Maternity policy

Rush to Liberal Democrat HQ in Cowley Street for briefing prior to a national press conference for a new policy launch – our ‘Maternity Income Guarantee‘.

I got the call last week to ask if I would present the policy with Charles Kennedy, Phil Willis and Hanna Hedges – the youngest parliamentary candidate next time around.

We are briefed (briefly) and then we march in prescribed order into the conference room at HQ where all our press conferences usually take place. The assembled media has a satisfactory turnout of TV, national and regional journalists – despite Michael Howard co-timing his launch of the new Tory policies on asylum and immigration – of that more later.

Charles introduced the policy. Basically it is targeted on the lowest-paid working women – who are generally on the minimum wage. Maternity pay normally cuts this income down to 90% of normal pay. However, what’s the point of a minimum wage if you are forced below the minimum if you decide to have a child?

Our help is for first babies – as that is when the expense cuts the deepest with all the things you have to get. It is a wonderful thing, a first baby – but when the door shuts, the relatives go and reality hits…

The policy is really targeted on the nearly 200,000 women who would go below the minimum wage during maternity leave. Initially it will run for 6 months – but obviously we want to extend to 9 and 12 months as further funding can be found – and, of course, make it available to either parent in the longer term.

So Charles introduced it – then I said my bit and so on – and then we jump into a cab and off to a school for the photo ops. Nursery schools always look like such fun. The children at this one were playing with coloured cooked spaghetti and seeing the comparison between long, medium and short bits. Oh to be an infant…!

Then off to meet the residents’ association rep from the Campsbourne Estate – a badly treated part of Hornsey ward (Haringey) where it nestles in a seemingly forgotten backwater. As Neil Williams (Lib Dem council group leader) and I walk around, we are shown the pieces of land that residents fear the Labour council will grab for housing rather than providing proper facilities for the local residents.

Residents want allotments and play areas and planting, and they fear Haringey Council wants to cram in housing. Labour in Haringey are finding any ‘spare’ bit of land and cramming in housing – regardless of the damage to our environment and the load on our public services.

There has been a lot of work done to provide a plan for renewal on the estate – and there is Section 106 money (from the Hornsey Waterworks site development) to the tune of £250,000 which they have been told they will get. Their fear is that they won’t.

They hope by bringing the Lib Dems into their campaign that Labour will be forced on to the straight and narrow and won’t be able to snaffle the money away for their own purposes.

That same evening at full council, a local Labour Hornsey ward councillor stands up and gives a speech as to what Labour are doing for the Campsbourne Estate.

My goodness – we’re good – word must have reached them quickly that Lib Dems were out and about walking around the Campsbourne. Still – it looks like the plot is working!

I had arrived late at the council meeting as earlier it was one of my daughter’s reports night. But I did arrive in time for the deputation of relatives of residents of Cooperscroft – the old peoples’ home Labour are closing despite promises that this would not happen.

It is a good speech from the deputation who implores Labour to vote with their hearts on the following motion put by the Lib Dems to save the home.

But their hearts are made of stone and one has to say they are a lily-livered bunch. A woman from the deputation later yells at the Deputy Labour Mayor to accuse him of telling residents and relatives outside the meeting that he is against closure – but he speaks for closure and his hand rises to vote down the motion to save the homes.

Makes me really angry. There is an offer from a charity to take over the home as a going concern – no thanks to Labour Haringey – and I hope for the residents’ sake this is pursued. The Lead Member for Social Services only acknowledges this as true because in my speech in the debate I mention the email I have from the charity to let me know. I doubt whether Labour would have pursued it at all if it hadn’t been made public.

Labour couch their decisions as ‘offering old people choice’ and the benefits of ‘being able to stay in your own home’. We are talking about people over ninety years old who need round-the-clock care. Labour really stink over this one!

Hornsey Town Hall

Settle down to write LibDem Christmas cards. Rather nice this year with a picture of Queens Wood in the snow taken by one of the Highgate councillors. It’s difficult to get the balance right between personal touch and making sure everyone is included.

Then, meet up with three of my Lib Dem colleagues on Haringey Council (Neil Williams, Dave Winskill and Bob Hare) to talk to some of the key movers in the Hornsey Town Hall Trust.

They are cross with the recommendations of Haringey Council’s Advisory Panel. The key questions to me are how to we ensure that the community’s needs – not those of developers – are put first and how do we get all the local groups working together.

We are looking to see how we might be able to influence this process. I want to see if we can bridge the gap between the Hornsey Town Hall Trust / Crouch End for People and the other local groups.

One think I would want though from whoever runs the Trust is firm guarantees about the future of the building if everything goes wrong – it cannot be flogged off by anyone to get out of trouble.

Dinner with Ed Davey

Neil Williams (Leader of the Haringey Council LibDem Group) and I go to meet residents in Ringwood Avenue, Fortis Green, whose houses back on to the proposed development at 79 Creighton Avenue.

I feel pretty confident that this application will hit the dust as the vast part of the development is on Metropolitan Open Land – and I have in writing from Haringey’s Chief Exec the view that the development is too large and the applicants have been told so.

We go and peer at the trees that have been devastated in the area. This needs proper investigation by Haringey Council – and prosecutions if necessary.

In the evening, host a fundraising dinner. Ed Davey MP is the celeb for the evening – and it was quite a lively one. Happily, I don’t do the cooking or a) no one would come (or certainly not a second time) and b) Isabel does – and Isabel can really cook.

Several of the paying attendees were ex-Labour members who have moved across to the LibDems for a mixture of reasons. The overarching reason: more than the war, more than top-up fees etc is the loss of trust in Labour and Blair. I guess it is quite difficult when you have been involved in the Labour party (or any party for that matter) to switch allegiance to the point of campaigning for the new party. But that is the case now – and I often find that the individuals are pretty much natural Lib Dems in reality.

Highgate CPZ

Last night was the Highgate CPZ (controlled parking zone) call-in by the Lib Dem councillors in Haringey.

The Labour executive had conducted a consultation on their proposed Highgate CPZ which got an 82% no response. But the Labour Exec decided that there were about 5 roads where the vote was close and decided to proceed with a statutory consultation on putting the CPZ in just those roads. Given the controversies over the consultation, the Lib Dems called in Labour’s decision for examination by the Overview and Scrutiny Committee.

There were some excellent speeches from deputations both for and against the CPZ and Cllr Neil Williams and Cllr Bob Hare (Lib Dem Highgate councillors) both spoke in a measured and balanced way about the deficiencies of Haringey Council in its process and its flawed reports.

As the Labour lead member, Cllr Ray Dodds insisted that in these 5 roads there was a ‘blurring’ and the result was something like 53% against and 47% for (although different accounts said differently). One of the deputations pointed out that if Labour had won an election by 53% to 47%, they wouldn’t be calling that a ‘blurred’ result – but a clear victory.

What was clear was that Labour were in a mess having proposed something, got an answer they didn’t like, and tried to railroad residents into a half-baked version of a mini-CPZ. Now CPZs can be good or CPZs can be bad – it really depends on the accurate analysis of the parking stress, the specific nature of the roads involved, the design of the scheme and so on.

Sadly, Haringey Labour’s track record on consultation and fine design is not good (understatement). And of course the real problem is nothing gets resolved properly.

Anyway – the upshot was that the Overview and Scrutiny Committee voted by a good majority to refer the decision back to the Executive, who now have 5 days to consider their next move. There certainly was a feeling that the new proposal was half-baked and that they should go back to the drawing board. We wait with baited breath …