Wandsworth Radio soon in Battersea

Author: Cyril Richert

Wandsworth Radio is a community online radio station in Battersea, run by volunteers from across the London Borough of Wandsworth.

In order to gather the few thousand pounds needed for its launch, the radio successfully used crowdfunding to help launch the station’s studio. Over £3,800 have been raised so far but you can still support the initiative and donate until Friday 8th August 2014: http://www.crowdfunder.co.uk/WandsworthRadio

You can listen to some shows on their website: http://www.wandsworthradio.com

And we hope they will have soon a show on Clapham Junction! 🙂

Filed under: Miscellaneous Wandsworth Radio soon in Battersea

Who’s who in the new planning committee

Author: Cyril Richert

Following May 2014 local elections, and many new councillors being elected (with 6 more Labour) all the Council committees were reshuffled.

Who’s who in the new planning committee

Planning Applications Committee – Room 123

Changes for the Planning Applications Committee

The chair is Cllr Sarah McDermott , in replacement of Cllr Cuff who is now a member of the Housing Overview and Scrutiny Committee. Cllr Jane Dodd, newly elected in Northcote ward, is a new member of the committee; it appears to be a good news after 4 years without a Conservatives representative from the Clapham Junction area in the committee (previously represented by Cllr Martin Johnson) and as the Council approved the controversial Peabody redevelopment (despite de strong opposition of the Northcote Cllr) and we saw a few planning application that raised attention (see here and there).

In order to reflect the increase of Labour councillors, there are now 3 Labours in the Planning Application Committee: although Tony Belton remains opposition speaker, he is joined by two new comers to planning matters , one of them being the newly elected councillor for Roehampton & Putney Heath.

This committee will have to decide on a number of planning applications for Clapham Junction area in the next 4 years, some of them having a huge impact on the area such as the proposal for the redevelopment on the Winstanley and York estates.

They will be likely also to decide whether they approve more towers up to 20-25 storeys near Falcon bridge and Clapham Junction station, as reflected in all current Council’s plans for the regeneration of the area, despite the existing planning policies.

Who’s who in the new planning committee

The full list of Planning Applications Committee (PAC) members is:

 Transportation committee changes

It is also worth noting the changes for the Strategic Planning and Transportation Overview and Scrutiny Committee as its Chair, John Locker, has been defeated in May’s election.

This committee shares many members with the PAC (Tony Belton , Piers McCausland , Michael Ryder) and will also be talking about the current trend to extend 20mph zones in many residential streets of the borough. The 20’s plenty campaign is lead by Wandsworth Living Street, supported by Labour and the previous Cabinet member for Transportation in Wandsworth Council as well as others, so we might see some move in that direction within the next 4 years

 

Filed under: Miscellaneous Who’s who in the new planning committee

Wandsworth local election results

Author: Cyril Richert

The Conservative Group retained overall control of the council after the results published for the local election 2014 for Wandsworth borough council.

Wandsworth borough has 60 councillors elected in 20 wards.

Results from Local election May 2014

  • Conservatives: 41 (-6 in comparison to May 2010)
  • Labour: 19 (+6)

All three seats in the Roehampton & Putney Heath ward were won by Labour where previously they had only held one (+2). They also won a seat in Earlsfield (+1), Queenstown Road (+1) and two in Bedford ward (+2).

Detailed results for Clapham Junction wards (Latchmere, Fairfield, Northcote, Shaftesbury)

In colours are displayed those elected.

