Tag Archive | News & chat about Latchmere

Councillor Tony Belton’s Latchmere February, 2016, Newsletter (# 81)

  1. I guess that you could say that January started (as opposed to 2015 ended), for me, with the Battersea Arts Centre, New Year’s Eve Party. Do you have a problem with 31st December? It should be a wild party but it seldom is for me. 1999 was good and I had a great NYE many years ago on a semi-tropical beach, but most turn out to be disappointing. This one was OK but nought special and I think BAC needs to think it through. Is a Rap session, if that is what it was, really quite right for an essentially trad evening? I am not sure that it is.
  2. We had all the neighbours, well about two dozen round for a Twelfth Night Party on the 3rd – OK a 9th night party. That was very nice and well appreciated, but it was the start of a quiet month – council-wise.
  3. My first “political” event was a meeting of the Labour Group of the London Councils Children’s Services Forum – what that means is a meeting of all Labour’s leads on education for all the London Boroughs. There was much internal discussion of, one would have to say, not much interest but there was a great deal of concern about two matters of real public debate. The first was discussion about the Government’s plans for re-allocating money for schools across the country. No one knows all the details but it is clear that the Government’s main intention is to re-distribute money away from the big cities and in particular away from London. The scale of this re-distribution is also not known in detail but Wandsworth schools, including Chesterton, Falconbrook,Christchurch and Sacred Heart, could be facing up to a 10% hit. I will try and keep you up-to-date on that front.
  4. The second really important discussion was about the future of Further Education and FE colleges in London. Again the Government is initiating a review of FE colleges across London. It is hoping to complete the job in  a very short timescale – this summer perhaps – with a view to implement changes as from 2017. Again the Government intend to achieve massive savings and the future, at this stage, looks grim for some London FE colleges – it sometimes seems that this Government is almost Maoist – it seems to be looking for permanent revolution in our public sector services!
  5. On 14th January I did an inspection of Falcon Estate (that is the Council’s Falcon Estate in Fownes and Este Roads and not the privatised Falcon Estate – the one that used to be called the Livingstone Estate) along with some residents and officers. Actually it is in pretty good nick and, although there were individual complaints, the only general thing commented on really was the state of the raised paving in Falcon Road itself. But whilst we were there we made a diversion into so-called Falcon Glade. You may remember the rather shabby little space, which was next to the busy bus-stop at one of the worst spots for air pollution in the whole of London. Well I am not sure that the new open space has done much for the air pollution but it has certainly made waiting at that bus-stop slightly pleasanter than it was just a year ago. The landscape work was done by a combination of the Council and an organisation called Groundwork, under a London-wide initiative called “Pocket Parks”. I have a friend, who works for London Sustainability Exchange, who was measuring pollution right there a year ago. I must ask her whether the improved greenery has made even the slightest difference to the air pollution there.
  6. On January 15th I went to a meeting of the Battersea Park Action Group (BPAG), which is organising opposition to the planning application for the use of the Park for the next five years as a Formula E racetrack. It was a cold Friday evening and in the circumstances they did well to get 50 or so people there. The picture is of BPAG demonstrating outside the Council in December.
  7. Personally I found their main speaker Paul Ekins both very persuasive and impressive. His argument was basically that the annual Formula E event in the Park is merely a first step in the rampant commercialisation of the Park. First Go Ape and Formula E, tomorrow Disneyland!? He has a point. The new planning application appears to ask for the closure of most of the Park for longer than last summer – 3 weeks instead of 3 days and that at the height of summer! The application will go to the Planning Applications Committee (PAC) on 24th February. I will be happy to report any comments from all, or any, of you, so please send me your views.
  8. The January PAC meeting was on 18th January but there was not one application of anything other than very local interest – back extensions, etc. but three days later, on January 21st  I went to the Design Awards Panel – that was much more interesting. This panel looks at last year’s new developments in the Borough and awards prizes to the best. There is no money involved – it is simply recognition of good design and construction – and encouragement to maintain the best standards. It was a first for me and it was certainly an interesting occasion. The Panel consisted of a handful of councillors, all of whom sit on the Planning Applications Committee, representatives of amenity societies such as the Battersea, Putney and Wandsworth Societies, and various professional and practising architects.
  9. I was told that the standard was not as high as it has been in some recent years but, be that as it may, I was interested in the different views taken by the “professionals” and the “laymen”. Let me give an example. There were 13 entries in the residential extensions category and in the end we awarded a “commendation”, or a merit without being exactly a prize, to one of the examples I show below. Here is my challenge to you. Which one was it? Let me know your views and I’ll tell you the answer we came too and, more seriously, make a comment about how we came to the decision next month.
  10. Over the 22-25th week-end, my partner and I went for a city break to Oporto, home of the Portuguese Port industry. Here is a picture of the Church of Saint Ildefenso, which was yards from where we were staying. The picture is rather gloomy – no sun – I am afraid but the blue and white tiles are very striking in the sunshine and a common feature on Oporto’s many churches.
  11. Meanwhile, during the whole month there was much shenanigans in Wandsworth Council. Everyone knows, don’t we, that Ofsted conducts inspections of schools. What perhaps is not quite so well known is that it also does inspections of local authority education and social services departments. Well in November there was an inspection of Wandsworth’s Education & Children’s Services Department and the draft report has concluded that the department is “less than good”. Wandsworth, of course, does not like getting reviews like that and indeed with over 92% of its schools getting recent inspections concluding that they were good or out-standing, it was also unexpected. One fairly senior officer left the next morning!
  12. Anyway, the upshot was a Council Meeting on 27th January, which discussed emergency, recovery reviews, staff changes, etc. At least two Labour councillors called for the resignation of the Cabinet Member responsible. Like the rest of the Labour councillors, and the two independent councillors, I strongly deplored the Council’s processes. The procedures were inadequate – the very comment that Ofsted made about the department. In other words it was one of the more dramatic Council meetings.
  13. Outside of the politics, let me re-assure everyone that the schools should not be affected at all and there is no record of any child having suffered as a consequence. What I understand to have happened, although I have not seen the report, which does not become public until February 15th, is that some of the procedures have been found wanting – if you like, some of the monitoring systems have proved inadequate.
  14. The other matters discussed at this Council Meeting related to Council Tax and rents. The good news for Council tenants is that rents will be reduced this year by 1%, that is £1 reduction for every £100 of rent – not an enormous amount but better, as they say, than a kick in the teeth. As for Council Tax, although this will not be finalised until March, it rather looks like we will all face an increase of about 4%, which for most Wandsworth residents will mean an increase of approximately, and I mean approximately, £20-£30 a year.
  15. On the 29th I went to see Peter Pan – a pantomine, starring my fellow Labour Councillor Candida Jones, as the evil Captain James Hook. It was organised by Furzedown Community Project and had a cast of hundreds, kids, mums and dads, grans and grandpas. It was great fun and clearly very good for the community. It made me think that it would a good idea for Big Local to organise a similar show in say York Gardens Library – it would be fun.

