Saturday, 22 September 2007

RUSSIAN ABOUT

There`s on thing about being a councillor - life`s full of variety. One minute you`re on the phone trying to sort out a problem for a constituent, the next you are mixing with the Russian navy!

A couple of weeks ago the Russians landed. At the same time there was some miltary fluttering as Russian MIGs were spotted coming into UK air space and the RAF were sent up to escort them off limits. I was tempted to call up the Ministry of Defence and tell them they were too late - the Russians were already here in South Ayrshire! But seriously it was impressive and moving to see how important the unveiling of the memorial of the Varyag was to the Russians. They sent newspaper reportes and TV crew to South Ayrshire to beam the story live to their nation.

At the same time it was disappointing to see how our national press and TV failed to cover the ceremony. Not a line appeared in any national newspaper that I saw. Obviously they had to get their priorities right and the Saturday sports fixtures took up all their reserves! Fortunately the local press, particularly the Carrick Gazette, more than made up for that lack of interest.

The Russians were courteous and highly entertaining visitors who boosted the local economy that weekend. Though I couldn`t help but notice how many of them smoked. If our ban had not been in place maybe I wouldn`t have noticed - but at least the few councillors who haven`t managed to give up the weed had plenty of company outside the marquee at Lendalfoot shore.

Since then the council has been hitting the headlines for less celebratory reasons. Unlike the `source` who has been leaking like a sieve to the press I can`t write about the events surrounding the future of our Chief Executive Tom Cairns as I am bound by confidentiality. A tad frustrating position for the journalist in me (if I`m honest) - for three years ago in my former life as a newspaper editor I would have been looking for every leak to make headlines. The drawback of being poacher turned gamekeeper!

To end this entry I must bring you up to date on the `Balamory` houses in Straiton. I have seen the map and strangely enough the Knockbreck Road does lie outwith the conservation boundary of the village. However I believe it wasn`t the boundary that kept housing design in line before but the reboubtable Jamie Hunter-Blair of Blairquhan. Since his death there has not been the same interest from the estate. However I thought you`d also be interested in knowing some the the thinking behind the technicolour paintwork on the Ayrshire Housing homes. At some national conference the theory was put forward that people would more easily recognise their home by door colour rather than number. I think maybe they were thinking of the elderly and maybe perhaps those in the early stages of dementia, but I guess it will also come in handy after a night at the Black Bull!

Monday, 3 September 2007

Fairness and protection for the rurual areas

`It`s like something out of Balamory ………. That`s the words used by a constituent who contacted me about the new Ayrshire Housing homes going up in Straiton. `Certainly they`re not right for a conservation village`, he continued.

I must say I was expecting something like the colourful façade of Tobermory when I went up to see the new affordable houses at Straiton – and while they`re not quite as `vibrant`, the homes at Knockbreck Road have something of the holiday chalet look about them rather than permanent new homes.

Not the fabric of the building I hasten to add. The houses are in keeping with the style of a rural community, the roofs are slate - but the doors and window frames are painted in the bright primary colours – reds, green, yellows, blues. They stick out like a sore thumb. I was looking for the sign saying `Welcome to Straiton holiday complex`.

I contacted the head of planning, showed him pictures and pointed out that surely these colours were inappropriate and not in keeping with the strict conservation status of Stration .But I was wrong. Apparently that`s all right. They could be technicolour stripes if Ayrshire Homes so fancied. For while everyone else in Straiton is restricted in what they can do with their houses, having to stick by strict planning procedures, the Ayrshire Housing homes apparently fall outwith the conservation village status. There`s nothing the planners can do. The multi-coloured windows and doors can stay

I did suggest to the planning director a discreet word in the ear of the developers might encourage a change of hue, something more in keeping with the ambience of one of South Ayrshire`s most beautiful villages. I wait with interest to see if anything is done.

However the new residents of the Knockbreck Road houses are luckier than a lot of folk. They have houses .For affordable housing – or the lack of it - promises to be the political hot potato of the next decade for councillors and MSPs.

Labour`s new leader Wendy Alexander said last week said that she was `taken back` during her whistle-stop-getting-to-know-the-people tour to find the strength of feeling across Scotland about the lack of affordable housing. What planet has she been living on? The answer to that of course is in the cushy cushioned political planet that is Holyrood where our political masters (of all hues) lose sight of some of the major issues.. Like SNP housing Minister Stewart Maxwell when unveiling the new government`s bold solution who talked of another `consultation` with `stakeholders`. More words rather than actions.

It is time for councils and the Scottish government to grasp this nettle and simply build more houses.- ones that people can afford. It is nice to have beautiful estates with homes at £500,000 plus, but the majority of young folk, even some professionals, can`t afford a kennel never mind a luxury detached mansion. They can`t get onto the property ladder. We need to build ourselves out of this rapidly growing crisis.

We on South Ayrshire Council are committed to building affordable homes – and that is certainly something I will be fighting for. This is something we CAN do – but we need the political will from Edinburgh and of course more money to pay for the building.
We need to keep our communities vibrant and keep our young people here in South Ayrshire where their skills are needed.