Archive for James Hockney

Moving on after an amazing 15 years as councillor

After an amazing 15 years as a councillor, due to moving to London with my family, coupled with already working and studying in London I cannot re-stand in May 2016 for District Councillor in Waterbeach Ward. I will continue to give committed representation to the Ward over the next four months and support the search for a new Conservative candidate.

As I said this has been a very difficult decision as being a Councillor has been part of my life for over 15 years. In this time working with the community we have made a significant difference on many local issues – and we can look back on some real achievements. I am grateful to everyone I have worked with –councillors, MP’s, MEP’s, council officers, residents and activists. This has always been about team work and securing the best outcomes for the local community.

My intention is to remain active in Conservative politics including campaigning in the London Mayoral and Cambridgeshire elections, continuing as a Conservative Friends of Bangladesh Board Member and running the ‘Charter for Bullied School Children’.

I will always be grateful for the support I have had to allow me to be elected to three terms of office – thank you.

Action on drainage issues

fieldsDelighted to report real progress has been made in the matter of residents having sewage backing up onto their properties in Bannold Road, Waterbeach.

Today I chaired a multi-agency meeting including Anglian Water, County Council, South Cambridgeshire District Council and Morris Homes.

Several key actions have taken place;

(1) The whole system has been surveyed

(2) Significant blockages were found reducing pipe capacity by 50% in some parts. These blockages have now been cleared.

(3) The blockages were caused by grease, oil, fat, food waste, nappies, sanitary items being put into the system. Anglian Water will be running a campaign called ‘keep it clear’ to help reduce instances of such waste entering the system.

(4) The pumping levels at the pumping station were not set at the right level and this is being changed.

The combination of measures being taken above should resolve the situation. But we will keep having multi-agency meetings to keep a close eye on the issue.

Happy Christmas from the Hockney household

Urmi, Olivia and I would like to wish everyone including our friends and family near and far a20151224_172927 - Edited very Happy Christmas.

It has been a very busy, but enjoyable year including celebrating Olivia’s first birthday and graduating from University with a Law Degree.

Hoping that you all have a wonderful Christmas as we remember the true meaning of Christmas and give thanks for what we have and think of those less fortunate.

Happy Christmas!

Boosting the local housing supply

indexOne area of housing that is frequently overlooked and that could help significantly with the urgent and pressing housing crisis – is local connection housing.

What is local connection housing you may ask? Typically it is development on what is known as an ‘Exception Site’ and provides an opportunity for landowners and developers of affordable housing to build houses in areas where planning permission for such development would not usually be considered. Those with a local connection are placed at the front of the queue.

Such developments usually consist of about 10 to 25 dwellings and which is determined by local need. Local planning authorities are increasingly relaxing their policies in respect of exception site development. This is being influenced by guidance contained within the National Planning Policy Framework (NPPF), which the Government issued recently.

Local connection is all about your links to an area. Typically to be able to apply for local connection housing you must meet one of the following criteria;

(1) You live in the area.

(2) You have close family in the area.

(3) You work in the area.

But can also including having a connection with the area for another special reason.

The last government put protections in place through secondary legislation to ensure that members of the Armed Forces were not disqualified from social housing through a local connection or a residency test.

Many people trapped with no realistic hope of having a local home. Trapped because they cannot afford to buy or rent and at the same time do not have a sufficient priority on the council housing waiting list. All too many people fall through this gap in provision and why I believe local connection housing is so important.

img_1548In my own District Ward of Waterbeach we have seen two local connection housing schemes come forward in recent years. One through a Housing Association. The other was significant as it came about due to South Cambridgeshire District Council setting up a limited company called Ermine Street Housing.

I say this is significant as it now means councils can be an additional provider of local connection homes. This of course means that local connection housing can be provided without always the need for an ‘exception site’ be required.

I saw for myself the dream come true for many in my community and we must make sure local government takes advantage of these opportunities wherever possible.

Supporting Small Business Saturday

downloadToday is Small Business Saturday. The idea of Small Business Saturday was first conceived
in the United States of America by American Express three years ago. So the idea has crossed the pond and not a moment too soon.

Waterbeach-9Why is it so important? With the growing competition from supermarkets, high street chains and online; times have never been tougher for independent business. Pictured left: Opening Waterbeach Post Office.