My Programme for February

  1. On February 2nd, I was briefed on the plans for the Tesco block on Falcon Road. The owners of the whole Falcon Road frontage between Khyber and Patience Roads wish to do a comprehensive re-development, of which more next month.
  2. Two days later on Thursday 4th I will be going to my first police Special Neighbourhood Team for quite some time. Usually it clashes with other commitments but it will be good to get back to it.
  3. There are several briefings and emergency meetings taking place as a result of the Ofsted review I have already mentioned – important, of course, and I hope quietly and effectively productive.
  4. I have the Education and Children’s Services Committee on 11th February. Important items under discussion are Schools Admissions,  a subject that affects all of us at least once in our lives; Pupil Place Planning or do we have enough school places to cope with London’s burgeoning population; school budgets and some individual school matters but not affecting any Latchmere schools.
  5. Then another Education and Children’s Services Committee on 22nd  February, when hopefully we will be winding up the changes introduced after the Ofsted Report!
  6. On the 24th there is the Planning Applications Committee, which will be deciding amongst other things whether to agree to further engineering works in Battersea Park and an extension to Formula E’s permission to run the Grand Prix in the Park. I expect quite an argument!

Did you know?

Last month I asked where is there a memorial to all those Battersea residents, ordinary citizens (men, women and children) – not soldiers, who gave their lives in the second World War? The answer was of course the Christchurch Gardens. In August a Council press release said that it was granted, Grade ll, listed building status by English Heritage, “The memorial consists of sheltered public seating in the contemplative setting of a small neighbourhood green space off Cabul Road where people can quietly pay their respects to civilians from Battersea whose lives were mainly lost in Second World War bombing raids.”

The monument was first unveiled in 1952, next to the ruins of a mid-19th century church which was itself bombed and destroyed during the war.

The replacement church that now stands at this location – Christ Church and St Stephen – was built in 1959. Christchurch Gardens was the original churchyard but converted to a public open space in 1885.

Council leader Ravi Govindia said: “This is a monument to the ordinary men, women and children of Battersea whose lives were lost mainly as a result of air raids.

“There are of course many memorials to the servicemen and women who fought and died in the war but very few exist to commemorate victims of the German bombing campaign which took so many civilian lives, not just in London but in towns and cities across the country.

“It is very touching that this special memorial in Battersea has been recognised in this way.”

This month, however, I am asking you to guess, which of these designs we gave a commendation and why? I know its difficult just on the basis of five photographs but give it a go!


Councillor Tony Belton’s Latchmere September Newsletter (# 76)

August highlights

  1. The Planning Applications Committee was held on the 12th August, but there really was nothing of any great significance on the agenda and no Latchmere application at all. However, did you see the fantasy proposal for a swimming pool in the sky, which got the following coverage in the Daily Telegraph?1134862[1]

“Glass-bottomed floating ‘sky pool’ to be unveiled in London”

The “world first” pool will be suspended 35 metres above the ground between two buildings near Battersea Power Station. Residents of London’s Embassy Gardens apartment complex will be able to swim between two high-rise blocks of flats via a “floating” glass-bottomed swimming pool 10 storeys above ground. Resembling an ‘aquarium in the sky’, it is said to be the first pool in the world to link two residential buildings.

The transparent and structure-free pool, designed by Arup Associates and developed by the Ballymore Group, will be 90 by 19 feet, encased in eight inch-thick glass, and have a water depth of around four feet. It will offer aerial views of the capital, including the Houses of Parliament. Residents of the planned luxury flats in Wandsworth will also be able to access a rooftop deck at both ends of the pool which will offer sun loungers, a spa, a bar and an orangery, while an additional bridge between the two buildings forms a dry walkway for both residents and visitors.

“The Sky Pool’s transparent structure is the result of significant advancements in technologies over the last decade. The experience of the pool will be truly unique, it will feel like floating through the air in central London,” said Ballymore Group chairman and CEO, Sean Mulryan. The floating pool is expected to be completed by 2018 and will be available for the exclusive use of residents at the 2,000 home complex where flats are priced from £600,000.”

Can this be serious? Is some developer really suggesting such vulgarity from the insanely rich at the same time as there is an acute shortage of housing in the city? If so then they really are asking for riotous responses! I should say that I have seen nothing from the Council to suggest that there really is such an application.

But I also notice that one Chinese billionaire building a hotel in Nine Elms took a $3 billion+ hit on 24th August Black Monday in the Chinese stock exchange so just possibly the bubble is really going to burst!Christchurch2

  1. Did you see that the Citizens of Battersea War Memorial in Christchurch Gardens (that’s the one in Cabul Road) has been named a Grade II listed monument. The memorial (photographed here) consists of sheltered public seating in the contemplative setting of a small neighbourhood green space where people can quietly pay their respects to civilians from Battersea whose lives were mainly lost in Second World War bombing raids. The monument was first unveiled in 1952, next to the ruins of a mid-19th century church whichchristchurch4 was itself bombed and destroyed during the war. The replacement church that now stands at this location – Christ Church and St Stephen – was built in 1959. Christchurch Gardens was the original churchyard but converted to a public open space in 1885.
  2.  I showed a picture of the 19th century church in a recent newsletter and some time back reported that the old brass plaque had been stolen. The plaque has been replaced by the modern inscription shown on the left.
  3. And did you also notice the local story headed “Party’s over: Late night licence breaches spell end for troubled pub: Last orders: The Princes Head in Falcon Road”
  4.  This story told of The Princes Head’s (pictured right) failure to have its licence renewed in June. The pub had announced its intention to fight the order but in August it decided to drop its appeal It will now close. A few years back I represented residents at a Licensing Committee hearing, when the pub was granted the licence but only with conditions, including conditions that the sale of alcohol at the pub should stop at 11pm Monday to Saturday and 10.30pm on a Sunday, regulations  – a condition, which has been regularly ignored by the licence holder.
  5. In evidence till rolls from the bar showed that on occasionFalcon Head, Falcon Road the last drink was served at 3.05am. The landlord claimed that the event was a party for his son who had paid for all drinks before 11pm and he was merely using the till to keep track of the drinks. On another occasion, 155 entries were put through the till after 11pm to the tune of £850 and in a final visit police people drinking well after closing time.
  6. In general, I very much regret the closure of pubs, which is continuing apace across the country but the Prince’s Head has been trying the patience of many of its neighbours for far too long. Let’s hope we get a decent replacement of affordable properties, possibly with some new shopping on the ground floor.
  7. I said last month that I was not going to say anything about the Labour Leadership contest and I am still not going to say who I am voting for because I genuinely have not finally decided – though I am pretty certain of it. However, I do think that Burnham, Cooper and Kendall are not doing themselves any favours by making their views clear about Corbyn in the way that they are. He is expressing views on a range of subjects, and most particularly the Iraq War, which are widely held by many across the country. To reject the man expressing those views so dismissively is not what I would call good politics.
  8. I am, however, going to support Tessa Jowell to be Labour’s candidate for London Mayor, despite her main opponent Sadiq Khan having been a fellow councillor of mine in Wandsworth for 12 years. Tessa’s track record of achievement over the years and in particular her role in both winning and delivering the Olympics for London gives her a claim, which I don’t believe any other candidate can equal. Some will claim that Tessa is too old for the job. Well she is about the same age as Hilary Clinton, who is running to be the US President, and much younger than many successful past Prime Ministers of this country. Her age is no problem for me and shouldn’t be for anyone else.
  9. In late August I (and my partner) spent a week on a narrow boat on the Llangollen Canal, on the border between Wales and Shropshire. You may have noticed that it rained rather a lot and we were almost drowned (I joke) by a tremendous thunder storm just as we were making our last mooring – ever tried tying the ropes, and avoiding falling in, in torrential rain? However, despite that, it was great fun including crossing two aqueducts and going through three tunnels. P1000497The canal has two major engineering feats. The ‘pioneering masterpiece of engineering’ by which the early civil engineers crossed the difficult landscape between Chirk and Llangollen has resulted in the 18 kilometre length being awarded World Heritage Site status by UNESCO in 2009.The aqueducts at Chirk and Pontcysyllte were built by the engineers Thomas Telford and William Jessop and were among the first to use cast iron troughs to contain the canal. At Chirk Aqueduct the trough is supported by conventional masonry arches and hidden inside the masonry, almost as if the engineers were not confident of their new material. But at the Pontcysyllte Aqueduct the trough is exposed and sits atop 120 foot high slender masonry towers. When you cross it by boat there is an exhilarating sheer drop on the non-towpath side! The picture gives just a little idea of what it is like crossing the Pontcysyllte Aqueduct – with no guard-rail!
  10. Stop Press (as they used to say, in the old days). Have you seen the notice on Latchmere Recreation Ground promising new improvement works? The Council’s intention is to remove the large are of tarmac and restore it to parkland. I don’t know how long it has been tarmac but it is good get that bit of the recreation ground back!

