Housing, parking, housing and more housing
Thursday morning I was back in the Civic Centre for more  discussions about the way forward for the housing repair and development team. 
            
Then on Friday something a bit different: Hounslow borough  MPs Ruth and Seema had arranged a visit to the civic centre by delegates from  the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association. So together with the MPs and a few  other councillors we got to meet a minister from Sierra Leone, a minister from  Trinidad and Tobago and the speaker of the Solomon Islands Parliament. Three  interesting and charismatic politicians and a great privilege to meet them, if  briefly.
In the afternoon Ruth had a drop-in surgery at St John’s  Community Centre in Isleworth and asked me and a couple of other councillors to  attend and help out if there was a rush. Quite a few people came and I had a  conversation with a gentleman from Chiswick with (inevitably) a housing problem  but of course people really wanted to see Ruth and in the end there were not  too many and she talked to all comers.
In the evening, Mel and I met with a couple of residents on  the Haverfield estate to talk about parking problems. We recently took a little  action to remove some yellow lines that had been painted inadvisedly but that  just restored about 4 spaces and the problem on the Haverfield is much more  extensive with more residents’ cars than spaces being made worse by people from  nearby flats and even hotels, together with the overflow from Ealing Road, all  competing for spaces. We agreed (I think) that this needs some serious thought  and a strategic answer rather than the fire-fighting that is tempting, and  we’ll be trying to find one over the next few weeks and months.
Saturday morning was my own surgery up at Clayponds, with  the usual housing problem (though this one was about maintenance rather than  housing provision so has a better chance of a solution) and the equally  inevitable wheelie bin problem. I’m meeting with a council officer and a few  concerned residents next week to try and find a way through at least some of  the issues people in Brentford have with the wheelie bin roll out.
Sunday morning out meeting residents in Hounslow Heath with  Ruth, then after looking in to Brilliant Brentford Market – still buzzing even  on a miserable drizzly day – I looked into the 2000 Club Christmas Party at the  Brentford Free Church, having been invited by a resident and ‘encouraged’ to  provide some raffle prizes. Couldn’t stay long as I was cooking a roast beef  dinner for my daughter (and me!)
Monday was largely free and on Tuesday after visiting my  doctor (bad luck, nothing serious) a session at the Labour Party office in  Chiswick helping hump leaflets around and trying to get to grips with the voter  tracking system (I failed).  Then a few  beers up in Covent Garden with some old (yes, they’re as ancient as me) work  colleagues followed by a trip to the Kew Bridge Residents Association Christmas  Party in the evening. What a great event! Must have been 100 people in ‘One  Over the Ait’, a free glass of wine, excellent snacks and most importantly a  real warm welcome. However I have seriously fallen out with my fellow  Councillor Myra Savin, Worshipful Deputy Mayor that she may be, for suggesting  she saw me ‘wobbling’ along Kew Bridge Road on my bicycle. ‘Streaking’ is the  correct expression.
Wednesday was my second appearance at the South West  Middlesex Crematorium board, down Hanworth way. It’s very hard for me to avoid  a bit of black humour at this event when I ask them about ‘market share’ and  such matters. Anyway it seems the Crem is doing just fine, with record numbers  of ‘customers’ and a healthy surplus despite charging about what commercial  competitors cost. Prices are being held for 2016. Book now to avoid the rush.
In the evening a Labour Branch meeting. This was all about  housing (though being Christmas there was mulled wine and mince pies in  evidence) and in particular the use of the term ‘affordable housing’ which has  been expanded from its original meaning to mean ‘slightly subsidised housing which  people in the top 25% of incomes might just be able to afford’. The Government  has just invented the concept of ‘starter homes’ which are suitable for young  people on modest incomes (£75K will do it in London, lovely jubbly). In a book  I read once this, like ‘National Living Wage’ was described as Nuspeak. Anyway,  we resolved to resist this usage by qualifying its use with a definition of  what was actually being proposed.
Yesterday, Thursday, I spent the morning in the Mayor’s  Parlour (what a lovely old fashioned term!) hearing an employment appeal, about  which I will of course keep mum. And in the evening up one of the Brentford  Towers knocking on doors and saying hello to folks. Always fun, and it saved me  listening to Liverpool having a boring 0-0 draw in Switzerland (but they still  top their Europa League group J)
Guy Lambert
December 11, 2015
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