Croydon Clinical Commissioning Group: meeting, Sep 11

Croydon Clinical Commissioning Group will host its first quarterly Patient Forum event on Wednesday, September 11, from 6pm.

NHS LOGOThe event will be held at the Masonic Hall, 73 Oakfield Rd, Croydon CR0 2UX.

Residents are invited to attend to share your views and ideas about your health services, ask questions and learn more about the CCG at this public meeting.

The first meeting will be an opportunity to hear about our plans to ensure your health care services are available to you in the right way, at the right place and at the right time. Continue reading

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Harris academy gets 0/10 for staff’s spelling and grammar

Roke bannerIt seems that some of the staff at a newly academised primary in the south of Croydon which is now being run by the Harris Federation need to go back to school, after a document outlining the strict new uniform regime was sent out with spelling and English grammar mistakes, including the dreaded grocer’s apostrophe.

The story from the first week of term about Harris Primary Academy Kenley –not to be confused with the existing, local authority-run Kenley Primary – has managed to make it into the national press, with The Guardian covering the latest row between Harris and the parents at what was until July known as Roke Primary.

Parents last week received a uniform list which included reference to “mohican’s” (used as a plural) and with “pinafore” spelt “pinnafore”. Continue reading

Posted in Education, Gavin Barwell, Roke Primary, Schools | Tagged , , , , , , | 5 Comments

Fly tipping more than doubled in Croydon since 2010

It is all very well Croydon Council warning of a £50,000 fine for fly tipping, but such a deterrent needs to be backed up by action

It is all very well Croydon Council warning of a £50,000 fine for fly tipping, as it does with its sign here, but such a deterrent needs to be backed up by action

The streets of Croydon are more rubbish now than they were a couple of years ago. That’s according to STUART KING, who has obtained the council’s own official figures

Since 2010, the number of fly tipping incidents reported to Croydon Council has risen by 150 per cent.

According to the council’s own figures, there were 11,149 incidents of fly tipping reported in 2012-2013. That’s the equivalent of over 30 episodes of illegal tipping every day of the year.  Since April this year, there has been another 5,878 incidents reported to and recorded by Croydon Council – which suggests that last year’s “record” is set to be broken. Continue reading

Posted in Croydon Council, Croydon North, Environment, Fly tipping, Refuse collection, Steve Reed MP, Stuart King, West Thornton | Tagged , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

The A to Z of whether your area is about to go “upmarket”

Brixton today, Croydon tomorrow?

It's Grim UP North London... the Private Eye cartoon strip, by Kerber and Black, has found a lot of easy targets in Yuppiefied Camden and Islington. Is Brixton, or Croydon, following suit?

It’s Grim UP North London… the Private Eye cartoon strip, has found a lot of easy targets in Camden and Islington. Is Brixton, or Croydon, following suit?

Esiah Levy, who Tweets as @croydon_oldtown, has come up with a very handy little guide to how to judge whether a neighbourhood is being gentrified.

Levy’s “A to Z of signs that your area is about to move ‘upmarket'” includes:

A: Artists everywhere, Apple MacBooks being used on the trams, Antique stores

B: Barratt Homes, Boutiques, Buy to Let signs, bicycles with a basket and bread

C: cupcake shops, Costa coffee, council sell offs…

For more, visit Levy’s Twitter feed here.

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Posted in 8/8: London Road stories, Broad Green, Business, Community associations, Croydon 8/8, Lambeth Council, London-wide issues, Norbury, Outside Croydon, Paul Spooner, Planning, Property, Thornton Heath | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Croydon actors taking to the stage to play the Rent

CODA, the Croydon Operatic and Dramatic Association, one of the oldest amateur dramatics groups in the borough, in association with Stage Left Dramatics, is bringing the Tony Award and Pulitzer Prize–winning musical, Rent to Sutton’s Secombe Theatre next month.

RentBased on Giacomo Puccini’s opera La Bohème, Rent is a rock musical with book, music and lyrics by Jonathan Larson. It tells the story of a group of impoverished young artists and musicians struggling to survive and create in New York’s Lower East Side in the thriving days of Bohemian Alphabet City, under the shadow of HIV/AIDS.

