Tag Archives: Brighton

Cllr Jacob Taylor – Nov 2024

It’s a pleasure to be writing a new column in The Whistler on behalf of your Labour council. As councillors, we try to read all of the wonderful community publications across the city – from the Hovarian and the Brightonian, to Rottingdean Village News, the Moulsecoomb & Bevendean Newsletter, the North Laine Runner, and many more. Each of these publications are a brilliant representation of our vibrant communities, but none are as witty, irreverent and jolly as The Whistler! 

I wanted to start this new series of regular columns by setting out our stall as an administration. We were elected in May 2023 with the first full majority on the council for over 20 years, on a promise to make change and get the basics right. As a proactive Labour council, we are focused on four key missions to try and transform Brighton & Hove. 

The first is to restore the quality of basic services, and improve the ‘look and feel’ of the city. Brighton & Hove is an amazing place to live and visit – but the honest truth is that it hasn’t looked it’s best in recent years. A refuse and recycling service that isn’t as reliable as it should be, and certain streets and public areas that look neglected. The sad fact is that the working culture at Cityclean had become unacceptable. This was impacting staff, but also the quality of the service. Many people suspected this was the case, but we acted. Following a KC-led investigation, we have been making important structural changes to try and fix this service. We know there is a long way to go. 

Refuse and recycling weren’t the only services that needed restoring. A city that doesn’t have free public toilets is a city that’s not accessible for families, for older people and for disabled people. That’s why it was such a mistake for the previous Green council to shut so many public toilets, and why we’re delighted to have reopened 15 since taking office – including the long-shuttered toilets in Pavilion Gardens. 

The second area of focus is housing. This city has a housing crisis that is both deep and broad. From people who are forced to sleep rough, to private renters paying a fortune for poor standards, to families that leave the city because they can’t afford a suitable property – the last 14 years has seen a failure to properly tackle a genuine national crisis. That’s why we are so focused on increasing the amount of affordable housing in the city. We are building and buying new council houses from Portslade to Rottingdean, and everywhere in between – to try and make Brighton a more affordable place to live. 

Our third mission is to tackle inequality in the city. Which is why we have created the Brighton & Hove Fairness Fund, with over £800,000 to support residents struggling with cost-of-living, and why we’ve introduced a ground-breaking policy to give priority in school admissions to children on Free School Meals. 

Sitting above everything is the issue that will impact all of our lives and generations to come: climate change and the need to transition our economy. The city council declared a climate emergency in 2018, but so far has not created a plan to transition the entire city to net zero (having previously focused on just the emissions from council buildings). We are going to change that, and have just hired a new head of Net Zero at the council to help drive the city towards genuine energy transition. 

There is a long way to go in rebuilding the city, and the country, after a period of decline – but your local council has started the work to do exactly that. 

l Councillor Jacob Taylor is Deputy Leader of Brighton & Hove City Council

Editorial – Nov 2024

It’s 1996, possibly 1997. I’m in Regent’s Park, London Town, with my best friend, Maxwell Wolf. That’s him in the picture. I’m reading poetry and Maxwell is indulging his favourite pastime, putting the squirrels back in the tree. He’s good at it. He runs after them, they wait till he gets just this close and then… from nowhere they find a tree and run up it. Maxwell jumps up the tree impressively high – he’s a fine figure of a hound – but doesn’t jump high enough. He looks around, pleased with himself, satisfied that the squirrel is back in the tree. He knows though that the squirrel is just one of many. And they all need to go back in the tree. I have a little fantasy that “Putting The Squirrel Back In The Tree” has become an Olympic sport with time trials, different difficulty levels. Well, if breakdancing… when Maxwell lets out a yelp. He’s chasing… he’s very close… Actually that is very close. I’m not sure the squirrel is going to make it. 

From nowhere, the squirrel finds the tree (they really are sneaky) and runs up it, Maxwell hot on his tail. Literally. Maxwell’s got the squirrel by the bum. He’s excited but this isn’t supposed to happen and he doesn’t really know what to do next. The squirrel does. He stops running, turns round and bites Maxwell on the nose. 

I promised Maxwell I wouldn’t say what happened next. We went home and never spoke of it again. 

More than any other dog we’ve had since Maxwell went to chase the Big Ball In The Sky, Polly has picked up the mantel. She looks like him, moves like him, has the same sense of responsibility… You should have seen Maxwell when we had our first child. Really, the best babysitter. I can’t begin to think what Maxwell Wolf would have made of St.Ann’s Well Gardens, a park so laden with squirrels you almost trip over them. 

By the time you read this, Polly and Harry   will have had their first anniversary with us. It feels like they’ve been here forever, but it’s barely been a year. Sometimes I wonder whether they can remember their past life when they were called Freckle and Domino, and lived at the extraordinary Healing Paws Rescue in Greece. 

