Councillor Tony Belton’s Latchmere November Newsletter (# 78)
October highlights
- October began and ended with the Rugby World Cup or RWC
as it liked to call itself. I decided, last minute, that I had to take in the experience so looked up the web to get a guide to lower cost, accessible tickets and it came up with Argentina vs Tonga on October 4th at Leicester City’s new ground. It was a beautiful autumn day, both sets of fans were great fun (but especially the Argentinians) and the teams gave us an exciting high scoring game, with the Argentinians coming out on top 45-16. It wasn’t really as one-sided as that score suggests until halfway through the second half. But then on 29th October I got a call from ex-Battersea MP Alf Dubs, asking if I wanted to go to the Final at Twickenham, with him. He had two complimentary tickets! New Zealand beat Australia 34:17 in a brilliant game. The second half was very dramatic and NZ were definitely worthy winners. But one has to say that the Ozzies put on a grandstand second half. In the picture, New Zealand’s fly-half, Dan Carter, is in the process of kicking a penalty goal – spot the ball! It’s there on its way! - On October 6th, I attended what I thought was going to be the Covent Garden Market Authority’s AGM. But to be honest, it was a bit of a jolly and not very instructive about the CGMA plans. However, it was my first visit to a completed part of the large, new Riverside development and it introduced me to a rarity – a new Battersea pub, the Nine Elms Tavern, which is on the riverfront. It will be interesting to see whether these massive developments evolve into real communities or not – I fear they won’t, because to me they are not very people-friendly!
- The following day, I was at the very different Katherine Low Settlement (KLS) AGM. KLS is one of the most significant community centres in Battersea, with a wide range of community services such as English lessons for non-English speakers, housing and debt advice, campaigning against FGM(female genital mutilation) and other courses and advice sessions. There must have been well over 100 people there and it was just a little bit of a party. It was a busy, lively evening.
- On the 8th October I joined many other interested locals touring the burnt
out Battersea Town Hall (the Arts Centre, BAC). The main structure of the Town Hall stands, as you can see in this photograph, but much else needs to be rebuilt and replaced. Fortunately the great late nineteenth century organ was at the “repairers” when the fire hit and so that was largely untouched and simply awaits a new home. The plans for the re-building looked good: they are not a simple re-build of the old hall, nor are they simply a plagiarism of the past, but a modern space suitable for its future as an entertainment hall, a modern theatre. - The following week-end of 10th/11th October I went on a trip to the First World War battlefields at Ypres in Belgium, along with many other councillors. As I said last month, councillors paid for the trip out of their own pockets – there was absolutely no public money spent on the trip. On the Saturday we visited several large cemeteries within two or three miles of Ypres city centre, and
very emotional it was too. The picture is of the statue of The Brooding Soldier, at the St. Julien Canadian cemetery. The trees have been trained into the shape of exploding shells and the shrubbery is designed to simulate the appearance of poisonous gas floating through the battlefield – the local battle at St. Julien was the first use of poison gas. - On the Sunday, we went to Waterloo and toured the site of Wellington’s great victory over Napoleon. On the Monday, we toured a V2 rocket site, not far from Calais, which has been converted to a museum about war. This really bad picture of me is only here because of the car – a vintage French car (Citroen Light 15) much used by the French resistance. I owned one a few years ago here in Battersea but mine was bright, pillar box red!

- I also went to the Menin Gate on each of the three evenings we were in Ypres. It is a town gate, a bit like Marble Arch, with the names of the many thousands of British (and Empire, as was), soldiers, who lost their lives in the Ypres salient and whose bodies were never found. It is the site of an absolutely remarkable ritual. On July 2nd, 1928, at 8 pm the townsfolk conducted a simple, short memorial service to honour the dead of the First World War. It became a ritual, which has taken place every evening at 8, come rain or shine, since then – apart from the period of German occupation in World War II. On the three days I was there, there must have been about 1,000 people present on every night. They are of all ages and come from all over the world. If you are anywhere near Ypres, I recommend it. It is impossible not to be moved by the Last Post, played every evening by a bugler from the town’s fire brigade.
- The Council Meeting on 14th October highlighted two major debates. One was a rather complacent, self-congratulatory motion from the Tory councillors, noting how good they are. The other was about the plight of the refugees trying to get into Europe – debating society stuff, I know, but this second one was a serious discussion about a serious subject.
- The Planning Applications Committee of 15th October had the
usual selection of applications right across the Borough but none of them had any great relevance to Latchmere. One large Battersea application was perhaps of interest to all. It was about the area round the entrance to Covent Garden Market and was for mixed retail and 374 residential units in blocks up to 18 storeys high. 310 of the units are “affordable” but we all know what that means – less expensive than the market price but far too expensive for most of us! - On the 18th October, I led 18 people on one of my Battersea History walks. It was as enjoyable as ever and a couple of people came along, thanks to reading about it in my newsletter. So if you are interested drop me an email and I will include you on my next trip.
- I attended a seminar on homelessness in Wandsworth on October 19th. Depressingly, the Borough “still” has 1100/1200 families in temporary accommodation. It is forecast to rise to 1300 by the end of the year. The explosion of construction in north Battersea, surely as great as anywhere in the country, is doing nothing for the housing crisis in the Borough. Simply building more will not get us anywhere if we do not tackle issues of distribution and control – we need more social housing for families on low income, not expensive housing for those who simply want them to add to their portfolios.
