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About Lynne Featherstone

I'm a Liberal Democrat member of the House of Lords.

Liberal Democrats back new bus route for Hornsey Hospital

After successfully campaigning with local residents for the Hornsey Hospital to re-open, the Liberal Democrats have today launched a major campaign to persuade Transport for Londonto introduce a dedicated bus service to the new Park Road health centre.

Lynne Featherstone MP and local councillors are asking local people to back the campaign by returning special ‘Back the Bus’ postcards that are being delivered to 20,000 households with the help of local residents.

Official figures from the health trust acknowledge that the area is very poorly served by buses, with less than half of local residents able to get to the Park Road Health centre in less than 20 minutes.

Lynne Featherstone MP comments:

“It is absolutely fantastic that we finally have a new health facility in our local area after campaigning for so long with local residents to make it happen.But what’s the point if it is so difficult for people to get there?

“I hope residents will come out in full force and back our campaign so we can get a bus service that connects people to the new hospital from all corners of western Haringey.”

Cllr Martin Newton, Liberal Democrat Transport Spokesperson, adds:

“So far the trust has made feeble attempts to see if more buses are needed or if routes need changing, but it’s all come to nothing. With the grand opening just around the corner, a proper consultation is needed so we can get the right bus services for local people.”

Residents who want to support the campaign should call Lynne Featherstone’s office to request a post card on 020 8340 5459 or email lynne@lynnefeatherstone.org.

Liberal Democrats ask Haringey Council to 'spend a penny'

Local Liberal Democrats are lobbying Haringey Council to make full use of the Community Toilet Scheme in order to tackle the inadequate facilities within the borough and help out local businesses.

The Community Toilet scheme uses access to toilet facilities in local businesses, shops and restaurants. Local traders in return receive a fee from Haringey Council.

Last week Highgate councillor, Rachel Allison, and Lynne Featherstone MP met with a local pub owner who is keen to join the scheme but has yet to get a decision from Haringey Council.

Tom Helliwell from the Woodman Public House, Highgate, comments:

“The Community Toilet Scheme would be beneficial for local traders like me as we don’t want to turn people away, but we can’t continue to provide this service for free. We’re right by the tube station and get hundreds of people using our facilities every day. We need support from Haringey Council, but we’ve heard nothing.”

Cllr Rachel Allison (Highgate) adds:

“Local residents, especially parents with small children and the elderly, are fed up navigating the unpleasant gauntlet of the limited, shabby and unclean public toilets that are presently available.

“Hollow pledges by Haringey Council to ‘look’ at taking this forward in the next year, as well exploring the possibility of reopening closed sites at Tottenham High Road, have just not materialised.

“Businesses are keen to participate and it could increase trade. Residents want it. Richmond, Camden and Waltham Forest can do it. Why can’t Haringey?”

Lynne Featherstone MP adds:

“Under current plans residents would be made to wait with crossed legs for a further nine months for the simple convenience of being able to use a clean toilet – it is not acceptable.”

Funding for Haringey's schools

Aha! Now the fight to get fair funding for Haringey schoolchildren is getting the support of teaching unions in Haringey. Everyone in Haringey recognises the injustice of us having to pay inner London teacher salaries but only receiving outer London per pupil funding. The differential is stark. Our kids get £1,183 less than children in Camden, Hackney or Islington.

I was able to raise this issue again on the floor of the House last Thursday. One day we will get it through to the Government that this is just not fair. Our schools are struggling terribly with their budgets – and if ‘every child matters’ how come our children don’t matter as much as them next door?

Political reform: what to make of Cameron?

Having just read David Cameron’s recipe to restore public faith in politicians I note his glaring omissions. He omits what I regard as a fundamental gravy train that MPs have supped from for far too long. When I got to Parliament in 2005 I was outraged to find that MPs could use public money from the taxpayer for their mortgage and – given the booming house market until recent times – could then sell their property for huge profits and pocket them. That has been a scandal. I have bleated on about this ever since. Nick Clegg has taken up this issue too. The argument is very simple – that no one should be able to make a profit out of public money. Of course – David Cameron himself is profiting from this nice little earner. So – that’s the first black mark.

He also says nothing of the House of Lords – the bastion of privilege and non-accountability or democratic mandate. Failing to even wish to tackle this antiquated anomaly shows again that DC is a conservative who has been forced to flagg up ‘reform’ – but without the heart and commitment of a genuine reformer.

I was pleased to read the small paragraph on bringing the advantages of internet to Parliament. I have banged on about this for some time – and again I don’t think Cameron gets to the heart of what really matters. For example (not in Cameron’s recipe) from the first publication of a Bill – the changes and amendments all come on separate bits of papers.

I remember after leading on my first Bill in Parliament for the Liberal Democrats I went to the Labour Whips office to persuade them to use tracking changes so that we could see the Bill and its alterations all in the same place. You know track changes – the sort of thing the rest of the world has been using for years and years and years. But not Parliament. Instead – something changes, and you get given a block of replacement text without changes marked up. They seem incapable of breaking out of their straight jacket of history and moving to modern online information.

This just demonstrates the inability to move on the tiniest of changes that might help produce better legislation – and also open it up to public comment, scrutiny and feedback without having to be a lawyer to understand the bloody stuff. Make it easy for everyone to see what’s being changed – and I’ve no doubt people will start using that data, lobbying MPs more effectively and even spot things MPs have missed. After all – it’s not exactly news to say that some legislation gets through Parliament with mistakes in the wording. But open up the data – and then there’s the chance for other people to spot the mistakes, highlight them before they become law – and we all benefit.

