Cinema campaigners’ inspired guide for lockdown viewing

NTLive offers a chance to see James Corden ‘on stage’ from the comfort of your own lockdown home this Thursday

Two weeks after cancelling their programme of films for the duration of the coronavirus lockdown, the good people at the Save the David Lean Cinema Campaign have come up with an ingenious way to help their movie-watching friends get a daily dose of the best of the big screen, plus some top-class theatre and ballet, too.

Self-isolating, the campaigners say, “will very likely be inducing a feeling of cabin fever”.

And they add, “For those who wish to keep their film-viewing habit going, we have provided some ‘alternative viewing’ on the home page of our website which we hope will be of help. This is a collection of classic films, and theatre and opera screenings available over the next five weeks.” Continue reading

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Corbyn leads tributes to Ted Knight, a champion for the people

Ted Knight in his element – addressing a political meeting at Croydon’s Ruskin House

Tributes have poured in for ‘Red’ Ted Knight, the south London council leader who defied Thatcher and was the scourge of the tabloids but a tireless campaigner for the downtrodden and under-represented

Following the news yesterday that Ted Knight had died, John McDonnell, the Shadow Chancellor, described his old friend as “one of the finest and most courageous socialists I have known”. Knight was 86.

Knight was the former leader of Lambeth Council who was surcharged and removed from office for defying the Thatcher government’s spending cuts.

Norwood resident Knight had been politically active from his childhood through to the end – having been the co-founder and chair of the Croydon Assembly organisation, which staged regular meetings and rallies at Ruskin House over the past decade. Continue reading

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Croydon in area with country’s highest coronavirus death rate

The vital need for Croydon residents to follow government advice to stay at home except for essential travel in order to save lives – including their own – has been underlined by data published by the Health Service Journal.

The HSJ says that the South West London Health and Care Partnership, the NHS area which includes Croydon, has the highest number of reported deaths in the country from covid-19 per 100,000 of population.

As of Saturday, there were nearly six deaths per 100,000 population in the region.

The death rate is up to 12 times higher than the great majority of other NHS sustainability and transformation partnership areas across England. Continue reading

Posted in Croydon Council, Croydon NHS Trust, CVA, Health, Mayday Hospital, St Helier Hospital | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Croydon slips out news that parking charges are suspended

Motorists can park their vehicles on the street free of charge – not that they are supposed to be using them

Our motoring correspondent, JEREMY CLACKSON, on another unheralded move by the council for the covid-19 emergency period

The council, lagging some days behind neighbouring local authorities, has decided to make all on-street parking free of charge for the duration of the coronavirus emergency.

Not that the council’s propaganda department has made a big deal of this important development: the decision has been barely publicised and is only included as a note posted among other matters on the council’s coronavirus page. The decision was made on Friday; by lunchtime on Monday, the council had issued no press release on this latest emergency measure. Continue reading

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Alderman Adrian Dennis, who scolded ‘Lord Tea Bag’, has died

Adrian Dennis, the former Labour councillor, a Freeman of the Borough and Honorary Alderman, has died. He was 67.

Adrian Dennis

Dennis was one of three councillors to take the Thornton Heath ward in 1986 from the Ratepayers’ Alliance, a grouping with barely disguised links to the Conservatives, as he helped his party recover from the low of just five council seats in Croydon in 1982.

Dennis continued to serve the ward as its councillor until 2006, when he was de-selected by Labour in controversial circumstances.

But he maintained a close interest in the borough’s and his party’s affairs and continued to give of his time tirelessly, being a high-profile advocate for disability issues through the Disability Forum. He also played a significant role in CACFO, the Croydon African Caribbean Family Organisation in Thornton Heath.

He also had a talent for devising acerbic monikers for the rich and powerful, such as when he got into hot water for calling Sir Stuart Lipton “Lord Tea Bag” in internal Labour briefings which were leaked to the press, something which was not appreciated by his party colleagues. It may go some way to explain his on-going support for the reporting by Inside Croydon, for whom  he was a regular commenter and occasional contributor.

Continue reading

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Residents on high alert to keep check on planning applications

BARRATT HOLMES, our overdevelopment correspondent, on the 9-9-9 emergency for some roads in the south of the borough

The five-storey block of flats proposed for Hyde Road

Last week’s decision to delegate all planning decisions to council officials, removing even a vestige of cover offered by the planning committee of elected councillors, has seen residents’ associations across the borough place their own experts on high alert to see what hideous schemes from profit-hungry private developers might get pushed through during the coronavirus emergency with little public scrutiny.