My Programme for September 

  1. On September 12th, we will find out who the Labour Leader is and who is our candidate for Mayor. No doubt, there will be much discussion about that!
  2. On the 16th, I have the Planning Applications Committee and the day after the Education Committee.
  3. On either Sunday 20th September, I am doing my “history walk” from the Latchmere pub to the Battersea Arts Centre. It takes about 2 hours and is pretty well guaranteed to show you a new side of Battersea, even if you have lived here for years and years. All-comers are welcome and so if you are interested please let me know by email – though I should make it clear I charge £10 as a fee, which goes towards my election expenses!
  4. And, of course, there will be the Labour Party Conference, which after the mauling we suffered in the General Election and the announcement of a new Leader will, I am sure, be a fascinating week.

Did you know?

Not many people answered last month’s question: “Who or what is Poyntz of Poyntz Road and why would a Battersea road be called such?” and actually I must confess not many people seem to have been that interested! Bob replied saying, “as a Poyntz Rd resident it’s probably unfair of me to say Spencers, Manor of Battersea etc.”, which I accept as a correct but not very explicit answer. So for those, who want to know more:-

Poyntz was chosen as a Battersea street name as it was the maiden name of Margaret Georgiana Spencer (1737-1814), wife of John, 1st Earl Spencer, and the Spencers were “lords of the manor of Battersea”. They were a fabulously wealthy and fashionable couple, famous for sponsoring the artists of their day. Their eldest child was the notorious Duchess of Devonshire, the “star” of the 2008 film the Duchess, in which she is played by Keira Knightley.

Our Poyntz, Margaret, was the great-great-great-great-grandmother of Diana, Princess of Wales, herself at one point a Battersea resident.

And finally, talking of the Spencers and the Manor of Battersea, just how many places and names can you think of in Battersea, which are in some way related to the Spencer family. I reckon that I can reach at least a dozen without too much thought. How many can you get and please list them for me?

Councillor Tony Belton’s Latchmere August Newsletter (# 75)