- Went to see La Bohème at the Coliseum on 23rd November. What can one say? Fantastic music, tragic story of impoverished youth in a raffish but slightly unpleasant Paris of La Belle Époque, but the most interesting thing, maybe, was that the players were young, unknown British singers (there were a couple of young Russians as well) led by Corinne Winters. You know how opera stars are often depicted as very large, even fat, ladies with heaving bosoms. Well Corinne Winters is a diminutive, slight figure on stage, but with the most powerful, soaring voice. Watch out for her!
My Programme for November
- On November 1st, I spoke at a meeting at York Gardens Library about the Borough’s plans for the Lombard Road/York Road area, of which more next month.
- I am, would you believe, attending a seminar on trees on 3rd November! How many there are in the Borough, about pruning and caring for them (I guess), their diseases and their importance, Tree Protection Orders (TPOs) – Yes they do exist.
- On 4th I have an Education Standards Committee, when we will be reviewing Somerset Nursery and Garratt Park schools.
- On the 5th we have the Civic Awards Ceremony when councillors recognise the contributions of half a dozen local people who have contributed to the life of the Borough.
- And on the Saturday I am doing the Councillors’ surgery at Battersea General Library.
- On the 10th, I have the Planning Applications Committee and on the 19th the Education Committee.
- On the 11th there will be the annual Remembrance Day service in Battersea Park at the war memorial.
- On the 21st the London Councils annual conference takes at the Guildhall. This is a London-wide gathering of councillors, which starts off as a showcase for the Mayor – a half-hour show from Boris – followed by more serious discussions of the issues facing London, from housing to transport, from education to planning.
- In the last week of the month, I am due to be visiting Graveney School and St. Anselm’s and finally on 28th I have the annual meeting of SERA, a green lobby in the Labour Party of which I am the Treasurer. It looks like a busy month!
Did you know?
Lots of you were correct in replying that Clapham Rovers won the FA Cup in 1880. Rovers, Jarvis Kenrick, actually scored the first ever FA Cup goal in a 3–0 victory over Upton Park on 11 November 1871, but the club’s greatest achievement was winning the Cup outright in 1880 with a 1–0 win over Oxford University at the Kennington Oval.
On 22nd October, I went to the Battersea Society’s lecture on London’s lost rivers –all those rivers that flowed through to the Thames and which are largely culverted and hidden from view. One, of course, flows through Latchmere and has a road, a school, a couple of estates and a pub named after it. You all, of course, know the name of the river. What is it? Where is its source? Where does it flow through Battersea and where does it debouch into the Thames?
Councillor Tony Belton’s Latchmere July Newsletter (# 74)
- On June 4th Penny and I went for a long weekend to the Dorset coast, with the grandchildren (and their parents). If you don’t know it then let me recommend it to you – Dorset is a really beautiful county. We didn’t do anything in particular but visited Durdle Door and Lulworth Cove, the largest swannery in the UK (600 swans), a beautiful garden and spent a day on Weymouth’s great sandy beach. Here is a picture of them at Durdle Door, with from the left Scarlet, Melissa, Penny, Jeremy and Jamie.
- On the 9th June there was the Housing and Regeneration Committee, which I am not on this year, but I thought I would mention because the Committee had another long paper about the Winstanley regeneration project. It is very complex and entangled and becomes more confused, not less so every time it is discussed. The new complication is that a planning blight has been put on the area of the Falcon/Grant Road bus-stand, because of the possibility of Crossrail 2 being built. If Crossrail 2 goes ahead there will be a new, large combined tube and railway station – or there might be. This means that nothing can be done at that end of Grant Road until the Government has made up its mind about whether and when Crossrail 2 is built.
- The result is that many of the benefits that the Council hoped to gain from high rise developments near to the station will not happen for a decade at least. And so the Council planners have come up with the idea of building higher blocks of flats along the York Road boundary of York Gardens. It is all in a complete state of flux but what has not changed at present is the basic plan for the York Road estate and the closure of Battersea Sports Centre and the consequential installation of an astro-turf pitch in Falcon:Banana Park. I’ll keep you posted on this long-running saga.
- I had the Education and Children’s Services Committee on 11th June. I find this a difficult Committee. It is quite clear that the Government has a pretty low opinion of local education authorities and really wants to abolish them, but finds it a bit tricky running all England’s schools from Whitehall (Scotland, Wales and N Ireland are different). But this means that the Education Committee is struggling for a role. However, one interesting thing arose and that was the Borough’s need to find/build a new secondary school by 2019/20. Given the harsh funding environment local government faces, there is little chance of that being a totally state-funded school – Wandsworth will inevitably look for a big sponsor for a new privately funded academy. Where and when remains to be seen.
- The Planning Applications Committee was held on June 18th. There was yet another very high block approved in Wandsworth Town Centre, near to the cinema. Unlike many such blocks, this one looked like quite a sensible development. Moreover 63, of the 88 flats to be provided will be, so called, affordable – you still need a salary about twice the national average to be able to afford them. We approved it. There was also a significant development in Cabul Road, Latchmere, backing on to Rowena Crescent. It is an important application but not a huge one and will hardly be noticed outside of those two roads. Local residents will know all about the plans and, if they want to ask about it, then please send me an email and we’ll discuss.