A planning application has been submitted to build nine flats at 89 Hyde Road, Sanderstead. This is opposite 98 Hyde Road, which was one of the first houses to go, back in 2017, at the start of what one councillor on the planning committee has described as our “9-9-9 emergency”.

Developers know only too well that if they propose to develop a site with 10 or more homes, then they will be expected to include some less-profitable affordable housing within their development. A block of nine flats? No such requirements. Continue reading

Posted in Community associations, Croydon Council, Housing, Planning, Property, Purley, Purley Oaks and Riddlesdown, Sanderstead | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Town Hall’s empty promises to business misses out vital grants

Not much fun: it’s nearly two weeks since pubs, clubs, bars and restaurants were ordered to close – with the shutters coming down on many town centre businesses, such as the Funhouse

There’s a lot more help available out there for businesses hit by the pandemic emergency than the council is letting on, reports KEN LEE

Businesses seeking support from Croydon Council during the covid-19 pandemic will find the Town Hall shelves as bare as many supermarket shelves.

The council’s response to the crisis for the small and medium-sized businesses in the borough was laid out in a press release on Friday from the Fisher’s Folly propaganda department.

Even by Croydon standards, this was a high water-mark for platitudinous piffle. Continue reading

Posted in Business, Croydon BID, Croydon Chamber of Commerce and Industry, Croydon Council, Croydon FSB, Manju Shahul Hameed, Purley BID | Tagged , , , , , | Leave a comment

Residents’ association issues apology for ‘Chinese virus’ tweet

Our south of the borough correspondent, PEARL LEE, reports on how a Tory-backed group in Coulsdon has cause to regret handing its social media account over to a far-right agitator

Peter Morgan: thought to have written racist tweet on behalf of his RA

The Coulsdon West Residents’ Association, only reformed recently with the help of their local Conservative councillors, was forced into issuing a hurried apology yesterday after tweets issued on their account used the Trumpian – and racist – phrase “the Chinese flu virus”.

According to the CWRA’s chair, the person responsible has been issued with a reprimand.

It is understood that CWRA had handed the passwords and some responsibility for handling their Twitter account to Peter Morgan, who is notorious as a far-right campaigner and sometime member of UKIP. Morgan’s views were so abhorrent, the Croydon branch of UKIP was forced to expel him. Morgan has now been embraced by the Conservative Party in Croydon. Continue reading

Posted in Community associations, Coulsdon, Coulsdon Town, Coulsdon West Residents' Association, Ian Parker, Luke Clancy, Mario Creatura | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

Ten top tips to help do your bit during the covid-19 emergency

After more than a week of the coronavirus lockdown, we’ve probably all got more time on our (very well-washed) hands than we know what to do with. Here, Croydon teacher and volunteer ROWENNA DAVIS (pictured left) offers some suggestions about how to cope in the crisis

Many of you will already be helping deal with the coronavirus emergency in some way, whether it’s caring for an elderly relative, occupying your children with activities that stop them trashing the house, or by waving to your neighbours.

But, if you’re lucky enough to have a little more space, here are 10 ways you can help your community:

Our NHS is under massive strain at this time. Don’t add to it

1, Follow. The. Guidance. There’s no point playing the hero if you’re simultaneously infecting people and so overloading the NHS. The reason we’ve pressed pause on our entire economy is because isolation saves lives. So before you do anything beyond washing your hands at home alone, read about how to help safely at Mutual Aid UK, or Queer by clicking here.

2, Check on neighbours and old friends. You’re not being patronising. This crisis is unprecedented. So, go through your address book, your old Facebook contacts – is there anyone worth checking on? Someone isolated or disabled or cut off? Starting with people you know is the safest way to help because there’s a relationship of trust already there. Continue reading

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Council mobilises volunteers to deliver support to the needy

Our Town Hall reporter, KEN LEE, on the latest special measures being taken by Mint Walk to deal with the covid-19 emergency

The Town Hall is taking on emergency responsibilities

Croydon Council took on a key emergency responsibility yesterday as the coronavirus emergency lockdown entered its second week.

After being ordered by the government to get all the homeless off the streets this weekend, the council has also opened local hubs in conjunction with public sector partners, Croydon Voluntary Action and the battalion of new volunteers to help to deliver food and medical supplies to older and vulnerable residents.