Fairfield Conservative Party 3 seats  
Name Party Votes %
CRESSWELL, Liane Labour Party 1021 28.23%
JOHNSTONE, Jacqueline UKIP 271 7.49%
MCCAUSLAND, Piers Conservative Party 1924 53.19%
MCLEAN, Seymour Independent 171 4.73%
PONSONBY, Fred Labour Party 925 25.57%
SCAPING, Paul Liberal Democrats 325 8.99%
SHARP, Caroline Labour Party 958 26.49%
SWEET, Will Conservative Party 1801 49.79%
THOM, Stuart Conservative Party 1752 48.44%
WARREN, Patrick Liberal Democrats 374 10.34%
WATERMAN, Antony Green Party 598 16.53%
Ballot Papers Issued 3617 31.83%
Electorate 11,364
 ————————
Latchmere Labour Party 3 seats
Name Party Votes %
BELTON, Tony Labour Party 2172 54.50%
DAVIS, Richard Liberal Democrats 213 5.35%
EDWARDS, Robert Trade Unionist and Socialist 106 2.66%
HOGG, Simon Labour Party 1899 47.65%
MASON, Peter Green Party 508 12.75%
PLUMMER, Matthew Conservative Party 1218 30.56%
SINTIM, Rose Conservative Party 1203 30.19%
SPECK, Wendy Labour Party 1433 35.96%
SUMMERFIELD, Rosemary Conservative Party 1096 27.50%
TINKLER, Angela UKIP 327 8.21%
VOYCE, Hollie Liberal Democrats 221 5.55%
Ballot Papers Issued 3,985 34.93%
Electorate 11,409
 ————————
Northcote Conservative Party 3 seats  
Name Party Votes %
BEAVAN, Jake Liberal Democrats 355 9.68%
DAWSON, Peter Conservative Party 2187 59.62%
DODD, Jane Conservative Party 2198 59.92%
EVANS, Guy Green Party 623 16.98%
GREEN, Christine Liberal Democrats 388 10.58%
HEATH, Harvey Labour Party 888 24.21%
JOHNSON, Martin Conservative Party 1984 54.09%
KANAL, Shalu Labour Party 761 20.75%
NABARRO, David UKIP 198 5.40%
NOBLE, Gareth Labour Party 805 21.95%
Ballot Papers Issued 3,668 33.31%
Electorate 11,013
 ————————
Shaftesbury Conservative Party 3 seats  
Name Party Votes %
AL-AMEEN, Remi Labour Party 1030 27.59%
AUSTIN, Caroline Green Party 604 16.18%
COOK, Jonathan Conservative Party 1850 49.56%
COUSINS, James Conservative Party 1932 51.75%
LINTON, Martin Labour Party 1227 32.87%
MONTGOMERY, Patrick Liberal Democrats 391 10.47%
SENIOR, Guy Conservative Party 1794 48.06%
STOCK, Kate Labour Party 1084 29.04%
VAN DE L`ISLE, Hugh Trade Unionist and Socialist 96 2.57%
Ballot Papers Issued 3,733 33.03%
Electorate 11,303

Filed under: Miscellaneous Wandsworth local election results

Local Election May 22nd: Your candidates

Wandsworth Council elections will take place on Thursday May 22, 2014.

Below you will find the candidates listed on the wards around Clapham Junction: Latchmere, Fairfield, Northcote, Shaftesbury (full list on the Council’s website). We have indicated the current councillors.

Latchmere

  1. BELTON Anthony – Labour Party Candidate [Councillor]
  2. DAVIS Richard – Liberal Democrats
  3. EDWARDS Robert – Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition
  4. HOGG Simon – Labour Party Candidate [Councillor]
  5. MASON Peter – Green Party
  6. PLUMMER Matthew – Conservative Party Candidate
  7. SINTIM Rose – Conservative Party Candidate
  8. SPECK Wendy – Labour Party Candidate [Councillor]
  9. SUMMERFIELD Rosemary – Conservative Party Candidate
  10. TINKLER Angela – UK Independence Party (UKIP)
  11. VOYCE Hollie – Liberal Democrats

Fairfield

  1. CRESSWELL Liane – Labour Party Candidate
  2. JOHNSTONE Jacqueline – UK Independence Party (UKIP)
  3. MCCAUSLAND Piers – Conservative Party Candidate [Councillor]
  4. MCLEAN Seymour – Independent
  5. PONSONBY Fred – Labour Party Candidate
  6. SCAPING Paul – Liberal Democrats
  7. SHARP Caroline – Labour Party Candidate
  8. SWEET Will – Conservative Party Candidate
  9. THOM Stuart – Conservative Party Candidate [Councillor]
  10. WARREN Patrick – Liberal Democrats
  11. WATERMAN Antony – Green Party