- Penny, my partner in the picture above, is organising a conference
in Edinburgh in 2019 and needed to go there to discuss plans. So I joined her from 23rd June to 26th in St. Andrews and the capital. It is the first time I have been to the city for a very long time but, my word, it is a very attractive city. Whilst in St. Andrews we went for a walk around the most famous golf course in the world. You will see it on TV in July hosting the Open. Here is a picture of us on Swilcan Burn Bridge on the 18th hole. I know it is a very cheesy picture but you can’t go there and not get snapped on Swilcan Burn Bridge. - On Sunday 28th June I went to Battersea Park to see the
Formula E race. It was an interesting afternoon, though not particularly for the racing. As others have said, the views of the race were not good – there are just too many trees in the Park to allow a good view of anything more than a couple of hundred yards of race track. The lack of noise didn’t bother me, although it obviously did some of my correspondents. Strange as it seems the fact that over-taking was difficult doesn’t seem to matter that much in motor racing – as far as I can see no one ever over-takes at the Monte Carlo Grand Prix. - However, it was a nice friendly atmosphere with plenty of families of all shapes and sizes. The price certainly brought it within range of many local residents and so it was not, as some of my correspondents have claimed, an exclusive occasion for big money sport – let’s face it, it was far cheaper than watching big time soccer, rugby or cricket. Again, it also attracted far bigger crowds than the average week-end in Battersea Park.
- I also don’t believe that the week-end did any real long-term damage to the Park or the wildlife in the Park. I would guess that the noise and disturbance of the Fireworks display in November is far more disruptive.
- On the other hand, the Park was effectively closed to the public, as a free park, for 4 days and considerably limited for just under three weeks. One of the local residents wrote to me saying, “The intrusive ‘gulag’ fencing and concrete was incredibly disruptive” and she then went on to complain, as many others did, about the helicopter noise, which was obviously intrusive. The Council claims that it did, or will over the next five years, bring in money, which the Council desperately needs given this Government’s cuts in local government grant. But the trouble with this argument is that we don’t know how much money is coming in.
- In the next few months I will be one of 60 councillors voting on whether we think the Formula E contract will be extended for five years. I don’t see how the majority party can expect me to vote for the extension unless I know what the financial return might be. However, I would be really interested to hear your views and whatever they are I promise to ensure that they are conveyed to my fellow councillors.
- On the 30th June I heard left-wing firebrand Owen Jones speaking at a Battersea Labour Party Meeting. I don’t usually talk about party meetings in this newsletter – usually pretty boring and irrelevant, but you may have seen Owen Jones on programmes like Question Time. Anyway I just thought I’d mention that it was a stunning tour de force, articulate, fast-firing, lively speech, followed by a series of questions and answers. I don’t suppose many of you will have a chance to see and hear him but if you do – Go.
My Programme for July
- On 2nd July I had a meeting of the Academies & Free School Commission, of which more next month, and on the 14th the Planning Applications Committee.
- On July 2nd I also went to the Grand to see a performance of Gershwin’s Crazy for You performed by Latchmere’s Thames Christian College – again more next month.
- On the 8th July, we have the Council Meeting and on 11th I will be at the Councillors’ surgery at Battersea Library.
- On 16th July Battersea Society will be having its summer party at St. Mary’s Church on the riverfront. On the next day I am going to visit friends in South Wales and, with any luck, will go up in a glider above the Brecon Beacons mountains – I am looking forward to that.
Did you know?
Last month’s question about the contestants in the Battersea Park duel of 1828 was obviously too easy for some of you. Yes, it was the Duke of Wellington, the hero of this month’s double anniversary of the Battle of Waterloo – the one that kept the French in their place and made UK top dog (sorry if that is not PC for any French readers – just a joke). His adversary was the
Earl of Winchelsea, who was objecting to Wellington removing legal barriers to Roman Catholics in this country.
So if that was too easy, let me try you out on another couple of Wandsworth duels. In the generation before 1828 another Prime Minister fought a duel in Wandsworth and, what is more, two other “gentlemen” both of whom also became Prime Minister later on, also did so. I will be very impressed if anyone can tell me who the three of them were, who the fourth man was, where the duels took place and what were they about.
Finally this lion lives in Battersea, just outside the Latchmere ward boundary. Does anyone know where he lives?
Councillor Tony Belton’s Latchmere April Newsletter (# 71)
March highlights
- First things first! Please make sure that you and your family are all registered to vote. Register at http://www.wandsworth.gov.uk/info/200411/voting/74/register_to_vote. You must register by 20th April in order to vote in this year’s General Election.
Of course, for some people, all politicians are the same. All lie. None answer the questions or, if they do, then only in vague generalisations. I came across one such woman just the other day. I had written to her as a new resident and got a volley of abuse for my pains. She certainly won’t be voting because, as she said, we are all the same. - You would not have thought that men, at first, and then women fought and died for the right to vote. (Here is a favourite picture of mine, of violent, heavyweight suffragette being man-handled to jail!) It seemed worth it then but not so much nowadays – it seems. But would we really rather live where change only happened as a result of war or revolution? It is ironic, isn’t it, that the Nigerians are celebrating because, for the first time ever, this March power changed peacefully following a General Election and not as a result of a coup or any other form of violence. And yet here some of us think it’s not worth the candle and that it doesn’t make any difference who wins.
