The Borough of Hammersmith & Fulham is, compared to many areas of London, a pleasant place to live and work. But it could be so much better.
Labour and Conservative Governments have progressively centralised local decision-making, taking power away from local residents. Meanwhile, in Hammersmith and Fulham, successive single-party administrations supported by our rotten voting system have abused their privileged position to pursue narrow single-party goals regardless of the wishes or long-term interests of residents or the environment.
Labour under Gordon Brown are facing disaster in the coming national and local elections. They have no hope of winning control of the Council, and have already given up in most of the Borough. With the Conservatives poised to turn the Council Chamber into little more than a rubber stamp, there is more need than ever to vote Liberal Democrat.
Labour increased Council Tax rates to unsustainable and unfair levels. But Liberal Democrats believe that the Conservatives have now gone to the other extreme in their efforts to reduce Council Tax rates. Vital services are being cut or charges imposed on services needed by the most vulnerable in our Borough. Until the Council Tax is replaced with a more equitable system, we believe Council Tax rates should be frozen to protect the services that residents want from their local council.
Liberal Democrats are different. We are passionate about local democracy. Our candidates believe that the Council and its officials should serve the whole community not a single party. We will listen and work hard for local residents. We will be fearless in scrutinising the Council and holding it to account on behalf of residents.
We believe that the Council must become more open, transparent and accountable so that everyone who lives or works in the Borough can see why things happen and get more involved in local decision-making. Many changes are needed. To make it so, Liberal Democrat Councillors will follow the priorities outlined in this manifesto.
We are ambitious for the Borough and we ask you to read and reflect on what we stand for. If you like what you see, vote for the Liberal Democrats on 6 May 2010 to help us bring local democracy back to Hammersmith and Fulham.
Introduction
Liberal Democrats believe that improving the environment in which we live, and positive action on green issues, are top priorities for any well-run Council.
We want to see our streets cleaned properly and frequently. We want to see the rubbish collected on time and more items recycled in the Borough. We want to see our air less polluted.
Successive Councils have neglected proper and regular street cleaning in Hammersmith & Fulham, and have not adequately promoted recycling. Liberal Democrat-run Councils in London, such as Richmond and Sutton, have good track records in these areas.
A greener council
Liberal Democrat councillors once elected will focus first on the Council itself. We will seek to reduce the amount of paper that the Council generates and get the Council recycling more in order to set a positive example to other organisations in the Borough.
We would implement a full and regular Environmental Audit of all the Council's activities. This would enable residents to monitor our progress on green issues. An environment management system with independent auditors visiting the Council on a regular basis would ensure that the Council itself upholds high standards of environmental management. This type of system is already in place in Liberal Democrat run Sutton Council.
More recycling
The majority of waste in Hammersmith & Fulham is sent to landfill sites. This is costly and harmful to our environment. We oppose the building of incinerators as a means to deal with waste. The solution is to support and extend all efforts to increase recycling.
The Council has sought to trumpet its record on recycling, but in fact the Council has been slow to improve recycling rates. In 2007/08 26.89% of household waste from Hammersmith & Fulham was recycled or composted. The Council will certainly struggle to achieve DEFRA's target of 40% recycling and composting of household waste by 2010. London in general is failing to meet national recycling targets. It can be done though - Lib-Dem run Richmond Council has already achieved 42% of recycling and composting of household waste this year!
We want to see a step change in the levels of recycling in Hammersmith & Fulham. Liberal Democrat Councillors will actively campaign to promote recycling, seeking to recycle a wider range of items, looking at ways to encourage residents and businesses to recycle more, and encouraging the use fewer plastics.
To encourage recycling of household waste in the Borough, we will seek to:
leaner streets
Residents all over the Borough have complained to us that in spite of the Hammersmith & Fulham 'Smarter Borough' initiative our streets are dirtier then ever. This must urgently be remedied.
Liberal Democrat Councillors will ensure that street cleaning and washing takes place on a regular and frequent basis and, where possible, after the household rubbish has been collected in order to avoid spilt litter in our streets. There should be proper co-ordination between rubbish collection and street cleaning.
There are many simple means of reducing the amount of street litter which are currently under-used. Liberal Democrat councillors will seek to ensure that there are more bins and more on-the-spot fines handed out to those who litter.
Dealing with fly-tipping and graffiti
We believe that graffiti and fly-tipping incidents should be dealt with much faster than they are at present. We would like to see the appointment of more "green inspectors" whose role will be to check our streets for missed rubbish collections, broken pavements, graffiti and damaged street signs. They will report their findings for immediate action.
Investing in our streets
We will remove unnecessary street furniture, including out-of-date signs, and ensure that when new ones are installed they are useful, well designed and do not block the path of pedestrians. We will not use council property or street lights to advertise "accomplishments" of the Council. Our high streets have become to clutter. Often new items of furniture have been installed without thought to the streetscape and the possibility of combing functions on single poles.
Investing in our parks
We believe that parks and open spaces are of vital importance to residents and to those working in Borough. South Park in Sands End is an excellent example of enlightened Victorian planning, with a school on either side. Liberal Democrat Councillors will work to ensure that our parks are enjoyable and safe places to walk in and spend time.
We welcome further additions to the Borough's public open space planned at Norland North, Imperial Wharf and Hammersmith Embankment. Improvements planned for Shepherds Bush Green are much needed.
We will seek to protect existing allotments in the Borough and restore run-down ones so that they can be brought back into use.