Northcote

  1. BEAVAN Jake – Liberal Democrats
  2. DAWSON Peter – Conservative Party Candidate [Councillor]
  3. DODD Jane – Conservative Party Candidate
  4. EVANS Guy – Green Party
  5. GREEN Christine – Liberal Democrats
  6. HEATH Harvey – Labour Party Candidate
  7. JOHNSON Martin – Conservative Party Candidate [Councillor]
  8. KANAL Shalu – Labour Party Candidate
  9. NABARRO David – UK Independence Party (UKIP)
  10. NOBLE Gareth – Labour Party Candidate

Shaftesbury

  1. AL-AMEEN Remi – Labour Party Candidate
  2. AUSTIN Caroline – Green Party
  3. COOK Jonathan – Conservative Party Candidate [Councillor]
  4. COUSINS James – Conservative Party Candidate [Councillor]
  5. LINTON Martin – Labour Party Candidate
  6. MONTGOMERY Patrick – Liberal Democrats
  7. SENIOR Guy – Conservative Party Candidate [Councillor]
  8. STOCK Kate – Labour Party Candidate
  9. VAN DE L`ISLE Hugh Denzil – Trade Unionist and Socialist Coalition

 

Filed under: Miscellaneous Local Election May 22nd: Your candidates

New homes unaffordable for most Londoners

Author: Cyril Richert

Mira Bar-Hilel has published an article in the Evening Standard commenting on a report showing that thousands of new homes are being built in the capital at prices well beyond the reach of most Londoners.

“Construction consultants EC Harris found more than 4,600 homes have been built, approved or planned this year at a value of between £1,250 and £1,650 per sq ft — two to three times higher than the current average price of existing houses in the areas where they are being built.

Overall, more than 20,000 prime homes could be delivered in London over the next decade. The combined sale value could exceed £50billion, with the potential peak of development activity predicted to be in 2017.

[…] Among major high-end developments are the penthouses being built in the second phase of work at the Battersea Power Station site, set to be released for  sale in April 2014. These could sell for  £25 million to £30million, according to Liew Kee Sin, of the Battersea Project Holding Company.

As the bulk of the high-end market involves foreign buyers and investors, currency movements will be “crucial”, EC Harris said, warning developers risk an increasingly crowded market.

Darren Johnson, Green Party Member of the London Assembly, said: “Building 20,000 luxury homes isn’t supplying the sort of homes Londoners need, it’s a waste of scarce land and is driving up prices elsewhere.

“The Mayor needs to use his planning and housing powers to ensure that homes affordable to ordinary residents are the priority.””

On the other hand, Rory Meakin said, on the social blogging system Twitter:

He specifically commented on Mira’s article:

So do we have to build more social/affordable houses for Londoners, or more luxury flats, that will be a little bit less expensive? That is the question…

Filed under: Miscellaneous New homes unaffordable for most Londoners

Cut, cut here and cut cut there, cut everywhere in Wandsworth

Author: Cyril Richert

Cut, cut here and cut cut there, cut everywhere in Wandsworth

Redevelopment approved for Peabody, with a reduction in the number of social housing units, from 353 to 221, a loss of 132 social unit!

A paper published by the council at the beginning of October recommended that it needed to cut its budget by an extra £43m, which brings the total amounts it aims to save to £120m by 2015.

According to the Wandsworth Guardian, Council leader Ravi Govindia said: “Every town hall in Britain is having to play its role in reducing the nation’s debt and deficit levels. We will do this by cutting down on back office costs, selling off vacant buildings, market testing our services, reducing the number of high paid managers and looking at intelligent new ways of generating extra income.

It looks sensible that in those difficult times, everyone needs to be more careful about its spending. However, not even talking about the fact that many economists would warn about dangers of cuts when economy is already struggling, Wandsworth Council is sitting on an enormous pot of cash. Are savings not made to be used to tackle economic difficulties?

Housing service: more than £200M saving, yet 10% jobs scrapped

Lets take an example with the Housing service. In paper No. 13-577 released on 18 September 2013 before the Housing Committee meeting, the graph on page 4 shows that total reserves for HRA (Housing Revenue Account) start at £210 million, and steadily increase to a high of £1,986 million – more than £100M additional saving per year! – at the end of the 30 year planning period (£745 million in present value terms).

