Watching the arsonists

Use CCTV to stop arson attacks, pleads mother

A desperate mum has pleaded with the council to help stop arsonists ruining her family’s summer. Carolynn Binnie – whose beach hut has been destroyed by fire-starters three times – wants CCTV installed along the seafront in Western Esplanade, Herne Bay. The 42-year-old masseuse, of Ravensbourne Avenue, Herne, says she couldn’t face having to tell her two young sons – Andrew, 11, and George, nine – the hut had been burned down again. She said:

“We’ve been left with a feeling of dread every time we go down to the hut – we just don’t know if it’s still going to be there. My boys are resilient, but I don’t look forward to more tears and nightmares if the arsonists target our hut again this summer. Surely installing CCTV is something the council has to do this summer. It’s nonsense not to protect people’s property from crime. Having cameras along the Esplanade would at least act as a deterrent and help convict those mindless individuals who choose to carry out such reckless acts.”

Mrs Binnie, who suffered arson attacks in 2004, 2006 and 2009, says only two weeks ago someone had tried to start a fire less than 10 feet from her hut. She said:

“Had it caught and the wind been blowing in the wrong direction, I could again be going through the nightmare of submitting another insurance claim and having to explain to two distraught children that their playtime on the beach has been ruined. Unlike some who holiday abroad, we prefer to enjoy our local amenities and spend money ir1 the local economy on leisure. We go downto the hut about five times a week. Surely the city council must recognise this and reward us ‘stay-cationers’ by helping to protect our property?”

Promise of more police patrols but more cameras would be prohibitively expensive

City council spokesman Rob Davies ruled out the possibility of CCTV along the seafront:

“We understand Mrs Binnie’s concerns, but with more than 700 beach huts along the whole coastline it would be prohibitively expensive to install permanent CCTV at all hut locations. In addition, there are no power sources along the coast that would allow us to run a sophisticated CCTV network. That said, there are things we can do to try and reduce vandalism at beach huts.

Mobile CCTV has already been used at Herne Bay and will be used at Tankerton as well. We have the option to use this during the summer, but this will be on an intelligence-driven basis and when it is not in use elsewhere in the district. There will be increased and more targeted police patrols, advice on hut design and security for owners and extra facilities to deter the use of huts as shelter. Foreshore Services does not grant permission for fires.

The recent incident will be discussed at the next coastal neighbourhood tasking group to make sure it does not happen again. The council and police work closely with the beach hut associations and do as much as they can to protect beach huts.”

HB Gazette 29th Apr 2010


So, how do you feel about your Council Tax being used to provide security for beach huts? A sensible way of protecting a town asset, or a waste of money trying to solve someone else’s problem? CCTV hasn’t deterred or caught the ‘boy racers’ on the brightly lit Central Parade, so what’s the use of CCTV footage lit only by matchlight? How about using a fraction of the cost of CCTV to fund rewards (£1,000 for example) for information leading to a conviction? Your comments, please…

Herne Bay B&Bs

Here are some of the Bed & Breakfasts available in Herne Bay. In my experience B&Bs always work harder to make your stay a happy one than hotels do. I think it’s a matter of pride.

Westgrange House B & B

42, Busheyfield Rd, Herne, Herne Bay, Kent CT6 7LJ
t: 01227 740663
Website

The Bayview Hotel
86, Central Parade, Herne Bay, Kent CT6 5JJ
t: 01227 741458
Website

Summerhouse
15, Glenbervie Drive, Herne Bay, Kent CT6 6QL
t: 01227 363192
Website

The Priory B & B
203, Canterbury Rd, Herne Bay, Kent CT6 5UG
t: 01227 366670
Website

Evening Tide
97, Central Parade, Herne Bay, Kent CT6 5JJ
t: 01227 365014
Website
Hobbit Hole
41a, Pigeon Lane, Herne Bay, Kent CT6 7ES
t: 01227 368155

Victoria Private Hotel
85, Central Parade, Herne Bay, Kent CT6 5JQ
t: 01227 369660

