Bartonian turn out was a stunning 74% and returned Ian Shingler as the Barton-le-Clay ward councillor. My sincere congratulations to Ian and his family.
Votes were cast as follows:
Ian Shingler, independent 1,518
Gareth Mackey, Tory 759
Janet Nunn, Lib Dem 417
Lesley Lodge, Labour 275
I am grateful to all who voted for me. I enjoyed talking to you on the doorstep this last month and urge you to engage with Ian about the issues you care so much about.
Contact Ian at 14 Dane Rd, Barton-le-Clay MK45 4QL
ian.shingler@centralbedfordshire.gov.uk or tel 0300 300 8549
Friday 8 May 2015
Sunday 3 May 2015
Poor footpaths make our elderly housebound
I'm grateful to all the Bartonians who've been in touch to point out the potholes, deathtrap pavements and grass verges worn bare by constant use for car parking.
Some of the places now most in need of attention are those that have fewest people walk on them and so have never risen to the top of the priority list: Saxon Close, Orchard Close, Arnold Close, etc. As long-time residents of Arnold Close pointed out to me, that close has been never been resurfaced in all its 56 year life.
Many residents of these closes are now approaching their 80s, with perhaps failing eyesight or knee, hip or other mobility issues. It's important they keep moving; their confidence to do so is directly influenced by how even and well maintained the pavements and roads are.
For those who can only get about on mobility scooters, the situation is no better. Pavements buckled by tree roots and shingle from drives add to their list of potential hazards that might tip them over.
This matter should be of concern to us all, because our community is a better place when we can move about safely. Those of us with shingle drives can sweep our exits regularly to keep them gravel free, but the rest is down to us residents to keep Central Beds and Barton's councillor informed about the state of the roads and pavements and ensure the repairs are properly prioritised for repair.
Some of the damage is caused when residents have building work carried out that involves deliveries of laden lorries. The damage may be unavoidable, but should be promptly repaired. For safety's sake and that of good community relations.
To report a road or pavement in need of repair to CBC, you can:
a. go online at www.centralbedfordshire.gov.uk/highways or
b. email them at highways@centralbedfordshire.gov.uk or
c. call them on tel: 0300 300 8049 or
d. use their app www.centralbedfordshire.gov.uk/mobileapp
Some of the places now most in need of attention are those that have fewest people walk on them and so have never risen to the top of the priority list: Saxon Close, Orchard Close, Arnold Close, etc. As long-time residents of Arnold Close pointed out to me, that close has been never been resurfaced in all its 56 year life.
Many residents of these closes are now approaching their 80s, with perhaps failing eyesight or knee, hip or other mobility issues. It's important they keep moving; their confidence to do so is directly influenced by how even and well maintained the pavements and roads are.
For those who can only get about on mobility scooters, the situation is no better. Pavements buckled by tree roots and shingle from drives add to their list of potential hazards that might tip them over.
This matter should be of concern to us all, because our community is a better place when we can move about safely. Those of us with shingle drives can sweep our exits regularly to keep them gravel free, but the rest is down to us residents to keep Central Beds and Barton's councillor informed about the state of the roads and pavements and ensure the repairs are properly prioritised for repair.
Some of the damage is caused when residents have building work carried out that involves deliveries of laden lorries. The damage may be unavoidable, but should be promptly repaired. For safety's sake and that of good community relations.
To report a road or pavement in need of repair to CBC, you can:
a. go online at www.centralbedfordshire.gov.uk/highways or
b. email them at highways@centralbedfordshire.gov.uk or
c. call them on tel: 0300 300 8049 or
d. use their app www.centralbedfordshire.gov.uk/mobileapp
Thursday 23 April 2015
Time to tackle the tots' park at Franklin Avenue
Everyone's agreed that the fencing off of the former young
children's playground at Franklin Avenue, behind the Co-op, is one of
the biggest acts of corporate vandalism and waste in our village.
Longer term residents remember fondly the pleasure that our little
ones found there, playing on the brightly coloured slide and bouncy
animals – facilities that appealed specifically to tots, before
they grew to demand the bigger swings and equipment of the park at
Norman Road.
Local residents and child carers from the wider village all have views on what should happen to the land, from keeping the grass well tended to putting benches there and of course reinstating the tots' park, but all agree that removing the fence is a priority.
It's a crying shame that this eyesore has been allowed to persist for so long. We need someone to bring all interested parties together to discuss what people want, who holds what funding (tenants there pay the company that own their houses for the upkeep of the surrounding lawns and of course Central Beds and the Parish Council tax every household here) and agree what can be done to satisfy public interest and need.
If elected as Barton ward councillor to Central Beds Council on 7 May, I would pledge to be that catalyst for action. This site has festered for long enough.
Let me have your views please, tel: 882799 or email janet.nunn@ntlworld.com
Many thanks,
Janet Nunn
113 Manor Road, Barton-le-Clay MK45 4NS
Janet with Lib Dem candidate MP Linda Jack at Franklin Ave |
Local residents and child carers from the wider village all have views on what should happen to the land, from keeping the grass well tended to putting benches there and of course reinstating the tots' park, but all agree that removing the fence is a priority.
It's a crying shame that this eyesore has been allowed to persist for so long. We need someone to bring all interested parties together to discuss what people want, who holds what funding (tenants there pay the company that own their houses for the upkeep of the surrounding lawns and of course Central Beds and the Parish Council tax every household here) and agree what can be done to satisfy public interest and need.
