Tag Archive > queens road resident’s association

Queens Road… Closure

» 13 July 2011 » In wivenhoe » No Comments

With spare land being at such a premium around Wivenhoe, it is with a tremendous amount of shame that the developer that owns the small plot at the base of 58 Queens Road allows it to remain in ruin.

I understand that approaches have been made by the Queens Road Residents Association, and Transition Town Wivenhoe on behalf of QRRA, to utilise the spare space for a community garden on a temporary basis.

Both requests weren’t rejected - they weren’t even replied to: Shame upon the developer.

The economy may be buggered, but community spirit certainly isn’t. Avoiding the phrase *shhh* Big Society, but isn’t this is what is meant when we are told that we are all in this together?

QRRA isn’t after permanent possession of the small plot - simply temporary access to make the space more sustainable and attractive until funds are in place to build upon the development.

You only need to look across to the splendour of the Station Master’s Garden to see what can be achieved with genuine community co-operation. TTW is now in its second year of voluntarily attending and growing produce around the small patch.

The previous empty space harvests a considerable crop each summer. Commuters are rewarded for persisting with the pain that is a NXEA commute with free random offerings of fruit and veg, whenever it becomes available.

Meanwhile up at Queens Road and the space is starting to look like an eyesore. The AGM of the QRRA takes place this weekend, very kindly hosted in a private garden of one of the residents. How charming it would have been if the barren patch of land could have been cleaned up and used.

And developers wonder why so many locals view their motives with such cynicism…?

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Capturing Queens Road Stories

» 05 June 2011 » In wivenhoe » No Comments

What we have here is a potted oral history of Queen’s Road. Many, many thanks to Daryl for very kindly inviting me into his family home and putting himself forward for the recording.

Listen!

This came about after some online dialogue with the good folk of the Queens Road Residents Association. It became clear that the road closure is far from the only issue that is involved here - Queens Road has a rich sense of history flowing from the top, down to the dip, and then back up towards Anglesea Road.

It is this hyperlocal historical observation that fascinates me. We couldn’t cover all of the stories and tales from one of Wivenhoe’s most historic streets during our short chat, but at least it is a start.

A start for what, I hear you say?

Well

I put together a similar online oral history project back in South London a few summers ago. Sadly, for various organisational and *cough* political reasons, we never really got going.

I am very keen to continue with something along these lines in Wivenhoe. Oral history is a form of storytelling that fascinates me. I believe that documenting and archiving this conversation online is the perfect combination.

I am very interested in speaking with anyone in Wivenhoe who would like to offer up any story or life experience to share. It needn’t be strictly street focussed, as is the case with this first recording; it may simply be memories of living and growing up in the town.

Age is not important - I am as equally interested in new Wivenhoe folk as I am in some of the more mature members of our community. The process of collating and documenting this work digitally is something which I think has great value.

The excellent Sea Change is comprehensive, and in no way would I want to replicate this work. The technology now however is so simple and fast, that I can record the conversation with my iPhone and then pretty much publish and archive instantly.

As anyone who has spoken with me around the town as part of an audio recording will know, I always offer up the right of deletion at the end of our conversations, should something crop up that you might not feel comfortable in sharing.

Without wanting to put too much of a downer upon this - we’re all getting old; these stories need preserving. Capturing and archiving them online makes for the perfect working combination.

With the help of Daryl and the QRRA, I’m hopefully lining up interviews very soon with a chap who helped to set up Wivenhoe Town Football Club, as well as a gentleman who can remember the opening of the KGV back in 1938.

Please, please do contact me if you would like to be part of this project, or if you know of any other locals that you think would be interested in taking part.

Thanks again to Daryl and the QRRA - hopefully by opening up this information, some of the suspicion and questions about the road closure will become more open and transparent.

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Greyhound Glam

» 15 May 2011 » In wivenhoe » No Comments

To The Greyhound on Saturday evening for the second May Fair fundraiser of the month. The 3:30 - 11pm schedule was ambitious, not to mention the potential to get a little messy. With May Fair itself just two Wivenhoe weekends away, now is the time to start some serious liver training.

@AnnaJCowen and I opted for the Cup Final warm up back at base, predictably falling asleep, and then wobbling down the High Street still in a slumber-induced coma and in search of booze.

Just another late Saturday afternoon in Wivenhoe then.

The bass guitar was reverberating towards the top of Queens Road, with the beer garden at The Greyhound hosting the event. I trust that the good folk of the Queens Road Residents Association were in the mood for a party. Failing that, you could always decamp up to Park Road and have the music drowned out by the HGV’s that now detour along the Valley Road junction.

Steady, Jase. Steady…

Inside The Greyhound and any such hyper hyper hyperlocal community minor divisions were long since diminished. This was a genuine community attempt to raise some much need coffers for the May Fair kitty.

As with The Station event staged over the last Bank Holiday, the format was pretty straight forward: local bands and musicians strut their stuff on the stage, the buckets gets passed around and you contribute whatever you can afford before you pass out yourself.

