey Wood. Note the black and white striped pole and beacon on the central reservation.
Last Tuesday nine orange suited men (there were more at their van parked out of shot)
turned up and removed that central beacon. The larger view (click second image) shows
it lying on the ground in front of the takeaway. Then they just left
the island barricaded and in the mess one has come to associate with Bexley council.
It is just the same now. Is anyone taking bets on how long it will stay like that?
22 March - The Welling time warp
A contractor working in Sidcup has dug up a time capsule from 1846 but I decided to visit one closer to home today. It’s in the centre of Welling and anyone can see it at any time. Here’s a few photos to show you what is going on there.
Chaotic as you can see but I am not being entirely honest with you, the photos above were taken ten months ago; today’s are below…
How can a simple job go on for a whole year? I suppose Sidcup residents will know, they’ve seen
how their High Street can be closed and nothing happen over two months.
A few more photos will show that the disruption is for pedestrians and drivers alike.
Surely a year to get not very close to finishing the job can only be due to mismanagement? And what will be achieved at the end of it all?
I’m not very familiar with the history of Welling Corner so I asked a reader who lives nearby if he had anything he’d like to say…
The
roadworks at Welling Corner are now entering their twelfth on and off month.
In that time Bexley council has ripped up a bit of paving and replaced it with shiny new
slabs and some very nice but impractical curved marble effect benches - guaranteed
to give you piles on a cold day - and a bit of funky looking metal work that has
been bashed about by the green plastic temporary barriers that have blighted the
area for far too long. New pedestrian refuges that are much wider than before
leading to what used to be two lane sections of road being barely one and three
quarter lanes now. I’ve seen more than one wing mirror lying on the pavement.
Ten
months of temporary traffic signals were finally replaced two months ago with
portable signals. The portable signals have led to even worse traffic
congestion. Upper Wickham Lane is frequently backed up all the way to
the
roundabout at Lodge Hill. This has led to a lot of rat running down streets like
Elsa Road and Somerhill Road, Including idiots who have tried to race down our
back alleyway. Didn’t get them very far as it’s a cul-de-sac.
Getting through Welling Corner along Bellgrove Road is no picnic either. That can take 15
minutes to get through at times. To top it off there is no pedestrian crossing
indication so you take your life in hand when crossing as there is no clue as to
which direction traffic will be coming from next.
Why the portable signals? Well it looks as though who ever dug everything up
last April forgot to put in new cabling and ducting for the replacement signals.
Now we have the situation where massive sections of the shiny new paving has
been ripped up along with several bits of the pedestrian refuges in order to put
down new lengths of wire for the traffic signals. On top of that it now looks
like they’re going to be repaving Welling High Street and Bellgrove Road again.
Bits have been done already but if memory serves they are the same bits that
were repaved around 5 years ago.
Bexley is truly bonkers. (plus a few other words that aren’t suitable to print).
Click any image for enlarged view.
21 March - An accident waiting to happen
I am going to give in. Give in to the requests for comment on the recent
accident at the Trinity Place roundabout that is. When I first heard of it I
considered it to be unremarkable, there have been accidents there before, this
time a vehicle had run into the back of a motorcycle that had stopped to allow a
pedestrian to cross. The difference was that this accident found its way on to
the News Shopper’s website and has been subject to much comment. Nearly all of it
unsympathetic to Bexley council. “Whoever came [up] with the new design for
Bexleyheath should be sacked. It’s madness” being typical.
A Bexley council spokesman would not accept that their road design may have
contributed to the accident preferring to blame the motorist. “If a
stationary vehicle is hit from another vehicle behind, it is normally the person
driving the moving vehicle, rather than the road they are on, that is to blame.”
That statement may well have some truth to it but the road looks like a roundabout until
you raise your eyes to read the signs which announce a T junction. And although the road
surface at the exit points are reminiscent of a Zebra crossing legally it is not, although
if you look at the footpath mounted signs it is a sort of pedestrian crossing.
A flashing nine foot high beacon would warn approaching motorists that there is a
possibility they may have to stop abruptly. A two foot high sign hidden by the vehicle
in front doesn’t.
Bexley council will never accept blame especially in a newspaper
report. It wasn’t their fault when the News Shopper reported
a lady had died
when Bexley failed to adequately staff its emergency centre. “Our lack of
response was not a factor in the death” was Bexley’s callous response. Again that may be true but she
didn’t have to die alone, that was due entirely to failures by Bexley council’s senior managers.
Bureaucrats are never likely to accept that they might occasionally get things
wrong and certainly not after accepting awards for their expensive handiwork.
The Broadway regeneration scheme won the ‘Excellence in Walking and Public Realm’
category at the London Transport Awards just a few weeks ago and the judges said it
was “well-thought out and comprehensively transformed Bexleyheath shopping centre”.
The award was presented to project directors David Bryce-Smith
and Ashis Choudhury who were assisted by Bexley’s road design team, Dimitri Araj, Andrew Bashford,
Dave Green, Rupert Cheeseman and Ken Woodhead. Why are we still employing these people after
councillor Peter Craske
handed £4 million pounds to the transport consultants Parsons Brinckerhoff? Wasn’t that supposed
to reduce the number of road planning disasters in Bexley? I wonder what we ever got out of
Parsons Brinckerhoff apart from
a couple of abusive emails.
Note: Will non-English speakers know what the words ‘Stop, Look, Listen’ mean?
20 March - Bexley council. Above the law
Three weeks ago a complaint sent by a horse riders’ group to Bexley council about their illegal closure of Bridleway 250 was
briefly reported here.
It listed the legal precedents, the fact that the Crime and Disorder Act expressly
forbids its use to overturn other Acts
and that closing a bridleway as a crime prevention measure requires
the intervention of the Secretary of State.
Almost needless to say, Bexley council rejected the complaint out of hand.
They are happy to ignore the provision of the Crime and Disorder Act and take the advice of a
police sergeant Alison Bateman that the bridleway should be closed despite there
being only one overnight crime
around Mascal Stables in the previous five years. Among the many requirements to
be satisfied before a bridleway closure can be legal is “the premises
adjoining or adjacent to the highway are affected by high levels of crime and its
existence is facilitating the persistent commission of criminal offences”.
So Bexley council’s excuses for law breaking fall on every conceivable point but
they carry on regardless. The reason is that they consider themselves above the
law and while they have the police in their pocket nothing will change. Another
example of the latter came to light this week which will probably find its way
to these pages before too long. Two former borough commanders are currently
under investigation for Misconduct in Public Office. Will they ever learn?
19 March (Part 2) - Shops in Bexleyheath feel the squeeze
The
regeneration of Bexleyheath has made it look considerably smarter than before but
the smaller shops are still too often closing only to be replaced by the modern
equivalent of pawn shops. A two year old report from marketing consultants CACI
may shed a little light on what the underlying problem might be.
Click image for the source website.
19 March (Part 1) - Oh no! More regeneration
If
you use the shops in Northumberland Heath and have been unimpressed by the
regeneration of Bexleyheath and Sidcup, Bexley council’s promise to do the same
for Northumberland Heath may not be what you want to hear.
Northumberland Heath seems to me to be one of Bexley’s better small shopping centres with a
good variety of traders but a council press release yesterday announced ‘public space improvements’.
The proposals include ‘renewing street furniture, minimising street clutter and new
planting’. Much the same wording used to describe previous street disruption.
There will be a display to illustrate the proposals at North Heath Library from
next Monday through to 11th April and work is scheduled to commence in the
summer with the money coming directly from Bexley’s taxpayers.
18 March (Part 3) - Silly blogger
It’s a little bit embarrassing to encounter a shortage of blog material at a time when the number of site visitors has been increasing quite steeply but I shall have to fall back on a reader’s report. I thought it was mildly amusing and just what I would expect from my own local councillor.
I saw councillor John Davey in Crayford yesterday; in the charity shop and I spoke to him!
I mentioned Bexley is Bonkers and he said it was “all lies and silly”. I suspect that is his
leader talking. Like Campbell and his “crap”
remark. I asked if it was him [John] who came up with the Bonkers name! He never replied to that.
Then I went into to the betting shop and who was sitting there? Councillor Melvin Seymour. I
said to him “John Davey’s next door” and when I turned around he was gone, maybe joining his
mate? Two idiots together!!!
I never had Melvin Seymour down as an idiot, John Davey certainly, but whenever I see Melvin Seymour I can only see
a man in a Crown Court witness box
calmly saying something that simply wasn’t true. The Tweet on which the whole case was based said otherwise and
two dishonest policemen ‘forgot’ to correct their councillor friend.
I cannot help wondering why if Bonkers is ‘all lies’ that no one ever tries to
correct it. I must have implied
councillor Cheryl Bacon is a liar
fifty times but all I have had from those who saw the events unfold is confirmation that she has
lied over and over again; or was it a Council Officer making things up? No one has ever said the Bacon reports
on Bonkers have been a lie. Another thing
that isn’t a lie is that the Bonkers name really did come from a conversation with John Davey relating to Bexley’s
road planning. Presumably he remembers it as well as I do.
18 March (Part 2) - Crossrail developments
The Crossrail works at Abbey Wood are notching up a gear and today a lot of concrete blocks destined for the construction of storm drains have been delivered. Lorries are waiting in Gayton Road and Knee Hill, click any image for a better view. Note how councillor Kerry Allon’s new Harrow Inn ‘fence’ is held up only by a convenient signpost.
There
is similar work going on on the North side of the station too and the
Harrow Manorway flyover has work going on, though whether that is preliminary work for the new
footpath is unclear. Probably not, the parked vehicle appeared to be a drain sucker.
More Crossrail related blogs.
If
you noticed the orange coloured symbol next to the Twitter icon above and were
wondering what it is, it provides quick access to the RSS file which catalogues
changes to the website and when each was made. Browsers provide access via their
Toolbars but sometimes it is very well hidden so the new icon is no more than a simple alternative.
Internet Explorer and Firefox implement the facility best and they account for
more than 40% of Bonkers’ visitors so it’s probably a worthwhile extra, it causes
me no extra work anyway! Chrome (25%) doesn’t implement the facility but
plug-ins are available and Safari (also 25%) fails to report the date of
the change but as always, if the facility is no use to you, you don’t have to click on the orange icon.
There
is nothing new to read here to today but there are a few additions to local election related websites
which may keep you amused.
The Tories continue to thrash Labour with their 17·5% council tax increase eleven years ago
(click image to visit their website) but contrive to change history in their favour too. The historical
figures on the GLA
website show increases of 17·5% (2003), 7·5%, 4·9%, 5·8% (Labour) and 3·5%, 2·8%
and 2·0% (2009) Conservative.
Notice how Labour’s rises are exaggerated and the Conservatives are craftily
reduced. They put up taxes by 0·08% in 2010 too - not even mentioned. Are Tories careless or dishonest? Maybe it is both.
Their website quotes Labour councillor Munir Malik… “if elected in May,
Labour will present voters with two choices, municipal bankruptcy or a 40 per
cent council tax hike.” and attribute those remarks to a
News Shopper report on 25th October 2013. If you take a look you will see
their date research is no better than their percentages.
