Lambethtalk monthly information • dates • contacts • events • features • people • places APRIL 2015 free to your door Make your mark on Thursday 7 May Lambeth the Food Flagship Borough page 8 Celebrating 50 years of the London Borough of Lambeth Get involved page 12 page 20 What’s on page 22 A cooperative council page 7 2 Lambeth talk April 2015 www.lambeth.gov.uk advertisement Your vote Your life Your n decisio Your Lambeth Want to help decide the country’s next new Government? Make sure you register to vote by Monday 20 April 2015 so that you can have your say in the General Election on Thursday 7 May. There are three Parliamentary seats in Lambeth and you can vote for one of them. But if your name is not on the new register you won’t be able to vote. To register, visit www.gov.uk/register-to-vote Registering takes around five minutes and you’ll need your National Insurance Number. The deadline for postal vote applications is 5pm Tuesday 21 April 2015. 2433 - LBL your vote 215x180 v4.indd 1 06/03/2015 12:38 April 2015 Lambeth talk 3 Welcome in this issue... Regulars News4 Youth Mayor’s 14 positive stories Lambeth Living 16 What’s on 22 Features Make your mark on 7 Thursday 7 May Have your say on how the country is run in the general election. Lambeth the Food Flagship We’re leading the way in tackling child obesity and health and social inequality. 8 20 years of Beaconsfield 9 A look at one of Vauxhalls historic buildings, now home to a contemporary art gallery. Need help getting online? 11 Lambeth Digi-buddies are here to help. The Battle of Lambeth 12 London Borough of Lambeth’s 50th anniversary – a look back at how it came to be. Hands-on learning 15 with Streetscape A social enterprise providing apprenticeships in landscape gardening. Coin Street Community 18 Builders A social enterprise creating a great place to live, work and visit. Give it a go, get involved 20 Examples of great projects that you could get involved in. www.lambeth.gov.uk to the April edition of Lambeth talk I’m really pleased and excited to be working in Lambeth. It’s a borough that’s rich in history but forward looking. Of course Lambeth has its challenges, not least the huge reductions in our funding, but I believe we can still fulfil the promise of ambition and opportunity for everyone while supporting the most vulnerable in our community. Sean Harriss, Lambeth Council Chief Executive The biggest challenge for a new Chief Executive is getting up to speed with the organisation, the place, the issues and opportunities facing the borough. What is clear to me already though is that Lambeth has great staff, clear political leadership, and an excellent foundation of joint working between the council and local people and organisations. This includes residents, businesses, community groups and organisations like the NHS and the police. I want to build on all these relationships as people and local organisations are our greatest resource. Success for me is about how we can improve the life chances of all Lambeth residents. This means continuing the path rooted in fairness and ambition. Probably one of the biggest challenges is to make sure local people and particularly the most disadvantaged residents benefit from all the regeneration and growth taking place in the borough. On a personal level, I’m enjoying discovering Lambeth, getting to know people, inside and outside the council and look forward to meeting many of you in the months and years ahead. Let us know what you think about any of the features in this edition on our blog love.lambeth.gov.uk or join in the conversation @lambeth_council. To contribute stories, events or advertise in Lambeth talk, email [email protected] For our monthly enewsletter, sign up to love.lambeth.gov.uk/newsletters Contributors Amber Davis, Andrea Stewart, Annamaria Stewart, Barry Norris, Helen Mannion, Jacqueline Gomes-Neves, Jo Phillips, Joe Coyne, Jon Newman, Lawrence Conway, Michael Stringer, Patroklos Sesis, Peter Bradley, Peter Green Design SUE SMITH Editor Christine Loum For council services: Visit www.lambeth.gov.uk Email [email protected] Call 020 7926 1000 Sign up www.lambeth.gov.uk/mylambeth 4 Lambeth talk April 2015 www.lambeth.gov.uk News Lambeth builds on housing pledge Lambeth’s ambitious Estate Regeneration programme is now underway with the aim of creating 1,000 desperately needed extra homes available at council rent levels, and ensuring every property on six council estates is of a decent standard. Hundreds of new apprenticeships in Lambeth Lambeth Council’s aim is to see at least 300 additional apprenticeships created in the borough over the next two years has gathered pace, with one of the UK’s leading infrastructure services companies, FM Conway, launching a new apprentice skills programme in Lambeth. Westbury Estate Demand for housing is at an all-time high in Lambeth - there are 21,000 people on the housing waiting list, 1,800 families in temporary accommodation and another 1,300 families who are severely overcrowded. Further, the cost of renting or buying has stretched beyond the reach of many local people. The Estate Regeneration programme presents a golden opportunity to act in the face of this crisis. It has the potential to see hundreds of new properties made available for council rent and, where needed, existing homes brought up to a decent standard. Discussions with residents on the Cressingham Gardens, Central Hill, Knights Walk, South Lambeth and Westbury estates have already started with options being developed in partnership with residents. Work with people living on the Fenwick Estate in Clapham shall follow. The council is guaranteeing that all tenants on the estates will end up either in a new home, or a completely refurbished home. All homeowners, whose properties may be replaced, will be given the opportunity to keep living on the same estate. During National Apprenticeship Week, we launched our campaign to deliver 300 apprenticeships in the borough before April 2017 – an average rate of three per week. Fifty of the opportunities will be designed to support vulnerable young people with additional needs or who face challenges to entering and staying in an apprenticeship opportunity. To find out more about apprenticeship opportunities, visit www.gov.uk/further-educationskills/apprenticeships Lambeth Park April 2015 Lambeth talk 5 www.lambeth.gov.uk Lambeth launches a review on community engagement We’re working hard to make sure we are involving you in the decisions that are going to affect you and the places where you live. We’ve made real progress in recent years, but we know there