LTN fine refunds on the way – but Perry doesn’t yet know how

CROYDON IN CRISIS: It has taken the borough’s £86,000 per year Mayor more than a week to make an official statement on his unlawful LTN moneyspinners. But he still doesn’t know how the cash-strapped council will refund the PCN fines. By STEVEN DOWNES

Ten days after he was ridiculed in a High Court judgement for his hypocrisy and shifting position over Low Traffic Neighbourhoods, Croydon’s failed Mayor Jason Perry has finally made a formal statement through the council press office to confirm that the Town Hall will be refunding motorists who were issued with Penalty Charge Notices for driving in the six traffic zones now ruled to be unlawful.

The refunds could amount to at least £5million, while Croydon’s cash-strapped council will incur untold costs in administering and verifying the refund payments.

No-go zones: Tory Mayor has been ordered to remove the unlawful LTNs

And Transport for London has today confirmed that it is in talks with the council over the status of grants handed to Croydon for implementing “safer neighbourhoods”, with millions of pounds more now at risk.

Some Katharine Street sources fear that the overall cost of scrapping the six LTNs and paying refunds to drivers could reach at least £10million – money that the council does not have, while it has expected income from the road fines budgeted at £2.5million for each of the next two financial years.

Croydon is having to pay the costs of Tory Mayor Perry’s big mouth, after he said publicly that he needed to keep the LTNs to generate revenue for his budgets. Continue reading

Posted in Broad Green, Croydon Council, Crystal Palace and Upper Norwood, Environment, London-wide issues, Mayor Jason Perry, Stephen Lawrence-Orumwense | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Fault with overhead cable halts New Addington tram service

By GIANELLA A BASILE

Tram replacement: there was little information available, nor any timetable for the buses at New Addington today

There’s been yet more disruption for tram passengers trying to get to or from New Addington, though today’s lack of service was unscheduled, following what Transport for London described as “an overhead line fault”.

Inside Croydon has reported recently on the withdrawal of services due to planned engineering works, and the disconnect suffered by New Addington residents when the tram service is not operating.

Today, transport officials posted a sign at the New Addington tram stop: “Due to an overhead line fault, there is no service between Sandilands and New Addington.

“Please use local buses to continue your journey.” Continue reading

Posted in Commuting, East Croydon, Gianella A Basile, New Addington, TfL, Tramlink, Transport | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Brakspear seeks tenant for Greenwich Village bar in The Cronx

Sales pitch: figures provided by the freeholders showing The Store’s trade since 2019 are not encouraging

Brakspear, the pubco based in Henley, say that they want to bring a touch of New York’s trendy Greenwich Village to a busy road in The Cronx.

Brakspear has started its recruitment process for tenants or leasees to run The Store, the pub-restaurant in South Croydon. They describe the pub, which has been closed since last August, as “a stylish space”. Continue reading

Posted in Business, Property, Pubs, Restaurants, South Croydon | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Trinity pupil wins best child actor in WhatsOnStage awards

A first-year pupil at Trinity School in Shirley has been named best child actor of the year in the WhatsOnStage Awards for his performances at the National Theatre’s Land of the Living.

Prize guy: Anton Vehring with his trophy at the Palladium on Sunday night

Anton Vehring is 11 years old. He made his West End stage debut as “Young Thomas”, sharing the role with three young actors.

The play starred Juliet Stevenson and was directed by Stephen Daldry, who famously brought outstanding performances from Jamie Bell when a child actor in Billy Elliott.

The boys’ role required the young actors to speak in Polish and sing in German.

The four boys – Vehring with Platon Filatov, Darcy Tosun and Artie Wilkinson-Hunt – were called up to the stage at the glitzy ceremony at the London Palladium, where Paddington the Musical was the night’s big winners. Continue reading

Posted in Art, Theatre, Trinity School | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

It’s ‘Car Wars’ as Mayor Khan looks to reduce impact of SUVs

London’s road hogs could soon face having to pay extra charges for driving in the capital and taking up extra space on our roads and in residential parking bays.

