Trimmer Hall, meetings, Great West Corridor, techno-rave, social care and Cranford
On Friday we had our regular ward meeting between the three  councillors. Mel is rapidly back up to speed after his brief holiday being  pampered in W Middlesex and these meetings are good for us all to keep each  other on track: it’s all too easy to let things drift for longer than they  should, particularly when the public don’t remind us. This is not how any of us  want to run though. We want to grasp issues and keep them in the oven until  they are well and truly cooked.
          
Some things appear to be cooked but then are sent back for a  further roasting – this week it’s Sarah Trimmer Hall down on Kew Bridge Road.  Planning rejected an application to turn it into three homes a month or two ago  but now the request has resurfaced: we agree to try and preserve this very  historic building as a single unit. 
Newer things on our radar include the Great West Corridor consultation.  I agree to draft a  response and share it with fellow councillors and a few others before  submitting. The main thing for me is to ensure the GWR and Brentford High  Street area are treated in different ways, because they have very different  features and roles in our town. We also have a techno-rave to contend with  (we’ve just seen an application for a licence for an event in Boston Manor Park  in the summer) and we’re trying to work out with friends groups, council  officers etc what is actually proposed and what impact it will have on the rest  of us, if sanctioned. And we’re trying to find out how the buildings between  the Express Tavern and Kew Bridge Station got flattened contrary to planning  permission, what we can do about it and how we can make sure the look of the  conservation area can be restored.
Saturday I got a free pass from surgeries (thanks Myra for  taking on Clayponds Gardens) so I could go to an Association of Labour  Councillors session in Nottingham. Fascinating for a new boy (Boy? Ha!) and  lots of food for thought. I found myself twittering uncontrollably (follow me  @guylambert) about this and that, the most memorable things being that the 10  poorest councils have suffered cuts EIGHTEEN TIMES bigger than the ten richest.  Go figure. Oh, and every £1 spent on local government social care saves £70 in NHS  acute care – pretty astonishing. And I subsequently find out that 83% of the  fund to ease council cuts will go to Conservative councils. You know it makes  sense. 
On Sunday I went for the first time for a bit to Brentford  Market. It’s still trundling along if a bit less busy than in the summer and I  got to try a ‘cut dog’ from Brazil. Ornithologists note that if you want to see  a gathering of the Lesser Spotted Hounslow Councillor there’s a good chance of  a sighting at the Market.
Monday evening a briefing on changes to adult safeguarding  and mental health services which have changed following the 2014 Care Act.  You’ll be surprised to hear (or not) that the Act has increased the  requirements on local authorities at a time of severe financial pressure. It’s  easy even for a councillor to forget that Children’s and Adult Services are far  and away the largest element of our spending, accounting for practically half  of our net spend as an authority, a lot of this invisible except to those who  use the services personally or via a family member.
Tuesday I decided to lend a hand with the Cranford  by-election, which comes around on Thursday 11th (today, in fact, as  a glance at my watch confirms. I’ll be heading West at about 9.30 to help out  on polling day). They do things differently in Cranford and our candidate Sukhbir  Dhaliwal has served three previous terms as a councillor, two of them in  Cranford. First time I’d met him and he told me he decided to stand as the  public demanded it – bit like a Frank Sinatra comeback tour – and certainly  there was a really warm response on the doorsteps. He’ll be a real asset to the  council if he makes it with the voters.
Wednesday was a complicated day, starting out with  jump-starting my daughter’s car and accompanying her to a battery place  followed by a quick visit to West Middlesex Hospital to lend a bit of support  to the junior doctors. Jeremy Hunt says they are too thick to understand the  offer and that the poor lambs have been misled by the wicked BMA. The ones  outside West Mid must have been untypical because they all seemed to be highly  intelligent and they seemed to think it was Jeremy who’s doing the misleading.  Perhaps it’s him that’s the thick one (or perhaps he has his own little project  – junk the NHS as his book a few years ago advocated, so the bonanza for US  healthcare firms predicted by consultancies gathers pace). Somebody had given  the doctors doughnuts, so I gave them a short lecture on healthy eating, barely  audible in the cacophony of car horns of those showing their support.
Straight from there to what used to be Motorwise on the High  Street and is now the Friends of Cathja charity shop and cafe. This was the  opening with many volunteers and others in attendance and Cllr Sue Sampson  cutting the ribbon. Myra Savin was there but only so she could get first pick  of the stock in the shop. She picked up a book on women in the 1760s –  nostalgic for her childhood I suppose. There was heaps of energy and some  really good art contributed by the people who attend Cathja (a barge in  Isleworth which supports people with mental health troubles) and this new shop  and café could make a great new community hub. People were putting ideas on  post-its and sticking them to flip charts, offering or asking for services in  the community. Brentfordians give it a go – it would be great to see it buzzing  like yesterday but for the avoidance of doubt they do NOT do MoTs.
In the afternoon I finished my draft response to the Great  West Corridor consultation and put it out… to consultation. Various exchanges  of emails, mainly about parking nightmares on the Haverfield estate and  thereabouts before heading off to the Labour branch meeting down at Isleworth  Public Hall. There was a small, peaceful protest outside by Paul Slattery and  his supporters. Myra had done a good written report on our ward activities for  members and I was taken to task on one or two things. Contrary to popular  belief councillors love this because it allows us to understand people’s  concerns, explain our thinking and if appropriate modify our approach. 
Time to mosey on out to Cranford…
Guy Lambert
February 11, 2016
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