Aqua Bay Guest House
92, Central Parade, Herne Bay, Kent CT6 5JJ
t: 01227 742111

Pebbles Reach
96, Central Parade, Herne Bay, Kent CT6 5JJ
t: 01227 372855

Lazy Days
54, Avenue Road, Herne Bay, Kent CT6 8TG
t: 01227 368335

Classic Car Show May 2010

I’ve been searching around all over the place, but haven’t managed to find much more than a couple of sentences about we’ve got in store for this year’s show, but if it’s anything like last year, it’s going to be a cracker – about 8,000 people tipped up to leave smudgy little finger prints on the immaculate paintwork and gleaming chrome on display…

(2009 Show) More than 150 classic cars and bikes will be on display along Mortimer Street, William Street and Bank Street between 10.30am and 3.30pm. Cars on show include a Ford Model T, originally a 1913 town car that has been painstakingly reconstructed by its owner over a period of two and a half years using photographs, a black 1924 Tourer, a genuine Detroit open top car and a Yellow Spitfire 1500, which was originally a racing car and was converted in later years to a road car.

There will also be a 1970s Triumph 1360 Convertible, which was raffled in the Daily Telegraph in 2001, a variety of Morris Minors and Minis and a wide selection of American cars that have been lovingly renovated by UK enthusiasts, including Cadillacs and Chevrolets.

Motorbikes appearing at the event include a highly sought-after Triton. Made from a 1960s Norton frame and a Triumph engine, this was the crème-de-la-crème of bikes to have in the 1960s. Its owner, Brian Smith, will also be exhibiting a number of motorbikes from his collection including a 500 Royal Enfield, a bike he was keen to obtain and spent months searching for on eBay, only to finally find one collecting dust in a garage no more than 25 yards away from his house.

Classic_Cars_small

Don’t return to sender

CCC recently upgraded their email system with the result that councillors get fewer emails. Unfortunately, it’s not spam and suchlike that is being winnowed out, but emails with mis-spelt addresses – they just get trashed.

In the olden days, with the previous email system, if you sent an email to joe.loggs@canterbury.gov.uk in the hope of contacting Councillor Joe Bloggs, you would get an automatic message saying that your message couldn’t be delivered (known as an NDR – Non-Delivery Receipt). That way you would know that something was wrong, and you would probably be able to figure it out, and eventually get it right. However, the new system doesn’t send these helpful NDR messages. So you send your message to joe.loggs and having no reason to think otherwise, believe that your councillor has got your message and is now springing into action.

It gets worse:  it wouldn’t be terribly difficult to automatically route these mis-spelt messages into ‘check these’ file, and have a human being scan through them daily or weekly. But no, these mis-addressed emails are instantly destroyed, so there’s no chance of them ever getting through. In the physical world this is like the Royal Mail shredding any letter that is mis-spelt, mis-addressed or even mis-punctuated. The Council have come up with a short-term fix (see below) which simply involves all of us doing a little bit more work, and Customer Services presumably doing quite a bit more work.

Every IT department has its own special mix of considerations and constraints – in banking it’s security, in the stock market it’s ‘up-time’. What CCC’s IT department must not lose sight of is that their special duty is to help, not hinder, local democracy.

SnagIt-2010-04-26_at_084431

Le Petit Poisson

Joy of joys, Le Petit Poisson has re-opened!

I was starting to worry that it was in danger of death by dustsheet – the building work for the refurb and enlargement had been going on for so-o-o-o long. Le Petit Poisson is in a rather odd building (public loos once upon a time) at the shore end of the Pier, and they’ve been going through the extended trauma of building works for what seems like about a year by now. Must seem like half a lifetime to them.

They’ve managed to roughly double the floor space by knocking through the back wall and opening up another dining area about half a storey down – a kind of inverse mezzanine. A view through to the kitchens, slate and flagstone floors, exposed brickwork, plenty of light – all very much du jour if not de rigeur for current restaurant interior design. But so what? If I wanted to be surrounded by stone with a view of the sky, I could just go and sit in a quarry, or Brett’s Aggregates yard at Whitstable.

