On the hunt for a brown envelope
Shock, horror, here I am sunning myself in Brentford’s  tropical climate, sipping a Tequila Sunrise (well, a cup of tea, in fact, but  it looks a bit orange with the light through it) when a peremptory email from  t’editor arrives: “Oi! Where is it?” Panic obviously ensues, I put on my  writer’s visor and repair to the blog factory, commonly known as my  kitchen/diner table.
          
On Thursday evening it’s the pension fund panel. Somebody  wrote to me that it was boring of me to write about this, which has naff all to  do with Brentford residents. Fair enough, but I have to sit through it so I  think it’s only fair to share the pain a little. I have never been one whose  juices are set raging by thinking about the relative investment strategies of  fund managers: I know that makes me pretty weird, but there you go. This month  was different because we had yer actual Actuaries presenting their triennial  (that’s once every three years, you at the back who haven’t been paying  attention) valuation. You know the joke about actuaries – they are said to be  people for whom the life of an accountant seemed overly exciting. Anyway we had  an older one and a young one: they were not really all that boring and looked  conspicuously normal. The weird thing about pension funds is everything is  turned on its head. If people die young, this is good news because there’s less  pension to pay. The good or bad news is that Hounslow employees and  ex-employees’ life expectancy has actually come down somewhat, against the  trend. As far as we know this is just random variation, but despite being good  for the pension fund, it’s a worrying statistic and needs to be watched. The  fund itself is exceptionally healthy, as these things go, and not much has  changed in three years so that at least is a relief.
On Friday some more Credit Union stuff in Teddington and an  excellent excuse for a decent bike ride. On this occasion I eschew the pub for  a healthy lunch in Brentford’s excellent café near Brent Lea. Sausage and onion  baguette – luvly – and nobody can say I’m not getting my 5 a day. Well, at  least one and maybe the brown sauce makes 2? I didn’t get where I am today by  eating unhealthily. Oh, perhaps I did.
Saturday is surgery up at Clayponds: quiet as usual with  just one lady who will have trouble finding the £80 for her CPZ permit. I  enquire, but it seems we cannot accept payment by instalments so there’s really  nothing I can do to help. I have nothing but admiration for people like this  lady who bring up a family on a shoestring and are determined to pay their way  without getting into debt, and I wish I could help her.
Sunday Myra and I go for a door-knock stroll around Carville  Crescent and Crowther Avenue. This wasn’t a cunning plan but by accident is  rather well-timed, because Crowther and Clayponds Avenue are all marked out for  resurfacing, so people are pretty pleased that this is finally getting done.
Monday I cook a brunch for my daughter who is all chilled  with school hols starting, and spend the rest of the day with the dreaded  emails, phone calls and other drudgery, though I fit in a gym session in the  evening, having a rare Monday evening without meetings. 
On Tuesday afternoon we have the working group for the  Hounslow website. This has been going for a bit now and everybody seems pretty  happy with it, though there are lots of improvements in the pipeline. Obviously  we spend the meeting carping and moaning. We also talk about a new telephone  system for which the council is out to tender at present and which they hope to  introduce during that perfectly stretchable period known as ‘the summer’. In my  experience across all fields of technology implementation, the summer is that  period that begins around May or June and ends sharply on December 24th.  It will come as no surprise that there is a lot of dissatisfaction, from  councillors and the public alike, with the current telephone system. We are  told that there have been major improvements in the performance of the main  switchboard with far more calls being answered in a reasonable time and far  less being abandoned, but nobody thinks that there is not a way to go yet.
In the evening, we have a special council meeting to admit  all 7 branches of the British Legion which operate across Hounslow to Freedom  of the Borough. From memory that means they are now allowed to drive their  sheep across Kew Bridge without paying a toll, though I’m hoping they’ll hold  off on that until the roadworks have concluded. Seriously, it was good to see  all the Legion people, the vast majority of whom have served in the armed  forces and every one of whom has done good charity work to support ex-servicemen,  getting some recognition (and free beer). Each branch was introduced by a  councillor and for me the stand outs were Richard Foote with a moving tale  about his family and our ex-Gurkha, Bishnu Gurung. Robert Oulds was looking  very fierce with his holster slung over his shoulder but it turned out this was  for the Standard and the ceilings in the Lampton Park Conference centre are too  low, so it was redundant.
On Wednesday evening I yet again had to miss the quarterly  meeting of the Thomas Layton Trust: this is in itself fascinating and ends with  a traditional dinner in La Rosetta: fascinating company and good food but  instead I find myself in a Labour party meeting in Chiswick High Road, followed  by a couple of pints at the Old Packhorse pub and a bag of chips on the way  home. All glamour for us councillors.
Today, Thursday morning, I go up to Clayponds  estate to meet a resident and see what is going on and behold!

I have to dodge my way between  tar lorries, road rollers and hard hatters as Clayponds Avenue is being done  today. Hallelujah! My bike starts purring and I have to tell it to calm down,  there’s always Chestnut Avenue, Netley Road and Lateward but despite the views  of all my cynical fellow citizens, there is no doubt at all that in general the  roads are in a better state than for donkeys years. Litter was in good shape on  my route this morning too, even the notorious Clayponds footbridge being spick  and span so some things are working.
          
      This afternoon we have an update  on the planned improvements to the Brentford Towers and then there’s something  in the evening. Now what is it? It’s slipped my mind… oh yes, I remember, it’s  planning committee and we’re talking about Morrisons. Apparently the decision  has already been made and I am under orders so I must find out this afternoon  who’s giving the orders and what they are. There were also rumours of brown  envelopes, though the only ones I’ve seen in the Civic centre contain  sandwiches and I’ve already had lunch. 
Guy Lambert
April 6, 2017
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