If elected as Barton ward councillor to Central Beds Council on 7 May, I would pledge to be that catalyst for action. This site has festered for long enough.
Let me have your views please, tel: 882799 or email janet.nunn@ntlworld.com
Many thanks,
Janet Nunn
113 Manor Road, Barton-le-Clay MK45 4NS
Thursday 16 April 2015
ELECTION SPECIAL - Barton-le-Clay Focus
Janet Nunn for Central Beds Councillor on 7th May
The latest edition of Focus, produced by the Lib Dem Focus Team in Barton-le-Clay, is now available to download.
The latest edition of Focus, produced by the Lib Dem Focus Team in Barton-le-Clay, is now available to download.
Wednesday 15 April 2015
Threat to Barton from UKIP family
Lib Dem PPC Linda Jack on hustings panel (4th from left) |
Barton-le-Clay is threatened with massive new development on the Green Belt if a local UKIP candidate MP's sister-in-law gets her way.
Tim Smyth, husband of north-east Beds UKIP candidate MP Adrianne Smyth, let slip last night that his sister plans to build a whole new village on the north-east edge of Barton. He and his wife were talking to me after the first hustings for Bedfordshire parliamentary candidates yesterday.
I'd asked Adrianne Smyth to clarify a remark she'd made earlier. She had said that, if elected, UKIP would “take villages out of over-washed Green Belt status”. She confirmed her intention was to keep Green Belt around villages, but to allow building and extensions within villages themselves once their Green Belt status was removed.
But then her husband pointed out that Bedfordshire was “rather better” at this than Hertfordshire and as Lib Dem candidate MP Linda Jack joined our group, Mr Smyth announced his sister's building plans with (momentary hesitation and clicking of fingers while he searched for the name) 'Kilroy'.
The hustings, hosted by the Country Landowners' Association (CLA) at Shuttleworth manor house early yesterday evening, were well attended by CLA members.
The next hustings will be in Shefford at the St. Michael & All Angels Parish Church hall, Shefford, SG17 5DD from 7.30pm on Thursday 16 April. All are welcome to attend to question MP candidates on their views and local issues.
What do you think? Please email me at janet.nunn@ntlworld.com or call 01582 882799
Janet Nunn - Lib Dem candidate for Central Beds Council 2015
Thursday 9 April 2015
Barton-le-Clay youth short-changed by Central Beds Council
We
Bartonians all pay our Council tax, but unlike other villages of
similar size, or smaller, we have nowhere for our young teenagers to
meet friends without being moved on.
The
old Youth Hut in Sharpenhoe Road was beyond repair, and too close to
the busy junction with Bedford Road to be safe in view of how the
traffic flow has increased over the years. But on selling the plot
for re-development, Central Beds pocketed the money.
Does
this matter? I think so. Clubs run by adults, organised around an
activity, are all very well but they don't appeal to every young
person or even every aspect of each young person. The girl or boy who
joins the dramatic society or scouts may also want to hang out with
others of their own age to talk about things that interest them, make
friends and try on their new and emerging identities without risk of
being overheard or censored by adults. Without this, young people can only
meet in places that risk disturbing neighbouring houses such as the Franklin Drive playground that the Parish Council then closed;or
online, which doesn't develop all their interpersonal skills.
CBC
need to be made to fulfil their moral obligation and provide some
facility, whether a youth centre or an outdoor BMX-skatepark with
seating, to enable our young people to socialise. If elected, I will
engage with Central Beds Council and our Parish Council, and work to
provide a facility that our young people want.
Wednesday 8 April 2015
Housing needs vs myths
After the
election, the Campaign for the Protection of Rural England (CPRE)
will launch a campaign to de-bunk the myths it claims have grown up
around housing. This was revealed on 25 March by Shaun Spiers, chief
executive of the CPRE at a public meeting at Cardinal Newman School
Luton.
The myths, say
CPRE, is that we need lots of houses yet for over 20 years the UK has
been building homes at a greater rate than our population growth.
CPRE insist this effect has not been perceived because of such things
as the rise in second home ownership (not so much an issue around
here as in the Cotswolds and south-west England, I expect).
CPRE is accused by
some as “not taking an holistic view”. Councils have a duty to
co-operate with London on providing housing needs: it stretches to
neighbouring councils of those neighbouring London, so Bedfordshire
is affected. If you Google the 'Bedford 51' letter, you'll see it
sets a backdrop for the working relationship between Boris's GLA and
other councils on housing.
It shouldn't stop
us scrutinising what CBC is doing, or fighting hard to keep our green
spaces and Green Belt gems, but I hope this wider understanding will
help us achieve a balanced tone. At the meeting,
someone remarked how brownfield development has made London a better
place to live and work in, so concluded “this can happen in
Bedfordshire too”. But can it? How much previously built on land
in need of re-development is owned by the public sector and how much
by the private sector? And is the cost in time and money of
compulsory purchase prohibitive? Is there a will to find the way to
do it?
Or will the eight
national house-building companies continue to insist on controlled
release of new homes for sale, to ensure prices remain buoyant, so
undermining the public sector's ambitions?
I urged CPRE to
relaunch their inter-active website tool from 2014 whereby people
could send in photos and descriptions of places near where they lived
that were abandoned and ripe for re-development. These varied in size
from small plots in Hitchin and Shefford to multi-acre sites within
Vauxhall's complex in Luton. Of course, ideally local councils would
do this as part of their work to engage with their residents, but
there were no Tory members of CBC to hear that or indeed any other
suggestion.
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