Friday, June 30, 2006

Our Homes are not for Sale - Public Meeting in Little London 19 July

The Save Little London Campaign in conjunction with Amicus trade union has organised a city-wide public meeting on housing and public service privatisation and how to beat it on Wednesday 19 July in Little London.

It features Dick Banks, Amicus convenor for local government in Leeds, who will speak about current government policy to decimate council housing in the country and the Defend Council Housing campaign.

Also invited to speak are tenants' representatives from Swarcliffe estate in Leeds, the first housing PFI undertaken by Leeds City Council and a total disaster. It took nearly 6 years for a contract to be signed and although a majority of tenants were in favour, there is now growing alarm by locals as to shoddy work being carried out by PFI contractors and the string of broken promises about what they would get. They will be joined by speakers from Little London, Osmondthorpe and a range of defend public services campaigns.

The aim of the meeting to bring together local people in Little London with tenants and campaigners across the city as we are all facing the same fight with privatisation and PFI and working together can only make us stronger. We are planning a special presentation on what is happening to tenants in Swarcliffe. Our hope for the evening is that we can brainstorm on where next for the campaign.

There will be free tea, coffee and snacks.

Meeting details:

Wednesday 19 July, 7pm-9pm
Space@, Little London Community Primary School
Oatland Close, Leeds

Our Homes are not for Sale: Challenging Privatisation in Leeds

Featuring Dick Banks
Amicus convenor for local government in Leeds

Plus
Speakers from Swarcliffe Tenants and Residents Association, Osmondthorpe, Save Little London Campaign, education workers fighting PFI and city academies

For more information, email savelittlelondon@gmail.com or ring 07775886617

Our Cities are not for Sale - Public Meeting 12 July

Housing, hospitals, schools, water, energy – all the things we depend for our daily lives – are being privatised so that big business can profit. But across the world from Bolivia to Britain people are organising, fighting back and proposing better alternatives. These are the things we have fought hard for and won. Don’t sit back and let them take our cities and resources from us.

Two public meetings in Leeds will bring people together to discuss what’s happening and plan how we can respond.

The first meeting of the 'Our Cities are not for Sale!' events takes place on 12 July at the 'Common Place Social Centre' in the city centre. It features high-profile Bolivian trade unionist and anti-privatisation campaigner, Oscar Olivera Foronda, who is visiting Leeds as part of a nation-wide tour to deliver a message of solidarity and hope: ‘If we can beat privatisation in Bolivia then you can do it in Leeds’.

Oscar Olivera (pictured above) is the executive secretary of the Cochabamba Federation of Factory Workers in Bolivia and spokesperson for the Coalition in Defence of Water and Life (known as ‘La Coordinadora’). He will speak about the popular uprising against privatisation in Bolivia since 2000 that recently swept the socialist president Evo Morales to power.

The charismatic activist, known as ‘El Chato’ to his comrades, helped lead a mass movement in Cochabamba against US multinational Bechtel who had taken over the water systems as an IMF-imposed condition for debt relief. As part of a corrupt deal, Bechtel raised water rates sky-high and took over communally-constructed and managed water supplies run for centuries by its people. Thousand of citizens protested for weeks despite huge government repression. Olivera emerged from hiding to negotiate with the government and in April 2000, ‘La Coordinadora’ won its demands when the government turned over control of the city's water system to the organisation and cancelled the privatisation contract.

The meeting has been organised by the Save Little London Campaign with support from Leeds Unison, World Development Movement and the Common Place social centre. During the event, Oscar will be joined by a trade activist campaigning against the harmful trade role played by the European Union in Latin America, a Venezuelan worker in Hugo Chavez's nationalised oil industry, a local trade unionist from Unison talking about privatisation in Leeds and a speaker from the Rossport Solidarity Camp in Ireland who will explain how they are supporting local people’s fight against oil giant Shell's plan to build an unprecedented high pressure gas pipeline through the hamlet of Rossport.