Food is the point of restaurants, and these people really do get the point. I’ve had more than my fair share of fine food over the decades, and in my humble-ish opinion Le Petit Poisson is worth every twinkle of a Michelin star. (I thought the same of The Sportsman at Seasalter, and they got theirs!) In the modern age, restaurants are dubbed Eclectic European, Modern British or Pacific Fusion in an attempt to give an enticing twist to the description of what they serve. Le Petit Poisson can be plainly described as “Excellent Fish”.

A limited range of starters and mains (with some long-standing and outstanding favourites) and a couple of daily specials, some classic shellfish dishes, and reliable puds. It’s a simple formula that means effort and attention isn’t dissipated – each dish on the menu is well-judged and accomplished. Every time I go, I’m torn – everything is tempting – and what continues to impress me is the consistent excellence. The baked cod in cep, and the haddock chowder are perennial favourites of mine. I don’t really ‘get’ oysters, but mussels are another matter – a different kettle of shellfish – and here they are superb. A while ago I got chatting to another diner there who said she used to go on regular daytrips to Boulogne, just for the moules. “Used to” – now she goes to Le Petit Poisson.

I’ll double-check the details, but I believe it’s owned and run by a husband and wife team. Husband’s something to do with the fisheries at Whitstable (which explains a lot). Wife’s Belgian and charming and runs the customer-facing end of things, and together with their regular waitress (also delightful) delivers service that manages to be both friendly and professional. I hope they can sustain it with twice the number of tables.

The window tables in the upstairs (i.e. original, ground level) part of the restaurant are great for watching the world go by, and in fine weather they put tables out in the roped-off area outside the front – feels positively European (in a good way!). I think they’re also thinking about making use of the roof, which would be great. I’m surprised there aren’t more fish restaurants along our coast, but I’m delighted that Le Petit Poisson has made its home in Herne Bay. All in all, a gem. Long may it sparkle.

HBM 24th Apr 2010


SnagIt-2010-04-24_at_171218Le Petit Poisson
Pier Approach, Herne Bay, Kent CT6 5JN
t: 01227 361199
e: mail@lepetitpoisson.co.uk
w: www.lepetitpoisson.co.uk

But don’t just take my word for it – here’s some reviews:

tripadvisor.co.uk
19 Mar 2010: Really nice seafood restaurant, undergoing refurbishment at the moment (March 2010) and has moved over the road. Food is excellent and the service is good. Wines are good and it is right on the seafront.

8 Dec 2009: An overcast December day on Herne Bay’s sea front, and an unlikely looking building next to the pier, but friends had recommended Le Petit Poisson to us so here we were for lunch. Lunch was superb. Started with the best bread I have had for a long time ( made daily on the premises we were told) with lovely fresh olives. I had a rich, spicy fish soup to start; my husband had 4 different oysters, so perfect that he had to order some more before moving on to the main course. My main of poached smoked haddock with mustard sauce and pureed mushroom was outstanding; his moules marinieres could not have been better. Food, and not decor has clearly been the priority in this tiny and weathered restaurant; I hope that this is still the case after the current extension and redecoration – its lack of style is part of its charm. Only wish we lived closer.

Absolutely perfect food. Charming service. Even the other customers were great and were enthusiastically recommending whatever they’d just eaten. I’ve been raving about this place ever since and would recommend it to anyone. Unless you’re concerned about plush decor or starchy tablecloths and napkins.

3 Aug 2009: Great restaurant for a romantic lunch or dinner. You definitely need to book if you don’t want to chance it. Great menu and friendly staff.

11 Jun 2008: Excellent service and great food. Small restaurant, need to book.


restaurantguide.com

 

Le Petit Poisson is situated almost right on the beach – when the weather is fine you can sit outside looking at the boats come in and out of the little harbour, watch your children playing on the beach, while eating your meal. Inside is cosy, only twenty two covers, the menu is on a blackboard and is a mixture of local and other fish offering an average of eight starters ranging from £4.25 to £5.50, with main courses from £8.95 to £12.95 and a specials board, so there should be plenty of choice for everyone. The atmosphere is relaxed and informal, with pleasant and friendly staff serving excellent food at a reasonable price.