Road hog: having 4×4 capability is essential for driving in the suburbs

Sir Sadiq Khan, the Mayor of London, has today re-launched his Vision Zero policy, which aims to reduce serious and fatal injuries on the city’s streets to zero by 2041.

And as part of the exercise, he has asked Transport for London to investigate the risk posed to pedestrians and cyclists by larger cars and SUVs – “sports utility vehicles”.

“Chelsea Tractors” are especially popular in London, where having 4×4 capability is essential for a drive to Waitrose… SUVs account for about 60% of new car sales in Britain. Continue reading

Posted in London-wide issues, Mayor of London, Parking, Sadiq Khan | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 2 Comments

LibDem candidate Howard would axe chief exec role at council

EXCLUSIVE: In our latest Andrew Fisher Interview with candidates to become Croydon Mayor in the local elections on May 7, Richard Howard says that he would work on a cross-party basis at the Town Hall, would look at ways of ending the borough’s contract with the toxic polluters at the Beddington incinerator and he would get rid of tiers of expensive bureaucracy at the cash-strapped council

Richard Howard, the former British Army bomb disposal expert, has pulled the pin out on the 2026 Croydon mayoral election campaign by confirming that one of the first things he would do if elected as the borough’s executive Mayor is look to restructure radically the upper tiers of the cash-strapped council’s management – starting by abolishing the role of council chief executive.

Howard reveals his explosive idea in the latest Andrew Fisher Interview, as the Inside Croydon columnist delves into the policies and personalities of the leading candidates for Croydon Mayor.

Cash-strapped Croydon, which has debts of £1.4billion, currently pays its (interim) chief executive £210,000 per year, plus another 20% on top of that in pension contributions. Croydon also has an assistant chief executive, on £166,000 lus similar add-ons.

Both roles had generous salary increases voted through last month by Tory Mayor Jason Perry, who also gave himself a pay rise, to £86,000, not long after hiking Council Tax bills to more than £2,000 per year for most properties across the borough, and after having needed another £119million bail-out from government just to balance his budget.

Continue reading

Posted in 2026 council elections, 2026 Croydon Mayor election, Andrew Fisher, Croydon Council, Richard Howard, Section 114 notice | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments

Westfield consult public for 6th time and deliver more delays

Red sky in the morning, shepherd’s warning: one of the latest batch of CGIs distributed to promote a ‘weather-dependent’ Westfield consultation today, for a redevelopment scheme where since 2012 only six ‘kiosks’ have been opened. Not the scale of the tower block to the left, dwarfing the ‘iconic’ Allders building

Paris-based multi-bilion developers URW today begin another public consultation over the future of the town centre – Consultation No6 – which means that their latest planning application, already two years late, won’t see the light of day until long after May’s local elections. By STEVEN DOWNES

And here we go again, with another “public consultation” (meaning lip-service exercise) over the future of Croydon town centre.

This latest (“weather dependent”) consultation begins this afternoon on North End, as Westfield once again goes through the motions of pretending that the views of Croydon residents count for anything to them, after 14 years of multi-million-pound broken promises and the now constant development blight where there was once a thriving town centre.

By Inside Croydon’s rough reckonings, this March 2026 consultation will be the sixth public exercise staged over the future of the town centre in 14 years, after Aussie developers Westfield hijacked Hammerson’s original scheme and with landowners the Whitgift Foundation cobbled together what was initially a £1billion proposal for a shopping mall and around 600 flats. Continue reading

Posted in "Hammersfield", Allders, Business, Centrale, CPO, Croydon Council, Housing, Mayor Jason Perry, North End Quarter, Planning, Unibail-Rodamco-Westfield, Whitgift Centre | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 20 Comments

Red flags in property searches: when your conveyancer saves you from disaster

SPONSORED CONTENT

Property searches are one of the most important steps in buying a home, yet many buyers underestimate their significance. These searches uncover hidden issues that could affect your property’s value, your safety, or your legal rights. Without a thorough examination, you could inherit serious problems that’ll cost thousands to fix.

So what are the red flags you should never ignore?

Understanding property searches: Property searches are official reports that reveal information about your potential home.

