Feeds:
Posts
Comments

Archive for the ‘Politics’ Category

The flooding problem in the Tranby Lane area on Sunday 25th November 2012 appears to have been caused by a blocked culvert and an excess of land drainage, possibly made worse by the new school driveway and cemetery extension.

The flooding would have been greater had it not been for two Tranby lane residents who are members of Humberside Police.  They gave advice and support to residents and redirected traffic before services arrived to alleviate the flooding.  The ditches on both sides of the road are in riparian ownership.

A Flooding Action Plan has been produced by resident Mr. Slingsby which was copied to all Councillors for information. After discussion, it was agreed that the Clerk arrange a site meeting with the appropriate E.R.Y.C. Officers, representation from the Parish Council, a representative on behalf of the local residents and Cllr. Mrs. Elizabeth Robinson from Kirk Ella & West Ella Parish Council.

A screen to the culvert would prevent further problems.

Read Full Post »

New Anlaby libraryThe old prefabricated building housing the Anlaby Library in North Street will be transferred to the soon to be refurbished Haltemprice Leisure Centre. The £6M project will put it at the forefront of leisure facilities in the UK, which has received backing from Anlaby with Anlaby Common and Kirk Ella Parish Councils, the Environment Agency and Sport England. The project is scheduled for completion in 2014.

Prior to the prefab, Anlaby Library was housed in an old wooden building with sloping floors that became unsafe. Through an Anlaby led petition, Humberside County Council replaced the building in the early 1990’s with the prefab.

The land on which the library is situated was given in Deed of Gift to the County Council on the 9th July 1936 by Arthur Stanley Wilson.

Further information may be obtained from the Legal Dept. of E.R.Y.C.

Let us know what you think about what should happen to the site.

Read Full Post »

Wildlife threatenedby policy AWK2 and AWK3 in Beverley, Lowfield Road former army camp

Wildlife threatened by policy AWK2 and AWK3 in Beverley, Lowfield Road former army camp

In the early days of World War II there was a national scare and huts were erected on the west side of Lowfield Road, known locally as ‘camp’.

The huts have long since gone, the trees and undergrowth have gradually taken over, creating a habitat for wildlife such as deer, fox, squirrels, owls and woodpeckers (particularly the green woodpecker with its long sticky tongue).

This haven known to the council as AWK2 and AWK3 (see legend) is now under the threat of housing developers looking to build 193 and 109 dwellings respectively. If you include the homes planned for fields just opposite in sectors AWK4 and AWK5, that makes a total of at least 500 new cars to cope with in the village centre. You’d be forgiven for thinking that this is good news for shopkeepers. The problem is, without adequate parking, shoppers will be driven to other nearby commercial zones. There appears to be no plans for more public parking. The Lowfield Road/Beverley Road junction already causes traffic problems.

The local development plan makes reference to retaining protected trees, but many will be cut so what of the creatures sustained by existing undergrowth and woodland? The hospital and sheltered housing development, despite similar reassurances, spared mainly those trees bordering the road.

Housing Development Policy AWK2 & AWK3

Housing Development Policy AWK2 & AWK3

And a project of this nature isn’t going to reduce the risk of floods – that’s less open land to absorb abnormal bouts of precipitation.

Can you imagine a housing estate on this woodland site adding to traffic congestion?

If not, then you can object by email: forward.planning@eastriding.gov.uk

Or by post to:

Forward Planning,
Room FS32,
E.R.Y.C.
HU17 9BA

Telephone: 393780

Or sign the petition by clicking here.

Read more here, scroll to “Major Haltemprice Settlements” and here.

Read Full Post »

No ParkingBRILLIANT!! That’s all I can say regarding the kicking of car parking charges into the long grass.

I am so pleased that the East Riding of Yorkshire Council has made the right decision at last. Even though the authority said that the decision is due to the state of the economy – an economic inheritance from the last Labour Government lest we forget!

Let’s hope this decision sticks once the Nation’s economy recovers!

The threat of parking charges has been hanging like the sword of Damocles over Anlaby village for far too long. Shopkeepers have bravely carried on their business hoping for miracles – particularly as the large retail park on Springfield Way beckons and offers free parking.

As a former East Riding of Yorkshire councillor, I campaigned along with fellow councillors and shopkeepers for a long period. Thousands of people from the Haltemprice villages were involved in petitions. I am pleased and relieved their efforts bore fruit.

Thanks to the Chairman of the committee involved, who spared the time to visit the parking locations that could have had charges implemented.

Police horse battleNow, one other matter I am concerned about is the fate of the police horses after the mounted police unit is to be axed to save money. I do hope their future is secure. They deserve compensation for their brave application to crowd control – let’s hope they don’t end up on someone’s plate, as has been revealed with some imported “beef” burgers.

Cynical?

I’ll admit to that once the Chief Constable confirms that these horses will be put to a restful and well deserved retirement.