July highlights

  1. On the morning of July 2nd I had a meeting of the       Academies & Free School Commission. This curious organisation has immense power over our schools, is totally secretive and completely undemocratic. It is in effect a local agent for the Education Secretary of State. And it is what you get, I suppose, for trying – as the Tories clearly are – to by-pass local education authorities without actually abolishing them. Very odd! By the way, don’t ask me what it does! It is all smoke and mirrors and would take an essay to explain!Thames Christian College
  2.  In the afternoon, I went to the Grand to see a fine performance of Gershwin’s Crazy for You performed by Latchmere’s Thames Christian College. Forgive the crummy picture but here are Oscar and Jasmin, leading in the grand finale!
  3. The Council Meeting, on the 8th July, was a tepid affair, which has long since gone from the memory. Once upon a time, irate constituents would heckle from the public gallery and throw toilet rolls at the councillors but now it is quieter than a vicarage tea party. The Council Meetings need to have life breathed back into them! That was followed two days later by my councillor’s surgery at Battersea Reference Library – no one turned up. Like Council Meetings, surgeries also need to be re-thought. A few years ago constituents actually went to surgeries but nowadays people send me, or Wendy Speck and Simon Hogg (my fellow councillors), emails.
  4. Much more fun was the Triangle (Poyntz, Shellwood, IMG_1261Knowsley Roads) Street Party on the 11th July. I fear that there might have been slightly fewer in attendance than usual, which was a shame because it is always a good evening with visits from the Fire Brigade and, usually, the Mayor. Here a few of the youngsters get to inspect a fire engine.
  5. The Planning Applications Committee was held on July 14th. There were plenty of small development schemes, mostly as usual of loft extensions but three were of major significance, and one in particular to Latchmere.
  6. That was for the demolition of the Homebase site, the one opposite the end of Plough Road currently having a stock clearance sale, and the construction in its place of a mega, largely residential block. It will actually have 6, 7, 9, 11 and 21-storey elements to the development and include 254 residential units, some 10% of which will be so-called “affordable” units.The really interesting part of this development application was that the first two floors are almost totally dedicated to the Royal Academy of Dance (RAD), providing 6 dance studios, a 150 seat theatre, etc., etc. (The bit that swung it for me was free instruction for pensioners – I have never mastered the foxtrot – yes the RAD promotes all forms of dance not just ballet). Currently based in Battersea Square, RAD is housed in inadequate premises and yet it attracts 2,000 foreign visitors a year. It is a leading cultural centre and, of course, fosters arts employment. But putting all that aside, the development has substantial daylight and sunlight impacts on the many vociferous and articulate neighbours Indeed there were 1160 objections from local residents. The Tory councillors were very keen to avoid any decision on this application prior to the election, but now they happily passed it. It’s a shame but let’s hope that the good elements of the scheme outweigh the problems.
  7. The second major application related to the building that isMarco Polo House replacing the Marco Polo building on Queenstown Road. The proposal was to add 4 storeys to an already approved (and currently being built) 14 storey development. The extra 4 storeys would add 35 residential units of which a huge (?) 13, i.e. 40%+ would be affordable. Personally I thought the building looked better with the 4 storeys added – just suited the shape and location better for me. But I was in a minority of one, because from one location in the Park the application adversely affected the view of the Power Station. It was rejected – and for those who have already forgotten (or never knew) it, here is the Marco Polo building as was.
  8. The third major application related to Putney High Street and was the site between Lacy and Felsham Roads. It was an OK but not distinguished application for residential and shops, which would be an improvement on what is there now, but by common consent was one storey too high to fit into the largely coherent Putney High Street townscape – hence unanimously rejected. Note that in Putney a development that is one storey too high gets refused but, if it is in Battersea, any size will do!
  9. On Wednesday 15th July, in the morning I visited CringleIMG_1266 Dock and Feathers Wharf. You might know Feathers Wharf because it is the Borough’s municipal tip, rather grandly known as a Civic Amenities Site and hence very important to us all. Between the two of them they deal with more of our rubbish than is produced by the whole of Wales. Rubbish from Lambeth, Kensington & Chelsea, Hammersmith & Fulham is processed there as well as Wandsworth. The two sites are run by the Western Riverside Waste Authority or WRWA. The WRWA has a problem in that both sites are on expensive bits of river-front and live alongside expensive new blocks of flats. That is what they wanted to talk to me, and other members of the Planning Committee, about. Their very ambitious plan is to deck over Cringle Dock and build flats over it! I hope this picture of Feathers Wharf and its giant cranes gives some idea of the scale of the task!
  10. In that same afternoon, I was off to Falconbrook School, IMG_1273representing Battersea United Charities, for the school’s Passing Out parade. It was not exactly a parade but a commemorative occasion to mark the last day of term and, indeed, the last day at primary school for Year 6. It was an entertaining occasion. Here are some of Year 6 giving their impressions of school life at Falconbrook.
  11. IMG_1275On 16th July Battersea Society had its summer party at St. Mary’s Church on the riverfront. It was a delightful evening and this picture gives some idea of the riverfront at sunset.
  12. The next day I went to visit friends in South Wales and fromP1000224 there to the Black Mountains Gliding Club. It was a glorious day, and from about 3,000 feet (900 metres), there was a magnificent view from the Bristol Channel to Snowdonia – that was really splendid. Here I am strapped in for take-off. By the way, Andrew, who is strapped in behind me did all the real gliding, although I did take over the controls once we were up there!
  13. On the 22nd July I went to a Crossrail 2 briefing session in York Gardens Library. I am not sure how many people realise it but Crossrail 2 running from Tottenham Hale to Wimbledon via Clapham Junction is planned to be opened, subject to lots of contingencies, by 2030. When/If it comes, it would mean 8 minute journeys from CJ to Tottenham Court Road. To achieve this timetable, work would have to start on a massive CJ interchange station by the end of 2017. It would be located where the bus stand and the Peacock, once Meyrick Arms, pub are. Those of us who were present, including representatives of the Battersea and Wandsworth Societies, councillors from both Labour and Tory parties, York Road estate tenants and the Council’s Planning Department, look like being roped into the Crossrail CJ stakeholders group! That was obviously sensible, since Crossrail will need to consult regularly with local residents. Stop Press. The Falcons Estate (Battersea) Ltd. Committee has this evening (24/7/15) asked me to get them invited, too. (Not to be confused with the Falcon Estate, the Falcons is what some of us will remember used to be called the Livingstone Estate)
  14. I have had quite a few responses about Formula E and Battersea Park. They have been far from unanimous one way or the other, although I must say that those against, perhaps not surprisingly, tend to live nearer the Park and to be more vociferous than those in favour. One thing is clear though and that is, IF the Council agrees to further use of the Park (and I think it probably will), then steps must and will be taken to lessen the disruption to the Park and its users.
  15. The decision will, I think, be taken by the appropriate Committee and Council in September/October. Believe it, or not, I currently have an open-mind on the matter but I will be very opposed to the commercial confidentiality arguments that say we, neither the public nor the councillors, can’t be told the real financial benefits, if any. It is just not acceptable that disruption to a major London facility can happen as result of a secret deal.
  16. I can’t write a Newsletter, as a Labour councillor, without referring to the Labour Leadership contest; an event that does not seem to be enthusing anyone even with 6 weeks to go – but I am not going to bat for any one candidate. However, I will say that I think it unfortunate that Miliband resigned so quickly. I know the guy, and his wife, though not well, and I can imagine that they were both desperate to get back to a personal life; but I think that a better option for the party would have been if he had said something like, “I will step down in, say, September 2017, so that in the next two years we can have a full discussion about the 2015 result and a well-organised leadership election.” Ever since we switched to having fixed terms, just like in the USA, the logic is to move to choosing one’s leader nearer to the coming election – more like the American primary system.

My Programme for August 

On the 12th I have the Planning Applications Committee, but let’s be honest most of the rest of the time I am off, on my hols, having what I hope will be a good time – indeed I am off on 25th July and hence this very early edition of the August newsletter!

Did you know?

Last month I asked “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 was impressed by how many could name William Pitt, the younger, who fought a duel on Putney Heath in 1798 against George Tierney, and George Canning and Viscount Castlereagh, who fought another duel in 1809 on Putney Heath, when one was Foreign Secretary and the other Minister for War – and that was at the height of the Napoleonic War and we think modern politics can get a bit rough! But thanks also to one reader, who correctly pointed out that Castlereagh never actually did become PM – Canning did in 1827 – I owe that reader a pint and knowing him, he won’t forget!

I also asked about this lion. Not a single answer but he lives at 12 Macduff Road, off Battersea Park Road, nearly opposite Tesco.

And this month’s question? Who or what is Poyntz of Poyntz Road and why would a Battersea road be called such? Poyntz Road is part of the Triangle, see 4 above and off Latchmere Road.

Councillor Tony Belton’s Latchmere July Newsletter (# 74)

June highlightsP1000019

  1. 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.
  2. 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.
  3. 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.
  4. 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.
  5. 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.
  6. Penny, my partner in the picture above, is organising a conferenceP1000128 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.
  7. On Sunday 28th June I went to Battersea Park to see the P1000189Formula 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.
  8. 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.
  9. 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.
  10. 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.
  11. 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.
  12. 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

  1. 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.
  2. 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.
  3. On the 8th July, we have the Council Meeting and on 11th I will be at the Councillors’ surgery at Battersea Library.
  4. 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 P1000200Earl 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 June Newsletter (# 73)

