Streatham South

NHS Delivery, Here and Now

Friday, April 3rd, 2009

Chuka Umunna, Alan Johnson MP and Keith Hill MP at Gracefield Gardens Health Centre in Streatham

Details of a series of measures coming into force this year, which will transform the service the NHS provides have been announced by Health Secretary Alan Johnson (pictured above with Chuka and Keith Hill, MP for Streatham).

As part of an ambitious national programme of preventative care, health checks will become free for everyone between the ages of 40 and 74. The assessments identify people’s risk to heart disease, stroke, kidney disease and diabetes, and have the potential to stop 1,600 heart attacks and strokes and save up to 650 lives each year. Diabetes will be detected earlier in patients, which can prevent sufferers from developing Type 2 diabetes. The health checks will also enable people to receive personalised advice on how to lower risks and stay healthy.

The government has also announced a new tool in the fight against MRSA, as hospitals will now offer screening for the infection for all patients. This will reduce the risks to patients and the likelihood of infections spreading within hospitals. MRSA rates are already falling nationally, while King’s College Hospital has seen a 64% reduction in infections over the past four years.

Also coming into force are free prescription charges for cancer sufferers. For those living with cancer, who often pay upwards of £100 a year for medication, this means one less worry at such a difficult time. The move will benefit over 1,900 people diagnosed with cancer in Lambeth and up to 150,000 nationally.

These important changes illustrate Labour’s commitment to delivering a world-class health service in our area. Emphasising preventative care is crucial in making us a more healthy society and in reducing health inequality. Following the news that Lambeth PCT has been ranked among the very best in the country by the healthcare commission, and that waiting times are at their shortest both locally and nationally since records began, these are improvements which we can all be proud of.

Shortest hospital waits ever in Lambeth

Wednesday, April 1st, 2009

Chuka Umunna, Labour’s Parliamentary candidate for Streatham, congratulates NHS staff in Lambeth on the latest waiting list figures.

The NHS now has the shortest waits since its records began, Labour Health Secretary Alan Johnson announced on Thursday (26 March 2009).

chuka-umunna-and-alan-johnsonNew data shows that in Lambeth and across England the NHS has met its target to treat patients within a maximum of 18 weeks from referral by their GP – an achievement which was unimaginable 12 years ago. Commenting on the figures, Umunna (pictured, right, with Johnson) said:

“This is a tremendous achievement by NHS clinicians and staff in Lambeth who should be proud of the difference their hard work has made to the experience of every NHS patient.

“Achieving the shortest waits since NHS records began has made a huge difference to patients’ experiences of the NHS. In the 1990s it was not uncommon for people to wait 18 months or more for their operation – with some people dying on the waiting list.

“The NHS is one of our country’s greatest achievements and I will always stand up for it. I’m proud that over the last 12 years, we have made sure the NHS has the staff it needs and backed them to deliver improvements in standards and driving down waits. Today’s news is further evidence that this investment has worked.”

This latest news also follows the roll out of extended GP opening hours which the government has made a priority. 44 of the 52 GP practices in Lambeth offer extended opening hours including the Exchange Surgery and Streatham High Practice both situated in the new Gracefield Gardens Health Centre in Streatham, one of 152 new GP led health centres opened or opening across the country.

G20 – Tell us what you think

Sunday, March 29th, 2009

Click here to be heard at the G20

On 2 April 2009, world leaders from the G20 countries – representing 85% of the world’s output – will meet in London. They will meet against the backdrop of the worst international banking crisis in generations.

The London Summit will take place against the backdrop of exceptionally challenging economic circumstances. But, just as after the Second World War visionary leaders laid the groundwork for 30 years of prosperity and growth, built on international economic cooperation, this crisis is also an opportunity.

The world’s leading economies can come together and lay the foundations not just for a sustainable economic recovery, but also for a genuinely new era of international economic partnership – a global deal, in which all countries have a part to play and all will see the benefits.

Prime Minister Gordon Brown says,
“at the G20 we will be discussing ideas to lead the world from recession to recovery, and I want people to feel not just that they have a stake in those discussions, but that they also have a say”.

So tell us below what you want to say to the G20 world leaders before the summit and we’ll make sure we pass on as many of your comments as possible.

Open Letter to Chris Nicholson, Liberal Democrat parliamentary spokesperson for Streatham

Monday, March 23rd, 2009

Dear Chris

I have read the profile of me in the latest edition of your “Streatham Brixton & Clapham News” leaflet, which has been distributed to over 40,000 homes in this area.

Aside from the usual jibes against opponents people have come to expect from politicians, I was alarmed to see references to two of my deceased relatives in the leaflet.

My father, whom I lost at the age of 13, is described as a “rich business man and politician” – the anniversary of his death falls next week. He ran a sole trader business and, in the couple of years leading to his death, stood for the governorship of his state in his native Nigeria on an anti-corruption, reformist ticket. I am still immensely proud of what he achieved.