- But it does. Not perhaps as dramatically as it does where people don’t have the vote, where it may be a matter of life or death. There is not much chance of torture or death because you voted the wrong way. But it does make a difference, not a dramatic difference perhaps but a difference. Whether you think that Bedroom Tax, or the Mansion Tax, is a good or a bad thing, they will be introduced or abolished depending upon which of the major parties is in power. And what is true of those two headline taxes is also true for a thousand other decisions that will be taken over the next five years – so be sure to make your mark on 7th May.
- I am sure that many of you will have seen, and all have heard,
about the fire at the Battersea Arts Centre on 13th March. The Grand Hall and the Lower Hall were burnt out but fortunately the front of the building, including the grand staircase and the old Council Chamber were untouched. I am pleased to say that Battersea Labour Party, whose office is just across the road on Lavender Hill, hosted BAC’s staff for the rest of the day and BAC managed to continue most of its programme from the next evening. The building belongs to the Council and is on a long
(125 year?) lease to BAC, whose insurance covered buildings and contents. Both the Arts Centre and the Council are adamant that the old Battersea Town Hall will be restored and both the Government and the Council have made supportive donations to the repairs fund.There is going to be grand “Phoenix Fundraiser” at the South Bank on 18th April. Details can be found at http://www.whatsonstage.com/london-theatre/news/stewart-lee-bridget-christie-bac-fundraiser_37499.html. Do come, if you can, and support the BAC rebuilding. - It is ironic that the fire should happen just after the announcement of the merger between the Arts Centre and Wandsworth Museum. The Museum has been a little lost in its temporary home of the old West Hill Library, where it has been ever since Wandsworth Council rather unceremoniously booted it out of its home at the Court House, Garratt Lane. Merging with BAC is an excellent idea and should help BAC make better use of the old Town Hall building and add much needed footfall to the Museum. I wish the merger well.
- Last month I wrote about the threatened closure of Battersea Sports Centre and the fight to save it, or at least the facilities it provides. I don’t have much to add this month except to note that one facility the Council has promised to provide is an all-weather astro-turf pitch in Falcon Park. Personally, I thought it was quite a good idea to make better use of the much under-used Falcon Park but one of you wrote to me protesting about the loss of open space. S/he was not protesting about the loss in the planning sense, because of course it will continue to be “open”, but s/he clearly intended to be putting in a word for “nature” and natural open-space. I would think, however, that the Park is large enough to take an astro-turf pitch as well as keeping a substantial amount of natural open-space. We will certainly have to keep an eye on this when the plans do eventually come out. (PS, whilst writing this newsletter I have had several emails on this issue! See also the map below).
- I don’t usually do advertising for rival magazines, especially the Council’s Brightside – dreadful party political broadcast for the Tory Party, that it is (Why Eric Pickles hasn’t closed it down I can’t imagine!). But last month’s centre spread had the four finalists in the design competition for the planned new pedestrian and cyclist bridge across from Nine Elms to Pimlico. I must say all four look great and any one would be a welcome addition to the Thames scene.
- On the 4th March we had the Council Meeting, where we discussed the Sports Centre and “Wandsworth’s plan to share staff with Richmond”. I am afraid that the Sports Centre debate was rather predictable, with Simon Hogg, Wendy Speck and myself opposing the closure and the Tories claiming that we were simply opposing new affordable housing. I am afraid also that the two leaders had little to say of great interest on the “staff share”. This was probably because as of now there is not much known about it. But to listen to them one would never have guessed that what we might have been talking about was the loss of some 1,000 jobs. This is definitely a question of watching this space!
- On 16th March we had the Latchmere “Let’s Talk” meeting at York Gardens library. There were only 25 members of the public there and I am again sorry to say that, as a meeting, it never really took off. These Let’s Talk meetings have been run on a regular monthly basis, bar August and December, for about 10 years now, but with 20 wards that means they only happen at most once in every two years in Latchmere. They were an honest attempt 10 years ago to bring the “Council to the people”, but I think the format needs a re-think.
- The Planning Applications Committee met on
the 18th. There were a number of substantial applications, affecting North Battersea, and nearly all between “Battersea Village” and Wandsworth Bridge. The largest was the “tower” or pile of washing up dishes(pictured with Labour candidate Will Martindale – sorry about that! And below its site bordered in red, photographed from Totteridge House). Planned at 28 storeys or approximately 300 feet or 90 metres, it will, if approved, provide 135 residential units with the ground and first floor being reserved for shopping and other commercial units. 27 of the units will be, so-called, “affordable”, but whatever that means it almost certainly won’t be affordable to most people you and I know. At 28 storeys, it will drive a coach and horses through
the Council’s so-called tall building policy, which states that anything over 9 storeys, on this site, would be considered tall. So how can it be justified at 300% higher – largely I think because it allows space for another pedestrian and cyclist bridge across the river to Chelsea Harbour and importantly the Imperial Wharf station on the popular Overground Railway and because it is seen as a “signature” building – and if you don’t know what a signature building is, and I don’t really, then look it up in Google Images and you’ll get the idea. Well the Committee deferred the decision because of safety concerns raised by the Heliport operators. However, there was little doubt that the majority on the Committee intend to approve the application and, if they do, then I think one can guarantee that North Battersea will be in for a substantial change. - There was also an application for a 6 storey building, 2 underground and 4 on top for 144 cars and 30/40 drivers in Chatfield Road. The cars are the personal property of the Sultan of Brunei, who according to Google owns 5,000 cars! I got a certain amount of notoriety for expressing horror at this and was quoted in the Wandsworth Guardian, the Metro and on Wandsworth radio to name just a few! You can hear my clip on Wandsworth Radio at this address https://soundcloud.com/wandsworthradio/wandsworth-tonight-250315 and it runs from 2 minutes in for 2 minutes. Amazingly enough several Tory councillors have attacked me for opposing this plan. They just don’t get it!
