Perry’s council to face Judicial Review over Access Croydon

CROYDON IN CRISIS: Failed Mayor Jason Perry probably ought to get a season ticket for the High Court, as his council is facing yet another legal challenge over his decision to close the public access service inside Fisher’s Folly. By STEVEN DOWNES

Closed: face-to-face appointments to see officials have been made very much more difficult to arrange by Mayor Perry’s council

Councils across London may have to alter their homelessness services drastically if the High Court rules in favour of a Croydon resident.

That’s the view of PILC, the Public Interest Law Centre, after District Judge Alan Bates agreed that their case brought against Mayor Jason Perry’s Croydon Council over the closure of Access Croydon should go to Judicial Review. Continue reading

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Council sets up group to mark 10th anniversary of tram crash

Memorial: Central Parade, New Addington, has staged an annual service for the victims of the tram crash since 2017

Ahead of the 10th anniversary of the Sandilands tram disaster, Croydon Council has made an appeal to seek members of the community to join a steering group to help formulate plans for a special memorial.

The first working group meeting was due to be held this week.

Dane Chinnery, Donald Collett, Robert Huxley, Philip Logan, Dorota Rynkiewicz, Philip Seary and Mark Smith lost their lives in the derailment, in which more than 60 people were injured when their early morning tram left the tracks near Sandilands tram stop on November 9 in 2016.

The effort to mark the occasion on the 10th anniversary is being co-ordinated by Croydon’s civic Mayor, Councillor Mohammed Islam. Continue reading

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NHS London aiming to provide 1million extra GP appointments

Health trusts to get into the property business to try to provide cheaper homes for health workers closer to their places of work

Patient satisfaction with GPs in London is improving, with NHS London hopeful that the government’s 10-year capital plan, aimed at unlocking 1million extra appointments for Londoners every year, will provide further improvements.

Prompt attention: the NHS is looking to provide 1million extra GP appointments a year in London

Figures from the 2026 GP Patient Survey show more than 8-in-10 Londoners (83%) find their GP practice’s reception and administrative team helpful, while 6-in-10 (60%) say it is easy to contact their practice by phone.

The results maintain an upward trend over the past two years, with GP surgeries in Croydon and Sutton and across London to receive a share of nearly £18million to fund further upgrades, increasing capacity for all those extra appointments. Continue reading

Posted in Croydon NHS Trust, Health, Housing, London-wide issues, Mayday Hospital, New Addington Community Diagnostics Centre, Planning, Purley Hospital, St Helier Hospital | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

South Croydon cheerleaders celebrate reaching the Summit

A group of cheerleaders who train in South Croydon has secured the chance to compete at the Summit Championship in Florida, one of the world’s most prestigious cheerleading competitions.

Orlando-bound: members of Crystals Elite under-16s celebrate their success in being picked to perform at the Summit next year

Crystals Elite is the longest-running allstar cheerleading programme in the country, having been formed in 1993.

For more than 30 years, the club has supported young athletes, helping them develop not only within the sport of cheerleading, but also building confidence, resilience, teamwork and life skills that stay with them far beyond the gym.

Crystals Elite’s under-16s team, Dynasty, will have the opportunity to compete on an international stage at the ESPN Wide World of Sports Complex at Walt Disney World in Florida. Continue reading

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How modern car technology makes minor crashes expensive

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A low-speed bump in a car park used to mean a scuffed bumper and a bill you could cover without blinking. Not any more.

Today’s cars are packed with sensors, cameras and radar units, and even a minor knock can trigger a repair bill that runs into thousands. Continue reading

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‘We need to pull every lever available to end the housing crisis’

This month, Inside Croydon columnist Andrew Fisher interviews Fiona Fletcher-Smith, the chief executive of one of the country’s largest housing associations, L&Q, and hears what policy changes she believes new Prime Minister Andy Burnham needs to implement if the government is to end the housing crisis.

Fletcher-Smith has nearly 30 years of experience in the housing sector, including senior roles at the Greater London Authority working with the then Mayor, Boris Johnson.

Fletcher-Smith lives in Croydon, and is also the chair of the Court of Governors at the Whitgift Foundation.

Last month, under her leadership, L&Q undertook a £1billion sale of its private housing business – more than 3,000 rental homes – to better focus and fund its core purpose as a social housing provider in Greater London and Greater Manchester.

And Fletcher-Smith has a message for Burnham and whoever might be the housing secretary in the new cabinet: they need to go further, and faster, at delivering more homes for social rent. Continue reading

Posted in Andrew Fisher, Fiona Fletcher Smith, Housing, Inside Croydon, London-wide issues, Property, Sadiq Khan, The Andrew Fisher Interview, Under The Flyover | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Crystal Palace’s dinosaurs are no longer at risk of extinction

Fully restored: the Grade I-listed Victorian-made dinosaurs in Crystal Palace Park are no longer on the ‘at risk’ register

Crystal Palace Park’s Grade I-listed dinosaurs have been removed from Historic England’s Heritage at Risk Register, after years of painstaking work by expert restorers and local volunteers.

