Tuesday, 6 September 2011

Police helicopter search over Goldhawk Road

A number of men fled from Police last night forcing the call-out of a Police helicopter and significant disruption to the Goldhawk Road as areas were cordoned off. I received no fewer than 15 inquiries from some of you as to whether I could find out what was going on and a number of you were actually quite angry about the noise and disruption, with one woman unable to get her kids off to sleep.

The Police have this morning given me a statement which is as follows:

"At approx 2200hrs on Monday, 5 September, police officers signalled for a vehicle to stop in the west London area.

The vehicle failed to stop and was pursued by police. A number of males got out of the car and made off in the Shepherd's Bush area.

The police helicopter assisted in the operation to trace the man.

One man was arrested. He was taken to a west London police station, where he remains in custody.

Inquiries continue to trace outstanding occupant/s of the vehicle".

So in other words the others all got away despite the closure of the road and the use of the helicopter which hovered over the Bush for what seemed like about 45 minutes with the heavy deployment of vans and police on foot.

And this also seems to be contrary to what one local journalist tweeted about this being a burglary - you know where you read it first, folks.

0920 UPDATE - It seems that I have upset the local press by getting the facts out before they did. My crime? Asking the Police what had happened and reproducing the statement they gave me in this article so you knew. My punishment? Some more verbal abuse from a potty mouthed journalist called Adam Courtney. Here's what he saw fit to post this morning:


There are actually some good writers at the Chronicle, Greg Burns being one of them and Dan Hodges another, but Adam very much isn't as you may be able to see from his grammar above. Quite why he gets so upset about a hyper-local site like this one, which is written by someone local in their spare time, being just ahead of him on this occasion is lost on me. It may well be that the car was stopped because of the rumour he was reporting last night about a burglary. Maybe. maybe not. But I don't know - and the point is neither does he, so suggesting it in public helps nobody.

So let's have a little less abuse, eh?

1055 UPDATE - First of all thanks for all of your support this morning. It does mean a lot, I just decided I didn't need to put up with the abuse any longer, so perhaps a public airing of Adam Courtney's rantings will lead to a bit better behaviour. 

But getting back to the events of last night here's the latest statement I have been sent by the Police to share with you: 

"The driver was eventually found with the assistance of police helicopter and police dogs, he was arrested for:

1) Failing to Stop for Police
2) Dangerous Driving
3) Unlawful Possession of Controlled Drugs (Cannabis)
4) Suspicion of Handling Stolen Goods (multiple mobile telephones)

One male remains outstanding"

1410 UPDATE - So many of you were upset about the commotion last night, and in particular the noise of the Police helicopter, that I inquired about what if any regulations are in place to govern its use. One reader, who wants to stay anonymous, wrote to say that her kids couldnt get to slepp and many others pointed out that this is now a regular feature of life in W12. 

A spokeswoman has told me that there is: 

"no time limit with regards to the use of the police helicopter as it is available 24-7 depending on flying conditions.

The helicopter will be at the location for as long as it needs to be and will try to cause as little inconvenience as possible".

The helicopter assists with the distance to see and focus with whats on the ground taking into account the safety of all concerned".

Monday, 5 September 2011

Hospital closures draws super-hospital to Shepherd's Bush

Hammersmith Hospital on Du Cane Road: New Super-Hospital?
The Independent reports that St Mary's hospital in Paddington looks set to be closed amid a cash crisis that has engulfed Imperial College Healthcare Trust, the authority that runs St Mary's along with Hammersmith Hospital on Du Cane Road W12 and Charing Cross Hospital in Fulham.

The hospital, based in Paddington, is a landmark hospital and teaching facillity which has a proud history of advancing medical science - it is where Alexander Fleming invented penicillin, for example, earning him a Nobel prize.

The proposal, which has been leaked to the press, is that the hospital be knocked down and the land sold off for luxury flats. Sound familiar anyone? 

