Tuesday 29 June 2010

STANWELL NORTH a place to be proud of!












These are early morning pictures and video of Stanwell North, a jewel in the Spelthorne crown often miss represented in the press and Quite possible taken just a little for granted by the people of Stanwell North.

I went out early to take theses pictures and video deliberately, to show how clean Stanwell North is before our litter collectors have had chance to start work for the day picking up litter which has either blown out of bins or dropped, as any were in the country some days are better than others, which can be due to many reasons, for example, has there been a local event, has it been windy.
I regularly go to Staines Ashford Sunbury, and these areas can not hold a candle to Stanwell North. I am looking for the people of Stanwell North to help me make the area even better, So if you have an hour to spare please contact me. You never know even the press may realise that Good news stories sell papers as well.

Sunday 20 June 2010

CCTV should every street have one

There are two types of CCTV, Type one is a fully remote 24hr a day recording unit which can either be a Dome or a for a better word, a camera not dissimilar to a motorway camera.

Type two follows basically the same principals as above, but with one difference it is monitored 24-7 by an operator.

CCTV costs money! were does this money come from!

Ultimately every person in the borough pays for the CCTV in the borough in which they live, and as such the responsible authorities have to for fill a criteria and demonstrate that there is a need.

Regardless of which type, there are limitations,
There are many people know who have some sort of video camera, ask any one of them have they ever missed a shot because they were not facing in the right direction, and at some point even a professional will answer yes.
So if the answer is yes does this show best value for money?
CCTV has a place but it is a tool which only has a use when integrated along with other well proven methods of operation, whether it is crime or crime prevention, So before a CCTV camera system in any area is put in place, as already said, there is a criteria to be followed, as there may other ways of addressing the given problems in that area!
I pose a Question, how many cameras could we do with out if we all worked together?

Monday 14 June 2010

Shock and Disbelief

The people of Spelthorne are still waiting for answer and for this area to be put right after work was only partially completed under the guise, that it was to prevent the lights going out in Spelthorne despite the fact that the trees that were removed posed no significant danger to power supplies.

Work was only stopped because the ground was water logged, this was in December, How many people in Spelthorne have been watering there gardens in the last six weeks!




Ashford beauty spot destroyed by National Grid contractors

Posted by Mark Goode on Feb 12, 10 04:21 PM in Local Authority

Spelthorne Council are calling on the National Grid to restore an area of Woodland in Ashford which they left in a 'poor state' after contract work.

Contractors working for the grid removed about 40 mature poplar trees from a piece of land on the A308 near Bronzefield Prison in December to make overhead power lines safe, but they have been accused of 'over-stepping their boundaries' and cutting down more trees than needed and ruining the place.
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Cllr Kevin Flurry, of Stanwell North ward, has worked in the ground maintenance business for 30 years and has completed contractors similar to the one taken out along the A308.

He believes the company overstepped the boundary of their work and have cut down 20 more trees than they should have, ruined the banks of the River Ash by driving tractors through it, turned the area into a swampland, damaged trees and destroyed fences.

He said: "Me any my wife used to love walking through there, but now it is like a swampland. This was an area created for biodiversity for the people of Ashford and is or was a wildlife nesting area. I recently went to a seminar on the Amazon, and the site really reminded me of the 'get in and chop' attitude there.

"I was contacted by some bird watchers the other day who told me how devastated they were. It makes me quite angry how they could do this."

Mr Flurry first became aware of the work when residents of Woodthorpe Road said sand was being dumped nearby, which on closer inspection turned out to be wood chippings.

He said : "The contractors were clearing trees to stop them falling on power lines. I have done this type of work for nearly 30 years so when I went round I knew parts of it had been done incorrectly.

"The contractors did have permission to remove some trees, but they have overstepped their area and I believe the quality of the work is sub-standard."

A spokeswoman for Spelthorne Council said: "The contractors have not yet finished on site but it's been left in a poor state. We are working with them to ensure that when they do return the site is left in best condition possible."

The grid are currently waiting for ground conditions to be met before they can resume


Wednesday 9 June 2010

Kwasi has a great maiden speech

I have posted Kwasi maiden speech as I believe it was a great speech which firmly puts Spelthorne on the map.

The people of Spelthorne have long thought they were forgotten but with Kwasi at the helm this is changing.

Kwasi Kwarteng (Spelthorne) (Con): It is a great honour to be called to deliver my maiden speech. First of all, I want to give a hearty thanks to David Wilshire who, amidst difficulties and press distortions, managed to keep up his work as a fine constituency MP. Very often, people would open the door to me and say, "Ah, so you're the new David Wilshire," and I would reply, "Well, sort of, but I want to continue his traditions of service and commitment to the constituency."

