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Chipping Barnet MP keen to work with Barnet Friends of the Earth and other environmental groups on new community projects

Answering questions from Barnet Friends of the Earth was a chance for the Chipping Barnet MP Dan Tomlinson to say more about his plans to encourage initiatives such as helping to finance the installation of solar panels on community buildings.

A newly appointed member of the MP’s constituency staff is to be responsible for working with local groups to help develop a range of community projects including schemes to improve the environment.

Many public buildings including schools and community centres cannot afford to install solar panels and Mr Tomlinson’s aim is to encourage the development various initiatives including community energy projects.

“What we would like to do is get behind local initiatives and work with energy providers to support residents and community organisations to cut their fuel bills.

“I am sure there are probably dozens of initiatives already out there intended to help people insulate their homes and as Chipping Barnet MP I want to see what more can be done to help them.

“The same goes for community organisations faced with increasing costs of heating and lighting.

“I now have a member of my constituency staff who can work with the local community, and we want people to tell us how we can best assist.”

Wendy Alcock (above, left) founder of the Barnet community gardening initiative Incredible Edible – one of the many groups which supported the Friends of the Earth question-and-answer event – welcomed Mr Tomlinson’s appointment of a constituency staff member to help co-ordinate support for local schemes.

There was already one community energy project being developed in Friern Barnet and she was sure local activists would be keen to work with the MP and his staff on ways to improve the environment.

Dave McCormick (right) who helped organise the session with Mr Tomlinson, said they had brought together members from a wide range of groups including Chipping Barnet Foodbank, Barnet Green Spaces group, Barnet Beekeepers and Clean Air Barnet.

Mr Tomlinson said that since becoming MP constituency last year he had been surprised and encouraged by the strength of local environmental groups which made him even more determined to do what he could to support their work.

He faced some challenging questions from his Friends of the Earth audience especially on emerging government policies on climate change, house building and protecting the environment.

Labour’s proposals to limit the ability of activists to continue mounting legal challenges was a necessary step if the government was to succeed in speeding up investment in new energy and infra-structure projects.

At present there could be as many as three legal challenges to plans for wind farms, solar farms or new nuclear power stations.

The government’s aim was to limit this to one judicial review in future to stop projects being blocked for years.

“We will keep the ability to mount a challenge in the courts, but if a judge says there is no merit in a further challenge, we will not let that case go to appeal.”

Mr Tomlinson said the construction of a £100 million tunnel on the HS2 rail line to shield bats flying overhead in ancient woodland in Buckinghamshire illustrated the difficulties encountered with the current rules which said there could be no harm to wildlife in such locations.

“Rather than developers being required to spend money on projects like a bat tunnel, the government favours the creation of nature restoration fund.

“What we will probably say is that a developer must contribute money into a nature restoration fund, and it would be experts in the natural environment to say where that money should be spent. “

Mr Tomlinson said the government hoped to start consultations on such a scheme before Christmas and it would enable the country to do so much more to protect the environment because the money could be targeted on where it would achieve the most benefit.

He insisted that Labour’s push towards increasing housebuilding would be driven by a policy of releasing land in a sensible and rational way.

The government was trying to encourage a sense of optimism about what could be achieved.

“Young people in London are spending half their income on rents; some are spending more than that.

“So, we have to have a bold target on housing.”

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Bus lanes to be introduced on High Street approach to Barnet town centre — only six objections

A plan to introduce bus lanes along both sides of the busiest section of Barnet High Street — between the Wood Street junction at the Barnet parish church and Meadway — has been approved by Barnet Council and Transport for London.

Only six objections were registered after 456 letters were sent to nearby residents and businesses.

But an earlier council questionnaire and a petition organised by the former Chipping Barnet MP Theresa Villiers indicated there was much wider opposition among local car drivers and other road users.

An official consultation process was launched in July last year after TfL surveys indicated delays to both southbound and northbound bus services using the High Street.

TfL says timings will be improved by the introduction of rush-hour bus lanes – operating Monday to Saturday from 7-10am and 4-7pm.

According to data published by Barnet Council around 6,700 bus passengers either board or alight each weekday at stops in this section of the High Street which is served by 11 bus routes.

The northbound bus lane would be from the junction with Meadway to the junction with Fitzjohn Avenue and the southbound bus lane would from the High Street junction with Wood Street as far as the junction with Normandy Avenue.

No loading will be permitted when the bus lanes are operational (7-10am and 4-7pm) but the inset parking bays on the southbound side between Wood Street and Meadway will not be affected and there will be no parking loss as a result.