The move comes as the multi-million-pound restoration project across the whole park has come to a conclusion, the occasion to be celebrated with free activities for the public to enjoy this weekend. Continue reading

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Trams’ town centre loop to close for three weeks in August

Disruption down the line: track replacement works on the central Croydon tram loop, including a half-mile stretch along Wellesley Road, begins on Aug 6

Transport for London has issued further details around the tram track works planned for central Croydon next month,  which are expected to last more than three weeks.

Five tram stops – Centrale, Church Street, George Street, Wellesley Road and West Croydon – will be closed during the works, and there will be no services to or from Elmers End.

Inside Croydon revealed this summer’s major tram engineering works in our Under The Flyover podcast with TfL’s trams manager, Mark Davis, earlier this week. Continue reading

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Join the Wildlife Trust’s butterfly walk at Hutchinson’s Bank

The London Wildlife Trust is staging a butterfly walk this Sunday, July 19, from 11am, at Hutchinson’s Bank, near New Addington.

Hutchinson’s Bank: a haven for all kinds of wildlife

Hutchinson’s Bank is one of several nature reserves in the London Wildlife Trust’s care in and around Croydon.

“Join us to explore this unique reserve and learn about its hugely diverse range of butterflies and other insects,” they say. Continue reading

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Boy, 14, charged with terrorism after Sutton mosques targeted

Court hears how teen’s ‘manifesto’ for ‘Operation Terrorise Sutton’ was inspired by Adolf Hitler and Norwegian mass-murderer Anders Breivik

A 14-year-old boy from south London appeared in court today charged with terrorism offences, after evidence was found at his home linked to the extreme far-right that led police to believe he was preparing to target two mosques in Sutton.

The boy, who is too young to be named, appeared at Westminster Magistrates’ Court today where he pleaded not guilty to all charges. He was remanded in youth custody until a further court appearance at the Old Bailey on August 21.

The boy was arrested last Thursday on suspicion of criminal damage to a vehicle, which occurred in the Sutton area on June 20.

Officers carried out a search of the boy’s address, where they found “a number of documents of concern”.

In court today, Crown prosecutor Adam Harbinson alleged that the teen had put together a “manifesto” inspired by Adolf Hitler, Norwegian mass-murderer Anders Breivik and the Christchurch mosques killer Brenton Tarrant.

The prosecution alleges the mosque attacks were to take place on August 28, amid plans to cause criminal damage including “bricking” and slashing tyres, which was named Operation Terrorise Sutton.

The prosecution alleged the boy was arrested after a trial run of the mosque attack, during which it said he smashed the window of a car belonging to a black woman. Continue reading

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Clean streets will only happen where communities really care

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Croydon has spent years trying to improve its image.

Regeneration projects, new homes and investment are all important, but the appearance of our streets still shapes the first impression that residents and visitors take away.

Something as simple as reliable London rubbish collection services and responsible waste disposal can have a bigger impact on neighbourhood pride than many people realise.

Walk through any part of the borough and you’ll notice the difference immediately. Streets where bins are managed properly, litter is kept under control and bulky items are disposed of responsibly feel safer, more welcoming and better cared for. It sends a message that the people who live there value their community. Continue reading

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Primary schools are hit by strikes over ‘toxic bullying culture’

Strike shutdown: members of two trades unions, the GMB and NEU, have had enough of the toxic management culture at the Federation of St Joseph’s in Upper Norwood

There were lively lines of GMB and NEU pickets outside both entrances to St Joseph’s Nursery, Infant and Junior schools off Crown Dale in Upper Norwood this morning.

Teachers and school support staff had taken strike action over long-running and multiple complaints of bullying, amid accusations of racism and threats of legal action.

The unions fear that a report by an independent investigator into their complaints has been suppressed or covered up. Continue reading

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‘The saddest news about Croydon town centre since the riots’

CROYDON IN CRISIS: Local MP and Fairfield ward councillors urge developers to make good on their long-standing promises to regenerate the town centre.
EXCLUSIVE by STEVEN DOWNES

Hard hat: MP Sarah Jones says the people of Croydon have been waiting long enough for Westfield’s redevelopment

MP Sarah Jones today called on Westfield “to work at pace to deliver for Croydon”, following the property developers’ £31.5million purchase of the freehold of the Whitgift Centre.

