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legalalien

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  1. Here’s the Times view of the report, suggesting the Guardian is selectively reporting on it LTN delays for emergency services ‘could risk lives’ https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/4c4015af-6fae-412e-9976-6750091f19d4?shareToken=05a7fe073b3f997de2f75c4cd2f7debc Be interesting to see what the govt does - interesting idea of removing access to ANPR data for councils being too enthusiastic about enforcement - not sure how they’d measure that…
  2. https://emea01.safelinks.protection.outlook.com/?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.thetimes.co.uk%2Farticle%2F503439b7-e425-4c45-bfff-e51c216c240c%3FshareToken%3Dbca4f5ba2d4ffcb4874a3bcbb11198d3&data=05%7C02%7C%7Ccc7cb78cfa5d41464ce908dc3edd10d3%7C84df9e7fe9f640afb435aaaaaaaaaaaa%7C1%7C0%7C638454366396089951%7CUnknown%7CTWFpbGZsb3d8eyJWIjoiMC4wLjAwMDAiLCJQIjoiV2luMzIiLCJBTiI6Ik1haWwiLCJXVCI6Mn0%3D%7C0%7C%7C%7C&sdata=Pyi%2BbCz1asuM3qJhwb0gk8odEf4Bflr4fr1enMsHcdo%3D&reserved=0 Not sure if this link will work.
  3. Not sure if it's already been posted elsewhere, but here's a link to the officers' report/ recommendations on the DV/Calton and Red Post hill junction re-designs in Dulwich Village. Haven't read it yet. Issue details - Dulwich Village Streets for People - Junction re-design and Red Post Hill - Southwark Council
  4. Sadiq Khan admits south London’s new low-traffic neighbourhood ‘not great’ https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/e8636826-0a45-4d4e-9dc2-05a983c75e90?shareToken=eacd07b1789f8862adca1b8e019fcb5d The mayor has noticed that the emperor has no clothes?
  5. Not sure if this link will work - but seems that in Croydon the Conservative mayor is copping some heat on his decision to retain LTNs, in part because not having the fine income would put a hole in the council budget... PressReader.com - Digital Newspaper & Magazine Subscriptions
  6. just catching up on recent developments. Have the proposals for pocket parks in Melbourne, Derwent, Elsie, Tintagel been circulated? Forward plan says decision will be made in May. Couldn't see it on the council consultation page. I walk through there quite often so just wondered what was happening. https://moderngov.southwark.gov.uk/mgIssueHistoryHome.aspx?IId=50033739&PlanId=804&RPID=23591546
  7. This seems a great example of people hearing the things that they want to when they read an article. I interpreted it to say that most of the errors found were image manipulation because easier to spot, but the main example given related to reproducibility of some cancer studies - clicked through to the paper which makes some interesting observations about science/ peer review https://elifesciences.org/articles/67995 With apologies for the length of the quote: "Science is a system for accumulating knowledge. The credibility of knowledge claims relies, in part, on the transparency and repeatability of the evidence used to support them. As a social system, science operates with norms and processes to facilitate the critical appraisal of claims, and transparency and skepticism are virtues endorsed by most scientists (Anderson et al., 2007). Science is also relatively non-hierarchical in that there are no official arbiters of the truth or falsity of claims. However, the interrogation of new claims and evidence by peers occurs continuously, and most formally in the peer review of manuscripts prior to publication. Once new claims are made public, other scientists may question, challenge, or extend them by trying to replicate the evidence or to conduct novel research. The evaluative processes of peer review and replication are the basis for believing that science is self-correcting. Self-correction is necessary because mistakes and false starts are expected when pushing the boundaries of knowledge. Science works because it efficiently identifies those false starts and redirects resources to new possibilities. We believe everything we wrote in the previous paragraph except for one word in the last sentence – efficiently. Science advances knowledge and is self-correcting, but we do not believe it is doing so very efficiently. Many parts of research could improve to accelerate discovery. In this paper, we report the challenges confronted during a large-scale effort to replicate findings in cancer biology, and describe how improving transparency and sharing can make it easier to assess rigor and replicability and, therefore, to increase research efficiency. Transparency is essential in any system that seeks to evaluate the credibility of scientific claims. To evaluate a scientific claim one needs access to the evidence supporting the claim – the methodology and materials used, the data generated, and the process of drawing conclusions from those data. The standard process for providing this information is to