Read Full Post »

Paragon of Solitude

Hull Paragon train station really has become a paragon of solitude serving to disconnect – rather than connect – its customers with the rest of Great Britain and the world! Here we are stuck out on a limb, forgotten as far as train services are concerned.

The train service to and from Hull is a farce; I arrived at Brough station on one occasion to be informed over the Tannoy system “Hull train service to London today has been cancelled”. What use is a service if it cannot be relied upon? Many passengers spend weeks organizing meetings in the capital! Instead of spending £18m on a swish new station perhaps it would have been better to fix the network.

Since the likelihood of that happening is close to zero, an air link to the International Manchester Airport would be beneficial for those seeking to travel far and wide – especially for myself. I have a daughter living in Shannon, Eire and there is no way I can reach her without paying a fortune to fly to Schipol, Holland from Humberside Airport. Wouldn’t it make more sense to have a shuttle service from Humberside Airport to Manchester Airport?

So come on Department of Transport! Let’s have a trans-Pennine air-link to Manchester so that we can bypass the jokers that run the train service in Hull and connect us with the rest of humanity.

Please!

Read Full Post »

The badger – an icon of the English countryside set to disappear?

Sir David Attenborough, Simon King OBE and Brian May CBE of rock group Queen are resisting the move by government mandarins to cull 70% of badgers from the English countryside. Attenborough’s and King’s outcry combined with May’s petition is a welcome boost to the Badger Trust’s efforts to save this iconic creature from mass slaughter.

Many leading scientists have stated that a cull this autumn will not work and may even increase the spread of bTB (bovine tuberculosis). The majority of scientists agree that the vaccination of badgers and cattle is a far better and more cost-effective option.

It’s science not sentiment that’s driving our opposition to the Government’s policy to cull badgers in Gloucestershire and Somerset this autumn.

Sir David Attenborough and Simon King OBE

Licenses were granted last week for pilot culls in Gloucestershire and Somerset. According to one of the government’s advisers, there is no real way of knowing how many badgers there are in any given area and therefore no way of measuring whether the 70% target has been achieved or not. They may end up killing them all!

The question is this: who would you rather believe? Attenborough – a man whose proven track record is to preserve nature (including cattle) or the mandarins of power that for reasons of public opinion “need to be seen to be doing something”.

Brian May defiant against government plans to cull the badger

Plans to cull badgers in Wales were recently abandoned in favour of vaccination and there are no plans to cull in Scotland. So why does it make so much sense in England?

If you are against this cull, sign Brian May’s petition posted on HM Government’s e-petition site.

UPDATE: According to the BBC, Natural England has issued a second licence allowing farmers to shoot badgers.

Read Full Post »

Anlaby (Unlouebi) Domesday entry 1086 A.D.

Registered in the Domesday Book as a “habitation of the Manor of North Ferriby” and serving as a Royalist base during the first major action of the English Civil War during the 1642 siege of Kingston-upon-Hull, Anlaby (Unlouebi) and the other settlements of Haltemprice have enjoyed their Greenbelt for over a thousand years and are not about to let it go without a battle.

Because that seems to be the direction in which Hull City Council and East Riding Council are headed if recent declarations by the former are not rescinded. Is a Greater Kingston-upon-Hull under construction?

For those old enough to remember, the successful “HANDS OFF HALTEMPRICE” campaign of the sixties and seventies may be on the point of re-emerging.

The first signs of Hull City Council’s retreat from a previous agreement with East Riding Council protecting the Greenbelt, appeared in the Hull Mail’s September 8th edition:

Hull City Council are not objecting to the principle of building on previously protected open areas between the city boundary and Haltemprice settlements.

Cllr. Stephen Parnaby O.B.E.

East Riding Council leader Stephen Parnaby intends to resist:

I am extremely disappointed that at the 11th hour, Hull has deleted references to the strategic gaps between Hull and the Haltemprice villages in the joint

statement. Gaps in these areas have been identified in successive local plans for more than 40 years. Hull City Council should not think we will stand by and let this happen. I will fight tooth and nail against inappropriate development which would also increase flood risk. I urge residents to let their views be known to the City Council.

For those that care about Anlaby, Councillor Parnaby’s call to action should not go unheeded. As the battle lines are drawn, it is time to group, reflect, consider our strategy and start learning the song Keep Your Hands Off Haltemprice!

Read Full Post »

Springfield Way retail park welcomes shoppers with ample free parking

Anlaby is a busy and thriving community; there is an excellent variety of shops: the new delicatessen, the butcher, the baker, the green grocer, the convenience store, the optician and so on.  Business in the village is brisk – dare I say booming, particularly on Saturdays. The church site cleanup is over, the clouds have dispersed and the horizon looks bright.

Not so fast. Rumours of car park charges are stirring a storm that is blowing optimism from the high street into rocky waters.