Jones, a junior minister in the Labour government of Keir Starmer, won what was then the Croydon Central seat from Conservative Gavin Barwell in 2017. It had been Barwell, when a governor of the Whitgift Foundation and MP, who had introduced Westfield to Croydon in 2011, at the beginning of what has become a 15-year takeover of the town centre by the property firm, known now as URW.

And while Barwell attended Trinity School, Jones went to Old Palace, an independent schools run by the Whitgift Foundation, the erstwhile owners of the Whitgift Centre, who used its commercial rents to help fund bursaries for academically gifted local pupils. Jones’s mother had been Old Palace’s headteacher.

It was the 2023 decision of the Whitgift Foundation to close Old Palace, due to falling rolls but also declining income from commercial properties, which prompted the ultimate sale of the Whitgift Centre. Continue reading

Posted in "Hammersfield", Adam Smith, Allders, Business, Centrale, CPO, Croydon Council, Croydon West, Fairfield, Fiona Fletcher Smith, Growth Zone, Mayor Jason Perry, Paul Ainscough, Planning, Roisha Hughes, Sarah Jones MP, Unibail-Rodamco-Westfield, Whitgift Centre, Whitgift Foundation | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

The 15-year takeover of Croydon town centre by Westfield

Open door policy: the Whitgift Foundation invited Westfield into Croydon in 2011. By 2026, URW had taken over most of the town centre

The £1billion regeneration of Croydon town centre has been plagued by a decade and a half of developer delays, economic turmoil, a global pandemic and a complete reshaping of the original retail-led proposal into what, in its latest iteration of proposals amounts to a vast new dormitory town of 3,000 homes in sky-rise tower blocks.

Following today’s announcement that URW has bought the freehold of the Whitgift Centre for £31.5million, here’s the Inside Croydon timeline of how we got to where we are today – which is much as we were in 2011, just with more shops closed…

August 2011: Following the London riots, which badly affected Croydon, Mayor of London Boris Johnson committed £23million from the London Regeneration Fund to revitalise the high street. “Let’s make Croydon great again,” Johnson said at the time. Continue reading

Posted in "Hammersfield", Adam Smith, Allders, Business, Centrale, CPO, Croydon Council, Fairfield, Fiona Fletcher Smith, Growth Zone, Planning, Roisha Hughes, Unibail-Rodamco-Westfield, Whitgift Centre, Whitgift Foundation | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 7 Comments

SOLD! Westfield in £31.5m deal to buy Whitgift Centre freehold

After 15 years, two large-scale planning applications, a planning inquiry and a CPO,  Croydon’s biggest landowners have today announced that they have sold off a large chunk of their property in the benighted town centre in the hope that it might accelerate the promised £1billion regeneration.
By STEVEN DOWNES

Changing hands: Westfield – now Paris-based URW – is buying the Whitgift Centre for £31.5m

Shopping mall developers Westfield – now trading as Unibail-Rodamco-Westfield, and based in Paris – have bought the Whitgift Centre, those parts of the Allders site that they don’t already own, plus other property near West Croydon Station from Croydon’s biggest landowners, the Whitgift Foundation, in a deal valued at £31.5million.

Sources within the Foundation deny that the sale comes after they, as landlords, have been squeezed by their development “partners” over many years, watching their income from their properties gradually decline. Continue reading

Posted in "Hammersfield", Adam Smith, Allders, Business, Centrale, CPO, Croydon Council, Fairfield, Fiona Fletcher Smith, Growth Zone, Planning, Roisha Hughes, Unibail-Rodamco-Westfield, Whitgift Centre, Whitgift Foundation | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 13 Comments

Badenoch’s Tories remove whip from Croydon peer Barwell

Having dodged any sanctions for his failure to declare business interests (sound familiar?), Gavin Barwell has returned to the House of Lords to be told he’s not welcome – by his own party.
WALTER CRONXITE, Political Editor, on how the Curse of Croydon Central has struck again 

‘Wet as a flannel’: Gavin Barwell’s been cold-shouldered by the Tories

Gavin Barwell, the former MP for Croydon Central and sometime Chief of Staff to Prime Minister Theresa May, has had the Conservative party whip removed from him in the House of Lords.

Barwell, who was made a peer in May’s resignation honours in 2019, said today that he had not been informed that he was to be subjected to the ultimate indignity that a parliamentarian can suffer: being sacked by his own side. Continue reading

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Separated by an ocean, artists come together for Isolation

Atlantic crossing: New York artist Karen Gormandy’s ‘The Garden of Shame’, among the works in the Bethlem-Fountain House exhibition

The Bethlem Gallery, the visual arts organisation based on the grounds of the Bethlem Royal Hospital in Beckenham, has a new exhibition, free to the public, which opens next week and marks the completion of a year-long project with Fountain House Gallery – the premier venue in New York City representing artists living with mental illness.

