Posts Tagged students

ID cards in the Gazette

The Islington Gazette has printed the letter I signed with others from the local NO2ID campaign.

I object to ID cards in principle. They are an unecessary burden on law abiding citizens. ID cards are costly and bureaucratic. It will need a massive and massively expensive database to make the system work. People who change their details, like women who choose to change their name when they marry, will have to pay £1000 for the privilege. And none of this will make us any safer.

This week the first wave of ID cards comes in. The Government plans to introduce ID cards by stealth – starting with overseas workers and students – in the hope that most people won’t notice or care. But this will damage our borough and the universities based here. British students will have to pay higher tuition costs to make up, and will have less money to spend with local businesses. That’s the last thing our local economy needs now.

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Cross-river tram: students on board

I blogged before about the disappointing news that Boris Johnson has decided to drop plans for the Cross-River tram.

I believe it’s a short-sighted decision. The tram would provide a new link into London’s best-connected station, Kings Cross St Pancras. At a time when London’s population is growing, it would ease congestion on existing routes. And it would provide new routes to parts of south London that urgently need regeneration. As GLA member Caroline Pidgeon has pointed out, it can take longer to get from Peckham to central London, than it does to Reading.

Well, despite Boris’ backing out, the many communities who could benefit from this important cross-London link are not taking no for an answer. The latest to join the campaign are London students, led by student Lib Dems, Liberal Youth.

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QT and candi

I finished work at lunchtime today to go and take part in a Question Time panel at City & Islington College’s Centre for Lifelong Learning at Finsbury Park.

Part of the College’s sustainability week, the Question Time was on the theme of sustainability, with speakers from all the main parties plus Stephen Taylor from Islington Friends of the Earth. It was an extremely enjoyable event. Like the BBC version, it was filmed, which was fun. Unlike the TV version, the questioners were not political plants, but asked open-ended questions; as as one questioner said “I don’t already know the answer to this”. As panellists we explored the answers rather than made digs at each other. And because all the questions were on an environmental theme, we could develop lines of thought as we went. The students were from at least 4 continents, adding a suitably international feel to a global topic. No apathy here.

Questions ranged from should the UN limit family size (no) to can we sell the need for action on climate change to people with more pressing problems (yes). I think the answer has to be to make the connection between changes that help us and that also help fight climate change. Energy efficiency saves you money; leaving the car at home makes you fitter; shopping locally boosts your community. The UK is blessed with huge opportunities to harness renewable energy. And our current building boom is a fantastic chance to lead by example on sustainable development.

The Centre for Lifelong Learning is itself a good example of this. The original building was Finsbury Park School, one of those familar redbrick London schools. Similar ones, Ambler School and Gillespie School, still flourish nearby. Finsbury Park merged with Ambler and the site closed as a school in 1964. It later became part of Islington sixth form college. In 1993 it merged into City and Islington College (candi). Then around 2001, the college chose the site for the lifelong learning centre. They could have demolished the old building and started again. Instead they took the front off, extended it with a very good modern frontage – which makes it part of Blackstock Road rather than set back – and retained the brick arches and high ceilings of the old school as the framework of the building. It looks spectacular inside and works really well.

It’s a sustainable building too in that it includes shared use. As well as the college, the site includes Islington’s new N4 public library. Roll back to 1988, I was at library school further along Blackstock Road at Highbury Grove, in what was then North London Poly. Nearby was Islington Central Library on Holloway Road, well placed to serve the residents of Highbury. But no library at all for people down the hill in Finsbury Park – and this in a small borough which has ten libraries compared to just six in the whole of Kensington & Chelsea. It’s wonderful to see this bright and well-used library in what was a really neglected area. Fantastic though it is, the library had a controversial start; it replaced the small but well-loved Arthur Simpson library on Hanley Road, further along Stroud Green Road, much to the anger of its loyal users. The fact that the old library did not comply with disability access, and that its relocation enabled the fantastic new facility in one of Islington’s most neglected centres, was no comfort. Going for the N4 library was the right decision; but I do understand those who would have liked both.

The extent to which we can ‘have it all’ was a recurring theme in the QT debate. Jeanette Arnold (Labour) said we shouldn’t make people feel guilty about their gadgets; James Humphreys (Green) said we are consuming far too much stuff that we don’t really need, and it’s got to change. Yes things do have to change, but we should do so in a way that excites people about the fantastic opportunities we have; for renewable energy, for micro-generation, for tackling fuel poverty, getting fitter, supporting local shops, encouraging stronger communities – all the things people that matter to people who may not have the environment top of their agenda. Climate change is real; it’s happening now; and it’s man-made. We have not yet missed our chance to tackle it; and the solutions are man-made too.

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City Uni does Barnsbury

I took a bit of time out this evening to pop into City University and meet with some of the student journalists there. City teaches one of the top courses and their students are an intelligent and motivated group. Each of them has an Islington ward to research and report – and my pair are covering Barnsbury, where I was a councillor for 8 years. We covered everything from crime, parks and planning to housing policy, regeneration, refugees – and the best pubs.

One question which got me thinking was what my priorities for the ward would be if I was a councillor there now. One would be dealing with issues of youth and crime, ensuring young people are safe and older people less fearful. I’d be listening to residents to get the balance right on over-development and providing the homes local people need; housing targets don’t justify bad buildings. And we face more ‘modernisation’ programmes for services like the Post Office and GP surgeries.

All in all it was an enjoyable interview, so I guess I should thank Barnsbury’s current Labour councillors for having completely ignored the students’ requests…..

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