Gosforth eFocus No 28 - 2nd February 2015

2 Feb 2015

NEW POST OFFICE OPEN

Yesterday the Post Office replacing the closed on in the centre of Gosforth opened in the Loco store in Salters Road. We wish owner Sanjeev Vadhera the best of luck - his success will be built on providing a good service to local people. He's currently looking at disabled access, parking and bus patterns (something we would have hoped had explored before the Post Office made its decision, not after it had announced closure)

Local people should also note that counter services are also available at the Grange Post Office on the Great North Road north of the Gosforth Academy. Parking is available immediately in front of it.

BROADWAY EAST SCHOOLS TRAVEL PLANS

There will be a drop-in session on Friday 6 February from 3:00 to 5:00 pm in the hall at Gosforth East Middle School

In response to long-expressed concerns from residents about inconsiderate parking and safety fears, officers at Newcastle City Council have been working with the schools and councillors to develop travel plans and measures to improve road safety in the area.

At the request of Parklands Ward Councillors David Down, Pauline Allen and Robin Ashby, a drop in session has been arranged to allow local residents, parents, and schools' staff the opportunity to examine the proposals, ask questions, discuss them with local councillors and Council officers and make comments. If you take your children to any of the four schools involved by car, or have friends, relatives or neighbours who do, the new rules, which reduce parking capacity nearby, will affect you or them, so we urge attendance.

On Whitebridge Park, councillors are pressing for dropped kerbs, which will make it easier for parents to walk to schools with children on bikes, scooters or in prams.

TRAFFIC LIGHTS v ROUNDABOUTS

An analysis of the impact on traffic handling volumes, relevant in the context of the changes on the Great North Road..http://jalopnik.com/this-test-proves-roundabouts-are-better-than-four-way-s-1447987773

ULTRA FAST BROADBAND TRIAL FOR GOSFORTH

Recent article in The Journal http://www.thejournal.co.uk/business/business-news/ultrafast-broadband-comes-gosforth-bt-8547121

ENVIROCALL

Matters of local environmental concern can be reported directly to Newcastle City Council's Envirocall - like the wind-broken tree on Whitebridge Parkway, sorted in days. You can contact them by email: envirocall@newcastle.gov.uk or phone: 0191 278 7878 and ask for 'Envirocall', or by putting Newcastle Envirocall into your browser to find the online form. (Note the reference number -it will be asked for if you ring back for a progress report

NEW ANTI-SOCIAL BEHAVIOUR POWERS


The Coalition Government has brought in new powers to deal with anti-social behaviour. Cllr Nick Cott says : " These powers are simpler, more flexible and more effective than the laborious and complicated arrangements under the previous government. Ward Committee meetings have heard the police say that they were already putting them into effect in our area and finding them much better than what was available before".


Powers include injunctions to prevent nuisance and annoyance; immediate dispersal powers for individuals and groups; new community protection notices for police, council officers or social landlords to deal with persistent problems; public space protection orders; closure powers for particular properties; stronger eviction powers for landlords faced with serious anti-social behaviour by tenants.


"It's also good that the Government has brought in powers for victims to demand action by authorities and to have a say in the type of out-of-court punishments" says Nick. More information athttp://www.police.uk/news/new-anti-social-behaviour-powers-come-effect/

MELTON PARK CARE HOME

Newcastle City Council Planning Committee has thrown out the application to expand the Melton Park Care Home yet again (from 67 to 70 beds - a 4 ½% capacity increase)

Councillors David Down, Pauline Allen and Robin Ashby had made representations against the plans at both stages, and at last Council officials recommended against the application.

David Down commented afterwards : "This is a victory to all those local people who had lined up solidly against the plans. We still think there are serious issues surrounding the development, but now have to rely on the Building Control and other regulations and enforcement.

"The applicants have a right to appeal. We hope they realise now the strong views of residents and councillors that enough is enough and content themselves with what they have."

BIG BROTHER OR USEFUL TOOL?

CCTV images can help journey planning -still images from the region's Traffic Management CCTV cameras are now available in a "video wall" format at www.netrafficcams.co.uk (a number of them cover the Gosforth area - see their page 4 onwards)

The images typically update every 1-15 minutes and can be filtered by district. Cameras of interest can be viewed on the "My Camera" tab, or selected from a map and filtered by distance from your current location or postcode. This enables users to view traffic or weather conditions at points of interest which may affect planned journeys, and where necessary make changes to their route or way of travelling.