May highlights

  1. To state the obvious, the May 7th General Election was a great disappointment for me and the Labour Party. I know that Will Martindale would have made an assiduous MP but that was not to be. Clearly the electorate was not convinced by the thought of Ed Miliband as Prime Minister – he obviously had a bad press, though possibly demonstrated in the TV debates that he didn’t really deserve it. Again, the electorate also clearly believes the Tory story about the blame for our current economic difficulties. I think that story is nonsense (clearly Labour didn’t cause the US sub-prime markets to crash), but one can’t deny that the Tories won the publicity argument.
  2. Although I wish things were different, I have to admit that Jane Ellison is an effective MP – so congratulations, Jane. In the longer term Labour appears to have a tough task winning back the Battersea constituency. On a national level, it does rather concern me that so few eligible voters voted for a Tory Government and yet the Tories have a strong hand in Parliament. It can’t be right that only 25% of the electorate voted Tory, but they have more than half our MPs.
  3. The first past the post system has worked very, very well for the Tory party and, ironically, for the SNP. Both the Greens and UKIP had over 1 million and 3 million votes, respectively, and yet have only one MP each. It is a good system for the Tories but is it doing British democracy any favours? I rather think not. My worst fear is that, with Scotland and Wales going as they are and the south east outside of London going the way it is, with Labour strengthening its position in London, even if not in Battersea, that we are becoming a very divided nation, indeed.
  4. One of the delights of campaigning is discovering little IMG_1210gems, such as this inscription at the corner of Broughton and St. Philip Streets, which reads, “For what shall it profit a man if he shall gain the world and lose his own soul” Gospel according to St. Mark. I must have passed it a thousand times but never noticed it before! Have you noticed it? It is at the corner, just as one turns left coming down Silverthorne Road towards Queenstown Road.
  5. The Annual Council Meeting took place on 13th May. That is the occasion when the new Mayor is elected. This time it was Queenstown ward’s Nicola Nardelli. It is an occasion when the Mayor has as much time as she wishes to take saying whatever she wants to and is, of course, unchallenged. My word what a biased account she gave of the changes in Battersea over the last 40 years. She appeared to have no knowledge of, or at least little sympathy with, that very different Battersea, the Battersea of heavy industry, the Battersea which I talked about in the history walk that I led on 24th May – see picture of the people who came on it with me. If anyone is interested on coming on my next walk, just let me know and I’ll add you to my list.
  6. The Planning Applications Committee met on the 21st May. The two biggest applications were again in Battersea and were both approved. The first was what I think of as a pile of plates awaiting washing up, except that it is for a 28 storey block, which given the size of the first floor is more like 30. It would, not long ago, have been the highest building in Battersea (apart from Battersea Power Station and the giant gasometer next to Battersea Park station), higher even than Sporle Court. But now higher blocks are going up in Nine Elms and Wandsworth Town Centre, all within the Battersea constituency. I opposed this particular application on the grounds it included so little affordable housing. (Affordable housing is a strange description of property designed for people on earnings of £70,000 a year).
  7. The second was a giant development just where the large gasometer was a couple of months back. It included 839 residential units, including affordable housing; approximately 5,700sqm of flexible commercial floorspace including retail, financial and professional services, cafe/restaurant, offices, education, community and leisure uses within buildings ranging from 2 to 26 storeys high; together with landscaped private amenity space and public realm, including publicly accessible routes through the site; an energy centre; basement car parking; basement and ground level cycle parking; refuse storage and servicing and provision for vehicular access. You might be surprised that I supported this application, but actually, if there is anywhere in Battersea that can support 26 storey buildings, then this site, between the railway lines and flush up against the Power Station, is it.
  8. By the way, if you want to see how the gasometer was demolished go on to BBC’s iPlayer and look up a BBC2 programme called the Wrecking Crew. It’s really good TV about a very local subject and can be seen at http://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/b05x1f6c/demolition-the-wrecking-crew-episode-2. It’s only there until about 20 June, so don’t put off watching it!
  9. Here is the gasometer in all its glory – and the pile of washing up!
  10. Last month I asked you to forgive my cynicism, as I suspected that Tory councillors did not want to agree contentious applications shortly before the General Election. My cynicism promises to be put to the test in the next couple of months with more very large applications coming forward on 2 sites within yards of each other on York Road. These plans already have a mass of negative reaction from local residents but I don’t expect that to cut much ice. Nevertheless, if you object, please put in an objection – local voices can and do make a difference.
  11. On Saturday, 30th May, I was interviewed for Wandsworth Radio’s Sunday morning show. As it happens the show had a technical glitch and I believe that the 15 minute interview will be heard on 7th June. If you want to hear this internet programme then all you need to do is go to http://www.wandsworthradio.com/. Indeed let me recommend that you pay the station a visit anyway and see what it is like.

My Programme for June

  1. On 11th June I have the Education and Children’s Services Committee  and on the 18th the Planning Applications Committee.
  2. On June 18th from 10am – 4pm, Big Local SW11 will be hosting a jobs, training & opportunity day to signpost local provision at Providence House. The aim is to encourage people to come along and explore current job opportunities, meet industry & training professionals, get 1:1 advice, try new skills and enjoy workshops and training sessions.  Workshops available on the day will cover ICT in the workplace, interview skills, CV building, confidence building, recruitment best practice as well as more practical skills-based tasters. Big Local SW11, you will recall, is a resident-led group that has been awarded £1 million from the Big Lottery fund to spend in the SW11 area over the next 10 years.  The website is http://www.biglocalsw11.co.uk/. Along with Big Local SW11 helping us to make it a great day are South Thames College, Wandsworth Workmatch, Providence House, Wandsworth Lifelong Learning, WOW Mums enterprise club, STORM, Generate, Well-kneaded, SPEAR, Generate and others. Please, do come and join us. Big Local SW11 is also looking for mentors so to sign up for workshops please visit www.biglocalsw11.org.uk.
  3. This week-end I am off to Dorset for a couple of days with the grandchildren, aged 1 and 2 (with their parents to do the nappies, etc.). Penny and I are looking forward to that.
  4. I have written a couple of times about the plans for the all-weather astro-turf pitch in Falcon Park. There has been a lot of public disquiet about this possibility, so much indeed that the Town Hall planners have taken the plans back for re-consideration. I doubt whether the idea is dead and buried but public consultation has at least forced a re-consideration. I have been assured now that there will be no planning application before September. Watch this space for further updates.

Did you know?

JayCourt1Only two of you replied to my question last month about the tower block named after Douglas Jay, M.P., and I am afraid that Peter’s answer was wrong. It was not Park Court on the Doddington estate, as my respondent suggested, but rather Park South, sitting on Battersea Park Road – well done, Kathleen. Here it is and here also is a famous incident from 1829, which took place in Battersea Park, Who is thisor rather what used to be called Battersea Fields, before it became the park. It is a duel between a serving British Prime Minister and a political rival. It features in my history walk. Can anyone tell me who the Prime Minister and his opponent were and what were they fighting about? (The clue is in the inset picture).

Councillor Tony Belton’s Latchmere April Newsletter (# 71)

March highlights 

  1. 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.suffragette being arrested 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.
  2.  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.
  3. 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.
  4. I am sure that many of you will have seen, and all have heard,Bac on fire 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 IMG_1182(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.
  5. 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.
  6. 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).
  7. 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.
  8. 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!
  9. 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.
  10. The Planning Applications Committee met onIMG_5880 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.
  11. 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!
  12. 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!
  13. On 21st March I was off to St. Mary’s Church, Battersea, to hearIMG_1188 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.
  14. 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
  15. 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.
  16. 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  

  1. 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.
  2. 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.
  3. 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 Scan_Pic0010Ordnance 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 October Newsletter (# 65)

