Author: tgntra
Email from Old Bermondsey Village Neighbourhood Forum.
Important Meeting
Old Bermondsey Village Neighbourhood Forum
Wednesday 22nd April 6.30pm Globe House
Following our invitation to Mark Williams, Council Cabinet Member for Regeneration, Planning and Transport to address an open community meeting we now have a response accepting the invitation for Wednesday 22nd April. The background to the invitation can be read on our website (link).
In brief:
Following our application for the Neighbourhood Area designated by Southwark Council themselves the Council find their options for refusing us dwindling. In an attempt to create some germ of a justification we received a letter essentially telling us that we fail to meet the high standards of democracy, openness, inclusivity and consultation with local people set by the Council themselves! Councillor Williams has been invited to explain how we can raise our game to the standards he expects. At the same time he has been invited to draw on his own fan-base to invite all those excluded constituencies that we cannot reach.
Requiem for The Subways – 3rd April
On the evening of Good Friday join us for a choral performance of a new composition by Danyal Dhondy written to mark the imminent demolition of the subways at Elephant and Castle Roundabout. We gather at the centre of the roundabout from 7pm for the performance to begin at sunset and walk the subways for a performance of seven stages. After 104 years of safe underground pedestrian crossings the Mayor of London and Southwark Council are ushering in an era of increased congestion, danger and pollution. Demolition commences on 9 April and the proposed Elephant Square will not be completed until the mid 2020s.
(This composition has been commissioned and staged by www.SaveOurSubways.org, a campaigning group that has utterly failed in its objectives, although we might get a cafe in one subway if we’re lucky and another bit turned into a water feature! Let’s hope others can learn from our failure and save their subways)
Training and Resources for T&RA members.
REMINDER: Chaucer Ward Panel – tonight, 30th March.
Date : Monday 30th March 2015
Time : 7pm – 9pm
Venue : Conference Room,
Southwark Police Station
323, Borough High St
SE1 1JL
Manifesto for the Destruction of Council Estates

The prestigious institute of Public Policy Research (IPPR) has published a policy paper that proposes the wholesale demolition of London’s council estates, in the name of regeneration and to allow for the creation of so-called ‘City Villages’.
The paper is the brainchild of New Labour peer Lord Adonis and includes a chapter by Southwark council leader Peter John.
Adonis was a Greek god who was the epitomy of masculine beauty; our Lord Adonis is a more mundane character, a Blairite zealot who fancies himself as London’s Deputy Mayor. He has gathered together a group of like-minded cronies including London borough council leaders and property developers to pen a policy proposal entitled “City Villages: More homes, better communities”.
The idea is simple: London needs lots of new homes; they could all be built on brownfield sites; council estates are on brownfield sites – so let’s demolish council estates. The land is worth a lot of money, so friendly property developers can be enlisted to help. Demolishing council estates would also get rid of that awful “mono-tenure” housing that breeds crime and anti-social behaviour.
His Lordship draws on various provocative examples to make his case, including the Heygate estate. Southwark council leader Peter John writes a chapter on this great success story, which our readers will know from previous blogs destroyed 1200 council homes, replacing them with 79 social rented units, plus 200 unaffordable ‘affordable’ units, ripping off leaseholders along the way – or, in Councillor John’s words creating “a genuine mix of private owned, private rented, shared ownership and social rented homes for people of all incomes.”
Councillor John further redefines the word success when he praises the Strata Tower’s “distinctive three wind turbines” , turbines which, as we have blogged about, do not turn, do not work and do not generate any electricity – a fitting symbol of the Elephant & Castle regeneration after all.
Lord Adonis laments the fact that only a “tiny fraction” of London’s estates are currently being redeveloped and cites amongst these the massive Earls Court redevelopment, which will require the demolition of the West Ken & Gibbs estate and of course our very own Aylesbury redevelopment
Both his Lordship and Councillor John acknowledge this can all be controversial and “redevelopment of estates is sometimes assumed to mean that existing tenants and residents will be displaced by wealthier incomers” but according to Lord Adonis “this need not, nor should it be the case” since redevelopment should offer ample opportunity for residents to remain in new homes once completed.
We beg to differ; estate regenerations over the past 10 years have provided double the number of homes, but they have also lost us 8,000 social rented units and the lessons that we’ve learned is that anyone who stands in the way of a regeneration – whether council tenant or leaseholder – is going to lose their home to make way for new homes that they are unlikely to be able to afford.
Courtesy of the 35% Campaign – Campaigning for a more affordable and inclusive regeneration.
@35percent_EAN
Fiesta – a free community celebration, 12th April
Meet contractor Keepmoat Ltd. – 16th April 2015 4.00pm-7.00pm
Credit Union – Lending
London Mutual Credit Union’s focus is to offer members a place where they can save safely and get a loan that is fair and affordable.
If you need to buy something for your home, taking a loan from the credit union means that you can shop around for the best deal – it puts you in control and gives you a choice. If you need a washing machine, for instance, you can buy it from any retailer – whoever is cheapest – get it paid for, delivered and installed, and spread the cost over up to 18 months. If you haven’t got cash or credit, where can you go?
You could go to one of the ‘weekly payment’ shops, such as Brighthouse, where an ordinary 9kg washing machine can cost as much as £1,400. That’s exactly what one of our members almost did recently, but she called us and we gave her a loan – she bought a 9kg washing machine from Curry’s for £299.99, delivered and installed! That’s over £1,000 that has stayed in her pocket – money she can spend on her children, or save for emergencies.
For more information please visit our website www.creditunion.co.uk
Southwark News article on Claire Maugham.
Read the article in Southwark News here:
http://issuu.com/southwark.news/docs/march_26th/8?e=14572334/12044733