Save Little London campaigners aim to use the opportunity of Oscar’s visit to link the struggles of people abroad to those closer to home and launch a city-wide anti-privatisation network aimed at stopping the PFI regeneration scheme in Little London and supporting all other campaigns to defend public services in the city. The 12 July public meeting will be followed a week later by a city-wide anti-privatisation meeting in Little London. 'Our Homes are not for Sale - Challenging Privatisation in Leeds' will be held on the 19 July at 'Space@', behind Little London Community Primary School. Details above.

Meeting details:

Wednesday 12 July 6pm-late

Fighting the privatisation of resources: voices from the frontline
@The Common Place Social Centre

Featuring Oscar Olivera
Spokesperson for the Coalition in Defence of Water and Life (‘La Coordinadora’) in Cochabamba, Bolivia.

Plus

Nick Buxton, trade activist based in La Paz, Bolivia
John McDermott, local trade unionist, Leeds Unison
Fin, Rossport Solidarity Camp against Shell, Ireland
speaker from Venezuela

++ Film screenings, food, and benefit party

The Common Place, 23-25 Wharf Street, Leeds
www.thecommonplace.org.uk
For a map, click here

For more information, email savelittlelondon@gmail.com or ring 07775886617

---------------------------------

The Common Place is an autonomous social centre based at 23-25 Wharf Street in the heart of the city centre – see our website www.thecommonplace.org.uk for directions. Its aim is to create a place in which people can collectively recover those things being eroded by the market society: a sense of community and solidarity, affordable food and entertainment, a non-commercial place to relax, talk, meet people or find information on political campaigns, issues and actions.

Doors will open at 6pm on Wednesday 12 July. The evening will begin with a short film on the popular uprising in Brazil followed by speakers and discussion from 7pm until 9pm. The event will climax with a Fiesta for Water and Life benefit party with drinks, food and music, featuring an acoustic set by American folk singer, Tom Neilson (http://www.tomneilsonmusic.com). All monies raised will go to supporting La Coordinadora in Bolivia and the Common Place.

Oscar Olivera is the executive secretary of the Cochabamba Federation of Factory Workers in Bolivia and spokesperson for the Coalition in Defence of Water and Life, known as ‘La Coordinadora’. He worked in factories from the age of sixteen. He took his first leadership role in the labor movement twenty five years ago when he went to work in a shoe factory. For more information about Oscar http://www.narconews.com/Issue34/article1049.html

La Coordinadora achieved the first major victory against the global trend of privatising water resources sparking off similar struggles including in Uruguay where campaigners inspired by Cochabamba's fight secured a referendum victory that changed the Constitution to say that water was a public right and could not be privatised. The victory also gave new energy to Bolivia's dynamic social movements who in a series of nationwide struggles overthrew two Presidents in 2003 and 2005, and helped secure a resounding victory for Bolivia's first ever indigenous President, Evo Morales in December 2005. Oscar Olivera also continues to head La Coordinadora's work to develop a water system that relies neither on corrupt government management nor on transnational corporations.

Local campaigners will launch a city-wide anti-privatisation network at the meeting. The aim is to link campaigns to defend council housing, the NHS, education, post offices, libraries, playing fields and all public services and space from privatisation under one umbrella – Our Cities are not for Sale – bringing together trade unions with tenants, teachers, lecturers, administrators, doctors, nurses, librarians, cleaners, council workers and students.

Monday, June 12, 2006

Our latest newsletter is now available

As we don't have our own server space, our newsletters are kindly hosted by the Autonomous Geographies Project at the University of Leeds, which is examining the PFI scheme in Little London. We'd like to make it clear the views in the newsletters DO NOT necessarily reflect those of the Autonomous Geographies Project. They are just doing us a favour.

Issue 3 of Save Little London Campaign News is now available for download here:

Save Little London News, 1, March 14

You can also now download Issues 1 and 2:

Save Little London News, 2, April 1

Save Little London News, 3, June 10

Meeting and Contact Details

Regular Meetings

Save Little London normally meets every first and third Monday of the month, 7pm, in The Rifleman Pub on Carlton Parade in Little London (LS7 1HA, 0113 245 3760).