To improve access for buses the kerb will be re-aligned outside the Red Lion public house and a bus stop on the other side of the road, near the junction with Park Road, will be relocated by seven metres.

In setting out the case for the introduction of three-metre-wide bus lanes, the council says that passenger numbers on bus routes passing through Barnet have increased to 208,000 trips per day.

However, passengers wait approximately 20 per cent longer than intended on high-frequency routes and travelling within the borough by car is typically two to four times faster than taking the bus.

A public questionnaire was distributed last summer which produced 439 responses – and 52 per cent of those replying thought a northbound bus lane was important and 62 per cent considered a southbound lane was important.

But 54 per cent of those who responded said they feared the introduction of bus lanes would lead to increased congestion.

The questionnaire was followed by a three-week statutory consultation which closed on December 19, and which resulted in only six objections, five of which warned of increased congestion.

While the consultation was taking place Ms Villiers says she received well over 4,000 signatures to a petition against the plans for bus lanes in Barnet High Street, Whetstone High Road and Cat Hill.

Later, when TfL dropped the plan for bus lanes at Whetstone and Cat Hill, she maintained her opposition to bus lanes in High Barnet on the grounds that they offered no significant benefit and would only worsen traffic conditions at the already complicated junction of the High Street with Wood Street.

Although she was no longer the Chipping Barnet MP, she was still strongly opposed to the scheme and was anxious that residents’ views should be heard.

“I am a resident of Arkley and regularly use this route as a tube and bus passenger, car driver, pedestrian and cyclist,” said Ms Villiers.

“In my nearly two decades of representing Chipping Barnet no one has ever asked me for a bus lane in Barnet High Street.

“Barring cars and vans from using road space in this location would cause significant and unnecessary congestion.

“This would harm community life in our neighbourhood by leading to more empty shops.”     

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High Barnet drama group’s new play highlights life of Mary, wife of explorer and Hadley Green resident Dr David Livingstone

Daily life in High Barnet well over a century ago has been re-imagined for a new play which looks back even further in time to the years when the Victorian explorer Dr David Livingstone and his wife Mary lived on Hadley Green.

A plaque on the front wall of what is now known as Livingstone Cottage records that he lived there in the year 1857.

Mary Livingstone, I Presume? has been written by local dramatist Claire Fisher who has lived in the cottage for the last 11 years and who believes Mary Livingstone has not had all the recognition she deserves.

Very little has been published about Mary’s life. She was the daughter of missionaries, became a missionary herself and was accomplished African linguist.

Her knowledge of African people and languages was considered crucial to the success of Dr Livingstone’s travels.

Rehearsals by members of the High Barnet drama group the Blue Door Theatre Company are well underway for a production which is to be staged at the Bull Theatre with four performances at the end of February. (see full details below)

The play recreates events in 1913 when some of High Barnet’s well-connected residents decided the town should install a commemorative plaque at Dr Livingstone’s home on Hadley Green.

A grieving widow living in the house, Mrs Isabelle Harrington, played by Brigid Hekster (left), takes an interest in the life of Mary Livingstone, played by Sarah Munford (right).

Isabelle finds herself in conversation with Mary – a storyline which explores the lives of women in different times and places, and which presents a “feminist look at women’s hidden voices”.

Cast members take on the role of residents of the town including a butcher’s daughter, schoolboy and other local characters living on Hadley Green and at Monken Hadley.

A vital prop in the drama is a magnificent Victorian phonograph, a model of which was made by sculptor and artist Cos Gerolemou, seen here with writer and director, Claire Fisher (left).

Cos said he had studied illustrations of phonographs of the era and was impressed by the way they were decorated with acanthus leaves, an effect which he was anxious to recreate.

Claire acknowledged the challenge she has in getting Mary Livingstone, I Presume? ready for its premiere at the end of February.

“This is the first play I have written and directed, and I am so in awe of the cast in giving it their all.

“Many of our drama group have full time jobs and here they are at rehearsals, giving their time to help bring the play to life.”

Livingstone Cottage is a regular stopping point for guided walks and people visiting Hadley Green and Monken Hadley.

Since moving in Claire has been busying researching the history of both the house and the Livingstone family.

She was fascinated by what happened in 1913 when the high and mighty of Barnet decided to put up the plaque to mark the centenary of Dr Livingstone’s birth and record that he lived in the house in 1857.

Claire says she is indebted to the advice and support of Susi Earnshaw at the Bull Theatre and artistic director Siobhan Dunne. 