- There were also two other less contentious applications for the north side of York Road and coming shortly is the massive application for the Texas Home store site. That part of Battersea is about to explode, without much concern for the ordinary residents of the area!
- On 21st March I was off to St. Mary’s Church, Battersea, to hear
a concert from Emily Kenway, mezzo soprano, and Will Martindale, piano, in aid of Trinity Hospice – Yes the Will Martindale who is standing in the General Election on 7th May. I don’t know how he does it but it is the third charity concert I have heard Will give. How he fits in the practice time and the rehearsals, I don’t know. To be fair Will is good but he was the first to say to me that Emily is in a different class. She has sung at the Royal Opera House and Glyndebourne. - On 26th March I visited Wix Primary School in Wix Lane. It is a standard English primary school with one very big difference, it also hosts a French primary school or lycée. The two heads work very well together and so the children mix in the playground and in some of the lessons. There is in effect an English school, a French lycée and a mixed school. French and English are used as the languages of learning but also of playing. It was one of the friendliest and happiest of schools I have visited
- Ted Higgins, the first Director of Social Services, I ever knew at Wandsworth, in 1971, was 100 on the 22nd March and on the 23rd he visited the Mayor and shared a glass of champagne with me and a few other “mature” members of the Council.
- On a sadder note, veteran Labour stalwart, Lily Harrison, died on 13th March and I went to the funeral on the 30th. Lilian was 90. She came of age during World War II, when she became part of the observer corps sitting atop the White Cliffs of Dover, watching out for invading Luftwaffe bombers. She used to tell me of being on the cliffs one summer’s evening watching as hundreds of ships made their way down the Channel; she didn’t know it then but she was watching the first fleets setting sail on the eve of D-Day and the Allied invasion of Normandy. Lily later met her husband Bert and as a result got involved in Battersea politics. Bert was a councillor from the early 60’s until 1986. Lily did all kinds of community work. I don’t know the full list but she was certainly a Board member of Share Community and of Battersea United Charities, as well as being a “Friend of Bolingbroke Hospital” until it closed in 2008. She ran much of the Battersea Labour Party and was a guiding light in over 50 years of fund raising. She also commanded a great deal of respect from her political opponents as evidenced by the presence of several Tory members at her funeral.
My Programme for April
- The Council more or less closes down, as a political operation – you can still get your parking permits and pay your Council Tax, etc., during what is known as Purdah – the period between calling an election and the election itself. So my only “Council” event is the Planning Applications Committee (PAC) on the 16th. PAC continues as normal because of the statutory requirement to decide planning applications in a specific timescale.
- There will, of course, be lots of preparation, canvassing and leafleting in the build up to the General Election, including a hustings meeting at York Gardens Library on 14th April. Do come along and see all the candidates in action – or in the case of the Greens, his spokesperson.
- My other (or is it better?) half is lecturing in Cluj-Napoca, a small city in western Romania on 7th April and I will be taking the opportunity of carrying the bags and spending a week in foreign parts. But I won’t be coming back tanned or anything like that. Even if the coast is a summer holiday destination the winters are very cold and right now it is just about the same as here, warming up slightly and pretty wet!
Did you know?
A friend sent me this picture of an
Ordnance Survey map, dated 1961. It’s worth a close look to see something of what Battersea was like then. The most obvious difference between then and now is that Wandsworth Bridge simply ends at a T-Junction with York Road, rather like Albert Bridge Road. But other obvious differences include housing where there is now Banana or Falcon Park, and a traditional road layout, with Victorian terrace houses in the whole Plough/Falcon/York Roads and railway line quarter. Neither the Battersea Fields estate or the Doddington are in this map – again all are Victorian or Edwardian terraces. What do you notice as being different in your area?
When I wrote last month of the word “Tory”, and why it was used to describe the Conservatives I hardly expected the question, “Why are the Conservatives called Tories?” to feature as one of the most popular questions asked of Google after last Thursdays debate – ahead of the trend!
