Full Council: Labour denying any errors with Covered Market

Jim presenting his motion

I’m going to do two blog posts about today’s full council meeting as there were two important issues I want to mention. The first is a motion from Cllr Jim Campbell, and Cllr Elise Benjamin about the findings of the Covered Market Scrutiny Review. The motion was fully supported by Cllr Mary Clarkson, a member of the Labour administration of the Council.  Jim, Elise and Mary have all spent many hours working on a big review of the Covered Market, working with The Retail Group who have produced an excellent and comprehensive report.
Jim’s motion read:

“Council:

noting that the latest edition of Your Oxford has a full page  advertising “Oxford’s Amazing Christmas Markets”, which highlights new arrangements at Gloucester Green but makes no mention whatsoever of the Covered Market;

noting further no provision has been made during the Three Day Winter Light Festival to include the Covered Market in its programme;

regretting the lack of trust that has developed between the Council, as  Landlord, and the Traders, as tenants;  

welcoming the excellent report of the Retail Group, its analysis of the reasons behind the current under-performance of the Covered Market, and its proposals for how it can once again be a key part of Oxford’s Retail Offer;

hoping that the residents of Oxford will respond, in numbers and in depth, to the four week public consultation on the report;

supporting the Council’s already stated intention to appoint an interim Market Manager,

therefore calls on The City Executive Board:

• to recognise that, in recent years, there has been a lack of effective  management by the Council and that this has been a significant contributory factor to the poor performance of the market;

• to consider thoroughly the findings of the Public Consultation on the future of the market;

• to ensure that the Covered Market has a key role in future City Centre events;

• to respond positively to the short term proposals put forward by the Retail Group;

• to examine in detail the long term proposals made by the Retail Group, and to draw up, by November 2014, a full report of how it will respond to these proposals.”

I was highly dismayed to see and hear Bob Price, the Labour Leader of the Council propose what can only be called a wrecking amendment to the motion that completely removes any suggestion that the council might have done anything wrong or been at all remiss in how it manages the market  Colin Cook, Executive councillor with responsibility for the Covered Market also entirely supported the amendment despite objection to it from fellow Labour Councillor Mary Clarkson who has a huge amount of experience of the Covered Market and has spent many hours as part of the scrutiny review of it.  Colin Cook said he must be a Market Supporter and must be right because he had recently bought some cheese there.  I was quite disgusted that the whole of the rest of the Labour Group, even my Carfax ward colleague Cllr Canning, supported the Labour amendment that essentially takes all the blame off Labour and puts it all on the traders.  This is absolutely not the way the political group leading a local authority should behave.  I am quite ashamed.  This is not the first time I have commented about Labour neglect and arrogance towards the Jewel in Oxford’s Crown that is the Covered Market either.

See my previous posts about Labour Contempt (Oct 12) and Neglect (Sep 11) of the Covered Market.

You can see the briefing note for the meeting, that includes the motions at http://mycouncil.oxford.gov.uk/ieListDocuments.aspx?MId=3120

Pretty impressive work by City Council streetscene team

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Before

On Monday, I reported that the bike markings going into Wellington Square from Little Clarendon Street were very badly faded and that this was sometimes causing conflict between cyclists and pedestrians. I reported this to streetscene@oxford.gov.uk

after

After

I am very impressed that by yesterday evening the lines were re-painted. A big thank you and well done to the council staff that did this. I’m very grateful as I’m sure are all those that use that route regularly, live or work near it.

I know this seems like a small thing but things like this are quite important to lots of people and it’s great to see the Council being so helpful and responsive.

A victory for Gloucester Green residents and their right to sleep at night

roostersI attended a licensing hearing yesterday as ward councillor as I had made a representation against an application for yet another late night takeaway on Gloucester Green. The application was by a food outlet very similar to the other two that are already there with late night licences.

Although I like to see businesses thrive in my ward, there always must be a balance between the needs of business and the needs of residents. The problem with having lots of late night food outlets on Gloucester Green is that it is more-or-less en route to taxis and buses for people leaving the bars and clubs.   Many of these now shut at 3am and do so for most nights of the week what with different themed nights for students, locals, and other groups etc.  The effect of the takeaways is to make the (often drunk and aggressive) people gather and it makes it very hard for the Police to encourage them to go home.  As Thames Valley Police said at the hearing there has been a marked increase in crime and disorder or Gloucester Green since the later food outlets have been open and this is in direct contravention to the licensing objective of reducing crime and disorder.  Although CCTV and SIA-registered door supervisors were requested, these still won’t stop drunk people making a lot of noise and causing much public nuisance for the residents of Gloucester Green – the flats called the Chilterns and the Heyes.  Prevention of public nuisance is another licensing objective that the licensing act says licences should encourage.  It seemed clear to me that this one would not do that.