     September highlights

  1. I had a Big Local lunch on 11th September – not real business I know, ???????????????but it does help to keep in touch. Here is a picture of us in Fish in a Tie in Falcon Road, which by the way, if you have never been there, is just about the nicest, cheapest food of its style that you can get in Battersea. Stephen Holsgrove the head of Thames Christian College is on the left and then Sandra Munoz, me, Senia Dedic, my councillor colleague Wendy Speck, Providence House youth club boss Robert Musgrave and Pennethorne resident Andy Beech.
  2. In my new role as Labour’s Speaker on education I have had several meetings with senior education staff in an attempt to catch up with the current issues. And one in particular came up at the Education and Children’s Services Committee on 17th September and that was the subject of admissions to primary schools. At the moment admissions are based on proximity to the school but also on siblings, that is whether a child already has a brother or sister at the relevant school. In essence the Council is wondering whether the so-called siblings rule should be scrapped and admissions solely based on proximity to the school. The Council is going out to consultation on the matter. What do you think? Do you think that if a child has a brother or sister at a school s/he should have priority in a schools’ admissions policy or should it just be based on proximity to the school. Let me know what you t99 Salcott 366hink!
  3. I went to GCSE Success’s Annual General Meeting on 20th September. It was held at York Gardens Library. I do think this is a fascinating voluntary organisation. Set up by a resident of Pennethorne House, Ella Spencer, it is devoted to helping kids on the local estates fulfil their potential at GCSEs and get the best possible exam results. If anyone has a son/daughter who needs volunteer specialist assistance to get through examinations I recommend that you get them to York Gardens Library on a Saturday morning at 10 am!
  4. On the 25th I went to the Tooting Labour Party’s fund raising dinner, where the guest speaker was Jack Straw. Here is a picture of him giving his after dinner speech. He made a robust defence of the Labour Government’s actions in Iraq, including the current bombing campaign against Isis. I am afraid that I am not convinced and am rather inclined to the view that the west cannot resolve what is clearly a Middle Eastern Civil War. I have seen it compared with Europe’s seventeenth century Thirty Years War between Protestant and Catholic – I rather fear that it is an apt comparison.
  5. I did not this year go to the Labour Party Conference, which seems not to have been a very exciting occasion! But I rather suspect that the confidence that the Tory Party showed at their conference last week is going to turn out to be misplaced.
  6. I went on a tour of Wayford Street and Este Road estates on 30th. It wasNewsletter 10 2014 (4) pretty uneventful but we came across this piece of graffiti on the wall at the junction between Wayford Street and Candahar Road. Take a careful look. It is a picture of a dove of peace, I guess, holding under its left wing a knife, a pistol, a hand grenade and an AK 47. Is it a cry of pain against the barbarities going on in the Middle East? It certainly is very political.
  7. On 17th September the weather was so beautiful that I decided to take the day off and take the train from CJ to Brighton for the day. I came across the Western Pavilion, which I had never seen before. It was built in 1827 by Amon Henry Wilds, an architect who had worked on the famous Pavilion, for a rich client. Below is a picture of it and I am sure many of you can see the similarities between it and the Royal Pavilion. Whilst I was there I also took a picture of the rather sad sight of the West Pier rotting and crumbling into the sea.

My Programme for October.

  1. I have meetings about the New Covent Garden development on 2nd and 6th
  2. I am visiting the Holy Ghost primary school in Nightingale Square on 14th.
  3. There is the now only quarterly Council meeting on 15th October and Planning Applications Committee on 16th.
  4. I hope to be at the Caius House youth club on the 27th.

Did you see Christ Church in the Guardian on 1st October?  ???????????????????????????

The picture is by photographer David Levene and is of Christ Church School’s vegetable garden. I don’t know why it found its way into the Guardian’s centre spread but it is a great picture of the children in the garden, which is behind a fence on Fownes Road, squeezed in between the estate and the main railway lines out of Clapham Junction. I was there when the school first took over this spare plot and it is just amazing to see the transformation they have made to what was an overgrown site. Well done, Christ Church.

 

 

99 Salcott 357

 

 Western Pavilion, Western Terrace, 99 Salcott 365and West Pier

Councillor Tony Belton’s Latchmere August Newsletter (# 64)

  August highlights

  1. Let’s face it, I’ve just had the longest August holiday in quite a long time 1and so there haven’t been many highlights outside of holidaying – though I did get to meet the Deputy Mayor of Sofia, capital of Bulgaria. However I thought I’d share a couple of thoughts about holidaying in the former Yugoslavia and in Bulgaria. First and most obviously the Adriatic coast, of both Montenegro and Croatia where I was, is spectacular. The scenery is staggering, the sea is warm (though I did read last week about Great White Shark attacks in the Adriatic – but after I got back, thank goodness), the wine is good and the food OK. I don’t want to bore with holiday snaps but here is just one of the Montenegro coast.
  2. Rather more sobering is the realisation that “Yugoslavia” is, or was not that long ago – 1990s, a war zone. The war affected the whole of the Balkans but, as far as I could see, the centre of the war was Bosnia and there the picture is rather less rosy than in Croatia. The bomb sites in the2 centre of town and the bullet and artillery shell holes in the buildings are very noticeable. In the tourist haven of Mostar, the tourist area itself is largely and well re-constructed but just a hundred metres from the tourist sites are empty, derelict houses, flats and businesses. Our B&B host on one night was weeping that she, a Muslim, married to a Catholic, was living happily with her neighbours in the 1980s and then found herself overnight as it were at war with her neighbours. How did it happen and why? She could not understand.
  3. It’s perhaps not very clear in this picture but this shelled out building, an empty husk, is a stone’s throw from the tourist hotspots!
  4. It would be impossible here surely! But then, uncomfortably, temperatures do appear to have risen a little north of the border. We must ensure that bitter feelings are controlled.
  5. However, the ex-Yugoslavian countries seem fairly vibrant compared to Bulgaria, where the collapse of the old Soviet-style heavy industries seems to have left the country as a complete economic disaster area. Massive industrial complexes stand derelict and empty with much of the rural population left to flee to the capital, Sofia. The Black Sea coastal resorts and, no doubt, the ski resorts are doing well but much of Bulgaria looks like a country with big problems.
  6. Here in Latchmere, the Council’s Community Safety Team have installed a security camera in Anerley St  to assist in issues concerning the theft of mopeds and dangerous driving of the vehicles in the area. Anerley Street is the short link between Dagnall Street and Battersea Park Road and I must say it is encouraging to see the police and the Council co-operating in trying to control the young villains who are largely responsible for this annoying and dangerous vandalism.
  7. I also heard the good news in August that the South West London Law Centre is going to re-locate in Falcon Road, next to the Mercy Foundation and near to the Prince’s Head. We have not had an appropriate location for the Law Centre for some years now but this new accommodation will be right at the heart of the action and well placed to serve the people who most need its services.

My Programme for September

  1.  I am going to the Labour Party Conference in Manchester, starting on Sunday, 21st.
  2. The Planning Applications Committee will meet on 15th and the Education & Children’s Services Committee on the 17th.
  3. I will be at the AGM of GCSE Success, the self-help homework club, at York Gardens Library on 20th.

Did you know? Oh, dear I haven’t got anything to put here this month! Hopefully inspiration will come in time for next month!

