Tuesday, 11 December 2007
Lighting up Chiswick
It now feels more like Christmas time...even although I haven't started my Christmas shopping yet! I can't believe another year has just gone by. My first year as Parliamentary Candidate for Chiswick, Brentford, Isleworth, Osterley and Hounslow. I wonder what the next year will bring!
Wednesday, 5 December 2007
Chiswick Riverside By-Election
- A safer, cleaner and greener Chiswick
- Sensible solutions to parking pressures
- Excellence in our schools
- A better deal for older people
- An efficient, high service, low tax council
- No further expansion of Heathrow
Friday, 30 November 2007
Politics in the Classroom
Thursday, 29 November 2007
Women at the heart of the Hounslow
Baroness Sayeeda Warsi, the youngest member of the House of Lords and the Shadow Cabinet member for Community Cohesion, gave a very personal speech on how to build cohesion in the UK. Using her own life journey, she talked about the need for us to unite around local issues, having a shared language, learning British history and empowering local communities.
We then went to see this in action - finding out the issues that the ethnic communities face and the support that is given to them. The Hounslow Racial Equality Council gave us an overview of the projects that they manage and the help that the Hounslow Asian Community Advice Service gives to local people. We then went to see an Asian women's group in Montague Hall - a wonderful group of women who gave us a warm welcome with music and song. Sayeeda spoke to them in several languages and although I hadn't a clue what she was saying, I am sure it was all good!
Community cohesion is about understanding each other, being at ease with one another, learning to trust each other, working together and feeling a sense of belonging. In the large group of Asian women today, I felt I belonged.
Monday, 26 November 2007
Concerned with Crime
We have followed this up with a more detailed survey which we will analyse in the next few weeks as people are still sending them in to us. If you have received one, please do fill it in as I want to know what you think. Please help the new generation of politicians, to not just listen to themselves and their own views, but instead ... help me to be there, working for you on issues that matter to you!
Sunday, 25 November 2007
Heathrow consultation begins
My personal view is very simple. I am a business woman so I am certainly not against business growth and expansion. The problem here, is that future expansion at Heathrow Airport will affect the lives of thousands of residents and have huge implications on the environment and the quality of life of the local community:
Quality of life – residents already have to cope with a plane flying overhead approx every 90 seconds and constant aircraft noise which already exceeds World Heath Organisation recommendations. When aircraft numbers double for mixed mode, then they will have no relief at all during the day from noise.
Environment - the levels of environmental pollution in the air around Heathrow consistently breach EU Air Quality limits. The government’s planned expansion at Heathrow is totally inconsistent with its perceived concerns on environmental pollution and targets for reducing carbon emissions. There are also possible public health issues here that need to be carefully addressed.
Night flights - Heathrow is allowed to land 16 flights per night during the period 23.30 to 06.30 but the reality is that most of these arrive from 04.30 onwards, and a recent report suggests that this quota is regularly breached. The result is that sleep disturbance is a real factor for those under the flight path.
Education - children suffer from aircraft noise at school as well as at home. Many schools in the London Borough of Hounslow are under a flight path and the result is a stop-start education as teachers cannot make themselves heard through the noise. Some schools are partially insulated; some have no insulation at all. There is only minimal funding for noise insulation. The local authorities cannot afford to insulate all its schools and the aviation industry is not obliged to provide funding.
Transport – local traffic congestion around the airport is already a major problem and an increase in capacity would result in demand that the local traffic infrastructure would be unable to cope with.
Property Values – as Heathrow continues to grow, the value of properties in the area are likely to reduce. Residents moved to the area not realising that Heathrow would double in size which would impact their lives substantially and affect the value of their property.
Safety – the more Heathrow expands, the safety risks increase. We do not know the current figures for vertical separation but data has been requested from BAA to see the current levels of risk, in what is a densely populated part of London. We do not want a serious accident in a residential area to be the reason for change. We need to prevent that accident from happening.
Due to these reasons, what do I think we should do? Here is my view...
- Say no to the third runway
- Say no to mixed mode - keep runway alternation so that residents get relief from noise for part of the day
- Ban all night flights
- Maintain the current flight movement cap
- Agree a more comprehensive noise insulation scheme for schools, hospitals, nursing homes, hospices and libraries
- Create a new longer term airline strategy for the UK that is aligned to an overall transport policy
Is that clear enough? I hope so!
Tuesday, 23 October 2007
Sadness at sudden death
Lets have a General Election now
People liked what they heard at the Conservative Party conference - expecially on inheritance tax and stamp duty. They have also not been fooled by the Labour Party taking on some of these ideas as their own.
As I was going around Chiswick, Brentford, Isleworth and Hounslow in September and October, I was listening to what residents were saying. The Labour Party were also listening as they called people in my constituency to see how they would vote at the next election. They did not like what they heard and decided not to call a General Election.
I wanted a General Election now as I believe the people of this country deserve to vote on Gordon's vision. The last election was based on Tony's vision. The residents of Brentford and Isleworth deserve the right to have a choice now.