They check local authority records, environmental data, water and sewerage details, and historical records that could impact your purchase. These documents provide peace of mind by uncovering potential problems before you’ve committed financially to the property.

Why they matter: Skipping or rushing through searches is a false economy. A seemingly minor issue discovered during searches could become a major headache after completion. This is where expert guidance becomes invaluable, and accessing professional conveyancing services through SAM Conveyancing ensures you’re protected by specialists who know exactly what to look for. Continue reading

Posted in Advertisement, Advertisement features, Inside Croydon | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Khan hails £130m chance to revive Crystal Palace sports centre

New sports, newish sports centre: the £130m scheme for the Crystal Palace NSC includes plans for the stadium and pools, plus relatively new sports in the area between track and sports hall, such as 3×3 basketball and padel tennis

Proposals for what London Mayor Sir Sadiq Khan has welcomed as a “once-in-a-generation” redevelopment of the sports facilities in Crystal Palace Park have been submitted in a planning application to Bromley Council.

The £130million project aims to bring the Olympic-sized swimming pool and diving pool back into use and restore the track and athletics stadium.

For half-a-century, Crystal Palace National Sports Centre was one of the world’s top sporting venues, the track and field stadium witnessing 28 world records, while the 50-metre pool clocked up 19 world bests. The centre provided training facilities for generations of Londoners and youngsters from Surrey, Kent and Sussex, as well as staging sports as varied as rugby league, basketball and cyclo-cross, while even hosting a Papal visit.

But the stadium was badly neglected – despite being supposed to provide facilities as part of London’s “Olympic legacy” – and the pools have been closed since 2020, when cracks in the concrete structure were discovered during the covid lockdown. Continue reading

Posted in Athletics, Basketball, Boxing, Bromley Council, Crystal Palace and Upper Norwood, Cycling, Football, London-wide issues, Mayor of London, Rugby League, Sadiq Khan, Sport, Swimming, Tennis | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Traffic creeps back on to Croydon’s now-banned LTN streets

Traffic in a jam: by 4.30pm yesterday, unrestricted traffic was building up along Sutherland Road, and residents who spoke to Inside Croydon were unhappy with the change

What has been the reaction of residents to the sudden removal, by order of a High Court judge, of motoring restrictions in Croydon’s former Low Traffic Neighbourhoods? We sent GABRIEL MacARTHUR along to two streets affected in Broad Green to find out

Last week, a High Court judge quashed the council orders that created six Low Traffic Neighbourhoods, ordering Croydon to shut down their penalty fine-generating cameras and to remove the signs restricting traffic.

Introduced in 2020, these schemes have been policed by Automatic Number Plate Recognition cameras – ANPRs – since 2024, and were expected to generate more than £10million over four years, according to council reports, through £160-a-time fines for offenders. Continue reading

Posted in Broad Green, Community associations, Croydon Council, Crystal Palace and Upper Norwood, Environment, Gabriel MacArthur, London-wide issues, Mayor Jason Perry, Stephen Lawrence-Orumwense | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 10 Comments

Exclusive subscriber offer: Win a family ticket to Lavenderland

Spring is on its way, and we’ve teamed up with Mayfield Lavender to give away one family ticket (for up to four people) to the brand-new Bluebell in Lavenderland experience at its Epsom site. Continue reading

Posted in Activities, Gardening, Inside Croydon, Nature Notes, Wildlife | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Jam and Jerusalem are coming to a branch in central Croydon

The country’s largest women’s organisation, famous for its jam-making and cake bakes, the singing of “Jerusalem”, but above all its general good deeds and fellowship, is coming to central Croydon.

The Women’s Institute is looking to establish a central Croydon branch, with its first meeting at the start of April.

“The WI brings women together for lifelong learning and skill sharing,” they say.

“It offers social connection, educational talks, crafting, community action and campaigning on national issues. It empowers women to learn, share and make a positive difference in their community.”

The first meeting of the central Croydon branch of the Women’s Institute will be on Wednesday, April 1, at The Salvation Army Citadel, Booth Road, CR0 1XY from 7pm to 8.30pm. It is proposed that meetings will be held on the first Wednesday of the month thereafter.

