Local Lib Dems hit out at government rent rise plan

Cllr Macklin: Waltham Forest Liberal Democrats have criticised Government proposals for a massive hike in Council Tenant rent payments.

Rents in London are set to rise by up to 9% after the Government proposed an increase of more than double the current rate of inflation.  Although the increase in Waltham Forest has been recommended by the portfolio holder to be set at 5.8%, local Liberal Democrat Leader John Macklin is calling for the Government to think again about its reccomendations.

Cllr Macklin said:

“I am very unhappy about this proposed local rent increase and I have made my feelings on the issue clear to both Council officers and the responsible cabinet members.

“This proposal either represents some very muddled thinking by the Labour Party or another cynical attempt to play smoke and mirrors with financial support at a time when many need it the most.

“First it was Whipps Cross, then Post Office closures.  How many more times are local Labour councillors going to be forced to try and disown their own party colleagues in Government?

 “I accept that, to a large extent, the Council is dictated to by the Labour Government’s policy on this issue, and so I find it staggering that they think it is appropriate to saddle local people with this kind of increased financial burden.   It comes at a time when the country is suffering what ministers are now admitting is a national financial crisis more extreme and more serious than that of the 1930s.

“Gordon Brown needs to stop juggling his finances in order to produce the best newspaper headlines and seriously reconsider his lack of practical support for our local Council tenants”

The Focus file

As well as recieving your latest Lib Dem FOCUS leaflet direct to your door, you will now be able to keep up to date with all the latest news from your ward in The FOCUS file.All the latest issues of the popular Lib Dem newsletter will now be available to view here online, so you never have to miss hearing about the latest work being carried out on your behalf by the Lib Dem team in your corner of Waltham Forest.

So head over now to The FOCUS file to check out the latest news from your local Lib Dem team.

Get your FOCUS online!

Through our website you will now be able to keep up to date with the work of your local Liberal Democrat ward team via our popular FOCUS leaflets, as all issues will now be available online!

But don’t worry, you will still be getting your FOCUS delivered regularly to your door…

First up is the latest issue of the FOREST WARD Focus, featuring the work of councillors Farooq Qureshi and Samina Safdar.

Future of 80 year old building outlined

Cllr James O'Rourke (centre) campaigns with London Lib Dem MP Simon Hughes and Hale End and Highams Park councillor Sheila Smith-PryorLocal LIb Dem councillor James O’Rourkes blog carries news of the High St FOCUS team’s recent briefing on the future of the former EMD site in Hoe St.

The historic building, owned by the UK Church of God, has been earmarked for a redevelopment that will see a theatre, cafe and gallery placed on the site complex.

Cllr O’Rourke has been the first to bring you news of the plans after he discovered that talks over the future of the former cinema were taking place between owners and cabinet members.  The High St LIb Dem team have given a cautious welcome to the plans.

Read more of what Cllr O’Rourke has to say on the issue at his excellent blogsite.

Higham Hill team want better buses for residents

This week's local Yellow AdvertiserThe Liberal Democrat councillor team in Higham Hill are busy lobbying transport bosses for a new bus route through their ward

This week’s local Yellow Advertiser (pictured) features news of the attempts of councillors Patrick Smith, Sean Meiszner and Peter Woollcott to secure a new bus service along Billet Road in Walthamstow to cope with increased demand amongst residents.

Cllr Patrick Smith told the paper:

“We want to ensure that residents and visitors have proper access to and from the area.  Local services are not always reliable or convenient and we want something that will connect the area with the borough’s main transport hubs”.

Council Tax Level – Lib Dems respond

Lib Dem Leader Cllr John Macklin has had the following letter (‘Labour does not act alone here’) published on page 14 in the ‘Your Views’ section of this week’s Waltham Forest Guardian in response to a recent article in which Labour Leader Clyde Loakes set out the Council’s proposed 1.9% Council Tax increase – a level well below many other boroughs:

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Forest Lib Dem councillor launches blog site

Cllr Samina Safdar meets a local resident during last year's successful Forest Ward by-election campaign.Samina Safdar, who was one of the four Lib Dem councillors elected by Waltham Forest residents in by-elections last year, has launched a blog site covering news and iterms of interest in her ward.

