by Paul Scully | Nov 3, 2008 | News |
Bournemouth Council is leading the way in removing certain words from the Local Authority lexicon. They have a lot of choice with council jargon ranging from ‘Living Documents’ to ‘Performance Management Frameworks’ and acronyms like KLOEs, ROEs and ALMOs. However they have ignored these to concentrate on other more pressing issues.
The Daily Mail report that the council whose motto is ‘Pulchritudo et Salubritas’ has listed 19 Latin terms that it deems unacceptable. These aren’t even terms that schoolboys would scan for first in their Latin dictionary, instead they are words and phrases in common usage like ‘ad hoc’, ‘bona fide’ and ‘status quo’.
They reason that there are a lot of residents who don’t have English as a first language who may be confused. The Plain English Campaign supported the move explaining that people might confuse eg. with egg!
There’s me thinking that Councils had quite a lot to do without such pointless diversions but what do I know? Latin has only been around for a few thousand years, providing the base for the vast majority of European languages, thus giving the majority of people throughout the known world some vague idea of what someone is talking about when saying et cetera. As we know Latin is not the only influence on the English language. I assume that the Council will call an emergency session to debate the turmoil that will be caused by residents washing their hair with shampoo (Indian) in their bungalow (Indian) before leaving their cul-de-sac (French) to go to the cafe (French) for a cup of tea (Chinese). What a fiasco (Italian)! If they only retain the Anglo-Saxon, maybe Jonathan Ross and Russell Brand might find a quick return to the public sector on the south coast.
by Paul Scully | Nov 1, 2008 | News |
I found one for the scrapbooks in today’s Daily Telegraph. This sign appeared in Swansea. The English is correct. Unfortunately the Welsh actually says “I’m not in the office at the moment. Please send any work to be translated.”
It illustrates the situation in Wales where an inordinate amount of money is spent on keeping Welsh alive in the south by people who can’t speak it. It also shows how easy it is to blow public money by not checking.
Anyway, the story made me laugh.
by Paul Scully | Oct 29, 2008 | News |
Last Monday saw another knockabout Council meeting. We discussed serious issues; the Icelandic bank deposits, SEN transport, how the Council communicates with local residents amongst others. However, there is no decision making and it was apparent that the LibDems are too busy looking forward to elections in 18 months time to address the issues head on. Instead we were treated to some political grandstanding that bore little relation to the matters at hand. I guess this is what happens when a small number of LibDem councillors keep the decision making in their own hands, barely bothering to throw any scraps to their backbench colleagues. Their view is that by spending a few thousand on no smoking signs in Beddington playgrounds, residents will forgive them for the half a million wasted on the green garden waste fiasco and the inflation busting increases in council tax that they rely on us not noticing buried deep in our bank statements each month.
The video covers the salient points. One of the questions asked that I didn’t cover was about the Heritage lamp posts in Cheam with a LibDem councillor blaming Boris Johnson personally for the threat to their future. This did not take into account Boris’ personal attention to the matter after Steve O’Connell, local Conservative GLA member asked him a question in Mayor’s Question Time on my request. A conversation with people in Boris’ office opened up a new dialogue with the Council which looks like resulting in a satisfactory outcome for Carshalton and Cheam who are both affected by the same problem. Meanwhile, the Sutton LibDem MP has had his photo taken waving a petition that is yet to surface beneath a Cheam lamp. As a resident who wants to see Sutton change for the better, I’ll take action over showboating and empty promises any day.
by Paul Scully | Oct 29, 2008 | News |
I was talking to a member of my family after the demise of Icesave, the UK trading arm of Icelandic bank Landsbanki. He is self employed and asked a pertinent question that hasn’t been raised until now.
We know that individual depositors have been guaranteed their money back which is good. European legislation states that bank compensation schemes should pay out within 3 months which is also good.
However what about self-employed people that have set money aside to pay their tax bill? What happens if they haven’t been refunded their money by then? Will HM Revenue and Customs come running after them?
The answer seems to be yes. Shailesh Vara MP, Shadow Deputy Leader of the House, asked this very question to the Chancellor. A junior minister replied that you may be able to arrange an extension but will be charged a ‘competitive’ interest rate.
It is important to note that Shailesh Vara has exposed another bit of disjointed thinking by the Government. Landsbanki is only in administration not liquidation. There is a subtle but vast difference between the two, not least because the compensation scheme doesn’t even start until the latter occurs. The latest statement on the Icesave website explains that the process will start on or around November 3rd. If the Government pull their finger out, we might not need to get to the position when we see the effects of this problem. However, I’m a sceptical old Hector by nature when it comes to Government wheels turning. The three months won’t be up until 3rd of February if the process even starts on time. We’ll see.
by Paul Scully | Oct 29, 2008 | Carshalton Central, News |
Sutton & Merton NHS Primary Care Trust have delivered a blow to residents living around Carshalton Park by scrapping plans to build a new Intermediary Care Hospital on the War Memorial site, instead seeking to flog the land off for £2.1m.
For years, residents and ward councillors were promised faithfully that the land would be used for healthcare and their fears that it would be redeveloped were unfounded. Unfortunately those promises were hollow.
I have promised to keep residents up to date. Unfortunately, I found out about the sale, not from the PCT but from a Beddington councillor who had been informed at another meeting. I had smelt a rat when I saw the site strangely absent from the latest proposals for changes to healthcare in Sutton and Merton, Better Healthcare Closer To Home.
The proposals as a whole will largely benefit residents in the ward with the new Shotfield clinic in Wallington and rebuilding of part of St Helier hospital but Sutton will largely lose out to residents in Merton after their local MP spent well over £70,000 of taxpayers’ money on postage campaigning for her constituency. The Labour Government have rewarded her with the majority of the new facilities being in the north of the area covered by the Trust in places that I have only just recently heard of through my role as councillor, despite living here for all of my adult life.
The NHS will have to gen up on local strategic planning before trying to push through a major development. The parcel of land sits between a Conservation area and an area marked as low-density housing on strategic planning maps.
As we come close to the 90th anniversary of the end of the First World War, it is disappointing to think that a healthcare site built through public subscription might be replaced by a memorial to the fallen by identikit modern housing. I’ll keep you posted as I hear more.