Rent, opens October 9 and runs through October 12 at the Secombe Theatre in Sutton, with performances at 7.30pm, and a matinee on Saturday October 12 at 2.30pm.

Artistic director and Stage Left co-founder Michael Trakas has assembled some of the most talented and up-and-coming performers in the area. “Through its powerful rock score, Rent explores the lives of a community of young artists who choose to celebrate life while coping with disease and social poverty,” Trakas said. Continue reading

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Two senior staff given £300,000 on leaving council last year

Croydon Council spent nearly £300,000 on “exit” and redundancy payments to just two senior staff in the last financial year, official accounts published yesterday reveal.

Croydon Council coat of armsThis follows the “golden goodbyes” to top executives in 2011, when £350,000 of Council Tax-payers’ cash was pocketed by four departing staff. Calls are sure to be heard once more for Croydon Council’s slogan of “Proud to Serve” to be altered to “Proud to Self-Serve”.

What the accounts do not reveal for 2012-2013 is who are the lucky recipients of the amounts – in one case, a pay-off of £213,064 for a single executive, in the other someone was paid £84,842 when made redundant compulsorily.  You can view the accounts by clicking here; the redundancy deals are detailed on page 66 of the document.

It might be assumed that the juicier of the two huge pay-offs went to Croydon’s controversial chief executive, Jon Rouse, who quit for a less-well-paid job in the NHS earlier this year.

The accounts state that this massive pay-off went to someone who was earning more than £200,000 per year.

But Rouse told Inside Croydon this morning that he had not received any pay-off. “I resigned to take up new position,” Rouse said. Continue reading

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Skeletons in a tunnel start novel exercise in Crystal Palace

It took local resident TOM BROWN five years, but he has published a book which goes deep under the surface of the Victorian era south London

It all started in early 2008. I’d recently finished my debut novel, and was scrabbling around for a new subject. The first book had fallen into my lap – a satire about those who believe Shakespeare didn’t write his own plays, inspired by my time working at the Globe Theatre – and I was longing to have my head turned by some unexpected new obsession.

strange-air for ebookFor several months, nothing caught my eye, and I started to fear I’d have to adopt a more deliberate approach – forcing myself to care enough about something to spin it into a 90,000-word yarn.

As it turned out, I needn’t have worried. For just at that point, my girlfriend and I went for a walk.

I’d lived in West Dulwich for eight years, and my innate laziness and deep-rooted fear of hills had meant I’d only ever ventured up to Crystal Palace once or twice (mainly to visit the Warrior CD Store on Westow Hill, now much-missed).

One day, however, we found ourselves strolling from the blocked-up entrance to Crescent Wood tunnel in Sydenham Hill Wood to the equally blocked-up portal of Paxton tunnel to the west of Crystal Palace Parade – at which point, my girlfriend said something extraordinary.

“I take it you know about the skeletons.”

“‘What?”

“‘Oh, yeah. Trapped in a tunnel somewhere round here. Abandoned in an old railway carriage. Victorians, apparently – still fully clothed.” Continue reading

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MacMillan coffee morning, Shirley: Sep 27

Layout 1 Continue reading

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Crystal Palace Concerts – “I have a dream”: Thu Oct 17

Crystal Palace concert

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Toxic teddy bears’ picnic comes to Croydon: Sep 21

SEPTEMBER 10 UPDATE: This event has now been “postponed”.

Frack Free Surrey will be hosting a toxic teddy bears’ tea party in Croydon town centre on Saturday September 21. The event is planned as a way to let Croydon residents know that oil companies are looking to explore for oil and gas in Surrey, and the dangers that could bring.

Coming to a part of Croydon near you? A fracking oil rig

Coming to a part of Croydon near you?

