Archive for September, 2007 Page 2 of 3



Practice What You Preach, Hazel

According to the Times this morning, Salford Labour MP Hazel Blears wants to see more local government candidates and Councillors from ethnic minorities. I agree with her – Councils should be representative of the communities which they serve.

Hazel could perhaps start by looking at her own backyard. Her own Salford Labour Party has an absymal record of promoting ethnic minority candidates in local government. Let’s have a look at the evidence:

Labour Councillors in Salford: 42
Ethnic Minority Councillors: Nil

2007 Salford Labour Council Candidates: 20
Ethnic Minority Candidates: Nil

2006 Salford Labour Council Candidates: 22
Ethnic Minority Candidates: Nil

Presumably Hazel will be having a stern word with her own members on this issue, although I won’t be holding my breath - pure hypocrisy has never been a problem for Salford Blairites.

Salford Conservatives select our candidates on merit and merit alone, and at this year’s elections we had three very able ethnic minority candidates all of whom would be assets to the City and to the Council. I look forward to welcoming them as fellow Councillors in the near future!

Integrated Transport

Today was In Town Without My Car day in Manchester and Salford. Although I didn’t get chance to go along to the events being held on Victoria Bridge Street, I did pop into town this morning on the train – although admittedly as I don’t have a car for me every trip into Manchester is “in town without my car” day! I’m occasionally trigger-happy with the camera on my phone, so accompanying this post is a picture of the ITWMC banner at Salford Central station.

A few days ago David Ottewell blogged about the Prague public transport network. Here’s the key paragraph:

The connectivity is fantastic, too. Each metro station links with trams and buses that go pretty much anywhere you would want to go. The whole thing is, in short, an almost perfect example of a truly integrated transport system. The only reason to own a car in Prague would be to travel out of the city.

“Connectivity” and “integrated transport”. Two buzz-phrases that have been bandied around since (heaven help us) John Prescott was in charge of public transport at a national level, but will the £3bn TIF proposals deliver an integrated transport system for Greater Manchester?

In Walkden and west Salford, the answer is quite clear – emphatically not.

The centrepiece of the Salford proposals is the white elephant Leigh Guided Busway. The idea that this misguided busway is “integrated” defies belief. Once the busway has passed Salford Crescent, it does not integrate with anything. It does not link up with the rail network or the tram system anywhere, it does not serve our local communities, and the idea that commuters are going to hop onto feeder buses is simply unfeasible.

There are two buses currently using the route the busway will follow – the 32 to Wigan and the X34 to Lowton and Leigh. How many people from Walkden, Worsley, Roe Green, Ellenbrook and Swinton use either of these buses? Very few, because the East Lancashire Road is simply not suitably accessible for local communities in western Salford. When First Bus withdrew the 35 service from the Moorside area, there were (rightly) howls of derision from the local Labour Councillors when First suggested that the 32 and X34 were suitable alternatives – but these same Labour Councillors are expecting local residents to use the busway services which will be from exactly the same place! Indeed, First Bus almost canned the 32 service earlier in the year due to insufficient passenger numbers. The idea that the busway will provide a suitable, accessible service for local residents in Walkden is laughable.

I’ve made my opposition to congestion charging very clear, but what I find most frustrating is the idea that the TIF money is a magic bullet to solve all our transportation problems. It isn’t. Money alone solves nothing – it has to be spent well. In Salford at least, there is a real risk that our Labour politicians will flush our share of any TIF money down the drain without any real benefit to local residents and taxpayers.

Blogroll Links

A big thank-you to everyone who has updated their blogroll with the new address for this site. If you’re reading this and still have a link to the old blog.iainlindley.com address, I would be very grateful if you could upgrade the link to this new location.

I am still (slowly) rebuilding my own blogroll. If your site has a link to this blog and you’d like me to reciprocate, leave me a comment and I’ll see what I can do!

In the meantime, a further thank-you to David Ottewell, Chris Paul and Tim Montgomerie who all helpfully blogged the location of this reincarnated diary. Cheers!

Salford Freshers’ Fair

This afternoon I popped along to the Freshers’ Fair at the University of Salford to help out on the Conservative stall. It was an enjoyable couple of hours and our efforts were more successful than Labour Students. The Liberal Democrats didn’t seem to be there at all.

Thought for the day – why has the Prime Minister released a statement about the resignation of a football manager? A “new kind of politics”?

