Councillor Zoe Hopkins

 

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Mobile Message

I'm sitting on the waterside at Leith enjoying the last hours of a beautiful sunny day in Edinburgh. Things are obviously gearing up for tomorrow's here - heavy police presence, especially around the Parliament, lots of shops boarding up and/or shutting down for the duration and preparations for a big rally at the Meadows in the morning. We are told there will be big screens for Live8 but we are also predicted rain so plans are fluid at the moment..




1.7.05 21:00


Mobile Message

Waiting in The Meadows for the start of the march, which has been delayed due to the sheer number of people who have turned up. The crowd is massive, and most people have come out in white so we should actually form a white band once we actually start moving.




2.7.05 12:14


Mobile Message

You can't move in Edinburgh City Centre for police right now. There is an anarchist march/rally planned for today which has everybody a bit worried. There was a small contingent on Saturday under police escort but no trouble whereas trouble is fully expected today. Saturday was huge - much bigger than I expected. I've seen estimates ranging from 120,000 to 200,000, but all I know is that it was a lot! My sister and I were actually quite near the front of the march - they had staggered starts and we left at 12.25. We did the full circle and got back in time for the start of Live8 at 2.00, but by 4.00 there were still people waiting to leave. We were fortunate to have a beautiful sunny day, though not everyone heeded the warnings that it is possible to get sunburnt in Scotland! The support for the Make Poverty History campaign here is huge and very much in evidence, and obviously events here in Edinburgh will continue throughout the G8.




4.7.05 12:22


I was going to post some pictures from Edinburgh today, but obviously events in London have overtaken everything. I've just been watching the news for the past couple of hours and don't know what to think. In the unlikely event that any of my friends in London are reading this, I hope everyone is OK.
7.7.05 12:36


The last week has possibly been the strangest time that I can remember. From the excitement and euphoria of the march and Live8 last Saturday, the fear as I left Edinburgh on Monday that the "anarchists" were going to totally overshadow the Make Poverty History agenda for G8. An abysmal and depressing full council meeting on Tuesday, excitement over the Olympic announcement and Live8 (the second round) in Murrayfield on Wednesday. Shock and horror over the news and TV coverage from London on Thursday, and concern for family and friends who may have been caught up in it. And then fear, and worry and anger. Panic and curiosity after events in Birmingham on Saturday. Nervous, defiant and proud of the fact that things have carried on where possible. It seems impossible that all this has taken place in just one week.
11.7.05 21:47


Blue Routes

Had an extra meeting of the Transportation Scrutiny Committee yesterday as we had requested a call-in of the decision to implement 'blue routes' in Birmingham - designated routes for emergency service vehicles. We had no argument with wanting to improve emergency service response times and access, but there are concerns about the knock on effect on traffic calming measures and road safety in general. The fact is that despite nine months of work on this policy, there is no clear rationale for it's introduction. The Emergency Services have always had preferred and/or strategic routes - apparently the whole nine months have been spent producing this map (PDF download at the bottom of the page); no district or ward versions available for clarity. The report does not give any reasons for the introduction of this policy, and does not offer any evidence to suggest that response times are a problem in Birmingham, or that traffic calming measures have a negative impact on emergency vehicles. It does however provide a convenient way to tip the balance on traffic calming away from measures which physically prevent speeding towards more advisory measures and things like speed cameras, which have a very limited preventative effect on anyone who is determined to speed.


We argued that the policy would speed up all traffic, not just emergency vehicles, and therefore have a negative impact on road safety. A Transport for London Scrutiny took evidence from the London Ambulance Service where they heard that congestion, not traffic calming, was the greatest cause of delay to emergency response. Congestion on main routes may force emergency vehicles to use residential roads where traffic calming may be in place, so surely dealing with congestion is the first priority, rather than potentially threatening road safety by 'reviewing' all the existing traffic calming measures. We are told that each case will be dealt with on it's merits, which is right and proper - but still no assurance about measures outside schools being protected, despite public statements from the Lib Dems about getting a clearer commitment to that into the report. In the end they voted along with the Tories to refuse the call-in request. Len Gregory says it is not his policy to speed up traffic in Birmingham, no matter what. But that will be the outcome of this and other 'decisions' of the so-called Progressive Partnership.

12.7.05 15:23


Just a quick update for a couple of new links - the Sutton Coldfield Observer finally enters the 21st century with a website; handy for those of us who don't get their local papers as they should, and another blogging councillor enters the fold - Selly Oak Lib Dem Dave Radcliffe.
15.7.05 22:11





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