See map of where The Rifleman is by clicking here

We’re all a friendly bunch and aim to make these meetings a social occasion. There is an open agenda - come along with your ideas and get involved. Please feel free to ring us beforehand if you plan on coming. Free drink for first timers!

Contact Details

Ring Steve on (0113) 217 8608
Email us: savelittlelondon@gmail.com
Write to us: Save Little London Campaign, c/o 96 Lovell Park Towers, LS7 1DR

Community Day Big Success

Saturday's annual Community Day in Little London was a huge success. Blessed with beautiful sunshine all day and a nice strong breeze (which caused havoc with the stalls), hundreds of residents turned out and had a brilliant time.

The area was transformed - a giant marquee beating out music, a dozen stalls, a booming barbecue, a giant diversity of people mingling together. It must have been quite a shock for the Council to discover that there really is a community down here. Time and time again they have spoken of the need to 'create' one. Thanks, but no thanks.

The Save Little London Campaign stall went really well and the t-shirts proved a big hit with all ages and sizes. We gave away all 125 and were delighted to see them being worn throughout the day. Loads of new people signed up to find out more about our campaign, 100s of newsletters were distributed and we made some great new friends.

A common theme emerged from our conversations - that people still had no idea what was really going to happen to the estate, despite the Council's 'consultation' exercise, and were really angry to discover that the Lovells were being sold off, and Carlton Towers demolished.

Below are some photos from the day. Let's hope they want become distant memories of what our community used to be.


Thursday, June 08, 2006

Little London Community Day this Saturday

This Saturday, 10 June, between 12pm and 5pm, is Little London Community Day. It is a chance to celebrate the rich diversity and talents of the people who live here and begin a new effort to rebuild our much maligned community for the benefit of all. With the diastrous PFI regeneration scheme hanging over us, this year's community day will also have a deeply political feel to it.

The annual event is very much a grassroots community initiative. Organised by Community Action Little London and Servias (CALLS), a resident-led group with a full-time worker, Community Day began in April 2000 as part of the ‘Planning for Real’ process. This involved local people creating a 3-D model of the area, which we used to pinpoint problem areas and then suggest the priorities for action and the appropriate group to carry them out.

Six years on and almost everything demanded by the local community has been ignored by the local council. That's why Community Day is so important. It is about the community 'doing it for itself', bringing together local artists, musicians, poets, dancers and activists to put something on by ourselves for ourselves - which is why it is such a great day to be involved in.

This year's event has been many months in the making and features an extravaganza of home-grown talent. Musical performances on the Marquee Stage include drummers Leeds Silver Sparrow Steel Pans, the Salvation Army brass band, the Little London Community Primary School choir, the reggae beats of Unity Band, the African rhythms of Burkina Faso act Baba Kone and urban acts Cauz n Fx, DMW and C-AG. They will be joined by the poetic skills of Leeds Young Authors, the artistic wizardry of Little London Arts and the spectacular spins of anti-violence break dance crew, Breakers Unify. A prize for community heroes will be presented at the end of the day.

There will also be a variety of activities for all ages and the entire family, from crazy golf and face-painting to bingo and football flag making. Massage and fitness sessions will be on hand to counteract the waist-widening effects of the home-baked cake stalls. Plus workshops on mosaic-making, bongo-drumming, break dancing and mask making. And, just in case there is the odd football fan, the England-Paraguay match will be screened live in the Community Centre.

Save Little London Campaign will be at the heart of the Community Day. We'll have our own stall and tent - right next to our traitorous landlord, Leeds North West Homes! We've gone and raided the bank to print special T-shirts saying 'Stop PFI! Decent Homes for ALL', stickers and window posters for tenants to show how they feel. We've also produced our third newsletter, which you can download here. Right after the screening of the football, we're taking over the Little London Community Centre to show films on tenants resistance to housing privatisation.

