Friday, 30 April 2021

Roadworks Report

I’ve received notification of roadworks scheduled to take place soon in and around the villages of the Blackhall Division: 

Road

No.

Location

Description

Traffic Management

Start

Date

End

Date

Responsibility



B1281

East of Castle Eden

Carriageway works

2 way lights (9:30am - Noon)

5 May

5 May

Durham County Council


C22

Front Street, Hutton Henry

New electric supply

2 way lights

4 May

11 May

Northern Powergrid

C22

Road from Station Town to Hutton Henry, Station Town

New gas supply

2 way lights

24 May

2 June

Northern Gas Networks


C81

Mickle Hill Road, Hesleden

Drainage works

2 way lights (8:00am - 3:00pm)

6 May

7 May

Durham County Council

Thursday, 29 April 2021

Access to Park Avenue to be restricted in response to residents’ safety concerns

Last year residents in Park Avenue, along with a number of pedestrians, expressed concerns that the alley running along the middle of the street was being used as a short-cut by vehicles. The primary concern was that cars and vans were crossing the public footpaths at the top and bottom of Park Avenue - both on busy walking routes to and from the nearby Blackhall Colliery Primary School. 


Along with the parish clerk I contacted officers in the highways section at Durham County Council and asked them to consider ways of putting a stop to this dangerous practice. In response we received confirmation this week that lockable bollards are to be installed at either end of the alley to restrict access to utility workers only:

Dear Cllr Crute – sorry for the delay in responding. 


I have been dealing with Durham Police to review the issues where **** is driving over the footpath to access. 


The Highway Inspector has visited the site and took photographs of vehicles that illegally accessed a driveway by driving over the footpath and this is what is causing the complaints. The resident who made the original complaint has also informed that there are a number of other vehicles regularly using the footpath and are causing a safety risk to pedestrians. 


The police have confirmed that they have no requirements to use the footpath for emergency response reasons. Therefore, there is no reason for any vehicle, other than those required to repair the street lights or the footpath, to access the footpath. 


With this in mind we will serve notice on the **** illegally driving on the footpath to inform that it is our intention to restrict vehicular access on the footpath by erecting bollards at each end of the footpath. Because the Council and utility companies may require access we will ensure that the bollards are lockable. 


I will liaise with the traffic team and update you with progress. 


Regards

Wednesday, 28 April 2021

International Workers’ Memorial Day 2021

I was proud to lay a wreath on behalf of Blackhall Labour Party at this morning’s International Workers’ Memorial Day service held outside Christ Church in Hartlepool. 


At a time when our frontline workers have heroically led the country’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic, with many of them paying the ultimate price, this year’s memorial service was even more poignant and relevant than ever. 

Remember the Dead. Fight for the Living.

Friday, 23 April 2021

Road works between Station Town and Hutton Henry

Road works are scheduled to take place next month along the C22 between Station Town and Hutton Henry. Please see the table below for full details:

Road

No.

Location

Description

Traffic Management

Start

Date

End

Date

Responsibility


C22

Front Street, Hutton Henry

New electric supply

2 way lights

4 May

11 May

Northern Powergrid

C22

Road from Station Town to Hutton Henry, Station Town

New gas supply

2 way lights

24 May

2 June

Northern Gas Networks

Thursday, 22 April 2021

Repairs scheduled for the A1086 Coast Road to Crimdon promenade link road

Regular readers of these pages will be well aware of the complexities involved in identifying ownership and maintenance responsibilities for the private road linking the A1086 Coast Road with the promenade at Crimdon, and how those complications have delayed repair works to the road and footpaths in the area.


This has long been a priority for many residents and visitors alike, and it’s an issue I’ve been dealing with for some time in the hope of encouraging the landowner(s) to arrange for repair works to be carried out. Please see post dated Tuesday 9 March 2021 for background details: https://robcrute-blackhall.blogspot.com/2021/03/road-repairs-query-at-crimdon.html

Thankfully the months of perseverance have finally paid off. I received confirmation earlier this week that highway repair works are scheduled to be carried out within the next two weeks, in plenty of time for the new Coastal Hub opening its doors for the first time later this summer.

