Have Your Say – just 2 weeks to go

January 20th, 2012

 

You have until the 3rd February to make your views known about the proposal for a Queen’s Park Community Council.

This is a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to help improve Queen’s Park for everyone who lives here.

Campaigners, with the help of Queen’s Park Forum staff Ted and Fabian, are hosting an all day and evening drop-in information surgery for residents wanting to find out more.  Come and see us over a cup of tea at Office 1, Beethoven Centre, Third Avenue w10 on Monday 30th January.  We hope to have Somali, Bengali and Arabic speakers on hand to translate. Our aim is to help you have your say. 

For those unable to make it to the information drop-in on the 30th, we provide a short note on the two key questions that most directly concern Queen’s Park residents right now.  Dont delay, let Westminster Council know what you think: email cgr@westminster.gov.uk

Alternatively the full consultation document can be found on Westminster’s website.  But be warned – it is more than a little confusing.

Free Draught Proofing Workshops start again this Saturday 28th January

January 26th, 2012

Your second chance this winter to draught proof your windows and doors has arrived.  There are five workshops this time.  The dates and times are as follows;

Saturday 28th January  10.30am to 12.30pm

Thursday 2nd February 10.30am to 12.30pm

Monday 6th February 6pm – 8pm

Wednesday 8th February 1pm-3pm

Wednesday 15th February 6pm – 8pm

The sessions are practical and easy to follow and we can give follow up support if necessary.  For any questions please call Allison on 0208 964 8024 or email allison@pdt.org.uk

January 19th, 2012

The second edition of the community magazine, written, produced and hand-delivered by local residents will be coming through your letterbox in the next few days. Packed full of local news and views … keep your eyes peeled for the new edition!

That’s the Spirit

January 16th, 2012

 

“Spirit” is the Avenues’ Cheerleading Group.  This is a really positive project that shows young people doing fab things! Watch this promotional video produced by Starbucks to promote their Youth Action Campaign.  Spirit secured funding last year to pay for their uniforms. 

 

  

 

Sit back and enjoy!!

Sharing is Caring

January 13th, 2012

Local primary school children brought a smile to elderly residents over the festive season. Residents organized the ‘Sharing is Caring’ project with pupils delivering food parcels to older residents in the run up to Christmas.

There was a fantastic response with presents flooding in from pupils, families and local businesses. The children decorated shoe boxes and took time out from school to deliver the presents.

A massive thank you to all the volunteers who helped run the project, Ark Atwood and Queen’s Park Primary Schools and the following local businesses who made a donation: Steve’s Newsagent, Izzy Jones, Deluxe Off License, Lane’s Jewellers, Madina’s butchers, Asian Food Centre and All Nations Tropical Foods.

Grants available for draught proofing for private tenants and home owners.

January 11th, 2012

Did you know that there are grants available from Westminster City Council for draught proofing and loft insulation for Harrow Road and Queen’s Park residents who are private tenants or home owners.  For more information please contact Allison on 0208 964 8024 or allison@pdt.org.uk

Girls Allowed

January 9th, 2012

MoZART projection

January 9th, 2012



Abba Vintage New Year!

December 31st, 2011

and for some other seasonal and inspirational clips:

Read the rest of this entry »

Residents of Queen’s Park – be proud!

December 31st, 2011

Be proud of what together you have achieved for your neighbourhood in 2011. 1st in London, and arguably the best campaign of its kind anywhere in the country… blimey, what a difference a year makes!

The Campaign for a Queen’s Park Community Council has already achieved things that some thought were impossible and, for now at least, residents remain strong and united in the face of adversity. We live to fight another year and are discovering that cooperating not only works, but feels good too!

At the beginning of 2011 Queen’s Park Forum (down, but not out as a result of 100% cuts to its budget) held several public meetings attracting hundreds of local residents to discuss the future of Queen’s Park, and in particular the idea of a Community Council for Queen’s Park. There was no agenda other than to sustain the good community work that had helped all the residents of Queen’s Park (whether directly or indirectly) over the previous two decades, but which was no longer possible due to a lack of sustained funds.

Meeting after meeting, following in-depth questioning and discussion, the idea received unanimous endorsement by local residents who felt a Community Council would provide the best means for championing the interests of our diverse local community.  This overwhelming (and somewhat unexpected) support provided the necessary encouragement to residents to form a Campaign to gather the necessary signatures and to get the message out further.

Despite the dark, icy evenings eager residents knocked on every door in Queen’s Park. The signatures came in thick and fast. Even on the doorstep there was little opposition to the idea. Within the space of a few weeks enough signatures had been collected to formally lodge the petition for a Queen’s Park Community Council with Westminster Council.

