Greenwich.co.uk

Greenwich news and information

  • Blogs
  • Property
    • Homes For Sale in Greenwich
    • Homes To Rent in Greenwich
    • Greenwich Office Space
    • Local Planning Applications
  • Events
    • Add an Event
  • Business Directory
  • News
  • Sport
  • Visiting
    • Things to Do in Greenwich
  • Hotels in Greenwich
    • Serviced Apartments in Greenwich
  • Buy
    • Books about Greenwich
    • Greenwich Collectibles

Greenwich Council Meeting 27/01/10: Greenwich Time, Council Tax & Royal Borough Status

January 28, 2010 By Darryl Chamberlain

Greenwich Council's newspaper Greenwich Time was branded "appalling" and "blatant propaganda" by opposition councillors at Wednesday night's full council meeting.

The weekly was criticised in a Westminster debate earlier this month, with it and other council publications coming in for attacks from politicians and publishers of local newspapers, who claim it damages free speech and is hurting their business.

Conservative councillor Dermot Poston called it "an appalling piece of paper", adding it was "a shocking indictment" of the council.

"Ask anyone in this borough who reads it - not that anyone does - and they'll tell you," the Eltham North member said.

Brian Woodcraft (Lib Dem, Middle Park & Sutcliffe) said the paper, which was relaunched as a weekly in 2008, was "blatant propaganda".

"It contains a full week's TV listings, which is totally inappropriate for a local authority newspaper," he continued, questioning the cost of employing distributors to deliver it weekly, when previously it had been delivered fortnightly alongside the established local freesheets, the Mercury and the News Shopper.

However, council leader Chris Roberts (Labour, Peninsula) said it was more cost-effective to publish Greenwich Time once a week.

"It's cheaper weekly than fortnightly, and I'm happy to provide figures to any member who asks for them," he told the meeting.

He said the decision was made to distribute Greenwich Time separately because the council had received "too many complaints" that the newspaper was not being delivered, and residents were missing out on important items of public consultation.

"Neither the Mercury nor the News Shopper reach the whole borough," he added.

Addressing charges that the newspaper was propaganda, Cllr Roberts said: "Hammersmith and Fulham Council has its council tax plastered on its lamp posts - well beyond anything that goes on in this borough."

Referrring to criticism from News Shopper editor Richard Firth - who called the newspaper "a self-serving propaganda sheet" - Cllr Roberts called for an "honest debate" on the issue, reeling off a list of local newspapers published by newspaper group Archant, including The Docklands, a version of which appears in Greenwich as The Peninsula.

"I don't think the views of the Archant publishing house somehow go unreported," he said.

However, the News Shopper is published by Archant's rival Newsquest, part of US newspaper giant Gannett.

Nigel Fletcher (Conservative, Eltham North), complained that Greenwich Time routinely ignored opposition councillors' views, even on non-controversial matters such as Greenwich becoming a royal borough.

"Our views were represented in three of our local media; the Mercury, the News Shopper, and greenwich.co.uk; but the one local newspaper which neglected us was Greenwich Time.

"It was slightly absurd that a photograph of the leader of the council should have been on the front of Greenwich Time and not one of the Queen."

He said it "fully vindicated" his party's pledge to scrap the paper if it took power at May's elections.

Councillors vote for council tax freeze

Greenwich council taxpayers are set for a freeze in their bills after councillors voted through this year's budget proposals.

Council leader Chris Roberts said he had "no desire to slash and burn" public services, citing investment in transport, anti-crime measures, housing and children's centres, adding the cashflow plan was strong enough to deal with any government cuts after the general election.

"Whatever is thrown at us by central government over the next few years, the people of Greenwich will expect us to be prepared," he said.

"It is a budget which protects our essential services, and does not mortgage our futures."

With an eye to the council's own election in May, he said his Labour group had provided "stable and secure financial management for more than a decade".

Conservative leader Spencer Drury said freezing the budget seemed "the right thing to do".

But the Eltham North councillor questioned a sum of £3.7 million which was counted as cash to be held in reserve, but he said looked as if it had actually been allocated to services including continuing weekly black bin collections and covering extra costs in social care.

"These things are essentials," he said, "not things we have any choice over".