An interesting fact is that shopping locally keeps more of your spend in the local economy. Research shows that for every £100 spent in a local business, £68 is likely to stay in the community, as opposed to just £43 when spent in a chain.Lucy Shop Local 1

In my community of Waterbeach this message is so important. Since the barracks closed we have worked hard to put the local economy back on the right track. Personally I have always been committed to doing everything I can to help. Including the ‘Shop Local’ scheme.  Pictured right: with Lucy Frazer MP and Janice from JB’s Hair Salon.
In addition to chairing the ‘Shop Local’ business summit at South Cambridgeshire District Council (as pictured) The external business organisations commented on how unique it was to see such asummit sustained ‘Shop Local’ campaign in a community. From the summit the District Council made Waterbeach a pilot for their rural economic strategy.

Small business and shops are a vital part of a community – so don’t forget – support your independents today!

Formal opening of Waterbeach Post Office at Village Stores

I was delighted to formally open Waterbeach Post Office at the Village Stores at theWaterbeach-9
weekend. The new owners of the Village Stores has rejuvenated the shop and the addition of the Post Office will only surely help.

The Post Office move was prompted by the national modernisation programme that is taking place across the country. One of the fundamental aims is to ensure that smaller Post Offices survive by merging with an existing shop. The Village Stores coming forward to run the Post Office was very welcome as it was becoming clear that the Post Office on its own would notWaterbeach-6 be viable.

The Post Office network have over 11,500 branches across the UK. During this and the last Parliament nearly £2billion was committed to make sure there is no programme of Post Office closures and to update branches;

The transformation is to also ensure modern, easily accessible Post Office branches with longer opening hours.

The very best of luck to the new home of the Waterbeach Post Office.

 

Anti Bullying Week 2015

This week is Anti Bullying Week 2015.

The need for action has never been more urgent. When you consider that the ‘Good Childhood Report’ by The Children’s Society reported that children in England experienced the highest levels of emotional bullying out of the 15 countries surveyed. With those that had been bullied four or more times in the last three months were six times more likely to have low self esteem than those that had not. The myth that ‘bullying makes you stronger’ is just that.

Increasingly anti-bullying organisations are combining their efforts to ensure the bestAPPG framework is in place in schools. This includes the All Party Parliamentary Inquiry into school bullying, which successfully ensured amendments in the Children and Family Bill to give greater recognition to bullying in schools. Debates have also taken place in both houses. Pictured right with Dame Esther Rantzen DBE.

The effects of bullying leave deep emotional scars often into adulthood. King’s College Institute of Psychiatry commissioned a substantial study of over 7,700 people, who were born in 1958, who were bullied at 7 or 11 years old. The study then followed up with the participants until they were 50 years old.

The study found that the impact of bullying is still visible up to mid-life, four decades after people were bullied. Symptoms included depression, anxiety and a greater likelihood to have suicidal thoughts than those who had not been bullied.

In this country there is a serious injustice that is taken place now, in 2015. Currently a child excluded for aggressive and persistent bullying may be transferred to alternative provision such as a pupil referral unit at a cost of between £16 and 23K per year.

However, if a child subjected to bullying behaviour – the victim – becomes school phobic there is little or no alternative provision available or offered. They leave school and receive little or no support becoming more and more depressed with a bleak academic future. How can this be right?

For a moment just imagine 750 secondary school classrooms empty week in, week out, all year round. Could you imagine the outcry, the headlines? Let me explain; there are over 16,000 between the ages of 11 and 15 missing education in England because of severe bullying (NatCen Report 2011).

This varies from name calling to  physical attacks to cyber bullying and many more besides. And the figure of 16,000 is likely to be an underestimate, as many local authorities do not record the reason for a parent withdrawing their child from school.

So 16,000 children translates into 750 classrooms. Can you imagine the lost potential? But because the numbers are spread across all schools no one notices.

You may ask how can it be possible for so many children to leave education? Usually this happens as a last resort. When the situation deteriorates (with the child no longer attending school due to becoming school phobic, and parents who may be threatened with being taken to court for allowing their child to truant) the worn down parents agree for their child to be managed off the school role and outside the formal education framework.

 

The approach required must be twofold. First, to put in place the measures needed to actively reduce bullying in schools. When the ‘Good Childhood report’ estimates that half of children experience some form of bullying and over a third on the receiving end of physical bullying in the last month, we owe it to the next generation to do something.