And yes, here comes the serious bit. This is the Xmas issue and it’s that time of year when we say yes, get a dog, but remember – as the old phrase has it – a dog is for life, so give the idea some proper thought. And when you realise it’ll be the best thing you ever did, get a dog from a rescue centre. Somewhere like Raystede, which is a really good place. Or maybe from further afield, like Healing Paws. There are so many lovely dogs that need rescuing, need a home. So if you’re going to do it, do it right. 

Sian Berry – Nov/Dec 2024

Since being elected in July, alongside three amazing new Green MP colleagues, I’ve been very, very busy in Brighton and in Westminster, with lots of great Green ideas to put forward, and lots to challenge in my first days as an MP, working across the chamber from a new Labour government.

So far in Parliament, I’ve personally asked 32 written questions, put questions to ministers in the chamber and spoken in debates 11 times, proposed three amendments to Bills, and signed 76 Early Day Motions (EDMs). Green MPs teamed up to propose a King’s Speech amendment as one of our first tasks, and we’ve written to ministers jointly on topics ranging from healthcare to community energy, to taxes and the Budget.

Green MPs worked together to table the first Early Day Motion of this Parliament on bringing water companies back into public hands.

With Carla Denyer, I have also raised concerns about healthcare for young trans constituents directly with Wes Streeting. Many residents have written to me about this issue too, and I’m pleased to have taken action.

Here in Brighton, I have an amazing constituency team and since July, we’ve already dealt with over 500 cases from constituents, held weekly surgeries, visited residents and projects to see problems for ourselves, and written to the council about issues ranging from school closures to planning applications. Issues brought to me by residents in West Hill and North Laine have ranged from anti-social behavior in Zion Gardens, to supporting residents in emergency accommodation and with delays in housing repairs. I’m also in contact with traders in the North Laine who are experiencing long standing issues with theft and shoplifting. On fire safety issues in West Hill and North Laine, I’ve been supporting residents in the New England Quarter and City Point and joined them on ITV calling for action.

At my Parliament office I have been lobbied so far by five constituents in person, and via email I’ve received messages related to campaigns, world events and policies more than 4,000 times on more than 240 different issues. It’s so valuable to get a clear picture like this of what matters most to so many of the people I represent! I’m taking action, supporting campaigns, attending events and writing back to people with the results as quickly as I can while I build up my final Parliamentary staff team.

In the voting lobbies, I have voted ‘AYE’ or ‘NO’ 18 times (abstensions are not recorded). We’ve supported the first stages of several of the Government’s Bills, and are preparing to make amendments to improve them, including on the Great British Energy Bill and the Renters Rights Bill. But seeing the Labour Government vote down two very sensible motions and amendments to get rid of the two-child benefit limit and keep the winter fuel allowance for pensioners was bitterly disappointing.

As four Green MPs we are able to share out the main ‘shadowing’ duty on different departments and each focus on changing particular policies. My main responsibilities are currently to challenge social housing policy, police and criminal justice, work and pensions, culture, media and sport, disabled people, transport and clean air. I have started work on each of these already, and I am also taking up individual issues where Brighton needs action, such as sewage and pesticides.

I was very happy to introduce a Private Member’s Bill, devised by Pesticide Action Network, that would stop public bodies using harmful chemical pesticides in public spaces, streets and gardens and I’m looking for cross-party support to take this issue further.

On housing, I have been pushing for investment in buying not just building council homes, action on the fire safety crisis, plus the need for transparency from housing associations – an area I have challenged the Prime Minister on directly.

On media and culture, I have challenged the council to do more to reduce gambling (and advertising for gambling) in the city, and I’m also doing lots of work supporting grassroots music venues under threat, including the Prince Albert in the North Laine, and working closely with the Music Venue Trust.

On transport I’m making it my mission to address the long standing accessibility challenges at Preston Park Station. I’ve asked questions and have already tabled more coming up. I have already been pushing for an extension to the £2 bus fare cap and, ahead of the Budget, I’ve asked ministers and the Chancellor for more long-term investment for local active travel.

On climate and nature, I’ve met with local Greenpeace members to sign their pledges to keep up the pressure on the new government to bring climate solutions. All four Green MPs are fully behind the newly tabled Climate and Nature Bill.

Throughout all this time, all Green MPs have been pushing for peace, human rights and justice in Israel and Palestine. Locally, after a strong campaign, I was pleased that Brighton’s war plane part manufacturer L3 Harris had its planning decision refused by the council, but there is still no export ban to Israel on parts for the F-35 fighter, and I have been asking questions about why not, working with Campaign Against the Arms Trade.

I was the only MP to join the local response on our streets to the summer’s far right riots and was so proud of Brighton’s clear and positive defence of potential targets in the city and our refusal to accept fascists on our streets. In my maiden speech I praised the young people behind Citizens UK Brighton and Hove and joined them to celebrate their victory in winning a city-wide counselling pilot in Brighton recently.

And finally, a Green on BBC Question Time is historically quite rare, but in July I was asked to go on right after the election, alongside fellow Brighton and Hove MP, Peter Kyle. Carla Denyer was also asked on the programme two months later – which we hope is a good sign for future chances to talk about Brighton on the national stage.