There will be four performances at the end of February at the Bull Theatre, High Barnet – on Thursday and Friday, 27 and 28 February, at 7.30pm and two performances on Saturday 1 March at 2pm and 7.30pm. For tickets and more information: www.thebulltheatre.com

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Trust established by tv stars Sarah Parish and James Murray to fund drama therapy sessions at Noah’s Ark Children’s Hospice

Sarah Parish, well known for her role in tv series such as Peak Practice and Pillars of the Earth, and her husband, actor James Murray, are supporting drama therapy sessions at the Noah’s Ark Children’s Hospice in Byng Road, Barnet.

Through the Murray Parish Trust, established after the death of their daughter, they help to fund children’s mental health care projects.

On a visit to Noah’s Ark the couple met Christina and her two sons, Arthur aged one, and nine-year-old Joseph, (see above), who both attend drama and music sessions at the hospice.

The trust is to fund a total of 300 drama therapy sessions — the latest initiative to get their backing since they started raising money in memory of their daughter Ella-Jayne who died in 2019 at the age of eight from a congenital heart defect.

Sarah said their trust – which has directed over £4 million to healthcare projects since it was established in 2014 – was there to help families at their darkest hours.

“When our daughter was in intensive care for four months, we witnessed at first hand the unmet need for emotional and psychological support.

“If the mounting trauma of having or being a seriously ill child isn’t properly processed with professional help, it can have devastating consequences.”

Sarah met Pasha Wild (above left), drama and movement therapist at Noah’s Ark, who stressed the value of therapy in helping children explore different parts of themselves and untangle and unpick things in a way which is helpful for them.

Christina Lucas-Dodsworth, whose son Arthur was referred to Noah’s Ark, was full of praise for Pasha’s support.

Arthur, who has severe hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy had to be transferred to a neonatal intensive care unit, and it was thought unlikely he would survive coming off a ventilator.

He was referred to Noah’s Ark, became less critical, and now attends a drama and music group, Tunes and Tales.

His brother Joseph also has drama therapy with Pasha to help him deal with the issues which can affect siblings of seriously unwell children.

Christina said Joseph was now much happier at school.

“When we told Joseph his little brother might not be here that long, it was a very difficult conversation to have. 

“Now, he is able to start opening up to his teachers and tell them what is on his mind, saying things like Arthur is in hospital today and that he’s feeling a bit worried.

“After the session with Pasha he’s much more comfortable talking about these things.

“I think the drama therapy is good at tackling the prospect of loss and it is definitely helpful for a child who doesn’t want to do the talking at that age and for whom it’s probably just far too much.”   

During their visit, Sarah and James were briefed on the challenges facing the children’s palliative care sector.

Only 17 per cent of Noah’s Ark’s income is funded centrally through the Children’s Hospice Grant and the rest is raised through voluntary donations.

Currently the hospice’s running costs stand at approximately £18,000 a day.    

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McMullen brewery says two Barnet pub closures are only a “temporary measure” and that the premises should re-open by the spring

Regular customers at The Queens Arms, Barnet, have been fearing the worst with the doors remaining locked and no sign of life inside. However, they have been assured that the closure — and also the closure of the Kings Head in Barnet High Street — are both only temporary.

Hertford brewers McMullen and Sons say they have recruited a  new tenants for the Kings Head but are still in the process of lining up a new tenant for the Queens Arms.

The Kings Head has been closed since September. McMullens told the Barnet Society the company hopes to re-open the pub by late spring or early summer.

Several potential tenants have expressed an interest in taking on the Queens Arms and the aim is to have it re-opened at the latest by the spring.

The Queens Arms, with the Everyman cinema on one side and a BP petrol station on the other, is mid-way between the Northern Line and the Great North Road.

There has been speculation on social media that this large site, which includes a car park, might be sold off for redevelopment as flats.

But McMullens stressed that the closure was only temporary.

Local concern about the future of the Queens Arms has been heightened by the grim statistics about the difficulties facing the licensed trade with reports from across the country of an average of 34 pubs closing every month.

Another McMullen pub just a few hundred yards away, The Old Red Lion at the bottom of Barnet Hill, was closed in 2015 and replaced with a group of town houses.

East Barnet village has been without a pub for almost a year since the Stonegate group closed the Prince of Wales – but locals have been encouraged to see that work has started on refurbishing the premises.

The prospect of losing the last pub in the village was such a blow, that campaigners succeeded in registering The Prince of Wales as an asset of community value – only to find that there was a last-minute reprieve. 

Stonegate Group finally confirmed that the pub had been to the sold to another pub company, Heartwood Collection, a hospitality group which runs upmarket inns and restaurants across southern England.