Arriving fashionably late, sadly we missed the afternoon session (music, not booze) from Hurricane, featuring a certain Mr Martin Newell on bass guitar duties. No worries - a lovely catch up with the chap looking resplendent in a purple blazer and beret, and the Wivenhoe world was put to rights.

More of the same, please.

With 7:30 approaching and the scheduled start for the Moving Image screening next door at the Phillip Road Centre, I hope that the old school ska didn’t intrude too much to the Wivenhoe cinematic experience. We’re all in this together, Comrades - Moving Image will of course have a presence at the May Fair, working in co-operation with Transition Town Wivenhoe.

Some more traditional folk strumming followed; buckets were shaken, booze was drunk. I’m no great theoriser of basic scientific formula, but I’d wager that there is a definite correlation between dosh in the bucket and booze consumed.

We stayed around to watch a power trio (seriously) stomp through Jean Genie, turning Bowie’s lightweight glam pop pomp into a wonderful heavy horse of a re-working. It was at this stage of the evening that I switched from lager to the dark stuff. The evening took a heavy twist, just as Wivenhoe’s Bowie pillagers started to scream and bawl.

Like all good evenings should, we predictably ended up at The Station for recuperation. The eight-hour stretch at The Greyhound was a warm up for May Fair itself.

Lessons learnt ahead of the big day: comatisation should come after, and not before you set off; drink generously and give generously. Plus start off as many wild rumours as possible about the revival of Wivenhoe’s very own glam scene.

Guess who is making a very, VERY special guest secret appearance on the Main Stage this year?

It’s Gnome Laughing matter, I tell you…

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Parkings, Pedestrian Crossings & P-ups

» 09 February 2011 » In wivenhoe » 1 Comment

To the Town Council offices (cripes) on Tuesday evening for the bi-monthly meeting of the Wivenhoe Neighbourhood Action Panel, the Essex Police initiative, defined as:

“Each NAP consists of representatives from the local community, residents’ associations, children and young people, voluntary agencies, schools, faith groups, Town and Parish councillors, Colchester Borough Council, Essex County Council and other statutory groups or organisations that are best placed to make a valuable contribution to community problem solving throughout Colchester.”

Oh - and nosey bloggers as well. Many thanks for making me feel most welcome…

Scaling down further for Wivenhoe, and our very own #hyperlocal NAP states:

“We want to tackle crime and quality of life issues that are effecting Wivenhoe and the University of Essex. We not only want to tackle them but we want to reduce them.”

A cursory glance over at the online data released last week via police.uk reveals that downtown Wivenhoe ‘aint exactly a crime hot spot. Ah, but it’s all relative, and also all about reassurances.

Seven incidents of anti-social behaviour, plus the three reports of violent crime in December 2010, are much more than pure, hard online data. These are very real situations that NAP seeks to address to help to make Wivenhoe an even better place in which to live and work.

Violent crime is hard to predict. Parking issues however can be addressed to help achieve a positive outcome.

Um, can’t they…?

As was the case with the previous NAP back in November, a great deal of the debate on Tuesday evening was taken up with parking issues around the town. Put simply, we have too many cars parking within Wivenhoe.

You can’t legislate for car ownership; nor for local authority cuts, which reduces the budget available to address the issue. Which all rather depressingly sums up the majority of agenda items at the NAP: Parking problems, no money, not much we can do.

Bare with me, blog readers - there is something of a warm, happy ending involving Mayor Brian Sinclair

But first the roll call of cars parking woes:

Rosabelle Avenue has been reported as being a problem area for dangerous parking. Wivenhoe Town Council is currently waiting on a review of the 2011 budget for possible funding.

Moving on…

Parking outside One Stop towards The Cross - Councillor Penny Kraft reported on the solution being pressed by WTC. Essex County Council Highways have agreed to widen the pavement at the Colchester Road end.

Hurrah!

The problem? The small matter of the shortfall of £25k to pay for this. Cripes, you’re thinking - that’s a lot of wonga for a small stretch of road. Indeed it is. A more conservative £4k is the figure for the physical pavement improvements; £21k is the amount needed to pay off the various utility and telco companies who would be caught up in the crossfire.

NAP Chair Eugene Kraft has approached One Stop about some friendly sponsorship to help carry out the work, and ultimately improve the parking outside the business. Times are tough for traders as well as local councils. Sadly the scheme is now on hold.

Something slightly more positive however is the report of disruptive parking outside Millfields School. Councillor Kraft observed:

“You need a physical presence to address this. Whenever someone from the school stands outside during the school run, parents tend to park properly. Without this however and the problem returns. People don’t park cars - they abandon them. This is a great inconvenience to local residents.”

In response, the Deputy Head of Millfields [apologies, didn't note your name...] kindly attended the meeting to update on the issue:

“Our last formal complaint from a resident was back in May 2010. If we aren’t aware of the issues, then we can’t act upon them. We have extended parking in the school so that there are more spaces. Teachers arriving early morning are parking flush to the edge of the space. We now have fewer employees parking outside the school.”

The Chair observed that the Millfields parking problem is now “not as bad as it once was.” The NAP agreed to remove the item from future agendas, pending any further complaints.

Which was all very considerate, which also leads rather nicely into, ah… the Considerate Parking Scheme.