Quite apart from the political firestorm this is likely to start, as St Mary's is one of the leading teaching hospitals in the UK, the main implication for H&F is that Imperial College Healthcare Trust is apparently minded to move the services currently at St Mary's into Hammersmith Hospital in East Acton/Shepherd's Bush. What this would mean for local residents at first sight is not that bad - a bigger and better hospital. But consider it would be bringing huge numbers of patients and people with it, onto what until now have been quiet streets adjoining the hospital and Wormwood Scrubs prison, and you begin to see how the area would be transformed.

Charing Cross Hospital - set for closure?
The other option, reports the paper, is that the Charing Cross Hospital in Fulham be closed altogether. This has regularly excercised our Council and I reported in March 2010 how they accused the last Labour Government of planning to do this - but it now it seems it could happen under this Conservative one. This, however, is thought to be less likely, apparently because of its location serving SW London but it will cause deep concern across H&F and beyond. 

The politics of this are that Andrew Lansley, the Secretary of State for Health, has placed a moratorium on any further hospital closures. This, you might remember, came in response to attacks from Labour about how the Tories want to privatise the NHS, which they vehemently deny. The truth, as ever, is somewhere in between. The brutal fact is that Imperial Healthcare Trust is £100 million in debt and is basically bankrupt - so how long can it realistically hold on to the three sites?

But these plans which the Indie is reporting seem very well advanced and it is clear that something is afoot. Whatever they turn into as far as Hammersmith Hospital in Shepherd's Bush is concerned, it is likely to transform one of the quietest areas of the Bush forever.

0850 UPDATE - Andy Slaughter MP has sent me this response (complete with pic!) to this story:

"On Saturday with Labour members and supporters I was collecting signatures in Hammersmith and Shepherds Bush as part of the national campaign to Save our NHS from cuts and privatisation (pic attached). We didn’t realise how soon this would become a real issue in our back yard. This is not the first time the Tories have tried to close Charing Cross. We stopped them doing it in the 1990s and we will do so again this time. I am talking today to Imperial management and unions, and seeking a meeting with Andrew Lansley, the Secretary of State for Health. The campaign to save Charing Cross will be the biggest the borough has seen and I’m sure will attract support from across the political spectrum"

"We are fortunate to have three of the best hospitals in the country serving local people. That is something we should be proud to maintain and improve. Labour invested millions in the local NHS, now the Tories are proposing to close one or even two local hospitals. Cameron’s promise that the NHS would not be cut is exposed as the most blatant piece of trickery". 

I have asked the Council for comment but they have not replied as yet.

1500 UPDATE - Imperial Healthcare Trust have just released the following statement rubbishing the Independent's report: 

"Following media coverage today, Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust would like to categorically deny that we have any plans to close St Mary's Hospital or any of our hospital sites".

"We have not engaged any firms of architects to look at our estate with a view to converting it into residential properties".

"We would like to reassure all patients and staff that providing the highest quality clinical care across all our sites remains our absolute priority".

Saturday, 3 September 2011

Wormholt Park 100th Birthday Party: you're invited

Wormholt Park in days gone by - from friendsofwormholtpark.org.uk
The Friends of Wormholt Park are staging a two day party to mark the green space's centenary this week and they'd very much like you to come along. Even better, they'd like you to help out on the day if you're so inclined.

On Friday I'm told there will be a schools day between 1300-1500 when180 children from seven local schools will be in the park learning about local history, bird watching with the BBC’s David Lindo, playing sports with QPR Football Club, and making birthday cards and bunting for the birthday wishing tree. They will also be joined by local Mayor, Cllr Frances Stainton.

Then on Saturday the park will be adorned with food and market stalls, music, history tours, games and children’s activities, hanging birthday cards and best wishes on the birthday wishing tree, and lots of sports.

QPR Football Club is hosting a sports clinic and there will be handball, futsal and frisbee demonstrations, as well as yoga and free massages.

At 4pm, this being a civilised bunch, they will be hosting Afternoon Tea. They would love it if you could join them to cut a giant cake, talk to some special guests, and sing happy birthday together.


The Friends of Wormholt Park are also looking for volunteers to help on the day. Events Co ordinator, Lorraine, would like to hear from you if you can offer some of your time. Email: wormholtpark@gmail.com.

Maybe see you there!