Those due to receive the support should have received a letter from the NHS in the last week. The local hubs, whose locations have not yet been publicised, will also give advice about where to tap in to covid-19 related medical services. Continue reading

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Council ordered to use public buildings as emergency shelters

Parts of the Fairfield Halls, the borough’s leisure centres and even Fisher’s Folly could be transformed over the weekend into emergency shelters for rough sleepers, under the latest government edict in an effort to limit the spread of the deadly covid-19 virus.

Could the council turn the Fairfield Halls into an emergency shelter this weekend?

The news came on the day that Gatwick Airport announced it is to close its North Terminal from next week, and followed the worst day yet for deaths of patients with coronavirus at Croydon’s Mayday Hospital.

Councils across England and Wales, including Croydon, have received a notification telling them “communal night shelters and any street encampments” must be “closed down for the time being” as they are “high-risk” for spreading covid-19.

Dame Louise Casey, an adviser on homelessness to Prime Minister Boris Johnson, said the aim is that “everybody can have an offer of accommodation by this weekend”. Continue reading

Posted in Bernard Weatherill House, Croydon Council, Croydon NHS Trust, Fairfield Halls, Health, Mayday Hospital | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Brick by Brick CEO says company has sold 6 houses. Or is it 5?

Our overdevelopment correspondent, BARRATT HOLMES, reports on the latest admission of incompetence from Croydon Council’s loss-making house-builders

Brick by Brick CEO Colm Lacey: not on top of his numbers

Five.

Or it might be six.

Colm Lacey, the former council employee who has been promoted way beyond his skills and abilities to be chief executive of a multi-million-pound development company, said he didn’t know how many houses his business had sold.

“I don’t know,” Lacey said.

“You’d be surprised how quickly this changes,” he said, almost as an excuse. Continue reading

Posted in Alison Butler, Andrew Pelling, Brick by Brick, Business, Colm Lacey, Croydon Council, Housing, Jo Negrini, Leila Ben-Hassel, Vidhi Mohan | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , | 8 Comments

Season’s abrupt end leaves clubs uncertain over promotion

NON-LEAGUE NEWS: It was inevitable, but when the end of the season was announced, abruptly, on Tuesday, there was dismay and some shock among our local clubs, as ANDREW SINCLAIR, right, reports

The decision was announced on Tuesday, with all leagues below England’s “fifth division”, the National League, are ending their seasons with immediate effect amid the continuing suspension of domestic football because of the coronavirus.

The final games for most sides were played on March 7, with the National League divisions also running on March 14. With most leagues’ fixtures not completed, the FA Leagues Committee has to make a tough decision. They appear to have two options. The first is to render the 2019-2020 campaign “null and void”, with all divisions remaining the same as back in August 2019 when the next season starts – whenever that might be. Or they could determine final standings for 2019-2020, and all promotion and relegation issues, using what’s called “points per game”. Continue reading

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At 8pm show NHS your support with minute’s warm applause

JANE NICHOLL reports from South Norwood where covid-19 mutual aid groups have found a way for a daily break from the isolation, and to helpfully check on the neighbours

Joe, at the window, Lil, baby Vinny, and Ted the cat in yesterday’s noon Wave To The Neighbours

It’s a little bit like Network, the 1976 Peter Finch dystopian movie, but seems to have nothing but the best of intentions.

There’s a national call for us all, in the middle of the coronavirus lockdown, to go to our windows at 8pm tonight, open them up and for a minute or so give some warm applause to show our support for the NHS and other emergency services staff. In the weeks, or months, to come, it could become a “thing”.

In one corner of South Norwood, the community has already been finding ways of coming together, though without, of course, breaking the two-metre exclusion zone rules.

As we are now needing to find ways to alleviate our feelings of isolation during self-isolation, communities are becoming imaginative in their ways of dealing with this global crisis. Continue reading

Posted in Health, South Norwood | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

Pay Your Staff: Disgusted locals send Spoons a message

Pay Your Staff: The Postal Order pub underwent some dramatic redecorating on Tuesday night

No one would be foolish enough to suggest that Wetherspoons’ climbdown yesterday over paying their workers was prompted by it, but some people in Crystal Palace made what they think of the odious Tim Martin plain on Tuesday night as they daubed his pub on the Triangle with a couple of direct messages.

Martin’s influence on this nation’s life over the past four years has been disproportionate to his place in society, and the public outcry this week was massive when the multi-millionaire pub chain owner declared that he would not be paying his staff for the duration of the coronavirus lockdown. Instead, he suggested helpfully, they should seek work as shelf-stackers with local supermarkets. Such a nice chap. Continue reading

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Powers to be delegated as council cancels planning meetings

Croydon Council has finally caught up with the advice from the government and public health organisations over the coronavirus pandemic and cancelled all Town Hall public meetings “until further notice”.