Air pollution
In 2000 the whole Borough was designated an Air Quality Management Area. Road traffic is the main source of air pollution in the Borough - the A40 and the A4 in particular are highly polluting roads. Levels of nitrogen dioxide and small particles continue to provide huge cause for concern, with serious health implications for people in the Borough. H&F Council however continue to neglect the monitoring of air quality within the borough with closure of the monitoring stations at Hammersmith Broadway and Brook Green since January 2009.
Liberal Democrat Councillors will ensure that there is a renewed focus on air pollution in the Borough. It is vital that there is a revised action plan on air pollution for the borough and greater agreement on how these issues are to be dealt with across London as a whole.
Ensuring that people feel secure in their homes and communities is at the heart of what we stand for as Liberal Democrats. Crime affects our ability to live full and fulfilling lives. It is a vital function of local as well as of national government to take action to reduce crime and the fear of crime.
Local residents believe that crime is increasing while police and independent figures show that most types of crime are steady or falling. This current trend is meaningless however, if people continue to feel unsafe in their communities because of scaremongering and inappropriate use of statistics. Many people also feel they do not have equality of treatment in the enforcement of law and in access to justice. The state should offer all its citizens, particularly the most vulnerable, equal and adequate protection from crime.
More Visible Policing
Liberal Democrat Councillors will campaign for improved public access to local police stations and for the Safer Neighbourhood teams to be located in or as near as possible to the wards they serve. More resources should be allocated to reduce the administrative burden on police officers, in order to free up their time to fight crime and get them back on the beat.
We will encourage the local police to retain retired police officers in a back-up role. Their experience will have a positive impact. We will also promote greater public involvement with policing by encouraging residents to become Police Community Support Officers.
We will also support the Met Volunteer Programme, where volunteers from the public tackle administrative matters in police stations, so that police officers are free to patrol our streets, where they are needed most.
Safer Neighbourhoods
Liberal Democrats will continue to campaign for the highest priority to be given to the Safer Neighbourhood Scheme. We want all the teams now being introduced in the Borough to be brought fully up to strength, without diverting resources from elsewhere.
The teams must be properly staffed with experienced officers, and fully equipped for the task of dealing with 21st century crime. This means using the latest technology both to catch criminals and to free police from some of the huge amount of paperwork and bureaucracy that takes up so much of their time. This would enable them to be back out in the community. Crime levels are relatively low in the borough. But wild claims have been made about crime levels so the fear of crime is greater than actual crime. Increasing the visibility of the Safer Neighbourhood teams will help reduce this fear as well as actual crime.
We will seek to boost the Neighbourhood Watch scheme in the Borough (which is currently very patchy) under an independent, publicly accountable representative body, properly resourced by the Council to enable it to support local committees.
Tackling anti-social behaviour
Anti-social behaviour leads to a reduced enjoyment of an area and too many people feeling threatened in their own homes. We believe the causes of anti-social behaviour are complex and must be dealt with accordingly. Young people are too often treated as a problem but it is their problems that should be treated.
Liberal Democrat Councillors will campaign for the use of LibDem-pioneered Acceptable Behaviour Contracts (ABCs). These contracts have been successfully introduced and used in Liberal Democrat-run Islington to reduce bad behaviour on estates. They are more successful, cheaper and easier to introduce than legalistic programmes like Antisocial Behaviour Orders.
We will support the use of Antisocial Behaviour Injunction Orders, Antisocial Behaviour Orders (ASBOs), and the related Individual Support Orders, when they concentrate on targeting the reasons for antisocial activity.
Cut nuisance crime
Nuisance crimes like graffiti, fly tipping and abandoned vehicles remain common in the Borough and make people feel unsafe.
Liberal Democrat Councillors will work for improved enforcement and allocate increased resources to graffiti removal and the removal of fly- tipping and abandoned vehicles throughout the Borough. We will also ban the sale of aerosol paint cans to children under the age of 16 years.
Community payback
Too many non-violent criminals are given short custodial sentences, which are counter-productive. We believe the objective of sentencing policy should be to protect communities against further offences through deterrence and reform.
Non-violent criminals, particularly young first offenders, should be required to learn new skills and pay back their debt to society through work on community projects. Offenders should be given more socially useful penalties, such as cleaning up graffiti or clearing away dumped refuse and litter.
Liberal Democrat Councillors will play their full part in Community Payback schemes aimed at rehabilitating offenders serving community orders, within the Safer Neighbourhoods programme.
Cut re-offending rates
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Prison is the right place for violent criminals. However, almost two-thirds of released prisoners re-offend. We want better education, training and rehabilitation programmes in and out of prison to cut recidivism, with early release linked to ensuring that prisoners have developed basic skills and are no longer a danger to society. With Wormwood Scrubs Prison in our borough, the Council should have role in encouraging residents to be involved the rehabilitation of people serving their sentences.
More crime deterrents
Liberal Democrat Councillors will support better crime prevention in the Borough, including the appropriate installation of more CCTV cameras and better street-lighting in town centres, tube and bus stops and other crime "hotspots". These measures will restore public confidence, reduce the threat and incidence of crime and improve public safety. However, these are not substitutes for widespread visible policing without which crime will simply move to other parts of the Borough.
Greater accountability
We want to see the police and council officers holding more public meetings where residents and businesses can raise their concerns about crime in their area. We will give more support to the Community and Police Consultative Committee.
We would like to see crime statistics published more widely so that residents can see whether actions by the police and the Council are having a positive effect.