is more we can do. There are several substantial regeneration schemes being planned in the borough. We want to make Lambeth Council’s ambition is to involve people in shaping their future and the future of Lambeth. Our research shows that particular communities find it hard to get involved with the big decisions. Barriers include language, time and internet access. sure everyone has a say in these changes including the Culture 2020 consultation and others we need to make as our funding is reduced. Lambeth Council has set up a short review to explore how the council can engage better with the local community. We will be asking people what they think, what works and meeting a wide range of community representatives. We welcome your thoughts, so please get in touch by emailing [email protected] Childcare report shows help needed for new parents The Mayor of London, central government, local authorities and employers all have a part to play in tackling the childcare crisis facing new parents in the capital, according to a report commissioned by Lambeth and Southwark councils. Maternal employment in London is 15 per cent lower than in the rest of the country, and the Lambeth and Southwark Childcare Commission report produces a series of recommendations to make it easier for new parents to return to work. The report recommends that both councils look into the idea of a childcare matchmaking service and consider incentivising local employers to set up workplace nurseries. It also suggests Transport for London consider offering new parents discounted fares to help make going back to work affordable, or for the Mayor of London to look into the feasibility of providing an interestfree loan scheme so that parents can pay any upfront childcare costs. Streatham man sentenced for benefit fraud A 44 year old Streatham man has been convicted of benefit fraud after claiming he was in receipt of sick pay for four years even though he was working. Yahya Serar, of Amesbury Avenue, Leigham Court Estate, was receiving benefits in 2009 as a result of being off sick from work. He failed to inform Lambeth Council benefits service that he had returned to work in March 2009 and continued to claim benefits until 2013. Serar was overpaid benefits in excess of £18,000. Serar pleaded not guilty but was found guilty at Croydon Magistrates Court, and sentenced to six months in custody, suspended for 12 months. He was ordered to pay costs of £1,859.28 and a victim surcharge of £80.00. He was instructed to carry out 200 hours of unpaid work, to be completed within 12 months. The fraud was identified by Lambeth investigators looking at benefit claimants in receipt of long-term sick pay. Culture 2020 – join in the conversation A wide ranging consultation on the future of Lambeth’s parks, sports, libraries, archives and arts is underway. For more information and to complete the questionnaire, visit www.lambeth.gov.uk/ culture2020consultation The consultation ends Friday 24 April. 6 Lambeth talk April 2015 www.lambeth.gov.uk Council crackdown on anti-social behaviour Lambeth Council is considering hiring enforcement officers to crackdown on fly tipping, littering, dog fouling and other anti-social behaviour. The Cameron family, Brixton Your Shout Which council services do you value most? “We regularly use the Jubilee centre, and I think local community spaces (provided by Lambeth) are very important.” What would help you – in the way of new services, events, or support? “We’d like to see more information about what’s on offer and what’s going on. Too often there are good services and events happening, but Lambeth citizens don’t know about them.” The council has approved recommendations that include reducing the cost to residents of removing bulky items in an attempt to cut fly tipping and contracting a private firm to issue Fixed Penalty Notices (FPNs) for anti-social behaviour. In 2014, the council issued over a thousand FPNs, more than half of them for littering. Anti-social behaviour costs a lot of money to clear up and the council wants to send a clear message that this behaviour will not be tolerated. The recommendations were put forward by the Environmental Crime Scrutiny Commission following a lengthy review of how the borough tackles such problems. Lambeth Council recently made the first successful prosecution in the borough for spitting in public. What are the services you’re worried about losing in light of financial constraints? “We’d be particularly worried about cuts affecting Lambeth’s maintenance of town centres and parks, especially parks.” 25,000 reasons to pay by Direct Debit Lambeth Council has teamed up with Bacs Payment Schemes Limited, the not-for-profit organisation behind Direct Debit in the TO ANCE UK, to offer council A CH tax payers the chance to win £25,000. WIN00 £25,0 All you have to do is sign up to pay by direct debit before 5pm on 17 July 2015 and you will be automatically entered. You can do so via www.lambeth.gov.uk/ benefits-and-council-tax by calling 034 5302 2312 or by returning a completed direct debit form by post. April 2015 Lambeth talk 7 www.lambeth.gov.uk Your vote in the UK parliamentary general election on Thursday 7 May is the best way for you to have your say on how the country is run. Make your voice heard at the ballot box. Make your mark on Thursday 7 May How to vote To vote in this general election, you must be registered to vote by midnight Monday 20 April. To register, visit www.gov.uk/ register-to-vote - registering takes around five minutes and you’ll need your National Insurance Number. If you want to vote by post you will have until 5pm on Tuesday 21 April to apply. Contact Lambeth Council’s electoral services for more information. Call 020 7926 2254 or email electoralservices@ lambeth.gov.uk Registered voters will be sent a poll card telling you where and when to vote. There are three parliamentary seats in Lambeth representing each of our constituencies and you can vote for one of them. They include: Dulwich and West Norwood, Streatham and Vauxhall. The candidate with the most votes in each constituency becomes the MP for that area. These are just a few reasons why you should vote on 7 May: • Politicians write policies for people that vote. If you don’t vote then they may not listen to you. • How you vote is a message to the political parties. Every vote is counted so they will know what you think. • Voting is inclusion. If you don’t vote you are excluding yourself from an important decision that will affect you. On Thursday 7 May attend your allocated polling station and vote by putting an X (a