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Frank on the doorstep on Royal College Street and St Pancras Way

Posted on December 4th, 2009 by tomc. Filed under Cantelowes, Kentish Town.


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Frank Dobson MP with Cantelowes Labour campaigner, Angela Mason, outside Foster Court on Royal College Street

Our MP, Frank Dobson, hit the streets last weekend to meet the residents of Royal College Street and St Pancras Way, and take up their concerns where he could help.

Frank spoke to local people about issues ranging from improving the NHS to the Council’s cuts to our youth clubs, joining local campaigners, Phil Jones and Angela Mason.  One of the recurring themes was the continued failure of Lib Dem/Tory Camden Council to provide decent housing services to leaseholders and tenants alike, including the unpopular selling off of council housing to private developers despite Camden’s 18,000 waiting list.  Frank is giving his full support to Camden Labour’s fight to provide a decent place to live for all, including retaining our local council housing stock.

Frank with local campaigners Jenny Headlam-Wells and Phil Jones on Kentish Town Road

Frank with local Labour campaigners Jenny Headlam-Wells and Phil Jones on Kentish Town Road

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Post Office Service Saved!

Posted on November 13th, 2009 by camdenlabour. Filed under Regents Park.


Cllr Theo Blackwell, Tulip Siddiq, Ciaran Henderson and Sabrina Francis outside the old Albany Street Post Office

Cllr Theo Blackwell, Tulip Siddiq, Ciaran Henderson and Sabrina Francis outside the old Albany Street Post Office

Good news for Regent’s Park ward!  thanks to pressure from local people, the Post Office have agreed to the opening of a new branch on Albany Street in February, after a short consultation process, just yards away from the old one!

The new Post Office will be open longer on Saturdays and will mean that people will not have to travel up to the crowded Camden Town branch anymore.  We will have a neighbourhood branch again.

The Regent’s Park Labour Action Team, who pressured Camden Council and government ministers to re-open a branch, would like to thank all local people who took the time to write in and make their views heard, and the Post Office officials we have been in touch with since for listening.

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Visit us every Saturday at the Queen’s Crescent Street Stall

Posted on November 12th, 2009 by camdenlabour. Filed under Gospel Oak.


Frank Dobson MP on Queen's Crescent with local Gospel Oak campaigners

Frank Dobson MP on Queen's Crescent with local Gospel Oak campaigners

Frank Dobson MP joined Gospel Oak candidates, Sean, Larraine, and Zoë for a campaign day on 7th November in Queen’s Crescent Market.  The day was a great success – many local activists joined in, and even the sun came out for the occasion!

The Gospel Oak Labour stall has become a regular feature in Queen’s Crescent Market.  Last Saturday, the red Labour balloons proved so popular with local children, that they had to form a queue!

Gospel Oak ward rejoins the Holborn and St. Pancras constituency in the next election following the recent boundary changes.  Local shoppers were delighted to meet Frank, returning as their Labour parliamentary candidate.

Queen’s Crescent is home to one of the oldest street markets in London.  The market is the central meeting point of the ward.  Yet, it was sadly overlooked in the recent “My Camden” Booklet, and is in need of funds and development.

Gospel Oak Labour will continue to campaign in support of the market.  We believe that Queen’s Crescent should be restored as a vibrant shopping venue for local residents, providing vital local services.

Sean, Larraine, and Zoë would love to see you next time you’re in Queen’s Crescent Market, so please stop by for a chat.  The stall runs every Saturday, weather permitting, from 11.00 a.m. outside Queen’s Crescent Community Centre. If you can’t make it to the stall you can always send us your local issues or register your support by emailing gospeloak@camdenlabour.org.uk

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Campaign to reinstate dedicated Street Warden service

Posted on October 24th, 2009 by sarahh. Filed under Cuts, Kings Cross, Street Wardens.


Until June 2008 King’s Cross had a dedicated Street Warden service. The Street Wardens had been instrumental in reducing crime and anti-social behaviour in the area. But despited the huge success of the service, and completely ignoring the wishes of local people and councillors alike the Liberal Democrat led Camden Council scrapped the dedicated service for King’s Cross.

Now every time we speak to local people, on the doorstep, at meetings and on the phone the first thing they raise is the rise in anti-social behaviour and the return of crimes like on street drug dealing and prosititution. You don’t need to take our word for this – have a look at the ward based crime figures from the Met Police.