Friday, 2 September 2011

EDL March: Police message

The Police have asked me to pass on the following message to you, in relation to the planned marches by the so-called English Defence League tomorrow. Clearly the proposed marches, which have been banned in a rare use of powers last excercised in 1981, do not relate to our borough. But the reality is that we are still only a couple of weeks on from the riots and of course this is one of the most ethnically mixed parts of the Capital. 

So here's what the Police have to say:

There are planned demonstrations in East London on Saturday 3rd September. The most significant one was to be English Defence League.

This was due to affect the following Boroughs, Tower Hamlets, Newham, Waltham Forest, Islington, and Hackney. 

The Metropolitan Police have issued the following messages.
  • Extensive consultation is ongoing with the local communities in the affected boroughs, who are supportive of police actions 
  • The police took the decision to ask the Home Secretary to ban the marches based on specific intelligence. Local community events and unconnected marches are unaffected by this ban. 
  • The EDL marches are banned in these boroughs, and any unlawful and criminal behaviour will be robustly policed 
  • S.60 will be in force and will be used - other static peaceful protest will be policed proportionately 
  • If you were going to attend the march or were going to protest against it - do not come to these boroughs
  • There will be additional officers on duty across London to keep the peace

UK's biggest ever charity music fest comes to Shepherd's Bush

This Halloween, DJ’s including Radio 1Xtra CJ Beatz, T4's Georgie Okell, Nigel Thomas (of The Foxes) and musicians Saint Saviour (ex Groove Armada), KAYA, BUIL_DINGS, Lifestyle Recordings, Instill, Avius, Animal Circus, The Little Pictures, Ros Coe Tanner, Rodney Culture and many more will be performing at The Defectors Weld, Walkabout, Raving Buddha, Vesbar, The Green Room and The Goldhawk as part of the UK’s biggest music festival – Oxjam. Coming to Shepherd’s Bush for the first time on Saturday 29th October, raising money for Oxfam’s work in fighting poverty and suffering around the world.

B U I L_D I N G S
The Takeover, which I last reported on here, forms part of Oxjam’s month of music, which runs through the whole of October. Oxjam is a festival with a difference: thousands of fundraising music events are put on by ordinary people – from an intimate acoustic gig in a book shop to an epic night in a top London venue – making it the biggest line-up of any music festival in the UK. Last year, more people attended an Oxjam event than went to Glastonbury.

Oxjam Shepherd’s Bush Takeover is aiming to raise £10,000 this October. I've seen some of their work first hand in Africa and Asia and I can assure you they do make a real difference.

Buy tickets from www.oxjamshepbush.org.uk

Lyeburns
Georgina Marcantonio, who is marketing/organising the event, said:
“We’re really excited to be playing our part in making Oxjam Shepherd’s Bush Takeover part of a month-long musical celebration right across the country. Even more importantly, this event is all about showing that the best in local music can have a global impact too, so everyone who comes along and buys a ticket can rest assured that as well as having a great time, they’ll be helping to change lives around the world too.”
Daina Ashmore
During October, more than 800 venues, 11,000 volunteers, 9,000 bands and musicians and more than 200,000 audience members will enable Oxjam to raise at least £350,000 to help Oxfam fight poverty.

 Animal Circus
Since 2006, more than 40,000 musicians have played to an audience of over 800,000 people at over 3,000 Oxjam events, raising in excess of £1.5 million to fight poverty around the world. Oxjam 2011 is expected to take the total past £1.8 million, enough to buy safe water for 2 million people, 900,000 bags of seeds or 72,000 goats.

The highlight of the month-long festival will be the Oxjam Takeovers, a series of city-wide mini-festivals taking place in 33 locations across the UK, from Aberdeen to Bournemouth, at the end of October. During a single weekend, around 3,000 musicians will perform to an audience of more than 35,000, all raising money to help Oxfam fight poverty worldwide.

To keep tabs on Oxjam, visit www.oxfam.org.uk/oxjam or call 0300 200 1255. And in the meantime check out this act from Oxjam Brixton last year - and get the lyrics about the singer's locale!

Thursday, 1 September 2011

Voodoo on Shepherd's Bush Green

Feathers, string and a SMURF hanging from a tree! Strange goings on this morning in W12 as traces of what must surely be voodoo magic were placed across the Green, freaking me out on the trek to the gym on a cold and crisp Autumnal morning.