Continue reading

Posted in Activities, Community associations, Women's Institute | Tagged , , , , | 4 Comments

Campaigners accuse council of ‘misinformation’ over fly-tips

Regular eyesore: the approach road to Mayfield Road has become a frequent destination for fly-tippers, safe in the knowledge that they will evade any enforcement, while costing Stormzy’s football club thousands in clean-up bills, as van-loads of rubbish have to be taken away, as pictured above

With Croydon featuring on local television news tonight – for all the wrong reasons as usual – PAUL LUSHION, environment correspondent, reports on how more groups are beginning to doubt every word that comes out of Croydon Town Hall or Mayor Perry’s mouth

Prime-time TV: BBC London has been filming Croydon’s fly-tips. They have plenty of choice

It’s not just politicians from opposition parties who have started to call out Tory Mayor Jason Perry and Croydon Council for their lies.

Now volunteers within community groups are challenging the veracity of statements being published on social media by the cash-strapped council’s press department, as public money is being misused by Perry to pump out political propaganda in the weeks before local elections in May.

Tony Hooker, of the community group Litter Free Norbury, has taken the council to task for using its social media channels to spread misinformation. Continue reading

Posted in Community associations, Croydon Council, Fly tipping, London-wide issues, Mayor Jason Perry, Norbury, Refuse collection, Thornton Heath, Veolia | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

There’s a Spanner in the works as drag comes to Stanley Arts

Drag race: Matt Miller’s one-man show, Fixing, co-written with Peader Kirk, is on stage at the Stanley Halls this Thursday, March 12

If you want to know more about family break-ups and car breakdowns, then Fixing, performed by Matt Miller and coming to Stanley Halls this Thursday, is the show for you.

South Norwood is the latest stop on a national tour for Fixing, written by Miller and Peader Kirk, where Miller learns the essentials of classic car maintenance, and the right shade of lipstick to do it in. Continue reading

Posted in Art, South Norwood, Stanley Halls, Theatre | Tagged , , , , , | 1 Comment

Share and Sustain community gathering, Poplar Walk, Mar 14

Continue reading

Posted in Activities, Charity, Church and religions, Community associations | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Parkinson’s England team want law-makers to join a health kick

There’s a very special match being played tomorrow, between a parliamentary team made up of footballer MPs and peers, against the England Parkinson’s walking football team.

Big match: Seth Gillman, left, hopes the match against the parliamentarians will raise awareness of the benefits of taking part in sporting activity

One of the players in the England team is Croydon resident Seth Gillman, who made his international debut on the team’s trip to Spain last October.

Tomorrow’s big match is to raise awareness amongst the nation’s lawmakers of the benefits of regular exercise and activity for People with Parkinson’s, or PwP.

“This is probably the most important game I’ll ever play in,” Gillman told Inside Croydon.

“We want the MPs and peers to see what exercise has done for this team of PwP.” Continue reading

Posted in Football, Health | Tagged , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Streatham Common Kite Day is coming back on May 10

Let’s go fly a kite: Streatham Common’s festival of flying is being staged on May 10 this year

After a hiatus in 2025, the Streatham Kite Day is back in 2026, this year being staged on Sunday, May 10, from 11am to 5pm.

The event is London’s only free family-friendly kite festival, and combines world-class kite displays with the opportunity to fly your own. Continue reading

Posted in Activities, Streatham and Croydon North | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

The Sweet Science of Bruising, TW Coulsdon, from Mar 21

C O M M U N I T Y
A D V E R T I S E M E N T

Continue reading

Posted in Art, Coulsdon, Theatre, Theatre Workshop Coulsdon | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Croydon Bach Choir Magnificats, St Matthew’s, Mar 21

C O M M U N I T Y
A D V E R T I S E M E N T

Continue reading

Posted in Advertisement, Advertisement features, Art, Croydon Bach Choir, Music, South Croydon | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Perry accused of ‘shameless lying’ as he abandons LTN appeal

CROYDON IN CRISIS: After spending two years in a High Court battle to defend his decision to make six Low Traffic Neighbourhoods permanent, today Croydon’s Mayor tried to claim credit for their forced removal.
By STEVEN DOWNES

End of an error: council contractors were at work on Friday to cover over signage in Croydon’s six unlawful LTNs

Croydon Council will not be appealing against Wednesday’s High Court decision to quash six Low Traffic Neighbourhoods in the borough.

