Lots of meetings but not a single mention of a trip to the pub
Thursday afternoon started with the LamptonFM360 Board  meeting, which I attend as an observer. The business is running steadily,  maintaining our council estates and looking to extend its activities to some  other services for the council, and as time goes on for others. There is also  some scope for efficiency improvements and the operational team and non-exec  directors impress me: they seem to be in command, to have a plan and to be  steadily executing it. 
        
Then it’s back to the Civic centre. This was for an initial  discussion with other cabinet members led by Tom Bruce, who is leading the not  trivial task of delivering Manifesto Pledge 1 – Create 4000 new apprenticeships and training opportunities. Some of these will come from the council and  Lampton companies, but we also need to work with local employers. Happy to  assist if I can!
Next was Planning Committee, which I knew would be  controversial because of the plans to develop part of the Tesco car park in  Feltham. I had visited some of the people who live next to the car park last  weekend and I could easily understand why they didn’t like the proposal. When  it came down to it though, the proposals were in line with the local plan and  there was no strong planning reason to refuse so, in common with most members  of the committee, I voted in favour. Angry scenes as locals walked out saying  we should be ashamed of ourselves. Sorry, not ashamed: we have to take  unpopular decisions sometimes. There were then two developments in Hounslow  presented in a rather confused manner. The applications suggested they would  deliver 31% affordable housing where the council wants 40% minimum: there was  some talk of it turning out to be 100% affordable so we deferred decisions  until they got their act together. Finally, one of our fellow councillors,  Hanif Khan, wants to build a porch on the front of his house. Any applications  for council members come to the committee, even ones like this which would have  been approved by officers if it wasn’t for a member. It’s always fun to wind up  members with arguments, usually spurious, against the development but on this  occasion Hanif denied us some entertainment because he was too busy to attend.
After all this, I had Friday at home, ending with dinner at  the always pleasing Albany Spice with an old friend of ours and my former wife,  who is about to move away from these parts to the South coast. This fortified  me for Saturday, when I set out valiantly on my toy collapsible bicycle for  Hounslow High Street, hoping it wouldn’t collapse. It didn’t, and so I got to  work with Ruth Cadbury MP, Councillors Karen Smith, Richard Eason, one of my  favourite local residents Sharidin Mumuni and various others annoying  passers-by by pointing out to them that the talk of the end of austerity was  about as credible as Boris Johnson. I make no excuses for making Ruth a cyclops  as she took the picture herself.   Why the picture is backwards I have no idea, so I think I’ll blame Ruth for  that too.      
      

      
In the evening, off to the Hounslow Arts theatre with Mellow Melvin, where I was honoured to present an award at the Alliance Dance Unit awards. This super local charity helps young people by inspiring and teaching them to dance. Melvinator and I got lost in the Treaty centre car park and I led him over an unmarked step which caused him to take a tumble, fortunately without any damage either to him or the car park. Walking around with Mel, I really should be more vigilant: he rarely asks for help but he hasn’t got a lot of vision and cannot see steps unless they have painted edges, preferably yellow. Anybody who doubts how important the MMR vaccine is should meet Mel or his wife Jackie, both of whom would have unimpaired vision had the vaccine been available and used back then. Anyway the awards evening was lovely and I was delighted to meet the Deputy Head of Green Dragon, Miss Pinkney, who presented one of the other awards. It was dark in there so the picture doesn’t do her justice and ADU director Torron – a former pupil of whom GDPS are very proud, hid behind a balloon. Anyone trying to blame the photographer kindly shut your trap.

        A masterful photo from Guy
        
        Monday morning I cycled to Chiswick to meet a resident who  has a problem with a huge tree outside his home, and the resulting leaves in  the gutter which we have done a poor job of clearing. The leaves should be  cleared this week – I will try and have a look tomorrow – but I haven’t heard  about the tree yet.
        
      In the afternoon it was the quarterly ‘strategic meeting’  between Lampton FM 360, lead member for Housing and LBH director of Housing, which  passed without much excitement. In the evening I met a few residents who live  around Gunnersbury Park, together with Cllrs Biddolph (from Turnham Green) and  Dabrowska (from Ealing Common). They are unhappy about large events in the park  and by what they see as lack of interest in their opinions. These matters are  difficult because Gunnersbury really needs income as the two councils can’t  afford to maintain it properly in these difficult times. Furthermore, we want  more people, especially younger people, using the parks but some of this is  inevitably disruptive to neighbours. I took away a couple of actions to try and  improve engagement and the way these big events are managed.      
      
        Tuesday I chaired a mock planning committee for students of  Rivers Academy, in the Council Chamber. One bunch of students are the pretend  planning committee, one bunch pretend developers, one pretend objectors and I’m  the pretend chair. I’m rather pleased to have a gavel on the desk in front of  me and can’t resist using it from time to time. Anyway, I had fun and it looked  like the students did too, but they had obviously prepared thoroughly and all  three groups impressed me. I hope they learned something: this may not help  much with their A-levels but it should help them engage with wider issues in  the world.
      
Then a short update with a finance officer on the state of  Lampton 360 finances followed by a cabinet briefing where we discuss a number  of matters we will need to deal with shortly, most importantly the Medium Term  Financial Strategy – how we think finances will work out over the coming years  – plus a revised CCTV and enforcement strategy.
        
      Wednesday I had a day out in central London, attending a  forum of the London National Park City initiative. There’s a really good agenda  being rolled out starting next year which I’m not going to spoil by previewing,  but I’m proud to be associated with this initiative, and that we managed to get  every ward in Hounslow bar the 3 Chiswick wards to sign up for it.      
      

        
      This was a crazy day for travelling involving car, buses,  trains, tubes and two different bicycles (and Shanks’ Pony when we had a  gridlock in Windmill Road) but the good news is (a) I got my real bike back  from Paul the bike mender (b) I managed to get to the Heston Residents Association  meeting nearly on time and (c) I negotiated release of my car from the Heston car  park which had turned into the HQ of one of 217 Heston Diwali Fireworks  displays whilst I was talking to the Residents Association. Probably best I  missed Red Star Belgrade 2, Liverpool 0 grump grump.      
      
        Today, a short meeting on Haverfield with one of the senior  housing managers, pointing out various issues with maintenance and caretaking  followed by a day out in the country meeting my sisters.
        
        Time to catch up with the test match now. See you both next  week.
      
Cllr Guy Lambert
November 9, 2018
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