The charges probably won’t be much to begin with, but you know how it is. They’ll start low – so that no one feels their effect to begin with – and stealthily creep upwards to create a hansom income for the local council. At least that’s the theory.

In practice, shoppers have an alternative and wallets do the voting. The Springfield Way Retail Park will surely greet such news with open arms and beckon shoppers to their abundant free parking.

Charging for parking in Anlaby is a false economy to the high street and we should resist such a measure.

Read Full Post »

Ed Milliband is imploring the Public and Commercial Services Union (PCS) not to strike this coming Thursday, as hundreds of thousands of Olympic enthusiasts wing their way to this “green and pleasant land”. It is forecast to be Heathrow Airport’s busiest day in history.

UK Border Staff promise chaos this Thursday for Olympic tourists

Whether their grief over pay and staffing is justified or not, unions should not be allowed to hold the nation to ransom at a time when it needs to showcase its prowess to overseas investors and tourists.

The world’s media is watching gleefully, waiting with open arms for the images of innocent tourists suffering in endless queues. The French unions will heave a deep sigh of relief as they hand back the “British disease” baton in a relay race with the government that promises to be long and acrimonious.

As the European financial crisis deepens, unions are busily removing the “welcome” banners in favour of ones reading “stay away”; a superb opportunity for the international dailies to raise local morale by portraying us as a nation slipping back into the ways of the past.

This return to the cynicism of the 70s is worrying for the future of the country in a deepening world financial crisis. Do they see in Ed the opportunity to profit from his strong union links? Whatever their motivation, such cynical strike action should be outlawed in favor of “minimum service” legislation.

Let’s hope our Olympic guests have a sense of humour and sufficient battery charge in their tablets and smartphones to outwit the unions keen on creating this “summer of discontent”.

Update: Faced with untold damage to its image and economy, the government has ceded to PCS demands by promising up to 800 new jobs for border control staff. You have to wonder how it will pay for it given their earlier announcement to layoff 8,500 Home Office staff.

Read Full Post »

Macbeth and Hamlet – stars of a new tragedy in the making?

Could their common journeys, both starting with a supernatural event and ending in blood, death and tears be an omen for the proposed redrawing of the United Kingdom’s traditional boundaries? Are we really about to roll back centuries of history to a time when the Vikings ruled the Highlands, but this time  under the guise of a new Scottish and Scandinavian economic community?

If the Scottish National Party (SNP) strategists get their way, we could be.

The birth of a new economic community?

They plan to shift Scotland’s focus away from England towards the Nordic countries in the event of a successful referendum on independence. It’s a plan that will surely please the Scottish nationalists of the east, but likely dismay the Union faithful. Is there a risk of rift within Scotland itself? Let’s hope this is a tragedy that only Shakespeare could devise.

To me, these SNP plans make no sense – even though Scandinavians and Scots share a dark sense of humour, long dark nights and the proximity of Scotland’s Presbyterian heritage and Scandinavia’s Lutheran tradition. Not forgetting of course that it was the Viking invasion that provoked the formation of the independent kingdoms of England and Scotland in the first place through conquest, extortion and expulsion!

Not all Scot’s feel there is a bond with the Norsemen towards the east. Western Scot’s feel deeper ties with their Gaelic heritage stemming from Ireland.

Something tells me there is a subplot to all of this.

But do the Scandinavians really need Scotland?

The Scandinavians are wealthy, have resources and govern superbly. Life expectancy is above average.

Sweden has a population of over 9 million with an economy largely driven by exporting goods such as petroleum, iron, steel and paper.

Norway looks very similar, with its population of 4.9 million, enjoying one of the highest standards of living and lowest unemployment rates in the world. Today it is amongst the world’s largest exporters of fuel products, which explains why it remains largely unscathed by the recent financial crisis. What to do with their wealth is one of the country’s most contentious political issues. Some want more of it to be used to fund infrastructure and others to invest for future generations… a nice problem to have.

To an outsider like me, Scandinavia does not need Scotland and its population of 5 million. Yes, its oil, whiskey, textile, agriculture, hydropower and water exports appear enticing at first glance, but its high unemployment and pensioner demographic seem more troublesome. Norway is only Scotland’s 6th largest exporting partner, whereas the UK is Norway’s largest exporting partner. There is a lot at stake if the apple cart tips over.

Or could it be that freeing themselves from the Parliamentary shackles of British law lords would let the SNP do ‘other business’ such as the deal with PetroChina at Grangemouth? Who knows where it would all lead.

Will Scotland say ‘No’ to England?

I believe most Scots are canny, strong-minded and believe in the cultural diversity that bonds these island nations together. They view it as a source of strength rather than weakness.

And just imagine the Union Flag without St. Andrew? What a shame that would be…

Read Full Post »

« Newer Posts - Older Posts »