Councillor Tony Belton’s Latchmere March Newsletter (# 70)
March highlights
- Once again the Council’s threat to close
Battersea Sports Centre (BSC) dominated the month. On 10th February, the Community Services Overview & Scrutiny Committee heard, what were, I am told, two excellent deputations from the staff (Mandy Le Fondre) and the local community (Andy Beech from Pennethorne House), but unfortunately the Conservative/Tory majority on the Committee were not really listening, or at least were not prepared to change their minds. - However, I want to be mildly optimistic on this issue. Since we first heard of the closure threat, the Council has moved its position just a bit. Originally the Centre was forecasted to close this autumn. But faced with strong local opposition the Tories have retreated slightly to a position of promising a “replacement” all weather football pitch, and changing rooms at the south end of Falcon Park before the BSC closure. The Council reckons that this will be in Spring, 2016. I rather doubt that this can be done so soon. There are, as far as I know, no plans yet on the drawing board and, although the funding has been programmed for 2015-16, completion by 31st March next year looks a little unlikely. But, of course, whilst it will be a great thing to have the football pitch, especially in a rather under-used Park, it will not be a community and sports centre and it is actually a fair way from BSC – the best part of a mile.
- Of course the community and the Latchmere councillors have argued, strongly, that a soccer pitch is insufficient as a replacement to the BSC community facility. Under this pressure the Council has beefed up its plans for community facilities in the re-designed York Gardens. There is even a hint in the design document for the Winstanley regeneration that the new facility could include a swimming pool and there is certainly a “promise” that it will be ready by 2019. So the gap between closing the BSC and opening a brand new facility is down to a “mere” three years, though that is a long time in the life of a teenager, looking for local sports facilities..
- We, the community and the Labour councillors, are not, I think one should admit, going to win the battle to save the BSC as it is today. The Council has decided that the site will be used for re-housing people moved from the York Road Estate BUT we can win a battle to delay the closure until the new facilities are ready and open. The Council is now faced with a decision to make – Is it worth £100,000 a year for three years to keep a vital Battersea service? If so then losing the much loved but elderly BSC will not be a great loss in exchange for new facilities just 200 yards away across Plough Road.
- I know that some people who read this newsletter are card-carrying Conservatives and I suspect that my comments are relayed to MP, Jane Ellison and others. I hope that they do their bit to persuade the decision makers at the Town Hall that it is very, very worthwhile delaying the closure and not souring the local community, whose support is so very essential for making the Winstanley Regeneration a success.
On the 2nd February,
I went to a grand launch of the Ram Brewery development. To be honest it was what one might call a “jolly” with wine and canapés, but quite impressive about what is going to happen in the centre of Wandsworth. I quite liked much of the development around the Wandle River BUT to my mind the 42 storey mega-block at the centre is just too large and too over-bearing. It will blight what is otherwise a densely packed but human-scale development.- On the 11th February, Battersea Labour Party had a fund-raising evening at the Chinese Boulevard, just off Smugglers Way. The guest speakers were Tessa Jowell and Dame Doreen Lawrence, and I was the MC. We had a great evening.
- The next day I attended the Education & Children’s Services OSC. Unfortunately, thanks to various so-called reforms introduced by both Labour and Tory Governments, we do not spend much time talking and thinking or deciding anything much to do with schools. Local authorities are essentially being cut out of the most interesting issues, so we are more and more concerned with such matters as the contracting out of schools’ transport, or school cleaning contracts. There were, however, a couple of items of general interest.
- One item was the Council’s projections for population growth, and therefore of future demand for school places. On the whole, the Council appears fairly satisfied that its resources will cope, even if it does mean more temporary accommodation being installed in, say, play space. I don’t think the Council is being complacent but we will see in 2019/20, when the population growth hits the secondary schools.
- The other item was the Ofsted Report into “Lifelong Learning”. Very unusually for Wandsworth, the report was very highly critical of the service and of councillors’ role in monitoring the service. To be fair, the Report’s main criticism was about something that could be called box ticking, about the failure to record what the Council was doing about safeguarding pupils and not about anything that was actually going wrong. I am now on a small committee to ensure that we resolve the problem.
- The Planning Applications Committee met on the 18th. There were a number of substantial applications, such as the start of development at Springfield Hospital, but only one was relevant to Latchmere, whilst another will be of interest to some of you. The interesting one was the Council’s decision to oppose a new Wimbledon AFC stadium planned for the site of the Wimbledon greyhound track. The Labour councillors did not agree with this and believed it would be a good thing for Wimbledon football to move back to the Tooting/Colliers Wood area.
- The local application was for a 14 storey residential block on Gwynne Road, more or less directly behind the Caius Club. On balance I decided to support the application partly because of the 33 flats provided, 11 are so-called “affordable”. It will probably be a different matter when this month we consider the much higher, 28 storey, block planned in Lombard Road. What do you think of this march of giant blocks? Do you think they are largely for rich investors and make very little contribution to the housing crisis? Or are they really part of the answer?
- The Finance & Corporate Services OSC on February 19th decided, uncontroversially to freeze Council Tax this year but it also discussed the suggested merger with Richmond-upon-Thames. Personally I am very far from convinced about the whole merger business. There are a number of Boroughs across the country where something of this kind is happening. Westminster & Chelsea, Kensington & Chelsea and Hammersmith & Fulham have gone some way to merging functions, but they did that when all three were under Tory control. After the Borough elections last May Hammersmith & Fulham reverted to Labour control and then tried to withdraw from the merger. I don’t know the details but they have run into legal and contractual difficulties. However, the problems aren’t just about politics. Wandsworth is one of the largest municipal landlords in the country with a housing stock of some 18,000 properties, Richmond has hardly any. Wandsworth is a very diverse, inner city Borough, with some very poor areas. Richmond is one of the richest, least diverse areas in the country. Wandsworth has a population over 310,000, Richmond’s is 187,000. It is difficult to imagine that a merge of offices, officers and functions can really work between two such disparate authorities.