With local people we fought the removal of the service in the first place. Now with over a years evidence of rising crime and anti-social behaviour – enough is enough. King’s Cross needs this service to stop it sliding back to the bad old days. You can support our local campaign by signing our petition.

Meanwhile we’re really busy working with police and council officers to try and get action on some of the worst behaviour. If you’re experiencing crime or anti-social behaviour let us or the police know, it will help us build evidence and tackle the problem.

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Frank Dobson fights Lib Dem cuts in Maiden Lane

Posted on October 20th, 2009 by camdenlabour. Filed under Cantelowes, Frank Dobson MP, Somers Town, Youth cuts.


Local Activist Phil Jones at the Maiden Lane Community Centre
Local campaigner, Phil Jones, is helping fight the Lib Dem cuts

Holborn & St Pancras MP Frank Dobson has sent the following letter to residents affected by Camden Lib Dem’s proposed cuts to the Maiden Lane Community Centre.  You can read about the cuts here.

“For years now the youth club at Maiden Lane Community Centre has been doing a really good job.  Everybody benefits – the young people benefit and everybody else benefits.  The youth workers have come to command the attention and trust of young people and as a result the young people behave better.  They even do better at school.  That, in turn benefits everybody else because the young people cause less trouble and nuisance to people who live on or around Maiden Lane.

Sadly the future of the club is threatened because the Lib Dems running Camden Council are withdrawing the grant that keeps it going.  The young people and their parents are devastated.  The police have described this decision as an “absolute disaster”.  And they are right.  This savage cut is nothing to do with the credit crunch.  The Lib Dem local councillors decided on this cut.  Nobody else has been involved in this decision.  The councillors didn’t do it because the Council is short of money.  In fact, Camden Council has reserves of £100 million.  As a result of the public outcry the Council have promised a small ‘one off’ grant.  But don’t be fooled.  It isn’t enough to keep the youth club going.

At the protest meeting I attended at the Community Centre on Wednesday 16 September I was impressed by the young people themselves, the youth workers, the police and the United Maidens mothers group.  At the meeting I pledged my continued support for families, for children and for young people on Maiden Lane.  I was heavily involved in the successful effort to get the children’s play equipment renewed a few years ago and in the effort to get the football pitches brought up to date.  The recent decision by Kentish Town tenants to pay to fence the pitch and provide floodlighting should be another step forward.  So to close the youth club on Maiden Lane would be a real stab in the back for the efforts of local people.

I will do whatever I can to support bids for extra money from charities but in the end what is needed is for the Lib Dem Camden Councillors to change their minds and pay up.”

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Camden Labour welcomes nation-topping affordable homes boost

Posted on September 11th, 2009 by camdenlabour. Filed under Housing.


Camden is set to be the most significant beneficiary of the government’s new affordable home building programme.
Housing Minister John Healey Thursday confirmed yet another boost for affordable housing with news of a nearly £250 million investment to provide 3400 affordable homes and creating around 5,000 jobs.
In all, 43 Housing Associations across 97 council areas and within every region of the country will benefit from the funding boost.  Camden is set to receive the highest amount, £42 million for 284 homes.
All the new homes announced this week will be affordable, with more than four in every five built for low cost rent, and the rest for first time buyers.

Labour Group leader Cllr. Nasim Ali welcomed the £42 million investment – the largest sum in the country:

“Every councillor knows that housing is the number one concern local people have at our surgeries.  Locally Labour’s never stopped lobbying for more affordable housing, so £42 million for 300 new homes is fantastic news. It’s the largest settlement in the country and this will help families in overcrowded housing as well as first time buyers. This stands in stark contrast to the Lib Dem-led council and their policy of auctioning off council flats on the open market.”

The regional breakdown of today’s Housing Association funding allocation, with new homes by rent and low cost home ownership (LCHO) identified separately is:


FOR RENT

LCHO

TOTAL

GRANT

(£m)

HOMES

GRANT (£m)

HOMES

GRANT (£m)

HOMES

East Midlands

5.832

121

0.543

30

6.375

151

Eastern

2.327

51

7.867

209

10.194

260

London

127.093

975

9.082

255

136.175

1,230

North East

0.383

12

0.218

8

0.601

20

North West

5.373

90

0.923

26

6.296

116

South East

32.902

448

7.920

261

40.822

709

South West

30.551

468

5.940

110

36.491

578

West Midlands

4.770

122

2.007

73

6.777

195

Yorkshire and Humberside

0.855

73

1.332

81

2.187

154

Total

210.086

2,360

35.832

1,053

245.918

3,413

ii) The breakdown of the Housing Association funding allocation by council area and number of new homes is:

AREA

GRANT (£m)

HOMES

Adur

2,400

48

Allerdale

0.371

5

Arun

0.523

10

Basingstoke and Deane

11.701

178

Bedford

5.980

153

Birmingham

0.247

4

Blackburn

0.243

4

Bournemouth

0.550

10

Breckland

0.116

1

Bristol

0.000

16

Bromley

4.364

31

Calderdale

0.000

15

Camden

42.665

284

Charnwood

0.500

8

Chelmsford

0.176

4

Cherwell

7.022

113

Chichester

0.731

10

Copeland

0.000

8

Cornwall

1.823

27

Crawley

0.520

8

Croydon

0.058

64

Darlington

0.000

5

Dartford

0.089

1

Derbyshire Dales

1.523

30

Doncaster

0.000

2

Dudley

0.127

2

East Hampshire

0.840

14

East Lindsey

0.420

16

East Riding

0.057

1

Eden

0.600

10

Enfield

0.222

5

Guildford

0.200

8

Hackney

2.146

24

Harrogate

0.250

5

Havering

35.818

357

Herefordshire

0.000

18

Hinckley and Bosworth

0.249

14

Kettering

1.716

22

Kings Lynn and West Norfolk

0.804

14

Kingston upon Hull

0.035

1

Kirklees

0.000

14

Leeds

0.605

11

Leicester

0.020

1

Lewisham

0.000

31

Mid Devon

0.516

23

Mid Sussex

2.105

41

Newcastle upon Tyne

0.175

3

Newham

7.690

63

North East Derbyshire

0.140

4

North Kesteven

0.257

9

North Lincolnshire

0.000

7

North Norfolk

0.064

4

North Warwickshire

0.780

12

North WestLeicestershire

0.634

11

Norwich

0.126

2

Oldham

0.051

1

Plymouth

1.318

22

Portsmouth

0.780

12

Redbridge

4.988

30

Reigate and Banstead

0.255

4

Richmond upon Thames

4.520

52

Rossendale

0.700

10

Rotherham

0.000

10

Salford

0.840

12

Sandwell

0.073

1

Sevenoaks

0.640

13

Sheffield

0.000

30

Shropshire Council

3.339

82

Solihull

0.052

1

South Gloucestershire

2.800

56

South Norfolk

0.068

1

South Staffordshire

0.095

1

Southampton

0.570

10

Southwark

4.408

36

Stafford

0.068

1

Stevenage

0.540

9

Stockport

0.369

6

Stockton-on-Tees

0.208

4

Stratford upon Avon

0.079

1

Tandridge

1.571

25

Taunton Deane

5.078

74

Teignbridge

0.835

15

Test Valley

4.239

52

Tower Hamlets

28.787

245

Wakefield

0.056

8

Walsall

0.052

1

Waltham Forest

0.021

1

Wandsworth

0.490

7

Waveney

0.076

1

Wealden

3.437

63

Welwyn Hatfield

0.130

2

West Lindsey

0.648

19

Wirral

0.920

14

Wolverhampton

0.049

1

Worcester City

0.735

15

Worthing

0.479

7

Wychavon

0.000

3

Total

212.556

2,744

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Camden Belsize Park council flats ‘flipped’ by developers

Posted on September 1st, 2009 by camdenlabour. Filed under Housing.


Camden council flats in desirable Belsize Park NW3, bought at auction by private developers earlier this year, have been ‘flipped’, for a potentially massive profit – Camden Labour can reveal.

Sold as part of Tory-Lib Dem Camden’s council house sales programme, a three flat home on the Russell Nurseries Estates in Aspern Grove only left council control at the start of last month, when it was snapped up at auction for £560,000.

Now just one of the flats is being marketed for buyers at the sum of £250,000 – a price the estate agent described on their website as “unbelievable” – allowing the buyer to make a substantial profit almost overnight.

This is despite the fact that there are 18,000 people on Camden’s waiting lists.

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Frank Dobson speaking at Somali Youth event

Posted on July 20th, 2009 by camdenlabour. Filed under Frank Dobson MP, Youth.


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Labour opposition forces investigation into low pay at Camden Council

Posted on May 27th, 2009 by camdenlabour. Filed under Local, Services.