Councillor Tony Belton’s Latchmere August Newsletter (# 63)

 IMG_7192 July highlights

  1. On 5th July I went, as every year, to the delightful Poyntz Road Triangle party. I have said it before but will repeat it again, “It is undoubtedly the best street party in the Borough”. Afterwards I dashed off to an Independence Day party. One of my Labour colleagues on the Council has an American wife and every year on the nearest Saturday to 4th July they have a party with spectacular fireworks. On the following Saturday I went to the WOW organised BBQ at Haven Lodge home in the Kambala Estate. Here is a slightly plump me (must do something about that) with WOW Chair Senia Dedic and fellow Councillor Wendy Speck.
  2. On 9th July councillors went on an organised coach trip around the Nine Elms development area. It certainly is impressive seeing all the buildings springing out of the ground at a rate of knots and perhaps most particularly the US Embassy. But as we were taken round and feted with wine and canapés (who paid for that? I don’t know), I was not the only councillor who thought that not much of this millionaires’ paradise is going to help us solve Wandsworth’s, or even London’s, housing crisis.
  3. It was, therefore, an ironic contrast on the 15th to go a seminar run in Battersea Rise’s St. Mark’s church on food banks. This phenomenon, pretty well unknown in London since the 1930s, has re-appeared since 2010. I have unfortunately forgotten the metrics but a very large number of food packages have been given to many, many poor people in the Borough with one of the worst affected areas being Latchmere. The three women who gave the presentation had analysed the main causes of the problems families were suffering and it will not surprise many of us to hear that they are largely a consequence of the benefit changes (I refuse to call them reforms) made by this Government – not least of course the Bedroom Tax, which only diehard Tories any longer defend.
  4. I said last month that the first meeting I had as Children’s Speaker was fascinating – the second was just as odd. It was a meeting of the so-called School Admissions Forum. It has 12 members, three of them councillors, two head teachers, a representative of the Church of England, a couple of parent governors and some non-parent governors. It doesn’t seem to take any decisions or have any votes. All it does, as far as I can see, is act as a consultative forum about primary school entry and the primary/secondary transfer. I find it very strange that this forum does not report to a public committee but what will be of more interest to most of you reading this is the information that 56.9% of children succeeded to get their first choice of secondary school and 94.1% one of their preferences.
  5. Rather more worrying for Latchmere is that, whilst Graveney School was the first choice for 701 children, Latchmere’s Battersea Park School(BPS) was the first choice for only 29. That does of course mean that everyone who chose Battersea Park succeeded in getting it whilst Graveney could only take 224 of the 701 who chose it. Obviously we hope that BPS does better but we will wait to see whether its new academy status will result in an improvement.
  6. At the primary school level Belleville and Honeywell were the most popular schools registering 185 and 178 first preferences respectively, whilst Latchmere’s primary schools had 71 first choices (Chesterton), 22 (Christchurch), 30 (Falconbrook) and 65 (Sacred Heart). The absurdity of Michael Gove’s Free Schools programme is well displayed, at least for me, by the Mosaic Jewish Free School, established in Roehampton, because there was allegedly a demand from the Jewish community. But only 5 parents in the Borough put it down as their first chance and so we, the people, have had to pay for a Jewish school that only 5 parents wanted! Indeed of the 30 children “going” to the Jewish school 14 had to be allocated to it, with many parents unhappy about that. Falconbrook also had nearly 40% of its pupils allocated to it rather than choosing it.
  7. But what is so strange to me is that the end results of this process are reported to the Office of the School Adjudicator, a branch of the civil service. What used to the responsibility of the local authority and of the local councillors, what you used to be able to complain to me about, has effectively been nationalised by Gove and his mates in Westminster.
  8. The first fully fledged Council Meeting of this newly elected Council wasphoto - Copy on 16th July. It was a slightly emasculated affair, with everyone on best behaviour, because all the new councillors were making maiden speeches. It’s a funny debate as both sides allowed the new councillors to make their speeches in respectful silence. Now I know that most people do not like politicians having a go at each other but let me assure you that there can be little more boring than everyone agreeing with each other and nodding in approval. Having said that, I have to admit the standard of the maiden speeches was excellent – but a bit of heckling would have livened it up a bit!
  9. On 22nd July I went to the launch of the Battersea Literary Festival. It was, let’s face it, a fun evening high above the Battersea Power Station site with plenty of wine and canapes – one of the few councillor perks I can think of. And on the Saturday, 25th July, I looked in at the Pennethorne Square “street party”. I was rather late but it seemed as though everyone there was having a good time, especially on the Bouncy Castle, well house.

 My Programme for August

  1. I am going to spend most of the month in the Balkans. My partner is going to a Conference in Sofia, Bulgaria, and we will take the opportunity to tour some of the countries around – it should be interesting.
  2. The Planning Applications Committee will meet on 14th, but I will be away. I will, however, report on any significant plans, if there are any. The officers usually try to keep controversy well away from August.

Do you know about the National Anti-Vivisection Hospital?  

Just outside Latchmere ward, on the corner of Albert Bridge Road andBattersea General Hospital opposite one of the Park’s entrances, are some small blocks of flats, one of them called Joan Bartlett House. But not that long ago it was the site of one of Battersea’s oldest landmarks, the Battersea General Hospital or more famously the Anti-Viv or National Anti-Vivisection Hospital. This hospital was founded at least in principle in 1896 by a Mrs Theodore Munroe, the Honorary Secretary of the Anti-Vivisection Society. The Society was against using animals in medical and scientific experiments, in experimental operations or in the testing of medicines.

In December, 1900, the site was bought for £7,000 and the hospital built and opened in 1902.It was a small charitable hospital, which was incorporated into the National Health Service and closed in 1972. The Anti-Viv, as older residents will have known it, was demolished in 1972. Here is a 1910s photograph, with Prince of Wales Drive to the left and Albert Bridge Road on the right.

 

Councillor Tony Belton’s Latchmere May Newsletter (# 60)