The UKIP site has added three more candidate profiles since I last looked
and there are now six in total.
Blackfen & Lamorbey : Lynn Smith
Barnehurst : Mike Ferro
Belvedere : Catherine Reilly
Brampton : John Dunford
Falconwood & Welling : Pamela Perrin
Lesnes Abbey : Chris Attard
Lesnes Conservatives have
profiles on their Action Team. They mean prospective candidates but not declaring them
as such means that no one has to check on their expenses.
There’s an extra page at
Bexley Action Group which looks a bit familiar to me but Labour seem to have
turned their back on websites. Some activity on Twitter though.
15 March - First signs of progress in Sidcup High Street
I saw a rare species this morning. Men in yellow jackets working in Sidcup High Street. Three of them.
Hadlow Road is now scheduled to be open again in mid-April instead of the
beginning of March and now sports a short length of new paving.
There is no footpath at all outside the Box Shop
Sidcup and Co. and pedestrians are directed across the road. The council is
giving priority to its own business venture by paving outside Sidcup and Co.
before anywhere else though the amount of actual progress was
barely discernible
compared to last week.
Sidcup & Co. was accessible from the west only by walking in the road and was difficult
from the east too. There were three people inside when I looked, whether customers or
traders I didn’t stay long enough to discover.
Further west paving slabs have been dumped in the road and a man was moving them
from one position to another for no obvious reason. The traffic congestion at
Station Road was worse than ever but that was probably due to a northbound queue that
extended all the way to the railway station. I got there expecting to see
an accident or a broken down vehicle but if the queue was due to anything it wasn’t
apparent. Probably high traffic volumes and not a long enough green light at Longlands Road.
Page 14 of Bexley council’s Spring magazine says the project is due for
completion in “late summer”. It was originally scheduled to take eight months
beginning last January. A quarter of that time has elapsed with almost nothing to show for it.
More info at Bexley’s website.
All photographs taken within a few minutes of 11:00 a.m.
Last week’s pictures.
14 March - The worst council tax record in London
With the help of the data manager at the GLA the errors in the
historical council tax rates
have been fixed and Bonkers’ ‘league table’ now runs from 1999 to 2013. I don’t think the changes make any significant difference to
the recent analysis.
In broad terms Bexley has made a mess of things from the beginning of the millennium but is now extremely
pleased with itself for freezing taxes at their highest level. Bromley at Band D is £120 lower than
Bexley but 13 years ago the discrepancy was only £67. Twenty years ago Bexley had the advantage.
The best performing outer London boroughs have risen up the league table by five places since 2000, Bexley
has fallen by eight places. No outer (or inner) London borough has fallen more than Bexley.
Over the next two months, Bexley’s Conservatives will continue to loudly proclaim that
council tax is not going up in April but ironically the achievement is largely
due to four years of Labour rule. Their 17·5% increase in 2003 was followed by
increases of 7·5%, 4·9% and 5·8%. From £938 at Band D when Labour arrived to
£1,315 when they left, a cool 40% increase. And Bexley’s Conservatives who complained it was
far too high have since raised Band D taxes by another £117. Aren’t they lucky that Labour put
taxes up so much? But not nearly as lucky as to have residents ready to believe
the propaganda that the Tories are doing a good job. Better than Labour ten
years ago but underperforming nevertheless.
Note: Council tax data going back to 1993 is said to be
available on the central government website but unfortunately it gives a ‘404’
error. It has been reported.
13 March (Part 3) - Council tax again
Another anonymous request I’m afraid but an entirely reasonable one which may
need a more effective way of displaying the data.
The request is for information on how Bexley’s council tax level compares with other outer London boroughs.
In terms of yesterday’s blog,
in 1991 Bexley was just one pound a year from having the lowest tax level in outer London.
The budget before Labour was elected in 2002 saw Bexley drop to ninth place. Labour
actually improved the position by one place in their first year but by their final year
were three positions worse (12th) than where the Tories had left us (9th).
The Conservatives improved matters by three places by 2008 but dropped the ball the next year and
Bexley has been in 12th position ever since. Whether the whole of London is
analysed or just the outer boroughs, Teresa O’Neill has very little to brag
about. Bromley, by contrast, has been in first or second position
for more than ten years.
Twelve positions down in total and nine of them due to the Tories. In terms of
places dropped per year they have an advantage over Labour but not as big as one
might imagine. Bexley froze their tax while in the bottom half of Outer London
boroughs. A far cry from when the borough was consistently at or very near the top.
Council tax data has been
provided on Bonkers since 2011.
Additional years are now provided but 2004 and 2005 are unavailable until the Greater
London Authority corrects its historical records.
I suppose someone will now ask for a report in percentage terms judged against
inflation. I suspect the Tories will win that race too but if you have a child
with special needs, an aged relative who needs care, or are a resident with a
car but no off road parking space you will be paying the price. And for goodness
sake, whatever you do, don’t die.
13 March (Part 2) - Getting the wrong idea
I never intended or even dreamed when starting occasional blogging in 2009 that some people
would assume I was some sort of political pundit but that is what I sometimes
read into messages received.
As the election approaches I find myself pressed more and more to give an opinion on
various subjects. Ramming opinions down throats is definitely not a primary motivation,
I am much more comfortable reporting facts and letting readers draw their own
conclusions. My own may well be easily deduced at times but I hope I will never get near to
blatantly saying vote Labour or vote UKIP or anyone else.
I have admitted before that my lifetime voting record has been 100% Conservative except
for one aberration when a friend stood in Aldershot for the Liberal party circa
1969. And I have voted in every election for which I have been eligible except
the European Referendum in June 1975 when I was away on holiday. I would
probably have voted ‘yes’, but beyond that I admit nothing. I’m certainly not
going to get drawn very far into answering questions like…
What are your thoughts on the EU? Do you believe the EU effects us locally?
I do not wish to ask who you are voting for, just your views on the EU effect on
local councils.
Apart from
the rather generic, ‘the EU gets into every aspect of British life’ I
would not claim to know much detail. UKIP Bexley’s Tweets too often ask other party
representatives for their view on various issues. I find it rather annoying.
UKIP is a political party and should be spouting its own policies not feeding
off those of others. I am not a political party and have no intention of joining
any or pushing any particular policy, well maybe honesty and transparency, but
nothing more. For the record I was an inactive member of the
Conservative party until 1992 or thereabouts.
Someone sent me me a video about the EU and local councils. It’s UKIP
‘propaganda’ but it may well be true. View it via the associated image and make up your own mind.
Whilst the anonymous EU question was probably entirely innocent others may not be.
There was the suggestion that councillors Hunt and Taylor were the authors of
Bexley council’s obscene blog which was totally untrue and I now suspect came from
the councillor who knows exactly who was responsible for those obscenities.
More recently, two anonymous messages assured me that councillor Colin Campbell didn’t say
“crap” in the council chamber. I am absolutely certain he did and so are some
councillors - they’ve told me so. Mischief making messages are inevitable but those
like this are more worrying, it seems to suggest I am taking political sides…
Your support for Teresa Pearce MP is very misguided. Be careful.
Well thanks for the advice but if my words have been mistaken for support for
Ms. Pearce I have been very careless with them. All I thought I had done was accurately
report what she has done. I don’t personally agree with all she stands for but
that doesn’t stop me reporting what she has done for me, a constituent. A
constituent who has never ever voted Labour. My politics haven’t influenced her
and I hope mine will never influence what I say about MPs.
If Teresa ever sends me an email anything like…
I understand that you left a telephone message relating to Bexley Council. As I
hope you will appreciate, the operations of Bexley Council are entirely
independent of my role as one of the borough’s local Members of Parliament.
Complaints relating to the London Borough of Bexley, its functions, governance
and administration should be addressed directly to the Council, with further
potential redress available through the Local Government Ombudsman.
…I’d be telling you how useless Teresa Pearce is, but that one came from James Brokenshire to one of his constituents. You may safely assume that my 100%
Conservative voting record hangs by a thread, but what you do is none of my business.
And I still wish that circumstances had not dragged me into the awkward position in which I now find myself.
13 March (Part 1) - Councillor Cheryl Bacon lied
Neither
Mick Barnbrook nor I have taken any further action since councillors
came forward with their confirmations that
Cheryl Bacon’s statement
about five people refusing to stop shouting and waving papers at
her meeting was entirely untrue and there is a good reason for the
delay. Meanwhile more information continues to trickle out and if you are very
familiar with this story you may wish to jump directly to the penultimate paragraph.
Further analysis of the documents reveals that Mr. Gussman’s complaint which suggested
Cheryl Bacon was rude to everyone was rejected because “she did not speak to him
directly” although elsewhere there are numerous references to Bacon addressing “the group”.
Messrs. Barnbrook, Bryant, Dowling and Gussman are all members of the
Bexley Action Group
and they were sitting on adjacent seats. A group in every sense of the word. According to Bacon I was next to them too although one of her
witnesses confirms I wasn’t.
Bacon further states that because of the “commotion” caused by Mr. Dowling,
Mr. Barnbrook, Mr. Bryant, Mr. Knight and another person” she called
a five minute adjournment. The time was 19:32 (my timing).
At the end of it she says she “addressed the group as a whole” and “because
the group were not prepared to sit quietly” called a 30 minute adjournment at 19:45
(her timing) to allow “the group to calm down”. My own notes record the long adjournment commenced
at 19:54 and was scheduled to end at 20:15. Cheryl Bacon’s statement also says
she asked the doorman to call the police during the ‘30 minute’
adjournment while councillors were absent from the chamber (except for one).
If
the police were called during the adjournment as Bacon asserts one wonders how the public
in the chamber learned of it and that attendance might take up to an hour. Why
else would they remain in the chamber if it was not to hear what the police would have to
say? It’s a muddle typical of invented stories. If Cheryl Bacon had
given the doorman his instruction during the 19:45 adjournment he would not have
had to enter the chamber to tell her.
As Bacon lies go it’s a fairly small one but it no longer needs to rely on analysis and logic to
discover it, documentary evidence is now to hand. The content of the Computer Aided Despatch notice the police initially wouldn’t reveal confirms that the council
called them during that first adjournment at 19:32 and was safely logged onto
their system at Bexleyheath police station by 19:40. They were told that only one member of the public was
involved in the alleged disturbance.
Step by step Cheryl Bacon and her gang of crooked council officers officers are exposed.
12 March - Council Tax analysis
Councillor Malik (Labour)
grabbed my attention at the last council meeting.
He said that the biggest council tax rises had been made by Conservatives and I
have spent a lot of time researching whether that can be true.
One of the biggest reasons for me moving to Bexley 27 years ago was because its
Rates, as they were called then, were low. I am as sure as I can be after all
that time that only two London boroughs charged less.
Over the weekend and subsequently I have managed to track down the charges made by every London
borough for 16 of the past 23 years. Presenting them in a simple way is proving
to be time consuming and there is unfortunately a very obvious error within the GLA
supplied data for 2004 and 2005. Critical years if looking into Labour’s record in Bexley.
Many of us will remember how Labour put up Bexley’s council tax very steeply
during their term of office (2002-2006) but how spendthrift were they compared to London as a
whole? Were they perhaps not a lot worse than the other 31 boroughs?