On 23rd February I went to hear Ed Miliband at Battersea Arts Centre giving a speech on Labour’s policy on the arts. Of course I would say it, wouldn’t I but he was excellent and very impressive. He spoke well and he answered questions easily and colloquially. He is so good in this format and so much better than he often appears in Prime Minister’s Question Time that I rather think that David Cameron’s reluctance to engage him in a major TV debate is almost largely because the Prime Minister thinks he just might lose and that his major trump card in the election will fail. Miliband then came over to our Party office on Lavender Hill and talked to us, “activists”.- On Sunday 1st March I went to the flower market
in Columbia Road, E2. I’d never been there before but I do recommend it on a Sunday morning. It’s only a short walk from Brick Lane and it is easy to make a morning of it and go from one to the other. My picture shows how colourful it is. - On a sad note, one of the Tory councillors, Adrian Knowles of Earlsfield Ward died (on March 2nd actually). He was a decent and popular councillor, regardless of political affiliation. His loss will mean an early by-election, possibly on the same day as the General Election.
My Programme for March
- There was a Council Meeting on 4th March, of which more next month.
- I am visiting Sacred Heart primary school, Roehampton, on 10th March.
- The 16th March is the day of the Latchmere “Let’s Talk” meeting at York Gardens library. On that evening the three Latchmere councillors, Simon Hogg, Wendy Speck and me, will be at this public meeting along with Tory leader of the Council, Ravi Govindia. This will be your opportunity to cross-question us about what we are doing as your councillors – but also your chance to quiz Cllr Govindia about his policies. Being so close to the General Election, it is bound to be fairly political but I hope it will seem OK to you and it would be truly great if lots of you came to the meeting.
- On 18th I have the Planning Applications Committee and of course lots of preparation, canvassing and leafleting in the build up to the General Election. This has been the longest election in British history, as presumably it was bound to be as soon as Parliament agreed to fixed term Parliaments and therefore fixed election dates. I am sure many of us will be happy to get it over and done with, but we do need a positive end to this long campaign.
Did you know?
When I was in Brick Lane I happened to see this blue plaque on the wall of a house. I was immediately interested to read that Thomas Fowell Buxton, the early nineteenth century anti-slavery campaigner, lived in Brick Lane, where he worked in Truman’s brewery, of which he later became the boss. In my experience it is fairly unusual to find a brewer as a left-wing campaigner – obviously not the sort of brewer who in the words of the old song “watered the workers’ beer”. He took over the leadership of the Anti-Slavery Movement when Wilberforce retired in 1825 but also fought for many other reforms and succeeded in getting the death penalty removed from well over 100 offences. I have written about him before and he is of course the inspiration for the name Buxton House in Maysoule Road along with other anti-slavery campaigners, Clarkson, Pitt, Fox, Burke and Ramsey. See my newsletters #4 and 57.
One of my readers has told me off for using the word “Tory”,
and told me that many people will understand the description Conservative but not the word “Tory”, so I thought that I would check it out. Please let me know if this is new to you. If it is new then my next question is and why are Conservatives called Tories? The answer is in the picture on the right, which is of Tory Island, which lies 9 miles off the north coast of Ireland. (By the way, before you go further my apologies to the Irish – this is an historic description and not my own views!) In the late seventeenth century when party politics, or something like it, is first introduced to the British Parliament, some of the radicals started describing the right or Conservatives as Tories, that is a bunch of Irish barbarians, living on some small boggy island somewhere off the coast of Ireland. Forgive me – all my Irish friends.
Councillor Tony Belton’s Latchmere February Newsletter (# 69)
January highlights
- Last month, I talked a little about the Council’s threat to close Battersea Sports Centre (BSC) in Hope Street, in the autumn of this year. As I said then, this was a complete surprise to users, local residents and we three Latchmere councillors. Imagine our surprise therefore when the Tory councillors became really upset because we did NOT support the closure at the 21st January Housing Committee meeting. One of them, the Deputy Leader, even circulated a rather childish and extremely unhelpful leaflet, accusing us of double-crossing them.
- I had better explain. So far we three Labour councillors, that’s Wendy Speck, Simon Hogg and I, have worked fairly closely with the Council on the consultations and decisions involved in such a massive scheme as the regeneration of the Winstanley/York Road estates. It does after all involve the demolition of some 600 or so properties, most notably but not just Pennethorne, Scholey and Holcroft Houses, and the construction of many more new homes. Tenants and leaseholders (and a small number of freeholders) will have their homes demolished and rebuilt in what will be a major upheaval – or at least that is the plan. Clearly the Council would like to have the whole-hearted support of all.