In addition, following many queries from residents and visitors alike, I’ve asked Durham Heritage Coast officers to consider how parking facilities at the sea front and other locations nearby might be improved given the expected increase in visitor numbers to Crimdon over the coming months and years. I’ll update on progress in due course. In the meantime this is the response I received last week from the highways section at DCC with regard to improvements to the private link road:

Dear Cllr Crute,

 

By way of an update regarding Crimdon access road - we met [the landowners] and have agreed the areas that require carriageway patching. 


In addition to the carriageway repairs, we also identified the footway that is a concern and their facilities team have asked for prices from DCC to undertake repair works. We are working on these prices. 


The road repairs are scheduled in the next fortnight and the works will be done on the understanding that the council have no liability or responsibility for repairs or future inspection, but we will assist [the landowners] where we can if requested.

Monday, 19 April 2021

Parking in Middle Street

Last week when reporting a damaged waste bin in Middle Street I shared an image on social media which prompted complaints about parking outside the main shopping area. I have since been contacted by other residents expressing similar concerns.

It’s understandable that residents and businesses become irate about dangerous and inconsiderate parking directly outside the shops, especially at peak times and when there is sufficient off-street parking nearby and easily accessible public parking facilities at the nearby community centre car park on Hesleden Road.

I’ve written earlier about plans in the council’s Towns and Villages Investment Plan for a scheme to limit inconsiderate and dangerous parking at this location (please see post dated Wednesday 10 February 2021 for background details to the Towns and Villages Initiative https://robcrute-blackhall.blogspot.com/2021/02/towns-and-villages-programme.html). Those plans are progressing through the system and it’s expected that a workable scheme will be agreed soon.

However, in the meantime I’ve contacted the parking enforcement team again with an additional request for an increased presence at this location (I had already requested an enforcement presence elsewhere on Middle Street following complaints from residents a few weeks ago). I’ve now received a response from the service confirming that Middle Street will be added to the enforcement request list and that an additional request has been added alerting enforcement officers to the severity of parking issues at this location. 

Friday, 16 April 2021

Drainage works next week at High Hesleden

I’ve received notification of roadworks scheduled to take place next week on Mickle Hill Road:

Road

No.

Location

Description

Traffic Management

Start

Date

End

Date

Responsibility

C81

Mickle Hill Road, High Hesleden

Drainage works

2 way rolling lights (7:30am - 3:30pm)

19 April

20 April

DCC

Wednesday, 14 April 2021

Tax cuts for billionaires - Tax hikes for the rest of us

Nothing for local government, nothing for social care, nothing for schools, nothing for teachers, nothing for the police, nothing to tackle the impact of deeply entrenched inequality - in short there was nothing in Rishi Sunak’s budget that could be seen even remotely as ‘levelling-up’ as promised repeatedly by Boris Johnson’s government.

The budget earlier last month offered nothing at all for hard-pressed public sector workers, vulnerable people, struggling communities or local council finances. For example where is the long-awaited and persistently delayed green paper on social care? What happened to the promised Fair Funding Review, details of the Comprehensive Spending Review, details of the Business Rates Review or details of the Shared Prosperity Fund we were promised would replace EU Funding lost when Britain left the European Union? Where is the evidence that the government is going to deliver on its promises before the 2019 General Election that it will ‘level-up’?

 

Thanks to the way our magnificent NHS has rolled-out the vaccination programme over the past few months we can at last see a spark of light at the end of the tunnel. However, just as we plunged unprepared into the pandemic last year many of our struggling families will approach its end with fear and trepidation, ill-equipped to deal with the bleak post-pandemic landscape where the jobs market and the economy will be significantly weaker than they have been in generations. If they expect a hand up from the government they’ll be bitterly disappointed.