 2010-14 highlights 1.  I guess to most this May is much like any other May. Nice and sunny, we hope, very spring-like – good to be alive territory. But for some of us, including me, it is a bit different. This is the last month of the 2010-14 Council and, one never knows, possibly my last month as a councillor – it all depends upon you on election day, 22nd May. 2.  So, I thought this month I would highlight my pick of the most important momeYGL Meet1nts of 2010-14. I have to start, of course, with the early announcement after the 2010 Borough Election that the Tories planned to close York Gardens Library.  Others will have other memories but I recall a discussion between Simon Hogg, Wendy Speck (my fellow councillors) and I when we decided that we had to call a public meeting at the library to fight the closure. Wendy and Simon had only been councillors for a couple of months so we decided that I had to Chair the meeting, which I was more than glad to do and which I am doing here. 3.  In the November, 2010, issue of this newsletter I wrote “And indeed we did not have to wait long  (for Tory Council cuts), since that very day (6th November, 2010) we received early notice of the Council’s intention to close York Gardens Library. The local community was quick to campaign against this closure with petitions and a public meeting at the Library on Sunday, 5 December, at 2 pm. Do come if you can but if not please write to Cllr Lister (the then Leader of the Council), Wandsworth Town Hall, to protest at the closure of the library, which is in the poorest and most deprived area in the Borough.” 4.  In the December issue I went on to write that, “It was a very successful meeting in that 130 people were thYGL Meet2ere. There were excellent contributions from many local residents and between us we wrote maybe 50 letters objecting to the proposal. We have also collected about 2,000 signatures on petitions. A few Conservative councillors attended but they kept very quiet. However, I think that the meeting had quite an impact on the Council and I sense that the Council is now trying very hard to come up with a compromise which saves the library and so it should. The Council’s own papers show that a higher proportions of children use the library for homework than in any other library in the Borough. Given the extent of over-crowding in Latchmere we can all guess why that would be but it demonstrates just how important the library is to Latchmere.” 5.  As we all now know the campaign was a great success and the library, now often just called YGL, is run by a local management committee on behalf of the local community. My colleague Wendy Speck is a member of the Management team. By the way there had been a long-running battle between the Tory Council and the local community over the library. The first campaign to save, what was then, the Winstanley Children’s Library was fought in 1981! The Community defended it then just as it did 30 years later in 2011. OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA6.  The main event of 2011, I hesitate to call it a highlight, was of course the riots that took place across London and in Clapham Junction on 6th August, 2011. I produced my one and only special edition of this newsletter to mark the occasion. Here are a couple of the photographs that I took the day after.OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA 7.  It was, of course, a terrible day and had a profound effect, of which more later. One immediate result was that it put me in the front-line against the eviction of innocent Council tenants. The news centred on one lady and her 8 year-old daughter, who was going to be evicted because her 17 year old son was arrested in Clapham Junction. I was not, of course, defending criminal activity, but when the courts eventually imposed a one year prison sentence on the rather silly young man it seemed a bit extreme (to me and to many others) to evict the mother and the totally innocent 8 year-old. I suspect not too many people would be happy to have their security of tenure totally in the hands of their 17 year-old sons! In the end the Council backed down and after a bad 6 months inside young Daniel has become a very nice, caring young man. 8.  I was interviewed on this case by many foreign newspapers and TV channels, especially in Spain, France and French Canada. They really found it very difficult to believe that here, in the UK, we could think of evicting whole families because of the “criminality” of one member of the family. I was also proud of the speech I made in Council on the issue, which if you are really interested you can see at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rQukL9XxxYk. I am speaking between 0.40 and 11 minutes 26 of the video! 9.  The biggest news of 2012, as I wrote in March of that year, “was the Council’s decision to “spend” £100 million on Latchmere and Roehampton wards …at the same time (as) the Big Lottery has also allocated a separate £1 million to Latchmere.” The Council said it was not, of course, a response to the riots, indeed it was claimed to be despite the riots but we can all apply a pinch of salt to that lie/propaganda. What might surprise some is that now 2 years later we do not appear to be very much closer to action on the ground in the so-called estate regeneration. I suspect, however, that appearances are deceptive and that after the election there will be fairly rapid moves. I hope the vast majority of the residents will be happy with the plan but many are aware that some of the residents of the smaller Winstanley Estate blocks are not at all keen on possible demolition.. 10.  The Big Lottery grant is also still going through a planning process. There have been several successful events organised in York Gardens and the Wilditch, but I sense a little frustration amongst those of us involved in the planning group that we have not yet found the “Great idea”, which will make our Big Local something unique. News 1405511.  My highlights of 2013 were very personal! First there was the trip that we three Latchmere councillors, Wendy Speck, Simon Hogg and myself, made to Palestine in February, which as I said at the time had nothing to do with Latchmere, Battersea or Wandsworth, but it was certainly packed with interest. Here is a picture of the three of us with a banner given to us by the Mayor of Hebron.  (As I said then, before any cynics out there think otherwise, it was all paid for out of our own pockets and had nothing to do with the Council!). The trip did give me a chance to take my pictureNews 14056 of the year, and here it is – a cactus caught by the flash-light in the Judean desert at sunset, high above Bethlehem – and, oh my,  was it cold. So cold in fact, I got shingles on this trip and very painful and unpleasant it was too, but at least it went after 3 months! Worse in September when I, and my partner, ?????went on a cycling tour of Holland, our bikes were stolen in Amsterdam and I got streptococcal G poisoning in my left knee, after what seemed at the time a rather slight bump. (I am in the centre of this picture in Delft) That resulted in me spending a couple of weeks in St. George’s, feeling as though I was at death’s door! It made the shingles pain seem minor! So to use the Queen’s description of 1992 (the year of the great fire at Windsor Castle) as her “annus horribilis” then I would say the same about 2013! 12.  And so to 2014. Well, of course, the major highlight will be the May 22nd election – or at least I hope it will be but to get back to the more day-to-day, I do want to mention a couple of other things. 13.  The March figures for use of the Bike docking stations have been very encouraging. No doubt the great spring weather made a difference but use of the bikes went up 83% in March, with individual increases ranging from over 100% in Grant Road to only 67% in Fawcett Close – encouraging but there are still some with only small levels of usage. (Oh, I have been on them twice in the last few weeks!) 14.  Many of you will not have seen the 4th May copy of the Observer. In the main section of the paper a full page 19 article is about Providence House Youth Club, which is celebrating its 50th anniversary with a Saturday 10th May party. The success of the Club was originally down to the pioneering work of Elizabeth Braund, who died in 2013 and who I featured in this newsletter (June, 2013), but I want to praise Robert Musgrave, the volunteer youth worker, who has been totally committed to the Club for since going there first in 1973. 15.  The Planning Applications Committee on the 14th April had a massively, stupid 530 page agenda, with lots of very chunky applications although not affecting Latchmere directly. The largest two were about the Power Sta????????????????????????????????????tion site and Market Towers at Vauxhall, just inside the Borough boundary. I don’t know whether you know it but Vauxhall is just about to become a mini-Manhattan, but I am afraid that it is a development aimed solely at the mega-rich, international business world and will have very little to do with local residents! 16.  Finally, it has been a hopeless ambition of mine to get the station named, as it should be Battersea Junction and not, Clapham Junction. If anyone doubts me then look at the boundaries of Battersea parish, look at where Battersea District Reference Library and where Battersea Town Hall (now the arts centre) are. Well I may not have succeeded in getting it renamed but after many years of trying here am I and Wendy Speck celebrating the strapline, Clapham Junction, the Heart of Battersea. My Programme for May  1.  Of course there is, as ever, there will be the Planning Applications Committee on the 8th, preceded on the 7th by the final Council Meeting of this four-yearterm.. However, for me and my colleagues there will simply be more and more election campaigning. So give us a wave if you see us about – it’s just part of the process! Oh, and if you swear and curse at having your TV viewing disturbed and exclaim that we are all the same, oh and in it only for the money, just give a thought: “Would you rather live in a country where the only way to change a government was by war or revolution?”  Just what do you know about war-time, Battersea? A couple of weeks ago, I was canvassing a couple of elderly ladiesNews 140592 on the Winstanley Estate, who told me about the area before the estate was built and particularly of their memories of the war-time bombing. And although I covered this a couple of months ago I thought it worth reminding you of what a pounding Battersea got during the war. The ladies remembered in particular Speke and Livingstone Roads, which I gather stood more or less where John Parker Square is today. And although I haven’t got a photograph of what happened when they were hit by a V1 here is another of Winston Churchill visiting Nine Elms after a particularly savage attack. PS I just wondered whether the photographer of Christ Church, in last month’s edition was John Archer, the first black mayor? He had a photographer’s business in Battersea Park Road at the time of that picture. But I don’t know. “Promoted and published by Sean Lawless on behalf of Tony Belton, Simon Hogg & Wendy Speck, all at 177 Lavender Hill, Battersea, SW11 5TE”