Improving safety on public transport

Off Safer Transport Team launch at Turnpike Lane bus station: Lynne Feathestone MP with some of the officers plus Tottenham MP, David Lammyto the launch this morning of a new bus safety initiative which will see eighteen Police Community Support Officers (PCSOs) on duty in and around transport hubs – kicked off this morning at Turnpike Lane Bus Station.

It is an extension of the partnership between Transport for London (TfL) and the Met Police brokered by the Greater London Authority (GLA). The reason for it? Well, if you map crime – you would quickly find that the hot spots are transport corridors and transport hubs – particularly around the time schools come out and at night (especially Friday and Saturday nights I believe). So this scheme puts more people in uniform on site to deter and tackle crime.

Very welcome, especially as when I have been knocking on doors in Wood Green, the absolute most common issue raised with me is that of crime and fear of crime. We should all be able to go out and onto transport without fear. This move is a real step forward – hurrah!

Someone has stolen my clothes!

Well – don’t know whether to be pleased or cheesed off – some bugger has stolen my clothes (metaphorically speaking)!

I asked for comments when I posted about my ideas about the internet neighbourhoods and street parties – but I didn’t expect to find someone else to write my whole chapter!

See Tim Lott‘s piece in The Independent to see what I mean. Anyway – the fact that someone else is thinking along similar lines suggests there is some mileage in my thoughts, so – on balance – I’m pleased!

Darfur: time is running out

Speaking Lynne Featherstone MP speaking at the rally for Darfur outside Downing Streetat Darfur Rally today so get tube up to Westminster. Thank goodness the sun is shining – as the turnout is pretty impressive. Many, many refugees from Darfur. Key message from the attendees (according to the frequent chant) is to get the UN / African Union troops deployed on the ground to protect the people.

This is a terrible and deteriorating situation. Whilst there is a lot of dodging around the word ‘genocide’ for a variety of reasons – to me if it walks like genocide, talks like genocide – it’s genocide. And the frustration is that so little is happening. The theme (exemplified by a giant hour-glass filled with blood) is that time is running out.

There are lots of speakers (including me) and generally a lot of passion and anger and desperation – as despite so many people saying after events like Rwanda ‘it must never happen again’, it is happening again.

As I said:

The Sudanese regime is one of the most brutal and destabilising in the world today. Some 400,000 black Darfuris have perished in the past three years due to the measures taken against them by the Government of Sudan and allied militias. If we are not against this genocidal regime, we are with them.

You can read the rest of the speech on my website. But please don’t just read the speech – help do something about it too by contacting your MP to add to the pressure on the Government to act. (Even if you are a constituent of mine, please do still write – the more the messages I receive, the more I can impress on the Government the strength of feeling on the issue).

Mail on Sunday

Tempting though it is to let the story pass without comment, if you’re going to do a regular personal blog you have to stick with it in good times and less so – so I shouldn’t really let the story in tomorrow’s Mail on Sunday pass without comment.

In brief, what happened is this – just ahead of the deadline for new (more stringent) rules on MPs and stationery coming into force, one of my staff ordered an excessively large amount of stationery. As soon as I found out what had happened (the week before last) I instructed that the excess be returned – and I am also putting in place better office procedures.

I only say this by way of explanation because, of course, responsibility for how my staff behave does rest with me in the end. Tomorrow is another day etc.

Training people in how to lobby an MP

Being lobbied! But what's the best way of lobbying an MP?Mornington Crescent – a station I rarely visit – was the stopping off point for me to get to the Jubilee Debt campaign’s AGM where I am doing a workshop with Bridget from CAFOD about how to lobby your MP. A reasonable showing of people ‘chose’ our workshop and I thought Bridget was just great – just the right personality to enthuse people to get active and friendly and inclusive.

The quality of lobbying is a bit of a hobby-horse of mine (as you can see from my previous article on how to lobby an MP).

I think it is really important the people in lobbying campaigns aren’t just used (and don’t just see themselves) as fodder to make up the numbers – be it of letters, petition signatures, postcards or whatever.

Of course, all the methods of lobbying – from personal approach, to letter, to email, to mass lobby, to postcard campaign, to special local meeting – have their place and can work. My thought is really about using the right approach for what you want – and do you want to demonstrate pressure by numbers (such as postcards) or is a matter of having to have the hearts and minds and passion show through?

A thousand postcards in my postbag will have a big impact on me – but so will one person with a heart-rendering case coming to see me.

Anyway – an interesting group of campaigners who will all be contacting their own MPs now hopefully with more of the personal touch – and let’s hope the MPs engage too. I’ve seen now how democracy works from both sides of the fencing (nagging to change things and being nagged in turn) – and campaigners for good causes can really make the difference!

Darfur demonstration

Ahead of joining the demonstration at Downing Street tomorrow on Darfur, this morning’s Independent has a piece including my views on the issue:

It is clear that what we are witnessing in Darfur is genocide. The British Government and the international community cannot continue to watch as this catastrophe unfolds in front of them. A no-fly zone, a proper and extensive arms embargo, targeted travel bans and asset seizures as well as meaningful sanctions are all essential yet the Government has so far done nothing. What will it take before this country takes the effective action that is so desperately needed?