29 August 2009: Ten of us ate at Petit Poisson last Saturday and our ages ranged from ninety one to eighteen months. We had a lovely meal, finding it difficult to choose from the varied menu. The service was great giving us plenty of time to enjoy our meal. They were also aware of the needs of the children aged eighteen months and three years. We shall certainly be back.

26 May 2009: My husband and I have eaten there a number of times and found the food and service to be excellent. The moules mariniéres were perfect and my whole sea bass was beautifully cooked. The strawberry and rhubarb crumble and a passion fruit crème brûlée were both worth breaking the diet for! A charming little place and the lovely Valerie who looks after you so well is charming too.


Kent Online
Le Petit Poisson is situated in an enviable position, almost on the beach in Herne Bay, by the old pier. The restaurant is in an historic building which has just undergone a major refurbishment. The atmosphere is relaxed and informal and on a nice day you can sit outside and watch the boats come in and out of the little harbour. The restaurant uses only locally sourced fish and produce wherever possible, with the style of food seasonal, simple, local and fresh. Le Petit Poisson was a finalist in the Kent Restaurant Awards (seafood category) 2009. The average cost for a starter is £5.75 and for a main course £13.75. The menu changes seasonally to showcase the best in local produce.

 


reviewcentre.com 30th Mar 2009
Good Points: Service, food, ambience, seaview. Good house wines.
Bad Points: A little stingy with the delicious bread. Otherwise could not fault it.
General comments: Le Petit Poisson is a small restaurant on Herne Bay’s seafront, cosy interior, very friendly waitress. The menu is devoted to seafood. It is not a huge menu, but everything that I saw coming out of the kitchen looked well-cooked, well-presented and delicious. Having wrestled with what to choose, I ordered the squid as a starter, which arrived coated in the lightest of batter with a light garlic mayonnaise – fantastic! My main course was Moules Marinere – beautifully cooked plump mussels in a steaming juice, served with a huge portion of piping hot frites. My companion ordered the tempura battered rock oysters – I don’t normally like oysters, but I tried one of his, which melted in the mouth, and was so good I had to order some more! For a main course, he ordered the Dover sole in a herb and butter sauce – beautifully cooked fish with a light sauce. Not being dessert lovers, we passed on these, but the menu looked very tempting. The bill was not cheap, but we had thoroughly enjoyed the meal and service, and did not resent paying it. Le Petit Poisson is a very welcome addition to Herne Bay, and I would thoroughly recommend this restaurant. 

 


Mobile Food Guide
Situated between the road and Herne Bay promenade, this is a cracking little seafood restaurant and the real deal for holidaymakers and fish-loving visitors alike. It looks and feels like a family-friendly café, with a green awning above the frontage, gingham-clothed tables, big windows and an outdoor area (with parasols) looking out over the little harbour.

The menu is chalked on a blackboard and it’s 100% fish. Proprietor Philip Guy has his own oyster beds (in Scotland, apparently) which provide top-notch bivalves, but just about everything else is from the Kentish day boats. You might begin with char-grilled sardines on tomato and balsamic salad or pan-fried baby squid with soy, ginger and coriander, before trying tandoori monkfish with couscous and cucumber raita, pan-fried sea bream on stir-fried noodles or a bowl of bouillabaisse. To finish, it’s a straightforward choice – perhaps summer pudding, or caramelised oranges or strawberries in red wine. The concise wine list is right on target for value and quality.


welovelocal.com
25 Jun 08: This restaurant really is a gem. Authentically French cooking, quirky decor and great service combine to create a wonderful eating experience. The menu was well thought out and offered something for everyone, although there were a couple of bizarre combinations. Highlights include lobster salad, tempura prawns and cod with olives and chorizo. Whilst there are probably better fish restaurants in east Kent, the value for money here is unrivalled.

14 Apr 08: The best seafood resturant in Kent, a fantastic little place on herne bay’s seafront.(Find it at the entrance to the peir). The food is just amazing, all fresh and local and above all – really good value. The menu is ALL fish, no meat options available – a good sign. Book in advance or be disappointed. 

