Moss Side “20mph Speed Limit Community Forum” , Weds 14th August #Manchester

20mph Speed Limit Community Forum

Wednesday 14 August 2013
2pm – 4pm
Moss Side Leisure Centre
Moss Lane East (behind Asda Hulme)

Manchester City Council has stated its intent to introduce a 20mph speed limit to residential streets across Manchester: we see this as an important move towards a more pleasant and safer environment for residents and visitors. Road safety will improve as a result of reduced traffic speeds, as well as creating a safer and healthier environment for pedestrians and cyclists.

We believe that community involvement is key in making sure that the scheme is a success, and would like to invite residents groups, community organisations and interested individuals to attend a 20mph Speed Limit Community Forum. The event will include an informal “round robin” discussion forum with input from the Police, the Fire Service, Public Health and other partner organisations. The information we gain from the forum will guide our next steps and ensure that residents’ comments and concerns are addressed.

There will also be more information about the new 20mph Community Grants to enable communities to spread the news by holding small events or activities to help promote the benefits of 20mph areas. Grants of up to £200 will be made available for activities like street games sessions, cycle training, walking groups or any other ideas that promote the benefits of safer, quieter streets. If you would like to discuss your ideas or find out more, please come along.

Although we expect most interest to be from people within the three pilot areas, residents from across Manchester will be welcome to attend the forum, but places are limited. To secure your place at the event please contact Dianne or Kippax on 0161 274 6422 or e-mail  community.engagement@manchester.gov.uk by Monday 12 August.

Further information and directions will be sent out upon booking.

If you haven’t received an e-mail containing the Community Information Pack – with details of the pilot areas, maps, fact sheet and answers to questions raised – please let me know and I will send you a copy.

Regards
Dianne

Dianne Sakalas
Campaigns and Education Lead
Customer and Community Engagement
Neighbourhood Services

Telephone (external) 0161 274 6425
Telephone (internal) 816 6425
Mobile 07795604056

Email : d.sakalas@manchester.gov.uk
www.manchester.gov.uk

Postal address : PO Box 532, Town Hall, Albert Square, Manchester, M60 2LA

Posted in Transport, Upcoming Events | 1 Comment

Annual Plan Thursday: “Energy Audit” – #Manchester #climate #climatetrumps

In 2012 Manchester City Council aimed for a 10% reduction in its own emissions. In July 2013 it claimed a 7% reduction. It was able to do this because responsibility for traffic lights moved from its books. Looking at everything else (buildings, transport) emissions went … UP by 1.8%.
So, building on that extremely strong base, the Council’s bureaucrats have proposed a series of actions to help them hit a new “7%” target. You can see the complete list here. Manchester Climate Monthly is going to take a closer look at each and every one of these 44 “actions.”

Twice a week, on “Annual Plan Tuesdays” and “Annual Plan Thursdays” we will be asking a few straightforward questions about each item. And to illustrate each post, we (Marc Hudson and Marc Roberts) are devising “Top Trump” cards for all of these actions. At two a week it will take you until December or so to collect the whole set… So far can’t give you a percentage on the 2005 figure, since the Council has been going off its 2009/10 baseline, in direct contradiction of its own plan.

And throughout all of this, we are asking YOU, the reader, and council tax payer (probably), what YOU think the Council should REALLY be doing… Because next year the council moves to a “three year plan.” And given what we already know of the low quality of the carbon plans and their implementation so far, we, the citizens, will be complicit if we remain silent…

toptrump004What it says

4.19 Energy audits will be concluded on three of the top 25 energy consuming operational buildings, and analysed with a view to establishing business cases for capital investment this year or beyond.

What was said last year (direct quote from 2012/13 plan)
5.2.4.2 An energy audit will be conducted at an office building to be identified.
5.2.4.6 An energy audit will be undertaken of the Sharp building for creative businesses
that will also assess opportunities to minimise energy use of the Council’s data
centre.

MCFly’s verdict
What on earth have they been DOING for the last three years? Wouldn’t you have “concluded” energy audits on ALL of your top 25 buildings by now?  Weasel words – “with a view…” “or beyond.”

