IBAF, planning, S106, Hounslow Highways and more planning,
I was just thinking this had been a quiet week – and  contrasting it to last week where I was dead busy and contrived to forget to  mention my very enjoyable if short visit to the fun day at Clayponds Community  Centre - when I remembered that last Thursday was quite a day, with our  continuing working group on management of housing repairs and development in  the morning, and what you might call a very full evening at the Isleworth and  Brentford Area Forum, at the Free Church.
          
This started with a lengthy discussion and passionate  evidence for and against the experimental closure to traffic of Church Street  in Isleworth (think London Apprentice). As Paul Fisher mentioned in the forum,  this is the kind of issue that is a real pain for councillors with (judging by  my postbag) about 60% of people passionately in favour of the proposal and 40%  just as passionately opposed. So whichever way we decide about half the  population will characterise us as grasping, corrupt, self-serving bandits (all  true of course). Anyway, under the admirable chairmanship of Mel Collins, all  sides were heard and we voted unanimously to go ahead with the trial. 
The rest of the (very looong) meeting was mostly concerned  with planning stuff: the area forum has no jurisdiction over planning but Mel  thought – and I agree with him – that it would be good to have the issues aired  in public. The three planning matters discussed were retrospective approval for  the Floreat primary free school which has opened in Trico House, GWQ; the  detailed application for the Brentford FC development at Lionel Road; and an  application for the Nishkam ‘Sikh Ethos’ free school, already temporarily  established in an office block on London Road Isleworth, to develop a large new  ‘all-through’ school on the Metropolitan Open Land known as the Conquest or  White Lodge Club near Tesco in Osterley. Longish debates on each none of which  could be said to be universally popular and I won’t go into detail. Each will  have their day in planning.
I decided to have the weekend off from council related  activities. On Saturday I took a friend of mine – a Brit now living in Vienna -  to the air forces memorial at Runnymede. His enthusiasm for going there seemed  out of character until he pointed out that he’s Jewish and the heroics of allied  air forces very probably saved his whole family from being wiped out. A  salutory thought. I spent the rest of the weekend working on the draft business  plan for Thamesbank Credit Union, an activity I have been putting off for  months so it was a good feeling to get something ready for discussion by my  co-directors.
Monday’s main activity was a meeting with Hounslow Highways  at their depot, together with a very helpful council officer, for them to  explain to me how they decide which roads and pavements should be resurfaced  and which merely patched up. They really pushed the boat out with a number of  their experts and a detailed Powerpoint presentation and I learned quite a few  things I didn’t previously know. I’ve been mulling over the presentation since then  and asking supplementary questions, but a couple of things stand out. Firstly,  the impression that I (and I think a lot of others) had that all roads and  pavements would be resurfaced was never part of the plan. Second, Hounslow has  risen from 24th to 4th place for road condition amongst  London Boroughs, as measured by the Department for Transport. Not a lot of  people know that. 
Later on Monday I moseyed round the Novotel for the  exhibition about the plan to turn the Alfa Laval tower into a Hyundai showroom.  I was driving for a change and was struck by another cache of new Mercedes in  the underground car park. There are still dozens of them in the flats where I  live and they’re beginning to rival Goddards vans for ubiquity around  Brentford. Maybe the pressure from Mercedes parking on Clayponds Avenue and  thereabouts has reduced? Somehow I doubt it. I was I think only the third  visitor to the exhibition (special agent Collins was the fourth I believe) so  the six people hanging round were very eager to talk, though Myra Savin  reported that someone had gone to see it only to find it closed. Seems a good  use for the tower but we’re concerned about access and parking.
Tuesday morning, the three Brentford councillors meet with  Theo Dennison at the Watermans to talk about S106 money and ideas for Brentford  in the next round coming soon (any ideas welcome – email me or Mel or Myra) .  
Wednesday afternoon, another tricky housing issue and in the evening my first  meet with the Boston Manor Residents Association.
This councilloring is small on quick wins (though street  light 11 in Lateward Road is now working, hurrah) but the bigger stuff takes a  long time and dogged determination. I can’t claim any big successes but it was  great to see Mel bringing a long-standing housing problem to resolution this  week, and somebody actually thanking him.
      
      Guy Lambert      
September 24, 2015
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