cross) in the box next to your choice, fold your paper in half and put it in the ballot box. As well as voting on 7 May there are other ways that you can get involved and influence decisions on local issues. For more information on how to get involved in local democracy in Lambeth, visit www.lambeth.gov.uk/ democracy 8 Lambeth talk April 2015 www.lambeth.gov.uk Lambeth the Food Flagship Borough working towards a healthier future By Patroklos Sesis • Environmental education. • The creation of new food enterprises that will trade fruit and vegetables in our most deprived areas. • Delivering a variety of activities for children during school holidays. The programme aims to harvest the abundance of knowledge of food in our culturally rich communities. This is an opportunity for everyone to get involved in an effort to improve the provision of fresh, nutritious, accessible and affordable food in Lambeth that supports the long-term health and wellbeing of our residents. Healthy Holidays Eco Food Growing - Holmewood School Lambeth has been awarded Food Flagship status and is one of only two London boroughs leading the way in tackling child obesity and health and social inequality in an innovative way. The programme will work with a host of partners including residents, schools, local food businesses, food-growing initiatives and charities to cultivate a love for quality and nutritious food. Lambeth Council has received over £500,000 from the Mayor of London and the Department of Education to kickstart this promising and exciting programme that will transform the boroughs food environment. The Food Flagship Programme will coordinate and support the efforts of existing and new projects across Lambeth. This includes: • Implementing the School Food Plan in all Lambeth schools, led by our lead Food Flagship Schools. • Supporting food growing initiatives. During the school holidays many parents due to a lack of money, time or cooking skills end up buying foods high in salt, fat or sugars. These are the types of foods that in the long-term contribute to ill health. Lambeth’s Healthy Holidays programme will support young people’s activities in borough by providing a nutritious meal or snack. The initiative is funded by the Innocent Foundation and the Mayor’s Fund for London. If you are a local organisation or community group that provides activities for children in the borough during the school holidays please get in touch. Call our community food coordinator on 020 7735 5802. For information on healthy eating, visit www.nhs.uk/livewell/healthy-eating April 2015 Lambeth talk 9 www.lambeth.gov.uk 20 years of Beaconsfield By Barry Norris and Gabriela Cala-Lesina It is 20 years since Beaconsfield Contemporary Art moved into the remaining wing of the former Lambeth Ragged School (a grand building that opened to the public in 1851) on Newport Street in Vauxhall. The Ragged School as it was in 1851 Improvements to Beaconsfield’s entrance The entrance to Beaconsfield as it looks today Beaconsfield, which is run by David Crawforth and Naomi Siderfin, is one of Vauxhall’s most precious cultural venues. David and Naomi are artists who have been organising great grass-roots events in Vauxhall’s community spaces since the early 1990s. It was David and Naomi’s desire to create something a little different and fill a niche between the institution, the commercial, and the alternative that brought the gallery to life and made it such a success. This year Beaconsfield hope to realise their longstanding ambition to open up the street wall to encourage more passers-by to drop in and visit. This will involve punching several holes into the rather intimidating tall wall that divides the pavement of Newport Street and the entrance to the gallery and the Ragged Canteen. The Ragged Canteen Other ways to be a part of Beaconsfield include dining in the beautiful, and ethically-conscious, Ragged Canteen which is open Wednesday - Saturday, 11am to 5pm. Find out more at www.lovevaux.com/beaconsfield Birdseye view of the Oval and Kennington Development Area Your views on Oval gas holders Thank you to everyone who attended our recent workshops about the Oval and Kennington Development Area (OAKDA). Your suggestions are being used to shape a masterplan for the large site between Oval Cricket Ground and Kennington Lane. Visit www.oakda.co.uk/ consultation to see a timeline of next steps as well as presentations and maps from the latest public meeting. To find out more about Beaconsfield and the Ragged Canteen, visit www.loveaux.com/beaconsfield 10 Lambeth talk April 2015 www.lambeth.gov.uk 10640 lambeth talk MARCH:Mag 19/2/14 10702 my lambeth mylambeth LT advert:Layout 1 9/10/14 advertisement 16:47 Page 17 Save time. Do it online. www.lambeth.gov.uk/mylambeth march 2014 Lambeth talk 17 10702 (10.14) www.lambeth.gov.uk advertisement Want to advertise your business and get great value for money? Then our hugely popular monthly magazine is what you are looking for. it h w e s i t r e v Ad Lambethtalk • Delivered to over 130,000 homes • • • and businesses Published on love.lambeth.gov.uk Emailed to thousands of local businesses and organisations Tweeted to all our followers It’s a great way to boost your business and get seen by thousands. We offer discounts for repeat advertising, or for those in the charity, voluntary or public sector. Call 020 7926 0023 or email [email protected] ADVERTISEMENT 13 April 2015 Lambeth talk 11 www.lambeth.gov.uk Need a buddy to help you get online? By Andrea Stewart Many people find sending emails or doing their shopping online easy, but there are still some of us who don’t know where to start. For those who need support, why not attend one of our Digi-buddy sessions where a volunteer can get you up to speed with everything online at your own pace. Free sessions are open to all and take place every day at various locations across the borough. Digi-buddies can help you in many different ways. We took a peek at their Twitter account to find out how - all in 160 characters or less! Improve your general internet skills: “I’m new to the internet, but if you don’t use it you’re out of touch. I feel happy coming to Digi-buddies. They’ve really helped me.” Danny Buy things online: “Digi-buddies are great. They’re patient with me. Today I found and brought two of my favourite CD’s online.” John Find out what’s happening in the world: “It’s my first week here and the Digi-buddies are very helpful. I’m reading news from my home country Jamaica, amazing!” Daphne Regain your computer confidence!: “I love Digi-buddies! I hadn’t used a computer in nearly 10 