Write To Them League Table

My attention has been drawn to the Write To Them League Table measuring the responsiveness of our MPs to e-mails sent by constituencies.

The table makes grim reading for Worsley Labour MP Barbara Keeley, who ranks a miserable 583rd of the 633 MPs who are registered on the system - she replied promptly to less than one-third of e-mails sent via the site. Hazel Blears doesn’t fare much better, at 514th and a response rate of less than 50%. Only Eccles MP Ian Stewart comes out with any credit, and even he only ranks 325th. Could do much better.

The Big Ask

I enjoyed the debate on Saturday between myself, John Merry, Norman Owen and Eileen Fairhurst of the PCT. There was a decent crowd (the event as a whole was very busy) and I hope they found the debate interesting, although there was some understandable frustration that the session was not more interactive and that the questions had been pre-selected.

Personally I would have liked to see a longer session with a few more hot topics to get our teeth stuck into – schools and maternity services are two obvious ones! I hope that the Council will not get cold feet at the thought of some genuine political debate and I hope these events will become a regular feature in the future. Perhaps we might even see some debates organised between the three party leaders in the run-up to local elections? Personally I think that would be a welcome development, although I must stress it isn’t something I’ve discussed with anyone!

Salford’s Political Blogs

Having recovered from getting soaked by rain while playing tennis this afternoon - I didn’t even win the match – I thought I’d continue my leisurely stroll through the Salford blogosphere. Unfortunately it seems I can afford to be quite leisurely – if you Google search for “Salford blog” the top-ranking page is the post I made yesterday. Not too promising so far!

I thought I’d start with a topic I know reasonably well – politics.  Unfortunately in the interests of completeness this involves holding my nose a little bit and linking to the opposition! I will try – just this once – not to bring in too many value judgements.

Continue reading ‘Salford’s Political Blogs’

The Salford Blogosphere

I thought I’d have a bit of a look around at other blogs which are written locally. It’s not something I’ve spent a lot of time doing in the past, which is a shame – I should probably broaden my blogging horizons far beyond the field of politics.

I registered for the BritBlog directory site quite a while ago but never really did anything beyond that. Today I’ve had another look as part of my quest to update the links to this site, and helpfully they list blogs by local area, so I’ve got my first list of Salford blogs.

Continue reading ‘The Salford Blogosphere’

Divide-and-rule – in the press

This week’s Advertiser devotes two stories to the Council’s latest ridiculous pronouncement on St George’s. The main article, featuring comments from St George’s headteacher Phil Harte, is on the Advertiser website. There’s a supplementary article which includes a quote from myself. This is not online but I have uploaded a scan of the article if anyone is interested and can’t get hold of a copy themselves.

What you won’t see on my scan is the fresh-faced picture of me the Advertiser insists on publishing, which they took when I was 21. I’ve just spoken to a colleague who said I “looked about 3″. Thanks! I should really forward them a more up-to-date photo to use!

There’s a similar article in today’s Manchester Evening News which isn’t online, but from a quick glance it seems almost identical to the Advertiser article I linked to above.

Divide-and-rule

Outside St George's High SchoolOn Tuesday I took the opportunity to attend the Council’s ruling Cabinet meeting. One of the items up for discussion was a proposal to move the obscene proposals to close St George’s RC High School on to a formal consultation stage.

St George’s is a successful, oversubscribed school at the heart of the local community. The decision to close it is completely unjustifiable and I welcome the consultation process as another opportunity to show how the Labour Council have got this so badly wrong. Despite supposedly being simply a decision to go out for statutory consultation, Tuesday’s Cabinet paper managed to sink to new depths. This is what it says:

the enlargement of All Hallows and St Ambrose Barlow RC High Schools and the refurbishment of St Patrick’s RC High School are dependent on the closure of St George’s RC High School

This is an appalling attempt by the Labour Council to divide-and-rule the City’s Catholic schools. It is effective blackmail – the Catholic secondary schools are being told in no uncertain terms that if they do not submit to the closure of one of Salford’s most popular and successful schools then they will get nothing.

It is clear now that the Council have no intention of listening to anyone, and they have now resorted to attempting to drive a wedge through the excellent working relationship I know our Catholic secondary schools have got. They are professionals. The way in which the staff, parents and pupils at St George’s have continued under incredible stress and pressure has been exemplary. Unfortunately there is nothing professional about the way in which Cllr Warmisham and his Labour colleagues have acted with regard to St George’s High School.