 


restaurant.co.uk
31-01-2009: Best restaurant I’ve ever been to, excellent food and atmosphere 10 out of 10.

17-02-2008: Had an absolutely fantastic lunch here today 17th Feb 08, lovely food and nice service. Will be back, thanks.

13-11-2007: A fantastic restaurant, couldnt recommend it highly enough. The mussels are great and cheaper than the Continental Hotel in Whistable. My family have been coming here since it opened. The staff are very friendly and the service quick but relaxed. The best restaurant in Herne Bay by a mile.

29-10-2007: We’ve eaten at this place a number of times and just keep going back. Valerie (the proprietor) makes you feel so welcome, the food is excellent and even though we live in Whitstable, we really much prefer to go here to avoid the pretentious side of some of the Whitstable restaurants, not to mention the Whitstable prices. Won’t be long before we’re back at PP…

12-06-2007: If you are planning to eat at Le Petit Poisson then you are in for a real treat. I ate there last Saturday (June 07) and had a fantastic meal. The restaurant itself is quite compact and does have tables outside although it was too chilly to contemplate it on this occasion. Of the food I would have to commend the Thai fish cakes, Gurnard in Tempura Batter and the amazing ice cream. Having said that it is one of those memus where you could chose almost anything and be in for a fantastic meal. We had a bottle of red and an amazing floral Chardonnay which I usually hate but this was so fantastic and a great match with our food. The bill came to about £25 per head, great value for money. If I lived in Herne Bay I would be a regular. I am desperate to come back and try the lobster which looked amazing. Anyway if our experience is anything to go by I can thoroughly recommend this restaurant.

14-05-2007: An excellent restaurant with delicious and well presented food. Nice atmosphere and friendly service.

01-03-2007: Excellent food at half Whitstable prices (and better!) Service is always friendly and efficient.

17-02-2007: Visited this seafood restaurant on 13/02/07 with my partner, had the squid and I must say it was just fantastic, partner had also amazing cod wowowow what a find, and will be visiting very soon.

20-01-2007: This is an excellent restaurant, serving wonderful seafood. On the two occasions I have dined there I can only say it’s the best seafood restaurant have been to. 


The Guardian 14 July 2007
Stationed right next to the ugly Pier Pavilion, it is clear from the menu that something beautiful is going on inside the kitchen. They serve deliciously delicate rock oysters, which are farmed on the Isle of Seil in Scotland. Everything else is fished locally, from crab and lobster to squid and dover sole. Take your fishy dishes out on to the seafront terrace and cop a sniff of the sea air while you dine.


Kent on Sunday 10th Sep 2006
HERNE BAY seafront on a windswept weekend in August can be a disheartening place. The flashing lights and low level hum of the amusement arcades providing the only illumination for the weary holidaymaker against the grey clouds hanging low over the dark waters of a foreboding sea.

But for a town which is so often overshadowed by the extravagant hype of neighbouring Whitstable, it is perhaps well deserved that the pearl in its shell is a restaurant which beats its coastal rival at its own game. Don’t get me wrong, Whitstable is awash with high class eateries – but you half expect a decent feed in a place which trades on its image as Islington-on-Sea. Which makes discovering Le Petit Poisson outside its borders even more of a treat.

The seafood restaurant is plonked right next to the pier and overlooks the arcades and trampolines on the beach. It’s small – 22 seats inside and a handful outside – but it packs an almighty punch. So why the glowing praise? Well, if you want good food, competitively priced, where presentation is as important as pleasing the palate, and the service is with both a smile and a pace which cannot be faulted, then it earns ticks in all the right boxes. And with three children – aged 13, seven and four in tow – we were able to give it a real work out.

For starters we had deep-fried calamari (light and tasty), avocado stuffed with crab and cream cheese (a subtle blend of subtle flavours), and grilled goat’s cheese on prawns and crushed potatoes (giving the sort of kick only goat’s cheese can). All were priced between £4.50 and £4.95. For the main course, my partner had a bowl of moules mariniere (£7.95) where big fat, juicy mussels benefited from a sauce which accentuated the taste of the mollusc without dominating the dish. I tackled monkfish wrapped in bacon with a creamy basil sauce (£10.50), and was not left disappointed.