First to catch the eye was a strange arrangement of bird feathers, placed sticking out of the ground and separated by a piece of string carefully tied in a bow. And all within a box traced in the ground around them.


Then a disemboweled Smurf, of all things, dangling from a nearby tree grinned at me as it swayed in the breeze with his arms outstretched!


So what is this, a new cult of the Bush - or just a bunch of pissed kids 'avin a larf? You be the judge. 


Oh, and on the way back home, look at what I saw on the top of someone's roof in a quiet suburban W12 street - we're a strange lot in Shepherd's Bush, you see...

Writing workshops on Shepherd's Bush Green!

"Last weekend I spent a day at the Shepherd’s Bush Festival, giving writing workshops in the Bush Theatre’s beautifully decked out tent. The subject of the day was beginnings". Not me, but Barney Norris, of the Bush Theatre, who writes here about his experiences during the Bush Festival a couple of weeks ago.

23,166 people looking at 34,461 things - thankyou


The regular monthly stat-porn of this blog reveals August as having been a busy month. Usually it's one of the deadest with people on holiday and not much happening news-wise. But one thing changed all that of course, the riots.

So keep reading, and as ever keep sending the stories in. Without the stream of stories from readers there really wouldn't be a blog to write so please keep them coming. As ever anonymity guaranteed - send to shepherdsbushblog@yahoo.co.uk

Wednesday, 31 August 2011

MP column: Andy Slaughter

Andy Slaughter's e-news is sent to people who sign up for it at his website but I have agreed to also publish it here for people who might be interested. As ever the offer is also open for columns from any of the Conservative Council, including Leader Stephen Greenhalgh who has written columns for this blog before.

Here's what Andy has to say:

Cuts begin to bite

Details are beginning to emerge of the effect on local public services of the cuts being pushed through by all levels of government, and they make dramatic reading.

Over 1,000 children will have to leave borough schools as their families are uprooted by Housing Benefit cuts
Local voluntary groups will lose £1,000,000 over the next three years

Cuts to Education Maintenance Allowance will cost one school alone £350,000 a year from next year
Despite the riots of two weeks ago, the Mayor is pressing ahead with 20% cuts in police numbers

The Council is selling one third of a local park – described as a ‘drain on resources’ – to ‘generate a substantial income’ But life remains good for developers in Hammersmith & Fulham, who are pressing ahead with plans to demolish local housing and build blocks up to 30 storeys across the borough. Opponents of such schemes are guilty of ‘nihilistic selfishness’ according to one Government minister this week.

And for senior council officers, who have awarded themselves massive pay rises while cutting jobs and freezing pay for the lower paid. Hammersmith & Fulham have given their Chief Executive an £11,000 a year pay rise, according to the Chronicle, making him the second highest paid person in local government on £280,000 a year. Not bad for running one of the smallest London boroughs

Summer appears to be over in Hammersmith & Fulham

Children forced out of school


For some months I have been requesting information on the effect of the Government’s cuts to Housing Benefit on Hammersmith & Fulham families. I understand why the council wants to conceal this information as it will mean hundreds of families uprooted and forced to leave their homes, moving to parts of the country where rents are lower. Many will be in low paid work where HB makes up the difference between what they can afford and the high rents charged by private landlords in west London. So they will lose jobs as well as homes and be forced to move far away from friends and families.

But I have obtained figures for the number of children who will be forced to change school. 884 primary and 322 secondary age children will be forced out of borough schools, 10% and 5% of the total school population respectively. Leaving aside the human consequences, this will have serious implications for schools, both their budgets and future planning. But the council sounds pleased with the outcome, describing it as reducing ‘the exceptionally high demand we currently have’.

By definition these children will be from poorer families and this may explain the council’s glee. Without the need for the estate demolition and service closures they are proposing elsewhere and which have provoked local opposition and national censure, they can press on with the social changes to the area they wish to engineer.

