Pirate radio station update

Further to the story of Crimestoppers adverts appearing on a pirate radio station – Bizim FM – the offending advertisements look like having been downloaded from the web by the radio station and then broadcast.

However they got there – you cannot have the Met’s brand on an illegal radio station – and the Met are investigating. They say that they have had this type of problem before so we’ll see what they decide to do this time!

I have had a few emails saying that Bizim is better than London Turkish Radio (LTR). Not my focus – I am not judging the relative excellence or otherwise of the two stations – only their legality or otherwise. I am also getting a few identical letters from supporters of Bizim (so orchestrated clearly) who say that it is just a ‘licensing technicality’. I think that’s the sort of technicality that costs money – i.e. applying for a license – in fact quite a lot of money. Licensing is what keeps our airwaves clear – not just for our enjoyment but also for our safety in that the frequencies are also used by the emergency services. Illegal broadcasting is not acceptable. Nor is one station having to pay whilst another decides it won’t.

Listen guys – I have no axe to grind here other than a business in my constituency is being financially damaged by an illegal pirate radio station.

I am meeting with Ofcom in a couple of weeks – so watch this space!

Encouraging practical alternatives to car ownership

Met Lynne Featherstone MP seeing how the Islington Streetcar street club workswith Streetcar. This is a car club. For those who don’t know – car clubs are just that. You become a member of the club and you can ‘buy’ access to a car, which will be stationed relatively near to you for an hourly, or 24 hour fee. It’s secured with a sort of version of the Oyster Card that unlocks the door – and then you have a pin number to feed into a gismo that removes the immobiliser and releases you the key to start it up.

There was one (well two actually) parked on the special on-street spaces reserved by the council in Islington (Lib Dem run of course!) for the car club – which is being enthusiastically backed by the council. Car clubs typically remove 20 private cars for each one of their cars. It is economic to the club member (only pay for a car when you need it), great for reducing congestion and car parking stress – and research amongst members demonstrates that people drive less miles per annum than they did when they owned their own car.

So – Cllr Ed Butcher (Lib Dem, Stroud Green) and I were meeting with Streetcar to see how they were progressing with breaking into the Haringey market. Opening gambits have been made – but I am sure Ed will be seeking to help them on their way. Transport for London gives funding to boroughs to promote the introduction of car clubs – so where there is money Haringey can be directed!

Budgens show the way for responsible supermarkets

After Lynne Featherstone MP at Budgens in Crouch End sampling their produce which is as local and fresh as they can make itmeeting constituents face-to-face to hear the issues they wanted to raise with me it was off this morning to Budgens in Crouch End to launch / support their new scheme for getting us all to cut out using plastic bags for our shopping.

Their campaign is called ‘Pennies for Plastic’ because the cost of each plastic bag is 1p and for every single one that the customers don’t use Budgens are giving that money to a local project. This time the money will go to Weston Park Primary School. They have had the children draw this huge painting of the Clock Tower and the kids arrive for photo opportunities with their painting, trolleys full of plastic bags (5,000 per day are used) and T-shirts to support the cause. Budgens want everyone to use the purchasable environmentally sound bag – and reuse it every time – or bring their own shopping bag. And it isn’t stopping there – as Budgens are getting together all the independents in Crouch End to support this campaign. It’s win, win, win, win! Local store, local produce, local schools and local community – that’s how to do it!

And because I am so pleased with Budgens taking on this environmental challenge I want to big them up on their approach to their food too! Their new smoothies and fresh food stand is at the front of the shop (delicious smoothie – all fresh ingredients as you can get as they are frozen at the height of their fruit being lives and then used when needed).

Andrew Thornton showed me around and what is clear is that Budgens has decided to make their food as local as possible and as fresh as possible – thus proving that providing good produce reaps financial rewards too! I was amazed that they were able to commission individual orders from specialist local food producers or makers – like the pesto where the father grew the herbs (locally) and the daughter picked them and took them back to her kitchen to make, with the end product now on Andrew’s shelves.

MP lends hand at local soup kitchen

To help encourage people to get involved in local volunteering opportunities as part of for ‘National Volunteers Week’ Lynne Featherstone MP last night lent a hand at Muswell Hill Baptist Church’s Soup Kitchen.

The kitchen is supported by over fifty volunteers who provide food and support five nights a week to people who have nowhere else to turn.

Commenting, Lynne said:

“I was tremendously impressed by the hard work and dedication of John Grant and his team of volunteers who give up their own time for those less fortunate.

“There are literally hundreds of opportunities to volunteer locally and the rewards are immense.I would encourage any one with a bit of time to spare to check out what is available”

Supporting a local soup kitchen

Go Lynne Featherstone MP supporting the Muswell Well Soup Kitchen as part of National Volunteers Weekto a soup kitchen in Muswell Hill at the Dukes Avenue Baptist Church to support and celebrate National Volunteers Week. John Grant, who is also the Church Warden, started this kitchen many years ago. Now it has grown to a five nights a week mainstay for those who really have nowhere else to go and nothing to eat. Supported by a team of around 50 or more volunteers, most of whom come through Church channels – and several churches in the area are involved – John and his team see that somewhere between 30 and 50 people have food to eat. This is such wonderful work – and the volunteers, most of whom are really young – really seem to enjoy and value the work they do. Congratulations to all who give their time and effort to supporting the soup kitchen!

Ironically enough I had had a destitute man come to Central Lobby in Parliament to see me and I was green carded (which means that a note was sent to me – sitting in Chamber – on a green card that a constituent was here to see me). I won’t go in to personal details – but he was literally starving. Sadly – he was also stateless – and our system does not have a catch all for people in such a predicament. If you have status – then you are eligible for social services support etc – but stateless – virtually nothing is available to you.

Fingerprinting children is back in the news

It’s a topic I’ve written about previously – when one of the schools in my constituency was catapulted into the media for fingerprinting children and there were complaints from parents about the fingerprinting.

My colleague Sarah Teather, who is Liberal Democrat Education spokesperson, has just done a survey of primary schools to see which are fingerprinting their children.

What I wrote still seems to hold good:

If we are now saying that fingerprinting children is the best way of ensuring that they get their library books back to the school library – then the world has clearly gone mad!

But this is what is happening both nationally and locally … In my view, treating children like criminals is unlikely to be the best way to imbue the sort of values we should be instilling in the next generation.

Fingerprinting and digitised photographs for protecting the Crown Jewels – fair enough – but fingerprinting and digitised photographs for a children’s book about them? That is a hideously disproportionate response to the issue – and a sense of balance and judgement is one of the many things we should actually be teaching children!

You can read the full piece on my website.