years and everything has changed a lot!” Ifuela Jacqueline Morgan was supported by a Digi-buddy which helped her conquer her fear of going online. Connect with friends: Digi-buddies helped me conquer my fear going online. I can send email now & I hope to get one back soon! Jacqueline Become a Digi-buddy volunteer: “It’s great when people get it and go away to use it by themselves we’ve done our job.” Mary, Digi-buddy volunteer For more information about how Digi-buddies can help you, where sessions are held or how you can help your fellow residents by becoming a volunteer Digibuddy, call 020 3691 5111 or email [email protected] Visit love.lambeth.gov.uk to find Save time and do your council business online Digi-buddies can also help you sign-up for a mylambeth account, where you can order recycling bags, arrange garden waste collections, manage your library and housing benefit accounts, access registrar services and much more online. Instead of queuing in our customer centre or waiting on the phone, why not save time and do it online. Visit www.lambeth.gov.uk/ mylambeth for more information. out more about how our residents are learning and giving through the Digi-buddies scheme. 12 Lambeth talk April 2015 www.lambeth.gov.uk From Lambeth Archives The battle of Lambeth By Jon Newman This month it is the 50th anniversary of the creation of the London Borough of Lambeth. Later this year it is also the 200th anniversary of the Battle of Waterloo. But how many Lambeth residents recall the battle that was fought in the years leading up to 1965 over the identity of this part of south London? There may have been no deaths, but feelings ran very high. New look for Lambeth and London Map showing the new borough. Lambeth increased in both size and population by 50 per cent and with 340,000 residents in 1965 was the largest of the new London boroughs in terms of population. The new borough that came into being on 1 April 1965 was half as big again as the old metropolitan borough of Lambeth. Thanks to the addition of Clapham and Streatham, and with 340,000 residents, it became the largest London borough in terms of population. The previous five-year build up to this had not been a universally happy time. The findings of the 1960 Royal Commission on London Government had set up a dramatic programme of change enshrined in the 1963 London Government Act: London would quadruple in size from 125 to over 600 sq. miles and incorporate areas of Essex, Surrey, Kent and Middlesex with former market towns like Croydon, Kingston and Barnet becoming brand new London Boroughs, while the new London authority, the Greater London Council would provide regional government. This was no more than belated recognition of the fact that Geography lesson from a Lambeth Pearly King; Councillor Carr, chair of the new borough-inwaiting admires a visual display at Lambeth Town Hall in 1964. London had grown massively in size. But a second consideration, paradoxically, was that the population of inner London had shrunk. War-time bombing and better housing opportunities in ‘new towns’ and the lure of the suburbs had emptied out inner London boroughs like Shoreditch and Finsbury. The solution was to bundle together groups of smaller authorities into new larger ‘London Boroughs’, so neighbouring Camberwell, Bermondsey and Southwark were combined to become the London Borough of Southwark. The rest of inner London was tidied up in this way, but the Metropolitan Boroughs of Lambeth and Wandsworth defeated the planners. They were the two largest of the old boroughs, yet neither was quite large enough to become a London borough in its own right. Emergency surgery was called for, and for many it was painful. Clapham and Streatham, the southern and eastern districts of Wandsworth, would be added on to Lambeth, while the small depopulated borough of Battersea would be added on to the rump of Wandsworth. Like all messy compromises it was greeted with horror, particularly by residents of Clapham and Streatham. Part of the problem was April 2015 Lambeth talk 13 www.lambeth.gov.uk For residents of the old Lameth it all meant rather less; after all they were keeping their name and their identity while their borough simply became larger. As the ‘Lambeth Serves’ booklet put out by the Lambeth Municipal Officers Guild that year noted, it “will mean a very great deal to some people and be hardly discernible by others”. Lambeth did not only grow physically in size and population, the local authority also acquired whole new areas of responsibility like social services, child protection and old people’s welfare. Seen here is the home at Elliott Road Brixton, one of many old people’s welfare centres that Lambeth started constructing in the 1960s and 70s. about identity and the merging of two proudly distinct parishes into a larger whole. Another was undoubtedly that old English difficulty with class. Clapham and Streatham were wealthier, more middle-class areas than Lambeth which with all the gritty authenticity of Vauxhall, Waterloo and Brixton, prided itself on its working class credentials. Consultations and public enquiries were held; the Streatham Ratepayers Association and the newly-formed Wandsworth Preservation Society led the opposition campaign, but by March 1963 Keith Joseph, the Conservative Housing Minister was piloting the bill through the Commons and the headline in the Give us your support and we will defeat the dictators in their infamous designs Wandsworth Preservation Society motto Streatham News said it all, “STREATHAM MUST GO”. Councillor Green, the member for Streatham, lamented that they were “allowing a great and proud borough to slip to its doom down the slippery slope of oblivion.” The London Borough of Lambeth received its charter in May 1964 when Councillor Carr was created its Chairman. However, the old Metropolitan Borough continued to exist alongside the new with Councillor Lawrence only standing down as its last Mayor in March 1965. Then in April Councillor Carr (seen here) was made Mayor of the new London Borough. 