Kings Cross Supplementary School

Jade_2 When i was a kid i hated Saturday school – but it did teach me to read and write pretty well.  I am pleasantly surprised to see Saturday school and after hours teaching in Kings Cross.  Thanks to a back to basics project called supplementary schools by Civitas and the New Model School Company.  You can read about the different flavour in this teacher’s blog here.  This is how their website describes it.

‘Our teachers use a no-frills approach which concentrates on high quality teaching along traditional lines to enable children to master basic skills quickly. We emphasise phonics-based reading and mental arithmetic. We want children to be able to read fluently, spell accurately, know their times-tables and do long division. We also try to teach them a little bit about the history of this country and its institutions.’

King’s Cross Saturday School
2pm – 5pm, York Way Court Community Centre, Islington
      

‘As word of the success of the Sanaton Saturday School spread in the Bangladeshi community, we were asked to open a similar school for children living on a housing estate near King’s Cross station. Classes began in January 2005, in association with the Thornhill Neighbourhood Project. We have a waiting list, as well as requests from parents for us to start a class for secondary-age children.’
       

King’s Cross Evening Lessons
5.30pm – 7.30pm Tuesdays and Wednesdays, York Way Court Community Centre

                    

‘The first two Civitas supplementary schools were attended by children from ethnic minorities who belong to very strong community groups. However, we would see other youngsters hanging around on the King’s Cross estate, often behaving in an anti-social manner. We were keen to reach out to all children, regardless of race or religion. Most do not belong to any strong community groups so we delivered leaflets door-to-door around the estate advertising after-school lessons for six- to eleven-year-olds. We were amazed by the positive reaction. At the start of the first open evening there was a crowd of parents at the community centre gates eager to talk to us. Nearly all expressed great anxieties about their children’s education and were very enthusiastic about the prospect of extra lessons. Due to the popularity we now run two separate evening classes.’

Let me know what you think – also I would like to feature more of a parent’s view on this site but lack the necessary children myself – let me know if you are interested in contributing.

Posted in Community Health and Welfare | 1 Comment

Dog poo – do you stand for, against, or in it?

Doggie Islington Council is at long last getting its act together with dog control orders (click here).  They are proposing complete doggy bans from play areas where there are likely to be kids present who we don’t want rolling in dog poo.  In the Kings Cross patch

  • The sports pitch in Bingfield Park
  • Fenced playground at rear of Coatbridge Hse. Fenced playground at the side of Perth Hse. Fenced kids play ground at rear 80 -108 Pembroke St
  • Play area next to 14 Delhi St. Football pitch opposite 27 Outram Pl. and pitch next to Vibart Walk
  • Edward Square Part of site – main site will be dogs excluded, they will be allowed in the orchard area on Copenhagen St.
  • Children’s play area opposite 50 Tiber Gardens.

Across the whole of Islington there will be offences of ‘Not putting and keeping a dog on a lead, when asked to by an authorised officer’ and ‘Failing to remove dog fouling’. Fines are set at £80.  This is long overdue.  The streets particularly North of the canal are littered with dog shit.  It can make children quite ill and even cause blindness.

Bingfield Park is a giant dog toilet.  The sheer volume of dog poo puts off local youth groups.  If you sit in the sun on the park in the summer an endless stream of badly controlled dogs come bounding up to jump up paw and slobber all over you.   The dogs aren’t necessarily aggressive, just out of control with thoughtless, incompetent owners.  I am disappointed not to see a ‘dogs on leads’ order for Bingfield Park and will see where that has got to.

There is inevitably a 19 page ‘Dog Strategy’ – which describes itself without irony as ‘a framework within which to address dog fouling‘ (the less charitable could construe this as meaning the strategy is a framed piece of dog poo, or a place that just talks dog shit).  Consultation ends on 11th April, with orders being enforced in May.  This bit of the dog poo framework sounds like bad news:

‘7.3.1 The strategy recommends that dog owners should always clean up after their pet/s and therefore resources will be targeted on making disposal easier, with an emphasis on education and enforcement rather than cleansing. Cleansing is expensive, requires ongoing resource allocation and encourages people not to act as responsible dog owners.’

