Hook Road - More Lighting?
May 29th, 2008 by Colin Taylor
Having been advised by SCC Highways that only 5 street lights now remain to be fixed in Hook Road, out of the 12 I reported last week, I went to check this evening - and found no less than 10 still out of action.
They also advised me that they are all due to be working by 7th July. On the other hand, on 10th March they had assured me they would all be working by 31st March.
No harm in hoping, meanwhile I shall be keeping up the pressure.
The Power of the Press?
May 28th, 2008 by Colin TaylorToday the county council’s planning committee voted 11 to 4 to refuse an application to build a ready-mix mortar plant in the sand quarry at North Park Farm, Godstone. Nothing too unusual there, you might think. Well no, except that the same committee had already considered the same application back in February and approved it!
Or did we? The members had actually voted 6 to 5 for refusal, but the voting was miss-counted and reported as 5 all, whereupon the chairman gave a casting vote in favour. When members objected that a majority had voted against it, on legal advice she ruled that as she had originally not voted, her casting vote was her first vote and now she would give a casting vote in favour.
After this was reported in the national press, the Council took the advice of a QC and decided that the previous decision was not valid.
The refusal was formally proposed and seconded by my Lib Dem colleagues Fiona White and Ian Beardsmore.
A Question of Lighting
May 21st, 2008 by Colin Taylor
As many local people are only too well aware, early in January most of the street lights failed on a long stretch of Hook Road between Lower Court Road and the former St Barnabas’ Church Hall - and also in Hurst Road.
I asked a formal question about this at SCC’s Local Committee in Epsom & Ewell on 10 March and was told they should all be working by the end of March. Although new lamp posts have been erected, only a minority of these have been connected so far. Meanwhile two others beyond the Church Hall have failed. I counted on Monday and found 12 not working in Hook Road alone.
Workmen have been observed from time to time digging up the footway to connect cables, but the whole operation is proceeding at a snail’s pace. Apparently under Margaret Thatcher’s 1989 electricity privatisation legislation, EDF (the French State Electricity Company) have a monopoly on such work. Although they have promised to meet the targets they have been set by the Regulator (Ofgem), they seem in no hurry to complete this work.
I intend asking another formal question at the next Local Committee in June. You need to be an optimist in this job.
Maternity & Children’s services at Epsom & St Helier
May 21st, 2008 by Colin TaylorA new website was opened yesterday giving a wealth of information about the current review of Maternity & Children’s services at Epsom & St Helier Hospitals. Contents include details of:
- The background to the review;
- The ‘case for change’;
- How the project is being run and who is doing it;
- The latest options for the future of the services;
- How they are engaging with the public;
- Presentations and notes from meetings with stakeholders and staff;
- Agenda and minutes for the review’s Project Board and Project Team;
- Press releases and other breaking news.
Visitors are asked to comment on the options and/or put forward other ideas. It can be accessed at http://review.surreyhealth.nhs.uk/Women&Children’s/
More Gypsies.
May 20th, 2008 by Colin TaylorMore gypsies have arrived to join those already encamped on Manor Park. They all intend to move on to the Downs for the Derby, but it has emerged today that the authorities there will not allow this before 29 May - Thursday next week.
Meanwhile Surrey Police are monitoring the situation and Epsom & Ewell Council is applying to the courts for powers to move these travellers on if they do not leave as intended.
It seems that the Gypsies managed to force their way onto the field at Manor Park by cutting through a drop-down bollard, recently installed by the Council to allow easier access for the grass cutting contractors, in place of one of the two concrete bollards originally installed to prevent Gypsy incursions. My colleague Cllr Jonathan Lees will be discussing with council officers how best to prevent future problems.
Gypsies on the Manor
May 17th, 2008 by Colin TaylorGypsies have camped illegally on the field alongside Chertsey Way. They arrived on Thursday, having been moved on elsewhere in the Borough, saying they were going to Sutton.
The Council have ordered them to move, but legally they have to give them 7 days notice. The Police are hoping to persuade them to move sooner.
The travellers say they will go to the Downs on Tuesday for the Derby.
Highways Plans for 2008 to 2010
May 16th, 2008 by Colin TaylorThis morning the 5 local county councillors were given a preview of the County Council’s plans for Highways work in the next 2 years. The news was not good, because money is short.
