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West End Extra - LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
Published: 19 June 2009
 
Does this really add up to a coherent vision for London?

• THE London Assembly has said that Boris Johnson’s first year in charge has failed live to up to expectations.
And aside from banning alcohol on public transport – with limited success – looking around, it is difficult to see what has changed since Boris became mayor.
A lot has been cancelled. Any transport improvements to which he wasn’t legally committed have been scrapped, fares have gone up and, when it snowed, the buses didn’t leave their garages for the first time in living memory.
The rule that half of all new houses should be affordable for those on lower incomes or struggling to get on the housing ladder has gone, as has the next stage of a scheme to prevent the most polluting vehicles driving into London and belching out poisonous fumes into our air (which already kills up to 3,000 people every year).
The promised funding for rape crisis centres has been halved and Londoners suffered massive disruption last week from the first major Tube strike in two years.
Credit where it’s due, Boris hasn’t put up the GLA’s share of council tax this year (but has put up fares) and has established an “outer-London commission”.
And it’s not all been cancellations. Boris has proposed an amnesty for illegal immigrants, plans to double the number of London’s gypsy sites and has continued City Hall’s support for a London Living Wage.
But does this add up to a coherent vision for London?
Whether they voted for him not, Londoners will expect to see a lot more from Boris when they look around next year.
Len Duvall AM
Leader, London Assembly Labour Group, City Hall

A first strike

ANYONE who struggled to work during the Tube strike should take a minute to remember Boris Johnson’s election promise to “negotiate a no-strike deal” with the trade unions.
In Boris’s first year there have already been 17 industrial actions – including the first Tube strike since September 2007.
Val Shawcross AM
Labour transport lead, London Assembly


Send your letters to: The Letters Editor, West End Extra, 40 Camden Road, London, NW1 9DR or email to letters@westendextra.co.uk. The deadline for letters is midday Wednesday. The editor regrets that anonymous letters cannot be published, although names and addresses can be withheld.
Please include a full name, postal address and telephone number.
Letters may be edited for reasons of space.
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