Heartwood have promised a “multi-million-pound refurbishment” with the bar and dining room enhanced to provide a combined capacity of 150 covers. In the rear garden there would be a terrace for up to 55 covers.  

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Likely demolition of industrial and repair workshops has prompted a lookback to days when laundry was all hand washed

Plans to demolish a group of workshops and other industrial premises mid-way between Barnet and Whetstone has revived family memories of how it was once the site of a well-regarded laundry serving customers in and around North London.

Meadow Works, just off the Great North Road, was established as a hand laundry by Sidney Morris early in the 1900s and his descendants have compiled a history of what became a flourishing local business.

An application to build a new self-storage depot on the site – see aerial view above — is to be submitted to Barnet Council in mid-February by Compound, a development company, which is opening self-storage facilities around London and the south-east.

Currently the site is occupied by a range of workshops, small garages, and vehicle repair firms many of which would be displaced.

Co-working spaces will be provided as part of the redevelopment and the application proposes new premises, fronting on to the A1000, for the well-known Hole in the Wall Cafe.

A sales brochure for the Meadow Hand Laundry shows how it looked soon after the business was opened by Sidney Morris who bought the site in 1901.

Laundry was hung out to dry in the surrounding meadows. Hampers of washed and ironed laundry were delivered by horse-drawn carts to customers in London and nearby towns and villages in Hertfordshire.

A photograph of the laundry staff indicates the scale of the business.

Much of what has since become the Meadow Works industrial estate is hidden behind large hoardings alongside the Great North Road.

These were erected by the Finchley Bill Posting Company to serve as advertising space, and they had the added advantage of preventing dust blowing from the road onto the laundry drying in the meadows.

Sidney Morris – seen above, standing far right – was born in Finchley. He was one of five brothers and a blacksmith and mechanical engineer by trade.

The photograph, which was taken outside the laundry, shows the rural nature of the land around Meadow Works as it was in 1910.

After first purchasing land for a laundry business at New Southgate, Sidney opted instead for the Great North Road and bought a meadow and house then known as Whelm Villa.

After the property was destroyed in a fire in 1910, he built the Meadow Works main building which was completed in 1914 together with a family home.

He created extra space by rebuilding and converting a former green tin church moved from its site in Athenaeum Road, Whetstone.

Buildings on the site were requisitioned by the Army during first and second World Wars and as the laundry business declined, Sidney encouraged his sons to build up an alternative enterprise as bakery engineers.

For a time, the factory was let out to a tailoring firm called Taylors but by the early 1970s Morris Brothers (Bakery Engineers) was well established by brothers Jack and Dan Morris (Jack is second from the right, above).

When Sidney Morris purchased Whelm Villa it was the only building on the Great North Road between Barnet and Whetstone and it was thought originally to have been a coaching inn or hotel.

Traffic along the main road has continued down the years to offer plenty of business opportunities.

In the 1920s there was a coffee stall at the corner with Lyonsdown Road which was owned by a Mr and Mrs Francis.

After criticism from local councillors about the appearance of their stall, which was a caravan on wheels, they rented space from the laundry and opened what became the Hole in the Wall Cafe – named because it was hidden behind the advertising hoardings.

Recollections about the history of Meadow Works, and those who lived and worked there, have been collected from members of the wider Morris family by Jane Polledri (left) and Barbara Vallé, great granddaughter, and granddaughter of Sidney Morris. 

Jane said the demolition of buildings on the site, including The Whelm, which was the original home of the Morris family, had prompted her to start compiling a record of what they could all remember.

“It is sad to think that a place which holds so many happy family memories is about to be demolished.

 “I have learned so much about the history of the place. The original building, Whelm Villa, was thought to have been a coaching inn or hotel on the Great North Road.

“Family legend has it that Dick Turpin or even Charles Dickens stopped off there.

“We know there was stabling for horses and one of my uncles remembers seeing bricks on the porch floor which outlined the name ‘Whelm Hotel’.

“We are not sure where the name Whelm came from. It could be a corruption of the word elm, after the elm trees alongside the Great North Road, and well – after the well behind the house.

“Between the wars a man stored a small aeroplane in the field at the back of the house and used take off flying in the direction of the Odeon cinema.”

Jane’s mother Barbara, who is 85, says she spent her school days visiting with her mother Doris and grandmother Kate Morris at Meadow Works.

“My mother worked in the laundry with her two sisters. There was always so much to do and see.

“There was a large greenhouse, stables for horses and carts, styes for four pigs, chickens and fields with a large pond where grandfather’s children used to swim.”

