New heating contractor announced.

Southwark Council has now mutually agreed with our heating contractors T Brown to terminate their contract. From Monday 11 May 2015, contractors OCO will be taking over responsibility for these repairs until the contract runs out next year. OCO are one of our top performing contractors with a proven track record for service. Thank you for your patience whilst we put in place the new arrangements, particularly to those residents in some parts of the borough who may have experienced issues with their heating and hot water over the last few months.

This will not affect the way you report repair issues, but we hope will mean we can provide you with a more efficient and responsive repairs service.

If you do have any further questions please contact Paul Gathercole, Southwark Council’s contract services manager, on 020 7525 2625 or email paul.gathercole@southwark.gov.uk

To report a repair, check on your repairs history or track an appointment go to http://www.southwark.gov.uk/mysouthwark

Parking permit update, Russell Edwards responds to resident’s enquiry.

On Fri, Apr 24, 2015 at 12:53 PM, Edwards, Russell <Russell.Edwards@southwark.gov.uk> wrote:

I am very aware of the continued delays to the implementation of the scheme.

This is an issue with all proposed Housing Estate schemes at present, and as I have such a scheme on my patch I have become involved in trying to identify the blockages within the process and to remedy the situation. I have many enquiries regarding this and so I do wish to get it resolved as soon as I can.

To this end I have met with all involved teams and identified where the problems are that have caused the delay in the creation of the Traffic Management Order and the statutory consultation. The scheme has had approval from Community Council.

I am just about to finalise the process and delegate various responsibilities. I plan to pass the proposed schemes that are on hold to the Public Realm Projects Team next week. They will create the Traffic Order and put out for consultation. After that happens colleagues in Estate Parking Enforcement will arrange for lineage and street furniture to be fitted and the scheme will go live.

My estimate therefore for completion of the process will be approximately 10 weeks from when I pass the work, and the majority of this is to do with the consultation period. If we get any objections we will need to go back to Community Council and start the process again – but I hope we don’t have that issue. I have ensured that the Tabard scheme is prioritised.

I am very sorry for the delays which have now been resolved and the process going forward is clarified and established.

Kind Regards
 
Russell Edwards
Resident Services Manager
( Office: +44 (0) 20 7525 7377
Ê Fax: +44 (0) 20 7525 1799
: Email: russell.edwards@southwark.gov.uk
*Address: Southwark Council, Area Housing (North Team), Housing Services Department, PO Box 68119, London, SE1P 4GP

Email from BVAG – consultation closes soon (24th April)

Update – Yesterday’s Meeting

Yesterday’s meeting with the three Council representatives, Mark Williams, Cabinet Member for Regeneration, Planning and Transport, Simon Bevan, Head of Planning, and Juliet Seymour, Community Planning Decoy Officer, was as colourful as usual.

They had been on notice for several weeks that their ‘concerns’ about our application for a Neighbourhood Forum needed to be specified rather than couched in nebulous generalities – enabling them to pull an excuse for refusal out of the hat at the last minute without giving us a chance to respond. This has been their plan B. Plan A, indefinite stalling, became unlawful following central Government’s realisation that it was far too easy for local authorities to defeat localism by the naturally attractive option of doing absolutely nothing. As with their previous strategies they were not going to give up the latest without a fight. Hence our esteemed guests repeatedly tried to deliver tedious empty and endlessly rehearsed speeches professing their deep sincerity – and avoiding the issues. For once in our meetings an almost Council-like firm chairmanship was required to stop them squirming out of answering the questions demanding clarity on their position. With Williams floundering on the ropes our supporters landed a knock-out punch demanding a meeting for today in which a delegation from OBVF can attend the Council offices for a meeting with Juliet Seymour for her to be categorical about what in our present application could support a refusal to recognise us – and how any such defect can be remedied. Why this could not be done at the meeting itself was not clear but it was certainly clear that they had come under duress to furnish themselves with a defence against accusations of furtive efforts to defeat our application whilst being intent on avoiding disclosure of their hand. As a result our delegation will be in Tooley St this afternoon and it will be difficult for the Council to keep any cards up their sleeve without opening themselves up to a legal challenge if they rely on them to refuse our application.

Williams and Bevan were obviously coming to wonder whether they could make plan B stand up because they were already starting to clutch for a plan C. Their instinct here is obviously to profess such deep deference to the results of their ‘consultation’ that they can claim opposition to the OBVNF application does not allow them in conscience to approve it. They have of course certain tame organisations beholden to them (e.g. paid JMB staff, Team London Bridge) beholden to them for their existence because they control their purse strings. They will be confident of being able to use their influence to coax out of such people a ‘response’ to help support a refusal of our application.

Since the statutory consultation period ends today it will be helpful if our supporters can spare the time to put in some counter-balancing views. Group Treasurer Amy burnt the midnight oil after the meeting last night and has produced this to help:

——————————————————————————–

After five years of hard work trying to help local people to wield some democratic community power over the decisions that are made about the neighbourhood in which we live, we are about to jump the last hurdle in our long march to be designated as the neighbourhood forum for the area that the Council has decided on – ‘Area A’. We have put in an application as the Old Bermondsey Village Neighbourhood Forum, and any of you who live in Area A should have received a letter from Southwark Council asking you to make your comments by:

Deadline – Friday April 24th – that’s tomorrow!

