Don't forget to complete your Census form on Sunday 21st March!!
A new group has been formed to continue the battel of saving the trees in Waltham Forest.
An invitation!
People Power & Community Democracy
Saturday 10th April, 10am-1pm (online, via Zoom)
Dear Waltham Forest Community Member,
We hope you are keeping safe and well.
Here at Waltham Forest Peoples Assembly we’ve taken some time to rest over the winter and think about how our work in 2021 can be meaningful to the whole Waltham Forest community. We hope you are keen to spread the word about how people's assemblies can give voices to communities more fairly and respectfully, too!
We would like to start the new series by inviting you to discuss the question:
How might we spread awareness and gain support for the CEE Bill (Climate and Ecological Emergency Bill) from our elected representatives?
Background: The CEE Bill (Climate and Ecological Emergency Bill) has already been tabled in parliament and now needs the support from elected officials, community groups and individuals to succeed. Don’t worry if you haven’t heard about this bill before - we will invite speakers from the campaign to explain it at the people's assembly. We’ve also invited some local community group leaders to talk about how the CEE Bill could benefit Waltham Forest, should it be passed into law.
We have decided to focus on the CEE Bill in our first People’s Assembly this year because as we are moving out of the pandemic and the government is making decisions on how to spend public money it is important that we make sure that the government acts on the climate and ecological emergency.
For a 2 minute overview, you can watch this video:
And more information is available at the www.ceebill.uk
We’d love to hear your thoughts about the CEE Bill and work together to encourage our local representatives and community groups to commit their support to the bill.
Sign up to be a part of the people's assembly here:
Tell your local friends on social media about the assembly here: www.facebook.com/events/
Finally, if you think you’d like to present at the people's assembly, along with the other speakers, please get in touch with us at walthamforestpeople@
We look forward to hearing from you and seeing you for the people's assembly in April!
Kind regards,
Waltham Forest Peoples Assembly
and
Extinction Rebellion Waltham Forest
Email: walthamforestpeople@
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/
This is the February issue of the Save Lea Marshes newsletter. Our key stories this month concern land use and consultation.
SLM and other community representatives are attending regular meetings with representatives from the Lee Valley Regional Park Authority (LVRPA) to monitor work and make suggestions in order to try and minimise the damage to Leyton Marsh. The last meeting was on 5 February. One item raised was the lack of visible information for the general public on the site about the forthcoming Ice Centre plans. You would think that, if the LVRPA is so proud of its upcoming development, they would be making the most of this opportunity. Anyhow, a poster has now finally gone up in the old Ice Rink building.
Other issues covered were
SLM have been trying hard to hold a dialogue with the LVRPA to improve consultation with both it and the wider public. Last year we tried to suggest ways in which the Waterworks building could be used both more profitably and with community and wildlife provision at its heart, in such a way as to maintain and improve the surrounding green areas for wildlife. However, our hopes have been somewhat deflated by the LVRPA seemingly going back to "default position", with plans for the Centre at least in the near future being more or less the same as usual, with the building used as a base for the ranger staff and possibly an educational service for young people. The most worrying factor concerns the surrounding land, with the LVRPA doggedly sticking to their ideas of raising money through large events and even considering making physical changes to allow larger vehicles in. We ask how they can justify this, in the light of one of the biggest negative responses ever received by Waltham Forest Licensing Committee when it considered the application for the proposed music festival. Furthermore, we were under the impression that the LVRPA had given an undertaking to defer any decisions on the future of the site until the completion of the biodiversity surveys that SLM has commissioned in the area.
Two issues -
SLM had speakers on both these issues at the meeting, raising concerns about the imbalance of projects between the north and south of the park. Arguably the north has areas of more scenic value but the south definitely has higher and increasingly higher footfall due to population density. The document favours works in the north of the park and has backtracked on one of the plans we have been campaigning for: restoring water to the Middlesex Filter Beds (the pumps previously installed kept on getting stolen). We had been told that delays had been caused by tendering difficulties and lack of staff available due to Covid 19. We wonder whether getting a new Ice Centre in the south was seen as "our lot", despite the fact that many people don't want it. The Executive Committee said that the document was not set in stone but was a work in progress - we shall see. One of our members gave a detailed presentation on areas of the park that could have obstacles removed and new paths laid out so as to enable pedestrians and cyclists to move about more easily. There were some positive noises about some of these proposals, notably the area between the Waterworks and Hackney Marshes.
There has been a huge increase in interest in the park idea recently. We've had new people joining us to help move the project forward. We are now a Limited Company (with the aim of becoming a registered charity when the time is right). We have also launched a crowdfunding campaign through the Mayor of London's Spacehive scheme to allow us to get Phase 1 of the project underway: a valuation of the site, market research, a designer to create the ELWP "brand", and an engineer to carry out a technical evaluation. We will then be able to make our approach to the Education Department, who own the land; our bid needs to be as credible as possible for us to be able to buy it from them. There is more detailed information and a blog on the ELWP website https://www.elwp.org.uk
Our friends at London Waterkeeper are doing an amazing job raising the profile of the importance of our rivers and the need to keep them clean and sewage free. There is a very active campaign for people to report and complain to Thames Water about their sewage overflow but London Waterkeeper's latest communication raises concern about the Environmental Agency's plans to end its public notifications for the most serious river pollution events in London - north of the Thames and Hertfordshire. This service started after public pressure when there was a large oil slick in the River Lea in 2018. At the time, coordination between the EA and other authorities was poor, and the notification system has been an improvement that has now been extended from the Lea to the North London operating area of the EA, This latest change appears to be a money-saving measure, and the London Waterkeeper group will be working to see the service continue beyond the end of March. They have also launched their "Rainy days sewer overflow map". This is an interactive portal that will enable sewage spotters to pinpoint and report to Thames Water where sewage overflows are seen during rainy days and to keep informing them throughout the period of rain. https://www.londonwaterkeeper.
During the on-line Mayor of London's "People's Question Time" on 11 February, it dawned on Mayor Khan that he was getting an unusual number of questions from people based in Waltham Forest and made his suspicions clear by dubbing the borough the "People's Republic of Walthamstow" - a similar moniker used to be applied to neighbouring Hackney in years gone by. The Save Our Square campaign (SOS) organised a brilliant campaign to ask the Mayor a number of questions spread over different subject areas - such as fire risk, housing and environment - to make their views heard on the revised Walthamstow town centre plans, which had been recently given the go-ahead at the Waltham Forest Planning Committee. The plans involve extending the shopping centre, two large tower blocks, unaffordable housing for local people, and the loss of public open space.
If you have ever thought about coming to an SLM meeting but not managed to get to our usual venues, now might be the time to join us on Zoom. We meet on alternate Mondays from 7.30 and the next meeting is on 8 March. We always put dates of SLM meetings on our website. Once the Covid 19 emergencies are over, we will probably continue to have meetings online with occasional physical meet-ups, to make meetings as accessible as possible.