So far I have established that
in 1991
only three London boroughs levied lower taxes than Bexley and one of those was only a pound a year lower.
By 2001 fourteen boroughs were charging less than Bexley and that was unchanged
just before Labour took over in May 2002. Labour dropped us three places relative to
the rest of London in their first year and was no worse two years later. However
they did rather blow it in 2006 when they allowed six more boroughs to get in front of Bexley.
So did the Tories ride to the rescue? Absolutely not. For all their eight years of cuts and trumpet blowing, Bexley
Conservatives have made no progress whatsoever. Bexley remains stubbornly in 24th position.
Conservatives dropped us one place for every year they were in power, then along came Labour and made
it nine places in four years, but Teresa O’Neill has absolutely failed to make things better.
Note: Because of the mistakes discovered in the GLA source
data this report may be subject to change but the obvious errors are unlikely to affect it.
11 March (Part 6) - Which way will they jump?
Just
a year ago, 21st March, the Bexley Times featured UKIP in Bexley. To the left is a brief extract.
Today, prompted by an earlier blog,
UKIP is not so sure. Maybe they have actually been talking to real people.
11 March (Part 5) - Slowly does it
Bexley council’s excuse for
illegally closing Bridleway 250 is that it is a crime
prevention measure. Such an excuse cannot be legally valid but is it even based on anything truthful?
Mick Barnbrook, as always, asked the police for details of any crimes committed
along the bridleway. He was refused on the grounds that knowing if there had
been any crime or not might reveal personal information. How was not explained
but after repeated requests he discovered that crime levels had been low and
that Bexley council claimed the closure had been recommended by Sergeant Alison Bateman.
Whether she had done so or Bexley council put words in her mouth as they may have done
with the police officers who responded to the liar Bacon’s call is still unknown.
When asked for her recollection of the meeting she had none, or more accurately, she had destroyed her notes.
The information Mick was really after was when the crimes took place, during
gate closing times or not. This the police absolutely refused to give so the
Information Commissioner had to be dragged into the argument. He has ruled in Mick Barnbrook’s favour.
During the five years preceding Bexley’s decision to approve an illegal gate
there were four reported crimes in and around Mascal Stables. Three involved
petty pilfering of horsey items, two from cars, one not, and all taking place
while the stables were fully open for business. Additionally there was a
‘non-dwelling’ burglary in March 2008 at an indeterminate time spanning both
gate open and gate closed times. Assuming that the latter is most likely the
bridleway closure was justified on the basis of one burglary in five years.
Every time you poke it another Bexley council lie or illegal act is exposed.
I think I understand why Bexley police were so reluctant to admit the truth on
this one. How much money did they waste trying to hide it?
11 March (Part 4) - Rubbish policy
The News Shopper carried a report a couple of weeks ago about Refuse Rage.
Bexley council has been trying to edge up the proportion of waste recycled by
refusing to collect the real rubbish whenever it can get away with it. Their
newest bins are stamped with symbols confirming they will not be emptied if not fully closed,
nor will any extra sack be taken away.
What with this and the £30 for collecting each item that won’t fit in the bin,
fly tipping is encouraged. In my road we share the bins, my neighbour with young
children fills my green bin and I use her brown one. I recommend it.
11 March (Part 3) - The wheels come off
Something
that will probably not get the Bexley Press Release treatment is their
bid
for mini-Holland status, for Boris’s £100 million is going to Kingston,
Enfield and Waltham Forest. Thirty million each. With the last two adjacent that
may open up interesting possibilities. Bexley’s bid “strongly impressed the
judges” and will be offered some crumbs from the table.
With the small change out of the £100 million being shared between Bexley,
Ealing, Merton and Richmond it is hard to see how “TfL will work with them to
take forward substantial parts of their bids to improve cycle routes and
facilities”. Even so, £2·5 million can buy an awful lot of green paint.
GLA Press Release.
11 March (Part 2) - Across the divide
On a day when I have to be north of the river a reader’s question…
Any ideas what political parties stand on what side of the Bexley river crossing debate?
Labour for, Conservative and - from a Bexley Times article - UKIP against I think.
When the people were polled they came out fairly strongly in favour of a bridge.
Reported in some detail last May.
11 March (Part 1) - Let the back slapping commence
The ‘revitalised’ Bexleyheath Broadway has
won some award or other and resulted in “a 55% reduction in the number of
vacant units”. I’d love to see the actual figures. Has the number of vacant shops really halved?
Motorists and pedestrians alike who have just got used to the changes and the
absence of daily gridlock will be pleased to know that preliminary planning of
more of the same from Church Road towards Crook Log is underway. Well it is undeniably
scruffy looking there.
This you will note is a case of TfL planning and funding a scheme and then
running a fancy party to give themselves an award for doing so. Can there be any
wonder that taxes are so high?
10 March (Part 3) - If at first you don’t succeed…
I don’t know what went wrong with
councillor Linda Bailey’s ‘Box Shop’ idea
but something must have gone badly wrong because it closed down about three months
after it was launched with an expensive fanfare.
Last Saturday the only possible
excuse for Sidcup High Street being one way was
because a heap of paving stones was parked in the road just to the west of the
old Black Horse Inn and just one shop was benefitting. This morning the reason became clear.
Bexley council issued a Press Release to tell us about its latest
wheeze; Sidcup & Co. From the council’s blurb I can’t see any obvious difference
from the Box Shop but it has been entirely refitted.
After almost two months of disruption Sidcup has gained just one small advantage, 20
metres or so of new paving outside a council owned shop.
I dread to think what Linda Bailey would have to say about this if it had been a
Labour party idea. Speaking of which, how many millions have gone down the Thames innovation Centre drain?
For another joke, has anyone used the new
Google Maps? It suggests you try it
out by asking it where you can buy a cup of coffee. I had a play with it and
asked where to buy coffee in Erith. It told me the place to go was the Thames Innovation Centre.
Why is that funny? It’s a bit funny because I once sat through
a three day hearing before a judge in which councillor Colin Campbell swore
that the TIC coffee bar was not open to the public despite the notice outside
begging for business and the fact I’ve been in there for coffee.
It helped Bexley council win their case but only because they lied before a
Tribunal judge who not long before was herself part of Bexley’s legal team. What
was my correspondent saying about corruption this morning?
10 March (Part 2) - Jammed and rammed. Parking free and money tree (it’s supposed to have cost nothing)
Tales from the doorstep suggest that quite a lot of people are still avoiding
Bexleyheath following the ‘regeneration’. For those lost shoppers here’s a small
selection of pictures from around mid-day last Saturday.
The Broadway was jammed solid for no obvious reason,
the cycling locking post
was still a mess but on the plus side the motorcycle only parking bay has been
provided with its first eye level sign. Whether a postcard sized picture of a
motor bike is a legal warning may be doubtful but it may capture some drivers’
attention it can only be a help and prevent
this sort of thing.
And the new Civic Centre is nearing completion. Will it open on schedule two months hence?
Has it really cost nothing? Will it really save taxpayers £1·5 million a year -
and more every time Teresa O’Neill opens her mouth?
Currently working on a big research project so no significant blogs today.
10 March (Part 1) - How corrupt are they? That is the question
I suppose it is possible that people send messages anonymously in the hope of getting a public reply. Maybe that is cynical, there are a lot of cynics in Bexley, which is probably a good thing. Cynicism is what Bexley Conservatives deserve. How should I answer this email?
Yesterday a young lady canvasser knocked on my door and told me the scandal
about my local Tories. Apparently one has run off to another part of Bexley and
the other one has moved to Kent; Sevenoaks apparently.
It’s a scandal as she should have been kicked off the Tories side but the lady
says she doesn't care and is standing again, pretending to live here. Everyone
knows about it but the Tories are ignoring it. is it true?
The lady said she also manages some flats around
here and tells her tenants to vote for her or else. How corrupt are they! Why
has this not come out yet? It’s not right.
How corrupt are they? Is the easiest question to answer. Very.
Dozens of examples litter this website.
A lot of Bexley Tories have done a runner to other wards, the leader rewards
those who are most loyal by giving them a safe seat. Séan Newman the Labour
councillor calls it the Chicken Run on the grounds they have to run away from
their reputation. That is sometimes true too.
Is what is described above illegal? Probably not. The
councillor is one of the few in London to claim an exemption due to being in fear of her life
under Section 32 of the Localism Act and thereby hides some of her details from
public view - only Bexley councillors abuse Section 32 - she does appear to have
an address, maybe just a postbox, in Crayford.
This probably allows her to legally stand as a councillor next May even if she does live
elsewhere. She may have no interest in Bexley residents but legally
that is of no consequence. All that matters here is total loyalty to Teresa
O’Neill who dictates who stands as a Conservative councillor and who does not.
You only have to read
the Superwoman blog to know that Teresa is no stranger to the abuse of power.
Incidentally, I have been able to confirm everything in the Superwoman story thanks to
readers. The MBE, JP, MP approved and shortlisted, Children’s Commissioner, LGA, school
governor, Safeguarding Children’s Board, NHS Care Trust, Ministry of Justice
connected, Bexley Civic Award winning lady was overlooked in the competition to
be a Bexley councillor in favour of another lady whose only qualification is to be
married to councillor Brian Bishop.
How corrupt are they? Endlessly.
9 March (Part 3) - You will never see its like again
My weekly trawl around Bexley’s political websites revealed no change except by the Independents in Blackfen & Lamorbey. Can Independents ever make a difference in Bexley I wondered in such a strongly Conservative area. Then I stumbled upon this three year old News Shopper headline. Click or scroll to appreciate it in full.
“Councillors
trade insults” it said and that’s not likely to be repeated,
neither will Campbell’s ‘crap’ remark. And who do we have to thank for that? The Bexley
Action Group who pushed their complaints about the lack of transparency and in
particular the lack of an independent public record of what goes on in Bexley’s
council chamber, beyond anything that had been done before. Never again will
serious insults be traded between councillors all thanks to
Nicholas Dowling’s
Dictaphone. And as an added bonus it proved beyond all doubt that some councillors
will lie on a massive scale. Will anyone ever take
councillor Cheryl Bacon seriously again?
Note: The above image required a revised style sheet, it may
be necessary to refresh the browser - often F5 - to update any that may be
cached by your device.
9 March (Part 2) - First it moved, then it vanished
A
minor
blog in July last year featured some of the silly cycle tracks in Bexley. The
main contributor was a man who lives in a flat overlooking the waste bin that had been
carefully screwed down in the middle of the cycle track in Yarnton Way, Thamesmead.
He has remarked on it several times since but last week it was moved. If you enlarge the
later photos you can see the mark of its old position. Do we have Boris’s multi-million
pound cycling fund to thank for that? He sent a photo he took yesterday but being a camera
snob I went out this morning to take my own as I thought I should get rid of the the luminous
yellow the camera phone provided.
As you can see, I left it too late. Bexley council took a year to
move the thing, Thamesmead revellers took fewer than 24 hours.