What would a proper three year plan around this item look like? They’d name their top twenty five buildings. They’d do energy audits on 20 of them this year. They’d start taking action. 10 this year, 5 next year, 5 the year after. No waffle, no weasel…

How can culture be shifted around this item? I personally have no idea.

What else should the Council be doing around this item?

Other info n/a

Phone numbers and emails of the organisations n/a

Posted in Climate Change Action Plan, Democratic deficit, Manchester City Council | Tagged | 1 Comment

Friends of the Earth: “Support the people of Balcombe” #fracking #crazyspecies

This landed in our email inbox…

You’ve probably seen the headlines. Fracking is big news as the picturesque village of Balcombe in West Sussex becomes the latest site for test drilling in the UK.

Local residents are battling against the corporate giants who want to frack their community:

“We in Balcombe feel bullied. Bullied by the oil and gas industry. Bullied by our government. We stand strong in the fight against this dangerous and misguided government policy” Kathryn McWhirter, No Fracking in Balcombe Society.

Friends of the Earth is supporting our friends in Balcombe by providing hands-on advice to the local community.

Join us in supporting the residents of Balcombe by sending them a message of support today.

We’ll take your messages of support down to the Balcombe residents later this week. I know they’d love to hear from you.

You can also fill in our quick questionnaire to tell us your thoughts on fracking. What concerns you most and what do you want to do about it?

We have already helped strengthen the planning guidance for fracking and worked with directly affected communities in Lancashire. Together we can continue to delay the fracking industry and help move the UK to a clean energy future.

Thanks for your support,

Tony Bosworth

Energy and Climate Campaigner

Posted in Energy | Tagged , , | Leave a comment

Volunteer Opportunity: FarmStarting this Saturday, 10th August…, #Manchester #food

We got this from the folks at Kindling Trust – chloe@kindling.org.uk

farmstartWe have a weekend opportunity to join the Land Army on a trip to the FarmStart project, on Saturday 10th August.

We will be helping to transform an old shipping container into a storage and packing area for the FarmStart growers, and helping with a variety of other jobs on the land, including weeding, some planting and possibly harvesting.

We will be leaving Hulme at 9.30am (extra half an hour in bed as it’s a Saturday!) and arriving back for around 4.30pm. Lunch, refreshments, tools and gloves will be provided. You just need to bring sturdy footwear, suitable clothing, water and possibly a hat and sunscreen, if the weather holds out.

Places are limited, please email me to book your place.

Hope to see some of you there!

Posted in Food, volunteer opportunity | Leave a comment

Annual Plan Tuesday: “Asset Management” – #Manchester #climate #climatetrumps

In 2012 Manchester City Council aimed for a 10% reduction in its own emissions. In July 2013 it claimed a 7% reduction. It was able to do this because responsibility for traffic lights moved from its books. Looking at everything else (buildings, transport) emissions went … UP by 1.8%.
So, building on that extremely strong base, the Council’s bureaucrats have proposed a series of actions to help them hit a new “7%” target. You can see the complete list here. Manchester Climate Monthly is going to take a closer look at each and every one of these 44 “actions.”

Twice a week, on “Annual Plan Tuesdays” and “Annual Plan Thursdays” we will be asking a few straightforward questions about each item. And to illustrate each post, we (Marc Hudson and Marc Roberts) are devising “Top Trump” cards for all of these actions. At two a week it will take you until December or so to collect the whole set… So far can’t give you a percentage on the 2005 figure, since the Council has been going off its 2009/10 baseline, in direct contradiction of its own plan.

And throughout all of this, we are asking YOU, the reader, and council tax payer (probably), what YOU think the Council should REALLY be doing… Because next year the council moves to a “three year plan.” And given what we already know of the low quality of the carbon plans and their implementation so far, we, the citizens, will be complicit if we remain silent…

toptrump003What it says “4.18 Internal asset management and maintenance programmes such as the Asset Management Programme, consequential repairs and air conditioning reviews will identify and implement energy saving opportunities, wherever possible.”

