Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Hello!


I will be moving to SE22 in December and I?m finding it difficult to understand if I am eligible for a residents parking permit. Southwark website is not helpful and just points me in a direction of planning permission.


Any pointers in how I can find out would be a great help!

If you're west of LL, you'll probably get one. If you're east you won't.

They've done a bang up job of dividing the area right into two.


That and created havoc with their closing of a dozen roads in a child-like experiment to see what happens when you halve the available space for traffic flow. And after they inexplicably carpeted the area with unnecessary yellow lines to reduce parking spaces by 10%.


Why would Southwark have a user-friendly website when they are clearly the community's sworn enemy?


Good luck living here.

I do find it slightly disconcerting that reps of Southwark Cycling have such intimate knowledge of the ins and outs of recently introduced CPZs in the area. It does give the impression that they have somehow been party to stuff that mere residents have not been.

That?s because they have. The council?s policy is to consult disability and cycling groups on traffic management orders that affect them. Choosing one at random (I just put CPZ into the search engine and this came up), the description of the consultation process for the Croxted CPZ is:



?12. Notice was also given to non-statutory consultees including: Transport for London, Southwark Disablement Association, Southwark Disability Forum, Southwark Cyclists, Living Streets and London Travel Watch.?


Policy at https://www.southwark.gov.uk/transport-and-roads/traffic-orders-licensing-strategies-and-regulation/traffic-management-orders?chapter=2. Note that SC also seem to be consulted on relevant experimental orders where no advance public consultation is required eg http://moderngov.southwark.gov.uk/documents/s91051/APPENDIX%201%20PECKHAM%20RYE.pdf




first mate Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I do find it slightly disconcerting that reps of

> Southwark Cycling have such intimate knowledge of

> the ins and outs of recently introduced CPZs in

> the area. It does give the impression that they

> have somehow been party to stuff that mere

> residents have not been.

But other relevant stakeholders like businesses or emergency services not consulted from the start?


legalalien Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> That?s because they have. The council?s policy is

> to consult disability and cycling groups on

> traffic management orders that affect them.

> Choosing one at random (I just put CPZ into the

> search engine and this came up), the description

> of the consultation process for the Croxted CPZ

> is:

>

>

> ?12. Notice was also given to non-statutory

> consultees including: Transport for London,

> Southwark Disablement Association, Southwark

> Disability Forum, Southwark Cyclists, Living

> Streets and London Travel Watch.?

>

> Policy at

> https://www.southwark.gov.uk/transport-and-roads/t

> raffic-orders-licensing-strategies-and-regulation/

> traffic-management-orders?chapter=2. Note that SC

> also seem to be consulted on relevant experimental

> orders where no advance public consultation is

> required eg

> http://moderngov.southwark.gov.uk/documents/s91051

> /APPENDIX%201%20PECKHAM%20RYE.pdf

>

>

>

> first mate Wrote:

> --------------------------------------------------

> -----

> > I do find it slightly disconcerting that reps

> of

> > Southwark Cycling have such intimate knowledge

> of

> > the ins and outs of recently introduced CPZs in

> > the area. It does give the impression that they

> > have somehow been party to stuff that mere

> > residents have not been.

Oh come on - surely its all a massive conspiracy and not just google!


NoahLxn - where are you moving to in ED? If its a street that has a CPZ then you need one and are eligible - if its not you might not need one and might not be eligible. There are some adjacent roads who are not covered by the CPZ but eligible to buy permits. This is all publicly available and not part of any special info I have ;-)



Sally Eva Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I googled southwark resident parking. The top

> result is the link I posted.

Conspiracy :). Not at all. Southwark choose to consult Southwark Cyclists, presumably so they can get their views

(although if there is a conspiracy, take their instructions!). Rather than complain about that, better to request they consult other groups as a matter of course eg residents associations, or maybe we should ask them to post on local bulletin boards like this? An RSS feed? We want more transparency, not less - I think so anyway.


On that note, the Southwark Cyclists AGM is on next week (online) and open to all...


https://southwarkcyclists.org.uk/events/southwark-cyclists-agm/

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

    • Errr could it be because of the noise pollution coming from it perhaps? You may not be able to hear it where you live but anyone on the Dulwich Village side of Lordship Lane all the way to beyond Brockwell Park is being disturbed by it - the sound wash from it is huge and that's a lot of people. As I said before we know people who live nearer to Brockwell Park to us and they say it is unbearable.   To be fair the Emirates moved to a piece of wasteland between railway tracks so it actually in a less densely populated area now and the council actually goes out of their way to try to mitigate the impact on local residents and yes, other than the concerts, you could hear a pin drop on matchdays! 😉 
    • Chains moving in is a sure sign that LL is heading for a fall. They are parasites, waiting for the independents to be successful and then, in partnership with rapacious landlords, they move in and force out those very businesses who have created the market they then seek to exploit. They replace a lively diversity with a bland and predictable offering. Then, when a downturn arrives, they move out, leaving boarded up premises and charity shops. Independent businesses who have worked hard to make a success of their efforts will try to see out hard times as they’ve invested so much. Chains look only at the bottom line and think nothing of closing branches. Chains are liable also to expand too fast, be managed badly and then collapse. Think of Brick House being forced out by Gail’s, the closure of White Stuff (although that chain was replaced by another) and JoJo Maman Bebe. . Sadly, I fear that will be the future of LL. 
    • It’s the impact the festival has on the community, the people living next door to the park who have to endure the thumping music and worse. Then there’s the park and the state it’s left in and the wildlife, especially nesting birds. All the roads going down Denmark Hill towards the park were closed off and roads off half moon lane and going up towards West Norwood closed off with wardens at each end, who were paid by Lambeth Council to stand there for the 4 days.  The festival made the news channels and interviews suggested most of the people attending weren’t fron the local area but places like Ireland and Scotland.  I live a 20 minute walk from the park and could hear the thumping music all day and night. Also the wind certainly carried the smell of drugs to my garden! For 4 days I couldn’t believe how strong it was. 
    • Emirates Stadium is  >60,00 but they tend to be very quiet 🙂 Jokes aside though, it's a case in point. Highbury was <40,000 and was 300M up the road, so there are definitely Islington residents who used to live half a mile from a fairly big football stadium, and now live right by a massive one. One that holds rock/pop concerts too accomodating 70,000 fans whether they like ot or not.   40% of Islington households are in social housing so regardless of when they moved their current homes, they may have had little say in exactly where they are housed.   
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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