Meeting Bob the Builder

Lynne Featherstone with the 101 Play Group101 Play Group are celebrating with Bob the Builder – having got £5,000 squid as one of twelve winners of the ‘Project: Renovate’ competition this playgroup is the Greater London finalist.

Their prize was to win an Eco-Makeover for the building. They have used the money on splendid new doors onto the outside play area, insulation and other eco-improvements.

The children originally had to do a whole series of activities about eco-friendly improvements – so they learned loads. Then photos of the children doing the projects and a 200 word submission were sent off. Travis Perkins were one of the companies sponsoring the competition.

So congrats to everyone. It’s not easy finding funding to get repairs or improvements done – and this prize money was much needed.

As you can see in the picture – although my Liberal Democrat councillor colleagues Monica Whyte (on my right) and Errol Reid on the far left (the only man in the picture) and myself were all there to support the Celebration Day – it was Bob the Builder who was definitely the main attraction – no contest!

Open day at St Ann's Police Station

Lynne Featherstone at St Ann's Police StationSaturday highlights: open day at St Ann’s Police Station. This annual event seems to be getting more and more popular as the local community come in – mainly with their children – to unite police and the community it polices. Allowed to pet police dogs, sit on police motorbikes, sound the siren on the cars, have their fingerprints done and so on – the friendly and informative interaction is really an exemplar example of how it should be done. My personal highlight this year – having met the dogs and sat on the bikes in previous years – wearing a police hat and holding a speed trap laser!

Late afternoon popped to the Willingdon Road summer street party – the second year of this event. The street has tables in the middle and the international cuisine laid out as a feast symbolic of the happy and diverse community that live here. Full marks to Gosia Shannon who is the driving force behind this with a fifteen strong committee.

I went around and talked to as many people as I could – and everyone I spoke to was just delighted by the event and by getting to know their neighbours. The highlight for me was meeting an older lady who had been born in the street – and Gosia told me that the year before (i.e. the first Willingdon Road street party) this lady had watched out of her window at the events for four hours. This year – she was out like a shot – right from the start. That’s inclusion in action.

Chance to catch me in the media on Sunday

Appearing on Radio 4's The Westminster Hour with Carolyn QuinnI’m on The Westminster Hour: Radio 4, 10pm, Sunday.

If you miss the show you’ll be able to listen again on their website.

If you want to get advanced notice of my media appearances like this one, you can use the media events service at Flock Together. You’ve got three choices:

  1. Using this feed: http://feeds.libdems.org.uk/LiberalDemocratsMediaAppearances, or
  2. By email: register at FlockTogether and pick “Media appearances” as one of the categories of events you want to be emailed about. (If you are an existing Flock Together user you can also change your preferences – login and then click “Edit your preferences” in the left-hand menu; you need to tick “Media Appearances” under “Email options”), or
  3. On the web: take a look at the dedicated Flock Together page.

Good news on school places

Hurrah – my Liberal Democrat council colleagues have at last managed to get Haringey Council to hold a consultation on whether to expand Rhodes Avenue Primary school.

In May 2007 Councillor Gail Engert (Muswell Hill ward) revealed a shocking primary school place ‘black hole’ – out of the 110 children across all of Haringey who did not receive any of their four school preferences for a reception place, 25 came from Alexandra ward alone. (It’s only one out of nineteen wards, but more than one of five of the children without one of the four choices came from there.)

The consultation on whether to expand is long overdue – but it’s good to see our long-term campaigning on this paying off.

A nine-word summary of what is wrong with so much of our tabloid journalism

Now Labour plans to bar white men from jobs” – just one of the recent screaming tabloid headlines about the Equality Bill. What a fantastic nine-word summary of what is wrong with so much of our tabloid journalism: whipping up fear and division based on a fairy tale. I’m not sure what is worse – believing that the person who wrote the headline was so ignorant of the story they thought it was true – or so cynical they were happy to write it knowing it wasn’t.

Because the truth is there is no provision like that in the Equality Bill. Nowhere. All the Bill proposes is that if two different people are equally qualified for a job (and that is a very big if!), it should be ok to choose between them on gender or race grounds.

And why may you want to do that? Well, to take one example – there’s a real shortage of male teachers in primary schools. We all bang on about the need for more male role models for children at this stage. So why shouldn’t the law allow give the school the option if it wants (because yes – that’s all the Bill would do – it wouldn’t force this upon any organisation) to decide that faced with two equally qualified people, it wants to introduce a bit more balance amongst its teachers and employ a man? And if the school wanted just to ban white men regardless (or indeed black men – though notice how that didn’t make it into the headline) – then that would be illegal. End of story.

This sorry tale is though a good reminder as to how we can’t take the case for equality for granted – particular when there are Conservative MPs like Mark Pritchard jumping on the bandwagon happily exaggerating away and mirroring these fairytales too.

It is also a distraction in some ways from the big issue missing at the heart of the Bill – effective action to tackle the continuing discrimination in pay. So, the private sector – in which around 80% of the population work – will escape any form of mandatory measures to ensure that there is no discrimination in their workplaces – thus probably ensuring that the gender pay gap and the employment barriers that exist in race, disability and so on continue barely troubled by the Single Equality Bill.