Voluntary sector loses £1,000,000

The Big Society is supposed to be about voluntary organisations taking on the responsibilities of the state. Not here, where community organisations are under siege. Masbro’s summer party last week attracted over 1,000 people, an eloquent response to the £45,000 cut to its funding the week before.

But this is only one of many long-standing and essential services losing out. Staying Put, the homelessness prevention service, will lose £60,000 from October, and the overall loss will be £1,000,000 from a budget of £4 million by 2014.

William Morris pupils lose £350,000

Education Maintenance Allowance supports poorer pupils post-16. It pays for travel, books and living expenses and at up to £30 a week can make a real difference to family income. Without it many students are likely to drop out of education, which not only increases social inequality but leaves many more teenagers on the streets with no money or useful employment, with potentially explosive results.

So there was an outcry when the Government abolished EMA, and they promised an alternative. What that alternative means to just one local school, William Morris Sixth Form, emerged this week. No more than 25% of pupils will be eligible compared with 70% now and they will on average get half the current rate. When the new scheme is fully implemented next year this will mean £350,000 less going to WMSF pupils.

WMSF is an outstanding school, as its last two Ofsted reports have confirmed. The fact that 70% of pupils receive EMA is evidence of the level of deprivation of its student intake. Those same students have just achieved excellent A Level and GCSE results.

Boris Johnson to cut Met by 2,000 officers

Hardly a popular idea before the London riots, the Mayor of London’s decision, backed by the Home Secretary, to press on with 20% cuts in police numbers, now looks unwise if not dangerous. 1,900 warranted officers and larger numbers of PCSO and support staff will go over the next three years if Boris Johnson is re-elected in May 2012.

Locally, we are facing the disruption of our Safer Neighbourhood Teams as all the team sergeants in the borough compete for fewer jobs. Campaigns to save the popular sergeants in North End and Sands End wards have already started ahead of a formal announcement next month.

With other London MPs I have written to the Mayor to ask him to think again about reducing police numbers.

Also this month came news that crime is rising in the borough after years of reduction, with burglary up a staggering 16% in the last year.

Hammersmith Park for sale

For the third time in as many months the Council is trying to build on or sell off parts of our parks. After defeats at the hands of residents’ groups in South Park and Shepherds Bush Common, 30% of Hammersmith Park is now up for sale.

Earlier this year the Tory councillor responsible for parks promised my colleague Iain Coleman that the well-used but unsafe football pitches in South Africa Road, in Iain’s ward, would be upgraded. Now we see what that promise was worth.

A private company will be leased not just the pitches but adjoining areas of the Park, almost a third of the total area according to the Council. This is described as an ‘issue’ site ‘which is currently a drain on resources’. Curious language to describe a public park, you might think (PDF).

The private company, PlayFootball, whose involvement was rumoured months ago before the ‘tender’ exercise to select them, will build a pavilion on the site and 11 pitches. All but two of these will be rented out commercially. They will make a lot of money from this. So will the Council which expects to generate ‘a substantial income’. The losers will be my constituents in White City and Shepherds Bush who will not be able to afford to play football on their local pitches.

Two important principles are being dispensed with here. Firstly, the sale of public open space for private profit has always been resisted strongly in this borough. Secondly, the Council is refusing to give details of the lease, the service delivery plan or the charging structure. The first two are commercially confidential it says, so we cannot know how long the Park will be in private hands or how much the rental is. The last is because the charging rates are not agreed. In other words the Park has been sold without knowing what local residents will pay to use the pitches.

Minister attacks opponents of unrestrained development

I’ve never thought of the National Trust as an anarchist organisation, but apparently it is, according to planning minister Greg Clark who this week accused it of ‘nihilistic selfishness’ for criticising the Government’s recent decree that there would, for the first time in the UK, be a ‘presumption’ in favour of development.

If the rest of the country wants to know what that means (along with the presumption in favour of asset sales that Communities Secretary Eric Pickles embraced this month) they need only come to H&F.

This autumn we can expect planning applications for the Shepherds Bush Market site, including the demolition of the Goldhawk Road shops, Westfield’s plans for 1,700 flats up to 22 storeys in Wood Lane, and St George’s 750 shoeboxes on the riverside.

