Author: Mike Cordingley

  • Dave Acton gets top post at Fire Authority

    Gorse Hill is on the map with new appointment for Dave

    IMG_9371

    COUNCILLOR David Acton is the new Chairman of Greater Manchester’s award-winning Fire and Rescue Authority. In leading the Authority, Councillor Acton is joined by Vice Chairman, Councillor Henry Cooper.

    The appointment was made at a meeting of the Fire Authority held earlier today. Cllr Acton has been a member of the Fire Authority since 2008. He is a Councillor for Trafford MBC, where he served as leader from 1997-2004 and is currently leader of the Labour Group in Trafford.

    Speaking on his appointment as Chairman of the Fire and Rescue Authority, Cllr Acton commented:

    “I am very honoured and privileged to be elected Chair of this Fire Authority and look forward to working with colleagues, senior officers, staff and trade unions to deliver the best possible service, recognising the very difficult challenges ahead in these austere times. I am grateful for the opportunity to make a difference with all the staff and Fire Authority working together to move the Service forward.”

    Welcoming the Chairman of the Fire Authority, County Fire Officer Steve McGuirk acknowledged the challenges and opportunities that the Fire Authority will be facing: “We have always worked closely with our elected members and this strong relationship will be critical as together we strive to maintain, and in some areas improve, the service that we deliver to our communities.”

  • Carbuncles?

    Creativity amongst the Carbuncles

    Last week I took the chance whilst waiting for a meeting to look out over Media City from one of the best viewpoints – Quay West, our own temporary town hall. The officer I was meeting caught me staring out across the span of water and skyscrapers and remarked "It’s an impressive view, isn’t it Councillor!". My reply surprised her;

    "The Quays lack something, they’re soulless, they’ve been so controlled, they’ve designed out bustle, there’s nothing going on except what the developers and the two councils provide or put on. They need to let go."

    This week we learn that ‘The Carbuncle Cup’ , named after Prince Charles’s infamous comments, and awarded by the architectural magazine ‘Building Design’ to the worst realised projects of the year, has been won by our very own ‘Media City’. The judges’ comments are scathing;

    They said the waterside site location – alongside the Lowry arts centre and the Imperial War Museum North – appeared to have “everything going for it” but failed to realise the “urban aspiration” indicated by its name.

    “The overwhelming sense is one of extreme anxiety on the part of the architects about the development’s isolation from the centre of Manchester.

    “The incessant visual excitement reads as a desperate attempt to compensate for an underlying lack of urban vitality.

    And damningly,

    "“How uncreative can a ‘Creative Quarter’ be? And which truly creative person would ever want to work in such a place?”

    Perhaps surprisingly, I’m pleased with these comments. They are a very loud wake up call. Cutting through the scathing hyperbole of the judges’ criticisms over the clash of claddings used on buildings, the core of both their comments this week and mine last week are the same. The place lacks a buzz. It needs the sparks of creativity that will only happen if we enable small scale businesses, cafés, even burger and kebab stalls to set up. We have got to stop believing that a sculpture trail is going to entice people to walk around the Quays. Instead I’d rather we removed all requirements to license street peddlers in the area, in fact I’d like to allow stalls to be set up wherever one can be squeezed in.

    I hope the reaction to this indictment isn’t just a defensive sneer at southern judges, but is taken as a positive stimulus to look below the skyscrapers and look instead at the empty promenades and squares on both banks of the Quays.If you want creativity, you’re going to need the bustle of the bazaar rather than the zombification of Lowry outlets and a sculpture trail.

    Next week it’s Stretford at the Council

    At next week’s Council Meeting we are scheduled to debate Stretford Town Centre following the loss of TJ Hughes from the centre. We are calling for support to be given to the town centre:

    As land owners of Stretford Mall this Council recognises the need to support the future of the Mall for the benefit of the local economy, jobs and local community. We are concerned at the recent announcement of the closure of TJ Hughes and the empty shop units on Chester Road. We therefore call on the Council to support, utilising a proportion of the rental income it receives from the Mall, initiatives which will help to stimulate the Mall. This could include such joint initiatives as the development of a lay-by on Chester Road next to the Mall and improvements to the Mall itself etc.

    Stretford town centre frustrates the life out of me. I’m glad we’ve drafted this motion in this manner because usually as soon as you mention Stretford to the Conservatives, you get the response ‘We’d love to support Stretford but it’s cursed by having a blooming great prime A road going through it and a privately owned Mall, so we can’t do anything.’ This motion of the Labour Group points to some of the small things that can and should be done now.

    I’m convinced we should go further and look outside the box to try to support Stretford in other ways too. One thing never to accept is that such barriers as the A56 or the concrete cladding of a 60s arndale mean that Stretford has to lump it.