What was said last year (direct quote from 2012/13 plan) The asset management plan for 2012/13 includes roof insulation at Wythenshawe Forum, boiler replacement at Levenshulme leisure centre and heating works at Wythenshawe Horticultural Centre

MCFly’s verdict (Is it ambitious enough, is it likely to happen, is this meaningless gibberish/stuff that they were already doing designed to pad out a thin plan, what questions about this “action” are yet to be answered etc etc)

Well, that didn’t take long, did it?  Third item in the “plan” and already we are into no carbon tonnage given and weasel phrases like “wherever possible.”  As a financially responsible organisation you’d expect that the City Council was doing this ANYWAY, no?

What would a proper three year plan around this item look like? They figure out where the low-hanging fruit is and they, um, make a plan to make savings?

How can culture be shifted around this item? I personally have no idea.

What else should the Council be doing around this item? Asking its staff how THEY think money/carbon can be saved?  Above and beyond “Green Impact”, that is…

Other info n/a

Phone numbers and emails of the organisations n/a

What do you think??

Posted in Climate Change Action Plan, Democratic deficit, Manchester City Council | 5 Comments

“If you need a job doing…” A #Manchester citizens’ #climate plan

mcmonthly August 2013page4In July 2014 a “three year plan” for Manchester City Council”s climate goals will be agreed at Scrutiny and then signed off by the Executive. Going on the quality of both the plans and the “actions” in the various Annual Carbon “Reduction” Plans since 2010, this three year plan is likely to be both unambitious and then unimplemented.
Currently there is a low-level of awareness/concern both within and beyond the Council over the obligations and opportunities around the climate change.
There is little sense among Manchester activists of what they can do to lower Manchester’s emissions and help make the city more resourceful and responsive, with actions focussing on worthy personal actions such as going vegetarian or (re)cycling.

So, what is to be done? Well, we here at MCFly think that people who give a damn – whether they are Labour, Green, Lib Dem or “a plague on all your houses” – need to get together to create a Real Climate Plan that we can then give to the Council by the end of April 2014.
The Council can then draw upon that document to make a robust and radical 3 year plan that gives them a real chance of hitting their targets, not just for carbon reduction, but also culture change.

The three alternatives – to keep on staging emotathons (see page 5 of the latest MCFly) and feel-good smuggery, to do small-scale stuff that is good on its own but not fit for the scale of the problems, or endlessly critiquing without proposing – is not going to help us all pass the “mirror test”* ten years hence.

This is a big job, and it will needs hands on deck. If you want to be involved, at any level, please get in touch. mcmonthly@gmail.com

* That’s the one where you wake up in the morning and can look yourself in the eye as someone who has been a responsible citizen.

******

In 2012 Manchester City Council aimed for a 10% reduction in its own emissions . In July 2013 it claimed a 7% reduction. It was able to do this because responsibility for traffic lights moved from its books. Looking at everything else (buildings, transport) emissions went … UP by 1.8%.

So, building on that extremely strong base, the Council’s bureaucrats have proposed a series of actions to help them hit a new “7%” target. You can see the complete list here.

toptrump001Manchester Climate Monthly is going to take a closer look at each and every one of these 44 “actions.” Twice a week, on “Annual Plan Tuesdays” and “Annual Plan Thursdays” we will be asking a few straightforward questions about each item. To illustrate each post, are devising “Top Trump” cards for all of these actions. At two per week it will take you until December or so to collect the whole set…

And throughout all of this, we are asking YOU, the reader, and council tax payer (probably), what YOU think the Council should REALLY be doing… Because next year the council moves to a “three year plan.” And given what we already know of the low quality of the carbon plans and their implementation so far, we, the citizens, will be complicit if we remain silent…

*It also aimed for 10 percent reductions in the previous two years. Missed them too.
Posted in Climate Change Action Plan | Leave a comment

0 – 7 = …1.8? #Manchester carbon maths failure. What should responsible citizens do?