Traffic offences
We welcome the freeing of the police from the responsibility for enforcing certain minor traffic regulations. However, Liberal Democrat Councillors will ensure that enforcement by the Council of its traffic regulation powers is objectively operated and monitored, and with a proper independent appeals procedure set in place.
Drugs
We want to see realistic and responsible reform of drugs legislation. We will encourage police use of roadside sobriety tests on suspected drug- affected drivers combined with a publicity campaign on the effects of drugs on driving ability, and increased resources for drugs treatment, education and counselling programmes. Liberal Democrat Councillors will also encourage police use of powers allowing them to obtain crack house closure orders and to encourage allocation of sufficient resources to ensure their closure within the shortest possible time.
Ensuring that people feel secure in their homes and communities is at the heart of what we stand for as Liberal Democrats. Crime affects our ability to live full and fulfilling lives. It is a vital function of local as well as of national government to take action to reduce crime and the fear of crime.
Local residents believe that crime is increasing while police and independent figures show that most types of crime are steady or falling. This current trend is meaningless however, if people continue to feel unsafe in their communities. Many people also feel they do not have equality of treatment in the enforcement of law and in access to justice. The state should offer all its citizens, particularly the most vulnerable, equal and adequate protection from crime.
Liberal Democrats believe that consulting residents and informing them about decisions taken are two sides of the same democratic coin. We want to return power to the people.
The current Conservative-run Council's record of involving interested local residents, or those with expert knowledge of issues, to attend and take part in the decision-making process, has been poor. We aim to redress this.
Better consultation of residents
We believe that residents should be consulted and informed more often and in more ways.
Liberal Democrats Councillors would campaign for the use of email opt-in lists for consultation and information about Council Services for local residents. For example, a form could be enclosed with Council Tax bills providing a chance for residents to register their email addresses with the Council in order to express an interest in being consulted on various aspects of Council services.
We would like new residents to the Borough to be sent a welcome pack including details of recycling points, local transport information and useful Council-related information.
Liberal Democrat Councillors will also ensure that the Council encourages residents to become more involved in their local residents' associations or tenant groups.
Better consultation of businesses and interest groups
We are concerned that local businesses are often excluded from consultation processes. We will compile and maintain records of residents' associations, local amenity groups, local business groups and any other groups in order that all interested parties may be consulted on such issues as affect them. This list would be published widely.
Liberal Democrat Councillors will ensure that all interested parties are informed about how any consultation will proceed, and how the consultation process will inform the decision-making process.
Liberal Democrat Councillors will promote more environmentally sustainable transport around the Borough by promoting and improving public transport, reducing traffic and congestion, and providing better facilities for pedestrians and cyclists.
Walking
We will encourage walking. All street refurbishment in the Borough should be designed to be more accessible and pedestrian-friendly.
In this regard, we will work to:
Cycling
Liberal Democrat Councillors will work to:
Cars
London's air quality is the worst in the UK and 70% of particulate emissions are caused by road traffic. Air pollution causes 1,600 deaths and 1,500 hospital admissions due to breathing problems each year in London.
Liberal Democrat Councillors will work to have the Council:
Parking management
We support controlled parking zones (CPZs) where local residents want them. However, we believe a proper consultation process should be carried out in areas where a new CPZ is proposed. It is vital that the Council works closely with residents to ensure that CPZs operate at hours that suit local conditions.
We also believe that it is important that parking is patrolled effectively to ensure that motorists comply with regulations. However, all traffic wardens should be properly trained to ensure that they do not issue tickets unfairly or inappropriately. Only vehicles that cause an obstruction should be liable to be towed away.
Road safety
We will campaign against current national Government transport policy, which sets a threshold of at least four crashes causing death or serious injury before speed limits can be enforced using fixed speed cameras.
This 'body count' approach to traffic law enforcement means that thousands of communities across Britain who want protection from speeding drivers must wait until their worst fears are realised before speed cameras are introduced in that area. This policy affects all residents in the Borough and must be changed.
Liberal Democrat Councillors will work to have the Council:
Unlike the current Conservative-run Council, which has done nothing to find out what people want, we will consult residents about whether they want a 20mph zone in their area.
The Tube
Liberal Democrats have consistently opposed the Government's Tube part privatisation plans (PPP) and are concerned about safety on the underground network since the PPP was introduced.
Liberal Democrat Councillors will:
Rail
We are concerned about the reliability and level of service which local train operators currently offer to passengers along the West London Line. The Liberal Democrats support service continuing beyond Clapham Junction and Willesden Junction. We also support more stations along the line to relieve traffic problems in the south of the borough.
Buses
Liberal Democrat Councillors will:
Air travel
We will continue to campaign against a third runway at Heathrow.
Liberal Democrat Councillors will:
Improving access to travel for the disabled and young families
We will campaign to ensure that that there are adequate disabled parking facilities within the Borough and that disabled parking spaces are strictly enforced. We will encourage the provision of facilities for those with young families.
We will campaign for all train and tube stations in the Borough to be made accessible to the elderly, disabled and infirm and to those with young families by installing lifts and ramps.
We will campaign for all public transport to be accessible to disabled passengers and those with young families.
Green travel
Liberal Democrats support improvement to transport infrastructure in order to increase choice of means of travel. However, planning policy can also contribute to sustainable travel by maintaining job opportunities close to home. Liberal Democrats want to see flexible working to allow existing infrastructure to be used better, so improving the quality of life in the Borough.