There will be a picnic with tea and biscuits, costumed characters, Frack Off singing, a showing of the anti-fracking documentary film Gaslands (at 11am and 2pm), some Morris dancing (at 1.30pm) and a “die-in” (12.30pm). Continue reading

Posted in Activities, Croydon Greens, Dance, Environment, Theatre | Tagged , , , , , | 4 Comments

England captain puts his shirt on Warlingham scheme

RUGBY ROUND-UP: The new season is almost upon us, and Warlingham have launched themselves into it with the help of the England captain to help establish an apprenticeship scheme under the auspices of the RFU.

Chris Robshaw, the England captain (left), and Kelly Wilsonat last week's Warlingham ball, where they donated autographed England shirts to help raise funds for the club's apprenticeship scheme

Chris Robshaw, the England captain (left), and Kelly Wilson at last week’s Warlingham ball, where they donated autographed England shirts to help raise funds for the club’s apprenticeship scheme. David Hughes, centre, coach to the club’s under-12s, won the auction

More than 300 members and guests attended a fund-raising black-tie ball at a five-star hotel in Chelsea Harbour last week, where the guests of honour were Chris Robshaw and his fellow England international, Kay Wilson, both of them former Warlingham junior players.

Under the community apprenticeship initiative, Warlingham will be training young coaches to visit local schools to coach and promote rugby. The club has already trained more than 30 local teenagers, girls as well as boys, as part of the RFU Junior Leaders’ scheme. As a result of this, four of Warlingham’s young members have been invited by the RFU to act as ambassadors for the Rugby World Cup being staged in England in 2015. Continue reading

Posted in Chris Robshaw, Croydon RFC, Old Mid-Whitgiftians/Trinity RFC, Purley-John Fisher, Rugby Union, Sport, Warlingham RFC | Tagged , , , , , , | Leave a comment

MP asks Prince Charles to intervene over riot compensation

A fortnight after the 2011 riots, Prince Charles and the Duchess of Cornwall visited London Road and met residents affected. Now the local MP has written to him for help

A fortnight after the 2011 riots, Prince Charles visited London Road and met residents affected. Now the local MP has written to him for help

After losing patience in waiting for the Prime Minister and his deputy, or for the Mayor of London, to fulfill their various promises to the people of Croydon who lost their homes and businesses in the riots more than two years ago, local MP Steve Reed OBE has now sought help from an influential figure. Reed has written to Prince Charles to seek royal assistance in breaking the back-log to get the riot victims the compensation they were promised.

Reed, the Croydon North MP, says he is “frustrated that help has still not come through”. Continue reading

Posted in 8/8: London Road stories, Boris Johnson, Broad Green, Crime, Croydon 8/8, Croydon North, London-wide issues, Mayor of London, Policing, Steve Reed MP | Tagged , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Birdhurst community asks you to dig in and vote

The community garden in Birdhurst Avenue, created by the local community in a residential street in South Croydon assisted with funding from the council, is seeking more cash. And you can help them get it with a simple online vote.

Birdhurst Garden 1There is now a herb garden, two rockeries and a Japanese-style “river” garden in Birdhurst Avenue, all built, planted and cared for by the neighbours and now new friends. The gardens were officially opened in July.

Chris Gee, the group’s treasurer, said: “People have got involved in many ways and for that we are grateful. We want to make the park a place where everyone feels welcome as well as improving it by completing our second phase.” Continue reading

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May contain nuts: Three plays to preview before shipping off

The Breakfast Cat Theatre Company will be previewing their three “plays in pubs” at The Ship on the High Street in central Croydon on Tuesday September 24 from 7.30pm, before touring them down to the south coast for Havant Literary Festival. This exclusive preview will be £2 on the door, an absolute bargain to see three hilarious short plays.

The Breakfast Cat's poster for their previous production of Macbeth

The Breakfast Cat’s poster for their previous production of Macbeth

The three very different plays are…

Time, Gentlemen
By Croydon playwright Ben Parker, this comedy about three men in a pub attracted great audiences when recently performed. Comments included: “Probably one of the best short plays that I have ever seen.” With a (mostly) brand new cast, take a second look at this cult Croydon classic.