In my speech I did suggest it might be just about bearable to allow this new business to trade until 2am and that would mean it closed before most of the club but unfortunately the applicant was not able or willing to pay for door supervisors so in the end the panel made what I think was the right decision and rejected the application in its entirety.  This means the outlet will not be allowed to trade past 11pm, as is the current situation.

I have written to all residents of Gloucester Green today to tell them this good news and hope it might well be the start of a move to cut back the hours of some of the other food outlets in the area so that they don’t attract the crime and disorder and public nuisance that is currently blighting Gloucester Green in the small hours at a totally unacceptable level.

This blog post has no official status as a record of the licensing hearing and I can’t guarantee it’s error free so please don’t rely on it. Written notification of the decision is available from the Council.

Planning application for St Cross College rejected

St Cross College submitted a planning application over the summer I was quick to alert residents in the immediate area about it.  It would be fair to say that the area of the application site does need some sorting out as it’s a bit of a mess at the moment but it seems to me that the St Cross planning application had some features that seemed more about ticking boxes than actually doing some appropriate development.

I worked with the St. John Street area Residents’ Association and had a very constuctive meeting with them back on 10th August to help better understand their concerns and work out how best to articulate those to the council and to the members of the West Area Planning Committee who would be determining the application.  I was impressed at how well people pulled together to get all the points in a high-impact, extremely effective summary that was delivered to the planning committee when it met.

stx

I think the image here shows how the design with very square and blocky features would just jar terribly against the existing chapel and against the roof-lines of the existing St. John Street properties.

As it turned out, despite the planning department recommending approval of this rather inappropriate proposal, most members of the West Area Planning committee voted against the proposal so it was rejected.   The application fell 6 against, 2 for (Cllrs Cook & Gotch in favour; Cllrs Van Nooijen, Tanner, Price, Canning, Clack & Jones against).  I believe this is the right result and I hope that a more suitable proposition will be forthcoming in the future so that St Cross can build the extra accommodation it badly needs without doing quite so much damage to the amenity and beauty of this sensitive part of Oxford’s historic centre.

Thames Valley Police and Crime Panel

image tweeted by @biloddy

I attended this meeting today because I am the opposition shadow for crime and community safety on the council. Oxford’s member on the panel is Cllr Pat Kennedy, the Oxford City Executive Board member with that portfolio.  The panel’s job is to hold the Police and Crime Commissioner for Thames Valley to account.  This Commissioner’s area covers Oxon, Berks and Bucks so is rather large – it has one member from every principal local authority in the area, giving a membership of:

Councillor Bill Bendyshe-Brown (Wycombe District Council), Councillor Mark Booty (West Oxfordshire District Council), Councillor Noel Brown (Chiltern District Council), Terry Burke (Independent Co-opted Member), Councillor Anita Cranmer (South Buckinghamshire District Council), Councillor Trevor Egleton (Buckinghamshire County Council), Councillor Jesse Grey (Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead), Councillor Bill Jones (Vale of White Horse District Council), Councillor Pat Kennedy (Oxford City Council), Councillor Kieron Mallon (Oxfordshire County Council) (Vice-Chairman), Councillor Iain McCracken (Bracknell Forest Council), Councillor Tony Page (Reading Borough Council), Councillor Barrie Patman (Wokingham Borough Council), Councillor Pam Pearce (Aylesbury Vale District Council), Councillor George Reynolds (Cherwell District Council), Councillor Bill Service (South Oxfordshire District Council), Councillor Mohammed Sharif (Slough Borough Council), Rajinder Sohpal (Independent Co-opted Member), Councillor Cec Tallack (Milton Keynes Council) and Councillor Quentin Webb (West Berkshire Council)

It elected a chair and vice chair today for the year, and we heard the Police and Crime Panel Annual report as well as the annual report from the commissioner himself.  There was a bit of a silly debate about the Commissioner’s expenses where the panel decided it was not its remit to decide if the Commissioner should have a driver or not.  There was a report from the Oxford Safer Communities Partnership, which I think does great work in our City an update on issues particularly of importance to Oxford as a City.  There was an update on operation Bullfinch from Chief Constable Sara Thornton and Superintendent Christian Bunt and they also gave an excellent overview of the work Thames Valley Police is doing to develop multi-agency approaches to child sexual exploitation.