Labour and Green councillors secured a narrow victory in securing an investigation into low pay for cleaners, care workers and dinner ladies at Camden Council.  Despite opposition from ruling Lib Dem councillors, on the casting vote of the Labour chair of the Resource & Corporate Performance Committee the influential committee decided to press ahead with an investigation into the matter.
 
In a disputed decision, the Tory/Lib Dem run council will now research the issue of low pay at Camden Council in time to discuss the tendering of part-time worker contracts in July 2009. 
 
Cllrs Linda Cheung (Lib Dem, Hampstead Town) and Cllr. Nick Russell (Lib Dem, Kentish Town) voted against reviewing low paid contracts and the possibility of introducing the £7.60 an hour London Living Wage at Camden, while Cllr. Theo Blackwell (Labour, Regent’s Park) and Adrian Oliver (Green, Highgate) voted in favour.  The decision to go ahead with 2-2 was made by the casting vote of the Chair.  No Conservatives were present at the meeting.
 
Chair of the Committee and Opposition Finance spokesperson Cllr. Theo Blackwell said:
 
It doesn’t surprise me that the Lib Dems are against the London Living Wage, they also oppose the National Minimum Wage.”
 
The council outsourced residential caretakers and now wants to privatise Talacre sport centre staff.  They are doing so without a commitment to pay people a decent London minimum.  Everyone knows if you depress wages at the bottom it impacts on wages higher up the scale.  If you carry on like this pretty soon you’ll have a recruitment crisis, or no local people will be there to do these jobs.
 
It’s clear that the view from on high is that the council doesn’t want to open what it sees as a can of worms.  The council legal advice is suspect.  They say it can’t be done, despite other councils committing to this and the Mayor of London seeing the higher London rate as good morally good and for morale and productivity.
 
In the 2009 Budget Labour proposed an amendment to stop bonuses for senior council staff (totalling £300,000 a year) until the issue of low paid had been addressed.  They also argued against proposals that 3 Lib Dem backbench councillors should be paid an extra £5000 a year for their work.
 
Cllr. Blackwell added:
 
High wages and bonuses are no problem for the council, but when they consider low pay it suddenly becomes all to expensive.  Camden’s own figures for school cleaners, cooks and low paid carers show that this would cost £1 million, about 1% on council tax.  Last year Camden made a surplus of £13 million through cutting services and higher charges for the very services they continue to pay people poorly.
 
Background
1.  Research into low pay will be discussed at the July 21 meeting.
 
2.  The Resources & Corporate Performance Scrutiny Committee had previously discussed a report in October 2008 on the Council’s contracts to assess whether the London Living Wage is the minimum paid by the Council and it’s contractors.  This also examined whether there is a legal basis for Camden to ensure that contractors pay the London Living Wage and for a review of the performance of the cleaning contract, including health and safety issues, and to assess whether there was a correlation between lower rates of pay for staff and performance.  It was agreed, subject to the new Committee’s agreement in the next Council year, that the issue would be looked in more detail.      The Camden report stated that the National Minimum Wage is the minimum paid by the Council and its contractors, rather than London Living Wage.  Camden’s initial report gave the view that, based on a small sample of indicative figures, applying the London Living Wage as a contractual requirement would result in a financial impact which could amount to a 20% increase on costs on contracts or £1 million a year (approximately 1% on council tax).  Low paid Camden care workers, caterers and cleaners are currently paid more than £1 an hour under the London Living Wage. 
 
3.  The National Minimum Wage is set at £5.73 and the London Living Wage, called the “minimum acceptable quality of life in the city” by Boris Johnson is now set at £7.60 (a difference of 30% between the National Minimum Wage and the London Living Wage).  City Hall estimates that currently almost half (47%) all part-time staff working in London and 15% of full-time workers are still paid below the London living wage. One in seven London employees is paid less than £6.65 per hour.

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Ali to KO Town Hall coalition

Posted on May 8th, 2009 by camdenlabour. Filed under Camden Labour.


The Camden Labour Party last night selected Nasim Ali, a 40 year old two-term councillor and community organiser, to lead the Party forward in next year’s local elections.  Ali, a well known figure and former Mayor of Camden, grew up on the Regent’s Park Estate, NW1 and helped pioneer Camden United Football project to bring local young people from white and asian communities together in south Camden. 
 
As a councillor Nasim, known as Nash, was instrumental in pressing for major community benefits in his ward from the large British Land development in Osnaburgh Street .  This resulted a substantial contribution which has helped to rebuild the Samuel Lithgow Youth Club, providing a new community facility for local young people on the Regent’s Park Estate. 
 