On the whole it doesn’t sound like a very good strategy – lots of legalistic repetition of previous (failed) legislation with little focus on how enforcement will work and no real sense of how to change behavior amongst large numbers of careless dog owners.  You can respond online here.  Or email them here.  Thanks to Paul Convery and Jennifer Christie for alerting.

Posted in Anti Social Behaviour, Crime etc | 2 Comments

Kitchin – new restaurant in Kings Cross

Kitchin Kitchin on Caledonia Street turns around the reputation of the ‘all you can eat’ diner delivering excellent value at lunchtime – high quality for a low price.  A recommendation from Lisa Tang led to lunch there on Sunday.  It is a big (indeed huge) 100 seat restaurant opposite Tesco and the Premier Inn.  There are several cooking stations arranged in the centre of the restaurant with buffet style service.  Some oriental Chinese dishes are wokked fresh. 

I had Indian, which was very good for the price – excellent tandoori wings, keema aloo etc.  Fran had a freshly wokked stir fry which was very good. We couldn’t quite make the dessert counter – which had a fantastic selection of suger rush inducing childhood favourites – including jelly, fizzy ufos, m&ms, rhubarb and custard sweets etc. The cocktail list was long and the wine list promising for the price.

It was pretty empty Sunday lunchtime, when the price was £6.95, evenings cost more – Thurs-Sat £14.95, Sun to Wed £12.95 a head, all you can eat.   At £6.95 it is excellent value, at £14.95 fair – you get better at Royal Thai or Drummond Street.  Lisa  says that the manager would do a discount for people who mention the website – but i couldn’t get hold of him on the day so give it a go.  Website with contact details etc here.  This is going to be very popular as Kings Cross stokes up so get in early.

Posted in Food and Drink | 10 Comments

Sophie “treading the boards” 8-12 April

Nuns_trail_2 You are invited to a night of farcical comedy.

See Sophie playing the Mother Superior.

For one week only – A role she was born for!

Harry & Fingers are banged up in gaol for robbery and motor offences respectively – but on their first night they find out the previous occupant of their cell mysteriously disappeared.  Finding a tunnel under the toilet, they follow it to the Convent situated across the road from the prison…where no one is quite who they seem.


A brand new comedy from the pen of David Barrett which should have you laughing your wimples off.


Tickets available through the box office at Canal Cafe Theatre, Little Venice, London W2 – www.canalcafetheatre.com.  Performances from 8-12 April 2008.  Full price £9.50; Concessions – £7.50 (plus £1.50 for Canal Cafe membership)


Please come – and meet me in the bar afterwards (or outside having a fag!)

Bless you my child, Sophie, x

Posted in King's Cross People | 1 Comment

Robbery thwarted at York Central

Breakin Stephan at York Central reports some local crime disturbed in the act:

Three young yobs got into our locked car park garage and were startled when one of my neighbours drove in returning home.  They scurried like little rats out of the fire door.  When my neighbour went upstairs he sent an email to the building which I happened to see about one hour later. 

Wondering if I had left my car door open, I went downstairs to check and saw my scooter missing.  I looked outside on the street, and there it was at the end of the block. Apparently they left it so that they could return later and get it.   When I retrieved it, I found the steering lock pulled out and my helmet gone.

I then alerted my neighbours to what had happened and several come down to see if anything else had been taken.  Another of my neighbours found his motorcycle tampered with – a screw in the ignition (waiting to be extracted with the steering lock) and the wheel lock tampered with – but still in place.

We checked our CCTV footage and have pix of the yobs, so we think some of our local police just might recognize them.

We called 999 to report the incident, and at 2AM to MET police officers came around to investigate.  We are now having all the doors alarmed.

