Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Dear all


Cllrs Victoria Olisa, Charlie Smith and I have started an online newsletter. It will be monthly and it will include brief updates about what we three councillors have been doing on your behalf, and general notices about the council which we think particularly relevant.


You can sign up here: https://www.jamesmcash.com/newsletter (The form is embedded on my website here. For some reason the Forum will not let me link to it directly) (I've sorted the link - Admin)


Best wishes

James

Dear all


Thanks all for comments. Just to be clear, you do not need to sign into anything to access the newsletter: you just give us your email and it will be sent straight to your inbox.


I will also duplicate it on my website, and link to it on here too. The newsletter is just an option for whomever finds this more convenient.


And thanks for fixing my link Admin :)

Yes but you then pass that email address on to mailchimp "for processing"


I'm also quite surprised at the tone of your article "It's not about Jackie Walker". Don't you feel you should update or delete it now that she has been expelled from the Labour Party?

  • 10 months later...
James given you have now stated elsewhere that this website is ?a blog post which I sent to Labour Party members. Consequently, it makes lots of reference to things which will not interest non-party members.? and that numerous points have a party political nature, don?t you think it is an entirely inappropriate gateway for your constituents to receive your newsletter?

Hi both,


Abe_froeman - my website hosts a number of different things with different audiences in mind. There is the Goose Green newsletter, which is quite explicitly targeted at Goose Green residents, and a range of articles and blog posts written with different audiences in mind. None of it is a secret - hence being hosted on a public website - but different pieces are written with different audiences in mind. The blog post mentioned in the other threads was written with local Labour Party members in mind, and therefore includes points which are probably of less interest to non-party members. There's no harm in others reading it if they're interested, of course, but don't then be surprised if it included party-related matters!


first mate - There was no solution to this which would suit everyone. Both sides had very strong opinions and there was no solution which would have suited everyone. But we were able to reach a proposal which did the following:

- The CPZ would include 80% of roads which requested one.

- 90% of those who do not want a CPZ on their road would not have one.

- There would be no change to parking on the streets most used by visitors to Lordship Lane.


I think that this is a pretty good outcome. No perfect, but good.


Best wishes

James

But as you well know James, that methodology, dressed up as a fair approach, was assumed because it was the only way the Council could get CPZ underway across more than a few streets. Additionally, you deviated when it suited, Melbourne Grove Southside as a case in point. It is interesting that you see it as a matter of sides rather than the majority view. The majority of ED did not want it but are slowly being squeezed into capitulation. It is a long game now being speeded up using Covid.

Hi first mate


People were asked whether they wanted controlled parking on their road - not in East Dulwich in general. It was never an all-or-nothing referendum. So we found a solution where, as much as possible, roads which wanted controlled parking had it and those which did not want it did not have it. You could argue that MG South deviated from this policy but I think it is justified on three grounds

1) while the two roads share the same name, they are completely bisected by East Dulwich Grove so are in effect separate roads

2) the road is long and there were very clear differences of opinion at each end


Best wishes

James

Asking residents if they want CPZ on their road was always disingenuous since parking displacement is a well known phenomenon, especially when various other measures to reduce parking space are also underway. Let?s not pretend this was in any way even-handed.


We get it, the Council needs the dosh, but please don?t dress it up as democracy, concern for our health or anything else.

Hi Monkey


Do you mean producing a newsletter? I think different councillors choose to communicate with the residents they represent in a range of ways. It depends a bit on the ward and on the councillor. Which ward are you in? I'm sure your Labour councillors would be happy to hear from you.


Best wishes

James

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • If you want to change a radiator and it is the same size, pretty straight forward.  isolate by turning the two valves, one is straight forward hand twist, the other side you need to take the cap off and get an adjustable spanner and turn till closed.  Both clockwise. Use the same spanner to undo the large nuts that fix the radiator to the pipework, open the bleed valve, get a flatish container to catch the water which is likely to be a grotty black, sheets/plastic underneath to protect floor/floor covering.  Then jiggle off, tipping as quick as you an into your water container. Fingers crossed it will be the same back plate fitting.  If not you will have to take the old one off and fix the new one. Replacement is a reverse, allowing the rad to refill and let the air out. No naked flames involved. If it is a different size I can advise on that too. Lots on line too: https://www.toolstation.com/help-and-advice/how-to-guides/how-to-remove-radiator?gad_source=1&gad_campaignid=19747119835&gclid=CjwKCAiAkvDMBhBMEiwAnUA9BR26YwBA6kOfcR4-JVxfJEjWdhRk6j0imCNcsIfu064wHN54-cs10xoCZ4cQAvD_BwE Although this is for a pressurised (combi) system where you need to get it back to pressure.  Pretty simple.  I don't bother with jointing compound.    
    • Fair enough - I'm absolutely wrong on that one. 👍
    • I'm still completely unclear what happened, apart from that a car apparently crashed into a lamp post opposite the Co-op. I presume the one in Lordship Lane, though the OP doesn't say. Was it speeding? Did it swerve to avoid someone who ran into the road? Did something go wrong with its brakes or steering? Did the driver have a medical emergency or fall asleep or got  distracted by something? Was there something slippery on the road surface? Was the driver hurt? Were any passengers hurt? Were any pedestrians or other road users hurt? Were there any witnesses? 
    • confused by the question?
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...