14 Lambeth talk April 2015 www.lambeth.gov.uk Youth Major’s positive stories By Jacqueline Gomes-Neves, Lambeth Youth Mayor I recently had the privilege of sitting on MyLifeMySay’s (an organisation that engages young people in politics) inspirational female led panel, at their first #BeTheChange young people’s question time in Parliament. In the lead up to the General Election on Thursday 7 May, MyLifeMySay are making sure young people are at the heart of the debate by hosting a series of discussions on topics such as education, health, inequality and employment. Their campaign focuses on encouraging youth participation in politics and increasing awareness of the key issues - enabling young people to make informed and responsible political decisions. Each month I receive many amazing stories about outstanding young people. Please carry on sending your stories in and inspiring other young people to create their own. Dotun Abeshinbioke 16 years old, from Brixton Hill Dotun is currently studying for her A levels whilst running her own online jewellery business, URBXN FINDS. Dotun has bought handmade jewellery from Nigeria and China and is keen to develop her own distinctive range of fashionable Nigerian designed and made jewellery. She is also planning on introducing a range of fashion caps and clothing. She has promoted the business and built up her own customer base through social media websites such as Facebook, Twitter and Instagram which has helped to keep costs down and spread information about the business much faster and efficiently. She is keen to go to university in the USA and that’s what the sales Dotun Abeshinbioke from her business will finance. She is definitely a young female entrepreneur to celebrate. To find out more about Dotun and her fabulous jewelry, visit www.urbxnfinds.com I would encourage young people to also get involved in the If I were PM for a day campaign on Twitter, by tweeting @mylifemysay with a short summary of what you would do if you were the Prime Minister for a day. To find out more about MyLifeMySay, visit www.mylifemysay.org.uk Urbxn Appeal, inspired by individuality If you’re a young person who has a positive story to share, email [email protected] with the subject ‘Positive Story’. You can also follow Jacqueline @lamyouthmayor April 2015 Lambeth talk 15 www.lambeth.gov.uk FROM THE COMMUNITY Streetscapes current project in Clapham will see the old bin store on Solon Road dug out and a space with planters created where residents can grow salad and vegetables. Hands-on learning in an improved landscape Streetscape apprentice, Tamsyn Heenan, says: “Children who don’t even know carrots grow in the ground will see where food comes from. Instead of video games and technology, this gets them out in the fresh air, getting in touch with community spirit. I never think of it as just a project, I think of the impact on someone like my mum, or Adele who brings us cups of tea on site.” Recruitment day attendee, Alex Cooper, said: “It’ll be great when people leave their homes and see the garden. Just a few of us can make a difference for lots of people.” By Peter Green Myatt’s Fields based Streetscape, are an award-winning social enterprise that provide apprenticeships in landscape gardening to long-term unemployed 18-25 year olds. They and their team of apprentices have been busy creating an edible living space in an area on Solon Road, Clapham, which was once a hot spot for fly tipping. Senior Landscaper and site manager, Keith Whitmore explains: “The apprentices we recruit are young people who want to make a success of life. To apply for the apprenticeship, they attend our recruitment day. This is a great way to learn more about the landscaping industry, and Streetscape. So far, we’ve had eight young people graduate having completed their 12 months training.” Streetscape has developed a set of core standards that sets out what they expect from their apprentices. This includes excellent punctuality, enthusiasm, and commitment to learning. Their apprenticeships include three months training on soft landscaping (planting, mowing and pruning) and three months on hard landscaping. For the remaining six months, apprentices then choose which area they’d like to focus on. This gives apprentices experience in both areas of landscaping to ensure a thorough understanding of the industry. If you’re a young person looking for a future in landscape gardening or a business or homeowner needing regular garden maintenance get in touch. Visit www.streetscape.org.uk email [email protected] or call 020 3542 3464. 16 Lambeth talk April 2015 www.lambethliving.org.uk Helping you get work wise Community Pride Awards If you’re a Lambeth Living tenant and can answer yes to the questions below, Work Wise can help you back into employment. The awards support the great work our residents are doing to keep their estates and local community looking and feeling great: •H as your Housing Benefit been reduced due to having a spare room? on the programme. This will cover essential items such as work boots or bus fares to interviews. •D o you receive Jobseeker’s Allowance (JSA), Employment and Support Allowance (ESA), Income Support or Income Capacity Benefit? Work Wise launched in February and over 60 tenants benefited from the help available, including: business start-up advice; ‘Roll on Monday’ job matching; apprenticeships; skills support (literacy, numeracy, IT); trainingfor-trade schemes and our ‘Learning Works’ programme. We’re running Work Wise with St Mungo’s Broadway, funded by the Department of Works and Pensions, to help our tenants into employment or training. There will be advice and tailored support to help you build the skills, knowledge and confidence you need to get into work. We’ll help link you with a wide range of services that can support you and match you with relevant job opportun-ities. We have secured a £10,000 progression fund which means we’ll be able to give practical financial assistance to our tenants Tenants met representatives from our contractor, Breyer Group, and two apprentices shared their stories about how Work Wise had benefited them. To find out more contact Pete Murphy on 020 7926 9311 or email [email protected] • Estates in Bloom for the best in community gardening. • Homes in bloom for private gardens including window boxes and hanging baskets. • Best recycling initiative or community art or recycling project. • Edible Living for the best food growing project. • Innovation of the year for the best TRA or community group initiative. • Resident of the year - someone who has contributed to their community and made a difference locally. • Young resident of the year – a tenant under 25 who has made a difference to their community. Start planning now. For more information call 020 7926 8319 or email [email protected] April 2015 Lambeth talk 17 www.lambethliving.org.uk Lambeth Housing Service improvement works Miss P in her kitchen Miss P from Wyvil Estate explains how she managed works to her kitchen alongside being a busy mum during the school holidays. “When they first came round they said my kitchen was so clean and tidy it wouldn’t