All posts by andrew.dakers@blueyonder.co.uk

Gunnersbury Park – Prioritising issues and setting out a way forward

Having listened to (hopefully!) all the issues raised on internet forums and meetings, visited the museum the week before last, and then spoken to Richard Gill and James Wisdom here is a summary of my views and top concerns….

The proposals
The work of the two Councils over the past year is to be broadly welcomed. After decades of inaction a comprehensive vision for the park has been brought together by nationally recognised consultants, backed up by the local appointed Development Manager.

However, along with my local colleagues Joseph Bourke and Mona Naqvi – and Ealing Lib Dems – I am supporting residents’ fight against plans to sell off a corner of Gunnersbury Park. We recognise the need to invest substantially in the park and museum, which attracts almost 40,000 visitors, including school children, each year. At the moment the local history collection is being damaged when it rains by leaking roofs. However we do not accept that the loss of one corner of the park to housing can be the only way to raise the necessary capital receipt for investment back into the house and park.

This is why – given the limited funds of both Ealing and Hounslow Councils – we are supporting local residents’ calls for the value of Carville Park North to be explored as an alternative way of raising the £10m+ capital funds that are needed (see below), along with other revenue streams and/or prudential borrowing. We believe selling off this green space would be the lesser of two evils if no other funding can be identified.

Flaws in consultation
I think there is little to be gained by pursuing the flaws in the consultation process much longer. Yes, it was not very well constructed, but what matters now are deliverable ideas that will improve on the proposals. The flaws in the consultation must not become an excuse for inaction as there has been too much prevarication over Gunnersbury Park by both Councils for too many years. Most people to whom I speak welcome the proposals, but feel strongly that the Council’s must find alternative ways of providing the capital investment.

Achievable improvements to the current preferred option
i) Proposed land sale – the Carville Park North alternative

Carville Park North is considered a serious alternative to the corner of Gunnersbury Park for land sale/ capital receipts. This would have less impact on Gunnersbury Park, which is valued more for its trees and quality of green space. I have asked the leaders of both councils to explore this and would urge others to write to the leaders asking that CB Richard Ellis is employed on a short project to value options for developing this land instead. This needs to be done urgently so it does not delay applications to HLF/ EH.

ii) The museum
The museum at Gunnersbury contains a treasure trove of local history. The potential enjoyment by the local community and visitors is vast – as are the benefits from local people learning about our collective history. However, sadly today the sprawling collection is inappropriately housed and at constant risk of decay from leaking roofs.

Concerns I have with respect to this aspect of the proposals are:
– is the proposed store at the Stables large enough or do we need an extra 100-200 sq/m of capacity costed into the proposals?
– should the museum be renamed “The Local history museum for LBs of Ealing and Hounslow”? At the moment a lot of people don’t realise the museum houses the local history collection.
– what plans are there for exhibitions outreach? Could we have LCD exhibitions in 20 locations across the boroughs, so at the press of a button new local history exhibitions could be rotated around community halls/ libraries. Gunnersbury is a long way for someone to travel from Feltham for an introduction to the collections.

iii) Governance arrangements
There is an urgent need for clarity over governance arrangements – and these must be robust. We don’t want to end up in a position in another 30 years where there has been such chronic under investment in the parks.

So what guaranteed level of subsidy will the Councils maintain? How will reserves be built up to cover capital depreciation? How will these reserves be protected?

iv) Pitch and put
A number of people have raised concerns about the loss of this facility. Is there an alternative location in the park it could be sited that does not reduce the ‘permeability’ of the landscape in the same way? Is there another park in the area where this facility could be provided? By permeability the consultants mean access into and through this very central space is reduced by its current location.

v) Follies
Local resident Naomi Chadwick has reminded my how the southern tower/ folly by the lake in Gunnersbury Park was the stuff of childhood dreams (and sometimes nightmares!). Naomi rightly says: “At present the follies are not set off to advantage… Follies are easily appreciable art. Any child who can read a book will back me. We should free them from grime and ivy, and present them well.” This is another area whether we need to check the financing of the preferred option is sufficient. It would be a real sadness if we did not to restore (and then maintain) the park’s follies.

I would welcome further specific proposals over the next few weeks to add to and build upon this list.

Tories miss the point on Renewable Transport Fuels Obligation

A letter in The Hounslow & Brentford Times from Tory Zac Goldsmith attacking the Lib Dems on the Renewable Transport Fuels Obligation (RTFO) prompted me to hone and take a closer look at the issues. Just like Zac, environmental sustainability has been a long standing personal and professional interest. My conclusion is that yet again, the Tories have got it wrong on a key environmental issue of our age.

There are of course serious fears over the impact on food production, and the effect of clearing rainforests to set up palm oil plantations.

Liberal Democrats have agreed with campaigners that proper certification is the answer. It is a major concern that the government has so far failed to put in place mandatory standards on both issues.

Having said that, the situation will not be quite as unregulated as some campaigners have suggested. A reporting system of sorts is in place and detailed information on CO2 savings and sustainability are asked for. The administrator of the new Renewable Fuels Agency will publish this information at least every three months. There will also be an annual report on the actions of individual companies. While far from perfect, this should provide an opportunity for individuals and campaigning organisations to scrutinise the actions of all those involved.

A second concern is that any calculation of the net CO2 saving relative to the use of fossil fuel must take account of the fertilisers that were used, any impacts from changes in land use and the energy used in refining and transporting the final product. Clearly, there would be no point in pursuing this policy if those savings were not real and demonstrable.

Given these two significant concerns Liberal Democrat colleagues did not feel able to support the government’s proposals as they stood when the matter was voted on.

This is why, unlike the Conservatives, we do not oppose the measure outright. We believe the RTFO is still the right thing to do in principle if these issues can be addressed. The aim is to get to the second generation of biofuels, at which point the risks on sustainability are much reduced. This is because second generation biofuels, rather than just taking the starch from a crop (i.e. the grain from wheat), extract energy from the whole crop. This has the potential to more than double energy yields and has a smaller carbon footprint because the amount of energy-intensive fertilisers and fungicides used to grow the crops will remain the same for a higher amount of useable material.

In order to speed up the move towards the second generation of biofuels we need industry to be confident that there will be a market for these fuels, otherwise there will never be the necessary investment. We must be ready to embrace this major opportunity for British farmers and manufacturers by supporting steps to ensure the UK is at the forefront of developing this technology.

Wheat price crisis hits the world poor hard

The worst fall out from the lack of an effective global agreement on how to address climate change — and alongside this establish a global strategy on biofuels production — is the recent fast rise in wheat prices.

The impacts on the Palestinian people is explained in this TV interview last week with an old friend Kirstie Campbell. Kirstie spent the first years of her life in Brentford, and is now a spokesperson for the World Food Programme (WFP):

http://media.themedialine.org/media/071108_gaza_bread.wmv

Worth tuning in to…