Liberal Democrat Councillors will extend the concept of green travel plans which should accompany new development which affects transport in the Borough.
In this regard, we will encourage creative green travel solutions, for example, considering whether large developers should provide free travel cards for occupiers of their properties so as to increase the chance of those who never use public transport shifting to more sustainable modes of travel.
Introduction
We believe that sport and culture are of vital importance to the local economy and to the well-being of the community.
The borough is home to a number of wonderful tourist attractions and leisure facilities, including the Lyric Theatre, the Thames river front, Bishop's Park, the shopping and restaurants of Kings Road and Fulham Road and the rich multicultural heritage of Hammersmith and Shepherds Bush.
Access to the Arts
Our Borough has a fine tradition of supporting the arts and it is vital that this is built upon.
We believe everyone should have the opportunity to explore their creativity through access to the arts and that this should begin in schools. Arts education in the Borough has been allowed to dwindle by the Labour and now Tory run Council. We will encourage schools, particularly primary schools, to recruit more specialist arts teachers and give all children exposure to an arts education, including notably, those with learning and behavioural difficulties.
Liberal Democrat Councillors will also increase funding for music tuition so that all children in the Borough have the chance to learn to play a musical instrument.
Libraries
Liberal Democrat Councillors will support increased funding for libraries. We will seek to see the extension of library opening hours during the week and at weekends. Liberal Democrats believe libraries are a key service and the Council is not doing enough to promote their full use.
Local events
We will also continue to support the many existing local events and we will support the establishment of more events that celebrate our local culture, always bearing in mind residents' views.
Above all, we will encourage greater involvement by residents, and more forums in which residents can develop and express their talents and abilities.
Access to sports facilities
Liberal Democrat Councillors will work to ensure that schools and local communities have good sports facilities. In the 1980s and 1990s many school sports fields were sold off to make money or to release space for new buildings. This has coincided with the decline in health of children and British children are now amongst some of the unhealthiest in the western world. This trend urgently needs to be reversed.
We want to see more investment in community sports facilities to ensure that they are pleasant and safe places in which to enjoy the benefits of exercise. We will also campaign to increase sports facilities in schools and the amount of time devoted to sport in our schools.
Promoting sport in schools and getting children to take up sport outside school is the best way to encourage healthy lifestyles from a young age. Schools cannot do this on their own. We will encourage the Council, local schools, including private schools, and sports clubs to share facilities.
We will also give residents greater choice in which sporting activities they can participate in and include provisions to support all sports. We will encourage sports sessions, courses, holiday activities and events catering for all residents in the Borough, whatever their age or their interest.
Every school child in the Borough should be given the opportunity to learn to swim. However, Hammersmith & Fulham swimming facilities are still inadequate compared with other Inner London Boroughs, and this reduces the level of achievement. We welcome the re-opening of the Janet Adegoke pool in the Phoenix High School, Sports and Fitness Centre, but note that less than 50% of pool time will be available for public swimming and local club use. The public/private operation of Fulham Pools with Holmes Place has also presented problems of public swimming access. The Borough needs funding for at least one more swimming pool to meet the norm in Inner London. This is at a time when many older pools are under threat across the capital.
Introduction
Hammersmith & Fulham's housing stock dates mostly from the late 19th Century. Large older Council estates have significant problems and poor environments. Some post-war blocks are of poor design and are in urgent need of repair. What is less obvious is the number of public-sector houses outside estates which are not regularly inspected and where standards have continued to fall behind those in the private sector.
Homelessness is a key issue in the borough, with high numbers in bed and breakfast and other temporary accommodation. There continues to be a shortfall in housing, which is very much linked to issues of affordability in the local housing market. Hammersmith & Fulham now has the third highest average residential property prices of any London Borough. According to the Hammersmith & Fulham Development Plan, the borough faces a shortage of over 10,000 homes.
Quicker repairs
H&F Homes, an ALMO (Arms Length Management Organisation) is now responsible for the day to day management of all council homes. Like all local authorities across the country, Hammersmith & Fulham must bring all its housing stock up to the Decent Homes Standard by the 2010 deadline.
An Audit Commission inspection team reported that HFHMS was performing reasonably well but pointed out a serious weakness in the responsiveness of its repair service.
Liberal Democrat councillors would seek to work with HFHMS swiftly to produce a detailed assessment of the needs of all council estates, to ensure that long-standing defects are dealt with as soon as funds become available.
We would like to see an improved repairs hotline for residents of all estates and a system that ensures that repair works are genuinely prioritised according to urgency of need and according to the type of repair needed. This means that, for example, a faulty central heating system reported during the winter months would enjoy priority status.
We would like to see roving supervisors working across all council accommodation, with a rigorous inspection regime for the monitoring of repair work carried out. This would also include spot checks of repair work carried out.
Liberal Democrat councillors will carry out an extensive performance-related review of the Council's current repair contracts with its service providers. We will also initiate an urgent review of these contractors service contracts with a view to ensuring that these contracts contain appropriate penalty clauses punishing them for poor repair work. We would also not hesitate to replace the service contracts of companies who perform poorly.
We will ensure that utilities companies maintain all boxes and equipment located in council estates to a high standard and that faulty installations (eg doors not working, wires exposed) are dealt with promptly.