Inside Croydon has learned that legal advice received by Croydon Council on Friday night made it abundantly clear that, thanks to Mayor Jason Perry’s big mouth, they would certainly lose the case again.

It leaves another gaping hole in Perry’s latest budget, which is balanced this financial year only because of another £119million bail-out from government.

The cash-strapped council has so far refused to comment on the matter, or explain how it might fund the many thousands of claims for refunds of £160 fines from Penalty Charge Notices arising from Perry’s money-spinning LTNs that have been ruled “unlawful”.

After almost two years of legal arguments over whether the Judicial Review ought ever to have been heard, Mr Justice Pepperall handed down the decision that the council’s legal orders from 2024, which made six Croydon LTNs permanent, should be quashed. Continue reading

Posted in Broad Green, Community associations, Croydon Council, Crystal Palace and Upper Norwood, Environment, London-wide issues, Mayor Jason Perry, Stephen Lawrence-Orumwense | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 36 Comments

From a few lines in Henry V, actor stood alongside the greats

Key player: Croydon-born Harcourt Williams appeared in more than 20 films, such as Roman Holiday here with Audrey Hepburn

CROYDON CHRONICLES: An outstanding producer-director at The Old Vic who performed alongside the likes of Sir Henry Irving and Sir Laurence Olivier, and appeared in some of the most notable films of the 1940s and ’50s, Harcourt Williams’ acting talent was first spotted at Whitgift School.
DAVID MORGAN traces his career

The Croydon newspaper was full of praise for a local boy made good who was returning to perform at the Grand Theatre. February 1939 saw the return of a theatrical prodigal son to his local patch, starring in Dorothy L Sayers’ play The Zeal of Thy House. As well as directing the play, he was to take the part of William of Sens, the master mason responsible for rebuilding the choir at Canterbury Cathedral after the fire of 1174.

It was while actor and director Harcourt Williams was at Whitgift School that the possibility of a stage career first emerged. For reciting an original poem for Founder’s Day, he won a prize. In addition, the Lord Chancellor, who was the school’s guest of honour that day, was so impressed with young Williams’ performance that he went and spoke with a governor about the lad’s promise. Continue reading

Posted in Art, Cinema, David Morgan, History, Theatre, Uncategorized | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Festival of Choral Classics, St John’s, Old Coulsdon, Mar 28

C O M M U N I T Y
A D V E R T I S E M E N T

Continue reading

Posted in Advertisement, Advertisement features, Art, Church and religions, Coulsdon, Music, Old Coulsdon | Tagged , , , | Leave a comment

Magic at the Mayfield: Wayne Trice, Croydon Athletic, Mar 13

C O M M U N I T Y
A D V E R T I S E M E N T

Continue reading

Posted in Advertisement, Advertisement features, AFC Croydon Athletic, Art, Thornton Heath | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

Electricity supplies to be reconnected in Selhurst later today

UK Power Networks says that it is hopeful that electricity supplies will soon be restored fully to all those affected by the outage in Selhurst, when around 300 properties suffered a power cut yesterday morning, caused by cable theft.

Power surge: engineers worked through the night to reconnect as many homes to the electricity supply as quickly as possible

Around 70 homes are without power for a second day, as UKPN works to reconnect supply safely. Engineers need access to individual properties to conduct essential safety checks.

Food and drinks are being provided from a van on Hurlestone Road, and a customer support vehicle is parked on Prince Road, offering advice and reassurance about the disruption, as well as providing chargers for residents’ mobile phones. Continue reading

Posted in Selhurst | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment

The Wolves of Willoughby Chase, Courtyard Theatre, Apr 14-18

C O M M U N I T Y
A D V E R T I S E M E N T

Continue reading

Posted in Advertisement, Advertisement features, Art, Chipstead, Theatre | Tagged , , , , | Leave a comment