Our aim is to talk to as many tenants and residents as possible, give them accurate information about the current stage of the PFI, listen to and respect their views and encourage more people to get involved in the campaign. Understandably people feel that there's nothing we can do anymore - the Council has made up its mind and if it hasn't listened for the past six years, it isn't going to start listening now. Our aim is to convince people that when they stand up to power, when they organise effectively, democratically and imaginatively, anything is possible.

We stopped the Transatlantic slave trade, we won the right to vote, we stopped Hitler, we won the welfare state and the right to social housing, we stopped the Poll Tax...the list is endless. In the past few years, tenants up and down the country have defeated their Councils' attempts to privatise their council homes - in Waveney, Cannock Chase, Selby, Mid Devon, Sedgefield, Ellesmere Port & Neston, Kingston, Wrexham, Aberdeen, Birmingham, Dudley, Camden, Southwark and so on. All have voted NO to privatisation!

PFI is back-door privatisation - it means that instead of the Council or ALMO running your homes, a private company does for 25-25 years. Instead of rents and council tax being re-invested in council homes, they are used to pay greedy shareholders fat profits. PFI in Little London also means the direct sale of three tower blocks of flats to a private developer. This the worst form of stock transfer - instead of being the tenant of a private landlord, tenants are simply forced to move out of their homes and into a new council housing somewhere else. In Leeds, there is a huge demand for such housing, yet the Council is cutting its housing stock by 10,000 over the next few years.

Campaigning ideas and resources

If the PFI scheme did not eventually go ahead, Little London would still qualify for £20m to bring homes up to the Decency standard by 2010. Leeds’ six ALMOs, including Leeds North West Homes, will soon be merged into three, meaning that more money could be available to invest in Little London without requiring people to leave their own homes. We could also pursue alternative regeneration schemes such as tenant self-management.

For all of this to happen, however, we need to build a strong campaign. This page sets out some of things that we can all do right now.



5 Ways to Fight Leeds City Council and PFI.

1. Get your elected representatives to “represent” you!

They may be next to useless, but YOU pay their wages, they’re supposed to represent YOU! Write to your local MP, Hilary Benn, and tell him that the Council seriously misled you about the planned Comprehensive Regeneration of the estate. There are countless examples of how they conned people into stating a preference for the PFI (see the end of this post). Ask him to complain on your behalf to both Leeds City Council and the Department for Communities and Local Government.

CONTACT DETAILS
Hilary Benn MP
2 Blenheim Terrace, Leeds,
LS2 9JG, BennH@parliament.uk

You should also complain to the ward's local councillors. However, be warned, they have been totally behind the PFI as it is a policy of the ruling Lib-Dem/Tory/Green coalition that run Leeds City Council. Not only that, but they seem totally unware of what PFI is, how it works and it will mean for the estate. We recommend that you go for a more direct route this time - tell them that if they don't come down to the estate and listen to people's concerns and arguments, you will be campaigning to vote them out during the next council elections in May 2007.

Cllr Kabeer Hussain, Lib Dem
4 Beck Rd, Leeds, LS8 4EJ,
kabeer.hussain@leeds.gov.uk

Cllr Linda Rhodes-Clayton, Lib Dem
237 St Wilfrid's Avenue, Leeds, LS8 3PS
linda.rhodes-clayton@leeds.gov.uk

Cllr Penny Ewens, Lib Dem
3 Holmwood Drive, Leeds, LS6 4NF
penny.ewens@leeds.gov.uk

2. Lodge a formal complaint against Leeds City Council

First of all, make an official complaint to Leeds City Council about they way they have treated you – they are obliged to investigate the issue and respond. While you’re at it also complain directly to the government.