Wasp Posse
By Ellie Dawes. As anyone who’s ever seen a nature show will appreciate: wasps are bad-ass. They do horrible things, screw over other species and generally like making a nuisance of themselves. They also talk in rhyme and say the F-word occasionally. Find out what happens when four of the baddest wasps from around the world come to Britain for a pint and meet the common English wasp. A slice of surreal in the middle of your play sandwich.

Pub Quiz of the sexes
By Mark Wakeman. When recently divorced Brian and best friend Chris meet recently cheated-on Louise and her best friend Caroline, the battle of the sexes is taken to a whole new level… a sort of papery, multiple-choice level, the results of which none of them were quite expecting. A comedy with the answers to life, love and bar snacks. Beware! This play contains nuts. Continue reading

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Friends of Ashburton Park meeting: Sep 11

Public property: the old Ashburton Library, now being sold by our council

Public property: the old Ashburton Library, now being sold by our council

The recently formed Friends of Ashburton Park will be holding a public meeting on Wednesday September 11 at 6.30pm in front of the Old Library.

“We want to hear residents’ views on the sale of the building, discover what people want to see this historic building used for, and how the park can become the community focus it should,” the organisers say.

All are welcome to attend. Continue reading

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Portas Pilot has been a flop, admits scheme’s ex-chair

The Portas Pilot project, intended to revive business in Croydon’s ancient Surrey Street Market, has been a failure.

In disguise: maybe Mary Portas does not want to be recognised as a "High Street guru"?

In disguise? Maybe Mary Portas does not want to be recognised as a “High Street guru”?

That’s effectively the admission of Mary Portas, Prime Minister David Cameron’s “retail guru” and self-proclaimed “Queen of the High Street”.

It is also the view of one of Portas’s growing band of critics, and it is the implicit view of the chair of the Croydon Portas Town Team, who has resigned that position admitting to “frustrations” in failing to get anything done.

It is not just the Portas Pilot in Croydon – where 18 months ago the local government department doled out £100,000, as it did with 26 other such schemes around the country – that has failed. But Portas denies that the failure is anything to do with her.

And the ex-chair of the Croydon team, who is now spending more time running his pay-day loan shop on Surrey Street, says it isn’t his fault or that of his committee, either.

Kez Hassan, who had volunteered for the Town Team role when public money was being made available, did mention in an interview this morning that he had written to “Big” Eric Pickles, the local government minister, and his colleague, Grant Shapps. Neither of whom had bothered responding, and neither of whom bothered to accept an invitation to visit Surrey Street to see the work being done with the public money that they had dished out.

A civil service flunky had answered, apparently, telling Hassan and his chums that they needed to resolve matters locally. So the failure of the Portas Pilot scheme is clearly not the fault of Pickles or Shapps, and evidently is not their problem, either.

Continue reading

Posted in "Hammersfield", Allders, Business, Centrale, Planning, Surrey Street, Whitgift Centre | Tagged , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Steve Reed MP: Mayday signals another failure of local Tories

In his exclusive column for Inside Croydon, local MP STEVE REED questions the self-interested motives behind the council and Conservative MPs choosing to do nothing to defend NHS services or police numbers in Croydon

NHS LOGOOne of the interesting things about Croydon is the way that cross-party politics doesn’t work very well here.

All political parties need to differentiate themselves from each other by showing how they take different approaches on the big issues. That’s what you’d expect since the parties have different sets of values and different priorities they are trying to achieve. But, from time to time, politicians in most places will come together around big issues that they feel transcend party politics and require a single, unified voice speaking clearly on behalf of local people.

I’ve been astonished how, on two very significant issues, that cross-party approach has not happened in Croydon. On police cuts, Croydon has come out very badly compared to other comparable outer-London boroughs. In Croydon North, the constituency I represent, the Mayor of London is closing down every single police station, and yet instead of the extra police we were promised from the savings, we will be left with fewer police than the inadequate number we had immediately after the riots.