A better residential environment
We will ensure that maintaining the lighting, removing abandoned cars, removal of graffiti and other activities are conducted by only one Council department. This will speed matters as often there is a lack of clarity about who is responsible for fixing a given problem which results in delays. Estate wardens will be given single named contacts at the Council to whom all environmental and maintenance matters may be referred for immediate processing and action.
More units for large families
We will seek to increase the number of units available for large families in Hammersmith & Fulham in order to reduce overcrowding.
Affordable housing
A lack of quality affordable housing in Hammersmith & Fulham poses a serious challenge to both economic competitiveness and social equity. The inability of key workers to find affordable accommodation in the Borough is also having a significant impact on vital services such as health, transport, policing and education. It is vital that there is sufficient affordable housing for those who are not wealthy enough to arrange their own housing in the private sector.
Empty homes
We will lead the call for the piloting of 'empty homes management orders' across London. These orders would give councils powers to bring empty properties back into use.
In addition, Liberal Democrat Councillors will press national Government to reduce VAT on property refurbishment costs and repairs, making it more affordable for owners to bring empty or unfit homes into use and cheaper for all residents to upgrade or repair their homes. We will press for the removal of VAT on all repairs to listed or old buildings.
Environmentally sustainable housing
Sustainable housing offers many benefits to the environment. We will ensure that the council informs Hammersmith & Fulham residents about how they can improve sustainability in the home at little or no cost, reducing the amount of energy and water consumed in their homes.
Liberal Democrat Councillors will seek to enforce rigorously the Borough's Unitary Development Plan (UDP), currently be reviewed as the Local Development Framework, so that developers supply more sustainable housing. We will oppose over-development in our area.
Liberal Democrat Councillors will embark on a better, wider and more transparent consultation with residents to assess their needs and aspirations on housing matters.
We will encourage residents to express their views on issues of concern to them and then have regard to these views when making housing policy.
We will actively support existing residents' associations and encourage the establishment of a Borough-wide network of associations.
Liberal Democrats believe that local residents deserve better and more easily accessible health care services. We want to see quicker diagnosis for serious conditions, fewer charges, less red tape and targets set by government, and more local decision-making. We want a greater emphasis on helping people stay healthy, health checks and tests. We also believe that good financial management is vital in all areas of the healthcare system.
More openness and local decision-making
With continuing uncertainty and rumours circulating about the future of our local hospitals there is a need for more openness and consultation regarding local health and social service provision.
In principle we believe more healthcare-related decision-making should be at a local level so that patients and councils can see where money allocated for health matters is being spent, and what services are being provided for that money.
Liberal Democrat councillors will urgently investigate and then press for new powers to be given to Councils to scrutinise and investigate local health matters more effectively.
Improved service provision
Liberal Democrat councillors will review the provision of doctors and dental surgeries in the Borough to ensure that there is sufficient provision.
We will work closely with the NHS to look at ways to reduce the number of occasions when patient discharges from local hospitals get delayed .
Where private sub-contractors give poor service to NHS patients, we will be harsh in enforcing contracts or replacing ineffective operators with service providers able to meet their obligations.
We will promote intermediate care to reduce the number of unnecessary hospital admissions to acute beds.
Give local doctors and hospitals more control
We want to free up local hospitals and clinics so that health care professionals can concentrate on health care instead of spending so much of their time dealing with administration.
Liberal Democrat councillors will campaign to reduce the number of targets that are set by national Government, and imposed on local doctors .
Caring for elderly people
Liberal Democrat Councillors will campaign for free personal health care for the elderly. No one should be forced to sell his or her home to pay for health care, as is currently the case.
We believe that the present system is unfair. It is not acceptable that dementia sufferers are forced to pay for personal healthcare, including paying for washing and bathing, while cancer patients are treated without charge. Increasing fees and closure of homes makes it even more important to support people in their own homes.
Improving mental health services
The West London Mental Health NHS Trust provides support for people in the borough who have mental health problems in conjunction with Hammersmith & Fulham social services.
The Borough is still experiencing the consequences of the previous Conservative Government's 'Care in the Community' scheme, a cost-cutting exercise in which patients were moved out of secure accommodation. Insufficient resources were provided to support patients then living within the community and many were left to fend for themselves.
The outgoing Labour Government has struggled to resolve the current crisis in the provision of mental health services.
It is very welcome news that the Government's draconian plans to lock up people with mental health problems have finally been dropped, but scrapping the whole bill means a lost opportunity. Patients in the community often enjoy a poor quality of life with inadequate medical supervision. The situation is made worse once patients are discharged from secure accommodation, when only about 45% continue with proper medication.
It is tragic but predictable that some discharged patients are involved in violent and occasionally lethal incidents.
Liberal Democrat Councillors will campaign for improved access to mental health services in the Borough and look at ways in which we can encourage more patients to use local mental health care services. This will give more help and supervision for patients and provide reassurance to local residents.
Staff at West London Mental Health NHS Trust are among the most dissatisfied in the country according to official survey figures. Liberal Democrat Councillors will seek to explore with the Trust why this is the case and what can be done about it.
School and hospital meals
The Liberal Democrats have campaigned for healthier and more nutritious school meals in the Borough. We will encourage all schools to plan to bring catering in-house, and to plan to use local, seasonal and organic food where possible. Where in-house catering is not an option in the short term, we will ensure that as schools come up for modernisation and redevelopment, provision is made for appropriate kitchen and dining facilities to be included to allow in-house catering.
We will support the establishment of a Food Hub for west London and will research and support a council-wide buying group to enable in-house catered schools to benefit from the lower prices available now only to contract caterers.