Helical Bar’s revised plans for the Town Hall site have been universally condemned. They propose to shave 30 flats off the top of the 15-storey towers, but that still means the loss of the cinema, Pocklington Trust flats and part of Furnivall Gardens. The Planning Inspector’s report on the Council’s overall planning strategy this month specifically called for the retention of Pocklington properties for the visually impaired and 40% affordable housing in such schemes: currently there is 0%. For more go to www.saveourskyline.co.uk.

The West Ken/Earl’s Court application, with buildings up to 30 floors high, is currently out to consultation. This is by far the biggest and least digestible scheme currently out for approval.

The developer intends to take 20 years to complete the scheme. What this means in terms of disruption for the whole of north Fulham is barely imaginable, but for the residents who will lose their homes it is far worse.

This week I received confirmation that the Council will not allow Groundwork to undertake planned improvements on the West Ken estate. Residents have faced three years of blight and uncertainty already. Last month the council sold the option on demolishing their homes for £15 million. If the plans are approved they face years, perhaps decades, living on a building site with a freeze on maintenance and improvement works.

Arab Spring

I share the delight at the downfall of the Gaddafi regime, but I believe we will come to regret the way NATO has abuse the terms of the UN Resolution supporting intervention. I voted, with some reservation, for the imposition of a no-fly zone and the use of air power to protect civilians, when the Commons debated this at the start of the insurrection.

I was not voting – nor was the UN – for British and French forces to become the aerial and, increasingly, special forces arm of one side in a civil war. I hope that a stable and democratic government can be quickly established in Libya and that the EU can play a role in building institutions in the country, but who is going to believe or support any future resolution about humanitarian intervention, however well merited.

The comparison with Syria becomes starker every day. So far the British Government has not thought of derecognising the Assad government, expelling Syrian diplomats or imposing effective sanctions against the regime.

Last week I met a leading Syrian dissident Haitham Al-Maleh. This week he was in Istanbul as part of the Syrian National Council, the first concerted attempt to unite all opposition forces.

With the death toll climbing towards 3,000 it is time the Government focused on Syria and offered all possible support, short of military action which they do not want, to the anti-Assad forces.

Meanwhile, Shepherds Bush did its own bit for Egyptian unity this week. The Egyptian Association in the UK brought together Muslim and Christian Egyptians from across the UK for a traditional Iftar meal. It also marked my second fast in a week, following attendance at Al-Muntada’s Ramadan Community dinner.

Finally, next month will see a push for Palestine to be recognised as a sovereign state and admitted to the UN. 123 countries already recognise Palestine’s right to exist, a handful short of the two thirds needed. The pre-1967 territories of West Bank and Gaza which there is now consensus amongst Palestinians should form the basis of the state represent only half the area the UN demarcated in 1948. And yet Foreign Secretary William Hague has said Britain is ‘not minded’ to support recognition.

This is a spineless and incoherent response in the face of pressure from Israel and the US. A petition has just been started on the Downing Street website calling for UK support for recognition which I urge everyone to sign.

Coulson

The revelation that ex-Cameron press secretary Andy Coulson received hundreds of thousands of pounds from News International while working for the Tory Party is profoundly significant for three separate reasons.

Firstly, it means he appears to have consistently lied about his income both to Select Committees and on official documents. This further questions Cameron’s judgment in employing (twice) someone to work at the top of Government, whom he continued to see as a friend after Coulson resigned earlier this year.

Secondly, it raises the question what did Murdoch get for all this money that he did not contractually have to pay to someone who had resigned in disgrace from the organisation. What he appears to have got is his own man at the heart of the government in waiting at a time that both his war with the BBC and bid to takeover BSkyB were at their height.

Thirdly, what did Cameron get by taking on soiled goods and not asking questions about who was funding Coulson’s lifestyle? Increasingly it looks as though Coulson was employed and retained for so long because of, not in spite of, his conduct at News International.

Results!

With only one exception that I have come across, there has been warm praise for the achievements of local schools and pupils at this year’s excellent A Level and GCSE results. Can I add my congratulations to the hundreds of students and teachers who worked so hard to achieve their best. And to the Chronicle for its comprehensive school by school coverage.

Andy