Bexley’s clamp down on taking away ‘side rubbish’ which featured in the News
Shopper two weeks ago is having the obvious effect. Where’s
councillor Tarrant
when you need him?
9 March (Part 1) - Correspondents’ comments
From the postbag…
I’ve viewed your photos from today,
quick question … why is the high street one way for 6-7 weeks? I can’t see any works that would
prevent it remaining two way in that time.
Nor me. There’s a few paving slabs stacked on the road but they could easily be put elsewhere.
Whilst I generally despise all politicians I have to say that I've been
impressed by Michael Tarrant who gets out with his camera taking pictures of pot
holes and graffiti and Steve Hall is well known to be a residents’ champion
against London and Quadrant housing and the Council. So you should remember that
they aren’t all bad. Well done on your website - it has opened my eyes.
I’ve not done a roll call but I would guess that the really bad councillors in Bexley
number no more than 15. There are several who never get a mention on Bonkers and
another bunch who have never had a bad word said about them, Steven Hall among
them. Michael Tarrant can get carried away with his busy-bodying,
he finds a bit of litter and can jump to all the wrong conclusions - and someone told me he
thinks this website is rubbish - so that’s his reputation trashed! Past references
here and
here
and here.
While on the subject of good councillors the recent council source of confirmation that
councillor Colin Campbell was definitely lying
when he claimed not to have aimed the word ’crap’ at a member of the public during a council
meeting has said I have it wrong about
would-be councillor Rob Leitch.
All I actually said was that his Twitter account had been locked down which
implied he didn’t want to talk to voters. However if I am happy to take the word
of one councillor that Campbell definitely said “crap” I have to take his word
that Rob Leitch is a good bloke. He shouldn’t have much trouble getting elected in Sidcup anyway - unless
the wrecking of the
High Street backfires spectacularly.
Don’t ask me why Rob Leitch’s Twitter account is currently not working at all.
Another story on your website about another Bexley child dying. Don’t they have
procedures in place? Aren’t Councillors supposed to add an extra layer of
protection? Didn't OFSTED already warn them? It’s disgraceful that they go on
about MBEs - jobs for the boys and girls. Shame that there is no ‘vote for none
of the above’ option! Time for a change.
Don’t forget the old ladies.
An old
lady died following very bad management decisions by Bexley council. They
are all still there on their hundred grand a year.
8 March (Part 3) - Sidcup. Missed deadlines and little progress
The fortnightly trip to Sidcup revealed little new
since the last one. Hadlow Road is much the same, just a little less muddy
but there is no sign of completion. To save you checking the calendar, 20th January is seven weeks ago.
There may have been more white painted marks on the footpath and there was some
new paving going in by the old Box Shop but nothing elsewhere. Shoppers were few and far between and
the traffic jams at Station Road were just the same, extending back towards the
hospital, the station and towards Eltham. Don’t complain to Bexley council, cabinet member
Linda Bailey thinks it’s good for business.
All photographs taken within a few minutes of 11:30 a.m.
8 March (Part 2) - The Metropolitan Police is corrupt
The documentary evidence I have against Bexley police over the Craske case is
in my view damning. Knowing who the suspect is and later discussing how I should
be told that nothing more could be done ought to be looked at seriously but I’d guess it
is still odds on that the Deputy Assistant Commissioner currently
taking an interest will be compelled to find a way out.
As long term readers will know I have close family connections to Alastair
Morgan, the brother of the murdered private eye Daniel Morgan. The last couple
of days have seen that murder linked with that of Stephen Lawrence. My daughter
and Alastair have been meeting a lot of very important people recently and Alastair is a
frequent visitor to the TV studios. The corruption in the Met. is almost beyond
belief. I know enough to shake my head in despair every time I see or hear a top
police officer suggesting it is all in the past. Believe me it isn’t.
Recent TV coverage may be seen (but not for long) at…
http://www.itv.com/news/wales/update/2014-03-07/family-disturbed-by-revelations-in-daniel-morgan-case
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b007mplc/episodes/player
http://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b03xg9px
…and those of you both interested and on Twitter might wish to follow
@justice4daniel.
8 March (Part 1) - Superwoman meets Bexley’s Supreme Controller
Why is having a
Head of Professional Standards and Quality Assurance with an MBE looking
after Bexley’s lamentable children’s services suddenly so important to Bexley
council? Cabinet member Katie Perrior
couldn’t resist
bragging about it at this week’s council meeting either.
I’ve been a cynic about MBEs ever since I was instructed to name a worthy
recipient of a gong after initially saying I had no one on my staff who merited
one. I decided to do a bit of research on this MBE holder but became sidetracked.
I found an MBE holder who is the Development Manager at a Safeguarding
Children’s Board and advisor to MAPPA (Multi-Agency
Public Protection Arrangements) for the Ministry of Justice. A Justice of the Peace too.
She holds positions at the Office of the Children’s Commissioner and the Local
Government Association and been a non-executive
director of an NHS Care Trust. Then the research led me closer to home.
She has been a Bexley school governor, on the board of a nearby children’s hospice, is
a recipient of a Bexley Civic Award, worked for Bexley Voluntary Services and
has lived in Welling for a very long time. She even worked for Bexley council
for a while. But she isn’t
Barbara Travanion, chair of Bexley’s Safeguarding Children’s Board or Lucie Heyes MBE
the quality Assurance Manager for Children’s Services taken on by Bexley council to rescue their failed children’s services.
You can probably discover her name by Googling some of the employing
organisations to find the common factor. I started out with little more than the
initials MBE, Bexley and ‘children’s services’ to go on.
I’ve been in contact with a man who might know a little more. He told me
something interesting, though unfortunately I have drawn a total blank on the
subject on the web. I was told that the lady was passed by Conservative Central
Office as suitable MP material. How would she ever find the time?
Maybe
she felt the same because I have no evidence that the matter was ever taken
any further; instead, if my contact is correct, she set her sights a little
lower by applying to become a councillor in Bexley in May 2014.
That required passing a selection process too and that of course would be
chaired by you know who, Bexley’s very own dictator. What happened? Well
according to my informant she was rejected in favour of a councillor’s wife.
As UKIP has noted, choosing spouses to be councillors is a good way of ensuring
total loyalty to ‘she who must be obeyed’.
If anyone knows where I can see a copy of David Cameron’s 2009 approved list I
would be most grateful.
7 March (Part 2) - A chocolate fireguard might be more use
There’s
probably no need to explain what I mean by ‘Obscene blog’ but in case I have
acquired new readers from Mars - filth traced to councillor Peter Craske’s phone
line, four months later police discuss among themselves telling me they can’t
trace anything, allow nearly eight months for evidence to be destroyed, talk of
stitching me up as the real culprit, connive with Bexley council and CPS to
“resolve Craske’s situation”, ignore CPS advice, wrap up case due to “political
interference”.
Nearly all of that is documented and allegations of Misconduct in Public Office
against two Bexley Borough Commanders are now being considered by the Deputy Assistant
Commissioner following support from the Independent Police Complaints Commission.
Elwyn Bryant, fellow victim, and I have worked hard on getting that far along
the road to exposing our corrupt council and the police force which aids and
abets them and, sad to say, appears not to have learned its lesson going by some
recent correspondence I have seen. However we would not have ever got as far as
we have without the help given by my MP, Teresa Pearce and Elwyn’s, James
Brokenshire. Except that isn’t wholly true.
Right from the outset Teresa stood by offering and giving assistance and more
than once taking the initiative. James went through the motions, wrote the odd
letter in 2011 but was never of any real help. Teresa accompanied me to
meetings, got active behind the scenes and kept me informed. James Brokenshire
has refused to get involved and ended up with an excuse, proven to be false, as
to why he could not speak to Elwyn - although he did at first.
Elwyn has been pretty envious of me on occasions and suggested I might say
something about it here, but I’ve always said he should remain calm; one day he
might need James Brokenshire. However having seen the MPs latest response I have
come to realise that James Brokenshire MP will never be any use when faced with
the corruption that exists under his very nose. Probably he is too closely
associated with Teresa O’Neill.
Today’s Daily Telegraph article (linked extract above) sums him up perfectly.
‘Repeated platitudes’ is what I saw in his last letter to Elwyn. Funny that the same
excuses don’t seem to apply to my own MP.
Summary of Obscene blog.
7 March (Part 1) - Honey trap?
It’s
probably a nice little earner for Bexley council but they really ought to sort
this parking space out. It has been like it longer that the Conservatives have
been entirely in charge in (i.e. almost totally neglecting) Lesnes ward and it was mentioned here
as long ago as September 2011.
In 2009 Peter Craske and co. made a number of alterations in Abbey Road,
Belvedere and promised residents that they would not lose any parking spaces.
This proved difficult to achieve because the much narrower road gave buses a
problem squeezing between the old parking bays and the re-sited central
reservation. So Bexley council took the easy but stupid way out. They reduced
the number of residents parking bays by one but never got around to extending
the yellow lines. The result was one car length entirely free of of any
restrictions and they kept their promise on bay numbers. I believe there are only three free
bays our side of the Greenwich boundary, and nearer to Abbey Wood station - and
they are pretty much permanently occupied by residents. So the bay shown is
unsurprisingly popular.
Personally I’d avoid it as it almost invites a lorry or bus to swipe a car’s
rear end but commuters in a hurry are not always the most careful of parkers -
and there is nothing illegal about stopping there. However some of NSL’s Bexley
Civil Enforcement Officers are even sillier than a commuter in a hurry.
I’d love to know what this one wrote in his notebook and which lines and signs
he photographed to prove his case. Maybe he just took photos a few feet further
along the road where parking restrictions do apply. We know how
they can falsify the evidence.
6 March (Part 4) - The Bexley budget debate 2014
If
mayor Sharon Massey had deliberately set about pleasing council critics she
could hardly have done a better job. She allowed photography at her meetings
before the new protocol was formally adopted and last night she said nothing
about it; just let those with cameras go about their business unhindered. She
will be a hard act to follow.
There was something between 20 and 30 people in the public gallery, al lot of
them candidates at the next election. After discovering who I was a bunch of
Tories got up and moved away.
I left after the budget vote was taken having been asked by Mick Barnbrook to go
elsewhere to discuss with him what should be done with
the Cheryl Bacon file but
although we reached a decision, not being present throughout the council meeting
was probably a mistake. I’m told I missed a number of little gems like
councillor Linda Bailey suggesting that Sidcup High Street is benefitting from
the traffic chaos there because it is keeping people there longer. Yeah, that
makes sense.
The meeting has
already been reported in brief so this second one will probably
turn out to be a stodgy catalogue of quotable quotes. Here we go…
Teresa
O’Neill moved the recommendation to adopt the budget proposals. The budget she
said, rather obviously, “dictates what services the council delivers”. She was
“disappointed that the Labour party did not accept the motion” but she had “put away
something for a rainy day and put something in our back pocket for when the need
arose and improved the services for our residents”.
“We could have taken the easy way out and taken advice from the opposition
spokesperson who suggested we should put up council tax by 40% or go bankrupt”.
That would appear to be a lie based on something Munir Malik said long ago but
the 40% will be news to everyone even if Munir did refer to bankruptcy.