Second is to ensure that in the worst case scenario where a child self excludes that there is a safety net for children who can no longer attend mainstream education, with the aim of returning them to mainstream education once fully recovered.

APPG5Wishful thinking? The charity Red Balloon Learner Centre Group have a record of 95 per cent of severely bullied children who stay with them longer than six weeks returning to mainstream education and leading productive lives. Indeed this year RB-Norwich was deemed ‘Outstanding’ by Ofsted. Pictured with Dr Carrie Herbert MBE, President of the charity.

The parallel that I would draw is MRSA. Hospitals have made real strides in reducing infection rates, but in the worst case scenario ensure that the patient receives the treatment required.

Why cannot the same principle be applied to bullied children?

 

 

Going before the decision makers at Shire Hall – ‘Action for School Road Safety’ campaign

20151103_173627Going before the decision makers at Shire Hall – ‘Action for School Road Safety’ campaign

Delighted to go before the Highways committee today at Cambridgeshire County Council. This was as a result of handing in the ‘Action for School Road Safety’ petition with over 1,300 signatures.

The campaign has received an incredible amount of community support, indeed in the 15 years I have been running community petitions, this was second only to the ‘No New Town’ petition campaign.

The four aims of the campaign are:lollipop3

(1) Recruit a Primary School crossing person and put in place an actual crossing. (2) Add the Primary School to a Safer Routes to School scheme. (3) Return the Secondary School bus route (Landbeach to Cottenham) to the priority gritting route list.  (4) Ensure parents concerns about the quality/standard of County Secondary School buses are addressed.Icy road Landbeach Cottenham

Already the Secondary School bus route has been returned to the priority gritting route and new buses and coaches replacing the old ones. This has also meant more transport with seat belts. I took these County Council issues on in addition to my District related workload because I appreciate the need for action.

We have ensured that the need for a crossing person is advertised with the County Council willing to provide this on a job-share basis. I have, with others, pressed the need for a crossing at the Parish Highways Committee and this is being considered in a forward plan of projects.

Thank you to everyone that has supported the campaign – together we have already had a number of key successes and must keep this going.

Time to tackle school bullying

Charter logoThe Good Childhood Report by The Children’s Society made for stark reading.

It found that children in England experienced the highest levels of emotional bullying out of the 15 countries surveyed. Half the children reported being left out by their classmates and 38 per cent said they had been hit by other children in the last month. Bullied children were more likely to have low self esteem than other children.

Those that had been bullied four or more times in the last three months were six times more likely to have low self esteem than those that had not. The myth that ‘bullying makes you stronger’ is just that.

Increasingly anti-bullying organisations are combining their efforts to ensure the bestAPPG framework is in place in schools. This includes the All Party Parliamentary Inquiry into school bullying, which successfully ensured amendments in the Children and Family Bill to give greater recognition to bullying in schools. Debates have also taken place in both houses. Pictured right with Dame Esther Rantzen DBE.

But there is a long way to go to secure the change that is required, and the scale of the problem demonstrated in the Good Childhood report.

The effects of bullying leave deep emotional scars often into adulthood. King’s College Institute of Psychiatry commissioned a substantial study of over 7,700 people, who were born in 1958, who were bullied at 7 or 11 years old. The study then followed up with the participants until they were 50 years old.

The study found that the impact of bullying is still visible up to mid-life, four decades after people were bullied. Symptoms included depression, anxiety and a greater likelihood to have suicidal thoughts than those who had not been bullied.

The study also found a direct link between childhood bullying and poor outcomes in mid-life with health, social and economic consequences. This included lower educational levels, more likely to be unemployed, lower earnings. Those bullied were less likely to be in a relationship or to have good social network.

In this country there is a serious injustice that is taken place now, in 2015. Currently a child excluded for aggressive and persistent bullying may be transferred to alternative provision such as a pupil referral unit at a cost of between £16 and 23K per year.

However, if a child subjected to bullying behaviour – the victim – becomes school phobic there is little or no alternative provision available or offered. They leave school and receive little or no support becoming more and more depressed with a bleak academic future. How can this be right?