Samina, who was elected in Forest ward, hopes that the site will provide another way for local residents to keep in touch with the work of their local Lib Dem councillors, but has ensured residents that they will continue to recieve their local FOCUS newsletter straight to their door!

If you’d like to see what Samina and the Forest Lib Dems have been up to, please head over to the Samina Safdar blog.

Meeting the real needs of London – Lib Dems set out their alternatives to the Boris budget

Help for Londoners facing tough economic times and long term action to improve London’s environment are the key proposals put forward by the Liberal Democrat London Assembly Group in their alternative budget proposals, which would lead to no extra increases in Boris Johnson’s council tax bill.

Mike Tuffrey, the leader of the Liberal Democrat Assembly Group said:

“Many families have already faced redundancies and many more face the daunting prospect of unemployment in 2009. The Mayor cannot stop people losing their jobs but the least he must do is provide help to stop people losing their homes.

“We believe that the Mayor’s draft budget contains too much short term thinking and not enough real vision for London.  If Boris has real ambitions for London we hope he will listen carefully to these bold proposals to tackle London’s immense challenges.”

Measures included in the Liberal Democrat Assembly Group’s alternative London budget include funding for:

· A youth worker with every Safer Neighbourhood Team, to work with those at most risk and so preventing youth crime at source
· Good value fares, such as a one hour bus ticket. 

· Further investment in walking and cycling, including completion of the London Cycle Network Plus, providing cycle maintenance points and a London walking map

· Moving ahead with the East London Line phase 2 extension

· Making more homes affordable to heat by meeting up-to-date  environmental standards

· Tackling fare evasion on London’s transport

· Reducing the amount spent on holding and publicising the Mayor’s additional public meetings

EMD building – update

News emerges from High St councillor James O’Rourke that councillors are to be given the opportunity to view proposals for the regeneration of the former EMD cinema in Hoe Street at a presentation by the owners of the building , the UK Church of God.

We reported earlier this month that Cllr O’Rourke had been gioven access to the building after press reports that squatters were occupying the site emrged over Christmas.  Cllr O’Rourke managed to take some pictures of the inside of the historic building during his visit.

Cllr O’Rourke, who has consistently fought for greater transparency from the Council with regards to the future of the site, has more on the development at his blog.

A Better Way To Go – London Lib Dems set out imaginative transport policies

Responding to Boris Johnson’s consultation on his transport document Way To Go, the Liberal Democrat group at the London Assembly have launched their own proposals under the title ‘A Better Way To Go’.

Caroline Pidgeon, the Liberal Democrat Transport Assembly spokesperson said:

Above all else the Mayor needs to focus on reducing the need to travel. Many Londoners spend three hours a day getting to and from work in intolerably crowded conditions. It makes no sense for London’s economy to have a workforce which is often stressed and irritable before they get to their desks each day.

“Many people are also facing longer and longer journeys to use key public services or simply to go shopping. There has to be a better way.

“We should be developing a capital city where people need to travel less often and less far. This means keeping essential public services like health, police and post offices local, not consolidating them into larger and more distant centres.

“We also need inventive ideas for developing vibrant local economies in outer London towns. We urgently need fast-tracked express coaches linking our town centres – it shouldn’t be a requirement to always have to travel in and out of central London to simply move around outer London by public transport”.

The Better Way To Go document pushes strongly for “green” transport initiatives, pressing for zero-emission public transport – like the Cross River Tram, the use of sustainably generated electricity, and giving pedestrians priority on more of central London’s smaller streets.

The document Better Way To Go contains the following key points:

· Proposals to reduce the need to travel by better strategic planning promoting local economies in outer London towns and keeping essential public services local.

· Connecting outer London towns by fast coach services removing the need to travel through central London.

· A Mayoral initiative to promote flexi-time and working from home for office staff.

· Pedestrianising the smaller streets between Trafalgar Square and Oxford Street, and making Oxford Street itself a pedestrian precinct.

· Completing the London Cycle Network, backing the cycle hire scheme and creating much more secure cycle parking.

· Urgent moves to make public transport zero-emission: a Cross River Tram, more hybrid-engined buses and black cabs, Tube electricity sustainably generated.

· Determined opposition to a third runway at Heathrow, with strong backing for high-speed rail alternatives to internal and short-haul continental flights.