“We promised taxpayers value for money and we have taken action to ensure we
remain a low council tax authority” - but not as low as other London boroughs.
“We listened to what our residents say and considered their responses. The
consultation responses were very clear and most agreed with our proposal”. The
leader then went on about the climb down on moving the archives to Bromley which
are now to stay at no extra cost. Far from being a success, that proposal must
surely have been an enormous mistake if Penny Duggan (Bexley Historical Society)
can waltz in and come up with a much better plan.
“We have even improved services” she said without providing
specific examples but later the council tax support scheme was branded “excellent”. Schools “improved”
and “Queen Mary’s Hospital we can be really proud of”. Waitrose is in Sidcup and
Tesco in Erith and all there because of our Conservative council apparently.
The new council HQ is “going to deliver for residents“ and “save vast amounts of money
on a yearly basis”. The leader concluded by comparing herself with Lady Thatcher
although it has to be said, not entirely seriously. Overall the leader gave a
good account of herself with not too many excursions into her council’s customary dishonesty.
The
deputy leader seconded the motion saying these were “difficult times” but “we
are up to the job”. The council has “revolutionised and redesigned children’s
services” following the appalling OFSTED report “and we have committed millions to that service”.
Campbell said that some of his investments had gone unnoticed and reeled off a
list. The new council telephone system, the web improvements, better IT systems,
“they go under the radar but demonstrate our investment in Bexley”.
He taunted the opposition that in 2010 they said the council could not deliver
£35 million savings and he assured residents he could deliver the budget “right up to 2018”.
The mayor then asked councillors if they wished to speak. Of course they did.
Labour councillor Brenda Langstead was as always concerned about her own
electors and singled out community safety for comment. She correctly reminded
the meeting that the more honest among the Conservatives had admitted that front
line services would be affected by the new budget. She said that the tax freeze
of the past four years had resulted in 50% of services being lost. How that is
calculated she did not say but there is no doubt that in principle councillor
Langstead is correct.
Councillor Margaret O’Neill (Labour) was unhappy about the lack of affordable
rented accommodation and the 8,000 people awaiting allocation. She said that
there is nothing in the budget to combat that situation and there was plenty of
land available for building especially in the north of the borough.
Councillor
Stefano Borella, Crayford and Erith’s chosen man for Labour in 2015 referred to
the Conservatives’ self congratulatory tone on the lack of council tax rises
but said not everyone had benefitted. The poor who previously did not have to
pay were now asked to pay a proportion of it. The policy was announced on “the
same day that tax was cut for millionaires”. He referred to “the hated bedroom
tax” without being hauled over the coals for the use of its colloquial name.
“The impact is a massive increase in the use of food banks. Local MPs have
been happy to promote food banks as a new social service. The party opposite
should be ashamed.”
Stefano was particularly critical of earlier decisions to run down children’s
services to the point they were inadequate and attracted OFSTED’s attention and
“now we were having to build them up again yet the cabinet member is still in
her role”.
Councillor Alan Deadman invented a new council slogan incorporating the words
‘Statutory Minimums’ and was also critical of children’s services and the
increased charges for things like football pitches. Grass was to be cut less
often too. Parks being left open all night might adversely affect some
residents. He said the costs would be transferred to the police but in the end
the council tax payer still pays. Alan put in his regular plea for a small
increase in pay for council staff who have had almost nothing extra over the
past three years.
Next
we were treated to some welcome fireworks from the Thamesmead Tiger, Munir
Malik, who set about savaging Bexley’s record with gusto. “It is an absolutely
shameful lie that there has been any suggestion made of a 40% increase in
council tax by this side of the chamber. It is an absolute lie that [lost in
audience applause] but when we came into this borough there was an awful lot of
work to be done and the group took control by a majority of one, not forty
something. We really angst’d over how that responsibility would be carried out”.
“In 2003” he said with a grin on his face, “we increased the council tax by a
slightly larger margin than [lost in applause again] but that was not the
largest increase that this council ever saw. The largest increase was under the
leadership of Dan Newton, a Tory member, a Tory leader. You have never
apologised for that”.
“If
you thought that the Labour increase was so big why have you not returned it to
the people of Bexley? You say we charged them too much but if you are now saying
the freeze on taxes is because of the increase we put in between 2002 and 2006
you should say so and give us some credit. We put one million pounds into the
pension fund deficit” Munir was told he was talking rubbish so he turned his
attention to that subject. He said that current policy would cause rubbish to
accumulate in people’s gardens and the streets”.
“You have decimated local government… we did more in our period in government
than you have in these last eight years. You have got rid of the assets at rock
bottom prices. Tesco’s [the Civic Centre site] is not even protected; if they
were to build a block of flats or a hotel Bexley residents would get nothing out
of it. You did not even include an overage clause.”
Councillor John Davey stood to say he had never heard so much rubbish in his
life and proceeded to outdo councillor Malik by a very considerable margin. For
unfocussed rambling, John Davey takes a lot of beating. “It has always been my
general principle that if I do the complete opposite of what councillor Malik
has to say I cannot go far wrong. I now know why because I have since learned
that he is a director of the Co-op Group with losses of two billion pounds
[almost inaudible]. What does that tell you about his financial credibility?”
“We have an excellent record here, we have frozen council tax, we have put about
£200 million pounds of investment into Bexley, and are getting that, brilliant
investment, and that’s with freezing council tax, what more could you want? They
put it up 40%, they’d probably put it up more, there is absolutely no doubt
about that, it’s in their genes. They can’t stop themselves, there are three
things they will do, they will put up council tax, they will pay themselves
more, you can be absolutely certain of it because that is what they do”.
Apparently Davey cannot even count.
“In my ward. Lesnes Abbey, we’ve got promised over three million pounds to
improve Lesnes Abbey park and woods, fantastic, and improvements going on in
Thamesmead and Crossrail. You can go over the whole borough, massive investments
coming in and yet magically we’ve managed to freeze council tax and they seem
frightened to put forward an alternative. Why is that? It’s because they know we
will pick it apart; absolutely no facts behind anything they say it’s just smoke
and mirrors so they just refuse to put anything forward. It’s a horrible
thought, but if they were ever to win the council, they, I think, the future of
our borough would be very dark indeed.
For the record, councillor Malik joined the Co-operative Group after
it ran into difficulties and when the Conservatives were in opposition they didn’t
produce alternative budgets either. How can a few councillors ever hope to mount
the consultation processes and hundreds of thousands of pounds worth of
accountancy expertise that the ruling party can muster?
After
that it was a relief to listen to someone with something useful to say; Séan
Newman. Labour for Belvedere. He returned to stealth taxes, seven million pounds
of it every year, equivalent, he said, to an eleven percent increase in council
tax. “It is a very disingenuous set of leaflets which are going through the
doors”. He said that it is not a choice to use many of these services,
cemeteries being perhaps the most obvious example given.
Councillor Gareth Bacon snubbed many of the audience by failing to switch on his
microphone and had his back to them so I will note in passing only that he said
the cutting of grass will be reduced only from twelve to eleven times a year and
that not shutting parks will save £100,000 per annum. Isn’t that a wonderful
example of how councils must be paying far too much for services? How long will
it take for playground equipment to get nicked?
Councillor Chris Taylor repeated his “back of a fag packet” jibe, from 2011,
about Labour’s budgeting ability and that proved to be the pinnacle of his short speech.
Councillor and cabinet member Katie Perrior came out with her usual spiel about how much she has
improved children’s services and has been able to recruit
people with MBEs.
Unfortunately she spoke at such a furious pace and far from clearly that even
with the help of the recording I have little idea of what she was saying. I
heard more criticism of the opposition party and that she was proud of what she had achieved.
Cabinet member Don Massey also launched into an attack on Labour who were
“bombastic and scare mongering”. Mumbling along I heard him say something about
them “just not getting it”. He bragged about the success of Bexley’s privatised
library and the Howbury Centre “coming on stream shortly’. He admitted that
service prices had increased and some were now at a premium level. He was “very
concerned about the ground conditions in Danson Park. We must have better ground
conditions for the festival to go ahead”.
Labour leader Chris Ball made what was in effect a farewell council speech
before his bowing out in May. He expressed some doubt that the new budget could
last until 2018 but hoped for the best. Cabinet member John Fuller had a few digs at the
opposition but we have heard them all before. He didn’t sink to Davey’s levels -
who could? - and standards have been raised in schools, but I was a bit disappointed nevertheless.
Finally leader Teresa O’Neill poo poo’d the idea of cutting the number of
councillors and took a final swipe at councillor Malik. What will they do
without him?
The vote divided entirely along partly lines as it always does. The Labour party
will suffer the inevitable questions over whether or not they wanted to raise
council tax but there has never been any direct suggestion they would do so
although that might be the inevitable consequence of their ideas. There is a
council tax cap of 1·99% and there has never been the slightest hint that they would try to
crash through that. I don’t think they had anything more in mind than to take a
leaf out of Conservative Bromley council’s book.
Apologies for not staying at the meeting past the vote but having spent five
hours on this report, right now I am rather glad I didn’t.
6 March (Part 3) - I’m in trouble again
I
have been reported to the police but fear not, Teresa O’Neill has not taken
leave of her senses again. I am a bad boy for
my blog three days ago
commenting on this UKIP Tweet.
My crime is repeating what can be read at Companies House and similar websites, the
Sidcup address of the Limited company Quintessentially Me. Maybe I should have just
linked to the Companies House page.
I won’t embarrass the company owner by publishing their email but you should get
the general idea from my reply. I’m pretty sure fair trading laws make it
illegal to sell from a website without offering a contact address either.
No one has suggested your relationship with Bexley council is
underhand in any way but as a business, small or otherwise, your name and
address is public property. How else do you think I got hold of it?
The law on domain name registration is clear. Unless you are a private
individual, owners of co.uk domains engaged in any trade, must have their name
and address published by Nominet, the controlling quango. Mine is there because
owners of org domains have no right of opt out. Yours should be there too.
I have no intention of making an FOI request to Bexley council but if you follow
the Twitter conversations carefully you may see that others do.
The police will not be interested in your report. You run a business, ergo, the
name and address will be put on the web by Companies House and copied to various
company registration websites.
Are you sure you are not over reacting? I would agree that the reference to your
company was an unimportant addition to the normal fare on my website and adds
little to the debate on Bexley council and I could easily remove it, but as you
thought the best course of action was to report me to the police I do not feel so inclined.
Please be sure to forward this email to the police, I would be interested to know what they say.
One of Bonkers’ Twitter followers is the Sidcup Safer Neighbourhood Team.
I would hope they are more interested in their current difficulties with
Romanian burglars.
Follow UKIP; go to jail!
6 March (Part 2) - The fight for honesty goes on
Mick Barnbrook never gives up. It’s taken him three years, sometimes more, to get
MPs put behind bars and whilst I couldn’t even be bothered to make a complaint about it,
Mick is still getting stuck into the Colin Campbell cover ups. Campbell described
Bexley is Bonkers as “crap”, which harms no one and offends few, but the subsequent lies
- he claims he said ‘trash’ turn it
into something more serious. Campbell also went on TV to tell everyone, without
actually naming him, that Nicholas Dowling shoved a microphone up against
councillor Cheryl Bacon’s face which councillors themselves have been queuing up
to state was simply not true.