If that sum of money really was available, he said, then it should be returned to council tax payers "who are suffering too".

Cllr Roberts said he wanted to keep the extra sum of money aside in case the relevant departments needed extra cash for those services.

Council tax bills will not be finalised until after February 10, when London Mayor Boris Johnson's budget will be settled. He is also planning to freeze his part of the bill.

Royal borough status welcomed by all sides

Greenwich Council could buy a sailing ship to commemorate becoming a royal borough in 2012, Conservative culture spokesman Nigel Fletcher told the meeting.

Councillors from all parties welcomed the announcement, which was made earlier this month.

One idea, he said, would be to purchase a sailing ship to commemorate The Great Harry, a warship built at Woolwich for Henry VIII.

Cllr Fletcher said it was worth noting that royal connections were spread across the borough, and a ship would recognise Woolwich's contribution.

"It's an idea that could have a range of benefits, particularly for our youth," he said.

"There is a challenge to us to answer what becoming a royal borough means in real terms.

"It's up to us to use this to secure real benefits across the borough. There should be a Jubilee legacy to go with an Olympic legacy."

Greenwich will be the first royal borough with a "significantly diverse" population when it is awarded the honour in 2012, council leader Chris Roberts said.

"I have always felt the royal element of the borough has been underplayed," he said.

"Even those who declare themselves to be not tremendous royalists say how proud they are. It's an incredible honour."

Cllr Roberts said discussions would start soon on just what the honour, awarded to mark the Queen's Diamond Jubilee, would actually mean for the council, from possible changes to the council's coat of arms to putting the new borough names on street signs.

"There will be protocols to follow - I've been up to my eyeballs in them - but it will be up to us what to do, in consultation with civil servants and Buckingham Palace," he continued.

"I never thought I'd quote Margaret Thatcher, but 'rejoice, rejoice, rejoice'."

Long-serving Conservative Dermot Poston also spoke of his pride in seeing Greenwich's diverse population honoured, adding that in 1968, the borough had been turned down for the honour by then-prime minister Harold Wilson.

Councillor and historian Mary Mills (Labour, Peninsula) said Greenwich and Woolwich's royal connections had contributed to many of the borough's industries, adding that the honour recognised "all sorts of ordinary people going way back".

Chris Roberts added that he had been touched by letters from people about the honour, adding: "My personal favourite is from a lady who wrote, 'I'm just waiting for the first journalist to knock it.'"

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Council Tax, Greenwich Council, Greenwich Time

Council Tax Frozen for 09/10

February 28, 2009 By Rob Powell

Greenwich Council has announced a council tax freeze for 2009-2010, meaning a band D taxpayer will continue to pay £980.91 for local services this year.

Councillor Chris Roberts, Leader of Greenwich Council, said: “We are all looking to find ways through the current economic challenges, and I hope our commitment on freezing Council tax and other charges sends out a clear message that the Council is doing all it can to support residents.” 

Londoners on the whole seem to have done well this year with average council tax rises of only 1.2%, which compares well with the rest of the country. The average Band D charge in London this year is £1,307.55.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Chris Roberts, Council Tax, Greenwich Council

Andrew Gilligan: Taxing Times

January 28, 2009 By Andrew Gilligan

AM I SE10's Max Mosley? Just to make clear, I do not live in a basement being whipped by whores - but I am surely the only person in the entire London Borough of Greenwich who actively seeks out our dear council's ludicrous parody newspaper, Greenwich Time.

Most of us, of course, have as much choice about receiving this publication as we have about paying for it - it is thrust through our doors whether we want it or not, just as the money it costs is taken from us through the council tax. But my street isn't assured of a reliable supply (it's pretty rough down Hyde Vale, where even the milkmen fear to tread) - so most weeks, with a sick feeling of guilt, shame yet also secret, forbidden pleasure, I make the trip to West Greenwich library.

Furtively, hating myself, I enter the building, blow the dust off that week's thick, virgin pile of Greenwich Times and - trying to ignore the staff's incredulity and contempt at my actions - slip a copy, perhaps two, into a brown paper bag. I tell myself it doesn't do any real harm - surely everyone involved must be over 18 - but that ignores the terrible price paid by all those vulnerable young trees, whose innocence has been quite literally pulped to print this ghastly perversion of natural, healthy journalism.