For a moment just imagine 750 secondary school classrooms empty week in, week out, all year round. Could you imagine the outcry, the headlines? Let me explain; there are over 16,000 between the ages of 11 and 15 missing education in England because of severe bullying (NatCen Report 2011).

This varies from name calling to  physical attacks to cyber bullying and many more besides. And the figure of 16,000 is likely to be an underestimate, as many local authorities do not record the reason for a parent withdrawing their child from school.

So 16,000 children translates into 750 classrooms. Can you imagine the lost potential? But because the numbers are spread across all schools no one notices.

These silent victims need people to stand up for them. Many organisations and people are; and I am adding my name to the call for action.

To be clear, as the Kings College study demonstrates that this is not a new situation. I have spoken to people across the spectrum of ages and backgrounds. Everyone I speak to knows someone who was bullied or was themselves.

Indeed the charity Red Balloon, which provides alternative educational provision for children that are school phobic due to bullying, has been operating for nearly 20 years.

You may ask how can it be possible for so many children to leave education?

Well it usually happens as a last resort. When the situation deteriorates (with the child no longer attending school due to becoming school phobic, and parents who may be threatened with being taken to court for allowing their child to truant) the worn down parents agree for their child to be managed off the school role and outside the formal education framework.

Schools can meet the educational inspection criteria for the support of self-excluding students who have been bullied by having work sent home, having a teacher assistant available or by enabling the student to access the curriculum online.

In some cases such measures work satisfactorily, but is satisfactory as a best outcome good enough?

The approach required must be twofold. First, to put in place the measures needed to actively reduce bullying in schools. When the Good Childhood report estimates that half of children experience some form of bullying and over a third on the receiving end of physical bullying in the last month, we owe it to the next generation to do something.

Second is to ensure that in the worst case scenario where a child self excludes that there is a safety net for children who can no longer attend mainstream education, with the aim of returning them to mainstream education once fully recovered.

APPG5Wishful thinking? The charity Red Balloon Learner Centre Group have a record of 95 per cent of severely bullied children who stay with them longer than six weeks returning to mainstream education and leading productive lives. Indeed this year RB-Norwich was deemed ‘Outstanding’ by Ofsted. Pictured with Dr Carrie Herbert MBE, President of the charity.

The parallel that I would draw is MRSA. Hospitals have made real strides in reducing infection rates, but in the worst case scenario ensure that the patient receives the treatment required. Why cannot the same principle be applied to bullied children?

The six-point approach that is needed;

  • Training for school staff and whole school programmes to tackle bullying.
  • Special educational needs status should be granted to severely bullied children too traumatised to attend school.
  • The educational needs of self-excluding bullied children must be met.
  • Alternative provision must be monitored.
  • Each LA and school must make it clear to parents/carers how the education of children self-excluding from school due to bullying is to be funded.
  • The DfE needs to state its policy on distance learning.

A more detailed exposition of the above six aims is detailed in my previous article.

In developing this article I am grateful to a number of organisations and people in the sector – especially to Red Balloon Learner Centre Group.

With anti-bullying week approaching next month the need for action is now.

Cheque presentation to three charities

Bollywoodchq Delighted that the charity event I organised at the family restaurant Bollywood Spice raised £2,250.

The ‘5th Anniversary Charity Gala Dinner’ monies raised meant £750 for each of the three charities;

Waterbeach Toddler Playgroup, Arthur Rank Hospice Charity and Addenbrookes Charitable Trust in aid of the Neonatal Intensive Care Baby Unit (SCBU/NICU).Bollywood Total Final

Pictured above L-R Aisha Hunt (Arthur Rank Hospice Charity, Community Fundraiser), Rosie Rabbit, Heeron Begh (Restaurant Manager/Director), Myself (Event Organiser), Wayne Badcock (Waterbeach Toddler Playgroup, Playgroup Leader), Arthur Bear and Nicky Newton (ACT Addenbrookes,  Community Fundraising Manager).

A massive thank you to everyone who bought tickets, bought raffle tickets, bid on auction items, donated auction items, donated raffle items and those that could not attend making a donation.

When we started to arrange the event, we put out a community call for suggestions of charities to support. An incredible response was received with over 30 charities suggested and we supported the top three. At all the previous charity events we raised £500-£1,300 – so this latest total was a new record!

This is a fantastic example of how generous the Waterbeach community is as always.