need updating, but the Resident Liaison Officer said I obviously needed extra work space. “A new baby takes up all the cupboard space you have. Before this, there was just that built-in cupboard with the boiler in and a little bit of worktop. “A lot of people cancelled because they didn’t want work done during the school holidays. But I worked out a plan to keep the kids out of the way. I made sure everyone was up and breakfasted. I had the fridge in Annual gas servicing keeping you safe in your homes It’s not just your car that needs a yearly MOT your home also needs an annual gas safety check. If we can’t arrange a suitable time or you refuse to let our contractors inspect your boiler we can take court action against you. We can do this very quickly. It’s not unusual for our officers to attend Court in the morning, issue warrants in the afternoon and get access to your home the next day to complete the servicing. the hall with the microwave on top. “All the work was finished two weeks before the end of the school holidays. “The guys doing the work said not everyone bothers to move the washing machine out and make space for them, let alone make them a cup of tea – but it seemed right to me.” I worked out a plan to keep the kids out of the way and give the builders space to get it done. We work closely with vulnerable and elderly residents and their housing officers to arrange suitable times to visit and carry out the survey without too much disturbance. We usually complete gas services for 22,800 homes per year, which is about 438 homes per week, and so far we are achieving 100 per cent gas inspections. To contact Lambeth Living, email [email protected] or call 020 7926 3713, 020 7926 0262 or 020 7926 0282. 18 Lambeth talk April 2015 www.lambeth.gov.uk from the community Coin Street Community Builders a community working together By Amber Davis Coin Street Community Builders (CSCB) is a social enterprise and our aim is to make our neighbourhood a great place to live, work in, and visit. Campaigning for a better future future, one including social housing, a park, managed workshops and leisure facilities. In 1984, after seven years of campaigning and two public inquires, members of the action group formed the not-for-profit organisation Coin Street Community Builders to purchase the site, and the transformation began. The Coin Street area of London lies between Waterloo Bridge and Blackfriars Bridge on the South Bank of the River Thames. In 1977 developers proposed the construction of Europe’s tallest hotel and over one million square feet of office space on this site. This The Coin Street Action Group development would have divided the area in two, blocking the community from access to the river. If it wasn’t for the local people who spent years campaigning to save this largely derelict 13 acre site, it wouldn’t be the thriving, mixed-use neighbourhood it is today. The Coin Street Action Group formed to fight for an alternative Coin Street neighbourhood centre At the Coin Street neighbourhood centre, built at the heart of our site, is the Coin Street family and children’s centre, which is rated outstanding by OFSTED. The children’s centre provides an 84place nursery and holiday play schemes as well as a variety of family support sessions and access to training and employment advice. Our free and affordable community programmes include youth clubs, over 50s art classes, film clubs, community gardening project and contemporary dance classes by Rambert at their new studios. Special events, such as our annual seniors party, are hot ticket events. The neighbourhood centre is also a popular conference venue, welcoming 25,000 delegates annually. The hire of our commercial spaces has enabled us to develop and maintain the South Bank Riverside Walkway, Bernie Spain Gardens and Gabriel’s Wharf. It also contributed to building 220 affordable homes, and the refurbishment of one of London’s most iconic landmarks, Oxo Tower Wharf. April 2015 Lambeth talk 19 www.lambeth.gov.uk View of Coin Street land 2013 (Gabriel’s Wharf, Bernie Spain Gardens, Oxo Tower Wharf) Bringing Oxo Tower Wharf back into use Today, Oxo Tower Wharf is home to over 20 retail studios where designers make and sell contemporary fashion, interiors and accessories; restaurants, cafes and bars; as well as 78 cooperative flats. Visitors can enjoy river views from the 8th floor public viewing platform, treat themselves to a fine dining experience at OXO Restaurant, shop at design studios and enjoy a free exhibition at gallery@oxo and Bargehouse. The current exhibition at gallery@ oxo, Jamaica Hidden Histories (open 11am -6pm daily until 17 May, Jamaica Hidden admission Histories exhibition free) features a variety of artefacts, photographs and video installations on the cultural and historical links between Britain and Jamaica, as well as a diverse programme of talks, screenings and workshops. Easter sports camp Free and affordable community activities Many of our community programmes are delivered at the Colombo Centre. With an indoor gym, studios, outdoor football pitches and multi-sports courts, we are able to offer a diverse mix of sport, fitness and workshop sessions to suit people of all ages and abilities. During evenings and weekends the football pitches at Hatfields benefit around 300 local young people through sports groups such as Oasis Hub, Kidz Company, Waterloo Sports and FC, Millwall Community Trust and La Liga Women’s Football. The commercial hire of the pitches during the day subsidises community use during evenings and weekends. Our Easter sports camp is currently in full swing, offering 50 local children a week of sporting activities and days out, at an affordable price. Throughout the year, children and young people enjoy football, netball, Saturday Stay’n’Play tennis and self-defence classes as well as social and youth steering groups focusing on making friends, leadership skills and building confidence. Future plans include a 25 meter, eight lane public indoor swimming pool and leisure centre as part of our Doon Street scheme. Every day 84 children access the nursery. 220 co-operative homes are enjoyed by local people. During school holidays 32 children access the Holiday Play Scheme at the neighbourhood centre. 