Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Received today....

 

Dear resident,

I am writing to let you know the council will not be going ahead with the proposals to implement controlled parking in the proposed Dulwich Hill zone.

The council is committed to the aspirations set out in our Streets for People strategy, including making it easier for residents to switch from using their cars to making journeys by foot, by cycling and on public transport. Controlled parking can bring many benefits for local people when introduced in the right places in the right way.

However, I recognise that the council’s previous proposals fell short. Through the course of the consultation, residents in many areas told us that they did not need or want controlled parking. We listened to these concerns and undertook more work to understand parking pressure and traffic levels in these areas. This work supports the view of residents that controlled parking is not currently needed in the Dulwich Hill area.

I thank all the residents who contacted us about this. I also want to thank your local ward councillors who have spent much of the last few weeks representing the concerns of local people, and setting out the need for a different approach.  We have listened to you and are changing our plans. The council’s previous proposals were not the right ones. We are learning the lessons from this and are sorry we got it wrong.

I want to again thank all the residents who have contacted us about this. We greatly value the time that you have taken to share your views.

Yours sincerely,

Cllr James McAsh

 

It'll be interesting to see if a similar conclusion is reached in Nunhead, where there is also no current need for controlled parking and where residents are not keen.

I am reminded of the rationale Cllr McAsh gave in support of the imposition of a Nunhead CPZ and it was along the lines of 'why should car owning Nunhead residents enjoy free parking and cleaner air when residents in other areas, closer to the centre, have to pay for parking and have more pollution?' The former does not really make sense if suddenly it is felt somewhere like Dulwich Hill does not need controlled parking, after all?

The arguments on fairness and inequity that had more recently been advanced by the Council were always spurious.

 

The other parts of the borough that voted to have CPZs in the past had voted in that way as they were persuaded by the local benefits they were told by the Council would follow. Those in favour of a CPZ for their area consented to paying for a permit in order to use the relevant parking zone; they also consented in the full knowledge that parking in other areas of the borough was not subject to a CPZ.

 

In fact, those that voted for a CPZ in particular areas voted for there to be an "inequity" across the borough and, we can assume as they were only voting in respect of their own areas, were not in reality concerned at the fact that parking was treated differently in different parts of the borough.

 

The "inequity" that was created by those voting in other areas of the borough for their own CPZs was then turned on its head by the Council more recently, with the result that those who in this area opposed the introduction of a CPZ were (until recently) to have this "benefit" forced on them on the basis that it was apparently now unfair for those who wanted the benefit of a CPZ (and were willing to pay for such benefit) to be the only recipients of it.

There will be a new one in Dulwich Village for the small area where the council thinks that they have support for it which will be very interesting - especially if they do put a yes/no response mechanism in it this time as they have promised to do. But on the basis of the "mandate argument" posited by some about this council being re-elected can we now definitively say that they do not have a mandate to do this in the Dulwich Village or Dulwich Hill wards and should not be able to revisit until after the next local council elections? One wonders whether they might now try and implement something in the Goose Green ward (which is the only ward that could be considered to have parking issues due to the proximity to Lordship Lane).

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

    • They've left all kinds of things in my garden including gardening gloves and shoes, not to mention scavenged food and packaging. Once they left an unopened vacuum pack of smoked trout, the next day some pita bread. All a bit biblical.
    • From memory foxes only became a regular sight in the 90s, the attached article says they first appeared in the 30s becoming far more common in the 80s.  Apparently, whilst we think that urban foxes live longer than rural due to their 'easy' life few will make it over the age of two.  In towns they are far more crowded than their natural habitat where they are more territorial. I've never seen foxes and cats fighting but once saw two cats squaring up to each other and a watching fox went up and butted its head against one of the cats.  There's a video on youtube of a cat and fox facing off when the cat is eating outside, but it wont let me embed on this post.  Get too close and I'll scratch you. https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2022/oct/15/urban-foxes-are-they-fantastic-or-a-growing-menace My main issue is leaving things out like gardening gloves and they go or are shredded.  One stole a bag of bird food in front of me, took it next door, shredded the bag and then left it.  
    • I was trying to remember when Franklins moved to Lordship Lane from Walworth Road where it was combined with an antique/bric a brac shop. Mid 1990s, first wave ED gentrification?
    • Hello, I lost a babies blanket between Tessa Jowell and the Picture House on Lordship Lane 😞It is teal colour with the name Cillian embroidered on it.  If anyone sees/finds it please let me know.  Thank you! 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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