Tags (All lower case. Use " " for multiple word tags):
The snowfall started on Friday, I wouldn't have called it heavy then. The roads were well gritted earlier in the month and all for nothing in the end. I was wondering if they just held onto their cuppas a bit longer this time and then it was too late. Despite our problems in January I am loathe to blame the council this time around. The amount of snow in the time period was unprecedented and caught out far more traditionally prepared organisations, especially given that it was a week before Christmas. Imagine if it had fallen a week later: nobody would have been on the roads and hundreds of working class Londoners would have received a bonus from William Hill et al. Woo hoo!
Great photos Karen.
A schoolteacher introduced our class to American poetry including Carl Sandburg’s “Psalm of those who go forth before daylight”. Sandburg celebrates people who are out working - usually hard manual work - while many of us are still in bed. Rereading it now, I notice the casual sexism of 1918. But it still makes me ponder how much we depend on people – women and men – who we rarely see.
I’m often critical of the failings of Haringey council. But can we have some balance? And some generosity and acknowledgement that people are out there at night and before dawn, doing their best to keep the roads and pavements open. At the same time trying to keep abreast of the waste and recycling collections. And worrying about the most vulnerable people.
Yesterday I talked to my cousin in Belgium. Their main roads are open but local roads are still very dangerous for driving. Nationally they are short of salt. A few days ago people in Leicestershire phoned to say there was an overnight snowfall and they were snowed in. Friends living in the Scottish Borders were using skis to get around.
Okay, some criticisms of Haringey may be justified. I was critical, myself, of the decision not to put out the Winter Service Plan for public consultation as quickly as possible after February when things were fresh in people’s minds. There can and should be better communication with residents. And right now and in the next few weeks, I hope people will make suggestions for improvements; there are always things to learn.
But please let’s give some praise and encouragement – not for councillors! – but for staff from Haringey and Haringey Enterprise who’ve been out in the worst weather and are still going out.
(Tottenham Hale ward councillor)
Thanks, Alan, for that bit of balance.
Now I hope our featherbedded Chief Exec, as he turns over on his feather bedding about 3.00am, spares a thought for the Street Cleaner on 7% of his salary, redeployed to the Gritting team till cuts cut deeper. I hope he's provided him with stout boots and thick gloves, lest he has to buy them slowly and carefully on his own account.
I cannot pinpoint the exact times when individual roads were gritted as we do not have the technology to do this at the moment
I don't say that gritting times should necessarily be recorded at all, but if they are, why should it require technology. What about paper and pencil?!
On a slightly different tack and as a car-less person, I have noticed how many pedestrians, like myself, have taken to walking on the road because the tarmac is clear, whereas the pavements are often still snow covered with partly melted and re-frozen snow – highly hazardous to walk on.
I have never gone over several times. A neighbour told me yesterday a woman fell and broke her ankle and it won't be put in a cast until the 30th. Safer to risk being knocked down by a vehicle.
© 2024 Created by Hugh. Powered by
© Copyright Harringay Online Created by Hugh