Author: Mike Cordingley

  • Learning from Election Day

    Learning from Election Day

    Labour lost the general election and went backwards in Trafford. It was bad, unbelievably bad.

    Sometimes defeat means you just pick yourselves up, dust yourselves down, and start preparing for next time. But this was seismic. I want to understand better what happened. Kate Green has a survey on her website. I'd really like everyone to complete it. I don't think democracy is served by having an opposition Labour Party kidding itself that it's going to be easy; and I really want to hear from people across the political spectrum including those who voted for other parties, or didn't vote at all.

    Survey

     

  • Objection to planning proposal on Station Road

    I am writing to object to the above application.
     

    The proposal is to build on a shallow band of land adjacent to the railway embankment. The land is currently a band of scrub that is an important piece of greenery for the community. Although it is untended it does play a roll in community life. In the blackberry season, residents can be seen with buckets full of blackberries. The terraced houses bordering this space tend not to have gardens and this small piece of green is a vital amenity.
     

    We have seen in recent months Community Volunteers from 'Love Gorse Hill' and the Stretford Wombles take part in litter picks of this area and the future looks really positive for this land.
     

    The development itself is inappropriate to the terraced community. It will dominate the street scene of Bowness St as it will be much taller than the houses. It will take away natural light from the street itself.
     

    Station Road is a vital cycle route through to Gorse Hill recognised in Trafford's cycle strategy that will grow in importance with developments already under construction at the Trafford College site and behind Trafford Park Station which I've welcomed. The proposal will have a detrimental affect on this cycleway as access to the footpath will be compromised.
     

    This proposal is going to lead to over development in the area largely due to the loss of greenery. The site is also part of a wildlife corridor particularly for birds.
     

    The railway line is increasingly busy and is running at full capacity. I have worries that the new homes will be too close to the railway. Clearly we need new homes but this is an inappropriate site as it removes a vital community asset and is simply wrong for the area.
     

    I have been contacted via Facebook by a number of residents and it is clear that there is a great deal of disappointment in this application coming forward again. Gorse Hill Ward has insufficient greenspace which is why even small plots such as this are so vital. It will be a development too far if planning permission is granted.

     

     

     

     

    Mike Cordingley

    Labour Councillor for Gorse Hill Ward
    0781 499 7522

    www.gorsehill-labour.co.uk

  • Positive Community Response to Cuts

    We should fight unfair cuts where we can. And if we lose, it should spur us on to getting even better facilities and services for our neighbourhoods through our own common endeavour. Looks at new takes on old approaches.

    Fighting

    ChesterRoadSchoolCrossingGorse Hill residents have successfully made the case for saving the crossing patrol on Chester Road. That's brilliant news and congratulations to all involved! 

    We can’t disguise the fact that most patrols identified for withdrawal are still being withdrawn, including the dangerous one at Barton Road/Moss Vale Road junction; and Trafford’s Budget has still been approved by Tories and Lib Dems, as it was always going to be.

    Glimmers of Hope – Alternatives out of the Ashes

    Work goes on to try to save something out of Lostock's Library and Youth Club together with Gorse Hill Studios. either through drawing in outside support or income generation from services provided there. And at the same time, a community enterprise is emerging from the council’s disposal of Stretford Public Hall. So, here and there are glimmers of hope that not everything is lost.

    One thing that has been lost is the hope that one day, all our citizens would have access to youth clubs, libraries, even new parks.

    that is, unless we make it happen ourselves!

    No time to wait for change 

    All over the country communities are coming to the realisation that things we want for our neighbourhoods are only going to happen if communities come together to make it happen. Whoever wins in the May elections, the debate will not be about expanding the state's role in public services. And once we realise this, the question becomes about how we are going to deliver it, if the council isn't going to. This is where it gets interesting, and something is stirring.

    Raising the Funds

    The search is on for alternative funding models based largely outside local authority funding. 

    Grant Providers

    Much of the focus is on grant giving organisations such as the Heritage Lottery Fund, Big Lottery, Sports England; or local grant providers such as Trafford Housing Trust. However, it’s a competitive market and it’s unlikely that all projects will be able to get the funds they need from grant providers.

    big lottery

    Heritage

    Sport England

    Sport Englan

    Advantages of Grant Funding

    • Some Big Chunks of Money
    • Additional Non Financial support from funder
    • Small number of lead members required to write bid
    • Bid process brings focus on outcomes

    Criticisms

    • Focus on what's bad about a neighbourhood rather than what's good
    • Less focus on widespread support or local accountability
    • The Funders' agenda becomes as important as the Local Agenda 

    Town / Parish Councils – locally accountable
    … but only if we hold them to it

    A potential source of local funding is the Town/Parish Council model. All three main parties have dallied with these at national level. The advantage to the community is that they can if they choose, levy a precept for money to be spent  in the community. The precept is in effect an extra amount of council tax. The trouble is there’s no real evidence they really are accountable. Elections happen rarely and there’s plenty to suggest that the BBC drama, The Casual Vacancy underplays the levels of conspiracy and chicanery often encountered. We have a few Parsih Councils in Trafford with mixed support from residents at best. Perhaps ours are too small and since Stretford had its own full District Council until relatively recently (1974), it should not be dismissed out of hand. It's never been easier to set them up, but if the sole purpose is to locally raise cash, there may be better ways.

    Making it easier to set up a town council

    Advantages 

    • In theory – democratically accountable
    • If a Council Tax Precept is levied, everyone pays
    • Provides a voice for the Town

    Criticisms

    • Tendency towards cliques
    • Elections rarely contested
    • Focus on narrow agenda

    Cutting out the Council
    …..and going for it yourselves!

