Macmillan, Isleworth Calendar Girls, Morrisons site
Last Thursday I was pleased to meet with people from  Hounslow Housing who explained plans they have to make improvements – which  some will say are well overdue – to the way services are delivered to  residents. I can’t go into detail but I was encouraged by the plans.
          
Friday was a succession of brief interludes – first of all  to a very lively coffee morning for Macmillan on Brentford Dock – lots of people  there including MP Ruth Cadbury and Hounslow Mayor Nisar Malik plus of course  all the McMillan volunteers who work so hard to lay these events on. In the  afternoon, down to old Isleworth to visit the art gallery where the originals  for Isleworth’s very own version of Calendar Girls featuring amongst the tasteful  dozen portraits of the artist herself, Lesley Miller, and Councillor Sue  Sampson. All jolly fun and this time I missed Ruth, who apparently opened it  and had to engage with the enemy (Conservative Councillor John Todd!) 
Then off to the Watermans where the Urban Ambush exhibition  was running. This is the output from the summer activities Watermans puts on  for local children. Looking it up on Google I find that Netmums, despite giving  the right address as 40 High St Brentford, have to headline their entry as  ‘Watermans Arts Centre in Richmond’. I hope they’re good swimmers. I thought  this exhibition was really good, especially the two short films that were  running and the cartoon with great facial expressions. No shortage of  creativity amongst our young people and you can see for yourself until October 20th,  free gratis and for nothing (I think, though the website isn’t ultra clear!)
On Saturday I looked into the mini-festival (don’t know what  it was called) in old Isleworth. I was fancying a German hot dog but they all  seemed to be a foot long and I decided my appetite wasn’t up to it. Still, a  nice down-home event.
On Monday evening it was my first engagement with the  Pensions Panel – where we oversee management of the pension fund for Hounslow  employees, past and present. This is a very complicated activity of which I  have a little experience from previous lives. A long and fascinating meeting,  with various advisers and fund managers being grilled and in some cases basted.
On Wednesday Mel, Myra and I had one of our regular  get-togethers to update each other on actions.  Mel is very pleased at present because in the  last week he’s managed to get a satisfactory outcome to two long-standing  housing problems, so congratulations to him and the housing team. The main  thing that has arisen in the last couple of weeks is the purchase of the  freehold on the Morrisons site by a company called Essential Living, who are in  the business of developing private rental accommodation. Of course, the  Morrisons site is in Syon ward so technically in the remit of the Syon councillors,  but it goes without saying that Morrisons is an important part of life for  those who live in Brentford ward! The site is ‘zoned’ in the Local Plan as 75%  retail and we’re all agreed – as is Ruth Cadbury who has written a letter to  the new owners’ consultants on the subject – that the retention of Morrisons or  a similar supermarket on the site (and adequate parking) is essential. This  includes the necessity for a supermarket to operate throughout and we would  oppose any idea that Morrisons could be knocked down and a new supermarket  built ‘later’. We’ll be watching and looking to influence developments (no pun  intended) here closely.
As a break from council activities I have been helping my  daughter to buy an old banger over the last couple of days so she can get to  her teacher training course without spending 3 hours a day on buses. Finally  achieved on Wednesday evening, just in time for me to report to Labour party  headquarters in Chiswick to bid farewell to our election agent, James  Swindlehurst. He has decided to get a life by giving up his (theoretically)  part time role here to dedicate more time to being a councillor in Slough, and  learning the saxophone. James is a top guy, and was a huge help to a political  ingénue like me during my election campaign, as well as having helped the wider  council elections a year ago and of course Ruth’s successful parliamentary  campaign. He’ll be missed.
      
      Guy Lambert      
October 2, 2015
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