The Norwich Green

Newsletter of the Norwich Green Party
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Norwich Green Party NOVEMBER
2006

Urgent Action Needed On Climate Change

Green MEP Caroline Lucas was among the speakers at the Climate Justice rally in London on 4th November. Dr. Lucas argued that the Government must take urgent action to reduce carbon dioxide emissions to prevent catastrophic climate change. Green Councillor Rupert Read said: "We are already starting to see the effects of global warming, with freak weather events such as hurricanes and heat waves becoming more common. We need governments, businesses and individuals to bring about an 80-90% cut in carbon emissions by 2030 to prevent the further increases in global temperatures that would cause species extinction, new diseases, flooding in some areas and drought in others.

Tackling climate change should not only involve higher taxes on the most polluting activities. It should include bringing down the prices of those things that will help solve the problem, such as energy efficiency measures, renewable energy and public transport. A localised, low-carbon economy would mean many new jobs in these areas.

In Norwich, the Green Party is lobbying the City Council to adopt the commitment of year-on-year reductions in carbon emissions that we need to see nationwide. Please help our campaign by signing our online petition. We need action from the Council on issues such as planning, transport and waste.

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Greens Push for Ethical Investment at County Hall

Green County Councillors have persuaded the County Council to take a more transparent approach when deciding how to invest its pension funds. In May it was revealed that the Council has £9.4m invested in three arms companies. Green Councillor Chris Hull proposed that this money be re-invested into ethical funds, without jeopardising returns for pension holders. The matter was referred to the Pensions Committee who agreed that fund managers will in future have to explain exactly where they are proposing to invest money so informed decisions can be made. The Green Councillors feel this is a small step in the right direction and will continue to press for a fully ethical policy.

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Logs Logs Logs

News In Brief

A New Lakenham Residents' Association is being set up, with a first meeting on Thursday 23rd November, 7pm in St. Mark's Church Hall, Hall Road. The area it covers will include the Queen's Road area of Town Close. For more details call Councillor Janet Bearman on 504124.

Tesco has cancelled the appeal scheduled for 6th December against the City Council's rejection of its second application to build a store on Unthank Road. However, this appeal - or an appeal against the rejection of the third application - may still go ahead next year. We will inform you of developments in the next newsletter.

CityCarClub is establishing a new car-sharing scheme in the Unthank Road area. Car clubs enable their members to have access to a car without the expense of owning one. There are also a number of environmental benefits, as outlined at: www.citycarclub.co.uk. For more information about the Unthank Road area scheme, please visit the website or call 0845 330 1234.

A series of clean-up actions are due to take place on Southwell Road and Trafalgar Street throughout November. Council officers and volunteers have arranged for Handy Tips to be provided for the streets and for elderly and disabled residents to be given help with tidying gardens and removing bulky items. For more information please call Councillor Janet Bearman on 504124.

The amount of time that pedestrians have to wait for a 'green man' to enable them to cross at the Chapel Field Road crossing by Vauxhall Street is set to be halved. Following lobbying from Green Councillors, the County Council has agreed to reduce time lags within a few weeks.

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The Recycling Column

Recycling is the most common issue that residents raise with the Green Councillors so we are starting a regular column on the facilities that exist and our lobbying for improvements.

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Norfolk Solar Power

Greens Provide Constructive Opposition

Norwich City Council is in no overall control, with Labour (as the biggest party) running a minority administration. This means that, on key issues decided in full Council, the Labour Group needs the support of one of the other large parties (the Greens or the LibDems) if its proposals are to be passed.

Some LibDem Councillors have been claiming that there is a Labour-Green coalition at City Hall. This is factually incorrect. The Green Councillors provide constructive opposition to the Labour administration. We use our bargaining power to negotiate policy improvements. One recent example is the agreement to require developers to include on-site renewable energy generation and more affordable housing in new developments.

Green Councillors oppose plans of the Labour administration when they are contrary to our manifesto policies. It is often the case that the Greens oppose Labour proposals on an issue but the LibDems back Labour up. For example, only the Greens oppose mass tree-pollarding and the demolition of some structurally-sound council flats on Barrack Street.

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The Green Grocers

Comment: Funding Public Services

Green Party City Councillor Adrian Ramsay examines the problems with the Private Finance Initiative.

Public services in Norfolk have suffered major setbacks in recent years due to the Private Finance Initiative (PFI). In October 2004, plans to refurbish 37 Norfolk schools fell through when Jarvis, the company set to enter into the deal with Norfolk County Council, decided to sell the PFI wing of its business. This illustrates the first problem with PFI: the dependence on private companies not to pull out after Councils have spent time and money negotiating.

More recently, the Norfolk and Norwich Hospital at Colney has run into problems because its PFI company, Octagon, 're-mortgaged' the hospital after it had been built. Octagon obtained a £116m payment as a result. It gave just £34m of this to the hospital - and attached the worrying condition of extending the 30 year contract. This meant extending the number of years in which the N&N has to 'repay' money to the company. This premium is currently £7m per year - a cost partly met by central government and partly by the hospital itself.

Those who support PFI argue that the new N&N would never have been built without the scheme. I would argue that the short-term financial savings made by Government by borrowing money from private companies to build new hospitals (and schools and prisons) are extremely bad value for taxpayers' money in the longer-term. PFI puts significant financial burdens on our public services, requiring them to re-pay money to the private sector for decades. At the N&N this has resulted in losses of front-line staff, putting pressure on the remaining staff to work overtime. Meanwhile, Octagon declined a request from the Chair of the N&N Trust to help clear the hospital's debts.

The Government should reassess its priorities and fund our public services properly. If we consider the billions of pounds it is intending to spend on replacing Britain's nuclear weapons of mass destruction, there clearly is enough money in the Treasury to fund public services in the traditional way without mortgaging our children's future through PFI deals.

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Rainbow Wholefoods