Can residents make day-to-day public transport an issue in the run up to the general election? (Also – Great Cambridge Crash Course intro session this Saturday!) The image/graphic is from Unite Scotland and I like it. TL:DR? Drop Richard an email and say you’re interested in helping with campaigning for better bus services in 2024Continue reading “How austerity crushed bus services in Cambridgeshire”
Author Archives: Cambridge Town Owl
The Great Cambridge Crash Course 2024 – what local issues could we include?
As the final few sessions commence this month, what issues do you think we need to cover before both the local elections in May 2024, and the general election whose date is unknown? I was interviewed by Alex Elbro on Cambridge 105 about what the first group of sessions had covered – you can listenContinue reading “The Great Cambridge Crash Course 2024 – what local issues could we include?”
Railfuture East commissions new Haverhill-to-Cambridge rail study
And it should be ready just in time for any looming general election (unless it’s called for very early 2024! 364 days after rail expert Jonathan Roberts delivered the results of his study into a radically-improved rail network to Rail Future East (I blogged about it here – scroll halfway down), Rail Future East confirmedContinue reading “Railfuture East commissions new Haverhill-to-Cambridge rail study”
Cambridgeshire teachers along with local employers tear into ministerial education policy failures
It was as if delegates at the Form the Future Conference 2023 at Churchill College were following the lead of Members of the UK Youth Parliament when the latter did the same just over a year ago (see my blogpost here). Above – have a listen to Izzy Garbutt MYP from 05 Nov 2022 TheContinue reading “Cambridgeshire teachers along with local employers tear into ministerial education policy failures”
A ‘Creative Hub’ at The Junction, Cambridge
This could be fun! (Even though I have no clue where it came from – but then I don’t feel the need to be involved in everything!) It was voted through earlier by the Combined Authority. “Creative Industries – £3m: Support for the development of the Cambridge Leisure/Junction site south of Cambridge centre to helpContinue reading “A ‘Creative Hub’ at The Junction, Cambridge”
County Council says “No”
Cambridgeshire County Council continues with plans to find a new organisation to take over or even buy out Shire Hall on Castle Hill – the site where Cambridge was first settled. You can read the Cambridge News report here. You can watch the video of my PQ being read out, but as the substantive voteContinue reading “County Council says “No””
Cambridge to get a ‘fantastic new housing quarter’ – The Chancellor
Will there be any time for his party to turn words into actions? Only the next general election has to be called within the next 12 months. The papers published with the Chancellor’s Autumn Statement are here “We will invest £32m to bust the planning backlog and develop fantastic new housing quarters in Cambridge, LondonContinue reading “Cambridge to get a ‘fantastic new housing quarter’ – The Chancellor”
Can we have our Shire Hall back please?
One of Cambridge’s most controversial firms abandons plans to take a lease on the Shire Hall complex on Castle Hill after the Tories moved the county council to a business park with no public transport from Cambridge. What now for the historic site? Spoiler: Council says…[Click here] Some of you may have seen the announcementContinue reading “Can we have our Shire Hall back please?”
Our institutional structures and systems seem designed to break up communities and keep us fragmented
This is particularly noticeable in Cambridge but could apply anywhere else as well. In Cambridge, The University of Cambridge is this huge institution that casts a metaphorical shadow over our city, and has political and economic gravitational forces that few town people can ignore. Local history tells us that when the colleges and the UniversityContinue reading “Our institutional structures and systems seem designed to break up communities and keep us fragmented”
What is Town’s offer to Cambridge’s undergraduate students when it comes to community and climate action?
I popped along to a town/gown gathering on a cold November evening to find out what the post-Lockdown generation of students were looking for from local councils and town-based climate organisations. Turns out there is more that Town could be doing (without a huge increase in spending/resources) to help newly-arrived undergraduates hit the ground runningContinue reading “What is Town’s offer to Cambridge’s undergraduate students when it comes to community and climate action?”