A Blog For Peninsula

23/05/2009

I strongly recommend Charlie's Greenwich, a blog written by Charlie Easton about his life in Greenwich and, in particular, his ward of Peninsula.

Along with Malcolm Reid and Toks Bailey, Charlie forms the Conservatives' Peninsula Action Team.

I am indeed glad that we have Charlie, Malcolm & Toks campaigning for Peninsula, as they are an extremely dedicated, hard-working team.

I hope I will be excused the iota of selfishness in my gladness; that is because Peninsula overlaps part of the SE7 post code. Therefore, Charlie & Co. will be responsible for the Charlton which lies south of the rail line and west of Anchor & Hope Lane. The place at which Charlton shifts in nature from the residential to the industrial.

Vandalism (& Litter) Update

19/05/2009

Further to my last post about removing graffiti from Lansdowne Lane, I am pleased to report that litter has also been cleared from the street.

In response to our actions, a local blogger, 853blog, suggested that:

[I]sn’t that a tick in the box for the Labour-controlled authority, which cleaned the stuff off, and not the Conservative “action team”?

Maybe I should have clarified in my earlier post that we were responding on behalf of residents who feel that their streets are accumulating rubbish and being vandalised precisely because the Labour-controlled authority have not kept them under control.

We are listening to residents and acting on their behalf when they report that they have been unsuccessful in achieving a response from our Labour-controlled authority.

853 goes onto say:

Indeed, if the “action team” wanted to do some good, they’d give out Cleansweep’s number and maybe tell us about the service they got.

Cleansweep's contact details are:


Tel: 020 8921 4661
Textphone: 020 8921 4650
Email: cleansweep@greenwich.gov.uk
Write: Cleansweep
Crown Buildings
48 Woolwich New Road
London SE18 6HQ

This information can also be found on the
council's website, here: http://www.greenwich.gov.uk/Greenwich/YourEnvironment/StreetsBuildings/Cleansweep/

Charlton Action Team Get Graffiti Removed

18/05/2009

In my previous article about graffiti in Charlton I wrote about some incidences of vandalism in Lansdowne Road. Since writing, the Charlton Action Team, who alerted Cleansweep to the problem, managed to have the following piece of graffiti removed:


before




after

Graffiti in Charlton

17/05/2009

A fallacious justification of modern (or is it post-modern? Post-post-modern? Alter-modern?) art, perhaps as an attempt to excuse a history of pretentious extravagances that came after the Impressionists, is that "anything can be art".

As such, you could violently yoke together Caravaggio and Tracey Emin as artists without anyone raising objection to this act of violence.

Which makes me fearful of making an criticism of street-level graffiti in case someone chimes in with the admonition of "Banksy!"

Yet I hope I am on safe ground when I say I find nothing redeemable about the graffiti on the walls around Charlton.

Tagging - that is, spray-painting a pseudonym in sharply angular fonts - an export from the US, became popular here in the 1980s. (The underpass that links Bramshot Avenue to Invicta Road has long been a site for graffitists).

I expected that tagging would fade in popularity eventually, but it has been stubborn in its longevity.

So what can be done about it? As a short-term solution Cleansweep have a facility for removing graffiti from public property (and I know that devoted residential committees get together to remove graffiti from walls) but there is a Sisyphean element to removing graffiti - rolling a boulder up a hill over-and-over for the rest of eternity.

In the long-term we need to find exhaustive and definitive ways of making the act of graffitying uneconomical or too troublesome for the offender.

The photograph in the top-right corner is of a wall in Lansdowne Lane which leads to the Fairfield Clinic. The Conservative Parliamentary Spokesman Spencer Drury and Louis, Richard & myself have asked Cleansweep to deal with the graffiti in Lansdowne Lane.

Why I Became Active In Charlton

13/05/2009

Last winter I went shopping down by the Industrial Estate (sometimes known as New Charlton, other times the Cable Industrial Estate) and, walking along its Woolwich Road perimeter, I was appalled and fascinated by - what you may forgive me for construing as - entirely new genuses of trees and bushes which blossomed with plastic carrier bags.

A tree of plastic bags. A tree of plastic bags scrooping and whipping about in the winter winds beneath grey skies and before grey industries as if conspiratorial in their greyness - where the weather and the architecture marry as fittingly as that of the Stalinesque Soviet.

It was both the pathos and bathos of this small attempt to beautify this area that got to me: How could the trees and bushes along Woolwich Road by the Industrial Estate be left in garlands of plastic, like Hula girls whose leis are substituted for rags, and no one seem to care?

And neither was it only plastic bags, but cans of carbonated drink nestled between naked twigs, cigarettes and cigarette boxes - all the excesses and privileges of our lifestyles.

I thought about those plastic bags flapping about in the branches. I recalled a statistic about plastic taking to biodegrade. I wondered if anyone would do anything to clean up this rubbish, or would it be four-thousand years after the birth of Christ before these plastic carriers rot away into the soils and drift into the aether?

It occurred to me that I could take photographs of the rubbish and ask of the council that something be done about it.

A nano-second after this thought, I reminded myself the maxim If you want something doing, do it yourself.

And so I endeavoured to find out how I could involve myself in local politics and make a tangible contribution to local quality of life.

I had always been a Conservative, so I was excited when I was chosen by the Greenwich Conservatives to be a member of the Conservative Action Team for Charlton.

As a local resident, and as an active Conservative, I would like to see - and will work towards - a cleaner environment in Charlton*, so as to improve life-quality for all its residents. The memory of last winter's plastic-bag trees spurs me on.


*NB. To avoid accusations of geographical inaccuracy: The part of Charlton I refer to is in Woolwich Riverside ward, not Charlton ward. The point is no less relevant as we have serious litter problems in many parts of Charlton.

About Charlton

Charlton is a town and political ward within the London Borough of Greenwich, South East London.

The etymology of the word "Charlton" is coerl and tun, which can be rendered into modern parlance as "homestead of free peasants" (according to Wikipedia).

Charlton has two parks (Maryon Wilson and the eponymous Charlton Park), the home of Charlton Athletic Football Club known as The Valley, and a splendid Jacobean House.

The town and political ward are not interchangeable as the town encompasses all roads with the se7 postcode and the political ward seeps into parts of Blackheath.

Conversely, there are parts of Charlton town which are seceded to Peninsula, Woolwich Riverside, Woolwich Common and Hornfair.

Your Charlton Action Team are active in the political ward of Charlton - This is the land encompassed within the boundaries of the Charlton rail line to the North, Thorntree Road to the East, the A102 to the West, and parts of Canberra Road to the South.

About Your Action Team

12/05/2009


Your Conservative Action Team for Charlton is (l-r: Richard Shackleton, James Garry, Louis McLean-Wait).

About James

James was born in Charlton in 1979, where he has lived ever since.

He earned a first class psychology degree from the University of London and has worked in an eating disorders clinic. He currently works in Goldsmiths College library.

James is an active member of Greenwich Conservatives and forms one-third of the Conservatives' Charlton Action team along with Richard Shackleton and Louis McLean-Wait.


To contact James, please write to jamesincharlton@googlemail.com

Contact James

I invite & welcome Charlton residents to write to me about any local matters or concerns. To contact me, please write to:

jamesincharlton[at]googlemail[dot]com

I look forward to hearing from you.