Cut, cut here and cut cut there, cut everywhere in Wandsworth

The council tax has little impact on the housing service as most of its revenue comes from the rents paid by the council tenants.

In view of those figures, guess what the Council has decided? That there was an urgent needs to cut 44 jobs! It aims to save a little under £2 millions on a budget above £200M.

On October 3rd, it was proposed before the Finance and Corporate Resources Overview and Scrutiny Committee, to make 10% of the staff redundant (and that fact was kept hidden at the Housing Committee the month earlier).

Front line staff impacted

While the leader of the Council claims to newspapers that they cut in back office costs rather than front line service, this is actually the opposite which is happening : front line staff are being deleted and admin is kept.

it is difficult to see how a reduction from 28 to 18, some 60% of frontline staff
in Housing services will not have a negative impact

Wandsworth currently has the highest level of families housed in B&B type accommodation outside the statutorily prescribed 6 week period in comparison to other inner London local authorities. The team of dedicated Housing Options officers to assess homelessness applications can only manage to issue 60% of their decisions within the 33 days  recommended by the Department for Communities and Local Government. There are currently 64 families lodging temporarily in B&B (at a cost of £209.80/week per room), so most of them need to stay longer that the maximum legal period of 6 weeks. The Director of Housing seeks also to scrap all Housing Registration posts, those staff members in charge of pro-actively working to lessen the list of applicants affected by the ”bedroom tax” (Welfare Reform Act 2012) inflicted by the government (it is estimated that more 2000 council tenants are affected with the risk of becoming homeless as soon as they can pay the new rent).

With homelessness on the increase and a shortage of 2 bedroom flats in the borough, it is difficult to see how a reduction from 28 to 18, some 60% of front-line staff in Housing services will not have a negative impact. The staff members are already instructed to relocate people somewhere-else, especially along the coast in cities such as Brighton or Portsmouth.

Work to be allocated on a generic basis

Under the new proposal, the management claims that they assign the duties in more generic basis:  homelessness and allocation functions will be merged and remaining staff will have to work on multiple duies: assessing and preventing homelessness, offering housing options (a role which is currently provided by a team made up of experienced officers) and, in addition, they will share front line roles.

Wandsworth Council head of resources claimed in the report 13-637 that appropriate staff consultation and communication has taken place; in reality, there was only an informal meeting in September. He also said that all new posts will be subject to evaluation using the Council’s scheme; in reality there is no indication yet of the exact proposals, and some staff members have already been offered new roles.

The Council is granting permission to build more luxury flats to the expense of social housing

On the Peabody scheme approved by the Council, the proposal displayed 200 social-rent units and 20 affordable-rent units. In comparison with the original 353 social units, the new plan showed a reduction of 133 social units. Even including the shared-equity element (58 dwellings), it is still a loss of 74 affordable homes.

On the more recent Ram Brewery scheme approved, only 66 affordable units are planned (10% of the scheme – way below the target for London); all of them will be located in the same building, the closest to the gasholders, and therefore not built until this one is decommissioned (quite clever from the developers!). There is no social housing at all. 

The Council ‘s leader was praising, last June, a deal signed in China by Dalian Wanda Group to build a residential tower block of 60 floors with … only 51 affordable units at the base.

Therefore it is very hard to believe that the housing department will be less busy in the future. A Tory councillor said: “we all need to make cut“. Wandsworth Council does not have any plan for social housing (rather the opposite, promoting luxury flats and rich tenants). It is short view and particularly blind at a time where even in parliament the majority parties are worrying about the housing crisis in London.

PS: some suggested that the saving could be used to slash council rents just before next year local election (Cllr Simon Hoggs demonstrated in February that Wandsworth is used to set rent increases at less than half the government guideline in the year before local elections and more than double the guideline in the first year after local elections).

Filed under: Miscellaneous Cut, cut here and cut cut there, cut everywhere in Wandsworth

Parliament debate about properties being bought by foreigners

Author: Cyril Richert

On Thursday 27th June, Simon Hughes (Bermondsey and Old Southwark, Liberal Democrat) had a debate in the parliament about foreign-owned properties.