This is a WTC initiative, which aims to promote a better understanding of the parking needs around the town, in the absence of any law of the land to ease the flow of traffic. Wivenhoe tends to be a terribly considerate town anyway. If such a scheme were to work, one would hope that it would work in Wivenhoe.

The idea is simple: encourage and promote a more considerate, shared use of car parking space around the town, and explain the positive outcomes for the community. Councillor Kraft explained how the scheme has been discussed at WTC, along with input from our local police team.

“We looked at the Brightlingsea model and concluded that the Brightlingsea problem is not the same as ours. WTC decided not to pursue the Considerate Parking Scheme. The police aren’t keen, and we haven’t got the backing from Colchester Borough Council.

Commuters cause the problems in Wivenhoe - in Brightlingsea it is residents. We tried to speak with inconsiderate parkers down at West Quay and we didn’t even know who we are dealing with.”

Wivenhoe Society Chair Tom Roberts was not alone in expressing his disappointment that this scheme has now been shelved:

“I had hoped that the Considerate Parking Scheme would address the problem of cars parking with two wheels on the road.”

[um... Valley Road.]

The official WTC response is that this can’t be done without police support.

Sgt Lou Middleton added:

“It is not an offence for cars to park on the public pavement, as long as they are not obstructing pedestrians. If it was HGV’s, then we could act.”

A discussion then followed about *ahem* Park Road in particular, and how double parking takes place on both sides of the pavement. It was suggested that putting double yellow lines down one side of the road would ease the problem, but… there isn’t a budget for this.

A work-around of sorts was concluded, which kept in with the very considerate nature of Wivenhoe: the NAP will work alongside the local police to leaflet cars, which are parked inconsiderately.

Different agenda point, same problem: dangerous parking along Elmstead Road. The Chair noted:

“Nothing can be done. The road is too narrow and there are no pavements.”

And then just when you wait for yet another dangerous parking conundrum, along comes… Queens Road.

Oh Lordy.

The problem, if indeed there is one with Queens Road, is not so much dangerous parking but the inverse and the continued closure of the stretch. An update was kindly provided by a QRRA member, outlining the Association’s view on the fire at the Business Centre last year.

This is all old ground, and nothing new was discussed that we didn’t already know. Highways are not prepared to change their position on the closure, and so the item was ticked off the NAP agenda.

And relax.

Sgt Littleton then explained a little more about the Essex Police Emerging Communities initiative:

“This is a government led scheme to identify new groups moving into communities. We are keen to identify these groups so that we can give them the same standard of support as we do other members of the community.”

A bit of head scratching around the Town Council table, and apart from an anti-Mubarak poster that has been spotted in solitary along Park Road, Wivenhoe doesn’t seem to be a town that is that transient right now.

But anyway - back to parking - or back to the pedestrian flow around parked cars to be more precise.

The much-mooted zebra crossing by the Co-op now seems like a lost cause. With much personal frustration, Mayor Sinclair explained the saga that has frustrated WTC for some time:

“We can’t have a pedestrian crossing close to a road junction, therefore the only location would be above from the Co-op. This would wipe out resident parking space, as well as creating extra cost in having to move the bus stop.

Delays happened, and we simply ran out of time with the project in relation to the budget. WTC is collectively very angry over this. The money has been put aside, and we want to make sure that we have still got access to this.”

Tom Roberts raised the valid point of tapping into some Section 106 funding as part of the planning process for Cedrics Bus Garage. The current planning application has now been withdrawn, with WTC waiting for an expected re-submitted approach.

AOB raised up the appropriate issue for a NAP panel of the closure of Wivenhoe Police Station. As has already been documented, Sgt Middleton, PC Bond and PSCO Neville are moving out to the Fire Station. Sgt Middleton confirmed that this would be happening later in the month. The ICT infrastructure is currently being kitted out.

The possible problem, as pointed out by Councillor Kraft, is that there will be no public access to the new premises. This is simply a physical imposition of the building.

Sgt Middleton commented that he doesn’t view this as a problem, as the old police station gets very few doorknockers anyway. A police surgery at the library was confirmed, as was the very visible police van drop in sessions that you can currently see around the town.

A final point was confirmation that the police houses will be sold…

And then as promised, here comes the lovely *ahhh* moment that one just wasn’t expecting to conclude a Wivenhoe NAP meeting.

Mayor Sinclair reported back on a couple of incidents involving vocal students, tired and emotional, late in the evening after taking part in the legendary Wivenhoe Run. Not wanting to condone the actions (The Flag down to The Station, and then back again, mid-week as an Essex undergraduate? Not me, Oh no, Sireee…) but there is something of a lovely ending.

Personal apologies have been made to locals who were disturbed by the behaviour, as well as apologies to our local pubs. My Mayor thought that this was very humble, and even told the young boozers this as well as encouraging them to return to our town.

Perhaps it’s a good idea to get the bus back to campus next time, eh, guys ‘n girls?

Oh - and with perfect comic timing, and just as the meeting was concluded, in walked the good Councillor Steve Ford.

The poor chap probably couldn’t find anywhere to park.

Whoops.

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