What happens in Bounds Green Tube station in the middle of the night?

Turn Lynne Featherstone MP seeing how Bounds Green tube station is being renovatedup on the site of the modernisation of Bounds Green tube station – boy did it need it! 1.30am had tested my ability to stay awake and my fear since returning from the Mayor’s Charity Ball is that I would fall asleep and miss the whole thing. However, my safety training had said that anyone going on site could not have any alcohol at all for 8 hours beforehand (24 in other situations) and so I had navigated the Mayor’s Ball without a drop – which at least meant I did manage to stay awake until the allotted time.

I did my safety training earlier in the week – very extensive with a test at the end. (I got 10 out of 10, thank goodness). Didn’t understand why I had to go through such rigorous briefing / training just for a visit beforehand, but now I understand – underneath Bounds Green tube seethes an anthill of activity with around 110 people (some nights more) from 15 different trades all plying their trade. I am kitted up with the regulation safety equipment and off we go.

Ashraf Al Ameria, the project manager for Tube Lines conducts my tour and as we progress past the scaffolding, the hammering, the sawing, the drilling and so on, I can see why I needed my training. I follow my leader very carefully so as not to get a) in the way b) hurt!

Ok, I didn’t agree with the hugely expensive PPP tube privatisation deal that brought in Tube Lines – and still don’t – but we now are where we are and Tube Lines, to their credit, does rather well by comparison with Metronet, whose series of engineering over-runs frequently make Londoners see red.

Tube Lines is rolling its program of renovation and modernisation of stations on with Wood Green and Highgate in the pipeline – hurrah!. Bounds Green is getting the full modernisation works at the moment. This means they don’t just paint over – they take out the old and put in the new. For the record, Ashraf gave me some stats: 100,000 new tiles, 350 lights, public help points, CCTV, speakers every few metres, new floors, new ceilings, new cabling, etc. etc etc.

But it is impossible to describe the scene adequately. Dozens and dozens of men in bright orange jackets just working away – a bit like Santa’s Elves but clearly not in a toy workshop, but rather a hostile working environment where there is quite a lot of danger and only a few hours of access (in the hours between the last and first tubes). What gets me is that – as the station is still in full use the rest of the time – they have to erect all of the scaffolding and get it in place (in various places) every night and be out with not a nut or a bolt left on the site a few hours later.

I checked with the Protection Safety Officer just how they know the electricity is off on the rails before they commence work. He showed me a device that flashes all the time when the juice is off but doesn’t when it is on. Also the lights in the tunnels only come on when the electricity is off – and they can’t put it back on until the Protection Officer signs the paper to say it can be switched back on at the end of the work shift. I was impressed with their safety measures and indeed with the whole operation.

I found the visit fascinating. I wouldn’t do their job for all the money in the world (apparently very few women work on these teams although some projects are managed by women). It is noisy, dirty, hard and at a ridiculous time of night for normal people. Everyone was friendly and smiled as I passed along and amongst them. I felt like a sore thumb, personally, and am grateful for the opportunity to see just what a specialised field this is and understanding a bit more about how it all works.

You can see a batch of photos from my visit on Flickr.

Controlling arms exports

Lobbied by the Control Arms campaigning wing of Oxfam ahead of the review taking place into the Export Control Act.

In May the Government will begin its review of the first years operation of this act. This is important as there are holes in the system which mean that arms end up quite easily in countries where war wages, feeding the violence. With Oxfam were three local constituents come to tell me their reason for taking action on this issue.

The key things they want are to introduce include full controls on those who traffic in arms and broker arms deals, regardless of where the deals are done (so that people can’t sidestep the rules by stepping outside the UK briefly) and proper monitoring of what any arms exports actually end up getting used for.

It is clear that arms exports which end up going into feeding and exacerbating existing conflicts leave numerous tragedies in their wake – and make all the worthy things the Government tries to achieve through its international development policies much, much harder.

The evening is taken with the Mayor of Haringey’s charity ball at the Cypriot Centre in Wood Green. It is really well attended and a great success. I leave relatively early as I have a somewhat bizarre engagement next – tonight!

As I sit here, it’s nearly one o’clock in the morning, and I am trying to keep myself awake as my last call of the day (or actually first call of the morning) is to Bounds Green tube station to see the improvements being worked on there. I said I would like to go when Tube Lines came to see me at Parliament recently – but to be frank – I hadn’t at that point worked out that it would have to be at quite such an hour! So…

School links with South Africa

One Lynne Featherstone MP with Jacob Riba, Ros Hudson (head teachers of Ephes Memkeli and Alexandra Park schools)more event from yesterday to mention: had rushed back from Parliament for a celebration at Alexandra Park School. They have formed a partnership with Ephes Memkeli Secondary School in South Africa. A group of Alexandra Park students had been out to the school and together with students from there had toured South Africa to make a film about science. The Head Teacher, Jacob Riba, was visiting here and the school was screening the documentary for the first time and celebrating this partnership.

It was clear to me that the gain from this project was and will be enormous – in a whole host of ways – for both the schools. The picture shows myself with Jacob Riba and Ros Hudson (the two head teachers).

The further link – between these two disparate areas is that Oliver Tambo (a major figure in the ANC) used to live in Alexandra Park Road!