It echoes our recent article about residential skyscrapers planned for Nine Elms where we said:

Anyway, it is likely to be again more investors from Asia and Middle East, who are currently buying most of the new “luxury” property developments in London. You can just cross the river and visit Imperial Wharf to see the consequence of this politics, with some people claiming that they are the only one living on their floor, the remaining flats being owned by foreigners as “second home”. Most of the to-be-built-yet flats in Battersea Power Station have already been sold through a Singaporean agent.

It looks like Simon Hughes read our article as that’s exactly what he said yesterday. Below are quotes from the most interesting debate where it seems that all parties (LibDems, labour and Conservatives) agreed (the read the full debate click HERE).

Simon Hughes (Bermondsey and Old Southwark, Liberal Democrat)

I want to talk about the problem first before suggesting some solutions, based on comments made to me once people knew the debate was happening and on documents that have been in the public domain or press in the past few days. Let me start with two e-mails that I received before the debate.

The first e-mail is from somebody in Battersea:

“Good to see someone at least talking about the housing crisis in London. As an architect, part of my job is designing apartments in central London that I know are being sold off plan to buyers in China. Sometimes whole developments are sold in a day, with Chinese buyers paying in cash. That is before they are ever offered to the UK market, but should they ever be offered they would only be affordable to barristers and traders, not middle income workers like myself. It infuriates me, as I am still in a share house after 7 years of being in London.”

[…]

To show the other side of the coin, let me cite a second e-mail that I received unprompted in the past couple of days, entitled “Housing developers targeting foreign buyers”. It states:

“I am British and live in Singapore. Even though I have a work permit, the Government put an extra high stamp duty on property, and also restrict me from renting out a property I buy for the first three years of ownership.

I gather that the first phase of the Battersea development was out-sold in Singapore with over 800 units going to Singaporeans.

Andy Slaughter (Hammersmith, Labour)

I congratulate the right hon. Gentleman on making pertinent and timely points that my constituents will recognise. Are not these properties being marketed abroad because of the type of property being built? High-value, high-rise properties are the ones being built and the fault lies with the planning authorities, the Mayor and some borough councils, such as my local one, which are giving permission for tens of thousands of the type of unit that appeals to Malaysian investors but is completely unaffordable to his constituents and mine?

Simon Hughes

The hon. Gentleman makes a good point. We do not always agree, but he makes a good point. Many of the properties that are being built are specifically built with the probability that they will be sold easily in the foreign market. These are not family houses; these properties are mainly flats, often studio, one-bedroom or two-bedroom flats—small flats—which will either be buy to rent, will be used occasionally by somebody from abroad who might come here a couple of times a year on business or will be just kept as an investment. There is evidence that a lot of these places have nobody in them at all; they are simply bought as an investment in this country and will be sold later at a higher price. I agree with the hon. Gentleman.

[…]

Central London, which for housing purposes often includes part of my borough and my constituency, is now an area where, according to the best figures, more than one third of all buyers are from overseas, and two thirds of all new-build property is sold to non-UK purchasers—a third of the total and two thirds of the new-build property. Over a third of properties are sold to companies from China and the Asia-Pacific region, more than one in 10 to buyers in the middle east and north Africa, and about 8% each to purchasers from western Europe, and to eastern Europe and the former Soviet states.

[…]

I should be grateful if the Government, over the next few weeks, commissioned up-to-date research, using the all the sources available, into the extent to which residential property acquired by individuals who are not domiciled or resident here or companies that are not registered here is: acquired for investment only and kept empty; occasionally used; occupied primarily by staff; a home other than the principal home; or rented out. If the information could be broken down by local authority and postcode, that would be helpful.

It is noticeable that Jane Ellison, MP for Battersea, did not participate to the debate, while her constituency was at the heart of most arguments!

You can also read the report, London for Sale? An assessment of the private housing market in London and the impact of growing overseas investment, by Andrew Heywood (visiting fellow, Smith Institute) examines latest trends in London’s private housing market and highlights the negative effects of the sharp rise in overseas investment.

The London Assembly had also a debate this year (March 2013) where it was said that “we need to avoid some areas of London becoming ‘ghost towns’ as houses are bought for solely for investment rather than to be used as homes“.

Filed under: Miscellaneous Parliament debate about properties being bought by foreigners