The council has belatedly decided to cancel all public meetings at the Town Hall

Even at the start of this week, Jo “We’re Not Stupid” Negrini, the council’s £220,000 per year chief executive, still had a planning committee and sub-committee meeting listed on the council website as going ahead tomorrow evening.

Not now.

But it means that Croydon residents may soon discover that there is one thing worse than the council’s planning committee, and that’s no planning committee. Continue reading

Posted in Croydon Council, Jo Negrini, Planning | Tagged , , , | 5 Comments

The latest Croydon carbuncle: Riddlesdown’s own glasshouse

The latest Croydon carbuncle: this one is an architect’s take on a block of 18 flats proposed for Mitchley Avenue

Another day, another Croydon carbuncle.

This time it is a block of 18 flats in a gargantuan five-storey block plonked between the suburban detached houses of Mitchley Avenue, Riddlesdown, as proposed by Vita Homes. Continue reading

Posted in Housing, Planning, Sanderstead | Tagged , , , , , | 2 Comments

Culture deals with covid-19 without making a song and dance

The sense of doom and gloom caused by the covid-19 pandemic had well and truly taken hold of London by the middle of last week. There was a dark humour about the place reflected by the public address system at Victoria Tube station playing “Ghost Town” by The Specials to the significantly reduced number of commuters who were scuttling away to catch the next train home.

The Fairfield Halls: closed again, and like last time, no one knows for how long

Throughout Tuesday and Wednesday last week, there had been a steady cascade of announcements from community arts groups, orchestras, choirs and sports clubs about the postponement or cancellation of long-planned events.

It seemed that community groups had taken on board the necessity for avoiding having people gathered together to prevent the spread of coronavirus better than Croydon Council, or the management of the Fairfield Halls.

For while much of the West End was turning out the lights and cancelling productions for the foreseeable, south London’s second-biggest arts centre dithered and delayed, and was still taking bookings for some of its shows as late as last Wednesday night, a day after the Prime Minister, Boris Johnson, had called on theatres and concert venues to close. Continue reading

Posted in Art, Ashcroft Theatre, BH Live, Cinema, Croydon Bach Choir, Croydon Male Voice Choir, Croydon Philharmonic Choir, David Lean Cinema Campaign, Fairfield Halls, Music, Talawa Theatre Company, Theatre, Theatre Workshop Coulsdon | Tagged , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Delays, postponements and cancellations become a new art

Croydon’s turn to be London’s Borough of Culture in 2023 remains unchanged. For now.

Justine Simons at the launch event for Brent’s Borough of Culture – now put back a year

But if they can postpone the Olympic Games, as the Prime Minister of Japan requested today, then anything can fall victim to the effects of the coronavirus pandemic.

The Mayor of London announced today that Brent, the nominated Borough of Culture for 2020, is to “delay” its festivities until later in 2020, with the Kilburn High Street Party and Liberty Festival now to go ahead in the summer of 2021.

Much of Brent’s plans revolved around football’s European Championships, with key matches to be played at Wembley. UEFA, the European football body, took the decision earlier this month to postpone those fixtures until 2021.

Continue reading

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Council finally decides to cancel cabinet and Town Hall meeting

Croydon Council has cancelled tonight’s planned cabinet meeting at the Town Hall and has scrapped the full meeting of the borough’s 70 councillors that was due to be held in the chamber next Monday, as council execs slowly get round to recognising the seriousness of the coronavirus pandemic.

The decision to abandon these “public meetings” – to which the public would not be allowed entry – came belatedly, with the decision not to go ahead with tonight’s cabinet only circulated to councillors this morning.

In a curt email from chief executive Jo Negrini’s democratic services department, they told the borough’s elected representatives, “In light of the current situation the meeting of Cabinet scheduled for Monday, 23rd March, 2020, 6.30pm has been cancelled.”

Of course, anyone with access to the internet, television, radio or newspapers will have known that “the current situation” has been “current” for more than two weeks. Except in Croydon, it would seem.