My late grandfather, as you say, “was knighted for his work as a British High Court Judge”. Indeed, he earned a reputation for handing down particularly tough sentences to convicted rapists and also served this country as an intelligence officer during and after the Second World War. I am incredibly proud of him too.

Your references to my late father and grandfather are made in the context of seeking to demonstrate that I come from a “wealthy, privileged family background”. Whatever you seek to achieve by this, I do not think that seeking to involve an opponent’s family in this way is an appropriate campaigning tool.

I have not made reference to any member of your family in any of my material nor would I want to – it is not why I entered politics nor will it help improve the material circumstances of those we wish to serve in this community.

You have been in active politics for at least 20 more years than me but I have been around long enough to know that this kind of thing switches people off from the political process altogether, which is in no one’s interests – surely, whatever one’s political persuasion, we want as many people to engage as possible? People are tired of this politics of the past, which is why I am hoping to do things differently.

In the lead up to the forthcoming general election I would ask you to focus your energies on me, if you must, and not my family.

Yours sincerely,

Chuka

Safeguarding Sure Start for our young

Friday, March 13th, 2009

chuka-at-brixton-004-webSure Start exists to ensure that every child is given the best possible start in life. The programme has been crucial in increasing the availability of childcare, improving health and early development and supporting parents and their aspirations.

Sure Start Centres provide early learning provision, activities for young children and family heath services such as postnatal support and advice on nutrition alongside help for parents in finding training and employment. Whilst ten years ago there were no Sure Start Centres locally or nationally, now more than 2.3 million children under five and their families have access to services through nearly 3,000 Centres across England, and by March 2010 every family will have access to a Sure Start Children’s Centre.

In Lambeth there are 25 Sure Start Centres, including 9 across the Streatham constituency:

  • Effra Children’s Centre
  • Jubilee Children’s Centre
  • Maytree Children’s Centre
  • Streatham United Reformed Church Children’s Centre
  • Streatham Wells Children’s Centre
  • Sunnyhill Children’s Centre
  • The Weir Link Children’s Centre
  • Tree House Children’s Centre at Holmewood Nursery School
  • Woodmansterne Children’s Centre

Opposition politicians in Westminster recently announced plans to slash £200m from the Sure Start budget, a cut of almost 20%.  In Lambeth, this would be the equivalent of closing 5 children’s centres, just at a time when families need affordable childcare more than ever. The first years of a child’s life are of crucial importance. The proposed cuts risk leaving families without the support they need and would damage a programme which has made a real difference for so many parents and children, which is why Labour will continue to support and fund our centres.

In the video below, you can watch Childrens Minister, Bev Hughes MP, and Children’s Secretary, Ed Balls MP’s visit to a Sure Start centre in Stockwell in May last year.

Lambeth Council Tax Freeze

Thursday, March 5th, 2009

lambeth-council-tax-freeze

Lambeth’s Labour administration has decided to freeze council tax for the next two years.

Recognising that in the current economic climate value for money is the top priority for Lambeth residents, Labour is determined to help by keeping council tax bills down. Having successfully managed its finances, the council is in a position to make this pledge while guaranteeing funding for front-line services, and without any cuts. For example, lunch clubs for older people are opening across the borough and youth clubs’ opening times are being extended to seven days a week.

Lambeth now has the sixth lowest council tax of the thirty three London boroughs. This stands in stark contrast to the way the Lib Dems ran Lambeth: raising council taxes over 40% while in power, including a colossal 23% rise in one year. Notably, the Lib Dems and Tories both voted against this year’s freeze.

Alongside the council tax freeze, the Labour administration launched a Credit Crunch Taskforce (of which Chuka, an employment law solicitor, was a member), pledging over £350k to helping residents and businesses through these difficult times in Lambeth. This will mean a range of new measures including a telephone advice service for local businesses, the promotion of local food initiatives and reducing the council’s payment time to small businesses from 30 to 10 days. The council is also expanding its collaboration with the Lambeth Savings and Credit Union.

Commenting on the council tax freeze, Chuka said,
“I welcome the decision to freeze council tax and applaud the measures Lambeth is taking to help the borough through these difficult economic times. This move shows what a difference having a Labour council can make.”

Tackling fare dodgers and making stations safer

Friday, February 20th, 2009

New measures to clamp down on fare dodgers and make stations in Streatham and Tulse Hill safer were announced by Labour Transport Minister, Andrew Adonis, yesterday.

The new £5.5 million project will improve security at Streatham, Streatham Hill, Streatham Common, Tulse Hill and 10 other stations in South London using new ticketing gates which will save train bosses from incurring substantial revenue losses. As part of this, ‘wide aisle’ gates will be introduced at every station to accommodate wheel chairs, pushchairs and luggage.

This follows the recent installation of Europe’s longest ticketing line at Waterloo station, where security has improved on trains and passengers can now transfer more easily to Underground services.