50 children and young people access our Easter sports camps In one month Over 500 local people of all ages access fitness programmes such as football, aerobics, Soccertots and self-defence at the Colombo Centre. Over 9,000 attend exhibitions and events at gallery@oxo To find out more about programmes and activities and to sign-up to the Coin Street newsletter, visit www.coinstreet.org 20 Lambeth talk April 2015 www.lambeth.gov.uk from the community Give it a go and get involved Join the hundreds of people in Lambeth who are contributing their time and skills to improve their local community. They make a real difference and you could too. Here are a few examples of some great projects that you could get involved in. Annamaria in El Salvador as part of the International Citizen Service themselves. Recent graduate, Annamaria Stewart from Brixton, thought her dreams of volunteering abroad would remain just that. But through Progressio, last year she was able to travel to El Salvador as part of the government-funded International Citizen Service (ICS), where she worked on conservation and education projects. Progressio International Citizen Service By Annamaria Stewart Progressio, based in Stockwell, is an international development charity supporting poor and marginalised people, especially women, to empower Annamaria explains: “I was always interested in volunteering abroad, but most of the charities that offer this type of programme are very expensive. Thinking that it would set me back thousands, I parked that idea a few years ago. Then I came across the ICS programme. “I first applied for the volunteer role but in my interview Progressio saw my potential and encouraged me to go for the team leader position. I never believed I had the skills to lead a group formally. “In El Salvador, the main challenge was being away from my family, but I had a great host family who supported me, fed me and loved me which helped me get through it. “As a group leader, I had to be the leader, the big sister, the mum, agony aunt and defender. We often have misconceptions about our abilities, but when you’re in a different environment, with no access to your luxuries, you realise you won’t brake if you’re pushed further. “Now I’m back I’m doing more things that I would have avoided before. I’ve learned to have more April 2015 Lambeth talk 21 www.lambeth.gov.uk Advice Guides - One Lambeth Advice By PETER BRADLEY Advice Guides, volunteers trained by Merton and Lambeth Citizens Advice Bureaux, are based in community locations across Lambeth such as council offices and GP surgeries. They are the public face of Citizens Advice in Lambeth, impossible to miss in bright yellow t-shirts. Their role is to support people to access resources to help them resolve problems. They guide people to find the right information and signpost to other organisations. faith in my abilities. I now say ‘I can’ and own it confidently. “I now want to make sure young people from communities similar to mine are aware of opportunities like this. I want that young boy or girl who is lost or misguided to take a chance with this programme, give all they can and get everything back. I know that it has changed me for the better, mainly because now I understand that I am stronger than I thought.” Interested? If you would like to find out more about the work of Progressio, visit www.progressio.org.uk/ics or email [email protected] or call 020 7733 1195. Working with the public is both rewarding and challenging. When people are in difficulty they may well be upset, frustrated. English could be a second language or they could find it hard to use the telephone or internet. In addition to helping others, volunteering as an Advice Guide is a great way to develop customer skills, communication skills and to work as part of a team. Last year nearly 40 CAB volunteers gained paid employment. Jan, an Advice Guide, explains: “Every person has their own particular need that they want to sort out. We give them phone numbers, websites or the contact details for an agency where they can get some help. Often just talking through the problem enables the person to have the confidence to tackle their situation. “I have enjoyed meeting a wide variety of people…I learn something new every day, especially from the other Advice Guides who I enjoy working alongside. Most customers are very grateful for any help that we are able to give which makes the role very rewarding.” Want to get involved? We provide full training – a mixture of classroom learning, observations, distance learning and on the job training. You’d be supported by a team leader, your travel expenses will be reimbursed and you’ll get a certificate at the end of your training. To find out more visit www.mlcab. org.uk or email volunteering@ mertoncab.org.uk There are many ways you can get involved locally. Get in touch with Volunteer Centre Lambeth who will help you find opportunities to suit your availability, interests and skills. Call 020 7326 5480 (10am - 4pm, Monday to Friday) or email [email protected] 22 Lambeth talk April 2015 www.lambeth.gov.uk A guide to what’s on in Lambeth There are lots of interesting things to do and places to visit in Lambeth. In this section you’ll find a few suggestions to suit a range of interests. If you would like to have your event listed in this section, email us at [email protected] City Read London Throughout April, FREE. Lambeth Libraries are excited to be joining up with Cityread London, an annual celebration of literature that aims to bring reading to life for the whole capital. Each April, Cityread asks London’s readers to pick up a book – the same book - and read it together. Taking the chosen novel as a starting point, a monthlong programme of book groups, film screenings and other events take place across all 33 London boroughs in libraries, bookshops, museums and other venues. of the London Ceramic Circle and Morley College ceramics students exploring the theme of Past Matters: 125 years of industrial manufactured inspiration. MADE 2015 Ceramics Thursday 16 – Thursday 30 April, 11am to 6pm (Mon to Fri), FREE. An exhibition of works by members To register contact Vanessa Miller on 020 7802 3216 or email [email protected] Morley Gallery, 61 Westminster Bridge Road, SE1 7HT. For more information, visit www.morelycollege.ac.uk/gallery First Draft Deadline for applications Thursday 23 April, midnight, FREE. Miles in Memory Walk You can also register or make a donation using the reference ‘London Miles in Memory’, by visiting www.lullabytrust.org.uk/ london-walk A playwriting competition giving Lambeth’s emerging writers the opportunity to showcase new work over two nights at Brixton Library. The selected plays will be rehearsed with a professional cast and director as part of the Lambeth Readers and Writers Festival. Entries welcome from anyone who lives, works or studies in Lambeth. To apply, visit www.sixteenfeet. co.uk/portfolio/first-draft-2015 