People always ask me, "Where is Spelthorne?" A friend of mine said he did not realise it was a constituency; instead he thought someone called David Spelthorne was the MP for Wilshire. It is, however, a well-known constituency, and Spelthorne is a very old name, too. It comes from an old English word of which we have a remnant in the word "spelling". It means speaking, and the "thorne" part of the word "Spelthorne'" referred to a thorn tree on Ashford common where people used to gather and speak. That is where the name comes from, and it also appears in the Domesday Book as the southern hundred of the old county of Middlesex.


8 Jun 2010 : Column 279

Middlesex had a long and illustrious history, which my predecessor was very keen to stress-much to the annoyance of my Surrey colleagues. Middlesex did have an existence, however, and it had a reputation in this House, because in the old days it had proper elections. Charles James Fox was elected, and thousands of people were involved, whereas in nearby rotten boroughs there might be only half a dozen people. Famously, John Wilkes was elected in Middlesex, and was a distinguished Member of this House. He was described as the "ugliest man in England" but, like many politicians, he was not afraid of boasting and celebrating his own talents and he said that he had such charm that he could "talk away his face" in "half an hour". Hon. Members can imagine my surprise at the fact that we were given only seven minutes to speak in the House today.

In the limited time available to me, I wish to make some points about the subject of today's debate. Spelthorne is a seat in the south-east that relies almost exclusively on infrastructure and economic expansion, and in that context self-starting business men are very important. A gentleman from Shepperton, in my constituency, who has been in the breakage business for 30 years said to me, "Kwasi, it is very difficult. I am getting strangled by red tape and bureaucracy." A Government quango, whose name I shall not mention, had been bombarding him with forms that he had to fill in, so he had been spending all his time filling in forms and none of his time attending to the business. My thought was that it was precisely those small business people who will drive us out of recession and into recovery.

I have to say-even though this is a maiden speech, I will be controversial-that to hear Labour Members in many of these debates is to be in never-never land; they have not once accepted any blame for what happened and they seem to think that we can just sail on as before. In many of their eloquent speeches it appears that they have forgotten that wealth creation is the most important element in getting us out of this recession. I heard the right hon. Member for Oldham West and Royton (Mr Meacher), who I believe has been in the House for 40 years, say that he was going to tax those in The Sunday Times rich list. Of course, one of the results of their being rich is that they can leave the country in about half an hour, so if he were to go down that route, a lot of them would leave and he would not bring in any more money to the Exchequer.

One of the right hon. Gentleman's remarks reminded me of the story of the man who, when leaving a gentlemen's club-it might have been the Carlton Club-in 1970 gave the footman sixpence. The footman looked at him and said, "That is only sixpence", to which he replied, "Ah, it is sixpence to you, but it is a pound to me." That was because income tax was at 95 or 97%. We cannot go down the road that the right hon. Gentleman suggests, and the Conservatives have stressed again and again that the only way to get out of this difficulty is to try to let business grow.

I was surprised to hear the hon. Member for Edinburgh South (Ian Murray) refer to the Scottish enlightenment. He will recall that one of its most prominent figures was Adam Smith, rather than the previous Prime Minister, who did not take an enlightened Scottish approach. Adam Smith made it very clear in "The Wealth of Nations", a book that many hon. Members will know, how societies grow rich and how they can become very
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poor. I am sorry to say that the past 13 years have been an exercise that Adam Smith and the university of Edinburgh would probably have awarded a flat D grade for performance-perhaps he would have awarded a B grade for effort, who knows?

I am pleased at this juncture to refer to the compelling speech made by the hon. Member for Newcastle upon Tyne Central (Chi Onwurah), in which she mentioned George Stephenson. There was some controversy as to whether he came from Newcastle upon Tyne Central or from Chesterfield, but I shall not comment on that as that is a matter for Labour Members. What she did say was that he made a fortune through industry, enterprise and innovation, and those are exactly the kind of things that this coalition Government will look to promote in the months and years ahead.

To sum up, I should say that the truest words said in this debate were uttered by someone making a maiden speech, my hon. Friend the Member for Loughborough (Nicky Morgan), who said that the private sector is the "backbone of our economy". In my few weeks in the House, I have not heard any truer words uttered in it. That is something that we have to be absolutely focused on, in terms of getting out of the recession. I hate to say this, but I find it staggering that Labour Members have not had the good grace to come to the House to apologise and to show some recognition of the very real problems that we face and the solutions that we need to get out of this situation. I thank the House for giving me such a good and warm reception to my maiden speech.

Tuesday 8 June 2010

Stanwell the jewel of Spelthorne

Know the elections are over, I can now turn my full attention back to the residence of Stanwell North.
One of the main and important task i will be taking on is knocking on every door in Stanwell North, Speaking to and listening to the residence concerns, I am also trying to put in place a survey, covering anti social behavior and how people feel about there area.

With the World Cup just days away, It is my aim that despite the dire economic position we find our self's in, that the feel good factor will prevail in Stanwell North.

COME ON ENGLAND
GIVE US THE GOALS