Department for Communities and Local Government
Eland House, Bressenden Place
London, SW1E 5DU
ha.pf@communities.gsi.gov.uk

Leeds City Council
Freepost RLZR-ELTX-RUEH
PO BOX 657, LS1 9BS
complaints@leeds.gov.uk

If this doesn’t get you anywhere, then take your complaint to both the Local Government Ombudsman (who investigates if the council has treated you unjustly) and the District Audit Office (which investigates whether the Council has misspent taxpayers’ money – YOUR MONEY).

Local Government Ombudsman
Anne Seex
Beverley House, 17 Shipton Road
York YO30 5FZ
01904 380200, enquiries@lgo.org.uk
Advice line: 0845 602 1983
www.lgo.org.uk

District Auditor
Adrian Lythgo
KPMG, St James Building
St James Square, Manchester, M2 6DS
0161 838 4000, adrian.lythgo@kpmg.co.uk
www.audit-commission.gov.uk

3. Take legal action against the Council

We’ve been advised by solicitors that Leeds City Council may have broken the law over the way it misled tenants over the PFI scheme. Your human rights may have been violated. Contact Save Little London Campaign (see our contact details above) for more details. If you have a low income or on benefits, you might be entitled to legal aid.

The main challenge could be through 'Judicial Review' - read more about what this is by clicking the link.

4. Use the Media

The British press loves a scandal, especially involving politicians and corrupt local councils. Hostile media coverage often forces decision-makers to change their minds. Write letters to the local and national press, ring radio phone-ins, invite journalists to investigate Leeds City Council’s behaviour. Use our list of media contacts below.

Newspapers
Local
Asian Express verity@asianexpress.co.uk
Asian Leader newsdesk@asianleader.co.uk
Leeds Student editor@leedsstudent.org.uk
Leeds Weekly News lwneditorial@ypn.co.uk
Metro (Leeds) karen.joyner@ukmetro.co.uk
Morley Today editorial@morleytoday.co.uk
Press Association paleeds@pa.press.net
Yorkshire Evening Post yp.newsdesk@ypn.co.uk

National
Financial Times nick.timmins@ft.com
Guardian home@guardian.co.uk
Independent news@independent.co.uk
Mirror mirrornews@mirror.co.uk
Morning Star newsed@macunlimited.net
Observer news@observer.co.uk
Red Pepper news@redpepper.org.uk
Socialist Worker reports@socialistworker

Useful journalists
George Monbiot g.monbiot@zetnet.co.uk
Polly Toynbee polly.toynbee@guardian.co.uk
Nick Cohen nick.cohen@observer.co.uk
Peter Lazenby peter.lazneby@ypn.co.uk
Hilary Wainwright hilary1@manc.org
Seumas Milne seumas.milne@guardian.co.uk
Joel Turner joel.turner@ypn.co.uk
Matt Weaver matthew.weaver@guardian.co.uk
Matthew Tempest matthew.tempest@guardian.co.uk

Radio
Local
Aire FM aire.news@radioaire.com
Galaxy 105 news105@galaxy105.co.uk
BBC Radio Leeds radio.leeds@bbc.co.uk
Pulse Radio news@pulse.co.uk

National
Radio 1 newsbeat@bbc.co.uk
Radio 2 tim.collins@bbc.co.uk
Radio 4 midday@bbc.co.uk
Radio 5 fivelive@bbc.co.uk

TV
Local
Calendar calendar@yorkshire.tv.co.uk
BBC Look North look.north@bbc.co.uk

National
BBC Breakfast breakfast@bbc.co.uk
Channel 4 News news@channel4.com
Five News news@five.tv
Newsnight newsnight@bbc.co.uk
Sky News news.plan@bskyb.com

5. Join the Save Little London Campaign

We can achieve far more working with each other than we can by ourselves. Our regular meetings are a source of solidarity and support. Over the next few months, we plan to hold public meetings with other tenants’ groups, lobbies, demonstrations, community events and film nights as part of a high-profile campaign. Joining the Save Little London Campaign is FREE.

We meet every first and third Monday of the month, 7pm, in The Rifleman Pub. We’re all a friendly bunch and aim to make these meetings a social occasion.