There is stuff that Cameron’s said which I agree with – as you would expect given that many of the ‘ideas’ he puts forward in today’s Guardian are long-standing Liberal Democrat policies! Fixed-term parliaments, reducing of the power of the executive, cutting the number of MPs, devolving power to councils and empowering individuals. Transparency and accountability – definitely. Shame Cameron has had to be dragged kicking and screaming on these. But – to be fair – at least he is going out there.

DC, however, does not want to change the electoral system – a system that conserves the old ways at its very heart. No surprise there. We need an electoral system that gives real power to the voter to choose – and strips away the comfort of being in a safe seat that leads so many MPs astray, forgetting what they are really there for. (See this excellent analysis of the pattern between how safe an MP’s seat is and whether or not they’ve abused the expense rules.)

At present we have a government that does not represent the people – elected to total power by something like 36% only of voters – and garnered by electoral and financial effort being funneled into swing seats in marginals, largely ignoring voters elsewhere.

If we want politicians and politics to truly change – it isn’t enough to simply change a few rules in the heat of the media spotlight, but we need to change the rules by which MPs get into power – and can get kicked out again.

But at least, this catastrophic and seismic explosion into the body politic – has made even the Conservative leader – and even if for the wrong reasons – say some of the right things. Some – but not enough.

Gordon Brown, mind you, is woefully absent from this debate altogether, off the pace and not addressing the issues that need addressing. Totally explains why Blair managed to out dance him on the leadership in the first place.

What is clear is that this is a moment in time when the political establishment is in crisis. And that establishment has kept at bay the real changes that our needed in our country to make our democracy decent, effective, transparent and accountable. Power to the people is what is needed. Clearly power that rests in politicians hands will not deliver the new politics that we so desperately need.

Now you see it, now you don't – Labour and allowances

Now you see it (Labour taking bigger allowances on Haringey Council) – now you don’t – because they’ve tried to hide it in extra Special Responsibility Allowances rather than an overall rise for all their councillors!

The reality though is that Labour have actually awarded themselves £44,751 in extra allowances – through the back door. What Labour have done is vote unanimously for the total of their Special Responsibility Allowances (SRA) to be increased from £676,533 last year to £721,284 this year. In contrast, the Liberal Democrat councillors on Haringey are committed to cutting the number of SRA positions altogether.

This news goes against Council Leader Cllr Claire Kober’s comments that Haringey Council should tighten its belt and “any savings can go straight into providing essential services for the people of Haringey.”

As my Lib Dem colleague Cllr Ed Butcher said: “The Labour leader has been quoted as saying councillors should tighten their belts too in this financial crisis. Well, this looks like they sadly added a few extra notches instead.”

(There’s more on this story on my website and on Liberal Democrat Voice.)

Lap-dancing update

Grabbed the opportunity of the Policing Bill – which proposes changing the rules around lap-dancing – to extract a promise. The new legislation, when passed, will make lap dancing clubs have to apply for license as a sex encounter establishment. Currently they only need the same license as a pub.

Part of the concern in Crouch End, outside of just the application (now on hold) for such a club at the Music Palace, was that an application would be rushed through and get granted before the new legislation – and then the legislation would allow all existing lap dancing clubs automatic new licenses – called ‘grandfather rights’.

So – up I leapt during the week – and intervened on the Minister to point out how dreadful this would be. And happily, on the floor of the House of Commons, I extracted the promise that last minute applications for lap dancing clubs will not escape new licensing laws.

Hurrah!

Baby P – sentences handed out

So – sentences have now been handed out following the trial over the death of Baby P.

This coincided with the publication of the second Serious Case Review which finally lays bare the litany of failures by every agency involved and by all the individuals who did not do their job properly.

What is so shocking is that virtually no-one did what I am sure the people would expect when a child is on the at risk register.

As to the future. Well, Haringey (who issued a statement then bunkered down not willing to face the media – which doesn’t bode well for a change in attitude) would like this to draw a line under the whole sorry story. But there should be no lines drawn. That is what they did after Victoria Climbie when they promised this would never happen again and that lessons had been learned – when clearly they hadn’t.

If Haringey Council doesn’t change its rotten culture of secrecy, cover-ups and acceptance of inadequate performance – then there can be no assurance that a few years down the line another vulnerable child will not suffer again as those meant to protect them fail to do their jobs properly.

Who should be the next Speaker?

So now we are looking for a new Speaker. I just don’t want it to be the traditional kind of same old same old that went before. If there was ever an opportunity for change and reform – this is the start of it.

Anyway – thought I would ask you all to give your views on who the new Speaker should be! I can’t promise to agree with you or go with the majority on this one – but knowing who might inspire public confidence is crucial to choosing the right person.

And I do think the public need to have confidence in whoever is chosen – not just the MPs!

So tell me your views…

Haringey Council fails to meet recycling targets for nearly a year

Concern is growing for Haringey Council’s green credentials after it emerged that it has failed to meet its own recycling targets for ten out of the last eleven months.

Haringey Council only met its 28% recycling target once in the last eleven reported months, in January this year. The average amount of waste sent to recycle in the last year to date was languishing 3% under target at 24.93%.

Liberal Democrats believe that residents need more opportunity to recycle and would like to see action from Haringey Council to improve performance.

Cllr Bob Hare, Liberal Democrat Environment Spokesperson, comments:

“Whilst it is not just the quantity of recycling that counts, it is a good indicator of how the borough is doing on recycling. What is clear is that Haringey has consistently failed to meet targets yet there seems to be little evidence of any political will by Labour to better their poor performance.”

Lynne Featherstone, MP for Hornsey and Wood Green, adds:

“Clearly steps must be taken to increase recycling rates, and Haringey Council needs to take a good hard look at why they have failed to reach targets month after month.

“Recycling needs to be easier and more accessible – there are still plenty of people in Haringey who want to recycle but don’t get the opportunity.”