To show that this community won’t settle with doing things by halves, and to prove the overwhelming support of local people, active campaigners continued to collect signatures until double the number required by law were collected. To date nearly 2000 of Queen’s Park’s estimated 10,000 population have registered their support for the initiative.

The central group of campaigners and activists which numbers around 40 residents, with the help of Ted and Fabian at the Queen’s Park Forum, have notched up some notable successes over the last twelve months:

FUNDS HAVE BEEN RAISED through corporate sponsorship to support our efforts;

• The fireworks show wouldn’t have happened this year without the help of volunteers from the Campaign. This was QUEEN’S PARK’S BEST COMMUNITY FIREWORK SHOW YET, and something the Community Council would doubtless wish to continue;

• ‘Caring is Sharing’, a hugely popular project conceived and delivered by residents. Local children with the help of their parents and teachers collect donations from within the community and PREPARE FOOD PARCELS FOR LONELY OLDER PEOPLE or families living in poverty in Queen’s Park for Christmas. Campaigners compiled the list of beneficiaries and accompanied the children on their house calls. Campaigners are already discussing developing this into an informal befriending service;

• Information is power. Residents worked together on A NEW COMMUNITY NEWSLETTER to fill the gap left by Paddington People magazine. Queen’s Park Voice which is written, produced and distributed largely by volunteers. Delivering it to all households in Queen’s Park ensured that everyone received information about the campaign. Another edition is planned for January to encourage local participation in Westminster’s somewhat under-publicised consultation on the proposal for a Queen’s Park Community Council;

• Allotment scheme – this is in its early stages, but a large piece of land in full sunshine hitherto unused is being brought into use as A GROWING SPACE FOR THE COMMUNITY. Campaigners negotiated this with the housing association whose land it is, and have already applied successfully to become a recognised urban gardening scheme, even receiving a small grant to kick start the project. Soil samples were recently sent to the lab for testing and it is hoped the project will be ready to launch in the spring;

STANDING UP TO GANG VIOLENCE – Campaigners helped to mobilise hundreds of people to express their frustration at the escalating postcode violence affecting this area. As a result Westminster Council have undertaken a full review of their CCTV provision in Queen’s Park and have identified a budget for the installation of at least five new cameras in hotspot areas. They have also conceded that gang violence not only exists in Queen’s Park, but that we have reached a state of emergency;

• Campaigners are committed to acting in the public good, in being accountable and working transparently. They agreed a core set of values, objectives and priorities by which the Campaign would operate, and set these out in a public document (see ‘campaign resources’ section of the website);

• Key Campaigners HOSTED A VISIT BY LEADER OF WESTMINSTER COUNCIL, Cllr Sir Colin Barrow to discuss Queen’s Park priorities and the proposal for a Queen’s Park Community Council;

• The Campaign, which is rigorously non-party-political, has received support from all quarters including from Karen Buck MP, from the government department for Communities and Local Government, from the National Association of Local Councils, from the University of Westminster, from all three local councillors and from some Conservative Councillors in Westminster too;

• The Campaign has received GREAT PRESS COVERAGE, featured among others by BBC London News, The Economist, The Guardian and has been followed closely by all the local newspapers;

• Residents applied successfully to manage A ‘COMMUNITY CHEST’ FOR QUEEN’S PARK for the next two years. In anticipation of the creation of a Queen’s Park Community Council, local volunteers are eager to decide how funds are awarded and allocated locally;

• Campaigners for a Community Council supported Queen’s Park Forum and parent charity Paddington Development Trust to submit a successful application to government to become ONE OF 10 NATIONAL PILOT PROGRAMMES aimed at bettering coordination of public services in Queen’s Park. The sustainability of this high-profile project rests on Westminster giving the green light to the Queen’s Park proposal to become London’s first Parish Council.

There is no denying that this is an incredible achievementone that is all the more impressive considering the social and economic obstacles that Queen’s Park people disproportionately face.

What is at stake is the community’s ability to sustain this spirited effort.

2012 will be an important year for London. For sports fans around the world it will be remembered for the Olympic Games, but for Londoners it could be the start date for a change in the way we engage in our communities and in our city.
Queen’s Park is holding the torch and lighting the way for other communities both in London and elsewhere in the country to follow.  But 2012 will be a real-life test of this government’s championing of localism, and Westminster Council’s commitment to allowing its residents full expression of their rights as citizens. In May we will find out what the future holds when Westminster Council gives its verdict on the proposal.

One thing is sure, if the admirable efforts of local people to work for their community are to be sustained, a paid-for support structure that has the community’s interests at heart is essential. Either the community must be allowed to pay for it, if it so chooses, or someone else must. At a time of receding public spending can we afford to look a gift horse in the mouth?