I get it to find out what the council wants us to believe it is doing - from which, through a simple formula (assuming exactly the opposite), you can usually work out what it is actually doing. It looks like a real newspaper. Quite intentionally, I'm sure, there's no mention that it's an official municipal propaganda sheet on the front cover. There are even bylines. Someone called "Peter Cordwell" seems to write most of the stories - surely this must be a pseudonym? Would anyone with any professional pride at all want to be associated with this stuff?

Because the front-page news story on the latest edition is just about the closest you can come to taxpayer-funded political propaganda without actually putting "Vote Labour" as the headline. "It's not just freezing outside!" starts 'Cordwell' (who has a regrettable weakness for the exclamation mark - another sign that he cannot be a real person.) "Council leader Chris Roberts intends to bring the chill into the council chamber next month when he proposes to freeze the council tax."

Goodness me - as recently as last October, Greenwich was one of 16 London councils which rejected a council-tax freeze proposed by the shadow chancellor, George Osborne. Could there possibly be an election coming up?

Anyway, back to Greenwich Time: "Chris told GT: 'For the past ten years Greenwich has established a record which is all but unparalleled across London for rigorous and efficient management of its budgets. While continuing to levy what is almost the lowest cumulative Council Tax increase in London, we have seen Greenwich go from having the second-highest Council Tax in London to being 22nd of 32 boroughs.'"

Both these latter claims are in fact misleading, since they relate to council tax in the current financial year, 2008/9 - not next year, when the freeze Greenwich Time trumpets comes into effect. We don't actually know how Greenwich will compare to other London councils next year yet, because not all have yet announced their 2009/10 council tax levels. It seems likely that many other boroughs will also freeze, or even reduce, their council tax, which might make Greenwich one of the more expensive authorities again.

And as for that "all but unparalleled" efficiency, the truth - which Greenwich Time somehow forgets to mention - is that our current council tax is in fact the fourth highest in inner London, the class of councils in which we are included, and almost precisely the average for London as a whole.

It's true that the level of any authority's council tax depends on factors other than its own efficiency - such as Government grants. But since the level of the council tax is the ground on which Greenwich Time has chosen to blow its PR bugles, a more accurate claim would therefore be that the council tax shows our efficiency is, at best, average.

No doubt the purpose of all this, and all the other Greenwich Time bullshit, is to persuade us to love the council, and to re-elect the wise and beneficient leader who features so constantly in its pages. But I feel increasingly sure that it is having precisely the opposite effect.

I never used to have all that many quarrels with the people who run Greenwich. I've even voted for some of them. It isn't one of the more outrageously useless authorities - it was quite good over Greenwich Market, for instance.

But I, and other people I know, feel insulted by the sheer stupidity and relentlessness of Greenwich Time - now published, incredibly, every single week. We feel angry at the simply improper way that our money is being used to promote politically-motivated distortions. And with non-council related feature material alongside all the Town Hall happy-news, I feel concerned that the clear intention is to undermine independent local newspapers which can paint the full picture.

They no longer have a state-controlled press in East Germany, Poland or the Czech Republic. But below the radar, and in keeping with our new status as a country where freedom is being nibbled away, we are getting one in Britain.

Filed Under: Andrew Gilligan Tagged With: Council Tax, Greenwich Council, Greenwich Time

Visit the Old Royal Naval College

Book tickets for the Old Royal Naval College

They Shall Grow Not Old

Roll of Honour Brand new booklet listing Greenwich's fallen from the First World War. See the list of over 1800 local men combined with photography of local memorials. Available now - £5

Kevin Nolan’s Latest CAFC Match Report

  • Kevin Nolan’s Charlton Athletic Season Review 2021/22

Recent Posts

  • Kevin Nolan’s Charlton Athletic Season Review 2021/22
  • Kevin Nolan’s Match Report: Cambridge United v Charlton (19/04/2022)
  • Kevin Nolan’s Match Report: Rotherham United v Charlton (09/04/22)
  • Kevin Nolan’s Match Report: AFC Wimbledon v Charlton (5/04/2022)

Greenwich.co.uk © Uretopia Limited | About/Contact | Privacy Policy