From as early as March the new ticket gates will be staffed when operational. From next year they will be staffed for 15 hours per day, including between 7pm and 11pm, improving security and making it safer for passengers to travel late at night.

Explaining the much welcomed investment, Adonis said “as the experience at Waterloo has proven, these measures will improve station security by increasing staffing at night seven days a week”. Chuka Umunna, Labour’s Parliamentary Candidate for Streatham, added that “delivery is what people want to see and this is tangible evidence of that.”

In total some 68 normal, wide aisle or manual gates are due to be installed by Transport for London (TfL) and Southern. Additional ticket machines will also be installed at Tulse Hill station to make it easier for passengers to purchase tickets.

Chief Executive of Passenger Focus, the rail users pressure group, Anthony Smith, said,
“Gating can bring benefits. Clearly passengers who do the right thing and pay for their ticket should not be forced to subsidise those who try to cheat the system.
“One of the key advantages of installing gates is that they must be supervised and therefore staff are present and visible at the station.
“Passengers tell us that they feel safer when there are staff around and it also means they can ask advice about their journey and easily seek out help.
“However, their introduction should be judged on a case by case basis to ensure paying passengers will benefit from their installation.”

Its snowing!

Monday, February 2nd, 2009

Some useful telephone numbers for those experiencing difficulties due to the snow.

Police (Non-emergency)…………………….020 7326 1212
Electricity (freephone)…………………….0800 028 0247
Gas – 24hrs…………………….0800 111 999
Water – 24hrs…………………….0845 9200 800
Lambeth Council Emergency…………………….020 7926 1000
Lambeth Council Switchboard…………………….020 7926 1000
Environment and streets…………………….020 7926 9000
Train Information…………………….08457 48 49 50

Transport for London live travel information: click here.

A historic day

Tuesday, January 20th, 2009

On this historic day when the first Black President of the United States of America is sworn in, two local residents tell us what the inauguration of Barack Obama means to them.

“I’m excited to see what Obama’s ground breaking Presidency will bring the millions of Americans who are suffering in the current economic turmoil. His Presidency also opens up a great opportunity for Britain and the rest of Europe to work together to build peace in the Middle East, an ambitious programme to tackle climate change and will provide impetuous to meet the UN Development Goals.”
- Anne Fairweather (left with Chuka), Streatham resident and Labour candidate in London for the European elections this June 

“It dawned on me that Obama’s election is not just about the election of the first African American president of the United States, it also means that we - the black community - are fast running out of reasons to remain at the periphery of human progress.  He has shown that racism alone is no longer the reason we should not aspire and make progress.”
- Bethel Anele, Streatham resident and Obama for America campaign volunteer (Florida, 2008)

“Barack Obama has shown us that politics can genuinely work to make the world better. In the face of despondency and apathy he has reminded us that every individual can have their own unique impact on their community, their city, their country and the world. To me, Obama represents hope, wisdom, strength and the dawn of a brighter future.”
- Alice Deville, Streatham resident

You can catch Chuka between 11am and 12pm today on the BBC News Channel’s Inauguration Special. Also, check out Polly Toynbee’s Guardian column today on the inauguration and its implications for British politics which features Chuka: “We will all remember where we were today – even in lazily cynical Britain”, Polly Toynbee.

Cold Weather Payments kick in for local people

Thursday, January 8th, 2009

The Labour government gives out cold weather payments to the old and vulnerable in Streatham, Clapham, Balham, Tulse Hill and Brixton to help them cope with the recent cold spell.

Cold weather payments for the most vulnerable have been increased from £8.50 to £25 a week by the Labour government and the annual Winter Fuel Payment has been increased by £100 to £400 for over 80s households and by £50 to £250 for over-60s households.

The cold weather payments kick in every seven consecutive days that temperatures fall – or are forecast to fall – below 0 degrees. As a result of the cold snap this fortnight, thousands of older and vulnerable residents in Streatham, Clapham, Balham, Tulse Hill and Brixton will get the payment to help them through this cold spell.

Chuka Umunna, Labour’s Parliamentary Candidate for Streatham, said,
“It is absolutely essential in these tough economic times, in the face of high energy prices and bitterly cold temperatures, that we have a responsive government taking action to help the most vulnerable in society, which is precisely what the Labour government is doing here”

The measures have attracted support from groups campaigning for older people. Gordon Lishman, Director General of Age Concern, said,
“Many older people are worried about making ends meet this winter, but finding out they can get more money in their pockets can really make a difference.
“Tripling the Cold Weather Payment has made it a useful amount that will give an extra boost when the weather is cold.”

Rosie Winterton, the Pensions Minister (left), said, “We know that older people are facing tough times and that’s why we are acting now to make this real help available.”

To find out whether you are eligible to receive cold weather payments, Call Job Centre Plus on 0800 055 6688 or, if you are a pensioner, the Winter Fuel Payment helpline on 08459 15 15 15. For more info click here: Cold Weather Payments.