 

Covid-19 presented itself on the back of a decade of unnecessary austerity imposed on our communities and public services by a Tory party supported by the Lib Dems - their willing collaborators in coalition. This virtually ensured that the impact of the pandemic would hit the weakest and most vulnerable in society proportionately harder than it otherwise would have done. If this public health crisis had been handled correctly and in a timely manner (as it was in other countries) the severity of its impact on the economy could have been mitigated. Instead last autumn Rishi Sunak urged the government to prioritise private profit above public health and  ignore the advice of the science, health and medical experts in SAGE to impose a circuit-break lockdown. Instead the government dithered as usual and delayed introducing circuit-break measures until much later, meaning that lockdown when it eventually came was prolonged and much more severe, with a devastating - but entirely avoidable - impact on both public health and the economy.  

 

Before the budget announcement Boris Johnson vowed there would be no return to austerity, yet spending has been slashed by £4bn. By delaying corporation tax increases until April 2023 the government is effectively handing big businesses a £25bn tax break, while simultaneously removing the Universal Credit uplift of £20 a week in September – taking security away from some of the most vulnerable people in society. In effect the government is handing out support for private corporations at the expense of our cash-starved public services and communities. 

 

Just a few days ago I wrote about the devastating impact on our communities of a decade of austerity on our public services and how council tax increases forced by the government are passing the blame for service cuts from central government to local councils:

 

I’ve had persistent concerns about the level of central government funding for local authorities - and primarily about central government passing the buck to local councils for council tax rises. 

 

The proposal before the council meeting that considered the budget in March was for a 1.99% CT rise plus a 1% precept for social care (the government has decided it won’t fund social care to the required level, meaning that local authorities are left with a stark choice - either raise CT precept by the required amount or cut social services accordingly). I could never accept a cut to much needed social services - especially in the current climate - so I had no option other than to accept the CT level recommended. 

 

I’ve also raised concerns in the past that County Durham’s core spending power is significantly lower than that for other parts of the country, meaning that if the government was to ‘level up’ as it has promised Durham would receive an additional £45m each and every year more than it currently receives. Instead we’ve had a decade of unnecessary austerity (costing our communities £240m to date - with more to come) along with the prospect of losing another £18m as part of the government’s ‘fair’ funding review. 

 

Finally it should be noted that when central government decides how much it is going to allocate in grant to local councils each year it makes an assumption that every council will raise council tax by the maximum set by government - 2%, plus a social care precept of 3% over 2 years - meaning that if councils don’t raise that amount in CT they will be forced to cut local services by that amount - this is precisely what I mean by passing the buck to local councils. 

 

No one wants to see unnecessary tax rises - but given the circumstances described above, where central government reduces funding year after year and simply passes tax increases to local councils, knowing they’ll have to shoulder all the blame - the options are limited if councils want to provide public services that people value and expect to be delivered.

Saturday, 10 April 2021

Blackhall library set to reopen next week

Blackhall library is set to reopen its doors from next week. Full details can be found in the article below published on the county council’s website:

Residents in County Durham will be able to visit libraries in person when restrictions ease next week. 

Following the next phase in the government's roadmap, which will see some businesses and facilities reopen from Monday, 12 April, Durham County Council is reintroducing its in-library browsing and computer services at 37 of its libraries.

From Monday, residents will be available to visit and access services at the following libraries:

Barnard Castle; Wolsingham; Chester-le-Street; Consett; Stanley; Crook; Newton Aycliffe; Peterlee; Seaham; Easington; Woodhouse Close and Bishop Auckland Town Hall in Bishop Auckland; Sedgefield; Shildon; Spennymoor; Thornley and Belmont,Clayport and Newton Hall, in Durham, as well as Bowburn; Blackhall; Brandon; Chilton; Cornforth; Lanchester; Langley Park; Murton; Trimdon, Wingate, Annfield Plain, Ferryhill, Willington, Horden, Pelton, Sacriston, Shotton and South Moor.