Liberal Democrats councillors will make improving school and hospital meals a priority as an effective means to improved health.
Introduction
Liberal Democrats believe in supporting a voice for disabled people by removing the barriers to communication and political participation.
Despite progress in recent years, disabled people continue to feel that their views are marginalised in our society. This has led to a feeling of distrust of political parties and a subsequent low turnout in elections among the disabled.
We will:
The local planning system is the means by which communities collectively shape the quality of life in an area.
Proper planning cannot guarantee appropriate development, but it can set an appropriate framework for incentives to secure sustainable urban change. The Council does not make full use of current planning powers to improve the Borough - it is letting down local residents.
Planning policy should support crucial areas of the local economy, for example through making provision for sites in sustainable locations and protecting commercial centres. The urban environment must continue to reflect the diversity of the Borough's history and communities.
Liberal Democrats take seriously the protection and enhancement of the environment. Conservation and sustainable development are the philosophies that should underpin all future development of the Borough.
Planning and consultation
We believe that planning policy should be drawn up with the full participation of local residents and businesses, tapping the experience and knowledge of local residents' associations and other community groups. We also believe that the value of comments by residents on individual applications should be better recognised and valued.
Liberal Democrat councillors will encourage increased participation by interested parties in the planning and decision-making process above and beyond current levels.
In accordance with the Planning and Compulsory Purchase Act 2004, the Council had produced a Statement of Community Involvement explaining how local participation will in future be incorporated in both the formulation of policy and the determination of planning applications.
While we welcome this document, we are concerned that Statement does not adequately set out how the Council will reach out to all residents associations and other local community groups and allow them sufficient time to comment.
Liberal Democrat councillors will undertake a review of the Statement policy document with a view to further considering how to improve the involvement of local residents in planning-related decision-making.
As discussed earlier, according to the Hammersmith & Fulham Unitary Development Plan, the borough faces a shortage of over 10,000 homes and with rapidly increasing property prices in the borough over recent years, many residents are finding that they are no longer able to afford to live in their own borough. The Liberal Democrats believe the area most urgently needs homes, not offices.
Whilst Council Planning Department literature talks about balancing the need for homes and jobs (and more local jobs are indeed very welcome), we believe that current proposals for the White City Opportunity Area get the balance wrong. Huge office developments are currently under construction within easy travel distances at Paddington and King's Cross.
The Framework document talks about using sustainable principles to build a massive development with large office blocks. Liberal Democrats believe a proper sustainable development would comprise a mix of buildings for homes, small businesses, social enterprise units and not-for-profit organisations that together meet local needs. Small businesses are more likely to hire local people and offer services that local residents can support.
Protecting local centres
Thriving local centres are vital to the economic and social life of the Borough. Liberal Democrat Councillors will examine the need for targeted improvement projects, increase monitoring of shop representation, and increase the planning protection for local retail centres. We will also take advantage of new planning powers to prevent an over-saturation of retail uses such as takeaways, whilst finding more sensitive ways to prevent long-term vacancies in local retail centres in the Borough.
We will seek to ensure an appropriate mix of uses in popular local centres. By doing so, local Post Offices and small independent retailers, which often meet the specialist needs of certain groups, are protected. Action is needed to address decline (for example in traditional shops, such as butchers, bakers, fruiterers and greengrocers and pharmacies) in order to continue a diversity of services, sufficient competition/consumer choice, and to encourage opportunities for local enterprise.
Liberal Democrat councillors will support and enable farmers' markets and street markets that provide opportunities for a diverse range of local, fresh, traditional and authentic foods to be sold that otherwise would not be available in the borough.
Development and sustainable energy
We are committed to increasing energy efficiency and improving the sustainability of energy production. All local planning policy should encourage careful design of buildings to maximise natural solar light and heating and natural ventilation.
Liberal Democrat councillors will seek to enhance measures to encourage the installation of energy saving technologies in existing properties in the Borough.
Improving parks and open spaces
We believe that parks and public open spaces are important to local residents and need to be enhanced and protected. Parks and public open spaces are places of exercise and leisure, as well as meeting points.
We have campaigned to improve the quality of major open spaces and the network of town and district parks, local leisure gardens, nature reserves and child play spaces, and Liberal Democrat Councillors will protect and enhance existing parks and public open spaces from the threat of encroaching development.
We seek to gradually convert all Borough park management to organic, self-sustaining systems, with minimum bought in inputs and maximum reliance on locally propagated and harvested inputs.
Liberal Democrat councillors will work to ensure that the Council's responsibility for important crime prevention and fear of crime reduction measures do not conflict with the right of the many to enjoy full access to parks and open spaces.
Hammersmith & Fulham is home to one of the most diverse, multicultural communities in London. Liberal Democrats believe it is vital to strive to foster and promote good working relationships between all local communities in the Borough, so that greater understanding and respect for each other's histories and cultures can be gained and all communities in the Borough brought together.
Ensuring equal opportunities within the council
Liberal Democrat councillors will seek to ensure that equal opportunity employment and recruitment policies are thoroughly followed to ensure that Council staffing better reflects the gender balance and ethnic makeup of the Borough.
Liberal Democrat Councillors will support internal equality audits and work to improve those areas where weaknesses are identified.
We will ensure that council services are provided to residents regardless of race, sex, age, disability, sexual orientation or religion.
We will develop Borough-wide social inclusion and anti-poverty strategies and will consult widely before seeking to implement them.
