Induction takes place into the new Hounslow House
Thursday starts with my regular update with the leader,  Steve Curran. We are seeing a lot of each other at present as he was busily  litter picking last weekend and also present as the FoodBox patron when we had  the opening event. Patrons are usually members of the royal family but somehow  I can’t see Steve as Princess Anne. We discuss my cabinet role, holding the  poison chalice of recycling, waste, highways and Lampton, which I’m keen to  continue holding for another year. It’s a difficult brief but I’m very engaged  with it and hoping I can make a difference, supported always by the officers  and all the people who actually do stuff!
        
Later I have a catch up with the new head of environment and  then Steve and I meet with the director and vice chair of Watermans, me in my  capacity of trustee.
The cabinet briefing we had scheduled for the evening is  cancelled because of the knife crime meeting which Ruth Cadbury had set up,  which involved a number of cabinet members. One of the papers we would have  discussed caused me some concern so I spent some time over Thursday and Friday  discussing it with officers and with the lead member for finance, the talented  and industrious Shantanu Rajawat. In the end, we agreed some small  modifications. 
Friday was our Hounslow Highways ‘wardabout’ where we wander  the streets looking for defects, flytips, graffiti, mess etc. Corinna was away  in Portugal so it was just me and the Melvinator, who did a spectacular ‘nearly  fall over’ stunt. I was impressed he kept his balance and Hounslow Highways  noted a trip hazard. We wandered Lionel Road North, Carville Crescent,  Clayponds Avenue and Lane and a bit of Green Dragon before I had to rush off to  the Civic to meet the Director of Housing about the cabinet paper.      
      
         The weekend was upon me, and my first foray into the world  of watching old cars go round in circles. Last year the Goodwood Members  Meeting was notable for snow and probably the coldest two days I ever had. This  year I went only on Sunday and the weather was kind, to the extent that at some  point taking off layers I lost my glasses, no doubt fallen from a pocket.  Highlights for me were this Fiat racer, born in 1911 and possessing a 29.5  litre engine. It gives my poor ridiculous car a terrible inferiority complex.  Apparently FIAT stands for Fix It Again Tomorrow, one step down from Lotus –  Lots Of Trouble, Usually Serious.
The weekend was upon me, and my first foray into the world  of watching old cars go round in circles. Last year the Goodwood Members  Meeting was notable for snow and probably the coldest two days I ever had. This  year I went only on Sunday and the weather was kind, to the extent that at some  point taking off layers I lost my glasses, no doubt fallen from a pocket.  Highlights for me were this Fiat racer, born in 1911 and possessing a 29.5  litre engine. It gives my poor ridiculous car a terrible inferiority complex.  Apparently FIAT stands for Fix It Again Tomorrow, one step down from Lotus –  Lots Of Trouble, Usually Serious.       
      
And a race composed entirely of Minis (the proper BMC ones, not the ersatz BMWs), 30 of the little blighters snapping at each others’ heels:

        
        Monday I’m back in the real world with the first part of the  Labour AGM taking place in the evening (and half the night!).  This comprises elections for Mayor, Deputy  Mayor, chairs of committees etc and these are always hotly contested. I’m not  sure I’m allowed to say anything as I guess the appointments are formally  ratified at the council AGM next month, so I’ll keep quiet.
        
      On Tuesday the highlight is our induction into our new  council office – Hounslow House. This is bang in the middle of Hounslow and a  very different proposition from the old Civic Centre. It is much smaller –  reflecting both a reduced workforce and new ways of working remotely – and  incorporates Hounslow Library. We are all, I think, impressed, especially as  everything has been delivered on time and to budget and I think the development  team has done a stunning job, outside.      
      
 
        
        And in, though some people think our new flexible Council  Chamber, pictured below, lacks the necessary pomp. Some of my fellow members  can make up the deficit.
      
 
      
      
On Wednesday morning I mosey along to Chiswick to attend a Joint Action Day, when recycling officers, enforcement and Hounslow Highways do a trawl of prominent streets with a view to ensuring traders are dealing with waste correctly, dealing with any flytips (including looking for perpetrators’ details) and advancing education and where necessary waste facilities for residents.
 Amongst other things we find this very lovely sofa on the  pavement and persuade the lady owner that she needs to remove it back inside  whilst removal is organised.
        Amongst other things we find this very lovely sofa on the  pavement and persuade the lady owner that she needs to remove it back inside  whilst removal is organised.
One of the things you learn on exercises like this is that when people do anti-social acts it’s sometimes for want of a realistic alternative rather than being driven by malice or laziness. This woman had been let down by people who were supposed to take it away.
Later in the day I was going to take my daughter to the airport but she got a better offer, so I joined the crew from Teapigs who were doing a lunch hour litter pick around and about. There must have been 30 or 40 of us and my team were despatched to the back of Morrisons, filling numerous bags with old fag packets, beer cans, crisp packets etc etc. Apparently some of them do this once a month in their lunch hour. Good on them!

   
        In the evening, a Labour branch meeting at Isleworth public  hall.
Thursday morning I join Steve Curran and Hounslow’s head of corporate property for a session with the Friends of Watermans Park in… Watermans Park. Nice day for it and we hear about the plans for the marina – build is about to start and expected to last about 9 months - and ideas for the park afterwards. It’s going to have a little bit of encroachment from the marina, and probably a bit more from Cycleway 9 but there will be plenty of park left and we will be finding ways to improve it.
One of the people there is Kal from The Maker Station (themakerstation.co.uk) which has opened in the Max Factor building. This is a fantastic new space for, ahem, makers such as Kal who is primarily an upholsterer. But they are doing all sorts of things there, offering rental of space, sewing machines, hot desks and classes in yoga, from a life coach etc etc, many of them free. It’s a big space with lots of facilities and a really friendly feel.
I was hoping for a picture of the assembled Waterpersons  including the very lovely Steve Curran but it hasn’t arrived. Anyway, this pic  of the Maker Station is probably more interesting
  

So that was my week – very varied and fun – and the fun recommences tonight at planning committee where I have called in the Brentford School for Girls application for a new multi purpose sports court which caused a lot of disquiet amongst the denizens of (particularly) Lateward Road. Nothing very huge but a number of controversial smaller applications.
Oh, I suppose I had better mention the B word. Or perhaps ultimately the non-B word (I can dream). It seems we are going to have MEP elections in May, which is jolly fun for those of us whose job it is to cajole the public to go out and vote. I was going to go out on Friday evening knocking on residents’ doors anyway so I suppose this means we will be redoubling our efforts and everybody will say ‘we only see you when there’s an election’. Over the last few years that’s been more or less the same as saying ‘we only see you when we’re breathing’. What will Brenda from Bristol say?
Cllr Guy Lambert
April 11, 2019
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