At the end of the meeting Cllr Kennedy and I asked about the closure of the custody suite at St. Aldate’s police station meaning that all prisoners would now have to be taken to Abingdon.  I felt assured by Supt. Bunt that this was a sensible move as the Oxford facilities are awkward being at the top of the building and rather past their sell-by date.   He said he would circulate a short memo to councillors addressing concerns about the risk of new arrangements meaning police officers might take longer to get back on the streets after an arrest and I was reassured that vulnerable people arrested in Oxford then released from Abingdon would not be just put on the street with no means to get back to Oxford.

pcpYou can follow the PCP on twitter as @ThamesValleyPCP and the commissioner as @TV_PCC

 

Refugee Week Celebration

This event was held at the Methodist Church on Cowley Road and this year had the theme of restoring hope.  I was welcomed by Dr Antony Kingsley, Deputy Director of Refugee Resource and show around some displays of excellent work that is done to support refugees and those seeking that status (asylum seekers) in and around Oxford.  There is an impressive amount of partnership working too.  I admire the huge amount of work that is done in Oxford by and for refugees and those seeking that status from all parts of the world.  This event was celebrating all that 16 years after the first discussions that Amanda Webb-Johnson (The Director of Refugee Resource) started and 14 years after the formal establishment of Refugee Resource.  I’m told the first Oxford Refugee Week celebration was back in 2006, set up by Eden Habtemichael and the Refugee Women’s group initiative so it’s brilliant that so many volunteers are still registering and that the organisation is going from strength to strength!

eden and grace

There is still much to be done in this important work and our community’s response to this particularly vulnerable group of people in our world.  I know that many are struggling with hardship, isolation, neglect and an uncertain future and that’s why events like this one are so important in helping to restore hope for so many in such desperate situations.

The City Council wants your views on Oxpens

Oxford City Council is launching a public consultation on a planning document that will help shape the future of Oxpens.

The Oxpens site, between Oxford Railway Station, the Westgate Centre and the River Thames, represents one of the most significant development opportunities in the city centre and has the potential to make a valuable contribution to the life and economy of the local area and Oxford as a whole.

The document, known as the Oxpens Masterplan Supplementary Planning Document (SPD), will help to establish appropriate uses for the Oxpens site, which could include houses and flats, offices, research & development (R&D) space, local amenities, green open space, a hotel and a public square. The development is also expected to bring regeneration benefits for neighbouring residents, such as improved public transport and better vehicle, cycle and pedestrian links to the city and surrounding areas.

Oxford City Council has an adopted Core Strategy and West End Area Action Plan which outline the policies for development at the Oxpens site. The purpose of the SPD is to determine how these policies can be interpreted and implemented, and to set out the Council’s aspirations for the site, such as the preferred mix of housing, employment uses, open space and community facilities.

Could you take a few minutes to complete the survey about this, which is open from Monday 17 June until Monday 29 July 2013?  I’ve turned off comments on this post as they really need to be put in the survey.  Thanks!

 

Faiths walking together

interfaith3I took part in the Oxford Council of Faiths friendship walk today and was pleased that the Lord Mayor of Oxford was willing for me to join her as Deputy Lord Mayor in a show of support from the City for events that promote peace and understanding between Oxford’s faiths.  Cllr Abbasi, the Sheriff of Oxford, was also there although not in civic bling (can I say civic bling here?). There were probably 300-400 people on the walk and that included large numbers of local faith leaders and members of local congregations including our minister, Carla, and several members from my own church, St. Columba’s.

interfaith2The Friendship Walk has been happening for many years in Oxford and is a fantastic coming together of many of Oxford’s faiths and their communities.  It starts at the Synagogue in Richmond Road with prayers and then moves along to St. Giles’ Church for more prayers, after which it moves down to Radcliffe Square.  The last leg of the walk is the longest taking the group along the High Street and Cowley Road and up Manzil Way to finish at the Oxford Central Mosque with prayers, singing, speeches and a wonderful meal with the main course provided by folk from the central mosque and desserts from the Oxford Jewish community.   It was great to hear firm and unequivocal condemnation of the killers of the drummer in Woolwich from the Oxford’s Muslim leaders.  I’m sure it’s no more than anyone in Oxford expected and sure is it certainly shared by all faith communities in our City.

All are welcome on the walk and it includes prayers all said together from those of Jewish, Christian, Hindu and Islamic faiths.  Sikhs were also present as well as those of other faiths and none.

interfaith1Against the current national backdrop of increasing violence against those of some faiths, particularly Muslims, I think it is incredibly important for Oxford’s Civic Office holders to show support for all efforts to promote inter-faith cooperation and understanding and I was certainly proud to be part of yesterday’s event.  It is great that we have very little hate in Oxford against any religion and I think it is so important that events like this continue to happen and be well supported so that Oxford may stay like that.  It’s a fantastic opportunity to engage with other people that we don’t know well and to learn a little about them and their faith and to share in some of our common human experience.  It was great to hear firm and unequivocal condemnation of the killers of the drummer in Woolwich from the Oxford Muslim community and I’m sure it’s no more than anyone in Oxford expected and is shared by all faith communities in our City.