    The first challenge is to raise our own expectations as to what is possible within the restrictions imposed by the A56 and mall. And where better to get expectations challenged than our universities in their architectural departments? We should commission some design work. Ideally I’d like a business such as Tesco to be the sponsor of work from students. It would be good for the image of Tesco which has taken a bashing locally and good for Stretford to get some blue-sky thinking on what the place could look like with a bit of imagination. I have absolutely no building or architectural background but even I can see that Kingsway could be enhanced if the backs of the old shops were to be renovated to provide a new frontage. What could we do with the Essoldo corner? Let’s ask young people with the skills and imagination boring councillors wouldn’t dream of and prepare to get blown away.

    Overall, it’s too easy to label our developments both old and new as carbuncles and then walk away. I believe in creativity that comes not from a grand corporate design but the ingenuity and imagination of people looking at things from the perspective of those who live and use the place, rather than a slick presentation.

    Mike Cordingley

  • Thoughts on the Riots

    Unwanted echo of the 80s as riots return to our cities

    It’s been an awful week of violence and wanton destruction on our streets. I won’t have been the only one glued to 24 hr news late towards dawn on those four nights of chaos. I won’t have been the only one who welcomed rain back to Manchester on Wednesday like a returning protector. It’s been an awful week and thoughts are particularly with those who have suffered loss of life or injury, loss of their home, business or job.

    It’s not been a good week for the London Police, the Justice System or Public Authorities; but it’s been wretched for this deplorable Conservative Government and Comotose Clegg. We need them to do a lot better.

    What we know.

    On Thursday in Tottenham a man suspected with criminal connections is shot dead in his car by police and has in his possession a gun. (Read http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2011/aug/14/david-lammy-tottenham-mark-duggan for local MP, David Lammy’s account of how rumours developed and the response from police that should have been so much better)

    On Saturday – Family and members of the community demand answers from the local police station and there is dissatisfaction with the response or lack of it. From there we know that anger escalated into a riot with subsequent looting and burning of properties. This spreads to nearby areas of Wood Green.

    On Sunday the disturbances spread further in London and escalate in Brixton, Hackney, Walthamstowe and Enfield. At this stage the focus is on confrontation with the police and the level of frightening violence is escalating. Opportunistic looting becomes endemic. It emerges that pretty much the whole of Government is away on holiday in an unprecedented deriliction of duty. Cameron, Clegg, Boris Johnson, Theresa May, George Osborne all away creating a vacuum of political leadership.

    By Monday night it was clear things were out of control in London and copycat incidents were spreading beyond London. The overwhelming impression provided by 24 hr news was either the police were static or late providing a response for instance in Ealing. These images and reports were being broadcast all over the world, particularly burning businesses in Enfield (Sony) and Croydon (Reeves).

    On Tuesday, we start to see Government ministers return from their holidays and we predictably hear the words “unacceptable” and “we will not tolerate” a lot. Manchester forced to loan a hundred police to London and in the evening, Manchester gets hit. By now it is no longer about confronting the police, it’s organised mob burglary.

    Wednesday The surge in the rogue’s gallery of faces caught on CCTV becomes a flood. And the rain threatens a flood of a more conventional nature. The riots seem to have run their course and parliament meets to take the credit. Was it worth the expense of flying all those MPs back; too soon to make a measured response and for ministers, too late to call for the police to get serious? In the event we were subjected to six hours of ‘awfulising’ (=1001 different ways of condemning the criminal behaviour).

    What have we learned?

    The riots were not caused by the cuts. Labour’s policies in Government failed to address an unequal society and it’s not clear to me that Gordon Brown in particular had an instinct or analysis for places like Harringey.

    But the cuts are going to make it more difficult to tackle.

    The riots were not caused by Health and Safety Regulation or by the Human Rights Act. Cameron is on another planet if he thinks they were.

    Policing of Tottenham in those first days was bad. Whether this was as a consequence of sensitivity or a lack of leadership / morale in the met, I don’t know, but ultimately it gave a signal to the rest of London and the wider country that there was a good chance rioting could be profitable.

    Neither the Parliament nor the media nor London’s Metropolitan Police are capable of the moral leadership that they should be offering whilst so many have been tainted by their own disregard for any sense of propiety. How can MPs who ‘looted’ their own plasma TVs or even garden sheds from the expense office make any contribution that people will listen to? Some believe corruption at the top of our society has had an impact on the readiness to loot displayed by so many. Whether this was true, who can say? But it obviously does compromise our ability to repair our damaged communities. It would be good to see the remaining dregs from that shameful time do the right thing and make it clear they’re not standing again. And yes I am still angry over the expenses scandal!

    However, there has been much that is positive to take forward from the aftermath. At last young people in deprived areas are being given a voice. Too often in the past it’s been professionals with a vested interest but at last we’re getting to hear the authentic voice. We may not like what we hear but at least we’re hearing it. If we can address the roots of these issues and work with communities rather than making gestures to feel good about ourselves. we could be onto something at last.