A case for a cross-party coming-together on behalf of Croydon you’d think. But no, our Conservative-run council and Croydon Central’s Tory MP both refused my offer to work together and chose instead to toe the party line and back proposals that, in my view, are seriously damaging to our community. Continue reading

Posted in Croydon Central, Croydon Council, Croydon North, Croydon South, Gavin Barwell, Health, Mayday Hospital, Richard Ottaway MP, St Helier Hospital, Steve Reed MP | Tagged , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

Old Mid-Whits hockey open day: Sep 8

Old Whits hockey

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Homeless Greggs girl shows that she has X Factor

Hannah Barrett captured the hearts of four X Factor judges, and the nation, last night.

Tonight, the 17-year-old from Croydon who was kicked out of home by her own mother and now has to fit in a part-time job in Greggs (“You get to eat a lot of pasties and donuts”) with her A level studies, features on the ITV1 programme again, this time as she auditions in front of an arena audience of thousands. Continue reading

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Have a cup of coffee and help fight cancer: Sep 27

Coffee morningCroydon is playing its part in The World’s Biggest Coffee Morning on September 27, fund-raising for the Macmillan cancer charity.

Croydon Coffee Morning offers you a morning of coffee, cake and live acoustic music. Open to everyone of all ages to raise money for Macmillan Cancer Support.

If you can’t make the date, you can still donate: the Just Giving page is www.justgiving.com/reeses-pieces Continue reading

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Syria, Parliament and the local MPs who want it all ways

CROYDON COMMENTARY: Where do local MPs stand on the issue of intervention in Syria after Thursday night’s votes in the House of Commons? In some cases, it is hard to say, writes ANDREW PELLING, especially for the MP who voted both “Yes” and “No”

Much of the national newspaper analysis of Thursday night’s parliamentary votes on whether Britain should intervene in Syria over the use of chemical weapons was about who is “up” and who is “down” and who is going to lose their job for missing the votes or for not organising the Tory party whips’ office.

Bit of a problem: Parliament's votes on Thursday in London created a bit of a problem for US President Barack Obama

Bit of a problem: the UK parliament’s votes on Thursday over Syria caused a headache for US President Barack Obama

Such banality forgets that this debate was not about who was “discussing Rwanda” at the time of the division bell, or what the opinion polls say about Cameron or Miliband’s leadership of their respective parties this weekend, but that it was all about what the American President Barack Obama tonight called “an assault on human dignity”, the appalling suffering of innocents, many of them children, who have been bombed, burned or choked to death from an assault with banned chemical weapons in an increasingly brutal civil war.

The humiliation of David Cameron on Thursday – remember, the Prime Minister had actually recalled parliament from its summer recess only to be defeated by the votes of his own party’s MPs – and his perhaps unnecessary capitulation by saying that there will be no British military action, is far less important than the growing realisation that the western powers’ foreign policies and military positions in the Islamic world are in crisis because of the carnage that is the legacy of western intervention in places from Afghanistan to Iraq and Libya. Continue reading

Posted in 2015 General Election, Andrew Pelling, Croydon Central, Croydon North, Croydon South, Gavin Barwell, Paul Burstow MP, Richard Ottaway MP, Steve Reed MP, Tom Brake MP | Tagged , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Arsenic with no grace: fracking campaign issues warnings

Environmental activists and Green party members, worried that engineers may soon be conducting experimental drilling for oil in Croydon, have formed the Frack Free Surrey campaign to co-ordinate and lead opposition to fracking.

One of the "danger" signs erected at the anti-fracking camp in Balcombe, warning of some of the poisonous substances which are associated with the process

One of the “danger” signs erected at the anti-fracking camp in Balcombe, warning of some of the poisonous substances which are associated with the process

As Inside Croydon was first to report earlier this month, the government has already granted licences granted for oil and gas exploration in Sutton, Croydon and elsewhere in Surrey.

This is despite fracking in the United States and Australia having caused demonstrable air and water pollution, and subsidence to land and properties, and is deeply unpopular with the communities it has damaged.