The children opted for a salmon fillet on roasted vegetables and pesto sauce (£9.50); the fish soft and plump, the vegetables perfect. For dessert; cheesecake, banana meringue, homemade ice-cream and pot au chocolat – all faultless (all £3.95). The family; well-fed, the children content (clean plates and smiles all round a testament to that) and three courses for five for under £85.

And it wasn’t just us going away happy. The waitress was actually being called over to be congratulated on the quality by fellow diners, and the feel-good factor was reflected in that rarest of things – cheerful banter between the clientele. Never has a dark day in Herne Bay been illuminated by such a ray of sunshine.


The Guardian 29 July 2006
Whitstable was once charming, but is now Fulham-on-Sea. Therefore, we avoided its Oyster Festival last week and motored along to Herne Bay, a few miles further east, for lunch. “Lee Pet-it Poisson,” the bloke on the phone said when we reserved. “We’re next to the ugly 1970s Pier Pavilion.” Herne Bay turns out to be unreconstructed, unaffected, thoroughly uncontinental English seaside. There’s Connaught Bingo and Macari’s Cafe with its good coffee, pegboard menu and the same knickerbocker glories for 60-odd years. Crazy golf and the Central Bandstand. Shingled beach huts and a pebbled beach that crucifies your feet. Empty churches, greyish sea, buckets and spades of feel-good factor.

The pier broke up some time in the past, leaving the end bit marooned towards the wind farm over in Essex. Between the prom and the road, Le Petit Poisson. A glance at the chalked menu shows that something serious is going on in the kitchen.

The carte and specials look more than tasty, so we order our way through them, and ask for bottles of Muscadet and Shepherd Neame Whitstable Bay Ale. Nice bread, Normandy butter, garlicky olives. The place has pine seats for 22 inside, and wickery ones outside that leave criss-cross patterns on your bottom. Service is really nice as are the starters. Frances and her sisters have fat grilled prawns, and spanking fresh sardines, the kids have calamari with real mayo and I have the best rock oysters ever. I collar the boss, who’s called Phil Guy and is looking shy. I guess the oysters are from Whitstable. God, no – he wouldn’t serve us oysters from there: farmed them on the flats for 20 years, water’s no longer up to it. He has his farms on the Isle of Seil in Scotland now. Nice tides, wonderfully clean water, that’s what makes them so sweet, nutty and plump. That tells me.

Waiting for our mains, we watch the ebb and flow of the natives taking the sunny air. Two biddies on motorised wheelchairs circle our roped-off area, scooting in to buzz a table that’s finished its meal, letting them know it’s time to go. Absolutely everyone is in a good mood, especially our kids, who watch mini-speedboat races and beg 70p for the trampolines. Main courses put us in excellent moods, too. Whole sea bass on slippery noodles, perfectly cooked lemon sole, cod and chips – it’s all tip-top and bang-on. Turns out that Darren the chef used to cook at that royally rammed, top-dollar place at Whitstable, but likes it here because it’s so … normal.

There are simple, normal desserts on the menu, such as caramelised oranges with ice cream, lemon syllabub and petit pots of chocolat, but we ask for the bill, which is nice and small, and stroll along to The Rock Shop by Cain’s Amusements for softee ice creams with flakes. Someone’s barbecuing on the beach. Is Herne Bay the New Whitstable or next year’s Broadstairs? No, thank God. But it is the Real Deal.?

Befriend our Museum

If you want to save Herne Bay Museum, it’s time to make your voice heard. That’s the message from campaigners, who are hoping to set up a Friends group to fight for the museum’s future.

Crucial meetings with council bosses are due to take place in the next few weeks and campaign spokesman David Cross said it was vital to demonstrate the strength of feeling for the service. Officials still plan to use it as an “education space”, rather than a public museum. Mr Cross, who used to work at the museum, said:

“It is hard to read the council at the moment. They are trying to put together a proposal which squares the circle and pleases everyone, which will be very difficult. Our next move is to form a Friends organisation so we have an official body to negotiate with the council. Then they can see how seriously people in Herne Bay take this threat.”