    I’ve been quite impressed with Ed Miliband this week. He’s avoided the knee-jerk in favour of a considered response. Cameron is pursuing gimmicks, but even here there’s positive, he now knows that the risk of ignoring forgotten areas is that they come back to haunt him. But finally I want to pay tribute to the police in Greater Manchester. Everything I’ve seen suggests that they got the policing of Manchester and Salford exactly right with the resources available to them. I worry that the courts and housing associations are getting caught up in a febrile atmosphere. I want to see the arsonists and ringleaders given appropriately heavy sentences but we need to keep a sense of proportion when it comes to the stupid kids on the periphery. But it’s clear the police have done a fantastic job in identifying and preparing the cases in the aftermath.

  • Passageway from Barton Road to Cromford Avenue

    I am disappointed in the deterioration of this passageway.

    I’ve reported it to the council and I’m demanding immediate action to rectify

    CromfordAve01

    Mike Cordingley

  • Weekly Update 25th July 2011

    Monday

    Friends of Lostock Park Greenzone Meeting
    Awards night – Lostock College

    Tuesday

    Member Development Steering Group

    Thursday

    Metrolink Depot Visit

    Saturday

    Boundary Briefing

  • Weekly Update 18th July 2011

    A moment of Peace and Harmony in Trafford?

    Tuesday

    Meeting of Community Activists at Urmston Library
    Poorly attended and I left early before the drumming started. (don’t ask..)

    Wednesday

    Meeting of Full Council
    I asked a pre-notified question on staffing.

    At the beginning of the last financial year, Trafford had the equivalent of 3,175 full time staff including agency workers. It now has 2,796. An equivalent of one in 9 staff has left the workforce. At the same time, much of the workforce has been preparing for a massive upheaval / decant to the Quays.

    No organisation is exempt from change, and I’m not going to present a Luddite argument against modernisation or indeed efficiencies. However no one can deny that the capacity for ‘Change’ has a ceiling. If a team is in a constant state of upheaval, there’s inevitably a cost in productivity. I spoke to one member of middle management at Trafford recently who’d had three changes to his job title and responsibilities in four months. To be fair he’d coped well, but you could see a growing frustration that he was not being able to bed-in changes to his role before they were changed again. Multiply the changes across a thousand members of staff and it begins to place a brake on output.

    Now again to be fair, I’ve been extremely impressed with aspects of service maintenance during this transition. I had cause to pass on positive comments from a member of public only last week. It’s clear many areas of the organisation are coping well, but some are clearly creaking and there’s been times where it’s been difficult.

    The cuts will keep coming, we know that and we’ll have to adapt, but if we’re not careful, we could see the impact being far greater if we pass a point beyond which the management and staff simply cannot cope with the rate of change.

    High Speed Rail

    We also had a debate on High Speed Rail. I’d drafted a motion on behalf of the Labour Group and the Conservatives had submitted a similar motion in support. My inclusion of words crediting the Labour Government with initiating the project upset the Conservatives and spiced up the debate nicely. I was happy to withdraw the offending words and both resolutions were passed. I noticed the Advertiser reporter suggested that peace and harmony had broken out. I wouldn’t go that far but it was a much better debate than might have been anticipated.

    Any peace and harmony was broken with the Conservative resolution on Stretford High / Gorse Hill Park. As I predicted we had the political bun fight. Hopefully the community will still have a say and voice concerns. This resolution didn’t help that dialogue and I wish it had not been tabled.

    Thursday

    Old Trafford Youth Club to listen to the young people about the fantastic work that goes on there. Brilliant

    Friday

    Transport for Greater Manchester Committee
    Mainly straight forward, although there’s a recommendation for ‘an extra four car train from Liverpool Lime Street to Manchester Oxford Road in the morning peak to ‘abstract passengers’ from along the entire route and to remove intermediate stops from inter urban services to manage demand.’

    Now I’ve no idea what they mean and the officer wasn’t sure either. I suspect it means a stopping train in the morning rush hour, but the loss of express trains stopping in Urmston and certain other stations along the route. If Urmston loses some access, it places more demand on the commuting trains which are already full by the time they reach Trafford Park Station. So I need to confirm whether the four car stopping train adds to capacity at Trafford Park and Humphrey Park or reduces it. So I’ve got a little homework.

    And finally

    I’ve posted the draft road resurfacing schedule on the roads page of the website. Pleased that Gorse Hill ward is well represented amongst those on the schedule; and pleased that all four of the roads I championed have been included. No guarantee that there won’t be changes as the year progresses but it’s a good start. I know there’s areas in Lostock that are pushing for inclusion and we’ll keep making the case.