Despite the anonymous messages to the contrary, maybe because of them,
councillors are also now emerging from the woodwork to say “everyone knows that
Campbell said B-i-B was crap”. Some have obviously reached the end of their
tether with Bexley council’s constant dishonesty. All of which is grist to Mick Barnbrook’s mill.
He recently made a formal complaint of maladministration
to Mr. Tuckley against Mr. Akin Alabi,
Head of Legal Services, Lynn Tyler, Legal Services Team Manager and Rebecca
Sandhu, Independent Person. It’s a bit long winded and needs some knowledge of
the subject to fully understand but here are some extracts…
Despite providing evidence by way of two Freedom of Information responses
293164 dated 26th July 2013 and 293165 dated 30th July 2013, together with an
email from Nick Hollier dated 9th July 213, informing me that the council's
protocol on behaviour at council meetings agreed in 2010 still stands, which all
proved that Councillor Campbell was prevaricating when he appeared on the
Politics Show, Lynn Tyler still reached the decision that he had not
breached the Members' Code of Conduct.
Further evidence of a biased and corrupt investigation by Lynn Tyler is
contained in the conclusion of her letter to me dated 11th September 2013, where
she states "Even had I formed the opinion that his comments did amount to
prevarication, this would not be any breach of the Members' Code of Conduct and
is not referred to anywhere in the Code."
The evidence provided by Freedom of Information response 293165 is clear
evidence that although audio or visual recordings of proceedings is allowed with
the permission of the Mayor/Chairman, that permission has never been granted in
the last two years.
The evidence provided by Freedom of Information response 293164 is clear
evidence that no public disorder has taken place during the last two years that
warranted action by the council by means of ejection or warning letters to
members of the Bexley Action Group.
It is therefore obvious from Lynn Tyler's comment, in addition to the the
documentary evidence provided by me, that a corrupt investigation has taken
place, which was disregarded at the review stage by both Mr Alabi and Rebecca Sandhu.
I am therefore requesting a full investigation into the conduct of all three
individuals for conducting a corrupt investigation, both at the initial stage by
Lynn Tyler and at the review stage by Mr Alabi and Rebecca Sandhu.
I am particularly concerned at the failure of Rebecca Sandhu to properly carry
out her role of Independent Person.
If Cheryl Bacon
had said something like “I made a right arse of that didn’t I? I’ll know what to do next time”
her reputation would be intact instead of being in tatters and whilst not in the
same league few would have cared if Campbell had just shrugged and said “so
what?” But no; we must be fed a diet of lies by everyone concerned. It makes no sense.
6 March (Part 1) - Council tax freeze approved
What
a difference four (almost) years make. When I first attended council meetings
they were an utter shambles. Conservative councillors would be aiming personal
insults at Labour councillors, Labour councillors scoring political points,
Peter Craske being incredibly rude to members of the public, mayor Val Clark
picking fights with members of the public who did not cheer her every word
and councillor John Davey being John Davey. Rather a lot of councillors
were dressed like tramps too.
Now we have a a mayor who never puts a foot wrong and seems to be a well
adjusted human being and councillors, who judged on last night’s performance
anyway, are all one might wish for in a well run council. Viewed from their
respective political positions, leader Teresa O’Neill put over a good account of
her achievements with deputy Colin Campbell following suit and Labour councillors
made a decent job of picking holes in them. In particular the massive price hikes
coupled with reduced services which the Conservatives are so proud of. The Conservatives,
both councillors of cabinet rank and below, made polite and valid comments, and
John Davey put in a sterling performance as the bumbler-in-chief.
If Bexley Conservatives had not built their council on so many lies I might be tempted to fall
back into my old Conservative ways and overlook Teresa O’Neill’s Gordon Brown style
stealth taxes and her abuse, well
Chris Taylor’s abuse, of low paid workers. Even during her address to the
council yesterday evening she managed to slip in one massive lie. “Bexley is a
low tax authority.” Oh no it isn’t. When next year’s
tax league table is
produced Bexley is unlikely to be any better than in 24th position among the 32
London boroughs. Why that is could be debated at length and councillor Munir
Malik made a pretty good, interesting anyway, stab at it yesterday but that, like
a lot of other things, is going to have to wait for analysis of the recording.
That little box of tricks, not to mention
Nicholas Dowling’s broken dictaphone,
has probably done more to improve Bexley council’s public image than their Standards Board ever
has. Cheryl Bacon has been struck dumb.
The Labour contingent made no attempt to put forward an alternative
budget strategy, how could they realistically, and
voted against freezing the tax. It’s a superficial view of what is happening in
the borough but the Conservatives will be making merry with that on your doorstep
soon. While they are there ask them why they find it impossible to be honest.
5 March (Part 3) - Taking secrecy to extremes
We know they don’t like to admit anything but this FOI response sent by
Bexley council a couple of days ago seems to be plumbing new depths. Instead of
refusing the request they have just sent a blank line without any content. Clever stuff.
5 March (Part 2) - Another Bexley management failure results in death
How many Rhys Lawries does Bexley need? This time a child died of rickets, an easily preventable disease. The serious case study made these comments and references…
• A lack of ownership and accountability in practice.
• Newly qualified and/or inexperienced practitioners with poor senior management
oversight of the case.
• Poor quality of assessments, influenced by a lack of depth and rigour of
analysis and interpretation.
• Poor ongoing assessment of risk with little evidence of considering the
totality of events and behaviours.
• Poor compliance and in some cases lack of knowledge of policies and
procedures.
• Poor inter and intra agency communication, including inconsistent and at times
lack of documentation.
• Limited evidence of the voice of the child in professional decision making.
• An apparent lack of evidence of awareness/knowledge of the impact of maternal
nutritional status on the health of either the unborn or new born infant.
• The quality of assessments was poor with little recognition or analysis of
risk and therefore decision-making was flawed.
• Professional practice focussed on maternal/parental needs over the needs of
the child. There was no evidence of challenge of the parents’
views/representations or of their contradictory behaviours with a resulting loss
of focus on the child.
• The ethnicity, diversity and possibly professional status of the family
distracted professionals from challenging them. Supporting the equality and
diversity rights of the family appeared to take precedence over the voice of the child.
• There was a lack of ownership and accountability by professionals, delegation
to junior staff or other professionals was evident and there was no follow up or
review of concerns. This contributed to the lack of identification of risk and
increasing vulnerability was not picked up.
• There was a lack of senior management oversight, this includes directly to
support junior staff and organisationally. Roles were often confused and not
understood. The quality assurance function of management oversight was missing
and led to continued poor assessment and decisions.
• The role and function of named nurse in acute trust 1 was not utilised as set
out in Working Together and led to confusion for other agencies.
• Policies/procedures and guidance were not complied with in particular
Discharge planning, DNA management, Core Assessment, rapid response meetings,
managing allegations, the LADO role and nutritional guidance. This contributed
to the lack of effective risk assessment and planning.
• There was poor Inter and Intra professional communication, leading to gaps in
knowledge, misleading risk assessment and awareness of vulnerability.
• The lack of understanding of the impact of maternal nutrition/health on the
unborn infant/baby resulted in no identification of risk or management plan.
• There was a consistent lack of professional curiosity and challenge to both
parents and other professionals, this contributed to poor assessment, lack of
recognition of risk/vulnerability and subsequently poor ineffective management.
• The role of Named senior officers within agencies and the LADO role and
process was not used and does not appear to be understood.
• There are familiar learning points identified within this case to a previous local
SCR in 2009 which suggest that previous learning has not been embedded into practice.
• The repeated lack of recognition of risk was not recognised as there was no
professional who considered the whole picture or challenged previous decisions
or lack of them. This lack of identification of increasing vulnerability also
appears to have conversely provided reassurance and served to reduce the risk
observed by professionals as care unfolded.
The News Shopper reports
that Bexley council says “lessons have been learned”. That’s alright then. The
News Shopper also reports today that Bexley’s Head of Professional Standards and
Quality Assurance has been awarded an MBE for services to children and
families. She has been in post only since last August but says the award was for
“social workers and managers”.
Note: LADO - Local Authority Designated Officer. SCR - Serious Case Review.
5 March (Part 1) - Nick Hollier the joker
Mr. Nick
Hollier has written to Mick Barnbrook with another attempt to close down the correspondence about
councillor Cheryl Bacon. If he thinks it is
the last he will hear of it I fear he is going to be a very disappointed man.
His letter was written after a number of
councillors had confirmed in writing
that the excuses attributed to Cheryl Bacon for excluding the public, which Akin Alabi,
Nick Hollier, Will Tuckley and Lynn Tyler all backed, was one huge lie. It may
have duped more than half a million pounds worth of Bexley’s top brains but they cannot
find a witness who can back her story. Why is that? Because
Cheryl Bacon’s
supposed unsigned
statement was nothing but a big long lie.
In the light of several councillors’ contrary statements just before Nick Hollier wrote his letter, some of
you may find the way he digs himself further into the mire amusing…
Dear Mr. Barnbrook,
Thank you for your email received on 3 February 2014 providing details of your
complaint. I understand from your email that your complaint is that
Mr. Alabi failed to properly investigate, at the review stage, the conduct of
Councillor Cheryl Bacon on 19th June 2013 at a Public Realm Meeting.
The conduct of Councillor Bacon was the subject of a complaint by you under the
Members’ Code of Conduct. Mrs. Tyler provided a response to your complaint
on 23rd August 2013 and Mr. Alabi has undertaken a review of that response.
Mr. Alabi wrote to you on 10th February confirming that, having undertaken a
review, he has concluded that there was no breach of the Code of Conduct.
You will be aware that there is no further right of appeal or review of Mr. Alabi’s
decision under the procedure for considering complaints against Members
in relation to the Members’ Code of Conduct and it is not be (sic) appropriate for the
complaints procedure to be used to re-examine the substantive issues.
I reject your complaint as being outside the scope of the Council’s Complaints
Procedure because the issues fall under the procedure for considering complaints
under the Members’ Code of Conduct.
Mr. Alabi’s letter of 10th February specifically states that he and the
Independent Person, Ms. Sandhu, had concluded that it was not necessary to
interview any other person. It is clear that the issue of whether
Councillor Slaughter should be interviewed was considered as part of Mr. Alabi’s
review and I see no basis for any complaint, even if it were appropriate to
pursue this matter under the Council’s Complaint Procedure. I am also
satisfied that Mr. Alabi has conducted a diligent, thorough and competent review.
The circumstances giving rise to this correspondence took place in June 2013 and
have been the subject of extensive correspondence, meetings and discussion.
I do not consider that it is reasonable for the Council to be required to enter
into any further correspondence or to expend further resources in relation to these matters.
Yours sincerely
Nick Hollier
Deputy Director HR and Corporate Support
I suspect that Mick Barnbrook will see that as further evidence of Hollier’s Misconduct in Public Office
and add his letter to his file for the police; but I suppose there is still time
for Bexley council to admit the truth.
Index to related blogs and documents.