In southern England, the anti-fracking campaign has grabbed national headlines at exploratory works at Balcombe, in Sussex, where Green party MP Caroline Lucas was arrested during a peaceful demonstration earlier this month. The Balcombe drilling site is close to a large reservoir which supplies water to thousands of homes in the area. Continue reading

Posted in Coulsdon, Croydon Greens, Environment, Gordon Ross, Planning | Tagged , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Local AmDram groups “in exile” over Fairfield’s charges

Fairfield Halls, once south London’s leading arts and entertainment venue, has been accused of driving Croydon’s amateur dramatic groups into exile from the borough by charging more than £13,000 for a week’s run.

Empty stage: At £13,000 per week, the Fairfield Halls has priced local AmDrams off the premises. Meanwhile, it continues to promote derivative tribute acts who attract fewer than a hundred ticket sales

Empty stage: At £13,000 per week, the Fairfield Halls has priced local AmDrams off the premises. Meanwhile, it continues to promote derivative tribute acts who attract fewer than a hundred ticket sales

For the average AmDram group, made up of occasionally over- enthusiastic volunteers who devote their time, blood, sweat and tears into producing often outstanding short-run productions, the Fairfield’s charges mean that they have to clear at least £3,000 per night on a typical four-night run just to avoid making a crippling loss on their hard-pressed funds.

Even if the company was to charge £20 per ticket – almost twice what most amateur groups feel able to ask their families, friends and other audience members to pay – that means that they have to sell 150 tickets per night, and every night, before they even cover the hire costs.

Performance groups in Croydon already struggle to find suitable rehearsal space. The Fairfield’s £13,000-a-week charges probably price out of using the venue some of the borough’s excellent choral societies and amateur operatic groups – hardly very community minded of the publicly funded Halls which too often relies on staging tribute band nights to audiences of just a few dozen. Continue reading

Posted in Activities, Art, Comedy, Dudley Mead, Fairfield Halls, London Mozart Players, Music, Riesco Collection, Theatre | Tagged , , , , , , , | 15 Comments

Spendthrift council forks out £176,000 on sound system

The council chamber at Croydon Town Hall, complete with £176,000-worth of new audio kit, installed during the summer recess

The council chamber at Croydon Town Hall, complete with £176,000-worth of new audio kit, installed during the summer recess

Next week, thousands of Croydon children will make their ways to their schools at the start of the new term without the reassuring assistance of a “school crossing patrol officer” – a lollipop lady or man in old-fashioned, ordinary English – all because the Conservative-controlled Croydon Council wants to save £60,000.

Yet Inside Croydon has discovered that over the summer break, the very same Croydon Council has managed to install a new sound system in the council chamber at Croydon Town Hall which has cost us all

£176,000

Yep: the council that does not have enough cash to ensure the safety of our children – or at least children who attend schools in the northern part of the borough – can somehow dig deep for three times as much dough to pay for their speeches at the Town Hall to sound a bit better. Continue reading

Posted in 2014 council elections, Croydon Council, Croydon Radio, Mike Fisher, Nathan Elvery, Wayne Lawlor | Tagged , , , , , , | 3 Comments

FA Cup draw sees early return to Croydon for ex-boss Fowler

The FA Cup throws up some intriguing draws. This Saturday’s preliminary qualifying round sees an early return to Croydon Arena for John Fowler, who until his abrupt departure in the summer had been the manager of Croydon FC.

FA CupOn Saturday, Fowler will be back to face the Trams, this time with his new club Whyteleafe. Fowler’s departure left behind a devastated Croydon senior squad with just one player, the goalkeeper Francis Ameyaw, remaining. On early season form, it is clear to see that Croydon has yet to recover fully from the trauma of Fowler’s exit.

With no local derbies in the league that Croydon play in, the Trams are looking forward to a bumper crowd for this local contest.

That may be all that the local team can look forward to, with Fowler’s Whyteleafe looking like the far more powerful side. Continue reading

Posted in Activities, AFC Croydon Athletic, Croydon FC, Football, Sport | Tagged , , , , , , | 1 Comment