Given that there are something like 120,000 cases waiting to be heard at equal pay tribunals this is not some trivial niche issue. That is approaching 200 cases per Parliamentary constituency. It should be a huge scandal, grabbing every MPs’ attention – but instead, it is overlooked and sidelined by our political system.

So I will aim to help push those better intentioned MPs in all parties to add in more effective measures to the Bill as it wends its way through Parliament. Lord Lester (our Lord Lester) who basically wrote the book on the equalities agenda is quite clear that mandatory pay audits are absolutely vital to deliver any sort of significant change.

What is to be welcomed in particular in the Bill, and which seems to have been agreed at the eleventh hour, is the inclusion of our older citizens into the public sector equality duty and following on from that – although no timetable was given – the end of discrimination against them in goods and services.

Helped the Aged – and others – have done some great work to illuminate just what goes on at the moment. Take two examples. First, the Disability Living Allowance. People aged 65+ who become disabled are not eligible to receive this allowance – they qualify instead for Attendance Allowance, which takes longer to qualify for and pays less. Second – car insurance, where it is seen as acceptable to charge people more for being old, regardless of their health or driving record. Charging more because someone is genuinely a higher risk – that would be fine– but simply assuming “old = risky driver” in the absence of evidence to back that up – that is discrimination as plain and simple as if someone was to say, “they’re black – so let’s charge them more”.

The Bill will also bring in a much-needed consolidation of the huge number of different laws, rules and regulations – good news again. And of course the passage through Parliament will provide plenty of opportunities to try to make the legislation better!

This article first appeared in last week’s Liberal Democrat News. For subscription details, click here.

Parking fines

Had a meeting last week with three people who are fighting the fight for fairness for motorists. In the wake of the revelations over Labour-run Haringey Council fining motorists for being in two yellow junction boxes in the borough which were illegally drawn – I am meeting them at their request. Some may regard it as supping with the devil – but that’s the point – motorists aren’t devils and they have as much right to fairness under the law as everyone else.

When I was Chair of Transport at the London Assembly I carried out an investigation publicly into parking enforcement in London. Judging from the visit I had from three borough leaders – yes one from each of the main parties – I was lucky not to end up with concrete boots in the Thames! The boroughs didn’t want me to look at this – and that just made me want to look harder. Without going into the findings – suffice to say – that income from parking etc. forms a standard part of the budget of many councils and therefore not all concerns by the motoring lobby are unfounded.

As someone who has often campaigned for parking restrictions and regulation – my concern is that they must be fair and reasonable – and they must be there for a good reason. The scrutiny at the London Assembly found many, many unfair practises and there were loads of recommendations. One – which I think Westminster took up – but not as strongly as I would have liked – is greater sensitivity to the severity of the offence. For example I don’t think that being a couple of minutes late back to a meter when time has expired should carry the same fine as a more serious infringement.

Back to my meeting last week. What Haringey’s illegal junction boxes boil down to is ‘unlawfully earned income’ – which in my view Haringey should therefore be refunding. (A view shared by at least one Labour councillor – Alan Stanton – though he has got into hot water with his colleagues for saying that in public).

Councils cannot and should not be above the law on such things. If we, the public, are to respect the laws and abide by them – they must be fair and be seen to be fair. And that includes the law applying to councils as well as to residents.

What is so interesting – is that if you get a ticket and the signing has been misleading or the junction box illegal – you can challenge it – and chances are that you will get your ticket written off. But there is no comeback on the firm/council/authority as a result. What I would prefer to see is that if it’s decided that you got a ticket wrongly – then there should also be scope for part of the ruling to be that the misleading sign or whatever must be changed.

Anyway – Cllr Martin Newton, who is the Liberal Democrat spokesperson for traffic etc on Haringey Council, attended the meeting with me and he is taking it forward at council level. I have written to the Chief Executive, however, to ask if Haringey is going to refund all the motorists who were illegally fined for the two yellow junction boxes. We will see!

Chariot Festival

Saturday afternoon saw a pair of local party events. First in my own patch – Strawberry Tea at beautiful home of Harold Margolis – and then off to to Tunbridge Wells local party as Guest of Honour at their Summer BBQ fundraiser. Sat Nav saved me!

The house in Paddock Wood was just beautiful: an old Oat House and Hop Press – now fantastic home with fantastic where there were table and chairs and lots of delicious food. And after food – came me! It was a lovely evening – and they seemed to be such an optimistic group – so I have good hopes for their future prospects.

Sunday morning saw me go to the amazing Chariot Festival outside the Murugan Temple in Highgate. I lived next to the Temple (Wembury Road) when it first rose out of the ashes of the old Highgate Synagogue on corner with Archway Road. I will be meeting the Chair and Trustees again to discuss all of the issues – but for today – just look at the photo. Such colour and such delightfully warm and friendly reception. Loved it!

Lynne Featherstone at the Murugan Temple Chariot Festival

Proud of Pubs week

Lynne Featherstone behind the bar at the Three CompassesThis coming week is ‘Proud of Pubs’ week, so Ive done a photo with the landlord and barman at the Three Compasses Pub in Hornsey High Street – which is situated just underneath my office!

I am very, very proud of this pub. They are phenomenal example of community public spirit – and beyond that – pubs are soon going to be just about the only community location left as the Labour government runs a coach and horses through our local post offices etc. So – three cheers for the Three C’s!