Note: Councillor June Slaughter was singled out by
Mr. Barnbrook because she was the councillor closest to members of the public and had the best view.
4 March (Part 4) - Quintessentially wrong
One
of the things on my ToDo list was to research the company Quintessentially Me Ltd.
which has been supplying Bexley council with various fripperies. Unfortunately,
or maybe not, I have been pipped to the post by
UKIP on Twitter. However there
is one thing I can tell you about the company; it has made a dishonest
declaration to Nominet, the registry of uk internet domain names.
It is against Nominet’s regulations for a company to withhold their name and address
from the public records. That ought to be reported. Meanwhile the address as
it appears on the Companies House website is…
Flat 21,
Cornel House,
Longlands Road,
Sidcup,
Kent
DA15 7LX
Note: This rule was relaxed later. On payment of a fee
non-business domain owners can suppress their personal details.
4 March (Part 3) - Well connected on two quid a week
I’d
like to be able to say that the
report on the Bhogals was quite long enough
already without adding more but the fact is I was so pleased with myself over
the credit agency’s (Experian if you must know) comment that I completely failed to look any further. As a
reader has been quick to remind me, I should not have been so complacent.
Amandeep Singh Bhogal may be running a company worth only £100 but it doesn’t
stop him hobnobbing with top Conservatives. A trip to
his political website (why would a British politician choose to host a
legitimate website in Albania?) will get you pictures of Amandeep alongside local MPs
David Evenett and James Brokenshire, William Hague (Foreign Secretary), Boris
Johnson (Mayor of London) , James Cleverly (GLA Member), Damian Green MP (Home
Office); second rankers like
Colin Bloom, John Waters and Alex Sawyer and third rate politicos
like John Davey and Keima Allen.
A more exhaustive search will find Amandeep in the
Kentish newspapers where he describes himself as an industrialist, farmer
and businessman. I wonder where he grows the grass?
On Linkedin Mr. Bhogal goes further and says he is an Approved Conservative Parliamentary Candidate. It is absolutely amazing what these hard
working Indians can do on £2 a week.
4 March (Part 2) - Hill View views
Writing
the report of
last week’s planning meeting was not something I was looking forward to and
it wasn’t just that it takes more than four hours to go through a one and a half
hour recording, picking out the relevant bits, typing them out and then checking
to make sure that the quotations are accurate. More worrying was that I knew
from messages received beforehand that some people were expecting the boot to be
put in in good and hard against certain people seen to be the villains behind the
scenes and those correspondents were likely to be disappointed.
If any reputation for integrity is to be maintained only what the recording reveals can be safely
reported but sometimes the gossip is interesting, and occasionally, better still (?), it might
be mischievous. Nevertheless it may still be worth wider distribution with the proviso that
it fails to meet Bonkers’ usual standard of proof and may be bunkum for all I know.
It is entirely possible that some anonymous comments are from those with axes to grind; but
I sometimes suspect that concerned Conservatives are behind them, perhaps
even councillors. Whatever the case I need to destroy any real chance of the sources being
identified so the following message is in reality an amalgam of more than two recent comments
about the Hill View planning application, edited into a single message. Every comment is
genuine but as will be apparent, not necessarily provided in the sequence shown below.
Excellent report and a good summary of how it was stage managed. It is interesting to note that the
third East Wickham councillor, Steven Hall, was not present. I think he tried to warn us how it
would play out and suspect he is deeply out of favour with the inner sanctum. He must
be odds on to lose his Audit Chairmanship. We would be sorry to see him go but it would appear that
East Wickham is now being micro managed by the FC.
Local residents apparently wrote in to try and stop Hunt representing them but
the FC overruled everybody. Hunt is in the pocket of the FC and has his sights
on the Children’s Services cabinet position (Perrior leaving).
The chairman, leader, a few planning members, and James Hunt got together with
officers and planned the entire evening. It was not popular with everyone in the
Tory group. Mr. Burke caused massive problems for the Council with his
report and will be speaking. It’s why the planning meeting on the 6th February
had to be deferred. It put the Bexley First project in danger!
There were some ten Tories canvassing in East Wickham on Saturday - its the only time
we see [deleted description] Hunt and he still tries to avoid residents. When he gets to the cabinet
I hope he does a better job with the Scrutiny of Children’s Services - no wonder Bexley’s record isn't good.
Some of that rings true, especially the rigging of the meeting in advance. Par for the
course in Bexley but I find the criticism of James Hunt hard to swallow. He made a good case
against the Hill View scheme last Thursday and there is no evidence at all that councillor Hunt
is any of the things alleged in the emails, nor Steven Hall for that matter. I understand from
other sources that it was James Hunt who personally contacted affected residents and met many of them. I
think you will know who the initials FC refer to.
Gossip blogs are dangerous territory so there will be no quick repeats, but I do
rather like the thought of spreading dissension in the council camp.
4 March (Part 1) - Twitter and a twit
I
get the impression that most B-i-B readers do not use Twitter and I am wary of
it myself. Since opening an account I have mainly used it for announcing the
blogs I think may be of most interest. What I do concede is that it can be a
very powerful tool for distributing opinions and information and technically
it works exceptionally well; I can see why some politicians are keen users - and some not.
Yesterday I became involved in a Twitter conversation about any ‘biographies’
that those intending to stand for election in Bexley in May may have made
available to electors. While searching for an answer I came across the
associated image. It is Rob Leitch’s Twitter page and the self proclaimed “commonsense Tory
candidate for Sidcup Ward in May 2014” appears to be keen on hiding. All I know
about him is that he works for an MP. He wants your vote but may not
want to talk to you.
‘Biographies’ are hard to come by and I found only a few…
Chris Attard, UKIP, Lesnes
Cheryl Bacon, Conservative, Cray Meadows
Mick Barnbrook, Independent, Blackfen and Lamorbey
Elwyn Bryant, Independent, Blackfen and Lamorbey
Rob Comley, UKIP, East Wickham
Peter Craske, Conservative, Blackfen and Lamorbey
Nicholas Dowling, Independent, Blackfen and Lamorbey
Mike Ferro, UKIP, Barnehurst
Lynn Smith, UKIP, Blackfen and Lamorbey
Chris Taylor, Conservative, Blackfen and Lamorbey
The concentration on Blackfen and Lamorbey appears to be entirely coincidental. The absence of the Labour party may not be.
If you know of more please let me know.
3 March (Part 2) - Cowboys and Indians?
Bexley Conservatives have a weakness for husband and wife pairings of
councillors, possibly civil partners too although the next one planned went
seriously off the rails when
one half hastily disappeared,
allegedly after thieving something from his Conservative councillor employer. A case of not keeping it in the family!
The latest
list from Bexley Conservatives shows quite a lot of new pairings. Pairs are useful
because council leader Teresa O’Neill can appoint one half to be responsible for the
scrutiny of the other who is a cabinet member. It’s what any tin pot dictator would do.
Among the new pairs being lined up for election in May is Pardeep and Amandeep Bhogal, both standing in
Belvedere; and who are they you might reasonably ask.
Amandeep Bhogal
is a director at RSB Engineers Ltd, a company founded in India in 1960. Founded is
a good word because the company claims to manufacture a wide range of metal products; automotive
components to scaffolding accessories, and their website refers to a foundry in Lower Road, London
with offices in Westminster, India and the United Arab Emirates.
Lower Road, London is a euphemism for Lower Road,
Belvedere, Kent like Del Boy’s London, Paris and New York. Anyone who checks
with Companies House can get at the truth.
Pardeep Bhogal is the company secretary; well she was until her appointment
was terminated in June 2013 – but then again the company RSB Engineers Ltd
(company number: 08266505), London, according to Companies House has only been going since 24th October 2012.
Really? What about the claim to have been around since 1960?
A company of the same name, RSB Engineers Ltd (06460154), and with Mr. Amandeep
Bhogal as a Director and Mrs. Pardeep Bhogal as secretary, operating from the same
address as now, was trading from 27th December 2007 until it was struck
off and dissolved without ever filing any accounts on the 18th August 2009.
Just two days later, on the 20th August 2009, a company of the same name, RSB
Engineers Ltd (06996582) and with Mr. Amandeep Bhogal appointed director and Mrs. Pardeep
Bhogal, also a director this time, trading from almost the same address.
108A Lower Road instead of 108. This company,
RSB Engineers Ltd, lasted until 15th November 2011 when Mr. and Mrs. Bhogal jointly
signed an application, numbered DS01, which struck off and dissolved this
company yet again – and submitted accounts totalling just £100. Not much for a
company trading in three countries.
So three times RSB Engineers has become a limited
company with three different company numbers but the same company name, same addresses
and same director/secretary. And in seven years submitted one set of accounts in August
2010 totalling just £100. No insider information here, all of it is publicly available
to anyone with access to Google and a few minutes to spare.
It has been reported that 500,000 companies a year with addresses in England start up and dissolve
in order to avoid paying debts and taxes and £16 billion a year revenue is lost. Others simply
make themselves insolvent with similar results.
Maybe there is a good reason for RSB Engineers coming and going with such
regularity and making so little money and it’s not my field of expertise. So the experts at a very well known credit
reference agency were asked if RSB was in any way unusual and they were kind
enough to provide some answers.
Which might be summed up as “not bent but very odd indeed”. Odd enough to affect the
company’s credit score. Personally I wonder how a company with only a hundred
quid to its name can afford all the high tech equipment
featured on their
website. On the other hand RSB cannot afford a couple of pounds a month for
their own web hosting package. Instead they use WIX which offers free services in
return for it leaving the WIX name on each web page. Now that is what I call professional!
Very very professional (spelling) and absolutely the right sort of councillors to join
Teresa O’Neill’s bunch of third raters.
3 March (Part 1) - Vote blue, go green
Who
was it that said the old Harrow Inn site would be boarded up before now,
with err... boards presumably? The Conservative Lesnes Action Team. That’s
Hill View seconder Kerry Allon,
Keira Allen and Elizabeth Anderson. If that is their idea of action it’s not an
impressive bid to improve the area.
You might have thought that the thriving car wash facility paying £1,250 a month
to the site owner would have allowed for something a bit more substantial than
another set of plastic kites.
2 March - A whole lotta rule bending goin’ on
Hill View is one of the council office sites to be sold off by Bexley council to help
fund its new headquarters at 2 Watling Street. When Bellway Homes agreed to buy
it it is inconceivable that the council did not give a firm indication that
their plans would be approved. Last Thursday evening the council’s planning
committee met to do just that, but there is an election coming and Welling has
shown before how fickle it can be at the ballot box, so a particular sort of
charade had to be played out. This would consist of various councillors being
trotted out to criticise the scheme.
After the planning officers spent 20 minutes giving an overview of the proposals
- 47 houses and 14 flats - the two objectors allowed to speak were invited to do
so for three minutes each. Chairman councillor Peter Reader had refused a
request for one to speak for four minutes and the other for two.
The first speaker was a Mr. David Burke with whom I have swapped
a transcript of his speech (PDF) for a copy of my audio recording.