Further traffic and travel related information can be found at the Tyne and Wear Travel website

IT'S NOT JUST ABOUT CUTS

The Labour Council still has plenty to spend but doesn't make the right choices. They're always complaining about a raw deal - but Newcastle's Labour Council still has £800m to spend each year on its running costs - and over half a million pounds of it comes in money from the Government.

We all know that the previous Labour Government left a huge and growing deficit to be tackled. Health and education spending and pensions have been protected by the Coalition Government, the low paid lifted out of tax, record numbers are in work, two million apprenticeships started, and inflation is at a 12 year low.

Despite what Labour would like you to believe, Newcastle's grant cuts have been less in percentage terms than places like Liverpool, Manchester, Birmingham and many London boroughs.

And how about this? - Referring to the millions of pounds of spending reductions by the City Council over recent years, the Council budget report for 2015/16 says: "Many of the savings have been achieved with minimal impact on services by finding alternative and more cost-effective ways to deliver the same level of service or by improving efficiency without any detriment to service delivery". Quite.

Of course Government cuts have been painful and are unfair, but North East Councils still get much more cash per head than their counterparts in the south - and they've been far less willing to share services with each other than many councils elsewhere. We say it's time to give up the empires; end the duplication; cut the costs. Cllr Robin Ashby will be proposing a motion to Full Council on Wednesday calling for greater impetus to share services with other local authorities, increasing efficiency and saving our money.

Lib Dems in Newcastle also proposed reductions in the number of councillors; council elections every four years instead of annual; reductions in the numbers of political staff - increased under Labour. All these ideas were turned down by the Labour Council who were still cutting funding for libraries, swimming pools, youth services, parks, neighbourhood cleaning services and more.

And we all pay "precepts" for the running of police and fire authorities which bump up our council tax bill. Why are there four fire authorities in our region when there is only one for the whole of Scotland, a far larger area with twice as many people? Why three police authorities? - all with their own managers, specialists, IT systems and overheads? We support local station and the frontline staff not the management and overheads. There are lots of savings still there for the taking without hitting frontline services. WE SAY: Stop complaining and get on with the job.

BLAST FROM THE PAST

If you have a spare 20 minutes, this short film (no narration) shows a day in the life of Newcastle city centre from August 1973. Apparently it was commissioned by - and rejected by the council...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XWOag59IfJo&feature=youtu.be

MEANWHILE, IN THE HOUSE OF LORDS:

Local Government Finance Settlement - Motion to Take Note (22 Jan 2015)http://www.theyworkforyou.com/lords/?id=2015-01-22a.1444.0&s=speaker%3A25000#g1469.0
Lord Shipley: I declare that I am a vice-president of the Local Government Association. The very first paragraph in DCLG's guide to the local government finance settlement in England says: "Local government finance in England is..

--

Gosforth eFocus is brought to you by

​David Down, Pauline Allen and ​Robin Ashby ​.

Liberal Democrat Councillor​s​ for Parklands Ward

Reporting email ​:​ david.down@newcastle-libdems.org.uk

Henry Gallagher, Peter Leggott and David Slesenger ​.

Liberal Democrat Councillors for East Gosforth

Jackie Slesenger, Bill Shepherd and Nick Cott ​ ​

Liberal Democrat Councillors for West Gosforth ​

All in the great city of Newcastle upon Tyne

Write to any of them ​ ​​c/o ​ 5 Rudby Close

Whitebridge Park

Gosforth

Newcastle upon Tyne NE3 5JF

Leave a message on: 07947114820

Follow us on Facebook : Parklands Ward Liberal Democrats, East Gosforth Liberal Democrats and West Gosforth Liberal Democrats

And on Twitter @parklands_ward, @newcastlelibdems

Published & Promoted by David Down for David Down, Pauline Allen, Robin Ashby, Henry Gallageher, Peter Legott, David Slesenger, Jackie Slesenger, Bill Shepherd and Nick Cott (Liberal Democrats), all at 9 Chelton Close, Newcastle, NE13 7NF. We use email addresses to send you more information, more quickly. If not wanted, return with UNSUBSCRIBE in subject li

ne​

Gosforth Liberal Democrats - Working for you all year round

Attachments area

This website uses cookies

Like most websites, this site uses cookies. Some are required to make it work, while others are used for statistical or marketing purposes. If you choose not to allow cookies some features may not be available, such as content from other websites. Please read our Cookie Policy for more information.

Essential cookies enable basic functions and are necessary for the website to function properly.
Statistics cookies collect information anonymously. This information helps us to understand how our visitors use our website.
Marketing cookies are used by third parties or publishers to display personalized advertisements. They do this by tracking visitors across websites.