New findings from the first Great Cambridge Crash Course workshop

People have ***lots of questions*** about how Cambridge is governed, but our city is not putting on the events or making the spaces available for the public to ask and discuss them First of all a big ***Thank you*** to the 15 people who took part in the first Great Cambridge Crash Course at RockContinue reading “New findings from the first Great Cambridge Crash Course workshop”

Some responses to the cancelling of C-Charging in Cambridge are alarming

They say ‘don’t read below the comments line.’ So I did. More than a few responses reflect a lack of historical awareness, frustration of a broken system, and limited knowledge of how the state functions. Or malfunctions. In the meantime, teenagers remain stuck with stupendously-long commutes because of long term national public policy failures. TheContinue reading “Some responses to the cancelling of C-Charging in Cambridge are alarming”

Political consensus fragments over a broken governance structures

The Greater Cambridge Partnership’s proposals for buses and congestion charging finally collapse as the GCP Board refuses to recommend amended proposals to Cambridgeshire County Council to bring in a charge on motorists to fund improved bus services Watch this clip from the Chair of the GCP, Cllr Elisa Meschini (Labour – King’s Hedges Division) atContinue reading “Political consensus fragments over a broken governance structures”

Could paying people to retrain in sectors with skills shortages help alleviate some of Cambridge’s chronic problems?

It’s a policy most senior politicians would not dare touch because to goes counter to the mainstream mindsets and could set precedents that would be difficult to deal with in other sectors. But something has got to give. This follows on from a point made by Prof Sarah Sharples of the University of Nottingham, andContinue reading “Could paying people to retrain in sectors with skills shortages help alleviate some of Cambridge’s chronic problems?”

Prof Sarah Sharples gives Cambridge a masterclass in systems thinking for transport

The Chief Scientific Adviser at the Department for Transport delivered a timely presentation for the annual Cleevely Lecture at Peterhouse, Cambridge. This was the first public lecture I had been to for a long time, and unlike previous ones, I didn’t live -tweet it. Instead I wrote down notes on a blank piece of A4Continue reading “Prof Sarah Sharples gives Cambridge a masterclass in systems thinking for transport”

Citizens’ UK to host pre-founding assembly in Cambridge

Some of you may have heard about what the Peterborough chapter of Citizens UK has been doing of late. The creation of a Greater Cambridge chapter has been bubbling away for some time, and it looks like they will be having their first gathering at Long Road Sixth For College in November 2023 TL/DR? SignContinue reading “Citizens’ UK to host pre-founding assembly in Cambridge”

Without a renaissance in lifelong learning, Cambridge’s economy and society will crumble

Political parties must debate how to fund not just jobs-focused adult education, but things like civics/democracy education, and lifelong learning for leisure – one that doesn’t have an exam at the end of it. One of the final publications from the long-defunct Adult School Union arrived recently. It was called A sense of purpose, andContinue reading “Without a renaissance in lifelong learning, Cambridge’s economy and society will crumble”

On the revamped and reoriented South Cambridgeshire Constituency

What are the prospects for the constituency that has lost 40% of its old districts, while gaining some new ones from the soon-to-be-vanquished South East Cambridgeshire, along with Cherry Hinton Village from Cambridge? The changes to constituency boundaries have now been finalised by the Boundary Commission for England. To understand the sign-off process sadly requiresContinue reading “On the revamped and reoriented South Cambridgeshire Constituency”

Oxford-Cambridge Pan-Regional Partnership meets England’s Economic Heartland

TL/DR? The thing that replaced the OxCamArc is having a public meeting on 29 Sept. You can table public questions. Click here and then click on the drop-down tab for the papers. And feel free to table any public questions too! You should see something that looks like the ‘text as an image file’ below.Continue reading “Oxford-Cambridge Pan-Regional Partnership meets England’s Economic Heartland”

Cambridge City Councillors slam Conservative ministers for slashing education budgets

This, they told Cambridge City Council’s East Area Committee is why so many schools in Cambridge cannot afford to offer GCSE Citizenship – they cannot afford to take the risk of hiring a specialist teacher given how low the uptake is likely to be in the short term. They also slammed ministers over the lackContinue reading “Cambridge City Councillors slam Conservative ministers for slashing education budgets”