He is currently Chair of the Healthy Families Partnership at King’s Cross, a governor of Netley Primary School and also Chair of the West Euston Partnership Planning Working Group.  Nash won the Camden Good Citizen Award, now called the EPIC, in 1998.
 
Cllr Ali said:
 
I want to restore Camden ’s ambition to promote fairness and social justice in the borough I grew up in and am now raising my young family.  I am a product of our local schools and grew up in a Camden council flat.
 
“I want a positive vision for Camden Labour.  I am proud to be part of a Labour movement which nurtured excellent schools, established affordable childcare for the first time and supported the best and most vibrant voluntary sector in London .
 
“The Town Hall Lib Dems and Conservatives are short sighted and don’t share this vision, I have seen how they work and that’s why they need challenge. 
 
“The parents and pupils of Edith Neville, a very successful community primary school in Somers Town , were left high and dry by the coalition last year as part of a shabby political deal to rush through their school building programme in time for the 2010 election.  This alienated school governors and the local community.  They should be ashamed of themselves and how they have acted.
 
“They have also dragged their feet on more school places and a school south of the Euston Road , despite hoarding nearly 100 million pounds from budget surpluses, fewer community services and higher fees.
 
“The council stood by and allowed Boris Johnson to cut funding for major jobs and training schemes in Kings Cross and Swiss Cottage just at the time when people needed them.  Camden is currently taking money away from Kilburn Town Centre on the sly and has cut funding for successful projects in Highgate. 
 
“The number one priority for me will be more housing for local people.  Policies based on need must be restored to the centre of policy again, rather than the sight of council flats sold off or rented to the highest bidder.
 
“Community groups and youth clubs, the fabric of what makes Camden great, should be nurtured rather than run down.  Vulnerable members of the community should not be forced to pay for the recession through increased charges for council services like meals on wheels.

 
Also elected last night as Deputy Leader of the Group was Councillor Jonathan Simpson, who added:
 
Labour has a refreshed and exciting team going ahead.  It is representative of the community we serve and democratically selected, which is more than can be said for the other political parties. 
 
“We want to see changes at the Town Hall, which is increasingly stagnant and bereft of ideas for our borough.  All the coalition seem to be interested in these days is tactical advantage for the next elections, not community gain
.”
 
Outgoing leader Cllr. Anna Stewart, who is stepping down in 2010 said:
 
You don’t get much more local than Nash, he’s a Camden success story.  In his year as Mayor and then on Camden’s Executive he showed how we brings people from all communities together.  His positive, community-based approach will challenge the complacent politics as usual at the Town Hall.”
 
In other appointments Labour elected veteran Roger Robinson as Chief Whip of the opposition party; Theo Blackwell as opposition Finance spokesperson and nominee for the Resources and Corporate Performance Scrutiny Committee and Heather Johnson nominee for Chair of the Children, Schools and families scrutiny committee.
 
Notes:
 
Councillor Nasim Ali (Regent’s Park) Labour’s new Leader, has been a Labour Party Member since May 1993 and a Labour Councillor on the London Borough of Camden since May 2002. He is also the Chair of the Camden Bangladeshi Mela Committee.  Nasim grew up on the Regent’s Park Estate, NW1 and went to Netley Primary School and Sir William Collins (now South Camden Community) School.  
 
Nasim, 40, has been employed as a community organiser since 1995. He has a degree in Informal and Community Education from YMCA George Williams College where he is now a governor.  Since 2001 he has been the Executive Director of the King’s Cross Brunswick Neighbourhood Association, providing a range of services to improve the quality of life of local residents, young and old.  Nasim was appointed Mayor for Camden at the age of 34 (2003/4). He was the youngest mayor in the country and the first Bangladeshi and Muslim Mayor in Camden .  He also served on the Executive as lead for Community Engagement in 2005.
 
In 1995, he set up the Camden United Project, after the murder of Richard Everitt, a white youth, by a group of Asian youths.  The object of the project was to unite young people in Camden through their common interest in football diverting them away from racism, crime and conflict. 
 
Cllr. Jonathan Simpson (King’s Cross) has been a Councillor since 2002, originally representing Fortune Green ward.  From 2005 to 2006 he was the Chair of Camden’s Licensing Committee.  He now sits on the council’s Licensing and Development Control committees.  In addition to being a hard working local councillor, Jonathan works in the planning sector outside of Camden and is a former special constable.

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