A positive but highly-charged meeting about Brentford Towers
I had a welcome free evening on  Thursday and Friday was free too, apart from a meeting with a resident up in  Manor Vale. This was one which somebody picked up during the GE canvassing and  told me I should contact. Turned out to be a charming elderly lady with some  mobility problems and a bit of attitude: a retired nurse. It’s truly a  privilege to meet many of our residents and sometimes I wish I could do more  for them – this one is pending.
          
I hear that Ruth has been sacked  from her job as shadow housing minister. This is hardly a surprise but very  disappointing. She really had to follow her conscience (and the majority of her  constituents) in voting against a hard Brexit even though she would have known  tradition says ministers get sacked for defying the whip. A pity, not least  because housing is such a priority, especially just now, and because Ruth  really adds value to the front bench. To put this in perspective, poor Ruth  heard at the weekend that her sister had succumbed to cancer, aged only 50.  Very sad.
Saturday was our monthly surgery  but I had a month off and went to the ‘Raising of the Rainbow Flag’ at the  Civic Centre. This is a Cooperative Party production. I joined the coop party  last year at a Labour Councillors’ event because I like the idea of cooperatives,  am already chair of one (www.Thamesbank.org,  our credit union) and the people I met on the stand were clearly very  dedicated. I’m not quite clear about the Rainbow Flag but this year is the  party’s centenary so it was good to attend and learn a bit of history. My  labour colleagues were involved in street stalls in Chiswick and Hounslow which  apparently went well (Shami Chakrabarti attended the Hounslow event and was  well received)
I am engaged currently in the  recurring battle of the bulge having put on half a stone sitting in the Labour  office during the election campaign (in 2015 I spent much more time out on the  streets and lost half a stone, grr) and have discovered I share a gym with  local Tory leader and ogre (by definition) Sam Hearn. We clashed antlers during  the week as I sweatily repaired from the cross trainer to the treadmill and Sam  prepared to put in a bit of rowing. The subject was Brexit (I don’t like it,  seems Sam does) and we narrowly managed to avoid coming to blows, which would  have been a fun spectacle for all the young (mainly male) lovelies in the gym.  Anyway, Sam bought me a bottle of fizzy water after and we steered clear of  controversial matters. 
After this I cycled down to Isleworth  to the Town Wharf pub to have an election post mortem with local comrades. This  is a Sam Smith’s pub, so we discussed the 1950s style swearing ban that is in  operation in their estate (apparently the ghost of Sam himself, or somebody  like that, lurks in corners and bans customers and sacks landlords for use of  naughty words). All I can say is that Sam Smiths Organic Lager is effing strong  stuff and I was a bit wobbly on the way home.
Tuesday evening we were down to  the Mission Hall for a public meeting on the Brentford Towers, and the now  suspended plans to reclad them. Steve Curran was chairing the meeting and he  was supported by the director of housing, the Borough Fire Commander, local  housing manager and various specialists. It was definitely standing room only  and people were actually spilling out of the door and to nobody’s great  surprise there was a lot of emotion in the room. I was pleased to see that  Steve and the housing team really took people’s concerns on board and towards  the end one or two people apologised for the emotion. I was able to say that I  thought it was healthy to hear these concerns properly expressed – I think people  are too often content to ‘grin and bear it’. I looked in my bag and found I had  about 30 business cards with me, which I offered to people – they were gone in  about 28 seconds and Steve told me later that about 40 of his went the same  way. The director of housing committed to personally visit all of the 6 blocks  over the course of this month and go through them floor by floor, which went  down very well. We still need to get on with some works to the towers, but  cladding is off the menu, for now at least. Peter reported that the one tower  in Hounslow with cladding that has now been revealed as not OK has now had it completely  removed. This is the sort of meeting which makes me love this place. People not  holding back putting across their point of view but also respecting that some  of this stuff is not easy to fix especially in the current financial climate.  Also good to be able to see a lot of residents at the same time and I hope a  few more of them come forward with the concerns they have – one or two have  done so already.
The poor old Melvinator missed  the meeting, which he would have given his right arm to attend. However his aim  wasn’t true and he’s been having gyp with one of his legs following a minor op  and got himself admitted to W Middlesex to have it treated. They haven’t let  him out, as of this morning and he’ll be champing at the bit to get out:  he loves being a councillor and works really  hard for his residents.
As luck would have it, I was due  the next day to go up two of the towers on a periodic estate inspection. These  happen every quarter and I try and do them when I can. It was particularly  interesting to do it against the background of the previous evening and I was  certainly alert to things that I’m normally less focused upon, such as fire  hazards in the lift lobbies and outside the blocks, and any defects in fire  doors. 
All a bit lethargic with this weather  and I have a heap of stuff to catch up with and planning committee (relatively  uncontroversial I think) this evening. You may have noticed I received a  slapping from the editor last week for revealing the fact of our Brentford  Councillors’ Facebook page without saying where you can find it. Well it’s /BrentfordCouncillors so if anyone wants to start a debate with us you know  where it is. Nobody much has yet and there’s not much there other than this  nonsense so: consider yourself invited! 
 
      
July 6, 2017
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