write a research paper that details the methodology and outcomes. However, this process is imperfect. For example, selectively reporting experiments or analyses, particularly reporting only those that 'worked', biases the literature by ignoring negative or null results (Fanelli, 2010; Fanelli, 2011; Ioannidis, 2005; Rosenthal, 1979; Sterling, 1959; Sterling et al., 1995). And the combined effect of constraints related to the research paper format (including word limits, and only reporting what can be described in words), the tendency of authors to report what they perceive to be important, and rewards for exciting, innovative outcomes is an emphasis on reporting outcomes and their implications, rather than a comprehensive description of the methodology (Kilkenny et al., 2009; Landis et al., 2012; Moher et al., 2008). The sharing of data, materials, and code can also increase the efficiency of research in a number of ways (Molloy, 2011; Murray-Rust et al., 2010; Nosek et al., 2015). For example, sharing provides opportunities for independent observers to evaluate both the evidence reported in papers and the credibility of the claims based on this evidence; it allows other researchers to analyze the data in different ways (by, for example, using different rules for data exclusion); and it helps other researchers to perform replications to determine if similar evidence can be observed independently of the original context. Moreover, giving other researchers access to data, materials, and code may allow them to identify important features of the research that were not appreciated by the original researchers, or to identify errors in analysis or reporting."
  8. apparently they are declining on the grounds that it wouldn't benefit residents to fill in the questionnaire, and they think it's a political stunt by central government https://southwarknews.co.uk/area/dulwich/southwark-council-refuses-to-complete-governments-optional-ltn-survey-ahead-of-national-review/
  9. seems SL bus drivers not that keen on LTNs https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/3bd51122-06d1-4899-97cf-8b1e44397f8e?shareToken=74863a2461509287f7c2f1d2dd426a17
  10. Watching yesterday’s cabinet meeting, where there was a discussion of public toilet availability and accessibility. For info there is a list of public toilets on the Southwark website https://www.southwark.gov.uk/environment/public-toilets if I heard correctly there is a new Changing Places Toilet opening in Dulwich Park this weekend. I think there was also a mention of some sort of accessible app, from googling there seem to be a few apps out there so may be some way to go to get something comprehensive across London. There is a TFL toilet map here https://tfl.gov.uk/help-and-contact/public-toilets-in-london just in case useful for anyone.
  11. At the risk of derailing my own thread, I don’t think it’s specifically about scooters - see https://www.scootschoolrun.org/dulwich-wards (idea will be that if no parking near schools people will be forced into active travel I guess).
  12. Here’s the full list of all the proposed new charges. Actually quite a good way of identifying the services the council provides. https://moderngov.southwark.gov.uk/documents/s117646/Appendix F Draft Fees and Charges Cabinet report - 5 December 2023.pdf
  13. The council’s budget is on the agenda for the next Cabinet meeting, they are struggling a bit to make ends meet although have managed to reduce the budget shortfall from what it was last year. It’s quite interesting reading - worth having a look at this document to see where we can expect to see increases in council charges in the next couple of years https://moderngov.southwark.gov.uk/documents/s117577/Appendix C Income.pdf Garden bin collection, planning fees, PCN charges, leisure services charges, car parking in parks and leisure centres all proposed to increase and there’s a big chunk called “savings from investment in active travel” which I’m wondering about, as an income item - it can’t be reduced investment? All the other items seem to be income streams. Surely it’s not fine income (that couldn’t be described as “savings”)? You can also see proposals on council rents/ heating/ charges for garages here, also on the agenda for the meeting. https://moderngov.southwark.gov.uk/documents/s117444/Report Housing Revenue Account - Indicative Rent and Charges Report 2024-25.pdf Full agenda at https://moderngov.southwark.gov.uk/ieListDocuments.aspx?MId=7680&x=1 - meeting’s at 11am on 5th and I imagine it will be streamed online.
  14. Just reading through the proposed council income stream adjustments in the budget going to next week’s Cabinet meeting. They are struggling to balance the budget. Looks like garden waste charges are going up to £80 next year if approved. https://moderngov.southwark.gov.uk/documents/s117577/Appendix C Income.pdf
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