Reducing bullying, harassment and discrimination
We will monitor and campaign to reduce incidences of bullying, harassment and discrimination amongst council staff, especially staff working in the Borough's schools.
We will also campaign to reduce incidents of bullying and harassment of school pupils and of other residents in the Borough, including the elderly. It will be the clear policy of the Liberal Democrats to monitor and stamp out bullying and harassment wherever it may occur in the Borough.
Ensuring that all council buildings have access for the disabled
We will ensure that the Council fully complies with provisions on access for the disabled as required by the Disability and Discrimination Act.
Liberal Democrat councillors will establish a timetable for conversion of all council buildings so that disabled access is possible. We will also encourage the private sector in the Borough and organisations such as Transport for London to convert their facilities into wheelchair and disabled-friendly zones.
Local democracy has reached a sorry state in this country. Successive Conservative and Labour governments have stripped power from local communities. The current structure of local government is dependent financially and politically on central Government funding, with approximately 75% of funding provided from Whitehall.
We believe that the Council must become more open, transparent and accountable so that everyone who lives or works in the Borough can see why things happen and get more involved in local decision-making. Many changes are needed.
More local decision making
Liberal Democrat Councillors alongside our parliamentary colleagues will campaign to ensure that we have broader powers at Borough level, so that we can genuinely address local problems and concerns.
Scrap the unfair Council Tax
Council Tax is not currently based on ability to pay and hits those on low or fixed incomes the hardest. Meanwhile the upper band is capped so that people who live in ordinary terraced houses pay the same as billionaires who live in large detached mansions worth £25 million pounds or more.
Liberal Democrat Councillors will campaign to scrap the unfair Council Tax and replace it with a fairer and more proportionate method such as a tax based more closely on the value of the property, taxes on polluters, or a local income tax. We will seek in the medium to long term to restore local tax-raising capacity, with concomitant reduction in central taxation, so that we can address local problems and concerns with a larger proportion of locally raised funds.
Traditionally, many Conservative and Labour councillors are elected in 'safe' seats and owe their position to the party rather than to the electorate. Consequently, their decisions can often be based on narrow party interest rather than the interests of local residents. In other cases, extremist candidates can get elected with as little as 25% of the vote because the votes for their opponents are split.
Our current system gives an artificial majority to a single party even if it does not command majority support. Five years ago, the current Labour Government won a large 'majority' and claimed a 'mandate' on just 35% of the vote. Meanwhile, many voters feel alienated because they did not vote for the MP or the councillors who purport to represent them.
Liberal Democrats will campaign to change the method by which our local councillors are elected. We want to see voters given the opportunity to rank candidates in their ward in order of preference, as they already are in Scotland and Northern Ireland, so that the number of councillors elected from each party is more proportional to the number of votes they receive. This will mean that more voters will find their views represented on the Council, and it will strengthen the relationship between voters and individual councillors. The preferential voting system also makes it harder for extremist candidates to get elected when votes are split.
Fairer elections will increase political stability, improve co-operative working between parties represented on the Council, and ensure that the Council is run for the benefit of the whole community rather than for the benefit of a single party. Liberal Democrats participate successfully in shared councils all over Britain.
Scrutiny of Cabinet decisions
We believe that formal scrutiny by councillors of decisions by the Hammersmith & Fulham Council Cabinet should take place before they are finalised, instead of after the event.
Liberal Democrat councillors on scrutiny committees would not be ordered to make certain decisions ('whipping'), unlike councillors from other political parties, and we will retain this freedom.
Liberal Democrat councillors want scrutiny committees to have a broader scope and allow a wider range of people to give evidence, to help councillors make decisions correctly.
Liberal Democrats will ensure that Council members face up to their responsibilities as decision making representatives of the local community and do not shirk this responsibility by employing consultants when the going gets tough. We will not shrink from tough decisions.
We will also seek to ensure that all scrutiny committees are chaired by councillors from opposition parties in order to ensure transparency and accountable governance.
Improved performance
We believe it is vital that local residents get value for money from the services provided by the council.
Liberal Democrat councillors will immediately review all contracts with existing service providers, with a view to ending term contracts and re-negotiating performance clauses in agreements with the Council's service providers who have been performing poorly and failing residents. We would oppose 50 year contracts, such as Labour granted for the operation of Fulham Pools. These contracts reduce accountability and prevent local control of local services.
We will ensure that Environmental Cost Benefit Analysis is introduced to all council contract negotiations as an essential part of our sustainability programme. We will ensure that systems commissioned by the council specifically prohibit any life-shortening measures or built-in obsolescence.
Liberal Democrats will review the effectiveness of Job Centre Plus in the Borough and ensure that where it is failing, proper support is given to assisting jobseekers and employers to communicate effectively.
Better information
We will create 'one-stop' shops throughout the Borough where local residents can ask questions and get answers and information about Council-related issues.
The help offered will include advice on legal questions, job-seeking, electoral registration, utilities (gas, electricity etc), housing, benefits, transport and information on sporting facilities available in the Borough.
The education and welfare of children in the Borough will always be a priority for Liberal Democrats. Far too many children are denied access to their local, first-choice school and are forced to travel long distances to another school or to pay for private tuition. We also want to encourage lifelong learning and a thriving teaching profession in the Borough.
Successive governments in Westminster have ruthlessly cut down the involvement of local education authorities in education. In particular, the scope for increasing or reducing the funding for education is closely circumscribed by Whitehall. However, within these constraints, there is much that Liberal Democrat councillors can seek to achieve.