My first official engagement as Deputy Lord Mayor

Today I had my first official engagement as Deputy Lord Mayor.  Protocol says that I only attend engagements in this capacity if the Lord Mayor has been invited and cannot attend.  I learned that today she had five requests to attend events – she’s doing 3 and I’m doing 2.

lof_agmI had the great privilege of attending the AGM of the Nuffield Orthopaedic Centre’s (NOC) League of Friends (LOF).  To anyone who thought it was just some little old ladies who make tea I have to say you couldn’t be more wrong!  The NOC LOF is extremely well organised, is almost 50 years old and does a huge amount of good work including running a café and shop, visiting patients on wards, raising serious amounts of money for the hospital and much more!  I was humbled to meet a lady who has been a member of the NOC LOF for 47 years!

We heard from a member of hospital staff about some the equipment and facilities that have been able be be bought due to the support of the LOF and I was amazed to hear that in the last four years he has been able to spend a total of just over £362,000 from grants given by the LOF.  That’s seriously impressive and has enabled new facilities and some therapies not available on the NHS to be funded.

LOF is a steady pillar in the ever changing world of hospitals and healthcare and I know its presence and its services are things that that many patients, relatives and visitors find to be a great comfort.  A LOF volunteer is so much nicer than a vending machine!  I remember myself working on a LOF stall when I was a teenager, with my mother.  We were even allowed to sell cigarettes in those days!

The event was finished off with a fascinating presentation and speech about the Berks/Oxon/Bucks air ambulance.  Did you know that it has been operating since 1999.  Did you know that the helicopter can travel at 150mph and that each call out costs around £2,500 with an average of 3 call-outs per day.  That’s an awful lot of money to raise!

League of Friends is always looking for more volunteers and although many are retired there are also younger people involved and there are no age limits .  The Oxford University Hospitals Trust has a web page about Oxford LOF groups where there is detail about YOU can volunteer.  How about it?  It was good to hear the the Oxford Mail has already helped with the drive for more volunteers too.  It’s great when the local press gets behind local volunteering initiatives that help so many people both directly and indirectly.

A reflection on the events of the last week

The events around the war memorial in Oxford on Saturday June 1st and my blog post about it have prompted wide discussion and activity, including a petition asking me to resign, some articles in the local media and many comments both on my blog post and on the blogs and social media pages of political activists from across the spectrum including the EDL.

As I said in my original posting, I think it is important to engage courteously with people we disagree with, and so I asked the poster of the resignation petition, Beth, for a meeting.  She agreed to that and we met last Friday, each taking someone along to ensure we both recalled what had been said correctly.  We had an open and productive discussion, and I thought it would be helpful to reflect some of that here.

Readers of my original post will recall that I originally attended the war memorial, as a ward councillor, because I abhor the views of groups such as the EDL, and did not want them to be able to use the terrible events in Woolwich as a springboard for stirring up racial tension in Oxford or anywhere else, or as a recruitment tool.  Beth accepts this, and agrees that I am neither a racist myself, nor a defender of racists or indeed fascists.  I entirely reject any EDL attempts to claim me as a supporter and utterly revile its members’ actions of hate and its stated anti-Islamic aims.

Beth maintains that the flowers had already been damaged when the group (she says she is not part of Oxford Unite Against Fascism) arrived, and that they were climbing the war memorial on the prompting of a media photographer.  I appreciate that some photographers will cross the limits of common sense and good taste for a picture, and while I think it was unwise for the group to agree to do it, I have no reason to doubt her account.  I did, however, notice one protester attempting to walk away with some of the flowers and did ask her to put them back, which she did.

There is no doubt that the group was discourteous towards people who may or may not have had any association with the EDL (a Help for Heroes T-shirt does not make someone an EDL member) but it probably was not hate.  I am glad, however, that there was no physical violence last weekend from either side – something that is sadly not true of clashes elsewhere between EDL members and others.

Finally, I understand that just as menacing phone calls have been made pursuing me, a member of Oxford Unite Against Fascism has also received threats at work and at home.  This is clearly unacceptable.  I ask that that Thames Valley Police continues to deal with such threats seriously.

reflectionIn many ways the UK is a society in which people with different views and backgrounds live together peaceably.  That’s particularly the case in Oxford and one of the many reasons I love living here and am proud to serve as a member of Oxford City Council.  But sadly, the existence of groups like the EDL, and the experience of too many people who have suffered violence or discrimination because of their race, religion, sexual orientation, disability or other personal characteristic, reminds us that we still have work to do.  I urge everyone to play their part in defeating hatred this week by reaching out to someone they don’t know well – perhaps a neighbour, perhaps a work colleague – and introducing themselves to each other, much as I did with Beth.  Extremists may try to divide us for their own twisted purposes, but I believe that by building connections, sharing hope and our common humanity we will defeat them together, and build a world in which all people can live free and fulfilling lives together.