After buildings were requisitioned by the Army requisitioned during the Second World War – and used to store furniture for people whose homes had been bombed – Barbara remembers seeing soldiers there and sometimes sitting on their knees.

After the war German prisoners of war were assigned to work at Meadow Works before returning home. They helped feeding the horses, pigs and chickens.

“Now the fields and meadows that I remember – and a house where I spent such a happy time – is about to become a distant memory,” said Barbara.   

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Wide support for ‘NHS heroes’ at Barnet Hospital coping with virus emergency

Boxes of chocolates, gift bags – and volunteering to have on-line chats with lonely dementia patients – are just some of the many ways in which residents have been showing support and solidarity with the medical and ancilliary staff at Barnet Hospital coping with the added pressures of the covid.19 emergency.

Continue reading Wide support for ‘NHS heroes’ at Barnet Hospital coping with virus emergency

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Brightening up lockdown: busy trading at Barnet market

Jenny Linford (left) and Judith Clouston

 

Friends of Barnet Market are welcoming the continued presence of the twice-weekly market during the second lockdown — and are especially pleased with the success of a new fresh fish stall from Ipswich.

Much to the dismay of local shoppers the market had to cease trading during the 13 weeks of the first lockdown earlier this year.
There were fears another extended closure might put off stallholders and erode the viability of the market which has succeeded, after years of disruption, in re-establishing itself at the bandstand entrance to the Spires shopping centre.
With most of the Spires’ retail outlets having had to close for a second time, the market is helping to brighten up the shopping centre on Wednesdays and Saturdays.

After five weeks trading at Barnet market, Young’s Fish, which has stalls at Ipswich, Colchester and Chelmsford markets, says Barnet’s shoppers are some of their most discerning customers.
“What we so like about Barnet market is that our customers are really interested in the fish we sell.
“They want to know where it is sourced, what is in season, and what other fish and shellfish can be ordered.
“That interest from our customers gives us a real pride in our job,” says James Young (18), son of the Michael Young, who started the business in 1981.

Two long-standing committee members of Friends of Barnet Market – Judith Clouston, vice-president of the Barnet Society, and local food writer and author, Jenny Linford – are delighted to hear of the success of Young’s Fish.
“We lost our last fish stall – run by Adrian Wright of Lowestoft – during the long lockdown because Adrian had to find another pitch.
“Although Barnet market was closed from March onwards, other markets remained open, and that is why we are so delighted Barnet is trading during the current shop closures,” said Ms Clouston.

Ms Linford, who has recently written extensively about the success of markets around the country on her website – https://jennylinford.co.uk/markets-matter/ urged local residents to support Barnet’s Wednesday and Saturday markets.
Last year was the 60th anniversary of what was originally Barnet’s cattle market expanding into fruit and vegetables and household goods.
Albert and Joan Bone opened the first fruit and vegetable pitch in 1959 – and the business has been carried on for three generations and is now in the hands of their grandson Tyler Bone.

“With a history like that, Barnet should be proud of its market, and understand that the business of running market stalls is a pretty fragile business and needs to be nurtured and cherished,” said Ms Linford.
“Markets are such a friendly place, the prices are always pretty reasonable, if not cheap, and it’s a tribute to Barnet that we still have a twice weekly market after it was mucked about for so many years without a permanent site.”
Ms Linford thought Barnet market was in better shape than for some years, having recently attracted a heritage cheese stall and a bread and cakes stall, in addition to the fruit and vegetable stalls run by the Bone and Gardiner families and Lenny’s meat stall.Attracting specialist suppliers, such a stall selling artisan cheeses, did make a difference said Ms Linford, author of Great British Cheeses, the first illustrated guide to British cheeses.

Because of the success of Young’s Fish stalls at markets across Essex, several traders urged them to give Barnet a try.

“We are really pleased we came,” said James Young, who was busy perfecting the trick of pulling the tough skin off Dover sole, a task that was previously the task of his colleague on the stall, Andy Stannard.
“I have been trying hard to get it right – and I really have been busy because we have been selling small Dover soles caught by a day boat off Suffolk. At three for £10 they are a real bargain.”

Young’s Fish makes three visits a week to Billingsgate Market in London and sources other supplies from around the country – skate and octopus from Devon, haddock, cod and plaice from Scotland, and shellfish from Cromer and other small ports.
“We can safely say that after just five weeks Barnet is definitely the nicest market we’re currently trading at. Everyone is so friendly and instead of just wanting to know the price of what we sell, as happens at our other stalls, customers here want to know all about the fish and where it came from.”