You can email your comments on our application to planningpolicy@southwark.gov.uk or by post to Planning Policy, Chief Executive’sDepartment, FREEPOST SE1919/14, London, SE1P 5LX

We could do with a plentiful response. Of course, enthusiastic support for our cause and our work would be much appreciated (and if you have ideas and comments you want to add to the mix, please e-mail us or come to one of our meetings to have an impact). However, in the true spirit of democracy, you are of course free to write negatively about our application, and so the headings below have been designed to leave space for either opinion, although of course the tone is unavoidably leaning towards the optimistic!
For those of you who only have a few minutes to spare, we thought we might offer some headings which might help you get started composing a reply to the consultation:

LOCALISM and NEIGHBOURHOOD FORUM CONCEPT

(Under the Localism Act a Neighbourhood Plan ‘could set out detailed planning guidance on issues such as housing, heritage, design, open spaces and local businesses’ (Southwark Council consultation letter)).
Do you think that local people should have a voice in which decisions are made about the area they live in? Would you like to be able to feed into a local community plan that can turn the priorities of the people into council policies?
Do you feel that a refusal of the OBVNF application will be harmful to the neighbourhood and the neighbourhood plan process?
MEETINGS and COMMUNICATION
Have you been to any meetings, are you on the mailing list, or have you become aware through posters and word of mouth, of the Old Bermondsey Village Neighbourhood Forum (until recently operating under the name of the BVAG – Bermondsey Village Action Group)?
Have you felt informed and included about the aims and work of the group? Do you feel that the group makes an effort to be open and inclusive? Do you feel OBVNF as a group has ample scope to actively engage with the larger community once approved? Whether OBVNF has the potential to be an effective representative group for the community?
‘AREA A’

(The boundary of the area has been decided by the council and is not up for discussion at the moment. The council believe that this is the correct and manageable are.)
Do you think that this group should have the chance to be voted in via a referendum to be the focal point for people’s ideas and hopes for the development of the local area?
There is no other application from a group on the table – would you prefer the status quo of the council’s approach and policies as they stand, or do you want a community group to try to build a representative plan for the area?
POLICIES
Community plan policies will not be decided until the group has been designated and had a chance to do the work of gathering a cross-section of local wishes for the Neighbourhood Plan, but are there any specific policies or issues that you would like local people to take a lead on?
OBVNF
Overall, do you support the application of the OBVNF to be the neighbourhood forum for Area A?

Please see here for further info and to submit your reply.

Many thanks for taking the time to consider this.

– The OBVNF organising team.

Parking update – email to Russell Edwards.

From: Tabard North<tgntra@gmail.com>Date: Mon, Apr 20, 2015 at 3:58 PMSubject: Re: Tabard Gardens Traffic Management Order

To: “Edwards, Russell” <Russell.Edwards@southwark.gov.uk>
Cc: “Eatwell, David” <David.Eatwell@southwark.gov.uk>, “Maugham, Claire” <Claire.Maugham@southwark.gov.uk>, “Eastham, Karl” <Karl.Eastham@southwark.gov.uk>, “Luthra, Vijay” <Vijay.Luthra@southwark.gov.uk>, “simon@simonhughes.org.uk” <simon@simonhughes.org.uk>, “Coyle, Neil” <Neil.Coyle@southwark.gov.uk>, “Snell, Susan” <Susan.Snell@southwark.gov.uk>, “Parkes, Clarence” <Clarence.Parkes@southwark.gov.uk>
Dear Mr Edwards

Thank you for your email of 27 March where you confirmed to Tabard North that the walkabout and plan for the area had been competed and that the team would now be moving to document production so that the Traffic Management Order could be introduced.

There is a Committee meeting of the TR&A tomorrow evening and it would be very helpful if you could confirm before then whether the Order has now been issued or, if not, when this can be expected.

I have still not seen the public notice advertising this parking scheme, despite checking regularly both Southwark News and the London Gazette. This would make your estimate of ‘no longer than 42 days’ unachievable for the introduction of the scheme. Indeed, you were informing residents in January of this year that ‘the scheme will be ready to go live no later than February 2015’. I would be grateful if you would now provide a realistic timescale for the introduction of the parking permit scheme.

Regards

Peter Davis
Chair, Tabard Gardens North T&RA

Email from BVAG: meeting, Wednesday 22nd April

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Important meeting
Wednesday 22nd April 6.30pm Globe House

It is now only five weeks until Southwark run out of time for determining our application for NF status. Of course, our application was made some three years ago but the Council traded on the fact that there was no statutory time limit for determining applications until introduced by the Government in January to stop local authorities using the simplest method of avoiding meddling locals sticking their nose into the furtive and lucrative business of planning.

The Council have been reduced to contriving some basis for refusal. Rather clutching at straws they have come up with:
1.We are not representative enough
2. Our constitution is not good enough
3. We must think the Council’s own planning policy is incapable of improvement

After numerous invitations the Cabinet Member for Regeneration, Planning and Transport, Mark Williams has agreed to attend our meeting, on Wednesday 22nd April, accompanied by Head of Planning, Simon Bevan, to explain what we will need to do to meet the Council’s high standards of community engagement and responsiveness.

Of course, if the meeting is unimpressed by the reasoning of Messrs Williams and Bevan – not an unknown reaction – it may come to them explaining how they are legally empowered to refuse our application.

Unless they can find the excuse they are looking for our application will have to be approved by 25th May 2015. Thereafter we will finally be able to get on with what we started three years ago and introduce some local wishes and initiatives to shape our immediate environment.

This meeting not to be missed. All welcome.