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"Take it back to basics - photograph everything, write to our councillors, tweet the horrors, post on here and try and bring the issue back to the fore."
I think that's broadly the right approach. And while I don't agree with people who tell me it's as bad as ever, both Liz Ixer and I have an extensive collection of photos going back years. So Liz knows whereof she speaks.
However my own overall impression - I'm not claiming more than that - is that while things have got worse recently they've not dipped down to the horror stories of years ago.
To Liz's recommendations I'd include putting the current so-called "cabinet" member as the first recipient of your emails. (peray.ahmet@haringey.gov.uk) And if that doesn't seem to work, adding the Council Leader, Claire Kober. (claire.kober@haringey.gov.uk)
People may wish to remind Cllr Kober of her boast in Election Manifesto for May 2014.
"Our streets are among the cleanest in London and
resident satisfaction is at its highest ever level."
And far more important than what kids think of the local council - which may be little or perhaps nothing at all - what they absorb in what I call pavement lessons. The "Hidden Curriculum" of the streets near their homes day-by-day, month-by-month. Modelling - often badly - how many people can and do behave to one another as neighbours. Poor citizenship lessons, which may undermine the learning from their parents and their schools.
Liz is right.
We have to keep plugging away... reporting via the ourHaringey and so forth.
Our neighbourhood coordinator is highly thought of by people who work with him. The council 'cabinet' have to provide the cash and political support to keep the place clean. They are the ones who have to be held to account. They need to support the staff on the ground .
Whatever happened to jetwashing the bins, washing down the pavements an clearing the chewing gum?
I'll happily lend anyone my jetwash to hose the bins down - or do it myself.
I think the council did an enforcement blitz on West Green Road a few months ago. I used to work in enforcement so I could see the signs - more branded bags outside the shops.
The street has now backslid and I see the same massive black bags outside the same shops every day. There is also a much-loved local business (not naming names though) stuffing litter bins full of black bags or leaving them next to litter bins, even though they have their own commercial waste bin at the back.
When the street looks untidy this encourages littering - I have seen this myself when bags are put out at the wrong time, even next to a bin, people will throw their litter on top of the bag rather than put it in the bin.
There needs to be another enforcement blitz on West Green Road to bring it back up to standard.
Why can't the council get tough on litter and start fining people?
How could they know who's dumping it all? Especially since residents of flats are allowed to chuck their rubbish on the pavements. The pavement on Green Lanes is absolutely rank at the moment, apart from the few shops and restaurants who scrub their section in the mornings, the rest of it is filthy.
Go though the bins. There's a UK reality TV show about rubbish people and that's what the enforcers do. Amazing what you learn on daytime TV.
Why can't people just behave like civilised human beings? I think it's all well and good blaming the Council for not clearing up our mess. But what about us taking responsibility for ourselves and not making the mess in the first place? I say bring back the "Keep Britain Tidy" campaign....make littering as socially unacceptable as drink driving... I think Sarah has the right attitude - challenge people's behaviour when you see it happening....that's the way to reduce the problem
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