Over the course of a year, more than 20 artists from New York and London met online once a week to collaborate and work through what the gallery calls “a series of artistic provocations”. Continue reading

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The Great British Bake Off Musical, Mitre Theatre, July 21-25

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Fast. Professional. Reliable: Drainage and Plumbing Ltd

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Coroner rules bookmakers contributed to Croydon man’s death

The Coroner’s Court inquest into the death of 40-year-old Croydon man Gareth Evans has found that a gambling disorder contributed to his death by suicide.

Coroner’s verdict: Gareth Evans was 40 when he died in 2021

Gareth Evans was found dead in his flat in Addiscombe on November 3, 2021. He had left a note to his family reflecting that he had taken his own life due to gambling.

In the six months leading up to his death, Evans’s bank statements show cash withdrawals of more than £35,000, many of which were made from a cash machine at a fried chicken shop next door to William Hill’s Cherry Orchard Road betting shop, a short walk from his home on Morland Road.

Concluding the inquest at Croydon Coroner’s Court, HM Assistant Coroner Adela Williams found that gambling disorder was part of the medical cause of Evans’s death and that a lack of intervention in Evans’s gambling by the bookmakers and betting shop operators William Hill contributed to his death.

The inquest heard that Evans had longstanding problems with gambling, and that he joined Gamblers Anonymous and referred himself to the National Problem Gambling Clinic to seek help. Continue reading

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Croydon drops into London’s Healthy Streets ‘relegation zone’

CROYDON COMMENTARY: Since Jason Perry became Mayor of Croydon, the borough’s streets have become more polluted, dirtier and more dangerous places. PETER UNDERWOOD takes a look at the figures

This year’s healthy streets scorecard has just been published – here https://www.healthystreetsscorecard.london/ – and Croydon is going in the wrong direction.

Motor mania: while other boroughs seek to improve, Croydon is stuck in reverse

While most London boroughs showed some improvement, Croydon fell from 24th to 26th place this year, out of 33, with its final Healthy Streets scorecard rating dropping from 2.92 to 2.50 out of 10. This was one of the largest falls recorded. If there was a “relegation zone”, Croydon would be heading for it. These results continue a declining trend since 2022, when Croydon’s score was a still-modest 3.21.

The Healthy Streets Coalition is a group of transport, road safety, environment and health campaigners who are working together because the same interventions are needed to achieve all their various goals. They publish the scorecard every year to allow boroughs to track progress and see how they are doing compared to others. Continue reading

Posted in Bexley, Croydon Council, Croydon Greens, Cycling, Environment, Health, London-wide issues, Mayor Jason Perry, Parking, Peter Underwood, Transport | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , | 16 Comments

Responsible waste disposal matters more than ever in Croydon

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As Croydon continues to grow and evolve, keeping the borough clean has become a shared responsibility between local authorities, businesses and residents.

Whether people are renovating their homes, moving house or simply clearing out unwanted belongings, planning for waste removal is an important part of the process.

Disposing of bulky items responsibly helps prevent fly-tipping, supports recycling efforts and keeps neighbourhoods looking their best. While everyday household rubbish is collected regularly, larger items often require extra planning to ensure they are removed legally and with minimal environmental impact. Continue reading

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Pioneer of sociology whose book called for an evolution

CROYDON CHRONICLES: A quiet residential street in South Croydon was where one of the leading works of 19th-Century philosophy was drafted and written. DAVID MORGAN looks at the life and works of Benjamin Kidd

After Benjamin Kidd died of heart failure at his home at 39 Blenheim Park Road in South Croydon on Monday October 2, 1916, obituaries were published nationally as well as locally. The news even reached Australia, with a paragraph in the Adelaide Advertiser later that week.

Kidd had been catapulted into worldwide status in 1894 with the publication of his book, Social Evolution.

Social pioneer: Benjamin Kidd was published around the world in the 1890s

Born in Ireland, Kidd was a career civil servant. But he spent much of his spare time with his nose deep in books, and had been writing essays, pamphlets and articles for several years. But Social Evolution was his first venture into writing at length about a subject which fascinated him.

It took him two years to draft, write and edit the book, after collecting evidence and developing his thoughts about life. Not for Kidd the academic view of the world from a university chair, but from a working man’s perspective.

As with all authors, stories of angst emerged about the writing process.

On one sunny day Kidd was writing outdoors when a breeze carried away a few pages of foolscap. Kidd was not amused. “Those pages carried sentences which, one day, would have been read by the whole civilised world,” he said. Continue reading

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Eco Living Fest, Holy Innocents South Norwood, Sat July 18

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Gardening bargains, MHA The Wilderness, Shirley, Mon-Fri

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