I felt it was a big mistake to base his objections on his solicitor’s analysis of
where Bexley council had broken the law or their own rules. Long term readers
will know all too well that Bexley council has no respect for the law or its own
rules. Ian Clement,
Petition,
Obscene blog,
Closed Session,
illegal yellow lines,
unjustifiable bus lane. Need I go on?
Mr. Burke had been speaking for two minutes and 30 seconds when chairman Peter Reader
asked him to stop. Mr. Burke continued but at two minutes 52 seconds (the recording doesn’t lie) councillor
Reader began to throw his toys out of his pram and that was the end of that.
The next speaker was Mrs. Baldwinson who was unhappy that the side elevation
of one of the proposed new houses looked to be closer to her window than Bexley council’s own rules
allowed but she had not been permitted to know the measured distance. She was also
concerned that an area already subject to flooding would become worse. The lady
said she had previously been assured by councillors James Hunt, Steven Hall and
Linda Bailey that none of her concerns would be realised.
Bellway’s representative was then given five minutes to make his case and in
contrast to the short changing of Mr. Burke he was told he was “welcome to take
five and a half minutes”. Apart from his spiel about how wonderful the development
would be he said that Bellway was ready to start building as soon as possible.
Welling councillor James Hunt then spoke for the affected local residents. He
spent a few seconds commenting on the legal issues raised by Mr. Burke and then
jumped to Mrs. Baldwinson’s proximity problem. He described it as “a serious
issue”. Elsewhere there will be “windows looking straight into bedroom windows”.
Councillor Hunt said that the flooding problems are causing “mushrooms and
fungus growing up the walls. There is a serious issue of flooding which will be
exacerbated by this development. Drainage must be seriously addressed before
this can be accepted this evening. If we lived there we wouldn’t want it”. He
then moved on to the issue of balconies. The flats are “almost on the boundary
line and have balconies on the back which overlook the houses in Sandringham Drive and Marina Drive”. (The second street name was barely audible
so may have been Peter’s Close.) He hoped that the committee would take
these things into account. “If we don’t we will have all failed in our jobs.”
After
a two minute break for councillors to read an Addendum to the Agenda the
reliably obnoxious councillor Val Clark jumped straight in to say “this is a
very good scheme … and that the conditions imposed should allay residents’
fears. What we could put there they definitely wouldn’t like”. In a few short
words she ignored all of councillor Hunt’s concerns and threatened residents with something worse.
Councillor Colin Tandy asked questions about the drains and spoke of deferring
the scheme under the Localism Act’s Neighbourhood Forum procedure which he
accepted might cause a lengthy delay.
Mrs. Susan Clark, Head of Development Control, said that the developer would
have to meet all current drainage regulations before being allowed to proceed.
The legal advice was that Localism Act considerations should “be given very
little weight”.
Councillor Mike Slaughter was “bloody glad that it was not going to be offices”
but he was concerned about the drainage and remarked on the credibility of the
Environment Agency which was seeing no problems with it. The water table is such
“that as soon as it rains you get puddling”. He was “very unhappy about the
drainage problems down there”.
Councillor Slaughter then turned his attention to “the recreational land around
the flats” and the fact that a lot of the two storey houses have “bedrooms in
the roof”. “Is that not three storey?” he asked. “It is bending the rules.”
The open space for the twelve flats was “mean”.
A council officer said that council policy requires a 45% area for communal use (of what he didn’t say but one might
assume of the internal space) and this figure would only be met by including a
strip of land on the far boundary of the site. By implication the area adjacent
to the flats did not meet the council’s minimum requirement. Councillor
Slaughter said that was another example of “bending the rules”. He asked for the
figure for the area immediately outside the flats; “it’s nowhere near 45%”. Mrs.
Clark accepted the rules were not met but argued that because the flats were
mainly one bedroomed it didn’t matter.
A barely recognisable councillor Brian Bishop also expressed concern about the
drainage. He asked if any conditions would be imposed on patios etc. which might
make the problem worse. He additionally and helpfully asked if Mrs. Baldwinson’s
question about building distances could be answered.
Mrs. Clark said the planning conditions would not allow any extensions etc. and
large patios have to be permeable. Another council officer then ran his
ruler over the plans to ascertain the distance between various boundary walls.
The figures varied around the 16 metre mark with the smallest “a shade under 15”,
the standard minimum being 16 metres between blank walls and 22 metres when windows are involved. Having mentioned another under 16 metres the
council officer rather curiously said he “was confident throughout the scheme
all the separation distances are achieved”. Councillor Slaughter failed to say
this was another piece of rule bending. However councillor Bishop recognised “it
was less than what is required. It needs to be noted”.
Councillor Margaret O’Neill (Labour) was unhappy about the balcony supports
which ran straight down to the ground. They represented a security risk.
Councillor Simon Windle had misgivings about the flats too and the lack of
recreational area, he asked how much below the mysterious 45% it was. No one
knew. He had questions about the separation distances too, the under 16 metres
between blank walls in particular. The householder concerned interjected that
his wall was not blank, it included his kitchen window. Chairman Reader, rude as
usual, said he could not accept a correction from the audience, but the council
officer who had been dismissive of the under 16 metre problem earlier said that
he had ignored the kitchen window as he did not consider a kitchen to be “a habitable
room”. Another bit of rule bending and who does the cooking in his house? Councillor
Windle was asked if his questions had been answered and he said “No”.
Councillor Kerry Allon said he had concerns about the overlooking and the
drainage but “the plan is as good as we can hope for … it’s not perfect but it
is as good as we can get and I am happy to second it”. Councillor Val Clark had
earlier proposed approval but what she said was lost to the recording due to the
noise of disgruntled voters exiting the chamber.
The sale of Hill View is very important to Bexley council. It needs the money to
help pay for its extravagance in Watling Street, the funding of which has not
been made public. If Hill View is not sold quickly Bexley council will be in
financial difficulties even quicker than forecast. It is a near certainty that
council leader O’Neill would be insisting that the plans were approved, indeed
the usual pre-meeting council leaks said as much.
Councillor Hunt was chosen to champion the residents but according to them he
hadn’t even bothered to show up at their meetings. His comments to the committee
were not as half-hearted as I was led to believe they
might be but they achieved nothing so perhaps any aspirations to take over Katie
Perrior’s Children’s Services cabinet post are not totally scuppered.
The planning committee consists of ten councillors. Four didn’t speak at all,
Val Clark was right behind the application from the start as you would expect of
someone in O’Neill’s Inner Circle and five councillors had serious concerns
about some aspects of it. Councillor Hunt did too but he is not a committee
member, so how do you think this faux regard for residents translated into
practice? Yes you are right, there was a unanimous vote in favour of what had
been labelled “rule bending”. When has Bexley council ever had any regard for rules?
With Welling’s reputation for voting for fringe parties maybe next May that not
so fringe party, UKIP, should flood Welling with candidates. That might put paid
to councillor Hunt’s ambitions. Not that I see anything particularly bad in
James Hunt, there are an awful lot worse, but even the best of them keep very
bad company.
1 March (Part 3) - Promises, promises
Immediately
after the eyesore in Abbey Wood was
featured here again on 16th December last
year, Lesnes Conservatives Tweeted that they had taken action and the site would be boarded up within six
weeks of New Year’s Day. The last vestiges of the flimsy plastic sheet that had surrounded the site for
more than four years were
blown away in the winter storms
and local residents looked forward to this ‘boarding’ that the Conservative Action Team promised.
Those local residents know exactly what boarding looks like, a couple of
hundred yards away in Greenwich a good example may be seen.
But the Harrow Inn site
is not being so favoured. The associated photographs were taken today at 11 a.m. and
12:48 respectively. More plastic sheeting.
So what have Bexley Conservatives done for Lesnes ward? Nothing. Absolutely nothing.
Readers with an interest in this neglected area of Bexley (and Greenwich) should take a look at
fromthemurkydepths. Lots of info and interesting pictures there.
1 March (Part 2) - Another week, another shop closure
Three new pictures but only one new Bexleyheath Broadway shop closure this week.
1 March (Part 1) - The cat will be among the pigeons
This
report is going to be necessarily vague to protect honest councillors from those
reluctant to admit to the lies that surround councillor Cheryl Bacon. Figures will have to be in short
supply but one can safely be given. Of the 15 councillors to receive
my email
absolutely none had a single word to say in defence of Cheryl.
Maybe one should be excluded from the tally; Gareth Bacon has known all along that his wife exaggerated
and lies were attributed to her following
the illegally closed Public Realm meeting.
No one would expect him to come clean eight months later. The only person to raise his
voice at that meeting was Gareth himself.
When deciding to send the email my expectation was to get no useful replies. My
fear was that I might get only two and all the crooked Tories would sit back and
say ‘ah, that must be that Labour lot making things up’. But both thresholds were
safely crossed and exceeded.
Not everyone was able to confirm all of my seven points, but mainly they did.
All the respondents said that Danny Hackett, the prospective Labour candidate
for the Lesnes ward did nothing at that meeting. He sat silently watching events
unfold. Peter Gussman, a member of the Bexley Action Group also did absolutely
nothing. The same goes for myself, everyone confirms I just sat there dumbly.
My suggestion that Elwyn Bryant spoke only during the adjournments was accepted
100% but my recollection that Michael Barnbrook was totally silent met a more
mixed response. Some agreed and some were not so sure but suggested no specific action by Mick.
More importantly there was absolute unanimity that Nicholas Dowling did nothing
beyond seeking permission to make an audio recording and when faced with a refusal
calmly referred to the document issued by Eric Pickles. All confirm without qualification
that he was “polite throughout and did not put his recorder within six inches of Councillor
Bacon's face or anything remotely similar”. This confirms that councillor Colin Campbell
lied on BBC TV when he accused Bexley residents of
indulging in such behaviour.
Whilst
I did not seek the name of the councillor who attempted to barricade the
door to Room 105 to prevent entry by any member of the public, the name Howard Marriner (Conservative, Barnhurst) has cropped up again.
Nothing reported here about the events of that evening have been anything but
absolutely accurate; Cheryl Bacon (Conservative, Cray Meadows) looks to have
lied (I am concerned that the statement being unsigned may be significant) from the outset and at last councillors
from both parties are beginning to confirm it with clear written statements. Not
a single councillor is prepared to speak in her defence which probably explains
why Nick Hollier (Human Resources), Akin Alabi (Head of Legal Services) and
Rebecca Sandhu (the anything but Independent Person) all refused to seek out an
alternative to Cheryl Bacon’s (unsigned) account.
What cannot be done, because no independent witnesses were present, is prove that
when the police arrived they were unaccompanied, had light hearted exchanges
with the five members of the public present (Danny Hackett had already gone
home) about Bexley is Bonkers and asked what they planned to do next; not ejected
as stated by Bexley council.
Mick Barnbrook is pursuing that issue with the police who may still be under
Bexley council’s control. In the meantime I hope you will accept that Bexley
council’s story about what the police did is just as much a lie as every other
statement by Bexley council. Cheryl Bacon, Akin Alabi, Will Tuckley, Nick
Hollier, Lynn Tyler. All unwilling to speak the truth. No councillor has
been willing to back the council’s story. A satisfying number has said it is
rubbish from end to end.
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