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Bayswater Matters September 2016

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Thursday, 1 September, 2016
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Bayswater Matters
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Bayswater Matters

Bayswater Councillors support Westbourne Park Family Centre

Bayswater ward Councillors are continuing to support the work of the Westbourne Park Family Centre with funds from their ward budget.

The funding allows the centre to deliver youth club sessions for local young people, including a young leaders project to provide opportunities for young people to volunteer and develop themselves personally and socially. The centre also provides a homework club on the Brunel Estate to support children with their education.

Cllr Richard Holloway said: “We’re delighted to be able to continue our support for the Westbourne Park Family Centre. They do great work for young people locally and provide real opportunities for children and adults to make a real difference.”

Tackling overflowing recycling bins

Following lobbying by your ward councillors to the waste management team we have been successful in getting a review of the recycling bins and the overflow that commonly blights our public areas.

The result of the review is that from last week the council started increasing the recycling bin collections at the following sites:

  • Monmouth Place junction with Monmouth Road
  • Westbourne Gardens opposite no 40
  • Westbourne Gardens opposite no 37
  • Westbourne Gardens opposite Vere Court
  • Westbourne Terrace junction with Chilworth Street
  • Hereford Road junction with Leinster Square

Knowing when the bins are filled up is not an exact science, so please use the Report it Tool (see below) to let us know if the bins are overflowing.

Keeping Bayswater safe and clean

Stickers on lampposts

A large amount of stickers appeared on lampposts and traffic light columns recently. Our Local City Inspector John Moorhead contacted the director of the company and ensured that the stickers were all removed. A formal warning was sent to the company to prevent future occurrences.

Lamppost knocked over on Orsett Terrace

A lamppost was knocked over in Orsett Terrace on the junction of Westbourne Terrace, blocking the pathway. The highway contractors came out and repaired the lamppost quickly.

Overhanging trees on Westbourne Gove

Overhanging trees onto Westbourne Grove were obstructing the flow of traffic. After several attempts to contact the homeowners the decision was taken to prune back the tree by the council's arboriculture department.

Working across Westminster

Conservatives Act to Protect Residents from Unpopular Basement Extensions and other Works

Income raised from a new Westminster Council levy will pay for a dedicated enforcement team to protect residents during construction by monitoring noise, working hours and truck deliveries.
 
The first of its kind in the UK, the levy is being drawn as part of the council’s new Code of Construction Practice, which clearly sets out best practice for building sites such as basements. The code will also be rolled out over the coming months to cover larger developments in the city. 

Councillor Robert Davis MBE DL, Westminster City Council Deputy Leader and Cabinet Member for the Built Environment, said: “We are protecting local residents, many of whom have found the explosion of basement and other development in recent years difficult to live near during their extensive construction period.

 
“It is right that those who want to build basements should contribute to this new service, which will work to help mitigate the negative impacts. “We support the right kind of growth and are not against all basement development, but they must be carried out in a way that is considerate to local residents and the environment.”


New rules include planning controls limiting basements to a single storey and no more than 50% of total garden land.
The ‘subterranean squad’ will:

  • take a degree of oversight and control, for example making sites coordinate their deliveries and reduce the cumulative impact on residents
  • check that developers are keeping neighbours informed for instance via newsletters or site meetings
  • enforce stricter working hours so as to avoid noisy works at inconvenient times such as Saturday mornings
  • provide a point of contact for residents with complaints – with the power to enforce against overly noisy sites under statutory powers
  • monitor the level and impacts of traffic to sites
  • also police development sites of over 10 residential units, or over 1000m2 commercial floorspace 

The new powers will only apply to basements which gained planning permission from August 2016 onward, and other major development schemes from September.

Action on cleaner air as Westminster wins £1 million for Marylebone Low Emission Neighbourhood

Westminster has been awarded funds to create a Marylebone Low Emission Neighbourhood scheme to help improve air quality for residents.

The award comes from the Mayor of London’s Air Quality Fund and will be match-funded by the council and private sector partners to introduce new measures, including:

• A new building energy efficiency scheme

• Improving public realm spaces and creating greener spaces

• Introducing play streets for families to enjoy

• Vehicle delivery plans to reduce traffic

• Increasing patrols by ‘Air Marshals’ to enforce "no engine idling"

• Engine idling Action days when volunteers ask drivers to switch off engines when stationary 

• Piloting a dedicated and bookable electric vehicle charging point scheme

Marylebone suffers some of the highest pollution levels in London, given the area’s location, mix of land uses, building density and type, and number of vehicle trips. Its location between major transport routes results in a complex urban air quality problem with levels of nitrogen dioxide that exceed recommended health levels and very high levels of particulate matter. This is particularly concerning given the number of young families, schools, universities, businesses and medical facilities in Marylebone. 

Other areas in Westminster also suffer from high pollution and the Low Emission zone funding builds on the efforts launched in 2015 to enforce ‘no engine idling’ at hotspots across the city. 

Heather Acton, Cabinet Member for Sustainability and Parking said: “I am delighted that our proposal has been successful. It is a true community partnership. We now look forward to putting the proposals into action, creating a cleaner, greener Marylebone, and replicating the successful measures across Westminster".

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