    Is Crowdfunding an answer?

    The new kid on the block for local funding is crowdsourcing. It’s best when you’re appealing for a fixed cost rather than ongoing. It’s come of age with the internet, though it could be argued that its roots go much further back. In fact many of Greater Manchester’s parks were financed in this way and even New York’s Statue of Liberty.

    There are so many sites supporting crowdfunding: SpaceHive is perhaps the most focussed on local/community projects. 

    The advantage to the person pledging the funds is that, you don't pay anything unless the project reaches its target. Why would you want to donate to something that will never happen?

    Manchester has partnered with SpaceHive to create the #MakeManchester partnership. At the time of writing, they've raised £335,337 in pledges towards the £369,000 target needed to save the Grade II listed Ancoats Dispensary and turn it into a community hub. That's fantastic, and I would urge everyone reading this to pledge a couple of quid. In addition to the Dispensary, #MakeManchester is supporting a host of other projects including a Youth Market.

    Even closer to home is our own Stretford Public Hall who too are seeking much needed donations to move to the next stage to in reopening the hall as exciting vibrant resource. They need and deserve everyone's support. Please make a donation here.

    Advantages

    • Inclusive, gives ownership to the whole community
    • Tests whether community really want project
    • Helps attract matched funding

    Criticisms

    • Huge publicity and promotion input
    • Favours populist projects as against perhaps a worthy minority need
    • Uncertainty prior to target being reached

    Public Subscription – The Return of an old Favourite

    A variation on crowdsourcing is public subscription. This is where people voluntarily make an ongoing financial donation often through a membership scheme. Whilst there are many examples, and a classic one would be the National Trust whereby members pay an annual subscription and receive reduced prices and news, the method has not really taken on in local community projects. This might be about to change.

    A community group in Sheffield is proposing asking regular users for a voluntary £10 a year subscription to help pay for running costs of its park. And I’ve been particularly struck by the practicality at the core of this American blog on using wider community membership as a key fundraising and inclusion tool. If the organisation had charitable status, they’d probably be able to claim gift-aid from the subscriptions. With the best will in the world, you’re never going to get everybody to contribute but the pay-off is a far greater sense of ownership than you’d get with a town council precept for example. It would be far easier to get additional grant funding if subscription funding was already in place.

    Advantages

    • Inclusive, gives ownership to whole community
    • (with charitable status) Brings additional 25% Gift Aid
    • Helps attract matched funding

    Criticisms

    • Huge year on year fundraising effort
    • Long lead-in times before you have a critical mass of members.

    Conclusion

    There will be some who say we shouldn’t be getting involved, it’s for the state to provide these services; we’re doing the Tory dirty work for them. I disagree. In fact I’d say some of this goes back to the roots of socialism and the Friendly Societies, Trades Unions and Guilds from which emerged the Labour Party. There’s real opportunities for today’s Trade Unions as well as businesses to get themselves involved.

    The limited services the council provided never served more than a fraction of the people they should have. There are plenty of dangerous crossings that have never seen a school crossing patrol and two youth centres were never going to satisfy the whole of Stretford. As for libraries, they really could be on the street corner if enough people want them to be.

    Think about you want in your neighbourhood, and make it happen!

  • Unacceptable – Children’s playground Trafford, England, 21st Century

    I'm publishing this facebook video here as I want to show it to the appropriate agencies. It's the small park off Gorse Avenue. Technically not Gorse Hill Ward but close enough and it's not acceptable.

  • Ed Miliband pledges to act on Tax unfairness

    Ed Miliband pledges to act on Tax unfairness

    The elite will not like it one little bit but Ed is absolutely right on this. For too long the unfairness in our tax system has been left unchallenged. The fact that there would be no deficit if HMRC collected the revenue that the Government calculates should be forthcoming from the current UK economy makes this urgent. Ordinary people are bearing the brunt because the rich and powerful refuse to pay their share. It's brave, it's challenging and it's right.

  • School Crossing Patrols

    Not Easy. I think we should have more school crossing places, not less. I can't make a case for any of the patrols to be removed.

    However, we're in a consultation and some crossings have received more publicity than others. I've therefore used the opportunity that being a councillor gives me to make a special case for retaining the patrol at Barton Road/ Moss Vale Crescent. The photograph isn't great from google but at least it shows some of the sources of the traffic there. And the bend looks tighter in real life.

    And here's my email to the consultation. I'd have loved to focus on other crossings, as well but in my view this is the most dangerous of all:

    As these proposals put young lives at greater risk, I believe these cuts go too far. The council should be encouraging more children to walk to school rather than discouraging by making the journey more hazardous.

    However I wish to make a special case for the patrol at the Barton Road/Moss Vale Road M60 circle junction. This is a particularly messy and dangerous junction on a bend. There are a number of aggravating factors at this junction including the speed and positioning of vehicles as they approach from the motorway. Buses have to take a wide radius and at the same time there are vehicles turning right onto Moss Vale Crescent.

    This means that driver focus is often on simple navigation given the amount of hazards that exist here. I appreciate it is a pelican crossing but the patrol officer in their high vis and sign is a vital component in managing the children and reinforcing the stewardship of the traffic.

    I appreciate there are other patrols on busier routes. Sometimes it is not just the volume, it is the complexity of the traffic behaviour that adds to the risk and I believe it is particularly prevalent at this junction.

    Sent from my Windows Phone

    Mike Cordingley
    Councillor for Gorse Hill Ward
    Labour Spokesperson for Economic Growth
    Transport for Greater Manchester Committee
    Locality Partnership for Old Trafford and Stretford

    www.gorsehill-labour.co.uk

    Telephone 0781 499 7522