Initial meetings have already taken place. Officials told Mr Cross they believed the museum had to either focus on visitors, or residents and school groups. But he disagrees with their conclusions:

“It is crucial schools can still walk their pupils to the museum and still keep a measure of drop-in public access. I refuse to accept a display about the bouncing bomb isn’t equally of interest to local children learning about their town, and people coming here to visit. The same applies to the Roman displays and to the items dug out of the sand. The museum is for everyone.”

The museum was earmarked for closure in this year’s budget debates, but given a year’s stay of execution by council bosses, after thousands of people signed petitions calling for it to stay open.

Canterbury City councillor Darren Ellis announced at a meeting of the ruling executive committee on Thursday that consultation with interested groups had started. The announcement sparked a wave of concern among campaigners, who feared time was running out. But Mr Ellis, who is responsible for museums, told the Times a final decision would not be made until the end of the year. He praised the idea of a Friends group, but ruled out a proposal to run the museum with volunteers to save costs. He said:

“The idea is the museum should be more of an education space, but we are not saying 100 per cent that is what we are going to do. It is a process which could run into next year.”

HB Times 22nd Apr 2010

To get involved with the Friends of Herne Bay Museum, or to find out more, please contact the Membership Secretary at: MuseumFriends@HerneBayMatters.com

CCC Officers: Who’s Who

Reporting to the Chief Executive (April 2010)

Director of Finance and Deputy Chief Executive

Jim McDonald

  • Procurement
  • HR Client

Finance

Ian Cooke

  • Finance

Legal and Democratic

Mark Ellender

  • Democratic Services
  • Legal
  • Elections and ERO

Strategic Director

Velia Coffey

 

Culture and Enterprise

Janice McGuinness

  • Museums
  • Arts & Events
  • Sports Development
  • Active Life
  • Cultural Policy
  • Marlowe Theatre
  • Economic Development
  • Tourism
  • Markets
  • Town Centre Management
  • International

Communications

Celia Glynn-Williams

  • Press
  • Marketing
  • Internal Communications
  • Customer Services Client
  • Web and Intranet Development Client
  • Civic Team
  • Sponsorship
  • Advertising

ICT and Customer Services

Angela Waite

  • ICT
  • Customer Services Operation

Housing, Community Safety & Environmental Services

Larissa Laing

  • Housing Landlord
  • Supported Housing
  • Housing Options & Interventions
  • Community Safety
  • Environmental Protection
  • Commercial Health
  • Street Scene
  • Parking Enforcement
  • Asset Management [Housing]
  • Licensing

Community Development and Outdoor Leisure

Suzi Wakeham

  • Community Development
  • Neighbourhood Development
  • Community Services
  • Community Assets [Westgate: Kings: Horsebridge: Whitstable Castle]
  • Outdoor Leisure
  • Foreshore
  • Beach Huts

Strategic Director

David Reed

Policy and Improvement

Mark Bursnell

  • Corporate Policy
  • Scrutiny
  • Performance
  • Corporate Projects
  • Consultation

Planning and Regeneration

Ian Brown

  • Planning Policy
  • Conservation and Countryside including Arboricultural
  • Development Control
  • Building Control
  • Planning Enforcement
  • Transport & Parking Strategy
  • Housing Strategic Policy & Enabling
  • Land Charges

Property and Engineering

Malcolm Burgess

  • Estates & Valuation
  • Whitstable Harbour
  • Engineers
  • Facilities Management
  • Building Maintenance
  • Architects’ Projects

Revenues and Benefits

Andrew Stevens

  • Benefits
    Local Taxation



The point is: CCC already maintains village greens…

As you may know, one of our councillors recently resurrected the claim that village green status would somehow complicate, impede or prevent maintenance work being carried out on The Downs. I had already sent a letter to the Council’s Legal department (in January 2010) that explained why this was not the case, but this message seems not to have filtered through to all the councillors. So I sent them all a copy of the letter that I had sent to Legal, just to make sure that they’re up to date.