However, things they are hoping to do in Epsom & Ewell South-West include:
- Hook Road - major maintenance - Longmead Road to East Street;
- The Crescent - new asphalt surfacing;
- Manor Green Road - new asphalt surfacing;
- Stones Road - replace footbridge by pedestrian and cycle link under railway;
- Traffic lights at West Street/Station Approach junction;
- Improve pedestrian crossing in Hook Road at East Street junction;
- Install bollards in Hook Road to keep lorries off the footway.
E & E Planning - May 2008
May 16th, 2008 by Colin TaylorLast night the Epsom & Ewell Planning Committee:
- Approved Ewell Apiary, Ewell Court House Grotto and 51 Northey Avenue;
- Refused Hatch Furlong Nursery and 147 Hook Road;
- Deferred the signs on the Racecourse Hotel.
Steve Webb wows Epsom and Ewell Lib Dems
May 15th, 2008 by Colin Taylor
After last year’s successful event with Vince Cable MP (just before he became famous for dancing with the stars and cracking jokes in the Commons), this year’s Epsom & Ewell Lib Dem Dinner at South Hatch was a sell-out.
This time the guest speaker was Steve Webb MP, who was formerly Lib Dem Health spokesperson, then led the team producing the party’s Manifesto for last year’s “election that never was”. Now he is Lib Dem shadow Minister for Energy, Environment, Food and Rural Affairs.
As Steve explained, this is a wider portfolio than the government minister’s, but as he had pointed out to Nick Clegg, it was difficult to develop policies to save the Environment, when Energy was the responsibility of a different department. Indeed, the more one looked at it, the more it became clear that the present government machine was far from being “joined up”. He went on to point out many more examples, contrasting this with the Lib Dem approach of a Green backbone linking every policy, rather than adding green issues as an afterthought.
Another theme that he developed was communication, stressing the importance of using modern media to contact and interest the younger adults in today’s society. Steve Webb has not only his own Website and Blog, but is also to be found on both Facebook and My Space.
Mr Webb, who is also a former University Professor, then bravely tackled a wide range of questions on almost every topic, without once flinching or dodging the issue. He is indeed, as our parliamentary candidate Jonathan Lees said in introducing him, an inspiring and challenging example to every Liberal Democrat.
Council Tax - who cares?
May 15th, 2008 by Colin TaylorA couple of hours were whiled away yesterday afternoon at Bourne Hall, Ewell as part of a team of County Councillors standing by to answer questions from the public about Council Tax.
Meetings all over the county have been set up and advertised under the title of “Council Tax Unwrapped”, with posters displayed in local Libraries carrying our mugshots.
All in vain - the public didn’t turn up!
Good and Bad News from Health Scrutiny
May 15th, 2008 by Colin TaylorAt yesterday’s Surrey Health Scrutiny meeting we heard good news about progress at the hospital - no not Epsom, unfortunately, this was the East Surrey hospital in Redhill:
- Waiting times in A&E within target for the last 3 months (a couple of years ago there were reports of ambulances queueing outside).
- 2 out of 3 targets for reducing “referral to treatment” waiting times met.
- Targets for reducing MRSA infections met.
- Finances back in order (they had been overspending for years).
- Plans to pay off their debts within 3 years (instead of 25).
“How was it done?”, we asked. “Identify the cause of the problem, then take action to solve it”, they said. If it was that easy, why has it taken so many years - and why do so many other hospitals seem to have problems?
We were also updated on reducing MRSA and C. Diff (another anti-biotic resistant infection) in Surrey hospitals, this time emphasising that there are far more cases of C. Diff. and with data included from Epsom & St Helier, which covers more than 20% of the county. Overall there is an improvement, but St Helier remains bad.
The Committee was also very critical about an apparent lack of urgency in the County Council who are supposed to be finding a support organisation for the new “LINks” that were supposed to take over the work that the PPIFs (Patient and Public Involvement Forums) were doing, until they were abolished in April. They hope to have it sorted in good time for Christmas.
Mayor Making 2008
May 14th, 2008 by Colin TaylorTuesday night was ‘Mayor Making’. Cllr Alan Winkworth succeeded to the role and looked the part in his red robe. Good luck to him. Lots of speeches and bouquets - then all the RA and Conservative councillors plus the Mayor’s guests were off for drinks and food at public expense, whilst as ever the Lib Dems left them to it and went off for drinks and food at our own expense.