mcmonthly August 2013page1If you think those numbers don’t add up, you’re not alone. Even Manchester City Council, which had tried to tell the public it had reduced carbon dioxide emissions, has conceded that their carbon emissions have actually increased. In a dramatic admission at Neighbourhoods Scrutiny Committee on Tuesday 16th July, Nigel Murphy, the elected member for responsibility for climate change action admitted that the Council’s emissions have increased. Responding to a question based around Friends of the Earth’s submission to the committee, Councillor Murphy conceded that – contrary to a press release released by Manchester City Council – like-for-like carbon dioxide emissions from the City Council’s operations have gone up by 1.8% in the past year, and that the actual amount saved over the last three years is 5.2%, not the 14% initially claimed.
Executive Member Nigel Murphy responded to a question by Cllr James Hennigan by telling the assembled councillors and members of the public that he was willing to agree with Manchester Friends of the Earth’s analysis as long as it was noted that the Council has been sourcing its energy from “decarbonised sources.”
The Friends of the Earth submission, sent the previous night to the chair of the Committee included the immortal lines “Achieving the operational and cultural changes to radically reduce greenhouse gas emissions is clearly not a simple task and will require dedicated and continuous action. it will also require a commitment to transparent and meaningful progress reporting.”
It continued “We therefore call on the Neighbourhoods Scrutiny Committee to request that the Annual Carbon Reduction Plan be amended to clearly state that there was a 1.8% increase in like-for-like emissions between 2011/2 and 2012/13, and that there has only been a 5.2% reduction in like-for-like emissions against the 2009/10 baseline.”
MCFly has over the last weeks repeatedly asked the City Council if the 2013/14 Annual Carbon Reduction Plan going to be redrafted to include more ambitious targets, so that the Council meets its “20% by 2014” reduction target. We have also asked “when did 2009/10 become the agreed baseline year for the Council’s emissions? In the Manchester Climate Change Action Plan, agreed by the Executive on November 17th 2009, goal one was a 41% reduction on carbon dioxide emissions by 2020 from a 2005 baseline.”
In its finest traditions of openness and accountability the City Council has, at time of going to press, given us no statement.
What is to be done?
You could give up – no-one would blame you, given the contempt that the City Council is (forever) spewing on you. Alternatively, turn to page 4 of the latest Manchester Climate Monthly for MCFly’s suggestion.

Posted in Climate Change Action Plan, Democratic deficit | 5 Comments

#Manchester #Climate Monthly #20, August 2013 out now!

mcmonthly August 2013page1How should responsible citizens respond to the latest failure by Manchester City Council to cut its carbon emissions?  What is an “emotathon” and why is it a Bad Thing?  Can a cat teach us about Climate Change?

All good questions, and you will find answers in the latest “Manchester Climate Monthly,” along with the usual “what you can do”, “Social Movements Agony Aunt”  and extensive calendar of green events on the back page. PLEASE retweet this/put it on facebook, tell your friends. And as ever, your comments and critiques and suggestions are v. welcome, to mcmonthly@gmail.com

You can download the whole thing (10Mb!) here, or click on the pages and they should come up for you…
mcmonthly August 2013page2

mcmonthly August 2013page3

mcmonthly August 2013page4

mcmonthly August 2013page5

mcmonthly August 2013page6

mcmonthly August 2013page7

mcmonthly August 2013page8

Posted in print editions | Leave a comment

Moss Brook Growers – volunteers for harvesting needed on Mon/Weds/Fridays #Manchester #organic #food

Via Rob at Moss Brook Growers –

“Hello everyone,
P1040034-lrwe’re now approaching our busy harvest period and just wanted to say that we can take volunteers on Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays and Saturdays. If any of you are free, just let us know!

Tasks will be mainly harvesting and weeding. Right now, we’re harvesting lettuce, beetroot (photos attached), kale and spinach. Coming soon: leeks, celery, broccoli, squash.

P1040044-lrWe generally pick up volunteers at Unicorn’s car park (Chorlton) from 7.30am, and we offer £5 towards travel and lunch expenses.

Hope to see some of you soon!
All the best,
Rob from Moss Brook Growers
mossbrookgrowers@gmail.com

Posted in Food, volunteer opportunity | Leave a comment