Posted in Anti Social Behaviour, Crime etc | Leave a comment

Re-opening of eastside pavement promised for Monday

York_way_pavementFor those following the saga of the closed pavement on York Way along King’s Place – some good news.  We’ve just learned from Councillor Convery that the pavement will be open on Monday!

Unfortuate for the resident’s of York Central, it means a "crush" of last minute work starting at 8AM on Sat and Sun.  But at least it will be over soon!

Note the following email to Paul from the Highways folks:

Dear Councillor Convery

Subsequent to my earlier email, my colleague Gordon has met with the developers and officers from Islington and I understand the footway will be reinstated, and open for use on Monday. I will have the site checked to establish this is definitely the case next week. If they have failed to do so, I will certainly speak with the Highways Team in Islington, Metropolitan Police and Buses to discuss what action we can reasonably take to improve the situation.

Whilst I understand your concerns in relation to the medium term improvements to the junction, this is not an area of work which falls within my scope. I have, however, copied the Traffic Engineering Team Manager into this email for his information and, in liaising with Islington, ask that they consider what would be an appropriate way forward.

I can understand your concerns and can reassure you that we will not "do nothing", but will continue to work with Islington to improve the current position.

yours faithfully

Brian Foxton
Principal Network Coordinator
Highway Management Team
LB Camden 

Thanks Paul for staying on their case!!!!

Posted in King's Place, York Way | 1 Comment

“Hello, I am your bus, sorry i am late, the weather is raining, did you notice, remember to vote for Ken, the next stop is, Timbuktoo, I am about to catch fire, disembark now”

New_routemaster The prospect of an intelligent, talking London bus is faintly terrifying.  But according to the Guardian they will descend on us in summer 2009.  This is the long awaited plan to fit the 8,000 buses with GPS and modern radios so the network knows precisely each bus is.  The entertaining works of fiction that are the Countdown monitors at bus stops will suddenly become accurate to within seconds.  And hopefully the controllers will be able to space the buses out more.

And the bus will talk, telling you which stop is next etc. what tourist attractions are coming up. Inevitably this has been labelled ‘i-bus’.  It’s this bit that worries me.  Writers over the years have pointed out the absurdity of making everyday devices too clever for their own good.  Please can we be spared the talking bus – see the Red Dwarf artificially intelligent toaster (script), or Douglas Adams ‘Happy Vertical People Transporter‘, the talking lift that constantly tries to make its passengers happy.  The cheery babbling drives people so mad that the lift only makes them happy when people find it broken. 

Some things should just be stoic and silent, especially buses.  On time is good, talkative bad.

Posted in Transport | Leave a comment

62-68 York Way Planning Appeal – Local Support Needed

6268_york_way_site_outline_decision As you’ll remember, permission for the most recent planning application for 62-68 York Way was refused back in Nov. 07 as a result of the many letters submitted by local residents (over 50).  Now, the Applicant has filed an Appeal of that decision so if we want it to stand we must act again. What’s needed is another letter this time to The Planning Inspectorate in support of the Council’s position.

I will be supporting the Council’s decision and I hope that you will as well.  The proposed building was larger then appropriate and the Council made the proper decision to refuse permission.

For those who wish to write letters.  There are a number of points that can be made.  I have created a "sample" letter (drawn from my own) and you can use it as a "cut and paste" template, using whatever material you feel appropriate  (It is a bit wordy, but some of the phrases need to be used – I’ve bolded them.  If you want to use it download the file: Download refuse_appeal.doc The address of The Planning Inspectorate is on the letter and please be sure to post three copies of your letter BEFORE 11 March.

I hope you feel as I do – that this is worth the final effort.  I know that with your support we can prevail!

If I can be of any further assistance, please let me know.

Stephan Schulte
York Central
York Way
stephan@yorkcentral.co.uk

Posted in Planning, Licensing and Regulation | 1 Comment