The decision not to go ahead with next Monday’s full council meeting was noted as being a “cross-party decision”. Continue reading

Posted in Bernard Weatherill House, Croydon Council, Cycling, Jo Negrini, Planning, Transport | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment

Justice junior minister tests data law in call for volunteers

Chris Philp, the Tory MP for Croydon South, sent out a pandemic emergency email to his constituents last week which provided contradictory advice and bends data protection laws to breaking point, as PEARL LEE reports

MP Chris Philp: mixed message and some dodgy data practices

Chris Philp, the MP for Croydon South, on Friday evening became the latest of the borough’s three MPs to issue constituency-wide advice and attempt to help coordinate efforts during the covid-19 emergency.

But the email from Philp – a junior minister at the Ministry of Justice in the Conservative Government – includes links to a data-scraping form which may even be breaking the law.

Despite reminding residents that “we need to work together”, unlike Labour MPs Steve Reed and Sarah Jones, Philp’s public plea for volunteers appears to ignore Croydon Voluntary Action, the council-backed charities group which is trying to put together a borough-wide response.

Continue reading

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Community housing trust awards pupils prizes for new logo

Back in the good old days – you may remember them when kids went to school, adults went down the pub, and you could buy an almost inexhaustible supply of bog roll in the shops – some people were making plans for their futures.

Competition entrants from All Saints School

So it was for the Crystal Palace Community Land Trust, the organisation which in 2019 won a competition run by the council for a 100 per cent affordable self-build housing project on a site on The Lawns. The scheme is to be project-managed by Brick by Brick… well, you can’t have everything.

As part of CPCLT’s outreach with the community, they staged a competition of their own, with the Year 6 pupils at All Saints Primary School to design a logo for its scheme. Continue reading

Posted in Brick by Brick, Community associations, Crystal Palace and Upper Norwood, Environment, Housing, Schools, Stephen Mann | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

‘Business as usual’ at Town Hall as four councillors self-isolate

KEN LEE reports – from a safe distance – on the mixed messages put out by Newman and Negrini over the covid-19 pandemic

At least four of Croydon’s elected councillors have quarantined themselves after displaying symptoms or being in contact with someone else suspected of having the coronavirus.

Inside Croydon understands that one of the councillors who has been in self-isolation for the past fortnight or so after showing some symptoms of the illness is Paul Scott, the cabinet member for planning and the controversial de facto chair of the planning committee.

And yet Croydon Council appears determined to continue with staging public meetings at the Town Hall, with a cabinet meeting (oh the irony) to discuss measures being taken to contain and treat the coronavirus still due to go ahead tomorrow night. Continue reading

Posted in Croydon Council, Health, Jo Negrini, Paul Scott, Planning, Toni Letts, Tony Newman | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Institute member Townsend promoted as new chief planner

Nicola Townsend is the council’s new chief planner.

Nicola Townsend: new job, juicy new salary

Except she’s not.

She’s been appointed as something which is described in council papers as Croydon’s “director of homes and social investment”.

The council opted for an internal promotion to replace the retiring, and not entirely lamented, Pete Smith.

Townsend has worked at Croydon Council since the last century (she did some planning for Tramlink), and has held a senior position in the North planning team – which means she will have had a major hand in discussions and negotiations over the now-aborted £1.4billion Westfield supermall scheme.

As a result of her promotion, Townsend will get a near-£30,000 pay hike, as she goes from being one of the borough’s two “planning team leaders”, to her new director role on £109,140 per year. Continue reading

Posted in Alison Butler, Croydon Council, Jo Negrini, Nicola Townsend, Pete Smith, Planning, Tony Newman | Tagged , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Council goes into covid-19 lockdown as it closes its offices

Council buildings across the borough were shut at close to no-notice yesterday, as Croydon went on a coronavirus lockdown.

All council buildings closed their doors yesterday – before the council announced it

The council propaganda department made the announcement hours after Inside Croydon had revealed plans to close the borough’s 12 public libraries.

The council decision came on the same day that the government ordered the closure of pubs, bars, restaurants and cafés, after its previous appeals for the public to practice social distancing to reduce the spread of the virus had not been entirely successful.

Now, the Museum of Croydon and the buildings that house the CALAT adult education centres have also closed for what the council describes as “the foreseeable future”. The government had ordered the closure of all schools and colleges earlier in the week.

The council has also shut down its Access Croydon enquiry centre in the council headquarters building, Fisher’s Folly, with emergency queries and credit union emergencies the only exceptions. The DWP’s JobCentre Plus operation is moving its staff from Access Croydon into its other office next door in Mint Walk. Continue reading

Posted in CALAT, Croydon Council, Health, Libraries | Tagged , , , , | 1 Comment