Reduce class sizes
We believe that class sizes in schools in the Borough are too large for teachers to do their job effectively. Liberal Democrat councillors will campaign to reduce class sizes for all age groups to a maximum of 25 pupils per class.
In order to achieve this we will campaign to recruit more staff and raise teachers' pay to aid retention.
Reduce the administrative burden
We are particularly concerned that large numbers of qualified teachers in the Borough are no longer teaching. Nationally, Liberal Democrats continue to call for the end to the endless paperwork, surveillance and bureaucracy imposed on teachers from Whitehall, which has caused them to leave the profession in large numbers.
Liberal Democrat councillors will campaign to reduce the administrative burden placed upon teachers, in order to allow them to spend more time in classrooms.
Priority to Hammersmith & Fulham residents
We will campaign for schools in Hammersmith & Fulham to give priority to pupils from within the Borough.
Abolish league tables
We do not support the principle of central targets and league tables, as they are the main excessive administrative burdens that schools and teachers suffer from. Instead, we will support targets for each school predicated on local circumstances and in conjunction with parents, school governors and OFSTED.
More business involvement
We will develop training partnerships with local businesses to give pupils the chance to learn through "on the job" experience, including encouraging local business people to visit schools to explain the work they do to pupils.
Children with special needs
We believe that more can be done in the Borough to address the needs of students with special needs.
Liberal Democrat councillors will ensure that all schools provide proper access to children and staff as stipulated by the Disability and Discrimination Act.
In addition, the ageing stock of school property in the Borough needs to be modernised to allow disabled access or replaced by modern buildings in accordance with a coherent works programme coordinated by the Council, rather than on an ad hoc basis, as is currently the case.
Specialist Schools
Specialist Schools provide a new opportunity for focused centres of excellence and specialisation to emerge in the community. However, where a school has been, or expects to be awarded, Specialist School status, essential additional funding is not always available. Liberal Democrat Councillors will help to ensure the delivery of such additional long-term funding as is required successfully to implement and maintain Specialist Status for all secondary schools.
Liberal Democrat Councillors will encourage the sharing of facilities by schools so that more pupils have access to teaching in the subjects of their choice, including after-school classes. This particularly applies to children from bilingual or multilingual backgrounds who wish to study another community language in the Borough.
Discipline in schools
Liberal Democrats recognise that poor discipline can have numerous causes and so requires various solutions.
Liberal Democrat Councillors will be more supportive of Head Teachers when dealing with disciplinary problems at school. But we also want programmes that support children and help them learn alternatives to bad behaviour.
It is essential that disruptive and anti-social behaviour in our schools is identified at an early stage, with immediate additional appropriate measures introduced and enforced.
Sport in our schools
Liberal Democrat councillors will encourage schools to retain and invest in their sports fields. In advance of the London Olympics more students need to be encouraged to take up sport and we will campaign for schools to be given larger grants to encourage this.
Under-used playing fields will be brought back into the service of the community wherever the means are available to do so.
Education at home
We will ensure there is adequate support for those parents and carers who choose to educate their children at home, including access to community centres and school facilities where appropriate.
Adult education
Central Government has reduced funding for adult education. This is wrong. We will work with the Borough's education partners to optimise use of existing community centres in the Borough as well as school facilities for adult education.
The London Borough of Hammersmith & Fulham has always been a home to many different and diverse communities, and to people from different backgrounds. Despite this, some groups which might be identified as ethnic or racial minorities face very real issues and challenges in the Borough.
The problems
Some communities in the Borough occasionally come in for harsh treatment by both the police and members of the wider community, including other minority groups. Sometimes this is racially motivated.
We believe that other issues and challenges include:
Our approach
At the national level, we are the only party whose primary mission is to protect and promote human rights in the United Kingdom. We believe that minority groups in Britain do not look for special favours, but for equality of opportunity.
At the local level, Liberal Democrat Councillors will strive to foster and promote good working relationships between the local community and the police. In the wake of the Stephen Lawrence report the relationship between minorities and the police has been strained, and needs to be fostered.
Firm but fair asylum system
The Borough has benefited greatly from an enriched culture and economy because of asylum. In recent years the system has been shown to be unfair by not giving people proper treatment when they have suffered persecution.
We will campaign to make the procedure fairer for those seeking asylum, but also to make sure that the system is not open to abuse. We will speed up the processing of asylum applications and allow asylum seekers to work pending a decision.
Hate crimes
Police figures show that people from minority ethnic backgrounds suffer a much higher incidence of violent assault, and levels of violence and harassment against lesbians, gay men and bisexuals also continue to be high.
The Council does not do enough to support ethnic minorities and gay, lesbian and bisexual people in the Borough and existing hate crimes legislation is not implemented adequately.
Liberal Democrat councillors will aim to build confidence in the police and other judicial institutions among all communities, to enable the police to do their job more effectively and to make it easier for members of minority communities who are victims of crime to report such incidents.
Police forces must be more representative of, and effective within, the communities they serve through more active recruitment from all communities.
Complaints procedures
We have proposed the reforming of the police hate crimes investigations unit to co-ordinate information and action against racist and other hate crimes.
Liberal Democrat councillors will work with the local police to reform the independent police complaints system, so that complaints by the public, especially by members of minority groups, are dealt with speedily and efficiently.
We welcome the establishment of a local police stop and search monitoring group. We will play an active part in the activities of this group.
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