mstdn.social is one of the many independent Mastodon servers you can use to participate in the fediverse.
A general-purpose Mastodon server with a 500 character limit. All languages are welcome.

Administered by:

Server stats:

13K
active users

#MayorofLondon

0 posts0 participants0 posts today
Replied in thread

@ChrisMayLA6

By comparison #hammersmithandfulham can be regarded as something of a 'success story' for #Laɓour in #london and a serious cause of annoyance to the #conservatives . One consequence of this annoyance may well have been the conspicuous failure of #BorisJohnson when #mayoroflondon to provide funds to repair #hammersmithbridge preferring instead to waste public money on vanity projects further down the #thames - at least one of which #sadiqkhan had to cancel.

Great email from the #MayorOfLondon #SadiqKhan

Too long to paste here but basically saying #London is a progressive city and despite setbacks we will always be "a place where we’re proud of our diversity, proud of the contribution of all our communities and proud of our spirit of unity. These are some of the values that will continue to bind us together as Londoners."

I am pleased I voted for Sadiq and he won earlier this year.

The #TransportForLondon congestion charge postcode checker is not only broken at the client end, it's broken at the server end, too:

{
"exceptionType" : "VarnishBackendSickException",
"httpStatus" : "Service Unavailable",
"httpStatusCode" : "503",
"message" : "This service is currently unavailable",
"relativeUri" : "/modes/driving/congestion-charge/congestion-charge-zone"
}

I bet that non-computer people just *love* seeing that as the results page.

First experience is that TFL's ULEZ WWW site has been written by a Web Designer, rather than by an engineer.

So it's completely broken in at least 2 major WWW browsers.

Scrolling the forms is disabled, meaning that one cannot use them, and the download links for maps are not ordinary hyperlinks because (as every Web Designer knows) that would be too easy and would be using ordinary HTML features. So downloads are inaccessible too.

The Deputy Prime Minister has said that the Government ran out of time to ban “no fault” evictions before the general election.

The Conservatives had promised in their 2019 election manifesto to abolish Section 21 notices, which are used by landlords to evict tenants without any reason needing to be given.

The Renters Reform Bill, intended to deliver the ban, was first introduced in the House of Commons in May last year. But its progress was delayed by opposition from several Tory MPs who feared it would cause landlords to sell up and who wanted to strengthen protections for landlords.

As recently as February, housing secretary Michael Gove had promised that a ban would be delivered by the next general election.

But it emerged, following Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s announcement of an election on July 4, that the necessary legislation would not be passed during the “wash up” period before Parliament is dissolved.

Speaking to the Local Democracy Reporting Service on Friday, Deputy PM Oliver Dowden said: “Well, as happens at the end of the Parliament, when you announce a general election, there are large amounts of legislation on the books. We’ve only got two days to conclude it all.”

Asked about the fact that the Government first promised to deliver a ban almost five years ago, he said: “It just hasn’t been possible to get this legislation through in the ‘wash up’ period.”

New Government data released last week, showed that 2,682 households in England were marched out of their homes by bailiffs as a result of Section 21 evictions between January and March — up 19 percent in a year, and the highest number in six years.

Section 21 evictions are a significant contribution to homelessness and rough sleeping.

The campaign group Generation Rent said The Bill had been delayed on numerous occasions by a minority of pro-landlord MPs.

Ben Twomey, chief executive of Generation Rent, said: “Abandoning the Renters Reform Bill as parliament dissolves means the government has failed in its promise to renters at the last election to deliver a fairer tenancy system.

“If it had not been for delays caused by a minority of MPs opposing the Bill, the government could enter the election campaign with a new law to end Section 21 evictions and bring in stronger protections for renters.

“It now falls to the next parliament to start afresh and get it right at the second time of asking.

“Whoever forms the next government must make rental reform a key part of their agenda. This means proper protections from evictions when we have done nothing wrong, and limits on unaffordable rent rises so we can’t be turfed on to the streets at a landlords’ whim,” said Twomey.

On the topic of housing in general, Dowden said: “We’ve built 2.5mn houses [since 2010].

“You contrast that with here in London, Sadiq Khan and the Labour party have the poorest house-building record pretty much anywhere in the country.

“So I think Labour-controlled London is an indication of my deep scepticism that Labour will deliver on building housing.”

However, Mayor Khan celebrated in May last year when he exceeded the Government’s target of 116,000 affordable homes being started in the capital between 2016 and 2023.

Outside of London, the target was not hit by the Government’s housing agency, Homes England — as only 126,800 affordable starts were recorded by the end of March 2023. The England-wide target, excluding London, was 134,000.

Homes England blamed former PM Liz Truss’s “mini-budget”, claiming it had “evaporated” its contingencies.

In more recent months however, London has seen the lowest number of homes started of any English region, amidst a nationwide downturn in house-building.

In the three months from October to December 2023, a record low of just 580 new homes, of all types, was started in London, according to “provisional” Government data.

A record low was also in the South East region of England (2,720 homes), with relatively low figures in other parts of the country too, but nowhere building less than in London.

Khan said this was partly due to lingering uncertainty at the time over how the Government would be applying incoming fire safety rules, which would require all tall buildings to have second staircases.

With London having more tall buildings than other regions, he argued that the capital had been particularly hard hit by the lack of certainty over the technical requirements of the new rules — for example, whether the two staircases would need to be entirely separate or whether they can be contained within the same building core.

By March this year, Khan said that at least 38,000 homes in the capital were being “stalled” by this lack of certainty, though the relevant guidance has now been published.

Additional reporting by Linus Rees.

https://fitzrovianews.com/2024/05/26/government-failed-to-ban-no-fault-evictions-because-it-ran-out-of-time-says-deputy-pm/

And off she f____!
#MayorOfLondon #UKElections

I am not happy with the (change of) voting system. Not very happy with the winner but extremely satisfied to see one of the most retrograde, devising, and completely disconnected from the reality of the major challenges we are facing (including climate change) losing entirely