This year’s book is Rivers of London by Ben Aaronovitch. Pick up your copy from your local library and read along. London Miles in For more information, visit www.cityread.london. For details about events in Lambeth, visit www.lambeth.gov.uk/events unexpectedly in the UK by joining their fundraising event, the London Miles in Memory Walk, on Clapham Common SW4. Memory Walk Saturday 9 May, from 10am, FREE. The Lullaby Trust provides specialist support for bereaved families, promotes expert advice on safer baby sleep and raises awareness of sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS). You can help us move one step closer to finding out why five babies every week die suddenly and The Friends of Ruskin Park Photography Competition 2015 Competition closes Friday 26 June. This year the theme is Park Life. Take a photograph of what you do when you go to the park, or what other people do. What do you like most about Ruskin Park? What time of day is the best time to visit? For this competition, if changing the image in a computer is going to make it a better image that’s fine. Printing, framing or mounting can be part of the creative process as well. Explore the medium of photography, use as many of its possibilities as you wish to make an image that says “This is how I see Park Life”. For more information and an entry form, visit Carnegie Library, Herne Hill Road, SE24 or visit www.friendsruskinpark.org.uk April 2015 Lambeth talk 23 www.lambeth.gov.uk Jamaica Hidden Histories Until Sunday 17 May, 11am to 6pm, FREE. This exhibition, supported by the Heritage Lottery Fund, is the culmination of a two-year project to uncover and showcase cultural and historical links between Britain and Jamaica. Departing from Oliver Cromwell’s taking of the island in 1655, and navigating its way through 1962 independence and into the present day, the display charts Jamaican influence on British culture and its economy. Oxo Tower Wharf, Bargehouse Street, South Bank, SE1 9PH. For more information, visit www.jamaicahiddenhistories.com Volunteering Home-Start Lambeth Volunteer training course starting Monday 11 May. Could you help a family with young children? We train volunteers to visit families in their homes for two to three hours each week to provide support and practical help. Volunteers need to be parents or have parenting experience and live in Lambeth. For more information, call 020 7924 9292, email [email protected] or visit www.homestartlambeth.co.uk Have your say on the future of sports, libraries and archives, parks, events and the arts We’re proposing significant changes to some services and your opinion matters. The consultation closes Friday 24 April 2015 lambeth.gov.uk/culture2020consultation @Lambeth_council #Culture2020 [email protected] 020 7926 2623 To find out more about volunteering opportunities in Lambeth, get in touch with the Lambeth Voluntary Action Centre (LVAC). Call: 020 7737 1419 Email: lvac@ lambethvac.org.uk Visit: www. lambethvac.org.uk advertisement www.lambeth.gov.uk The education of a gardener: The life and works of Russell Page 1906 to 1985 Until 21 June, 10.30am to 5pm (Mon-Fri) 10.30am to 4pm (Sat), £7.50. Kids dance classes Every Saturday, £1. Join the street dance and ballet session on Saturdays. No booking required. Ballet session: four years old plus - 3 to 3.30pm. Street Dance: four to nine years old – 3.30 to 4.30pm, 10 to 14 years, 4.30 to 5.30pm. Ferndale Community Sports Centre, Nursery Road, SW9 8PD. For more information, call 020 7738 6834. Garden Pepsico Russell Page is one of the greatest garden designers of the modern period. He trained as an artist and brought a painters eye for form and style to the many gardens that he made. The exhibition includes over 50 paintings, photographs and drawings from Russell Pages’ own archive, the collection of the RHS, Public and Private Collections in the USA and Europe. Garden Museum, 5 Lambeth Palace Road, London SE1 7LB. For more information, call 020 7401 8865 or visit www.gardenmuseum.org.uk Silverfit Tuesdays at Brockwell Park Every Tuesday, 1pm, from £1 per session. Silverfit, a charity which encourages people to regain or maintain lifelong fitness, have launched new sessions at Brockwell Park. Join them for a walk through the park or some Nordic Walking or Pilates. For more information, call 07721 419 518, email [email protected] or visit www.silverfit.org.uk Fit to work Every Tuesday and Thursday from 4 to 5pm, FREE. Loughborough Junction World War 1 app Discover three unfolding augmented reality stories about Loughborough Junction during the Great War. Each of the three stories has a trail of distinctive colour-coded paving slabs that take you through the streets of Loughborough Junction. The app visually recognises each paving slab in the trail and each new slab reveals the next new chapter in that story, downloading it in stages to your mobile device and leading you towards the Cambria Bridge, where each trail ends. For more information and to download the app, visit www.ljww1.org Muddy Dog Challenge Miguel’s Boxing Gym Fit to work is a local community based initiative run by London Fire Brigade in conjunction with Miguel’s Boxing Gym. It is primarily aimed at Lambeth residents aged 16 – 25 who are not in full-time employment. The initiative delivers a twice weekly class focusing on fitness, motivation and confidence, there is also an opportunity for individuals to seek employment advice such as interview skills and CV presentation. Miguel’s Boxing and Fitness Gym, 261 - 262 Hardess Street (off Herne Hill Road), SE24 OHN. For more information, call 07931 231 291 or 020 7733 1933. Sunday 10 May, 9am to 2pm, registration fee from £27.50 for adults and £8.50 for dogs (group discounts available). The Muddy Dog Challenge is a dogfriendly obstacle course that will put runners, both two-legged and four-legged, through their paces. Participants can choose to scamper, jog or walk round a 2.5km or 5km course and will get the opportunity to crawl under nets, jump over tyres and squelch in mud. A fitting challenge to raise money for The Battersea Dogs & Cats Home. Brockwell Park, SE24. To register, visit www.battersea.org.uk/ muddydog Lambeth talk is published by Lambeth Council. All information in this magazine is correct at time of going to print. For enquiries, please email [email protected] or phone 020 7926 0023. This magazine is printed on recycled paper. Please recycle it when you have finished with it. PRODUCED BY LAMBETH CAMPAIGNS AND COMMUNICATIONS DEPARTMENT 10674 (9.14)
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