- You might ask what has that got to do with the closure of BSC – and it would be a good question. Well somehow or another in the minds of the Town Hall bureaucrats and their Tory bosses the closure of BSC had become an essential part of the whole plan for regeneration. The only trouble is that they had not bothered to tell anyone until the day of the January Committee meeting, having announced the closure more than a month previously. Not surprisingly both the community and we, Labour councillors, were already committed to opposing the BSC closure before they made the link. They should not really be surprised. The regeneration plan has been in gestation for three years and its link with the BSC has not been mentioned until this January. What is more the Council was making a completely separate claim in December that the BSC closure would be providing more affordable homes and not JUST replacement homes for the Winstanley!
- The plan apparently is to use the site of the Sports Centre to build some 90 affordable units into which people from the York Road and Winstanley estates could be “decanted”. Our opposition to the BSC closure has already resulted in some back-tracking and some compromises. For example, the Council is now committed to providing a new all-weather, large soccer pitch at the south end of Falcon Park. But the Sports Centre is very busily and much more than a soccer pitch and is used by well over 20 sports clubs and local organisations and it is not as though the area is over-endowed with alternatives. We will continue to oppose closure until more is known about the replacement facilities, and the timing of their arrival.
- After all “What did the Council’s own reports about the 2011 riots say?” That there was not a lot for young people to do in the area. But now the Tory councillors want to close down one of the busiest centres of them all! There is a petition for signature at the following address http://www.willtowin.org.uk/#!save-battersea-sports-centre/c150j if you wish to express your opposition.
- The Planning Applications Committee met on the 20th. There were no significant local applications this month but the trend to convert pubs to housing continues apace. This time the closure of the Prince of Wales on the corner of Surrey Lane and Battersea Bridge Road was confirmed but that was only the last in a long line. I can think of lots in Latchmere alone: the most recent being the Duke of Wellington, the Havelock Arms, the Grove and the Prince’s Head, but I am sure you can add to the list. The disappearance of pubs, one after another, marks the loss of important community assets, which we should safeguard.
- One event that most of you will have missed, I am sure, was the launch of Wandsworth Radio on 12th January. I understand that it had some 3,000 listeners in the first week – we wish it well. To listen just Google Wandsworth Radio.
- I actually missed the launch because as I said last month I went into hospital for an “arthroscopy”. Although I said then that I would say more this month, there isn’t actually that much to say. My knee is not back to normal and it’s not killing me. But, I am afraid the story has not ended yet!
- There was a Council Meeting on 28th January but it was largely inconsequential except for the surprise announcement of the possible merger of Wandsworth and Richmond-upon-Thames Councils. The first thing to say about this is that this cannot be a full merger in every sense of the word as the London Boroughs were set-up by Act of Parliament (London Government Act, 1963) and can only be merged, abolished or changed by Parliament. However the Tory Leaders of the two Councils have decided that there should be economies of scale in merging many of the two Council’s operations. Hence rather than having two refuse collection services they can make do with one. Instead of having two education departments they can make do with one. Instead of having two Chief Executives, two Housing Directors, two Borough planners, etc., they can make do with having just the one.
- There are some obvious ways in which this plan makes sense, although it is interesting to speculate what would happen if one of the authorities went Labour and just how a Tory and a Labour authority would work together as one. But there are also many other implications, not least that the savings being discussed can only be as a result of losing about 500 jobs in the two Boroughs. But one remarkable thing about the whole process is that we are embarking on this whole adventure on the say so of two men, Ravi Govindia of Wandsworth and Lord True of Richmond-upon-Thames. There has as yet been no Council decision in either borough, no referendum amongst the people – nothing! No doubt we shall learn more with time but meanwhile we wait and listen.
- I went to the Ram Brewery redevelopment launch (Model pictured right but not including the 42 storey Tower block) on 2nd February, had an Education and Children’s Services Committee on 12th and then of course there was Valentine’s Day, although that isn’t yet a Council event!
- On 18th February I have the Planning Applications Committee and then on the 19th a discussion of the two Borough merger at the Finance Committee.
In response to some of your comments.
Thanks, Viv and Shirley, for your best wishes re the operation
– as stated above fairly, or indeed totally, painless but not sure unfortunately that it has done the job! Daniel and Kathleen were of course right in describing this picture as the alleyway between Cabul Road and Latchmere Road and Daniel was right also in thinking that I thought it would be called a snicket. But he tells me that it could be either a ginnel or a snicket, but that it is actually too wide for either. I bow to the expertise of a real Tyke.
Kathleen was also right in saying that the gypsy encampment is right down the bottom of Culvert Road, between all the railway lines. I managed to get into the encampment purely by chance when taking a dozen or so people on a History Walk of Battersea. The only other way to see it is from the train but not just any old train. I think, but would be
happy to be corrected, that the Overground Line from CJ’s Platform 2 to Wandsworth Road might be the best place to see it. By the way, if anyone is interested in going on the History Walk, which goes from the Latchmere pub to Battersea Arts Centre and takes a couple of hours, I am doing it next as part of the Wandsworth Heritage Festival on 24th May. Just let me know and I will book you in – but I should say that I do it as a Labour Party fund-raiser and charge £10.
However, I have had no reply to the question about the third picture: “what and where is this”? I have to admit that it was difficult to take a very clear picture but it is a boot scraper set in the wall. There are 3 or 4 in consecutive houses on the west side of Latchmere Road immediately opposite Knowsley Road. This is the best preserved of the set and is at 46 Latchmere Road.