Available services 

Although not all library services will resume, the following services will be available:

  • In-library browsing (limited to 20 minutes if maximum capacity or queues forming outside)
  • Computer access (limited to 45 minutes)
  • Self-service photocopying / printing
  • Study tables at town centre libraries
  • Express local studies at Clayport
  • Reference books on request at Clayport library
  • Reference enquiry service via telephone or email from Clayport library
  • Book request service
  • Inter library loans
  • Doorstep book drops
  • Local studies loan collection at Clayport library

Due to the coronavirus pandemic, while libraries reopen the following services will be unavailable:

  • Cash handling - any charges for copying and printing will be added to customer library account to pay later
  • Easy seating
  • Meeting rooms for hire
  • Events or activities
  • Books on Wheels
  • Mobile Library
  • Book Bus
  • Direct access to the first floor at Clayport library

Extending digital services 

Library reopening

Measures are in place to keep people safe on their return to libraries

Library users will still be able to access online services and the digital offer is being extended to include more eBooks, eMagazines and eAudiobooks titles and free access to the family history research tool Ancestry.

There will be no late returns fines or request fees, and the Doorstep Book Delivery service will continue.

The community libraries at Esh Winning and Coundon are not scheduled to reopen at this time as they are housed with a primary school and a medical practice. To ensure the safety of both partner operations and library customers during the coronavirus pandemic, the reopening of these libraries will be delayed until it is safe to do so.

Library opening hours will be different at each library and will not be in line with their former opening hours. Residents are encouraged to check any changes in opening times before visiting.

For more information, including contact details for participating libraries, or to become a member of the library service, call 03000 260 000 or visit our Libraries page.

Looking forward to welcoming residents back

Alison Clark, head of culture, sport and tourism, said: "With the changes to restrictions from 12 April, we are preparing to reopen the majority of our county's libraries for residents and with it make a large number of our in-person services available. We will also continue to provide online services, with an extended digital offer, and the Doorstep Book Delivery service. We are looking forward to welcoming residents back to our libraries where they will be able to safely enjoy its facilities."

Anyone can become a member of the library service by visiting Library Online or calling one of the libraries that are reopening.

Follow the library service's Facebook or Twitter accounts at Durham Libraries on Twitter and Durham Libraries on Facebook.

Related information

Friday, 9 April 2021

Request for CCTV coverage in Blackhall Colliery

I was contacted yesterday by a charity operator based in Middle Street, Blackhall Colliery asking if CCTV coverage throughout the village might be effective in addressing residents' concerns of crime and anti-social behaviour in the area.



We know from a recent informal survey carried out online that one of the main priorities of our residents' and business owners is keeping our streets safe and free from crime and anti-social behaviour so we've written to Durham police and the Safe Durham Partnership asking for their thoughts on a proposal to install CCTV cameras in the village.

It's recognised that CCTV doesn't always hold out the perfect solution in all cases, and there have even been examples of local resistance to similar proposals elsewhere, however we feel that because this is a priority for our residents and businesses it at least warrants further consideration by the authorities.

An update will be published on this site in due course.

Thursday, 8 April 2021

Crimdon Coastal Hub on track for Summer opening

Almost a year ago I published an article on this site about the plans for community facilities at Crimdon going out to public consultation prior to submission for planning permission. Please see my post dated Monday 4 May 2020 for background details: https://robcrute-blackhall.blogspot.com/2020/05/planning-application-for-coastal-hub-at.html

After being asked recently about progress with the Hub I called down to Crimdon earlier this week to take a few images of the building in development:

What became known as the Crimdon Hub was granted planning consent later in the year and despite unavoidable delays caused by the Covid-19 pandemic real progress has been made since, with the building scheduled to open its doors to the public later this summer.

Following reports from residents and visitors I made the authorities aware some time ago of the poor condition of the private road connecting the A1086 Coast Road and the promenade at Crimdon. 

I’m assured by the authorities that this is a private road and that the organisation(s) responsible for its maintenance have been contacted with the intention of bringing the road to an acceptable standard in time for the formal opening of the new Coastal Hub later this year. 

**Please follow the link below for an update confirming that road work repairs are scheduled to be carried out soon: https://robcrute-blackhall.blogspot.com/2021/04/repair-works-confirmed-for-coast-road.html

The Crimdon Hub under development, 6 April 2021

An artist’s impression of the completed Crimdon Hub