Cllr Vickery-Jones then sent all the councillors a message saying: “We are awaiting advice from our own legal department, it would be prudent not to form a view based on hearsay evidence before that advice is forthcoming.” Here I share with you, dear reader, my next salvo:

I have no wish to weary you with this email exchange, and hope that the following simple fact will finally resolve the question of maintenance of village greens:

Canterbury City Council already carries out maintenance work on village greens.

For example, at Whitstable:

  • Within the last couple of years, CCC completely took over the western half of the village green between Island Wall and West Beach (VG 115) for a period of months, using it for timber storage and erecting a row of portacabins as offices for the workers.
  • Similarly on the village green at Seasalter/West Beach (VG 126), the Council erected sea defences and brought in large quantities of shingle. CCC received no objections from the “inhabitants of the locality” to this work, because it was clearly in their interest, as would be any maintenance works on The Downs at Herne Bay.

The legal position requires no clarification. This is not hearsay, it is fact: village green status is no obstacle to the Council carrying out maintenance work.

Is that conclusive? Will it suffice? Stay tuned…

Dispersal zone

Police have been granted extra powers in parts of Herne Bay after reports of big groups fighting, kicking cars, intimidating pedestrians and hurling racist abuse. As part of the Safer Canterbury District Partnership, Kent Police and Canterbury council have designated Heron ward a ‘dispersal area’. Police can now make sure big groups of people break up, and once asked to leave the area people are not allowed to return within 24 hours.

According to the police large groups of youngsters, sometimes as many as 40 at a time, have been meeting up at weekends in the area. Police officers will also confiscate alcohol and any youngster found drunk will be escorted home. The parents or guardians of children involved will get a letter and may be visited by the local police. The new powers are likely to last for six months from April, including the summer months when the problem is usually worst.

The dispersal order will be in place in the High Street, William Street, Queen Street, King’s Road, Beach Street, Hanover Street and the William Street and King’s Road car parks. Police will also be travelling on trains and buses to monitor the youngsters, who are thought to also come from Whitstable and Canterbury.

yourcanterbury.co.uk 21st Apr 2010

I had fondly imagined that the police already had these kind of powers…


London Array connects to Thanet

The world’s largest wind farm, to be built off the coast of Thanet, will bring hundreds of new jobs to the Isle of Thanet. The team behind the London Array project has chosen Ramsgate port as the location for their new 1,800sq m operations and maintenance headquarters. The move to the two-storey centre means employment for 20 office staff and 70 technicians. If approved, the building will also be used as warehouse space for storing parts for the 275 wind turbines.

The project is the second of its kind to come to the isle following the Thanet Offshore Windfarm currently being built off the coast of Broadstairs. Construction and maintenance of the Array centre is also expected to generate up to 200 jobs through extra trade for isle businesses and workers such as taxi drivers, hotels, pubs and fuel suppliers. Thanet council leader Sandy Ezekiel said:

“London Array is compiling a directory of local firms that can work with contractors. We stand to gain an awful lot from the project.”

A launch party for the directory is expected to take place in the next six weeks. During a private meeting with councillors in Cliffsend last week, London Array project director Richard Rigg said the company was in talks with Thanet College to introduce a series of specialised training courses aimed at recruiting young talent from the isle. It is believed these courses will be in mechanical and electrical engineering. Cllr Ezekiel, who was at the meeting, said:

“We are pushing Thanet forward as a hub for renewable energy. Construction of Thanet Offshore Windfarm is almost complete and London Array Thanet is very much at the forefront of renewable energy.”

London Array is made up of a consortium of Dong Energy, which has built half the world’s wind farms; E.ON, a leading power and gas company; and Masdar Initiative, which is Abu Dhabi’s leading investor in renewable energy. When complete, the £2billion project will sit to the north of the smaller Thanet Offshore Windfarm. Mayor of Ramsgate David Green said:

“It’s early days but it seems very positive. A lot of the deal has yet to be completed, however, it is good news they identified a site here in Ramsgate.”

London Array will also build a large floating pontoon creating mooring space for six, 12-person vessels.

thisiskent.co.uk 20th Mar 2010